Image provided by: Hood River Library; Hood River, OR
About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1909)
M osier B ulletin Issu ed Each Friday MOSIER........................... OREGON EVENTS OF THE DAY Newsy Items Gathered from All Parts of the World. L ess Im p o rtan t b u t N ot L ess Inter esting H appenings from P oints O utside the S ta te . M issouri crops have suffered g reatly from th e heavy rains. N ine men were killed by an explosion o f gas in a coal mine n e a r T rinidad, Colo. The mission steam er A b ler is m iss ing in the A rctic ocean w ith 19 p er sons. The A m erican S ugar R efining com pany says it is not g u ilty of violating the a n ti-tru st laws. W heat haB been dam aged in N evada by the ex trem e cold w eather. Iec formed in many places. D am age from rain is reported from many points in N ebraska. A t O maha p a rt of the stre e tc a r system is out of commission. R ailroad blockades in various p a rts of Colorado, due to heavy rain s, have delayed more than 1,000 deleg ates to conventions in the W est. PHYSICIAN IS S U E S E D ICT. M OURNED BY ALL. N ews of C u sh m an 's D eath S hock to F riends in C o n g ress. W ashington, Ju ly 7.—N ew s th a t F ra n c is W. Cushman, re p re se n ta tiv e from W ashington, had passed aw ay in New York yesterday m orning, came as a g re a t shock to his host of friends in both branches of congress. Morn ing papers contained d ispatches an nouncing he had successfully passed his crisis and w as on the road to recov ery . I t w as n o t until the m em bers of congress reached the capitol th a t they heard of his d^ath, and even then word spread elowly am ong the m em bers, for th e house was not in session. In conform ity w ith Mrs. C ushm an’s wish, there will be no congressional escort appointed to accompany th e re m ains to Tacoma, but the body will be taken across th e continent by a rep re sen tativ e of th e serg ean t-at-arm s of the house, who ’.vent to New Y ork this m orning. The house w ill n o t m eet until Thursday. A t th a t tim e Cush m an’s death will be announced, and ad journm ent probably be taken ou t of re spect to his memory. S enator Piles, who w as w ith Mr. Cushman when the end came, returned to W ashington la st evening. He said Mr. Cushman passed aw ay peacefully, being unconscious durin g his last houru. H eroic tre a tm e n t was resorted to as soon as Mr. C ushm an’s condition took a tu rn for the worse, b u t he was so weakened th a t he did not respond to treatm en t. He sank steadily through the n ig h t and breathed his la s t a t two m inutes p ast 5 y esterday m orning. H O LD S U P BANK. L a te st rep o rts of accidents due to : Heavily A rm ed Bandit W orks in B road F o u rth o f Ju ly celebrations show 76 Daylight. dead and 2,774 injured. T his is one- E v e re tt, W ash., Ju ly 7.— A lo n e rob h a lf less than la s t y e a r’s record. ber held up A ssistan t C ashier E. C. Ol A fte r seven y ears o f legal delays, son, of the Bank of Commerce, shortly John A. Benson, convicted a t San F ran- before the bank closed yesterday a fte r cisco of conspiring to d efraud th e gov noon, wounded C ashier J . L. Lyen and ern m en t of land, has been se n t to p ris escaped w ith a few hundred dollars. on to serve his sentence o f one year. He fled on a bicycle to the north end E nglish su ffra g e tte s w ill appeal d i of th e city, then turned tow ard the w aterfro n t. H ere his p u rsu ers found re c t to the king. the satchel in which he carried his B urglars opened a Los A ngeles safe money. I t contained only $15. D ep and secured $3,700. u tie s and citizens are searching for the All railroads leading into the M exi man. Bloodhounds have been secured. can cap ital a re tied up by floods. W hen the robber entered th e bank A C alifornia boy c arried up in the he th ru s t tw o revolvers into O lson’s ropes of a balloon cam e down un face and com m anding him to throw up his hands, laid down one gun and seiz harm ed. . ed all the money he could reach and S torm s in Colorado have done dam placed it in his satchel. H e paid no age estim ated a t $300,000 and railroad atten tio n to the few custom ers in the traffic is dem oralized. bank. C ashier Lyen w as in the re a r end of J a p leaders in the H aw aiian p lan ta tion trouble have been arrested for kid the building. He ran down an alley- way and entered by the fro n t door to naping strik eb reak ers. ta k e the robber by surprise and g rap A su it has been sta rte d in O klahom a pled w ith him . The robber shot three to se ttle claim to Borne tow n lots in tim es, one bu llet passing through Ly- which th ere are 1,400 defendants. e n ’s jaw and neck, m aking a serious W hat is claim ed to be th e larg est wound. The robber then fled, w ith flag in the world was unfurled a t P itts both Lyen and Olson shooting a t him. H is h at was shot off and it is b e lie v burg the F ourth. I t is 180 fe e t long ed he w as slig h tly wounded. He is and 90 fe e t wide. supposed to l ave had a bicycle hidden E. E. Calvin, vice p resid en t and gen in the vicinity, for he was n e x t 'seen eral m anager of the Southern Pacific, rid in g furiously north on one. He was is critically ill in San Francisco t ad Been by hundreds of people, b u t before his recovery is doubtful. arm ed citizens and officers took up the Many in fa n ts are dying in Chicago chase in autom obiles he disappeared. as the re su lt of the intense heat. New Machine for Flying. A rtesian wells are being sunk in Cape Colony a t the ra te of 1,400 a V ictoria, B. C., Ju ly 7.—An airsh ip which, the inventor asserts, w ill rig h t year. S eism ologists have figured out th a t itse lf w ithin a few feet when sta rte d earthquakes trav el a t ra te s varying upside down and w ill fly from V ictoria to San Francisco in less than five lrom 470 to 520 fe e t per second. hours, has been b u ilt by A. W. Gibson, Grand Duke W illiam , o f L uxem a Scotch engineer. The inventor pur bourg, is seriously ill. H is successor poses to make his first flight from Vic to the crown is his d au g h ter, 15 years to ria to the S e a ttle exposition and hs old. offered to w ager $1,000 th a t he can The A farm er and his e n tire fam ily of go the distance in h alf an hour. w ife, th ree dau g h ters and a son drow n airsh ip embodies en tirely new princi ed w hile fishing n ear th e ir home a t ples and is propelled by an engine w eighing 222 pounds. W ellington, Colo. The A m erican G eographical society New Y ork Tax Roll O ut. has accepted Mrs. Collis P. H u n tin g New York, Ju ly 7.— Andrew C arne to n ’s g if t of a $250,000 site for a new gie and Mrs. Russell Sage are each as building a t New York. sessed as possessing $5,000,000 worth A t the 50th annual com m encem ent of personal property in New York City, o f the U n iv ersity of W isconsin one of on the rolls presented to the board of the class of 1859 was p re se n t and gave alderm en today. John D. R o ck efeller’s personal assessm ent is $2,500,000, and th e class yell of th a t year. The tw o b a ttlesh ip s authorized by th a t of seven m em bers of th e V ander th e la s t congress w ill carry heavier b ilt fam ily a g g reg ates $1,340,000. J. b a tte rie s than any o th e r w arships P ierp o n t Morgan is down for $440,000, while the late H . H. R ogers and W il afloat or ordered by any nation. liam R ockefeller are each assessed The U nited S ta te s S teel cor|>oration $300,000. will endeavor to p rev en t its employes from using liquor, especially w hile on Gunnison B ore Finished. the property of th e corporation. M ontrose, Colo., Ju ly 7.—The last I t has been dem onstrated th a t the round of shots in the E ast heading for blue rays from m ercury vapor lam ps the Gunnison irrig atio n tunnel w as fired A few kill b a cte ria and ste riliz e w a te r in a t 5 :30 o'clock th is evening. which the lam ps are placed w ithout m inutes late r w orkmen from th e two appreciably increasing its tem p eratu re. headings shook hands through th e open ing. The tunnel is six m iles long and A landslide a t N ew port. England, has been under construction four years resulted in the death o f 20 laborers. and a half. T his p roject has been car K ing Alfonso, of Spain, has under ried out by th e Federal Reclam ation gone a slig h t operation, which proved bureau a t a cost of $3,500,000. It will successful. fu rn ish w ater for th e irrig a tio n of A th ie f in London grabbed a handbag 150,000 M M o f land. containing $500,000 in jew els and made S tjc k M ust Be W atered. his escape. San Francisco, Ju ly 7. The attack W hile the tem p e ra tu re in the E ast o f the Southern Pacific railroad upon has g re a tly moderated, th ere is still the co n stitu tio n altiy of the F ederal en much suffering. actm ents providing th a t ra ttle or sheep Russian and Chinese officials have in tra n sit by ra il m ust be w atered and clashed because the la tte r in sists on fed every 28 hours, was repulsed by the U nited S ta te s C ircu it C ourt of Ap her tre a ty rig h ts. peals today, the decision of the D istrict Many B ritish officials fe a r an u p ris courts being sustained. One of these ing in India. cases i.ivolved a shipm ent of 1,355 A prom inent A u stralian m erchant sheep, made from Corinne, U tah, to The says his country would help the U nited South San Francisco in 1906. company sought a rever al on a purely S ta te s fight Jap an . technical ground. The g re a te st A m erican fleet ever assembled is to engage in m aneuvers Hill to Invade C anada. on the A tla n tic coast. H elena, M ont., July 7. There was The W estern Union T elegraph com filed w ith the secretary of s ta te today pany has been indicted a t C incinnati an official resolution adopted by the for helping a bucketahop to do b usi board of d irectors of the G reat North c m railw ay, show ing its purpose to ness. construct a branch 1 ne from Toplar, G erm ans are g re a tly enthused over Valley county to the C anadian bonier, the proposal of Count Zeppelin to a t a distance of 80 miles. The inference tem p t to reach th e pole and will fu r is th a t the line w ill he extended fu rth nish all necessary money. er north, tap p in g the g rain fields of Saskatchew an, thus invading the C ana Count Zeppelin, th e G erm an aero dian Pacific te rrito ry . n aut, will try to reach the pole by bal loon. U se C annon at Oil F ire. M artinsville. III., Ju ly 7. Fire, The su g ar tru s t and six of its offi cials have been indicted fo r v iolating sta rte d by lig h tn in g in one o f th e 35,- 0 10 barrel tan k s of the Ohio Oil com the a n ti-tru st law. pany, was brought under control to Cholera still prev ails in SL Peters- | nig h t. The tan k was punctured by a bu rg to an a larm in g e x te n t, and many cannon shot and most of the oil drained out. T his p rev tn ted an explosion. deaths have occurred. OREGON STATE ITEMS OF INTEREST MUCH W HEAT S H IP P E D . BIG C O LO N IZA TIO N SC H E M E . P o rtlan d S hips M ore -Than th e P uget S ound P o rts. P o rtlan d — D uring the cereal year, ending Ju n e 30, P ortland shipped in the neighborhood o f 3,000,000 more bushels of w heat th an was sen t from P u g e t sound, w hile from there not quite 1,000,000 more b arrels of flour w as sen t out. The w heat shipm ents to Europe from here w ere 6,182,778 bushels, w hile those from P u g et sound were 4,154,481 bushels; to the o rie n t, South A m erica and A frica, P ortland shipped no w heat, P u g e t sound sending out 315,285 bush els. C alifornia w heat shipm ents from here w ere 2,932,861 bushels and from the sound 2,032,492 buBhels w ere ship ped. W heat from P ortland to Mexico w as 165,257 bushels and from P u g et sound to Mexico it w as 203,578 bushels. D uring the y ear ju s t completed P o rt land shipped the »following am ount of flour: To the o rie n t and H aw aii, 542,- 193 b a rre ls; Europe, 15,000 b arrels; C alifornia, 295,716 barrels. In the sam e order are the shipm ents of flour from P u g et sound p o rts: O rient, 909,- 513 b a rre ls; South A m erica, 109,847 b a rre ls; Europe, 23,581 b arrels; C ali fornia, 278,556 barrels, and to Mexico, 8,500 barrels. The grand total for the Beason, 1908-1909, being 26,811,259 bushels of w heat from here and the sound. The P ortland barley shipm ents for th is season are 822,509 bushels. V ast T ra c t in N orthern M orrow to Be C ut Into Sm all T ra c ts. Pendleton— More than 18,000 acres of w heat land in the n orthern p a rt of Morrow county are to be colonized by th rifty G erm an and H ungarian fam ilies, according to J . G. Craw ford, of H eppner. He says th a t the J . E. W oolery e s ta te , consisting of th is acreage of practically level land, has been taken over by a Portland real esta te firm, which has already made arrangem ents to p u t 1,000 fam ilies on th e tra c t, and th a t the colonization w ill be com plete by fall. T his is probably the la rg e st tr a c t of farm ing land in Morrow county and offers an ideal opportunity for a colo nization schem e of this kind. I t is said th a t the heads of many of these fam ilies are men of m eans and th a t the im m igrants w ill prove a valu able addition to the county. Mr. C raw ford is also au th o rity for the sta te m e n t th a t the crops of Mor row county are to be much b e tte r this Beason than w as expected a few w eeks ago. Then it was considered th a t a total fa ilu re w as inevitable, but now it is believed alm ost an average crop w ill be harvested. The unusual season o f cool w eather which has prevailed over E astern O re gon th is sp rin g and sum m er has turned out to be a blessing fo r th e farm ers, for w ith th e custom ary am ount of hot w eather th is season’s crops would have been burned up, as th e precipitation has been practically nothing. DALLAS-SALEM ROAD. G ood P ro g re ss Being M ade in C on stru ctio n W ork on New Line. D allas—The Salem , F alls C ity & W estern railw ay company w ill have com pleted the work o f track lay in g on its new line from D allas to Salem by the middle of A ugust, and reg u lar fre ig h t and passenger service w ill be established w ithin a month from th a t tim e. The g rading work is practically com pleted, having been carried to w ithin tw o m iles of th e W est Salem term inal. Steel has been laid as far as the Pierce R iggs farm near Eola, u distance of about nine m iles from D allas. Only about six mileB of track rem ain to be laid. The new track contains few bridges, the m ost im p o rtan t being the Brunk bridge over the R ickreall riv er a t Eola. No bridge will be b u ilt across th e W il lam ette river, the road term in atin g on th e Polk county side, in W est Salem . C om m unication w ith the Marion coun ty side w ill be carried on by m eans of a launch Bervice, w hich hus already been established. The company will instnll for its pas sen g er service on the new line, one of the new gasoline cars sim ilar to those w hich the Southern Pacific plans to put in use on some of its On gon lines. H arrim an M ust Not L abor So S tre n uously as in P a st. Vienna, A ustria, Ju ly 6 .—Edward H. H arrim an, the A m erican railroad w izard, m ust not work again so hard or so continuously as he has done in the past. T his is the ed ict of Dr. Adolf Struem pell, the noted Vienna specialist, who has diagnosed H arri- m an’s ailm ent a3 incipient paralysis. In obedience to th is ed ict is H a rri m an ’s only safety. F or the present, declares Professor Slruem pell, Mr. H arrim an m ust have com plete quiet. To th is end his meals are now being served in h s room, and he only em erges therefrom once a day to tak e the mild exercise which has been prescribed as a p a rt of his course of treatm en t. The course of tre a tm e n t through which Mr. H arrim an is now being put is intended to cure his nervous trouble and g e t him into as good physical con dition as possible, a lte r w hich an en tire ly new course of tre a tm e n t w ill be inaugurated in an effort to relieve the paralysis which is affecting his limbs. This cannot be cured, Mr. H arrim an has been inform ed, but its acute sym pt oms can be re lie v td ana its progress stayed. Mrs. H arrim an is rem aining con stan tly by his side, and her m in istra tions form an im p o rtan t fe atu re of the course of tre a tm e n t being given him. S U B S T IT U T E FOR DIABOLO. G erm an Invents a New G am e Much L ess D angerous to Play. P aris, Ju ly 6.— A new gam e o f the diaboio type is springing into favor here, and as the A m erican p a ten ts have been taken out, “ la fu n d a” will no doubt be seen before long in A m erica. Fine Im posed on Road. “ L a fu n d a” is a new form of sling, as Salem — A ttorney G eneral C raw ford its nam e show s. A little bag on a has commenced action a g a in st the Cor wooden fram ew ork is fixed on a swivel vallis & E astern railroad for the collec into a so rt of ten n is ra c k e t w ithout tion of the penalty fo r th e alleged fa il strin g s or top. The bottom of the bag ure of the railroad company to comply is open, and tw o strong india rubber w ith the railroad comm ission act. bands p ie v e n t the ball, a ten n is ball, Some tim e ago the commission, a fte r from falling through. The gam e is to an investigation of a com plaint of in sling th e ball from one p layer to an adequate depot fac ilitie s a t Lyons, or other or up into the air, to be caught dered the railroad company to build a by the sam e player a t w ill. new depot. The company hauled in a | I t needs a certain am ount of skill couple of old fre ig h t cars and rigged and is certain ly loss dangerous and ju s t them up as an evasion of the law, and as healthy as diaboio. The inventor the atto rn ey general w as requested to is a young G erm an named Seeger, who commence action to collect the fine of in a dem onstration w hich he gave the $10,000 provided by the law. other afternoon threw a ten n is ball higher than the chim neys ol a seven- story house and caught it again w ith Railroad W eight C ase D ism issed. Salem — As shippers w ere not in te r out ap p aren t effort. ested enough to appear a t the tim e set by the railroad com m issioners to hear WIND L A SH ES SA LT LAKE. the com plaint regarding alleged u n fair w eights the case was dism issed. It was charged th a t the railroads were Two P leasure L aunches Im perilled, but Reach S h o re Safely. not careful in tak in g w eights, th a t if a car w as w eighed more than once while S alt Lake, Ju ly 6.— A wind storm en route the shipper w as compelled to sw ept over G reat S a lt lake la st even accept the heaviest w eight, th a t cars ing, dashed the heavy w ater in huge w ere w eighed on scales not well cared \ broadsides a g a in st the S a lta ir pavilion for and th a t many tim es the scales 1 and th reaten ed th e existence of two used w ere too sm all for the cars, and j sm all pleasure boats cruising off shore. they are w eighed o re end a t a tim e. A fte r a stru g g le w ith the w ind and the waves in w hich the voyagers were A shland W ants M ountain. drenched w ith sa lt w ater, the launches A shland—The Ashland Commercial regained the pavilion. club will petitio n Governor Benson’s In m aking a landing, one of the recently appointed sta te board of geo boats w as dashed ag ain st the pier and graphers to change the nam e of A sh badly dam aged. No one, however, was land b u tte, the source of A shland’s injured. The gale, though of brief w ater supply and one of the chief scen duration, w as one of the m ost violent ic a ttra c tio n s of th is vicinity, from in the history of the lake. Rumors Siskiyou peak, w hich is said to have th a t one of the boats had gone down been applied to it by some of the gov w ith 60 passengers reached here and ernm ent publications, to Mount Ash there w as g reat anxiety u n til the out land. A resolution to th is effect w as come w as known. passed a t a recent m eeting of the club. C alf C o sts Ten T housand. K lam ath Kails—I t took the ju ry ju s t 25 m inutes to find a verdict for the de fen d an t in the K elley-A rant dam age su it, la st of the cases resulting from the crim inal prosecution of Ja y A rant, who was indicted for the larceny of a calf more than tw o years ago. A rai.t was tw ice tried on a charge of larceny, the first trial re su ltin g in a disag ree m ent, while the second acquitted him. Three cases resulted over the ow nership of th e calf. The calf involved in the litig a tio n w as w orth approxim ately $10. The money expended in litigation Ship F ruit by Auto Now. w ill ag g re g a te close to $10,000, and of Rainier S e c u re s New Factory. London, Ju ly 6 .—An experim ent th is am ount the tax p ay ers of the coun R ainier— The first of th e many fac ty w ill be forced to pay not less than tories expected to come to R ainier has 1 w hich is being w atched w ith much in te re st by the w holesale dealers in fru it $ 6 , 000 . ju s t closed a deal.w ith A. J . W right & and vegetables a t Covent Garden and Son for six acres of land on the east other m ark ets in the m etropolis is be Big P o w er Plant on M cK enzie. side of Fox creek, w here work will be E ugene— Vice P resid en t and Mana begun on breaking ground for a pressed ing made a connection w ith the con veying of fr u it and vegetables from g e r A. W elch, of th e Portland, Eugene brick factory. long distances by motor. Y esterday & E astern R ailw ay company, w hich a m otor van containing alm ost a lecord owns and o p erates the local street, PO RTLAN D M ARKETS. load of graves and other fru it, cucum railw ay system and the interurban line bers and vegetables, arrived a t the run n in g out of E ugene, while in the W heat— B luestem , m illing, $1.30; m arket from W orthing, th e journey city recently announced th a t the big club, $1.18« 1.20; valley, $1.17. being over 60 m iles. No dam age w hat power p lan t projected by the company C om — Whole, $35 per ton; cracked, ever w as done to the contents of the a t M a rtin ’s rapids, 30 m iles e a st of $36 per ton. packages, and the m otor arriv ed fully Eugene, on th e M cKenzie riv er, will O ats— No. 1 w hite, $40« 40.50 per an hour before the m erchandise which probably be b u ilt th is year. The p lant had been dispatched by train . w ill co st several hundred thousand ton. M illstuffs— Bran, $26.50 per ton; dollars. I t w ill fu rn ish power for oper Man Falls Into A sphalt. atio n of the com pany’s proposed lines. m iddlings, $33; shorts, $ 2 9 « 3 2 ; chop, $24« 30; rolled barley, $34« 35. Los A ngeles, Ju ly 6.— B uried alm ost H ay—T im othy, W illam ette valley, Tw o P lants in P ro sp ect. up to his nose in a barrel of liquid $17(0 20 per to n ; E astern Oregon, $20 asphalt, Salvador T alam antes, a la M ilw aukie—A t an adjourned m eeting (y23; mixed, $16« 20. borer, w as found early this morning o f th e M ilw aukie council a 20 y ear G rain S a g s—5 \|'c each. alm ost suffocated. I t required four fran ch ise was g ran ted J. L. Johnson & F ru its —A pples, $1«'2.60 per box; Co. to construct and operate a w ater straw b erries, $1.76« 2 per c ra te ; cher men to g e t him out. T alam antes fell w orks p lant east of the Southern P aci ries, 3 « 10c per pound; gooseberries, into the barrel w hile ersosing a ra il fic railroad. The ordinance g ra n tin g 4(>i5c; apricots, $1.25« 1.50 per box; road tre stle . T rying to e x tric a te him the franchise w as passed as draw n up cu rran ts, 7}®c per pound; loganberries, self he plunged both arm s into the w ith o u t am endm ent. I t obligates the $1.25 per c ra te ; raspberries, $1.50; asp h alt and sank deeper. He was found by D eputy Constable M iklaus- company to provide w ater free for tire black caps, $1.75« 2. hutz, who w renched his back try in g to protection. The p lan t is under con P otatoes — $1 (if 1.75 per hundred; save the m an. The M exican was fin stru ctio n . M ilw aukie w ill then have new, 2 ,4« 2 1i c per pound. ality ex tricated . tw o w a te r com panies. V egetables — A sparagus, 75c«90c per dozen; beans, 8 c ; lettuce, head, O pen Land N ear B urns. Filipinos Go T o Hawaii. B urns—The local U nited S ta te s land 25c per dozen; onions, 1 2 ^(< tl5 c; M anila, Ju ly 6.—A m essage from peas. 4(iC5c per pound; radishes, 15c office has been notified th a t the H arney Cebu sta te s th a t 250 islanders have Valley Im provem ent company segrega- , per dozen. le ft th a t p o rt bound for H aw aii to B u tte r—C ity cream ery,extras.26 L s c; tion, known as the fam ous Carey I work on the sugar p lantations under lands, has been canceled; and these fancy outside cream ery, 25(<i26lvc; contracts made w ith the ag en ts of the B u tter f a t prices average lands. 59,000 acres of which are locat store, 18c. H aw aiian P la n te rs ’ association. O ther ed close to Burns, w ill be opened a t 1 \.c per pound under reg u lar b u tte r parties are bt ing recruited in various prices. onee to public e n try . I t is thought | E ggs—Oregon ranch, candled, 25c p arts of the islands and w ill leave for th a t every acre o f this land w ill be H aw aii soon. The dep artu re of these per dozen. taken in a very sh o rt tim e. Poultry — Hens, 12(<fl3c; springs, laborers has excited a g re a t deal of un Six-Inch G uns Arrive. 16V*c«'18c; roosters, 8 « 9c; ducks, friendly criticism here, as for years Salem The tw o big six inch guns young, 1 2 « '13c; geese, young, 9 « 10c; the labor supply in the Philippines has from th e b attleah io Oregon promised turkeys, 18c; squabs, $2« 2.25 per be n unequal to the demand and this may cause a shortage. the city of Salem , have arrived and dozen. will be one of the attra c tio n s of the P ork—-Fancy, 10c per pound. Going to R escue C ook. cherry fa ir. The guns will be mounted 1 V eal— E x tras, 8 « 8 *v c per pound; New York, Ju ly 6.—C aptain Samuel on the sta te house lawn a fte r the fair. ordinary, 7c; heavy, 6c. They w ere procurred through the O re Hops— 1909 conracts, 16c per pound; W. B a rtle tt, of B rigus, N. F ., and gon delegation at W ashington and cost 1908 crop, U(ii 12c; 1907 crop, 7c; H erb ert L. B ridgm an, of Brooklyn. N. Y ., have purchased and are equipping the city of Salem only the freig h t. 1906 crop, 4c. Wool— E astern Oregon, 16ci23c p e r, a steam er for a voyage to E tah, N orth M onm outh N orm al O pen*. G reenland, P a e ry ’s base statio n , about Monmouth The enrollm ent of the pound; valley, fine. 23c; coarse. 21 *^c; Ju ly 15. The vessel w ill endeavor to sum m er norm al school is very s a tisfa c m ohair, choice, 24iq 25c. C a ttle - S teers, top, $4.50«'4.60; fa ir | bring Dr. Frederick A. Cook home and tory, th ere being betw een 80 and 100 to good, $ 4 « 4 .2 5 ; common, $ 3 .7 5 « 4 ;| w ill also probably take north Mene, the enro led th e first day. N ext week cows, top, $3.50, fa ir to good, $3(<f | young Eskim o, who w ith a num ber of P rofessor L. K. T ra v e rs’ course begins his countrym en came to th e U nited and from 30 to 50 additional students 3.25; common to m edium, $ 2 .5 0 « 2 .7 5 ;' S ta te s 12 y ears ago. a re expected. Prospects are for the calves, top, $ 5 « 5 .5 0 ; heavy, $ 3 .5 0 « '4 ; moat successful sum m er norm al ever , hulls and stags, $ 2 .7 5 « 3 .2 5 ; common, R hodesia to Be B ought? $2«'2.50. held a t th is place. Hogs— B est, $ 8 « 8 ;.1 5 ; fa irto g o o d , Capetow n. Cape Colony, Ju ly 6.— It Auto Line to C oos Bay. $ 7 .5 0 « 7.75; Stockers, $ 6 « 6.50; j is reported from Rualawayo, Rodessa, Marshfield Wm. Wade and Thomas China fats. $6 76« 7. th a t G eneral Louis Botha, prem ier of Goodalc have purchased a 30 horse S h e e p -T o p w ethers, $4; fa ir to the T ransvaal, a t the request of the pow er autom obile, carry in g six passen good, $3.50(ii3.76; ew es, less on all South A frican national convention will gers, which they w ill operate on the g rad es; yearlings, best, $4.15; fa ir to offer the chartered South A frican com C o m bay-R oseburg road. The trip good, $3.75« 4; spring lamb», g 4 .7 5 « pany $100,000,000 for the purchase of 5 . 25 . from Roaeburg is made in 14 hours. Rhtxlesia. by U nited South A frica. CHAPTER X X II.— (Continued ) It should, that Pearman had yielded to ‘‘Foolish business, Gren, very. I’m your terms. I was off to Plyart directly afraid,” he replied at length. “Nobody I got your message, and we have had a I’d sooner give her to, providing she’s busy afternoon of It. We rather woke up willing to take you.” the Subscription Room at Knightsbrldge, "My dear uncle, Maude and I—— ’’ I flatter myself. From being an outsider “Pooh! You needn't go on about that. In the betting, we brought Coriander back I never doubted that you and Maude had to 7 to 2, and made him once more first settled it all before you did me the honor favorlts. I told you we had Pearman in to consult, me. But what are you to live a hole, and we had. I suppose you got a on? Your £400 a year won’t keep a lot of money out of him?” wife, Gren, and I can’t help you.” "Yes, Indeed; we made him pay £10,- "No, but we can wait a b it; we are 000 to let off our claim.” And then both young, and I shall be making two Grenville recounted his interview with or three hundred a year at my profession Pearman. very soon.” “Very good; then he’s now absolute "Nonsense, boy; I know the law. I master of the horse again. Of course, thoroughly believe you to be clever and exactly what I expected from your tele have no dou,Lt the money will come In gram. Now I’ll tell you what I’ve done. course of time, but it’s slow work—vsry. In the first place, I laid, between us, or Long engagements are not Judicious.” rather Plyart did for us, £3,300 to £1,200 “But this is not to be so very long; against Coriander; that was before he and Maude is good to wait a couple of was driven back In the betting; of course years or so for me.” that left us to win £1,200 If he was beat “A couple of years,” smiled the squire. or didn’t start. After getting your tele “What did the fee-book s a y la s t y e a r. gram I went down to TattersalPo, and, Fifty pounds.” with Plyart’s assistance, got that whole “Not quite; very near It, though.” £1,200 on the horse at long odds. We “I'm afraid you’ll find It will take all now stnnd to win, between us £10,170 if two years to double It. I don’t doubt Coriander wins the Two Thousand, and your doing well at last, but It takes time, Just quits if he loses. Not a bad book, it takes time. Still, Gren, I’ll not gain Grenville?" say the match, and If at the end of next “Ry Jove! no; nnd he’s a good chance, year you can see your way Into something hasn’t, he?” like £300 a year, exclusive of what you “Y’es, on previous running, wonderful. have, make a wedding of It, if you like.” “Ten thousand thanks, uncle. This W# know Pearman has backed him to win case of yours will find me practice, see him a lot of money. I t’s not likely he if it don’t. I have no Intention of hid would have paid you £10,000 to-day un ing my light under a bushel. I’ll take less he was very confident about his very good care, through my friends, the chance. To wind up with, his own com case is well talked of. Only wait till missioner backed him to-day for a good the Two Thousand is over, and see what bit of money, although he had to take details the sporting papers shall have shortish odds, owing to our having ap of i t ! Good-by. 1 will just run up and propriated all the long prices against the see my aunt and Maude, and Chen I'm colt.” Grenville's eyes sparkled, though he off.” Grenville dashed Into the drawing room, said nothing, but smoked on in silence where he found Mrs. Denison and his for a minute or two. Yes, if that should come off, he might marry Maude at once! cousin. Ilalllson had regarded him latently. “I ’m just off to town, aunt, and have come to wish you good-by, and to tell you Suddenly he broke silence: Pin to be your son-in-law, after all.” “I saw your eye flash up, and then “ Don’t believe him, my mother,” laugh you plunged Into a reverie. I had for ed Maude, her eyes dancing with fun. gotten the stake you told me you had on “ We know better than that don’t we? We thia, when you first spoke to me about mustn’t detain him, or he’ll be too late It. Whether It's been any good to go so for hie dinner. Y'ou greedy thing; you far, of course I don’t know ; but you won't live if you gourmandize so------” stand as fair a chance as a man can do “Come here, Gren,” said Mrs. Denison; of winning £5,080 next week, If that will “has my husband consented to your mar help you at all. There's no certainly rying Maude?” nbout anything in this world—about how “Yes. aunt, as soon as I ’ve got bread long it’s been a world, or about how long and cheese enough to feed her on.” we’ve been preying on each other in it. “My dear boy, I'm so glad! I was Practically, mind, we are as much canni obliged to be your enemy once, Gren—I bals as ever, and eat each other up with couldn’t help myself; but I ’d rather you as much alacrity as the Feejee Islanders. took her than anyone!” A good heavy city swindle gulps us down “Oh y ou, m other!” cried M aude; “and much as a whale takes herrings; but he says he’ll feed me on bread and cheese, there's plenty of pike about, who do their and I like, I like—strawberries and cannibalism one at a time, and not by cream.” the shoal. Old Pearman was a piks of “Sad thing, aunt, but I suppose I'd renown; in fact, he might have aspired better bleak off the match at once. Bet to the dignity of a shark, if he hadn't ter that than come to a separate mainte been of a retiring disposition, and ever nance., you know. Bread and cheese is anxious to hide his light under a bushel. a good lasting dish, but how she's to get Young Pearman has a fair dash of the through the winters I don’t know, on pike about him, too. Which way he can what she proposes.” make moat money out of Coriander I don't ’’.Ah, well, never mind,” laughed Maude; know; but 1 should think, by winning; “she s yours now, and won’t have a sep and if I'm right In my conjecture, bar arate maintenance. You'll have to feed accidents, we shall win our money, G rin.” her some way and you can't guess how “And if It Is the other way?” she eats. When are you going, Gren?” “Shan’t lose It, thank goodness! But “In a very few minutes. I'm going I'm afraid if his book makes up a few to walk; will you come with me? Good- hundreds better on the lose. Coriander by aunt. Don't be afraid. I won’t run will not run up to his previous perform- away with her, at all events till straw ances. We’ve done pretty w ell; win or berries are well In, and threpence a pot lose, we stnnd a big stake to nothing. tle.” Good-night.” “Listen ; were lovers like that In yo.tr Grenville mused far into the nlgtit. Y’es, day, mother? I used to dream, a little lie had been playing for high stakes late while back, that when you had a lover, it ly, and winning game after game. Let was all you could do to keep him from this only come off, and he should have running away with you. Now I’m getting fairly won his sweet cousin. Then the quite clever about It, and know that thought cam# into his head that hs must Gren would always much prefer to leave see it, and then it finshed across him that me behind than his portmanteau.” Maude must be with him. How he wag “Uome away, Maude, and let’s see If to manage tt, he didn’t know. As inspira we can shut i t ; you know we always tions flash across mankind, so do supersti have a deal of trouble about that.” tions. Coriander’s winning the Two “Oh, yes, I always found you and Thousand depended upon Maude and him Thomas despairing over It, and it takes being there to see. all m.v Ingenuity to make those last three “Ridiculous!” you'll say. There Is or four packages fit In. Don’t you think pretty well as much romance nnd super he's making a wife of me, mother, a little stition going about the world as hereto before he’s entitled to?” fore ; but our nineteenth century training “(>o away, you foolish children. Yon teaches us. above all things, not to lay can quarrel and make up all the way to ourselves open to ridicule. We may In the station.” wardly admit such things; we don't ac The refractory portmanteau was soon knowledge them. reduced to subjection under Maude's (To be continued.) clever auspices, and thsn the two cousins wa'ked across the fields to the station. C o y o te s In T a c o m a . "Your father's given you to me,-Maude, The hundreds of the coyotps living as soon as I can get together an income on the prarles south and southw est of that we can live upon.” She might be coquettish before her Tacoma are living on the fat of th e mother, but she was meek enough to her earth since the snow began in contra lover when they were alone together. distinction to the lean fare of o th er “I hope I shall be a good wife to you, wild folk, a New York Herald dispatch Gren. Y'ou know I’m not extravagant, from th a t city says. Quail, oriental however I may laugh about It.” pheasants, the ordinary wild pheasant "No. m.v darling, I know you better; and if we have to begin with a little, I and birds generally, owing to th eir hope you’ll be able to spend lots of money sta rrin g condition, are falling an easy prey to the sm aller carnivori. before long.” “I never had any money to spend,” said Rabbits also are much easier caught the girl, gravely. “ I’ve often had to want since the coming of the deep snow a five-pound note, both for myself and than coyotes have found them since my poor people in the village.” 1893. “And will have again, pet. Wanting Owing to the protection given them, money is the normal condition of ninety- nine hundredth» of civilized humanity. game birds have increased rem arkably But you must turn back now, you have during the last eight or ten years up come far enough. Good-by. and God bless to the commencement of the present yon,” said Rose, as he clasped her in storm. Large numbers of quail have his arms. "Mine now, forever, isn’t It?” been found starved and frozen during “Y’es, Gren. Y'ours or no one’s,” she the last few days and hunters say th a t replied, as she lifted her lips shyly to his. the coyotes a re adepts In hunting down “Please write.” “Every day. dearest. G o o d - b y a n d , coveys and catching them In the snow. M arshal D anforth of Fern Hill with one more kiss. Grenville Rose tore caught in a tra p one of the largest coy himself away. How he traveled up to town in the ote» ever seen here several days ago. same carriage with Pearman we have al It measured five feet three Inches from ready seen. On his arrival at Waterloo tip to tip. and had an unusually fine Station he jumped into a cab. and pro coat of fu r and was f a t ceeded at once to the Temple. On enter ing his rooms the first thing that caught I 'B c l e H a n k '» I d e a . his eye was the figure of Silky D&lHson. It was Uncle H ank's first ride in a who. comfortably ensconced in the easiest chair in the room, was making, apparent parlor car. The porter came around ly. some abstruse calculations on a piece ;ind brushed him down w ith a whisk of paper, and referring frequently for broom. "How much, bub?” draw led Uncle guidance to a gaily bound betting book. “All right, old fellow.” he said. In re Hank, fum bling around in hi* pocket turn to Grenville’» greeting. “Wanted for a nickel. to have a talk to yon; knew yon would "Quarter will do. sab.” responded the come up by that train : told the old p*rty porter, with open palm. to get food for two *t half-past seven— "Quarter will do? Say, do I get the wants just ten minutes. Go and wash your binds, while I finish what I am whisk broom, too. for th a t? ” •bout.” S u r e E n n n ffh . After the “bit of fish and i'eefsteak” Kind Lady—W hat a re thoae bell» that constitute an ordinary bachelor din ner in chambers, the two began to srnoks. ringing for? Johnnie Jum p— Because Somebody'» “ Now.” said Dallison. ” ’shall be back W Juicer’ of course meant, as we agreed pulling 'em!