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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1916)
WORLD’S DOINGS Of CURRtNT WEEK Brief Resume of General News from All Around the Earth. UNIVERSAL HAPPENINGS IN A NUTSHEU Live News Items of All Nations and Pacific Northwest Condensed for Our Busy Readers. BIG LAX PROPOSED ON EXPAfRIAIES; IMMIGRATION BILL LIMITS JAPANESE PORTLAND RECTOR NEWS ITEMS CALLS EOR DEFENSE About Oregon Of General Interest Washington, D. C.— A meaaure pro posing a high graduated tax on the in comes o f American expatriates, de rived from their American properties, w ill be introduced in the aenate by Senator Kenyon o f Iowa. The Kenyon bill would place an an nual tax of practically 30 per cent on the incomes of the wealthier expatri ates. Also it would make dowera g iv en to American girls who marry titled foreigners a source o f considerable rev enue to the United States government, j W ith the steady augmentation of American fortune« aboard a« a result j o f the expatriation o f thousands of Mother Who Would Keep Her rich Americans, chiefly heiresses, the movement iri favor o f imposing heavy From Enlisting Declared to taxes on incomes thus derived from “ Disgrace to Nation.” the United States haa gained much strength in congress. Dr. Morrison, Episcopalian, Has No Use for Pacificist CHRIST’S NON-RESISTANCE IS DENIED Drastic restrictions would be thrown Oregon Hopgrowera association re about the immigration o f Janpanese in port Belling 3000 bale« of bopa. to the United State« and both Hindus A new Oregon Republican club ia and Chinese virtually would be barred organized in Portland with 600 mem- from the country by a provision that has been written into the immigration bera. bill to be reported to the houBe this A total o f eleven livea were loat week by the immigration committee. during recent aevere atorma in South As agreed on tentatively by the com ern California. mittee, the exclusion section o f the includes a paragraph barring Ilerlin announce« that auperior Rus- bill aian force« were repulaed in hand-to- "H indu s and all persons o f the Mon hand lighting in the Bessarabian fron golian o r yellow rare and the Malay or brown race.” tier trencbea. Sons Be Road Bonds Urged to Build Permanent Highways Salem— A state bond issue fo r mak ing permanent road improvements and an increased tax levy to provide for ' maintaining Btate highways and for redemption o f the torsi issue, are rec ommended by E. 1. Cantine, chief dep uty engineer, in h il annual report sub mitted to the State Highway commis sion. Conatruction of a coastal beach highway from Astoria to Crescent City ia also urged. When the locating parties have com pleted their work in Douglas, Wasco and Sherman counties. Engineer Can- tine announces that the Columbia Highway w ill be located from Seaside, in Clatsop county, as far as Wasco, in Sherman county, and the Pacific H igh way w ill have been surveyed from Portland to the California line, with the exception of a section in Josephine county. " I t is believed that the date is rap idly approaching when the state w ill have to undertake the maintenance of the main trunk highway, such aa the Columbia and Pacific h ighw ays," writes Mr. Cantine. A t the present tim e the State Highway commission doea not hold itself responsible for the upkeep of roads constructed from Btate funds, leaving this duty to county officials. The report urges upon the commis sion the advisabitliy o f working for enactment of legislation authorizing it to lay out highways and procure rights o f way for them, and empowering the commission to arrange with the coun ties for the maintenance o f such state iaid-out roads until a state main tenance program is adopted. Expenditure of the highway depart ment from January 1 to December 1, 1916, totaled $223,128.81, according to the report. O f this amount. $58,443.48 was expended on the Columbia High way in Columbia county, and $16,- 702.97 on the Rainier H ill section of the highway. The sum o f $34,106.70 was expended on the Columbia High way in Clatsop county. The M itchell's Point construction o f the Columbia H ighway cost $41,896.36. The Anger of shame was pointed from the pupit o f the Portland T rin ity Episcopal church Sunday morning at the mother whose love fo r her son rises above that fo r her nation Ths mothers and "p e a c e at any p ric e " advocates were denounced as a "d isgrace to the nation ," and an-ap- peal, based on the teachings o f Christ, for proper national armaments, was sent forth by Dr. A. A. Morrison, rec tor of that church, in what was con sidered perhaps the strongest sermon in defense o f preparedness ever d eliv ered from any pulpit in Portland. A fte r the sermon members o f the congregation rushed forward to con gratulate the pastor. ‘ ‘ I cannot understand these individ uals who cry even from the pulpits ‘ peace at any price,’ ’ ’ he told them. " I wonder what they would do, if some one in the night should by force steal away their w ife and daughter. Would they run a fter them with their theory o f love? O f course n o t." The teaching o f Christ, he declared in answer to those peace advocates who base their theories on the Bible, is not against preparedness. And he cited Christ's scourging of the money changers in the temple, his chastise ment of the Scribes and Pharisees and bis advice to sacriflee one's life for a friend. " A misapprehension exists,” he de clared, “ over the phrase called ‘ Christian teaching.' There are those advocating peace under any and all circumstances who assert that Jesus taught a doctrine o f non-resistance; a doctrine which would utterly abrogate Railroad Work Moves For the use o f force in education or as a ward in Harney County defense against evil-doers. Many per sons believe Christ advocated this, but O ntario— In spite o f the severe I say he did no such th ing.” weather, work continues on the O.-W. R. & N. extension west from R iver side, Or., to points in Harney county. N early all the grading has been com pleted as far as Oakley and the rock cuts and bridges are now progressing Beattie — T w o cars o f westbound rapidly. Mail service to Riverside has Great Northern Cascade Lim ited train been begun, the mail run on the were swept from the track by an aval thrice-a-week train being from On anche near Corea station Saturday tario to Riverside. Between Bend and Burns the Stra- morning, and were hurled 80 feet down the mountain side, causing death horn surveying party is in the field, to four passengers, and four missing. running the newly-projected line be H. N. Fifteen passengers were injured, none tween those interior points. seriously except Earl Smith, o f Spo Bogue, chief engineer for the Stra- horn party, was in Burns last week kane, a small boy. The train was standing on the track and hired a saddle horse for the pur near Corea, on the west slope o f the pose of a closer investigation o f the Leaving the horse, Cascade mountains, when the aval Sage Hen pass. anche struck it near the middle, a day he proceeded by auto to Bend, so it is coach and the diner going over the not known whether this pass w ill be bank, while a sleeper behind them was used by the new line, but probabilities toppled over on its side, where it hung are that it will. Everything indicates that within a in its |>erilous position over the bank, few months work w ill actually be un but was not taken down. The dining car stopped when about der way to connect Burns finally with half way down the slope and caught the outer world, and to do away with "In te r io r ” Oregon forever. Are, being destroyed there. ^Tfloosmn WOMAN WfSwS Author of T3heAMEUR QJAGvSMAN. RAFFLES. Etc. lUUSTRATlO Ng.^ _ . biscuit In the box. though he had be gun by vowing that he bad lunched In Cazalet, on tha ateamer Kalsar Frit«, town, and stuck to the fable still. homeward bound from Australia. criae Old Martha had known him all his out In hia alaep that Henry Craven, who ten years before had ruined his father life, but best at the period when he and himself. la dead and find« that H il used to come to nursery tea at Little- ton Toye. who «hares tha stateroom with him. knows Craven and also Blanch# ford. She declared she would have Mmnelr a former neighbor and play mate. when the dally papers come known him anywhere as he was, but aboard at Southampton Toye reads that she simply hadn't recognised him In Craven haa been murdered and calls that photograph with his beard. Cam let'« dream second sight. He thinks of doing a little amateur detective work "I can aee where It's been," said on the case himself In the train to town Martha, looking him In tha lower tem they discuss the murder, which wee com mitted at Casalet’e old home. Toye hears perate zone. “ But I'm so glad you've from Casalet that Hcruton, who had been Caz&Jet’e friend and the scapegoat for had It off, Mr cazalet.” Craven s dishonesty, haa bean release'! "There you are, Blanchle!” crowed from prison. Casalet goes down the Cazalet. "You said she'd be disappoint river and meets Blanche. ed. but Martha s got better taste.” C H A PTE R IV— Continued. "It Isn't that, sir," said Martha ear nestly. “ I t ’s because the dreadful “ I wonder who can have done i t ! ” man who was seen running out of the “ So do the police, and they don’t drive, at your old home, he had a look much like finding ou t!" beard! It's In all the notices about "It must have been (or his watch him, and that s what's put me against and money, don't you think? And yet them, and makes me glad you'vs had they say he had so many enem ies!” yours off." Cazalet kept silence; but she thought Blanche turned to him with too ready he winced. “ Of course it must have a smile; but then she was really not been the man who ran out of the I such a great age as she pretended, and drive,'' she concluded hastily. “ Where she had n eter been In better spirits In were you when it happened, Sweep?” her life. Somewhat hoarsely he was recall “ You hear. Sweep! I call It rather Ing the Mediterranean movements of lucky for you that you were— ” the Kaiser Fritz, when at the firxt But just then she saw bis face, and mention of the vessel's name be was remembered the things that had been firmly heckled. said about Henry Craven by the Casa “ Sweep, you don’t mean to say you let« friends, even ten years «go, when came by a German steamer?” she really had been a girl. "I do. It was the first going, and why should I waste a week? Besides, C H ATTE R V. you can generally get a cabin to your self on the German line " An Untimely Visitor. “ So that's why you rs here before She really was one still, for In these the end of the month,” said Blanche. days It Is an elastic term, and In “ W ell, I call it most unpatriotic; but Blanche's case there was no apparent the cabin to yourself was certainly reason why It should ever cease to some excuse.” apply, or to be applied by every decent "That reminds m e!” he exclaimed tongue except her own. “ I hadn't It to myself all the way; Much the best tennis-player among there was another fellow In with me the ladies of the neighborhood, she from Genoa; and the last night on drove an almost unbecomingly long board It came out that he knew y ou !” ball at golf, and never looked better "W ho can It have been?” than when paddling her old canoe, or "Toye, his name was. Hilton Toye.” punting In the old punt A ” d yet, this "An American man! Oh, but I wonderful September afternoon, she know him very well," said Blanche In did somehow look even better than at a tone both strained and cordial. "H e's great fun. Mr. Toye, with hia delight ful Americanisms, and ths perfectly delightful way he says them !” Cazalet puckered like the primitive man he was, when taken at all by sur prise; and that anybody, much less Blanche, should think Toye, of all peo ple, either "delightful" or "great fun" was certainly a surprise to him, if It was nothing else. Of course it was nothing else, to hia immediate knowl edge; still, he was rather ready to think that Blanche »a a blushing, but forgot, if Indeed he had been In a fit i state to see It at the time, that she ! had paid himself the same high com- { ptiment across the gate On the whole, it may be said that Cazalet was ruf fled without feeling seriously disturbed as to the essential Issue which alone leaped to his mind. "W here did you meet the fellow ?” he Inquired, with the sultaDle admix ture of confidence and amusement. “ In the first Instance, at Engelberg.” "Engelberg! W here’s that?” "Only one o f those place« In Swlt zerland where everybody goes now- j «days for wbat they call winter J "W here Did You Meet the Fellow?” He Inquired. sport«.” SYNOPSIS. side. But hia knife had reminded him of hia plug tobaooo And hia plug tobacco took him aa straight back to tha bush as though tha unsound floor bad changed under their feet Into a magic carpet "You simply hare It put down to tha man's account in the station books. Nobody keeps ready money up at the bush, not even the price of a plug like this; but the chap I ’m telling you about (I can see him now, with his great red heard and freckled fists) ha swore I was charging him for half a pound mors than he’d ever bad We fought for twenty minutes behind the wood-heap; then he gava me bast, but I had to turn In till I could see again.” "You don't mean that he— " Blanche bad looked rather disgust ed th « moment before; now ah* waa all truculent suspense and Indigna tion. "Beat m e?" ha cried. "Good Lord, no; but there waa non* too much In It.” Fires died down In her hazel eyes, lay lambent as soft moonlight, flick ered Into laughter before he had seen the fire. "I'm afraid you're a very dangerous person," said Blanche “ You've got to be,” he assured her; "It's the only way. Don't take a word from anybody, unless you mean him to wipe his boots on you. I soon found that out. I ’d have given something to have learned the noble art before 1 went out. Did I ever tell you how It was I first came across old Venue P o tte r He had told her at great length, to the exclusion of about every other topic. In the second of the annual let ters; and throughout the series the In evitable name of Venus Potts had sel dom cropped up without some allusion to that Homeric encounter. But It was well worth while having It all over again with the Intricate and picaresque embroidery of a tongue far mightier than the pen hitherto employed upon the Incident. Poor Blanche had almost to hold her nose over the primary cause of battle; but the dialogue waa delightful, and Cazalet himself made a most gallant and engaging figure as he sat on the sill and reeled It out. Twenty minutes later, and old Venus Potts was still on the magtc tapis, though Cazalet had dropped hia boast ing for a curiously humble, eager and yet Ineffectual vein. "Old Venus P o t t »!" he kept ejacu The Greek king ia bitter toward the lating. “ You couldn’t help liking him. entente powera for attempting to force hia country into the war. He declare« And he'd like you, my w ord !” Portland, Ore.— “ For You a Rose in "Is his wife nice?” Blanche wanted the neutrality of hia country waa vio Portland G row s" is the slogan that to know; but she was looking so In lated like that o f Belgium. will advertise the 1916 Rose festival. tently out her window, at the opposite The house committee favorably re The author is Bertha Slater Smith, end of the bow to Cazalet's, that a port« the Spaniah-American war pen whose father, James H. Slater came to man of the wider world might have sion bill which grant«, if passed, $12 Oregon in 1863, and was at one tim e thought of something el»e to talk per month to every widow of a soldier the state's representative in the Uni about. either a volunteer or a regular. Out her window she looked past a Seattle millionaires whose resi willow that had been part of the old dence« were raided by the sheriff for life, In the direction of an equally violation« o f the Prohibition law, will typical silhouette of patient anglers turn against him by attacking hi« anchored in a punt; they had not legal atatua a« regards searching pri raised a rod between them during all vate reaidencea. this time that Blanche had been out In Australia; but as a matter of fact sh* General Luis Herrera, in supreme never saw them, since, vastly to tha command of the Carranza force« at Chihuahua City, Mexico, late Friday credit of Cazalet's descriptive power«, night (latly denied the truth of the re she was out In Australia still. port of the rapture of General V illa at "N elly Potts?” he said "Oh. a Jolly the San Geronimo ranch. good sort; you'd be awfifl pals.” “ Should we?” said Blanche, Just An attack by the Britiah with the smiling at her invisible anglers. use o f «moke bomba on the German positions north o f Frelinghein, in ” 1 know you would." he assured her Northern France, ia announced in an with Immense conviction "O f course official statement by the German army she can't do the things you do; but headquarter«. It ia declared the at ■he can ride, my word! So she ought tack was beaten off with heavy Iona to to, when she's lived there all her life. the British. The rooms aren't much, but the veran das are what count most; they’re bat The Mothers’ Council, o f Dallas, ted States senate. Judge Woodson T. ter than any rooms." Tex., voted to submit bid« for the bar She was atlll out there, cultivating p rivilege« of the State Fair o f Texas. Slater, form erly on the Supreme bench in Oregon, i« her brother. N elly Potte on a very deep veranda, H alf a million persona visit the fair Mrs. Smith is the mother o f four though her straw hat and straw hair annually and the saloon man who g et« children two girls four years o f age remained in contradictory evidence the liquor selling right pay« from The scene o f the accident is but a and flne looking twins. Mrs. Smith Klamath Ships Livestock. $3000 to $6000. The Mothers’ Council against a very dirty window on th* few miles east o f the scene o f a sim did not send her slogan to the festival Klamath Falla— One o f the largest w ill raise a fund to buy the saloon Middlesex bank of the Thames. It ilar disaster o f February 28, 1910, headquarters until Saturday morning, right and publicly burn the contract, when two Great Northern trains were shipments o f livestock from Klamath was a shame o f the September sun January 16, the last day o f the con «truck by snowslidea and nearly all the i f their plana succeed. to show the dirt as It was doing; not county this year le ft on the Livestock test. She is a native daughter and She was not even smiling at his ar 1 persons on the trains perished. only was there a great steady pool of either or anr of those congenial pur- Special this week. This comprised 25 was born in La Grande. Font peace board is reported near rogant Ignorance; she was merely ex auits. and that long before they sunshine on the unspeakable floor, but carloads for C alifornia and Portland Mrs. Smith received a check for $26 complete disruption. plaining one geographical point and reached the river; In the empty house, a doddering reflection from the river markets. The biggest shipment was from the festival board. It was pre another of general Information. A A 60 per cent dividend ia declared which had known her as baby, child on the disreputable celling. Cazalet o f lambs sent to San Francisco by O. sented by O. C. Bortzmeyer, secretary close observer might have thought by the Standard O il company of Cali and grown-up girl, to the companion looked rather desperately from one to T. McKendree, o f this city. There and S. C. Bratton, chairman o f the her almost anxious not to Identify her fornia. of some part of all three stages, she the other, and both the calm pool and were over 2000 head, filling 20 cars. publicity committee. Mrs. Smith was self too closely with a popular craze. looked a more lustrous and a lovelier the rough were broken by shadows, El Paso, T e x .— Tedeore Prieto, who Tw o cars o f cattle and one car o f hogs Ixtrd Derby o f England declares photographed aB she mailed a letter to "1 dare say you mentioned It,” said Blanche than he remembered even o f one more Impressionistic than the the British army ia sufficient to win President Wilson, in the huge mail box says he is a major in the V illa army, were shipped by Fred Stukel to Sacra Cazalet, but rather as though he was old. other, of a straw hat over a stack of in Portland, n feature o f letter writing appeared Monday and declared that he mento. Charles Horton consigned two the war. wondering why she had not. But she waa not really lovely In the straw hair, that had not gone out to week, inviting the nation's chief exe had been sent in disguise to the border cars o f cattle to the Union Stockyards Floods in Southern California are "I dare say 1 didn’t! Everything least; that also must be put beyond Australia— yet. cutive to visit Portland June 7, 8 and by Gen. V illa to nay I hat Villa had at Portland. continuing to do considerable damage won’t go into an annual letter. It was the pale o f misconception And of course Just then a step Her hair 9, and participate in the flesta, the nohting to do with the massacre o f 18 to property. the winter before last— I went out was beautiful, and perhaps her skin, sounded outside somewhere on some Klamath Indians Logging. national dedication o f the great Co foreigners at Santa Ysabel January and. In some lights, her eyes; the rest gravel. Confound those caretakers! 10. Klamath Falla— L oggin g operations with Betty and her husband.” Restoration o f the Manchu dynasty, lumbia river highway. "And after that he took a place was not. It was yellow hair, not gold What were they doing, prowling “ V illa did not know o f the tragedy on the Klamath Indian reservation for More than 300 cities and towns in which ruled China before the establish down here?” en. and Cazalet would have given all about? Prieto, ment o f the republic, has been pro Washington and Oregon were repre for days a fte rw a rd ," said the winter are well under way. accord "Yes. Then I met him on the river he had about him to see It dow n again ‘T say. Blanchle!" he blurted ou t "I claimed by the leaders o f an uprising sented in the slogan contest by resi " l i e instructed me to say that he will ing to Supervisor o f Reservation For in Eastern Mongolia. A brigade of dents of Idaho, Montana, British Co execute the men responsible, even if ests J. M. Bedford, under whose direc the following summer, and found he'd as In the oldest of old days; but there do believe you d like It out there, a I believe Chinese troops is marching on lluihua- lumbia. California and North Dakota, they prove to be his own men, i f they tion the work is being done. The gov got rooms In one of the Nell Gwynne was more gold In her skin, for so the sportswoman like you! Cottages. It you call that a place." sun had treated It; and there was you'd take to It like a duck to water.” from former Oregon residents. are caught.” chen to attack the Mongolians. ernment camp is on Wood river, north (TO BE CO NTINU ED .) even hint or glint (In certain lights, I see." of Klamath agency. About 1,000,000 Montenegro makes complete sur Steam er Founders at Sea. Aged Physician Suicide. But there was no more to see; there be It repeated) of gold mingling with fe et of tim ber already haa been decked render to Austria who will have full But In "Pope's Size.” H alifax, N. S.- The British freight ready for hauling to Wood river. It never had been much, but now the pure hazel o f her eyes Seattle, Wash. — Heart-broken over supervision of that country. the dusty shadows of the empty bouse, A turlous Item in the trade slang of the recent death of his w ife, who had steamer Pollentia, which haa been re w ill be driven down Wood river and Blanche was standing up and gazing A Polander was refused his natural towed across Upper Klamath lake for out of the balcony into the belt of moving like a sunbeam across Its bars hosiers Is the term "pope's alia," ap ization papers when he declared he been his inseparable companion during ported in distress about 700 miles off use by the Klamath Manufacturing singing sunshine between the opposite boards, standing out against the discol plied to vests. They classify the scale Cape Race, foundered Monday, accord their 26 years of happy life together, would not take up arms in defense of side o f the road and the Invlitble river ored walls In the place of remembered of chest measurements for tbesa as: Dr. J. M. Morgan, pioneer resident of ing to a wireless message received company, a large box factory. the I ' mted State« pictures not to be compared with her. Small men's. S2 Inches; slender men's. acres away. this state, and, in former years, a here. A ll on board were rescued. An "W h y shouldn't ws go down to Lit- It was there that she was all golden 34 Inches; men's. 36 inches; pope s. 33 Katherine K elly, aged 10, and Hundreds o f Sheep Perish. well-known Seattle physician, ended earlier radiogram said that the Italian Inches; out site, 42 Inches Gladys Kdgerly, aged 9, o f Seattle, tleford and get out the boat If you're and atlll girl. his life in his home at California Place steamer Giuseppe Verdi and two other Roseburg — More than 1,500 sheep were probably fatally Injured when really going to make an afternoon of ! They poked their nose« Into, and The origin of this term, which has steamers were standing by the Pollen- by flring a shotgun through his heart. have perished in IVtuglas county dur they had a laugh In every corner and been current for nearly a century, waa they were thrown from their sled after Nearly every dav and night since the , tia, waiting for the seas to moderate. ing the last week as a result o f the It?” she said. “ But you simply must j coasting down a steep hill and crashed so out upon the leafy lawn, shelving discussed some years ago In Notes death o f Mrs. Morgan, December 6, The Pollentia is understood to have cold rains and snow, according to see Martha first; and while she s mak into a concrete wall. tng heraelf fit to be eeen. you must abruptly to the river. I .ast of all there and Queries, when it was stated on the physician, who was 89 years old, been in the service o f the British ad stockmen. Berkley Brothers, who take something for the good o f the was the summer schoolroom over the good authority that It bad no connec The Giuseppe Verdi left operate a large ranch on the North The allies have landed troops 4 8 j had prayed for God to still his heart miralty. house. I'll bring It to you on a lordly boat house, quite apart from the house tion with the successors of SL Peter. New York January 13 for Genoa. miles west o f Athens and it la asserted and place his body beside his wife. Umpqua river, report the loaa o f 700 Itself; scene of such safe yet reckless tm y.” It appears that ths head of an old that it is the intention o f the entente sheep, while E. G. Young & C o ., of She brought him siphon, stoppered revels. In Its very aura late Victorian! firm of West end hosiers. Messrs. Yuma Will Be Rebuilt. Painting Brings S I4 0 .0 0 0 . powers to force Greece into the war. Oakland, lost 600. Many other smaller bottle, a silver biacult-box of ancient It lay hidden In Ivy at the end of a Pope A Plante, ordered this size to ba Yuma, Ariz. — With the waters of Nets York — Hans M emling's "The| losses are reported from many sections memories, and left him alone with now neglected path; the bow-win mad* specially for bis own personal Arrest o f 67 members o f a secret o f the county. Feed is scarce here at the Colorado receding, work o f rescu Archer,” declared to have been the them some little time, for the young dows overlooking the river were use. and the manufacturer called It band in Southeast Missouri, is believed the preeent time, and even heavier mistress, like her old retainer In an framed In try, like three matted, whis after him for want o f a better nam«.-* to have frustrated a plot to burn sev- j ing Yuma valley flood sufferers was last work o f the great Flemish painter losses are anticipated by stockmen i f i carried forward Monday by local au j le ft in the art markets o f the world. | eral towns and kill many leading citi- other minute, was simply dying to kered. dirty, happy facet, one, with London Chronicle. . , the present stormy weather continue*. has been bought for $140,000 by a thorities, aided by officials of the sens make herself more presentable Yet its lower sash propped open by a Southern Pacific railroad from Tucson, Fifth Avenue jeweler. ' 'The Archer’ ’ when she had done so and came back broken plant pot. might have been Ita Kind. • One hundred and twenty-five post A riz., who arrived here with equip | is a portrait o f a young man painted ! Heavy Tim ber Felled by Storm . like snow. In a shirt and skirt just grinning a toothless welcome to two "That fellow baa wbat I call p ar» packages containing sheet rubber, ment to supply the city temporarily | on a wooden panel 10 by 12 inches. M olall*— One o f the severest storma home from the laundry, she saw that once leading spirits of the place. doxical Impudence." weighing an aggregate of 1376 pounds, with water, gas and electricity. It ; Only the head and part o f the cheat known in this section for year« has Casalet whittled a twig and wedged "How do you mean?” consigned to Gothenburg, are taken was estimated that the damage from »re shown. The portrait, considered done heavy damage to standing timber. he did not see the difference His de “ He Is always to the front wtth back from the Danish liner Frederick V I II the flood would amount to more than one of M em ling's finest, was painted A tract known aa the Schuated claim, vouring eyes shone neither more nor that sash up altogether, then he sat lees, but be had also devoured every himself on the alii, bis long legs in talk.” at Kirkwall. 91,000,000. Men are engaged in re in 1473, when the artist was at the which cruised 12,000,000 feet, is re pairing the levee which released the height o f his power. It was acquired ported by Fred Schafer, a sawmill man Senator Jones, of Washington, intro water that inundated this town Sunday. in 1912 by Paris art dealers. who waa hunting cougars in that vicin duces a bill authorizing a survey of CARING FOR THE OIL STOVE They come all stretched on perforated stova. partlcularly th « drippan. should ity. to have lost at leaat 5,000.000 feet Baker's bay, near the mouth o f the metal cylinders. ha wtped off «vary day wlth a soft W ages 27 Par Cent Higher, Grand Duchess to Wsd. o f timber, which was blown down. In Simple Matter If One Wil) Remember Columbia, with a view to its improve Glass reservoirs and glass indicator place of cheeee cloth kept far it e pur- many place« the tree« are piled 20 feet N ew York One thousand and three Zurich, Via Paris — The Neue Zü ment. a Few Matter* That A re tubes tell the height of the oil ta Ike pose O f course care must he used not richer Zeitung'a Luxemburg corre hundred repreeentative manufacturers high. Important. supply tank. Never let tbs oU run to allow food to boti orar on tha cook- A Chinaman, and common laborer, spondent announces that the marriage in New York state, employing approx in the United States for 26 years haa out. This Is especially neceaaary tn Ing surfac* or Into tha burriera. Thts Pow er Plent Destroyed. of Grand Ihicheaa Marie of Luxemburg imately 600.000 persons, are paying an The rare of the oil stove, the mod the wick stove* The wtcklaaa atovae cause* trouMe evan wlth a gas stava, been ordered deported He was L a Grande W h e n fire Wedneeday probably w ill take place shortly. Court average o f 27 per rent more in wages ern bine fam e variety. Is vary simple require to ba set perfectly level tn and tha burri e rs of an oli stova ara brought to this to this country when 7 , burned the Mill Creek power plant, than a year ago, according to a report officials o f Luxemburg favor an Aus In the wlrklees type, the asbestos order to hare an even height o f flame mora work ta clean thaa tha v a years old. trian archduke. The ducheea, for po made public here by the bureau o f | which assists in generating electricity ktndlers should be renewed every ets on each burner Cleaning up about b a ia r . A Maastricht newspaper reports that litical reasons, cannot marry h German statistics and information o f the State for the Eastern Oregon Light A Pow weeks ae a general rule W lckt In the stoves Is made muck easier If the About 17 per er company, the city became hard the gunflre of the French haa destroyed Prince or any o f the Bourbon Princes Industrial commission. the ttovee will last a season A new stove ta equipped with one of the new T im * to Lack Out. workers are employed pressed for power juice. A ll big con two Zeppelins north o f Khiema. The and the Princes of the smaller neutral cent more wtek should be put In about every ets I enameled drip ytns. which com* with It’s tints is took out whua n hast aircraft are said to have fallen within stations either are too young or are now than last year, the s tatistics; sumer* were promptly ehut off until mooiba If used all the year round. [ one type of atova The surface o f t h * , anas WU1 not bear loosing M l« 'show. Protest anU the German lines. temporary repair« can be made. Promiaea that the English conserip- Representative Wilson, o f Illinois, tion meaaure w ill be enforced without has introduced a bill requiring the aeverity, bring« loud applauae in the Oregon & California Railroad com houae o f common). pany, on demand o f settlers, to sell the W ar i«auea cauae hot debate in the unsold portion o f its grant in quarter- aenate, Hoke Smith leading in a «evere section tracts at $2.60 an acre, g ivin g arraignment o f England's attitude preference right o f purchase to Aral appplicants and to applicants who toward neutral ahipping. have been erroneously located and who A British aubmarine haa gone aahore heretofore have sought to buy not off Holland, according to an announce more than 160 acres. ment made by the official preaa bureau. The bill as introduced was prepared There waa no loaa of life. by the National Information Bureau Rooaevelt want« immediate action and is intended to protect the interests in conatruction o f half a dozen " f o r o f thousands o f applicants who have midable lighting ahipa," adeqate army tendered the purchase price to the rail road company, but have been unable to and univeraal m ilitary aervice. acquire title because o f the railroad’s A wealthy Spokane realty dealer refusal to sell. waa found guilty o f aelling intoxicant« in violation o f the liquor law and wa« fined |260 and ten daya In jail. Mother of four Children Wins 1916 Rose festival Slogan Contest Avdldnche of Snow and Earth Hits Great Northern Train; 8 Dead Villa Sends Messenger Lo Deny Impliidlion in Killing of Americans