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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1917)
T Congress Assembled.” It bore the ! name In print of John Hancock, presi dent of the congress, and was ettested by Secretary Charles Thomson, but Ked Cross Head Office Swamped With bore no other names. Pledges A Million An Hour Is On July 19 It was resolved In con gress: Kecord at Wind-up o f Day. Sheriff Gage's raid on the steam “That the declaration passed on the schooner Hardy, Saturday night at 4th be fairly engrossed on parch Washington, D. C.— Tabulations at 1 Marshfield, netted 439 bottles of ment. with the tltl« and stile (style) Red Cross headquarters at 1:30 o'clock j whisky, 56 o f beer and five gallons of of T h e Unanimous Declaration of the Brief Resume Most Important Tuesday morning showed 1100,313,000 1 Vote for Measure in House Is wine. Thirteen United States of America.’ ¡in reported pledges, o f which $35,993,- < and that the same, when engrossed, The Johnson Moores Logging com Nearly Unanimous. Daily News Items. be signed by every member of Con pany of Astoria, has sold its timber i)00 was from New York City and $64.- gress." holdings and logging machinery on the 320,000 from the remainder o f the j It could not have been headed “ Unan Cartwright tract near Seaside to Olson country. Later reports are expected | Imous” on July 4, for the New York Bros. The latter will log the timber to swell the total at least $5,000,000, delegation had not then been author for the Prouty mill. 1 campaign managers say. ized to agree to It, and It was not un One of the largest lamb deals in the til July 15 that It was announced In Oversubscriptions of the Ked Cross j Baker vicinity was closed this week the Continental Congress that the as j hundred million dollar mercy fund was 1 when R. B. Caswell, o f Kidwell A Cas Event« o f Noted People, Govern ents assured Monday night, when the eight- I No Foodstuff May Be Used in Man sembly of New York had approved the well, o f Portland, contracted for more declaration and thus made It unanl j day campaign closed with final rallies , farture o f Alcoholic Drink Dur and Pacific Northwest and Other than 30,000 lambs at a total price of moos. i in hundreds of American cities. more than $300,000. ing War Now in Senate. Thing* Worth Knowing. On August 2, 1776, the Declaration Pledges were pouring in at the rate j of Independence, being engrossed and Governor Withycombe has reappoint J o f about a million an hour. compared, was signed by the members, ed W. D. Whitcomb and W. R. Mac Red Cross officials said they had no those who were not present on August kenzie, both of Portland, as members ^ doubt that the total will show that Waahington, D. C.— The administra o f the State board ' o f accountancy for Since the beginning of the war 56,- American generosity has responded in 2 affixing their signatures at later 248 men have enlisted in the navy. The the same spirit as for the Liberty tion food control bill, giving the Presi terms of four years, their former dates, all but one signing before Janu total now is 120,923. Loan with millions more than asked. N VIEW of the fact that the 48 ar.v 18, 1777 dent broad authority to control the dis terms expiring June 3. All through the week additions will tribution of food, feed and fuel for states of the Union, together with Signing the Birth Certificate. W. J. Hanna has been appointed Precy Cupper, assistant state engi Porto Rico, Hawaii and Alaska, food controller for Canada, it was an be made to the fund, for campaign war purposes and appropriating $162,- neer, probably will become assistant It has been ascertained that of the celebrate the Fourth of July as 56 signers more than one-fourth were nouneed in the house by Premier Bor- «-ommittees in a number o f cities gath- secretary o f the Desert Land board, to ered so much momentum that they in- 500,000 for its enforcement and ad- den. succeed J. L. McAllister, who resigned Independence day, It Is Interesting to not present, on July 4. 1776, and sev< n sisted on continuing the canvass be- ministration, was passed by the house retently to become connected with an lo,e kow *^*s nationwide holiday came nf t],,.rn—Thornton Williams, Rush, The 288,000 Boy Scouts of America ] j |ate Saturday night after far-reaching engineer’s corp at American lake. i 0 *,e celebrated, and what It should | Clymer, Smith, Taylor and Ross who solicited last week on behalf of I yond the fixed time. Ten million dollar, of .p a r e n t over- prohibition proviiion8 had written _ , ...... I dgnlfy to all Americans. the Liberty Loan turned in subscrip I subscriptions may be necessary, it was . The Eugene Woolen Mills have re- j uly 4 now , holiday commemo- were not members at that dntc. On the lions totaling $15,480,350, pledged by j said, to make the actual collections j ,n*° ceived an order for 25,000 yards o f j •atlng the birthday of the nation, for I other hand, seven members on that about 125,000 individuals. from the United , >n that day In 1776 the Continental date— George Clinton, John Alsop, U. It. equal .............. ,IK»), „wing to the pos- , The vote was 365 to 5, Represent- olive-drab cloth ,. | Livingston. Henry Wlsner, Thomas Under the new order requiring ap sibility of duplicate recording of some 1 stives McLemore, Glayden and Young, States government, government, according according to to an an Congress of the 13 colonies of recently by E. Vmerlca a(i ted fhe Dedaratlon Willing, Charles Humphreys and John plications for passports to be made at corporation Red Cross dividends at o f Texas, Democrats, and Meeker, announcement made Kopp, manager. The cloth is to be ,f Indept,ndence whlch proclalmed Rogers— had not the privilege of be least a week in advance o f their issue, their source and also in the locality Out from the esa when daylight it breaking lndependent state8, atv coming "signers," for the membership it is announced that pass|iorts will be where stockholders live. The next ] Missouri, and Ward, New York, Re supplied in quantities o f 3000 yards a j h„ m free Marshaled by salvos and beating of drums of all but one had ceased prior to required for travel to every place ex- I two or three weeks will lie devoted to publicans, voting in the negative. mont“ ' i solved from all allegiance to the Brlt- August 2. Fresh from her annual slumbers awaking cept Canada. gathering in the money promised in The prohibition provisions adopted A team o f horses was drowned and *h crown. The original of this “ birth Bringing her message. Columbia cornea The first official Issue of the declara would prohibit the use o f foodstuffs for two wagons lost when a ferry on the ertlflcate," written by hand on parch- Heinrich Jahn and Emile Bepolein, individual pledges. tion bearing the names of the signers Never again shall oppression bear down I Meanwhile Red Cross officials will members of the crew of a merchant the manufacture o f alcoholic bever North Santiam river, one mile north of ueut and now much worn and faded. was printed as a broadside In Balti Never submission to scepter and crown I ship now in the New Orleans port, I try to formulate plans for the most ages and would give the President au Shelburne, broke loose and floated two ; s preserved carefully In an alr-tlght more under the resolution of January miles downstream Friday. The ferry tnd lightproof case In the library of were arrested after Federal authorities j efficient expenditure of the millions, Boys of today—you. the men of tomorrow— large portions of which already are thority to take over for war purposes finally drifted against a bank. Three the department of state. Only fac 18, 1777, ordering that copies be sent had found six bombs and other ex Mischievous girls—you the mothers so be— to each of the united states. There sought by humanitarian interests in all liquor now on hand. They were teams and wagons were on the ferry similes are exhibited today, the orig- plosives at their lodging. are only four copies of this ls- Miss not the lesson of War’s blighting sorrow. France, Russia, Koumania and other put into the measure in the committee when the cable snapped. Inal being far too precious a document arc ” ," 71 ,uur 7 Guard well your country by land and by sea; Government pools of coal production European war-stricken countries, as ,ue nmv known *° exl" t’ one of wh,ch of the whole and when the bill came Oregon’s total registration under the to risk In the light and air. and distribution and o f rail and water well as here in America, Let no invader approach ere you know. is In the library of congress at Wash up in the house proper, the anti-prohi war census was slightly greater than Declaration of Independence. transportation were reported to con-1 ington. It Is authenticate«! In writing Bringing destruction and infinite woe A facsimile of the Declaration of In- by John Hancock as president of the gress by the Federal trade commission bition faction did not demand that the first announcements indicated. A final detailed summary of war census lependence Is on exhibition In the dl- Congress and attested by Secretary Maintain that freedom that Puritans soughs for; as the only means o f avoiding a disas PRESIDENT NOW IN CONTROL they be voted on again. Protect the land where the patriots bled; trous coal shortage next winter. The bill now goes to the senate. returns from the various counties, vision of history In the older building Thomson. completed for the entire state by Ad if the National museum at Washing Honor the flag that they eagerly fought for; The principle o f woman suffrage was Export Trade to Be Intelligently and Leaders hope to get the measure to jutant General White gave, Oregon a Not Signed on July 4. ton. where there are also preserved conference by July 1. Battle, if need be on fields stained blood red; Systematically Directed. adopted in the house of commons W ed-1 Contrary to popular opinion, there personal relics and mementos of sev Few important changes were made total registration o f 62,922. Keep independence on Liberty's sod— nesday night by the overwhelming ma fore. it seems that the declaration was Washington, D. C. — Control o f by the house outside the prohibition eral of the members of the second Con- Tariffs were filed this week by the Freedorn i s man’s greatest guerdon from God jority of 330 votes. Sir Frederick American exports, authorized in a not signed on July 4, the day It passed, The control powers o f the Portland Railway, Light & Power com Inental Congress who signed this great Banbury’s amendment against the pro clause of the espionage bill, was as- section. Harlow* R . Hoyt. but between August 2, 1776. and Janu- President were limited to articles spe pany in accordance with the order re resolution. posal was rejected by 3B5 to 66. sumed Tuesday by President Wilson cifically mentioned in the bill, instead The history of the origin and draft- | ary 18, 1777, after it had been engrossed cently issued covering rates of that | with the appointment o f an exports o f giving him blanket authority; volun and compart-d, and then only by 55 Contracts for 3,667,200 pairs o f sox \ company for commercial light and ng o f the declaration Is of conslder- were awarded by the Navy department council, comprising the secretaries of tary aid in control work was made sub power, which is effective July 1. The ible Interest. Iu the second Conti members, all of whom were ordered to Wednesday to 18 firms in different state, agriculture and commerce, and ject to the |>enal provision; all persons company also has accepted the order nental Congress, which wns meeting do so by the resolution passed July parts o f the country. The average | the food administrator. in the food administration except those covering residence lighting and domes in Philadelphia, Richard Henry Lee 19. 1776. The name of Thomas Mc An executive order creating the serving without compensation were price paid was approximately 18 cents )f Virginia, on June 7, 1776, Intro- Kean. which does not appear among tic heating. for cotton and 28 rents for woolen sox. council directs the department o f Com- p|aced under civil service; and the luced the following resolution, which the signers In the printed copy, was merce to administer all details o f oper- ' President ■»__ u ... ....... added later, possibly not until 1781. Ethel Bittner, the 15-year-old was seconded by John Adams: was required to make an an The weekly list of Britisu louses in r/.Lon. nual report on the operation o f the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Bitt "Resolved, That these United Colo making the 56 signers. torpedoed ships, which will be issues) A victorious conclusion of the war bill. ner, living near Pendleton, was ac nies are, and of right ought to be. But little hus ever been done to per- Saturday, will Rhow the highest to can come, said, the President, only by The amendment designed to cut off cidentally shot through the heel Satur free and Independent states; that they I petuate the memory of these 56 early tal o f many weeks, the number of sytematic direction o f American trade. manufacture of liquors was adopted day by her 11-year-old brother, Le- ire absolved from all allegiance to Americans, only a few of whom are ships sunk being comparable to the "T h e free play o f trade will not be 132 to 114 in committee. It was sub land, as he was loading a .22 rifle. the British crown, and that all politl- well known, hut it is Interesting to worst week since the ruthless U-boat arbitrarily interfered w ith ," he said. mitted by Representative Barkley of The sister stepped in range just as the -al connection between them and the know that the National Society of the campaign began. “ It will only be intelligently and sys Kentucky, Democrat, and would pro cartridge was exploded. She may be State of Great Britain Is, and ought Sous of the American Revolution, In Announcement was made by the tematically directed in the light o f full vide that no food, food material or permanently crippled. co-operation with the Society of De to be, totally dissolved. Hutchinson, Kan., police that they had information with regard to the needs feed could be used during the war for scendants of the Signers. Is locating Foreign Alliances Urged. That the nation is in war and that arrested Dick Carter, of Springfield, and market conditions throughout the the manufacture o f alcohol or alcoholic the graves of those patriots and pre the men o f Oregon are preparing for Mo., against whom a warrant charging world and the necessities o f our peo beverages except for governmental, “ That It is expedient forthwith to paring a memorial volume to include first degree murder has been issued in ple at home and our armies and the industrial, scientific, medicinal or sac the call to arms was reflected by the take the most effectual measures for a biography of each individual. attendance at the opening of the Uni forming foreign alliances. connection with the mysterious disap- i armies of our associates abroad. The erection of n memorial In ramental purposes. Tlie collections In the National mu versity o f Oregon Summer school. The Members o f the exports council will pearance and death o f Baby Lloyd “ That a plan of confederation be pre Washington to the signers o f the seum Include relics p«-rtaiulng to total registration the first day was pared and transmitted to the respec meet immediately to organize and to K. ct. of Independence is a FOUR MILLION TAKE BONDS 156, and four-fifths were women. The tive colonies for their approbation." the lives of nine of the signers. They Declaration A German industrial bureau has recommend to the President a series of are John Hancock. John Adams. proposition worthy of promotion and enrollment on the opening day of the proclamations which will put the law Consideration of this resolution was been established in Brussels to recruit into effective operation. postponed, and on June 11 Thomas Thomas Jefferson, Matthew Thornton, •xecutlon. The memory o f these men Ix>an Oversubscribed 52 Per O n t and school last year was 247. Belgian labor for German war indus •hould be preserved and their names The first proclamation will require Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Oliver Wolcott, Charles Carroll, Ben Most o f Buyers Small Ones. tries and Belgian women for farm A jury in the Lane County Circuit jamin Franklin, Elbridge Gerry and «hould be so displayed that all Aineri- the licensing of all coal and fuel ship work. The official announcement men returned a verdict Frnnklln. Robert Sherman, and R. R. Samuel Chase. •ans may read tht-m. The signers Washington, D. C .— Liberty loan court Monday ments, including bunkers, and its pur- tions the "v olu n tary" nature o f the against the Southern Pacific company Livingston were appolnt«*<l a commit were a select bixfy of patriots whose j |«>se is to give the government first a subscriptions totaled $3,035,226,850, tee to prepare a declaration to serve recruiting, but doeB not specify the for damages in the sum of $10,000 for service to the country nnd the world firm grasp on shipping. Damages of the Fourth. an over-subscription of nearly 52 per the heirs of William Framhein, who us a preamble to this independent reso conditions. "'as of a most distinguished kind, yet The second will provide a system of lution. This committee, known as was killed in tunnel No. 4, on the Coos The country’s shortage o f freight I licensing for every class o f exports to cent. few Americans of average education the Jefferson committee, submitted a The final tabulation was officially Bay line o f the Southern Pacific sys draft of the declaration on June 28. cars has l>een reduced atiout one-third , the European neutral countries and is know very much about them. It is gen- tem June 16, 1916. since the railroad war hoard took the designed to prevent supplies from announced Saturday night, showing rally the soldiers on whom the spot which wns laid on the table for later aituation in hand on May I, it was an- reaching Germany, light o f history shines. j that more than 4,000,000 persons A severe drop is being reported by consideration. On July 1 congress, nouneed from New York by the Amer Proclamations to follow will name all Lower Valley orchardists, and from sitting as a committee of the whole Many of the signers. In fart a ican Railway association. On that date specific commodities which may not be bought bonds. Ninety-three per cent present indications the crop o f the to consider the resolution respecting great majority of them, wore men the shortage was 188,627 cars. On shipped anywhere without licenses. of subscriptions, or those of 3,960,000 coming fall will be far below estimates independence, agreed thereto, and re whose memory the average American June 1 it was 105,127. The first commodities to be designate«! persons, were for sums varying from made at the time of the heavy bloom. ported it to congress. Iocs not preserve. A man may know ’ hat the Adamses, t'harles Carroll, Sixty-nine alleged «lackers from " illIb'i ,Hnd f<*ld»»uffs $50 to $10,000, while 21 subscribers The total crop for the season will prob- On July 2 the resolution Itself was Samuel Chase. Benjamin Franklin. El- Western Washington are taken la-fore KY the ''•* wl" l,e «te n d e d applied for allotments of $5,000,000 ably fall below 750,000 boxes of fruit, adopted by congress, nnd the declara says a dispatch from Hood River. I.ridge Gerry. John Hancock, Renjamln tion was considered by the committee the Federal grand jury at Seattle to un*'> vi* u ,llY ‘' ver-V *,xP,,rt «»»"modity each or more. The New York Federal Reserve dip* I anwer to a charge of failure to regis- ■* Brought under operation o f the act. Harrison, Thomas Jefferson, Itk-hard of the whole, being again taken up The proclamations covering coal and trict led the list with subscriptions to- The Heppner wool market showed the next day, July 3. Henry Lee, Francis I.lghtfoot Lee. ter fur conscription. exports to European neutrals probably taling $1.186.788.400. or more than strong bulbsh tendencies at the public Philip Livingston. Robert Morris, Wil The Big Day. All meetings o f the National Ger will be issued this week. Under an three times the amount subscribed in * " ° l “ >* h* ld ^«turdmy. Bid* ranging liam Been. Robert Treat Paine, Edward man-American Alliance him ! of the arrangement to be made with the Brit the next district, Chicago, $357,195,- ,rorri 42 to 55* cents for fine wool _____ On July 4 the declaration, which and Itutledge. Roger Sherman. John With W isconsin anil Milwaukee branches ish government providing for an inter were freely Included the first paragraph of the 950. The other diatricta sent sub- 68 for ,'0* n,e erspoon snd Oliver Wolcott were sign have been indefinitely suspende«) be national shipping control the United j «criptions as follow s: Morrow | resolution, was agreed to by the com offered, with no takers. ers. but what of all the others? How cause o f the war with Germany. States snd Great Britain will have the Boston, $332,4 4 7,600; Cleveland, county sheep men are standing pat, mittee of the whole, reported to con many men can recall the names and King Vii-tor Emmanuel, o f Italy, trade of the world in their hands to $286,148,700; Philadelphia, $232,309,- and at this time seem to have the best gress, and adopted. The Independence service of such gallant Americans as of the situation. o f the United Colonies was thus de has accepted the resignations of direct in the manner best calculated to 250; San Francisco, $175,623,900; Bartlett. Braxton, Clarke, Clymer, clared. and thereupon congress Im General Alfieri, under-secretary of assist tn winning the war. Richmond, $109,737,100; Kansas City, With the disposition o f $1,000,000 mediately ordered that the declaration They made his F iiurth a night o f joy Floyd. Gwinnett. Hall, Walton, Whip- state for war, and Signor Cane)«, The neutral export proclamation will $91,758,850; St. Louis, $86,134,700; worth of road bon«is, out o f the $6.- With Roman candles and sky pie. Williams, Wilson, Wythe, and all under-se«-retary for agriculture. He be hurrie«! to prevent removal from Minneapolis. $70,255,500; Atlanta, 000,000 voted by the people, facing the be authenticated nnd printed under the others? the supervision of the committee previ has appointed General Alfieri under the United States of large supplies of $57,878,560; Dallas. $48,948,350. rockets state, it seems safe to assert that Of the tifty-sti signer*, eight—Gwin secretary for arms and munitions; foodstuffs bought by the neutrals and ously appointed to prepare tt, ami that Which, whiie they did not bum th« These subscriptions include those nett. Ili-ires. Livingston. Lynch, Mor General Montanari under-secretary for now stored in this country awaiting sent direct to the Treasury and appor when the present $240,000 or so o oi f I coptoa thereof be distributed to all boy, war. and Deputy Mario Cermenati shipment. The government is deter tioned among the various reserve dis rural credits money on hand is loaned state assemblies and the commanding Buifusl large holes in Ills father’» ton, Ross, Stockton nnd Taylor out. that no more attempts will be officers of the army. died before the lndep«>ndence of the under-secretary for agriculture. pockets. mined to hold neutrals to necessities. tricts. __________________ made to sell further rural credits i lilted States was won nnd acknowl In accordance with the above order, bonds until the first batch o f the road More than $30,000,000 is involved in edged hj England, while two of the declaration was issued ns a printed 2600 Quart* Are Seized. Kansas W heat Improved. That’s Why. bond m oneyis disposed of. a first mortgage filed with County Re them. Thomas Jefferson and John »roadside on July 5, with the heading: Hotjuiam, Wash. The biggest seiz Topeka— A total production o f 42,- “ Why do some women talk so much Adams, lived until 1-cje, both of «-order E. T. Stewart at Globe. Aria., A 10 per cent dividend was declared “In Congress, July 4. 1776. A Declara do yon suppose?" this week by representatives of the ure o f whisky on Grays Harbor since 1)00,000 bushels o f winter wheat in ihem passing away July 4. and Charles “ Because tlu-y've got nothing to any I’nrroll lived until 1S32. Adams died American Smelting A Refining com the state went dry was made late Mon Kansas this year, 2.000,000 bushels by the Farmers’ Union Grain agency tion by the Representatives of the United States of America, in General at the annual meeting at Pendleton. I suplióse.'' pany. day in Hoquiam, when officers confis more than the May estimate, was fore at the age of ninety-one. Jefferson st The agency is the owner o f the big Ihe age of eighty-three, and Car- The Geneva correspondent of the cated about 2000 quarts o f liquor and cast in the report issued by the State elevator which will be in operation for roll nt the age of ninety-six. Thomas Paris Journal D m Debate telegraphs arrested all of the officers o f the bt*anl of agriculture Monday. It will the first time this season. A con be the smallest wheat crop since 1896. Lynch o f South Carolina, who. Ilk* that former King Conatantine, of steamer Doris. servative estimate is that one-third o f The sheriff and deputies, members The prospe«-tive yield o f oats is given Edward Rutledge o f the same state, Greece, may not stop at Lugano, as it the Umatilla county farmer* will use as 70.354,709 bushels, exceeding the o f the Hoquiam police and officers 1 *» * « Lot mm* Dm « U . « , . \ „ Ym S. .W a d » 6) «vns only twenty-seven yenr* old when had been reported he would do, but go the bulk grain handling system this he signed the Immortal document, died direct to Baden, the famous health re- from Aberdeen, called over to aaaist in best previous year, 1888, by 16,000,- year, including Sam Thompaon. David 000 bushels and surpassing the crop of the raid, were on hand when the nt the ngo o f thirty. In 1779, while But e-rt in Germany. H. Nelson and Jesse Hales. /n e w steamer docked here ant! immediately 1916 by 41,000,000 bushels. Estimates ton Gwinnett of G<>orgln and John Bottled whisky was indicate that the yield of barley may- Fifty Salt Lake idlers are seized by hoarded her. Eleven dollars snd thirty-two rents Morton of Pennsylvania died I d 1777. Only one other of the signers lived to local police and sent to Garfield, where found cashed in all parts of the vessel. , aggregate 16.18)0,000 bushels. w as the average profit last month for lie ns old as Chnrlcs Carroll, and ha they were compelled to accept work at each cow in a herd o f 16 head owned Author of all Dat/t! There lived a youth, Russian Situation Clear«. New Republic Fights. was James Smith of Pennsylvania, one $2.50 a day with a construction com by A. S. Mobry. operating a farm near J tall and slender boy. of flaming crown, of Ihe three Irish-born signers, who Paris All thoughts that Ruasia may New York — Eight persons were Eugene, according to a report made by pany which is engaged in mining work A ton of Franee, but dear at ever ton died In 1*4*1 at the nge of ninety-six. conclude a separate peace must be set killed and many wounded in a clash L. N. Ross, tester for the Junction for the government. aside, declared Albert Thomas. French between government troops and sup Of o r n could be to one whom I have heard In that hrnve and |>atrl<>tlc body of City Cow Testing association. The British transport Cameraman, minister of munitions, on his return to porters o f the newly formed republic A people call their country's father, lit. signers were lawyers, merchants, farm with a small number o f troops on Pans from an extended trip to Ruasia. o f Kirsanov, in the province o f Tam The State Board o f Control has offi ers, physicians, soldiers, a m ini» He a at a gallant youth, noble of birth. board, was torpedoed and sunk by an An offensive by the Russian army is bov. Ruasia, according to a cable dis cially sanctioned the plan for state in ter. a surveyor, nnd a printer, and But noble alto tn the noblest use enemy submarine in the Eastern Medt- both a material snd moral possibility, 1 patch received here Saturday from stitutions to care for at least 100 of > two jvhn gave th«-lr occupations as a Of that high word. He risked hit all: terrmnean on June 2. it was officially in his belief, but he declined to specu Petzugrad by the Jewish Daily For those who may return to this state shoemaker and a sailor. Roger Sher Hit fortune, home, and lift; not for hit king announced at London. Sixty-three late as to when such a movement might ward The skirmish was caused by suffering from nervous or mental dis man of Cnnn«-rtlrut being the shoe persons, including the captain of the be expected. The military organisa the refusal o f the new republic to eases as a result o f war conditiona. Or country; not for rank or rich reward; maker. and William Whipple of th« transport, are preeumed to have been tion problems are in the way o f solu recognise the authority of the Petro- The Social Hygiene society has been sc But for d * alien and a kinglets land. «ame state the sailor. The namM of drowned. tion and the situation as regards Rus gra<l government. notified. Struggling despair fully but with jutt cause ) the signers should be preserved la sia's financial and economic difficulties For that sweet liberty through which alone »tone and bronze. They should have Veasela arriving at Seattle from Fortner President Theodore Rooae- ia improving. (•land Regiment Filled. a temple at the capital of thelt Japan reperì an encrmous amount of Mankind a t* rise. And by the unbought aid v*!t has res ponded to a request from San Juan. Porto Ri<-o- Porto Rico country. shipbuilding thè re. The three largasi the Eugene High School for his pic Of this French youth, this boy of flaming crown Germs* Plants Explode. has brought its regiment of infantry shipyarda in Japan bave received ture by sending a large photograph of And flaming heart, came victory at last. Paris — Several disasters have re o f the United States army to full war rnuugh arder* to kaep them buay for himself upon which is written; "G ood Monuments Tell ef Glorious I Came victory and liberty for us. cently occurred in munition plants in strength 19nv men— by the voluntary three years at lsast. luck to the Eugene High School, 1917. He could but bid his fortune and his life — Germany, according to the Zurich cor enlistment o f 600 men within leas than Theodore R oeevelt. " The story of the Revolution, The British ministry of ahipping has respondent of the Matin. T V corre- one month. the great deeds of the founders, H t add tn his brave all, what we. tn turn, iaaued a warning to posaible rharterer» •pnrvient telegraph* that he has learned The cranberry grower» o f Clatsop, hardly die from our memory w A great, lank, youth republic, now may give o f ahipping after thè war that "they that the hand-grenade arsenal at Span Haagry Germaaa ia Kmt. county are making preparations to en from the monuments on Its bettls In kind, and do of love engage to give. ean ha ve no assurenee that national re dau exploded June 16 and that seven Mai mo. Sweden Travelers arriving gage in bee culture aa a side lina. This It would be possible for a schoolboy to So long ae Thou, who didst appoint the lights -juieementa will permit such arrange ammunition sh«>pa at Manenhall were from Stettin, Germany, report hunger not so much on account o f the honey, construct an accurate and fairly «to Of keav’n for signs and seasons, days and years, menta " This warning is interprete*! destroyed by fire on June 1*. Some rintt in that city, mainly by women but rather for the help the insects 'ailed account of the eight years’ Shalt yearly bring September s u i t f« bless aa indicatine that thè goeernment an ammunition faetones at Nuremberg and children would give the grower during the blos •»niggle, beginning with Lexington sad In endless calendar this whirling earth. ticipate» being obliged to continue to also hare been burned, according to Troop* were called out to quell the soming season In th* pollenitat'on of -•nding with the surrender o f control ahipping after thè war. i this suthonty. I the blossoms. disturbisnee. -v sills at Yorktown, • • • —JO BS FIS LET M D HAPPENINGS OF « H IT f f i FI FULL MEASURE GIVEN WITH DRY’ RIDER A N IN D E P E N D E N C E MESSAGE STATE N EW S IN BRIEF. J COMPILED MAY SEIZE ALCOHOL FOR YOU I J Memory of Signers Should Be Honored J LAFAYETTE 0 Oon*