The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, June 03, 1922, Image 1

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    Euntnn Mtvafii
WEATHER FORECAST
TO.VIdllT AMI HI'NDAV FAIR,
f(UI,i;it Hl'M'AY,
N NEWS OF THE WORLD
".' BY THE i
ASSOCIATED PRESS I
Member of the 'Associated Press.
I'tflisnili Vnii' .No. ii:i;lt.
KLAMATH FAfcLH.OHKflO.V, SAH'llllAV, .M'M.' :. V.riSt.
I'RICH F1VH OBNTS
Eat
DELEGATION TO
TTN
I IT
Purpose Is to Link The
Dnllci-Cnliforniu and
Victory Routes
il'ii"'' delegation fiom llm ihiimlier of
rnuimerio lll iilli'iiil Hid IiIk rimil
limellng In Wlnimiiiiireii, NrVHilii,
Jiiiin 0 tiiul III V ('. Ihillnn, M. H.
West, J. A. (loriliin, 'I'. A. Htnven
win, ami HiHllily mm other niomhur
will in it t. tt tlin trip Ii'iiMiik Kliimiitli
Falls, Wednesday, June 7, mill ro
turning Monthly, Jim,, 12
Tim purpo,. of llm i t Iiir In In
locale ii in ii I ii highway from Wlttim
in men tu AluiriiH mill lloddlhg mul
which would link up Tim Dalles-Cnl-Uiirnlii
highway with llm Victory
highway from Halt I-uko City to Cull
(nrnlii. TIiIk would uimblo Northern
I'allfiuiilit ami Oregon lo got an uicii
hri'.ik ltli Hnullmrn Cnllfornht mi
Hut anli'm rrop ol tourists unit
Mould nit Klamath Fulls on a dlr
n't linn from Nevada, I'lali mul
Southern lilalio territory lo Crater
Like ami Northern Oregon
Should thl highway hit Imlll. His
khoil county inn million tlio two
highway, by building only 00 miles
nf rnntmrtlug ronil mul Klaimith will
hum mi ull-llii'-)rur highway to llm
rinilli mul I'lmt
liuleguilun fiom four states "III
iiltiiiil tin. meeting ami u number uf
rallro.ul off h lulu Mill Im present It
I tiiol.i'il upon by many iik being 'thn
iiiimI lininirtiinl rn.ul rnnterenio lit'lil
fur Minm yriirit ami Klamath County
Milt i( vllally lntTetid In Kit nut-
COIIIK.
Tim Klamath FallK delegation "III
spent Thiirmhi)' iiIkIH " Alluran
whom It will ho Joined liy rcpresrn
Intlvim from u iiiimbor uf ntlmr ell
Iih In Callfnriilu ami Oregogn. On
'llinritihiy tin' r.irut.m Mill iiiuku llm
I rip from Allurus lo Wlnni'inuini, a
iIIkIiiiho uf itinim 2"' miles out llm
ili'miri nniiitry.
LUMBER SHOWS GAINS
l'i imIikI hut III Columbia llitrr Mill
Ill Per Vnt ,Inii Xnnnal
I'OUTI.'ANI), Juno 3 One-hundred
mul twenty-llvii mills reporting
In Wont Coast Lumbermen' iissorla
Hun fur llm week iiiuIIiik May 2.
iniinufnclured IU.30S.22U frot of
lilliilmr; hcIiI KMi.riSI.l97 fort; mul
uhlppi'tl !i2.r.!H.!t7H feet.
Production fur niportln,; mill wn
12 Hr cent hIiovii normiil, Now linl
ims wan 10 per rniil atioMi protlue
llun. HIilpmi'titH with K per ton I bil
low now business
Thirty-six pur rent of all now busl
nesu lakiin Murine Hi" wi'i'k 'a for
fiiliiro wuliir ilfllvi-ry. TIiIm umoiinl
nl lo :il!.2ll,IU7 fi't't of wrlch 2fi
n.'il.nr.n fcol miih for ilnmi'mlr nirno
ilullvury. anil 1 0,2.10.831 font for
uvfr-nmiH Mlilpmnit. Now bintlm-im
fur iliillvory by rail ninoiinti'il to
2,133 rarn.
Tlilrty-lliri'o pi'r rent of tlio wtok'n
liimlinr HlilpmontK movoil by water.
Thin innouiilPil to 23.747.307 fool.
runHlwImi anil IiiIitceiihIhI: ami '.
iiriH.firl fiiot uxpiirt. Hull HhlimionlH
iiinniintcil lo 2,003.
t'nfllli'il tlcmi'Htlc rurRO onlcrH
total 107.733.3n3 foot. Unfllli'il ox
port nriliirn 71,000.184 Tuot. Vil
fllluil roll trnilo onlnrH, 7.070 carH.
In twimtyotio wink proiluclloii hnn
licon 1,0011,07 1 ,330 Mil; now Inml
ikiiih, 7ll.820.3rt8 flint; hlimolllH
1.013. I27.1M0 foul
MAIIKKI' HUroIlT
I'OltTI.ANU. Juno 3. I.lvimtock.
oKKrt ami butlor ultimly. Wheat
1. M to n.ao.
WIIATHKIt rHOIIAHIMTIKrJ
i.ii.l(iriiinuraiih at llllilcr-
, .i - ,,-- ...
wmm m i-iiariiiut
lniM luiilaluri'il hut
llttlo chiillKU in
baiuuiutrlc liroif
mirii ilur UK tlio
IukI Si liourH,
Thtorforo hut, III
llu I'liaiiitii III
wuuthur 1'oiiiUtlonn
in ii v li,i oxtaictwl.
Tomorrow kIvoh ov-
nrv nrnnuno or uo-
IDK u boauiKUl
dnv.
.. ForocuHt for noxt 21 heurs:
HH
M il
Ov "S
Oontlhiioil Mir and warm,
Tho Tyco'H locordlng thormomotoi'
roKiritoniil muxlmum uml minimum
tompcrnturoH today, an follews: i
, HIkH H"
w iKew: ,..v.,....,f.v..t.i s..4
1.1,0011 MtUM riHMH.NTIJM
M WAHHIMJMIV '1(1 Iti:
l i hi;i ion iiiiioiiustatiox
i
HKATTI.i:, Jiiiin 3 I'lvn
1 tlioiiminil tirrus of f ill over hinds
kUiiii (tin stnlo of Washington
by tlin Weyiirluieiiser Timber
mi lo In) devoted firm In ii nun-
', iirnl iilvn Krlii'iiin of refores-
J tuition In llm Mnli'. (leorgo
i Lung, norlliwiml miuKigir of
llm lomiiiiiiy, iiiiiiiiiiiiti'il nt a
meeting Imliiy of III" WiihIi-
liigtin statu forestry confer-
y I'llCli.
CRATER LAKE TO
BE SCENE OF K. P.
1923 CONVENTION
Plant Lminihril IIito An' Apprmiil
nl IliKiliiuc (Jutlurlii. I.
(I. K. K. May Atliml
(.rut or Lake In 1923 will liu thn
nmcoi for KiilKlitn of Pythian from
all pnrU of Koiillmrn OnKon. and
for mombi'M of Hi" Dramatic Order
of KiiIkIiIk of Khoraminii from all
purli of tho t!nlli'd Hlatcn, If plnnii
laliiirlii'd by tho Inral ImlKii and ac
copfd by llm K. P. convt'iillun In
lloitfluifK luxt M""l a r" broiiKht to
a mn'romifiil lonclunliiii .
liny lliirbln, who iilli'iidil tho
convi'iillon from Iiito. rr-porli'd Hint
Ihu propomil to hold tho annual
convrntlon for llm Hoiithurn ()r
;on illitrlcl at frnliT l.aku M.m
niciiptril with ftitliilnliiMlil It vmu
pluniii'd. hi' tt.ilil, to hold It In Aiir
nut. mIhmi thn 'DokkliV will hold
Hudr niitloniil ninvnntloii In Port
laud, limit piTinltlliiR them to ut
luuil llm TratiT l.akn riintrntlon
brfuri' rcturnlm; homo.
BEARFOOT IS MECCA
'liiillmtluin Arf Tlml Many Will
Mnttir to Ni-M Iti-wirt
With film Moathi'r promUcil, In
illtallonn.aro that many local mo
turUtii Mill inuko thn tmw lliMrfunt
liu Oivi'N r"'mirt thn morra of to
inorrow'it run, Mhllo a iiiiiuIht will
attrml tho ilmirn loulKht.
( (I. .Merrill, proprietor, ban In
nt.illed iircummoilatloiiN for two
Nruro Riieiti, and will open tlm re
mrt thin ovrtiliiR with u dauru on
tlm blR open air platform.
Tomorrow there will bo a chicken
dinner. danclnR and exploration of
thn niv.'K uuiliir direction of RUldv.
who know tlm region thoroiiRhly.
W. A. Dcliell. who him J tint re
turned from a trip to the lava bed,
leea Kru.it poimibllllli'it of duvolop
moot In tlm hum' renurt, iih an at
traction for tourliitn with Klaimith
Kit I In an IIh center.
Delzoll today riivo tho fnlloMliiR
miKKt'itloiiK and advlco to tlionu In
toudlUR to visit tho caves tomor temor tomer
row: "Those who o tomorrow aro iw
miteil of a lilOHt InttireBtliiK trip
and a flno vntorlalnment. 1 havu
been a bnoxter for this rt'Klon as a
tourUt attraction ver nlnco my
first visit thuru In 1000, when thu
Ico cavo M'as discovered.
"Wear ygur old ciolhe and ntout
shoes; thu rockK aro roiiKh to tramp
over. It In u noxcellcnt Idea to
carry several canteens of drlnkltiR
water In your car. Water can tin
found In snmo of tho cavos. tint
not alwnyM convenient. I'or ex
plorliiK caves I huvo fniind ordi
nary tallow eundles bottur tliiiu
flashllRhiH. nasy to hold whllo
cliimborltiK hvht tho rock, and
pieces ran ho stuck up most nny
wlioiti on Ihu rocks t
"Contrary to Koiioriil uollous,
thorn aro very few wniikon thero. In
IwrhiipH fifty vlsllii I hao mado In
tho last diweii years, I havo'tieon
less than hair a doon rattlors, and
Hiomi only later In tho soason."
KAYS (iUAhUATKH HNKIT
. HHRKKMSY, Cnllf., Juno 3.
Tho majority of college Kriiduaten
throughout thn United Mates uro
unfit for carourtf bocuusu of tho luck
or modern touching In tlio urhool
currlculuniH, Professor Frederick
Teggort of tho social Institutions
dopurtmont, Unlvoralty of Califor
nia, assorted recently In tho annual
Phi Ilota Koppn address. Professor
Toggart unld thoro hud boon no
proKresH In colloglato coursoa of
study bIiico tho ronalBsanco.
Infltoud of rovlowlnic dead Inn
guages and old documents, ho con
tinued, unlvorslly Instructlona
should appeal (o tho hutnanttlei,
Babe Ruth's
WZfiPr. A". k jyt
I S "I' lv ? r'xv' !
i
In nuth'n second frame thla
and tho plcturo ttlla tho rut
PLAGUE IS SERIOUS
HH'pi Anken lo (link Orii"'liiipier
Mi-lime In Till" l.nkf lll-trjit
Tlm Krasshoppor sltiiiitlmi In thu
Tulo l.akn tllstrlit lH iulle, serious.
reports K II. Thomas, who reliirn
etl last iiIrIiI from a trip of Inves
tigation llerauso thn lands nru
Koverilineill lenses, (ill whllll thitro
Is hut oho j ear's I en lire, It Is hard
to Ret a comprehenslvu extermina
tion program, thn lessees having no
assurance that they will control Uio
snmu bind next year. Imllvldtwils,
however, nru using extermination
method and will probably keep ihu
loss In hounds Dili year, silt)
Thomas, but the situation will llku-
ly be worse next season.
To have attained thu maximum
effect, lie aald, Murk should luivo
started tun days ago, before tlm
young gr.tsshoplMTH worn Mattered
Thiima.i said he would lend his
aid to the ranchers, mid ho oxped
rd that rotislilerablo control could
bit obtained In thu next week or
two.
Near Keno, on the old Kerns
ranch, Krasshoopers are tlilok on
tlm fields of Jack Waluli, said
Thomas; oIIiitmImi tho grain In
that district Ik not greatly menaced
LENINE HAS STROKE
Oilier Sotlet U'jiili'rH lA-at' Inline
illnltdy fur Mosi'ikv
Hi:itJ..V, Juno 3 Prlvatn ailvle
os readied from Sutlvl rlnles In
llerllu report that Premier l'iilnu
siiffrrcd a slrokii Thursday. .Maxim
l.ltvlnoff, Karl Itadek mul other mi
vlei leaders hern left Immeiliajely for
Moscow.
samtv i.i:.(ai:, Mcnroitn
MKUKOItl), Juno 3 .Tlm Sanity
l.eaguu of Amorlra, n national. Incur
poratcd Organltatlon seeking u mod
ification of thu Volstead art to as
to permit tho manufacture and sale
of light M'lnos and beer under gov
ernment control Id being organized
hero.
st'HCKSTs iwiuxirr iiiicnn
TOKIO. June 3. Premier T.ik.i
hasl again suggested today llm ad
visability of ii Joint resignation of thu
cabinet.
SIS TRIES
jl.OOKTiWArlNA BEArroTd
FooeV -1 aisT goTNoThih'. ,
'AGAlMSTpORlFWPPeR '
J1PM1 t TVLE S jBuT3dtnToi3AV X 1 ,
- .11111 II II II I I I I I- .-J
First Homer
uon. , Bambino at tht bat UngV
LANDIS GRANTS PLEA
Will CoiisliItT Itrlcfs In Huiih'IihIuii
(if 1'IIRIlR .MellllHTN
HAN KltANCIRCO, Juno 3 Ilaso
ball Cnmmlsslonor t.andls will ion
slder hrjefu and other ovldencc filed
on behalf of Kenwortliy, Klnppcr
unit llrowster. whom ho siispeitdod,
ncrorilliig to a telegram to Presi
dent McCarthy of thn Pacific Coast
league.
Tho telegram answered ono sont
by tho league directors hero after
ii special nietdlng yesterday, asking
l.andls If ho would consider such
ovltlencf. Tho lcaguu's j telegram
railed special attention to Ilrow
stir's showing that ho had no
knowledgu hlH name was being used
III itllegi-d oliji-ctlonul activities,
that ho M'as not an officer of tho
chili ,aiul ha( no opportunity to
put In a defetuo before tho ruling.
CUPID OUT OF COURT
Mul her of .Mntlillili .McCormlrk
U'lllitlrmtH IVHlliiii l ltetniln
CIIH'ACO. Juno 3. Tho court
fight against Matlilld,, McCormlck's
marrlagu to Max User. HmIss horMi
man, ended with Ins than two mill
Utn proreedlngH In tho probate court
today when Mrs. IMIth Itockcrfcl
ler McCormlck, tho girl's mother,
withdraw hor petition for n restrain
ing order to provcnl,thu union.
Friend suggested That tho court
action was htnrtcd to keep Mnthlldo
In America long as posslhln In hopu
shu might oluntnrlly rhatigo her
mind.
Mrs. McCormlck In her objections
Is s.iltl to bu htrongly supported by
hor father, John I). Itockefeller, Sr.
IM.IMI.VATi: (iOIICAK PUWT
WASIIINC.TON. May 3. Tho houso
military commltteo voted today to
report tho Ford Muscln Shoals pro
posal recommending adoption with
tho Horgas steam power plant elimi
nated. riax sn:itu. imcxic
DOWNIKVIM.K. Calif., May 22.
Plans' aro being perfected for thu
holding of a celebration picnic near
thn summit of tho Sierras, east of
hero, to commomorato tho opening
o( tho Yuba Pass routa to traffic.
ON HER NEW BATHING
SILK PIJAIS
FIGURE. TRIAL
T
Dainty Garments Are of
Purple and White; Attor
ney Says Chinese Suits
I.OS ANOKI.KS, Juno 3. Dainty
llk garments, ono while and ono pur
ple, were Introduced today an ex
hibits at tho preliminary hearing of
Itudolph Valentino on a bigamy
charge. They wcrci presented as tho
attire In whlcli Valentino and his
second bride, Winifred Hudnut,
whom he married In MoxictU May
13th, appeared In public at Palm
Springs, Calif., during their honey
moon a few dayy after their mar
riage. Prosecution contended tho nulla
Mora pajamas, whllo Valentino's at
torncy said they were Chinese silk
suits.
Tho preliminary hearing opened
with Jean Acker, Valentino's first
M'lfe, on tho stand. Hlio testified that
her nmno was "Jean Acker Valen
tino," and after consultation with
iittorncH It wan mado known for tho
record that thu legal namo of Valen
tino Is (iUKllclmo. Sbo testified that
sho married Valentino In Hollywood
on November ", 1919 and that the
marriage, had not been annulled.
Tho California Iom- of divorce pro
vftleH that tho marrlag0 ataluto Is
unchanged by an Interlocutory de
cree, which Is pncrly a Judicial find
ing, and that marrlagu Is not termi
nated until ono year thereafter when
u final decree Issues.
ATTACKS SOVIET PACT
PolocoJrn. Makes .WiUMxrawal OoadU
lion for French I'articlpalloa
PARIS. Juno 3. Premier Poln
euro In u memorandum forwarded to
the United States and all powers
which had been Invited to attend The
Hague, conference on Russian af
fairs, demand that tho Soviet gov
ernment withdraw Ita memorandum,
presented at the Ocnoa conference
May 11th, as a condition for French
participation at Th0 Hague meeting.
WARNS Cltl.NKSK LKADKR
PUKIN'O. Juno 3. Ocneral Wu
Pol-Ku, who recently wiped Chans
Tso-l.ln, Manchurlan war lord, from
tho glato of Poking politics, today de
clared that If Sun Yat Sen, president
of tho South China republic, per
sists In opposing plans for China un
ification, ho too must be eliminated
by tho sM'ord If necessary.
SUIT
IFN
IN
AMUNfWKN'H POIiAB KX
I'KtllTIO.V UIJK TO I.KAVK
TOIAY O.V 3-VKAIt IHtH-T
HKATT1B, Juno 3 Captain
Itoald Amundscn'rt exploration 4
ship Maud, In which Amund- 4
sen expects to drift In Ico floes
past tho north polo In flro or 4
six years, was to loavo hero
today. A featuro of tho voy-
ago will bo tho meteorological
report,, returned dally by wlro-
less.
PINE BEETLE SAID
TO BE MENACE IN
SOUTHERN IDAHO
(Ml Per Cent of IN ' Hnlc-IMy
e4lo Tcrrltor' Han Occurred
In Lost NU Years
Tho western pine Jicctlo Is be
coming a serious monace to timber
In southwestern Idaho, according to
L. R. Cochran, logging engineer of
the Bolse-Payctte Lumber company,
who la here for a week to study the
control methods of tho Klamath
Forest Protective association.
Since 1918, when tho beetles
wore first observed In numbers,
Cochran says', they havo multiplied
rapidly. He estimates 90 per cent
of tho loss In tho llolso-Payotto
torrltory has occurred In the post
six years. Tho estimated loss In
an area of 120, 000 acre Is ono
million .feet. Whllo tho damago so
far Is relatively light, tho Increase
In Infestation Is alarming timber-
men, and Cochran says actlvo ateps
will be taken to combat" tho pest,
starting this fall and getting Into
full stride next year.
A natural enemy of tho beetle la
present In tho Idaho forests In tho
woodpecker. During tho cold up
land winter, when rood Is scarce,
ho birds attack beetle troeg, aays
Cochran, and dcvour quantities of
beetles and larvae. Dark piled two
and thro feet high around tho base
of Infested trees In the spring shows
the Tlgor of the woodpeckers on-
Uttvttl .-
M.iUWTv. .--
HONOR GARCIA HERO
Bearer of Famous Mo-ngo Will
Receive Delated Recognition
SAN FRANCISCO Calif. Juno 3.
JLteutcnant Colonel Andrew S.
Rowan, retired, the man who carried
the famous "message to Garcia" In
1898, during tho Spanish-American
war will receive a belated recognition
for bravery. If Senator Samuel F.
Shortrldge of California can bring It
about. Tho senator has received as
surances from Secretary of War
Weeks that he will tako up with the
army board having Jurisdiction tho
granting of a medal or of a disting
uished scrvlco cross.
Lieutenant General Nelson A. Miles
ordered young Lieutenant Rowan to
deliver a "message to Garcia." Dis
cretion, Inltlatlvo and bravery wore
rcqulro'd. Rowan did not ask who
Garcia was, where ho could bo found,
or how to get thero. Instead ho
delivered tho messago to General
Garcia, In tho Interior of Cuba, whero
Garcia with bis llttlo band of patri
ots was almost surrounded, by Span
ish forces. Rowan knew that it tho
messago wcro Intercepted by tho
Spaniards ho would bo shot or hang
ed as a spy.
Garcia, heartened by tho ppromlse
of aid from tho United States, just
entering tho war, with Spain, fought
on, and tho foo was overcome.
Lieutenant Rowan was cltod by
General Miles Is dispatches to Wash
ington as follews:
"This was a most perilous under
taking, and in my Judgment Lieu
tenant Rowan performed an act of
heroism and cool daring thut has
rarely boon oxcolled In tho annuls of
warfare"
Rowan later was appointed lieu
tenant colonol ol oluntcrrs, and in
1908 was retired from tho regular
army with tho rank of major. Ho re
sides In SuiiiFraujClsco.
HKF.K GOLD UKCOVL'IIY
URIDUEPORT. Calif.. Juno 3.
An . elaborate plant Is bolng In
stalled at Meno lako, Meno county,
for tho recovory of valuej In gold
and platinum from the acrid waters
of tho lako. Thomas H. Ruddy,
who hoada tho enterprise, atatos
that a secret process invented by
C. F. A. Peck will be used.
The statement that tho wators of
the lake carried precious -metals In
recoverable quantities has often
been mado and experiments have
been carried on at intervals for
tunny 7ear, j '
E
fl. I SITUATION
' ' ' a ,
Shop Crafts Workers Cut
of $50,000,000 Annually
Now Develops j. '
CHICAyO, Juno 3. A tnonuclng
phnso In tho railway situation, with
a natlon-wldo strlkn easily within
tho bounds of possibilities, was matin
moro ncuto br Informal but well,
founded report that n wage cut for
shop crafts workers expected to bo
announced early next wcok by tho
railroad labor board would reach n
total of nt least ",0,000,000 annual
ly. This cut, which Is to follow tho
$50,000,000 reduction In tho wages
of 400,000 malntonanco-of-way em
ployes who aro threatening a strike
as a result, wilt afreet all black
smiths, machinists, bollormaknrs, ,
sheet metal workcrts, electrical work
ers, carmon and helpers In tho ser
vice of thn nation's railroads.
Tho scale of reductions Is sajyl to
range from 5 to 9 cents an hour.
Among tho decreases In thn Im
pending decision aro said lo bo thn
follewing:
Apprentices, ' cents; helpers, r
cents; mechanics. 7 cents; passen
ger carmen, 7 cents; freight carmen,
9 conts.
EDITORS ORGANIZED
New Horlrly In for lurpoo of Ail
muring Newspaper Profekn
BT. LOUIS. Mo.. Juno 3. Tho
new A'merlcan society of newspaper
editors that has bees 'launched by
of tho leading newspapers of tho
country Is to moot a ncod for a na
tional organization of th0 oxecutlvo
editors of metropolitan newspapers,
according to nn explanation of Its
purposes by Its president, Gnsper S.
Yost of tho St. Louis Gloho-Dcmo-crat.
"Wo editors most of us, at any
rato," said Yost, havo not, realized,
that wo aro members of a great and
honorablo profession which has com
mon interests as well an individual
Intorcsta. Wo could not act col
lectively becnuso wo bad no means
of collective action.
"To visuallzo newspaper Ideals; to
set standards of nowspapcr conduct,
which shall not uffect that Individual
Independence that Js essential to
newspaper personality, but which
may nrouio generous emulation for
newspaper progress; to promoto tho
dignity and honor of our profession;
to maintain Its Integrity and Its
rights, and dorohd It from unjust at
tncks; to establish ethical principles
whoso recognition and obscrvanco
will continue, to that public confi
dence which la a .newspaper's best as
set, to promoto tho efficiency of our
labors through tho Intorchango of ex
perience and the discussion by which
common problems of odltorlul man
agement may bo solved all thoso aru
purposes to which such nn organiza
tion us wo havo created can direct
its efforts, and In their accomplish
ment bo of great and lasting value
to all of us as mombers of a high pro
fession, of matujlal benefit to tho in
dividual nowspapors which sorvo, and
Increased usotulnoH for tho Press as
an Institution for tho promotion of
public welfare."
"Wo editors," sultl Yost to a rep
resentatlvo of tho Associated Press,
"havo bceu ubsorbeil lit our Individ
ual labors.
"Kach ono of u works ardently
for tho ndvuncomout of his news
paper. W,hy can wo not work us ar
dently togcthor for tho advancement
of our protcbslon, which moans re
flectively th0 betterment of each of
our uowapapors?"
OCT WAOIJ INClinAHR
KVERKTT, Wash., Juno 3Lura
bcr manufacturora ot this city to
day announced a flat incroaso of
SO conta n day for nil sawmill em
ployes, offoctlvo Juno 1, waking
tho minium wngo for rommos
laborors 3.S0.
This is believed by mlllmon hero
to bo tho highest wage scale paid
in any lumbor district in tho north
wost. Tho Incroaso) has been made,
they say, in view ot the gradually
improved state ot the. luber is
dustry. ' ' , .,
ST MENAC
MORE DC TEN
1 m
ii
d-
.;
f 3
.'!