Miscellaneous newspaper articles about Thurston County Washington
March 15, 1901
Oakland Tribune, Oakland California
FIST FIGHT IN A LEGISLATURE
Olympia, Wash, March 15-Representative Easterday of Pierce
county and Senator Ruth of Thurston county came to blows on the floor of the
Senate yesterday afternoon. The trouble arose over Ruth's vote in favor of
postponing a bill to repeal the present libel laws of the State.
Representative Easterday was on the Senate floor, and as a
soon as he saw that his bill was beaten he walked over to Ruth and called the
latter a liar and accused him of promising to support the bill. Ruth retorted
sharply and Easterday struck him.
The wildest excitement prevailed and for a moment it looked
as though the session of the Senate would wind up in a disgraceful scene.
Senator Baker of Klickitat relieved the situation by moving to adjourn until
evening. The motion was carried.
The defeat of the libel repeal law is a victory for the
newspapers of the State.
February 17, 1905
Oakland Tribune, Oakland California
REMOVE CAPITAL
Olympia, Wash, February 17-The bill providing for submission
of the question of the removal of the State capital from Olympia to Tacoma
passed the house by a vote of 53 to 36.
February 27, 1905
Oakland Tribune, Oakland California
VETOES BILL
Olympia Wash., February 27-Governor Mead ahs vetoed the bill providing for a
submission to the people of the proposition to removed the state capitol from
Olympia to Tacoma. His principal reason is that the bill is in the nature of a
constitutional amendment, and as such should have a two-thirds vote in the
legislature. In his veto message the Governor flays the lobbyist. It is doubtful
if an attempt will be made to pass the bill over the veto.
September 1, 1908
Oakland Tribune, Oakland California
Olympia's Mayor Is Fined for
Selling Cigarettes
Olympia, Wash., Sept. 1-W.A. Hagemeyer, mayor of Olympia, who
conducts two cigar stands in this city yesterday pleaded guilty to selling
cigarettes in contravention to the Bylerly anti-cigarette law passed by the last
legislature. The mayor was arrested on a warrant sworn to by W.H. Davis, a
leader of a local reform society, who recently secured the conviction of several
local saloon men for selling liquor to minors, and for Sunday law violation. The
mayor was fined $10 and costs by Milton Glies, justice of the peace before whom
he appeared Haqemeyer was elected mayor last December on what was known in the
campaign as the wide-open ticket.
October 19, 1910
Oakland Tribune, Oakland California
BOY CONFESSES BLOWING UP HOUSE
Olympia, Wash., Oct. 19-Ashton Watson, 18 years old, has
confessed to having been a participant in the dynamiting outrage at Gate City
last Friday night, when a Japanese bunkhouse was blown up.
Watson, with Frank Hoven aged 14, Dwight Murray 20, Clarence
Murray 16; Keath Hunter, 17, and Alf Post and W.F. Jelle, each 24 years old, was
arrested on suspicion of having been implicated in the attempt to blow up
fourteen sleeping Japanese laborers.
The youths were confined in the county jail and last night
Watson sent for County Attorney Wilson and made a confession, implicating the
others, and also Matthew and James Boggs, who, Watson said, were the instigators
of the plot.
Watson said the dynamite with which the bunkhouse was blown
up was stolen last week from a logging camp in the Black Hills.
August 12, 1929
Time Magazine
"Brightest Boys"
Last June there was graduated from the East Orange, N.J.,
High School one John Osborn Reid, 19, interestedin science and planning to go to
the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale. Often he had driven by the Edison
Laboratories, only three miles from his home, wondered what the insides were
like, speculated on the personality of Inventor Edison whom he had seen only in
the cinemas. Last week he and 48 other boys, specially chosen as the "brightest"
from each state and the District of Columbia, inspected the famed laboratory,
met Thomas Alva Edison, matched knowledge in what the daily press excitedly
heralded as "The Edison Brain Derby."
Despite prophecies that the winner of the contest would mysteriously become a
"second Edison" at once, and rumors that Inventor Edison would turn all his
duties over to the "brightest bright boy" and then retire, the contest was held
for no such spectacular reason. Its purpose was described in the rules as "to
stimulate the interest of the youth of America in mental development, with
particular emphasis on scientific matters, and, more generally, in the high
ideals that make for the highest type of American manhood." When reports that he
would retire continued, Inventor Edison said, "I never intend retiring. It's
unhealthy." When in the middle of the week Candidate Reid and his 48
competitors entered the Edison plant for their official reception, they found
speakers' platforms, microphones, chairs, benches. Pale, a little nervous,the
boys sat down. Spectators commented on the normalcy and healthfulness of their
appearance, were amused as they recognized the drawl of the south, the
slur of the west. Ranging in age from 15 to 21, the boys had come from all
classes, from farms, towns, cities. There was the son of the Czecho-Slovakian
consul at Pittsburgh, the son of a bishop, a boy brought up in an orphanage.
Rather stiffly they sat there in the hot sun, looking with awe at the judges who
sat facing them solemnly, and who, by whispers, were soon identified as Thomas
Alva Edison himself, Henry Ford, Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Dr. Lewis Perry,
headmaster of Philips Exeter, George Eastman, and Dr. Samuel Wesley Stratton,
president of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. First to speak was
Inventor Edison. He was unusually nervous as in clear, precisely accurate words,
he welcomed the boys and explained there was "no suitable yardstick which can
positively determine the relative value of one human being as compared to
another." Then as a surprise each boy was given a combination radio-phonograph,
said to be valued at $400. When the speeches were over they filed up to the
platform, spoke their names into a microphone, shook hands with all of the
Committee except Col. Lindbergh who stood
back and nodded politely. When Candidate Reid went up there was loud applause
from proud Jerseyans. After the reception the boys inspected the laboratories,
soon recovered from the self-consciousness that had resulted from batteries of
cameras and prying reporters anxious to gather material on the sayings and
actions of assembled geniuses. As each wore a large identification tag bearing
the name of his state, they soon found this an easier means of appellation than
remembering proper
names. "Oregon" compared notes with "Maryland"; "New Jersey" told "Kansas" about
Manhattan, for "New York" himself was from Utica, had never seen New York City.
Soon they decided to form a club, "The Edison 49ers," to meet every ten years.
While the "49ers" were going around his plant, Inventor Edison chewed a cigar
and consented to answer a questionnaire that newsmen had presented to him. To
the question, "What do you think of the future of the talkies?" his answer was
emphatic: "Without great improvements people will tire of them. Talking is no
substitute for good acting we had in silent pictures." Then, to another query,
he gave ambition, imagination, and the will to work as the key to success.
In the morning the "49ers" were assembled at 8 o'clock in the storage battery
room at the plant, and after a slight delay caused by New Englanders "Maine" and
"Vermont" oversleeping, the papers were passed out. The hush that marked the
first glance at the examination was gradually broken as the "brightest boys"
began writing. A morning that had started cool grew increasingly hot and humid.
Coats came off and sleeves were rolled up as the "49ers" worked in silence, five
proctors quietly pacing between the desks. With tense expressions the boys
labored over questions demanding exact, accurate answers, with puzzled, dreamy
glances at the ceiling they tried to answer problems involving such ethical
things as "truth," "honor," "love," "happiness."
Still ignorant of the winner, the "49ers" went to Coney Island that night, and
then on a sight-seeing trip through Manhattan. The Edison staff, cautious
gentlemen, advised leaving watches at home and taking no more than $5. The
next morning the boys assembled on the Edison lawn, talked of the test as they
waited announcement of who had won. Various rumors spread. It was claimed that
the judges were still debating after an all night session. It was suggested that
Inventor Edison, disgusted with the results, had decided to give no award.
While the "49ers" were waiting, the Committee which had judged the papers until
3 a. m., called in five boys for a brief chat that seemed to have no
significance. Actually, it was to decide by personal impression the outcome of a
practical tie. To Wilbur Brotherton Huston, 16, son of the Episcopal Bishop of
Olympia (Wash.), went the award that meant four years full scholarship at any
institution he will choose. So pleased was Inventor Edison with his test's
success that additional prizes were given, going to "Connecticut,"
"Pennsylvania," "New Mexico," "Indiana," and consisting of four years' tuition
at any college.
From the time his fellow "49ers" first heard he won and
lifted him to their shoulders, Winner Huston was the center of attention. It was
learned that he was
interested in marine biology, did not smoke, had never been a Boy Scout. When
the boys boarded the Mayor's yacht Macom for a tour of Manhattan, reporters
surged around Winner Huston, confident of a "chatty" interview that would tickle
their public. They were disappointed and commented on the Lindberghian
attitude he maintained toward them. Asked his answer to one part of the test he
calmly said, "You may not ask me that question." The test on which Winner
Huston scored 92 and lowest competitor above 60, the passing mark, was in four
parts, running from specific questions to vague ones that were admittedly
impossible to grade but gave characteristics of the boy. Some of the questions
follow with the answers at the end.
1.Define work, enery and power and leave an
illustration of each. How does weight differ from
mass? How does force differ from energy? Would a body
weigh more or less on the moon than on the earth? Why?
Where would bodies weigh nothing?
2. When you read the names of the following persons,
what fact is immediately associated with them in your
mind? Answer in one or two words in each case.
Mendeleff, Davy, Perkin, Faraday, Curie, Priestley,
Gay-Lussac, Dalton, Solvay, Ramsay, Lavoisier.
3. Solve: (X2 + Y' = 8 XY=4.
4. Who invented the cotton gin?
5. What did James Watt do?
6. Why does this country honor Admiral Farragut?
7. What three very low forms of life can you name?
8. Who was Jenny Lind?
9. On what physiological phenomenon is the success of
motion picture projection dependent?
10. What is a meteor?
11. Name the use of the following: Gal vanometer,
vernier, oscillograph, pantograph, micrometer,
pyrometer.
12. What is the underlying principle of an internal
combustion engine?
13. What is the function of the antenna in radio?
Impossible to answer exactly were:
- What place in our daily lives do you think the
automobile will have 100 years from now?
- Which one of the following would you be willing to
sacrifice for the sake of being successful: happiness,
comfort, reputation, pride, honor, health, money,
love?
- What, if anything, does music mean to you beyond the
usual reaction which most people have to rhythm and
melody?
Westerners who claim statistics show them to be better than
Easterners in every form of athletic competition rejoiced at Winner Huston's
success, claimed it
established their superiority in brain as well as brawn. Pious folk,
disregarding the regional aspect, rejoiced and quoted statistics to show
ministers' children out number all others in Who's Who. Educators searched
deeper for significant causes, found: 1) Bishop Simeon Arthur Huston, a cultured
gentleman, has been (1917-19) President of the State Board of Education, Wyo.,
but had grieved when he saw his son spurn the classics for science; 2) an uncle
and grandfather, both scholars, are also plant breeders, interested in science;
3) Winner Huston, unlike most of the candidates has traveled extensively,
following his father from parish to parish, spending six years in Cheyenne,
Wyo., two in Baltimore, four in San Antonio. Manhattan papers were prompt
in harassing college professors for answers which were quickly printed. An
exception was the New York Mirror, gum-chewers sheet, which decided to print the
questions and answers under the caption "Ediquests" at the announced rate of
"one or two a day." The answers used here were obtained by the New York
Telegram from four Columbia professors:
1) Work is force acting through space. Energy is
capability of doing work. Power is the time rate of
doing work. Work is lifting 50 pounds to a table three
feet high, exerting 150 foot pounds. You increase the
energy of the weight by the process, adding 150 foot
pounds to it. If you do it in ten seconds you exert a
power of 15 foot pounds per second. Weight is the
force by which the earth attracts a body, and is
variable. Mass is a measure of inertia and does not
vary. Energy is force multiplied by distance. A body
would weigh less on the moon because the mass of the
moon is so much less than that of the earth. A body
would weigh nothing at infinity.
2) Mendeleff, periodic system of the elements; Davy,
miner's lamp; Perkin, mauve synthetic coal tar dyes;
Faraday, electro magnetic induction; Curie, Radium;
Priestley, oxygen; Gay-Lussac, law of combining
volumes of gases; Dalton, atomic theory; Solvay, soda
from ammonia; Ramsay, the Noble gases; Lavoisier,
originator of modern chemistry.
3) Y=2, X=2.
4) Eli Whitney.
5) Invented the steam engine.
6) He was the outstanding naval commander of the Civil
War.
7) Amoeba, spirogyra, yeast.
8) A Swedish singer.
9) Persistence of vision.
10) A shooting star; a mass of matter from celestial
space striking the earth's atmosphere and bursting
into flame.
11) To measure small electric currents; to estimate
accurately the fractional divisions on a scale; to
record rapidly varying electric current; to make
copies of drawings, usually on a larger or smaller
scale; to measure small dimensions accurately; to
measure high temperatures.
12) To convert chemical energy of fuel into mechanical
energy.
13) To send and receive ether vibrations.
(Submitted by Dena Whitesell)
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©Shauna Williams, unless otherwise noted.