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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1911)
1 tac.k four DAILY EAST OUEGONIAN, rENDLETON, OREGON. SATURDAY, SKPTEMRER 18, . 1911. EIGHT PAGES jL , 1 v. QfatCCjytoft "J. j5C--ZZT' AN i.NULlK.NUE.NT SEWSl'Al'KK. I'ublitl iJ ltil!y and Soml-Wwkly at 1'en nirii:i. urvumi, by ilir ASV ii;KGiIMAN tuulisuinq oa smscKirTios rates. T1!j. one year, by mall I-ally. l ir,. hi I lis. by mail J!, ilut-e mom lis. by mail .... 1-aiiy, oll' ui'iiitti. by mall f'tlly. on year, by carrier l'!!y, six month, by carrier ... Itll;. three tn.nuhn. by carrier.. I !;. one luuut'u, by carrier ail W eekly, one year, by mall.. trail-Weekly, six mouths, by mail, frnul Weekly, four montUs, by mall . 2.80 . 1.23 . .AO . 7.B0 . A TS . i.t5 : The lal!y Kast OreRoulau U Kept : on sals i t j- vc.. tho irt.vious roc,-,rd hav i; the Orecon News Co., 329 Morrlaoa 1 ' 5rt. IVruand. Orejrua. ; ins been in 1 S 9 1 . when the fisures Northwest New t'o., Tortland, Owyoa. .,,,.,,.,,, , , Chlcaco Itareau, 009 Security Building, i r ached 124.991,920 head. The past vt mmnpton, u. ... uureau, poi toot- wenth street, X. W. Member United Treu Aaaoclttloa. Petered at th poatofflc at rendlatoa, j - Yelephooe Vain 1 Official City and County Paper. BE A FRIEND TO MAX. There are hermit souls that live withdrawn In the place of their self-content; There are souls like stars, that dwell apart In a fellowless firmament; There are pioneer souls, that blaze their paths Where highways never ran; But let me live by the side of the road. And be a friend to man. Let me live in a house by the side of the road. Where the race ofmen go by, The men who are good and the men who are bad As good and as bad as I. I would not sit in the scorner's seat, Or hurl the cynic's ban, Let me live in a house by the side of the road, and be a friend to man. I see from my house by the side of the road, By the side of the highway of life. The men who press with the ardor of hope, The men who are faint with the strife; But I turn not away from their s.m.Mes nor their tears, Both parts of an infinite plan. Let me live by the side of the road, And be a friend to man. Sam Walter Foss. ' I . . a TTTTTTm JlO per cent, but the consumptive de- Ol'R FIXE VISITORS. mand was so strong that values grad- It was a brisk crowd of Portlanders ually recovered, and before the sea that came up this morning on the j son was half through wool was sell Commercial Club-Ad Men's special. f ing almost aa well as at any period of Of course they are live ones or they the previous year. The Continental would never come to see the greatest demand, however, and more particu- outdoor exhibition the world has ever ularly the German demand, develop produced. Mummies would not care ed some weakness, and during the for the Round-Up, it is a show for the quick, not the dead. In the presence of so many people lrom the metropolis, Pendleton feels particularly honored and it is most complimentary to the Round-Up. It Is not often that four or five special trains may be run from Portland to a point this far distant merely to . bring people upon a pleasure Jaunt .And the best of it is, they all appear to be highly pleased with the per-ever, fcrmance and their treatment in gen-j eral. They are either exceedingly well i aatisfied or else they are all natives j of the Emerald Isle. It is more pleas- Ing 'to assume they like the show and j are telling nothing but the truth j ... IW'JUt it. To many the trip to Pendleton for ti.i- Round-Up is in the nature of a home-coming. Dozens of those aboard the specials formerly lived . j i . .v.i t t . .v.. i. . here and left this place for the larger ,. . , , -!tv. So many Pendletonians have t, .i . . . ,. , v.... pone to Portland that it has become a common remark that Portland In . t.....ie up io a mrge exi-ui ui l.ib uyw flow population from Pendleton. It was to brin? visitors to the city rind to show them a good time that ' the Round-Up was organized. So here's to the Portlanders and all oth er'? who are sojourning within the gates of the city. Have a good time and come again. The weather In I't-r.'lMon is always fine. AUSTRAMAX WOOL. Statistics of the Australian wool season ending June 30, 1911, are given ir. the annual review published by If!lg ty f: rn. (Ltd.). from which thf ! f( llowing has been nbstratcd: The principal feature of the wool year of Australia closing June 30 oversea exports having amounted to 1,976,387 bales, or 646,838,877 pounds from Australia, and 493,372 bales or 173,178,572 pounds, from New Zea- i lend, a total of 2.468,750 bales ' 820,012,449 pounds, valued at J150.-I 377,280. The increase, as tornpared with the previous year, amounts to 31,107 bales, or 3,150,784 pounds, but . on arcount of the lesser value the monetary return shows a decrease of J.31 per bale. The size of the clip ' ;! all the more remarkable when It lsj considered that the :,uuu,uuu-inie 'limit was reached for the first time in Uu; car Iff"'-' nml l,ast year's fi.tures are nearly double those of the I year 1 4.. l!i fa-t, taking; Austval ' ia serarately. they nre more than 'ilonMe. Coiisitiei ably more wool was :!.-o opoitetl on sheepskins than ilur- ii.i,- the prcv us year. The flocks in Australia ami Xew Zealand now total llti.173 head, hav ing increased ilurini; the past 12 months hy the small mnlier of 50S,- l"i0'"'9- oca 1. A great many more sheep, J j how ever, are now depastured in Aus- iral:iia than at any period during the I year's Increase s( considerably below jwhat had been expected, but the Isiuallness of the increase is to some , xt0nt due to the very large numbers which have been slaughtered for ex- port and local consumption. It is thv i inion that the absence of a mate- rial increase in sheep is not a detrl merit to Australasia, since present numbers are about as high as can be carried safely. Although sheep which were put through the past shearing did not cut any more wool per head than In the preceding year. f-ere has nevertheless been a general all-round improvement in the flock3, and a very high standard has been o general all-round improvement in the flocks, and a very high standard has been reached, to merinos. Although there were many more sheep to shear 20 years ago, before the great drought, than last year, yet the clip shorn durin the past season eclipses all previous records. Ine average price obtained for a bale of wool was 060.91 as compared with $60.22 in 19o-10, the average , for the year being thus S per cent iuiivu iaai ui me nrevious vear. i ne 'iiales were a few pounds lijhter than during the previous season, however, and the average price obtained for all the wool sold amounted to IS cents rer pound, against 19 1-2 cents in '1909-lu, a decline of over 7 1-2 per i cent. : That the clip was inferior to that .of the year 1909-10 is shown by the ' fact that while the average paid for 'the wool in Australasian markets wad t ! 7 1-2 per cent lower than In that year, the average decline in the value of , merino tops for t'ae year was but 1.53 'per cent, and for crossbred tops 3.36 per cent. i In the first sales of the wool year, I toward the end of September, the lo 'cal markets showed declines of about closing days of December and the earlier half of January the market declined to the extent of 7 to 10 per cent. Refore the regular selling sea son was brought to a close a good recovery had been made, and values ruled very firm until just at the close of the year, when there was a furth er weakening, more particularly as regards faulty wools, which declined 10 per cent. Generally speaking, how- for the year the markets were favorable to sellers, and the level of pri"es of practically nil sheep pro- t1 acts was a paying one, leading to a large acquisition of wealth for Aud- tralasia. ... Dr. Wiley has been vindicated and lis the hero of t'l" controversy In which lie became involved. It is ev j i.ler.t. however, t!'::t he really owe his victory to the American people and not to the preslden. Had there 1 been no campaign underway Wiley 1 3 might have gone the way of Plnchot. " J The people who call are the best ornartients of any home and the same u tru of cltlos whk.h fact makeg Pendleton a very fortunate town Just now. m Cleanses the System eiieciuany; uispeis colds and Headaches. I -1 T 4? i aut? io consupmiun. Best for men, women dnd Cnllul'Gni YOUnQ clftd Old t a o I IO Ot llS DnllCICil effSCtS.a.WaYS X0XQ tH f nQmO OI 111 COlTlpSny, (AlIFORNIA FlGtSYMP(p. plainly printed on the front of ever package of the Genuine Everybody will be down for the Uo.se Show next June, but then Pen- illetonians have always attended., All over but the .shouting. Nl'.MItEU Ol' MKDIl'AI. STI DI'.XTS. The total number of medical stud-tils in the United States for the year ending June 30, 1911. was 19, 7S6. a decrease of 1740 below 1910, a decrea-e of 359 below 1909, a de crease of 2S16 below 190S, und a 'de crease of S'i'.ti below 1901, when the hiiilnst number of students were en rolled. In fact, it is the lowest num ber since 1900, according to the Jour nal of the Amer.ru n Medical Associa tion, which recently pur:ished a report on medical eduiot'on for the vast year t'f the total number or stu dents. 1S.414 were in attendance at r.gular colleges, S90 at homeopathic, 4 33 at the eclectic, and 49 at the phy. -lomedical colleges. The attendance a; the regular collieges shows a decrease of 1722 below last year, of 2140 below 1909, and 2T)22 below 190S. In the homeopathic colleges there was an increase of 23 above the attendance of 1910, but a decrease of nine below the total for 1909. The eclect'c col leges show a decrease of 22 below 1910, but an increase of 20 above 1909 The physiomedical colleges had tho same number as last year. 49 stu dents; as compared with 52 in 1909, and 90 in 1908. The total number of medical grad uates for the year ending June 30 1911, was 4273, a decrease of 167 be low 1910, of 242 below 1909, of 168 below 190S and of 707 below 1907. It Is the lowest number graduating since 1900 says tho Journal of the American Medical Association, and is 1S1 less than the number graduate! .. -vj. -.v. ...... i i.iia jvui less than in 1904, when there were 5747 graduates. The percentage of graduates to martieulants was 21.6 this year, as compared with 20.7 in 1910, 20.1 in 1909 and 21.0 in los. The number of graduates from the regular colleges was 4006. or 10" loss thain in 1910, 157 less than in 1909. and 364 less than in 1908 From the homeopathic colleges there were 152 graduates or 31 less thain in 1910. 57 less than in 1909, and 63 less than in 1908. The eclectic colleges graduated 110 four less than last year, but 26 more than in 1909. The physiomedic al colleges had five graduates this year, as compared with 16 last year and 15 in 1909. fcElTF.MP.KK 16 IX HISTORY. 11S6 A conjunction of all the plan ets at sunrise at Libia, on which occa sions the astrologers had predicted great calamities. 1804. Rice crop of South Carolina completely destroyed by the great hurricane which swept over the south ern states. 184 S The populace of ' Frankfort attempted an Insurrection, but were quelled. 1S52 Earthquake in Manila and places adjacent, which continued un til the 18th of October, doing great damage. WHAT SAYED HER LIFE Krs. Martin Tells About a Painful Experience that Might Have Ended Seriously. RlYesville, W. Va. Mrs. Dora Martin. Is a letter from RIvesvIlle, writes: Tor three years, I suffered with wo manly troubles, and had pains In my back and side. I was nervous and oomld not sleep at night The doctor could not help me. He aid I would have to be operated on be fore I could get better. I thought I would try using CarduL Now, I am entirely welL I am sure Cardul saved my life. I will never be without Cardul In my borne. I recommend it to my friends." For fifty years, Cardul has been re lieving pain and distress caused by wo manly trouble. It will surely help you. It goes to the spot reaches the trouble relieves the symptoms, and drives away the cause. If you suffer from any symptoms of womanly trouble, take Cardul. Your druggist sells and recommends It Get a bottle from him today. N. B. Writtto: Udlw' Advisory Dept.. Oi Rno?a Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., for Special Jmtntclioru, and 64-p.if bock, "Home Treatment (or Women." tent In plain wrapper, oa request. Coicspete Biocks Concrete Work The Most Modern and Most Substantial Building Material-More Comfortable, and Cheaper in the end Save Yourseli Money Concrete Blocks and re-in-forced concrete are cheaper and far more satisfactory. Make prettier work when finished and give the great est comfort in either hot or cold weather. Estimates Furnished on Application Phone Black 3786. D , jf Pend leton, Oregon. Contractor and Builder of all kinds of Concrete Work. " iiii" Small Stores Gain Business by the bright electric light for signs and windows. Now that G.E. MAZDA lamps are available nothing is easier to obtain than profitable lighting. These new incandes cent lamps we now offer to our customers under very favorable conditions. More Electric Light can now be obtained for every dollar you pay for cur . Tw.l ths-i ever heforc. TL G.E. !!AZDA lamps giva more than tw ice the light you have ever before considered It possible to obtain for a given expense for current. We are now ready to tell you how you can get the benefit of this gTeat advance in electrical development. Pacific Power & Light Go. "Always at Your Service' 1864 A McClellan meeting in the I Undell Hotel, St. Louis, was broken up by a party of union soldiers. 186S Governor Brownlow of Ten nessee issued a proclamation calling for "loyal militia" to put down "the armed conspirators" in the state. IS 74 The grand jury of the Dis trict of Columbia refused to indict Charles A. Dana of New York Sun. for libel on charges made by "Boss" Shepherd. lEe Woider Store invites all to make our store their Headquarters during the Fair and Round-Up All the good now things for Fall are here in preat variety and the same low prices that have made our store tho Popular Priced Store Dress Yard wide Serges, all wool, 44-inch Serges, yard Cotton Blankets 69, 73, 98 $1.23 and up Best Outing Flannel, yard 10 Calico .1 5 Ladies Coats from S5.00 tn S1S.OO Our $10.00 Coat defies competition. Men's Peg Top Pants, corduroy Buy the hoy his new school suit here . Children's Coats , fiie Wonder Store The Store for Thrifty People - -r - wwM m sifaiftSiffl I 1884 Four hundred and ninety-two cases of cholera developed in South ern Italy and 169 deaths occurred. 1908 Orvlile Wright plans for aeroplane flight at Fort Myer, Va.. the next day. When the flight did occur it caused the death of Lieutenant Thomas E. Selfrldno and serious in jury to Mr. Wright. 1909 British Commons prepared te. pass Irish land bill the following day. Goodj all colore, yard 60 $1.00 $3.00 and $3.25 $2.50 to $6.50 $1.75 to $10.00 I Give Yourself Satisfaction See tny many beautiful de signs for Basements, House Foundations, Walls, Fences. Curbing, Building Trim mings and Cemetery Fences. They grow stroT.ger with age. Hotel St. George oar GEO. DARVEAU, Proprietor Pendleton's Popular Gentle mens Resort Anheuser-Busch's famous BUDVflEISER oa draught, 5 c glass Electric Mixed Drinks Served at this Bar. Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars, Distributors of Echo Spring and Old Crow Whiskey. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT FIRST-CLASS SERVICE The Quelle Cafe and Oyster House fJeals 25c and up Best 25c Meals in the Northwest. LA FONTAINE BLK., 036 MAIN STREET Get There Quick Phonu Red S961 for the AUTO CAB Twenty-five cent fares to any part of the city. Special rates for out of town trips. BEST SERVICE IN TOWN. Bund at 14 Main St Southeastern Washington's GREATEST FAIR Sept'r. 18 to 23, 1911 WALLA WAIiliA, WASH. $30,000 IN PREMIUMS AND PURSES Grmtoiit Race Program Ever Offorod in tlte Noitl i w eat. SPECIAL. ATTRACTIONS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT. Concerts Dally by Ruzzl's Famous ITALIAN BAND SjH-Jal Ratcti mi all Railroads. ST. PAUL'S SCHOOL Opens Sept. 1 4 t Boarding and Day School for Girls. ;; Primary, Intermediate, Ac ademic Special and Post Graduate Courses. Donart- I incnts of Music, Expression i J and Art. f PERSONAL ATTENTION REFINING INFLUENCES i THOROUGH WORK I t Nettie M. Galbraith t Principal WALLA WALLA, WASH .