Image provided by: East Oregonian; Pendleton, OR
About The east Oregonian. (Pendleton, Umatilla County, Or.) 1875-1911 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1903)
The minister who H'signed hi« pan the largest. pro|M*rtionately of any of torate at Seattle this w«-ek and went | the afflicted communities—probably to work iu a sawmill, because he was *1,000,000 or more. Here was the greatest I os of life—71. in Kansas thinks the tendency of the church is ! City the property loss is greatest on toward moral stagnation, lias tak<*u the railroads, and will read! to *7,- a coward's position. If every minis 000.000 or more.- The losses farther ter should do this, there would b<> no down the streams Is lighter, propor tionately, because of the preparation one left in the pulpits to tight against time given. The governor of Kansas moral stagnation Every mail is issued an appeal for aid for the thous honor bound to do his best to improve ands who lost homes and property. the conditions around him, and the The generosity of the nation has been manifest in the abundant donations higher his position the greater his pouring in for the sufferers, who are responsibility, it is cowardly to flee «■specially in distress, and there is 110 from a duty, no matter how irksome . insurance to assist them— Front The it may become. The way to encour ' Recent Floods of the Middle West." by Charles M. Harger, in the Ameri age wrong and moral stagnation is j can Monthly Review of Reviews for to run away from them, The way to July. «■heck them is to stand your ground GENERAL NEWS. and make a tight. mi'tillng of Union county pion«'«-rH at P. C. Sullivan, of Tacoma, lias re Union on Wednesday. turned from Nome and announces George B. Sturgill, a Baker county that he may run again for governor pioneer, med suddenly at his home of Washington. near Pocahontas, Tuesday. Scab is said to lie raging all over Twenty-seven barber shops of Se Southern Wyoming and the bureau of attle have been closed because of animal industry is making extraordi nary efforts to check it. their unsanitary condition. George Hatnil, of Oklahoma, was There are now 3,000 Idle men in Butte, owing to the closing down of arrested in Dallas, Or, Monday, on a message from Oklahoma authorities. the Anaconda and Butte smelters. Native Oregon granite will be used He is wanted for horse stealing. in the construction of tne monument M. J. Morgan, a logger of Tacoma, for the Second Oregon regiment. was struck on the head with an iron The government has decided to in bar by a sawmill engineer, Edward crease Instead of decrease the trans Eastman, Tuesday, and will probably port service out of San Francisco. i die. A comic opera on the Lewis and Six Chinese who came over «in the Indropura. were admitted to the Clark exp«-dltion, lias been prepared United States at Astoria. Tuesday. by a local playwright in Portland, will be presented during the sum Chris Klein, of S«-attle, Is under ar and mer. rest for stealing 30 head of sheep Twenty-seven extra policemen are from the Frye-Bruhn Stock Company to be apiminted In Portland on ac William Daniels, of Tacoma, was count of the increase of thugs and shot and Instantly killed In a drunk- footpads and consequent «•rime in the «•n row in a saloon there •Monday city. night. Francis Nicol), ag«*d 69, totally Th«- fish traps at Baker's Hay. on «leaf, was struck by an Astoria and the Columbia, have been put out of Columbia River train in the yards at commission l»y the heavy drift in the 1 Astoria, Monday morning, and in- river. ; Htantly killed. Earl Courson, a sawmill employe at Mrs. Mary Kelly, of Seattle*, ab- Hastings, near Vancouver, B. C.. was du< lt d her own child front its gram! cut in halves by a circular saw, Tues mother, Tuesday. The Kellys are day. divorced and th«.* grandparents are Joseph A. St robridgp, a promt- custodians of th«* children. nent pioneer of Portland. <ih-<l Wed Tim body of John G. Van Dyke, who nesday morning after a lingering ill- was drowned in Rogue river n<!ar upss Medford. Sunday, was recovered The O. It. & N. steamer Indrapura Tu«*sday afternoon, about 50 yards will carry a cargo of 3.0(H) tons of from where he fell in the stream. flour from Portland to Yokahama, Settlers on the north side of the next week. Columbia complain of tne presence W. H. Riegel, an insurance man of and depredations of cougars and Denver, was arrested in Astoria mountain lions Sheep, calves and W«*dnesday for doing business with hogs are missed daily and the ani »ut a licensa main are very bold In some places. Yellow fever has put In an appear- Th«* alarming increase of foul tnur- ea ou the Isthmus of Tehauntepec. «let's anti robberies on the Pacific New stock in the Pennsylvania Coast makes thoughtful citizens railroad lias been issued amounting shudder for the safety of the commu to *75.000,000. i it is but common justice for capital nity. There are too many men with Th«* socialists will have 81 mem to bear its share of the burden of out visible occupation living in every bers in th«* next reichstag, as against government. Oregon is not after city in the country. Too many of 57 in the last. the corporations. It is a plain busi- them ar«* engaged in th«» s«»cret work ! There are 3,064 languages in the world, ami its inhabitants profess ness deal, and yet they cry ••persecu- of ascertaining who. in the communi more than l.OOrt religions. FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1903. tion.” ty has read> money, which may b«> Twelve thousand Christian__ Seien- Published every Tue*lay and Friday at obtained by the easy metno«l of for lists are in session at Concord, N ... Pendleton. Oregon, by tba If Miss Mari 1» V»; .-e is convicted gery or the next step—a knock on H.. from all over the United States. EAST OREGONIAN PUBLISHING ! of the charges against her. she will ihe head in the dark. The law abid In England there are 300,000 wo prove to be the most versatile swlnd- ing p«*ople of every community should men In all the professions. In ^lie COMPANY. ler in the land office department. In insist that every doubtful ntan give Unit«*«l States are 3?8.< hki women , teachers alone. Phone, Main 11. order to obtain some valuable timber som«» evidence of his occupation, or | The ladies of the Congregational I >ands in Southern Oregon, she is ac- move on. It is the only safeguard church will serve ice cr«’am and case SUBSCRIPTION RATES. *3.00 cusetl of using six "dummy" home left by which the Innocent may be on Judge Lowell's lawn on Johnson Daily, one year by ■ mall .............. 2 50 steaders—names of men not in exist __________ I tally, six months >y b; mall................. street, on Saturday. July 4. protected. 1.23 months by mail......... Dally. three _______ ‘ Rev. N. G. Parke, aged 83 years, 5o ence—and the entire proceeding ot Daily, one month by malt ........... Daily, per month by carrier —. 1 died recently at Glen Summit. Pa land entry and filial proof is systemat The costly lessons of the past 1..10 Weekly, one year by mail ........... .73 ically carried out on her office rec should prompt campers in the moun 1 He had been pastor of the Pittston Weekly, six months by mail .... , Presbyterian church 55 years. .30 Weekly, four months by mail .. ords. without a hitch and the "dum- tain districts to be careful of their 3.00 Semi-Weekly, one year by mail The Mndon i Southwestern (Eng 1 00 mies" then deed over the land to real Semi Weekly, six months by mall fires it is a violation of the law to lish) railroad, is doing an average .50 Semi Weekly, three months by mall estate "sharks." one of whom is in- leave fires burning or in any way en with a combined mail and jiassenger The East Oregonian is on sal# at B. B. dieted with her. It is one of the most danger the forests or private proper train, of 63^ miles per hour. Rich s News Stands at Hotel Portland and The apple orchards of Orleans fraud ty by building fires in unsafe places clever pieces of wholesale Hotel Perkins. Portland. Oregon. county. New York, are being decimat brought to light in Oregon, and if she or letting them get beyond control. Member Scripps McRae News Associa by a plague of lice, and nothing is the author of it, she deserves credit The state lost over *4.000,000 worth ed tlon. yet tried checks their ravages. for her originality. of forests last year and the m.sfor- One hundred and seventy |M*rsons San Francisco Bureau, 40S Fourth St. tune must not be related were kili«*d by the overturning off a Chicago Bureau. 909 Security Building bridge ot a passenger train while American cattle, from the healthful Washington. D C. Bureau. 301 14th St.. Ji. W. districts of Indiana, while being ship The drunk Indian is going to cause crossing the Nejerilla river, in Si>aln. Schwab, president of the steel Entered at Pendleton poetoffice as eecoud ped to South America developed pro trouble in Pendleton sooner or later. trust, ¡»ought in the Bethlehem steel class matter. nounced cases of foot and mouth dis There are too many men ready to risk I works for *12.<<ou.u0«i and turned ease, en route. They were confined the danger for the small price. As them in to the steel trust at *3rt,<t04,- I in pens on board the vessel, in which long as Indians can get whiskey with 004. There was a large increase in the Argentine wool had been shipped to money, that danger is present The 1 have lived to know that the great secret of human happiness this country, and as the Argentins worthless white men who peddle it value of German exports to the United States during the last year, is this: never suffer your ener sheep have this disease, the authori out to them are worse than the In compared with the fiscal year preced gies to stagnate. The old adage ties say the cattle contracted it from ■lian. If the law cannot reach them, ing I of "too many irons in me fire" the infected quarters on the vessel. it is time to ascertain th»« reason. conveys an untruth. You can Dr. Emily Dunning, the first woman A movement is now on foot >0 quar physic ian to be appointed an ambu i not have too many—poker, tongs and all—keep them all going.— The picture« of the pope which lance surgeon tn New York City, an antine against the wool from that Adam Clarke. have been hunted out from among swered her first ambulance call Mon country. day last. the mis«-ellaneout> collection in print Thornby choked to death The telegraphic news item sent ing offices, in anticipation of his on Thomas INEXCUSABLE IGNORANCE. a piece of beefsteak in a Brooklyn out from Arlington on Tuesday fol i early death, can be laid back on the restaurant. Thornby was a butcher If the answers to letters of inquiry lowing the Heppner flood, to the ef I shelf. The old gentieman has gone and tl»e steak had been purchased at regarding the Lewis and Clark Fair, fect that an O. R. & N. relief train out his shop. for a drive. sent out by the Oregon Daily Journal had fallen through a bridge and kill The leading railroad industrial and banking corporations with headquar to parties in Eastern cities, represent ed four men and two horses, was un A movement is on foot to organize ters in New York city. will, on July the general knowledge of the fair, in true. Many inquiries have reached the farm laborers into unions, 1. divide dividends amounting to that section of the country, there is a this office in regard to the occurrence *137,000.000. throughout the West. great deal of dense, inexcusable ig and Superintendent J. P. O'Brien, of The cashier of the Harmonis norance on this historical subject, the O. R. & N., corrects the item by Clnb, an aristocratic Hebrew organ DRIFTWOOD. there. ization in New York City, ha* disap- saying that nothing of the kind hap ;»eared; likewise *15,000 of the club's If the people of the East do not pened and that there was no founda IDs was a hard and common lot. ready mon«»y. Which thousand« liear as well; generally know of the Lewis and tion for the story. Eight hundred and ninety-six He bore it meekly—bis was not Clark expedition and of the plans rural free delivery routes were The nature to rebel One of the most disastrous coal now being carried out for its com- in operation July 1. There memoration, there is truly a great mine explosions in the history of the lie seemed a commonplace why t Tied approximately 16,*w»n rural livery routes. A good machine to be; work ahead for Oregon newspapers. West, occurred at Hanna. Wyoming, The columns of a railway gu ae The prediction Is made in railroad yesterday There is a tendency on The truth of the matter is. the pro Were not more dull than he. circles that a round trip rat«- of *3»» vincialism and narrow views of the the part of the coal mining compa from Chicago and *45 from Missouri far East, blind all eyes to subjects nies to reduce the means of escape And when he died, strange hands laid river points will be made to :he ¡ bare luewis and Clark Fair and events not concerning them di from underground works on account His dull life's secret spring; Philip Aitland dh-d yesterday at rectly. It was the New England sen of expense. There should be more A rose, a lock of baby hair. S- « Salem. Pa. H» mad«» ali ar- timent in congress which prevented rigid government restrictions in such And half a broken ring raiigem«-nt»' 4t» years ago for ms fu- the government from sending assis matters. neral, and will I m - burieq in a coffin A beauty, radiant as the sun tance to the struggling Oregon set he himself made in 1863. The next legislature of Oregon will And baleful as the moon; tlers—it was the New England senti I* called uj>on to appropriate *35.000 The Russian minister of war is A woman for whom youth was done visiting Japan, and th«-rv indica ment which thanked God that the to pay the deficit in the coyote scalp Too utterly, too soon tions that the two governments will Rocky mountains lay between Boston bounty fund. When this amount is “ge« together" in relation to the Man- She often laughed a laugh, we knew. < hurt an and Korean issues. and the Oregon wilderness. paid. Oregon will have spent *313.000 To which joy lent no breath; People of that old coast have not for coyote scalps, many of which were She laughed at all things sad and During the year 1902 57.472.283 passenger miles were traveie«! in the mingled widely with the world. They imported from Idaho. Washington and true. United States for every passenger At children, love and death. have not touched shoulders with the California, to the border Oregon coun killed, and 2.946 272 passenger mile* ideas and views of people of sister ties. Yet when they nailed her coffin « lose. traveled for every passenger injured. states to any great extent. There is The heaviest socialist gains in They laid beside her there a tendency to stay in the shell year The collaiise of the shipbuilding A broken ring, a withered rose. Germany at the recent election were at Essen, the town where are located And a little lock of hair in, year out. There is a world of trust is a natural result of its fraudu the Krupp gun works and where the —E NESBIT education and enligntenment there, lent capitalization. It was two-thlrds emperor exerted himself most against but it is confined to dead issues and water and was soaked in bogus stock Rufus Choate believed in hard work socialists. antiquated subjects. Current history, values from its inception, Schwab, and struggle When some one said One result of Mayor Tom Johnson's current events, thrilling touches of as head of the steel trust unloaded to him that a certain flue achieve fight In Cleveian«! has been to have the present day and age are not one steel plant valued at seven mil- ment was the result of accident, he the taxation list of five corporations *2 This parts of the New Englander's life, it Hon, for thirty million dollars, upon exclaimed “Nonsense' You might as drop the Greek alphabet on the was done against the advice and con would seem. They are wrapped up it and a like accompaniment of fl- well round and expect to pick up the Ill sent of the attorney-general of the in the history of their own little sea nancial corruption has followed its ad." state coast towns of five to fifty thousand. entire career. The carpets In the adjusting rooms The movements of the other 80.000.- William M Evarts once told this of the United States mint at The specie of harmony which •»torv on himself. "A few summers *'*i0 people of the nation do not con Francisco, were put down In 1897 cern them—do not claim their atten reigned in the Iowa republican con •Ince at the earnest request of one few days ago they were taken his younger daughters, be sent tip macerated and reduced, ami *9.m vention yesterday may be judged of tion. o her country place in Vermont a tn gold was the result. from the statements of the press that ionkey for her use. She had reau Although the work must be done Jonathan Clark, of Chicago, free of charge, by Oregon newspa not a person prearranged by the ibout donkeys, but was uot familiar his entire «state of J2.0ort.0iM>. to a with their i>e^uliar vocalism. The bosses to be temporary officers of the pers, the East must be educated. The animal's strange noises inspired her «Ingle woman with whom h«* became olden shell of provincialism must be convention, was chosen by the dele with profoundest pity, for Its evident nfattiated 23 years ago. His four hildren are now seeking to have his distress. So she wrote to her father pried open by the Westerner and a gates. will broken and secure the inheri Dear Papa: I do wish you would little sunlight of twentieth century Three thousand tons of Oregon come up here soon, my donsey is so tance. events forced in for the little East flour is going to Japan on an Oregon lonesome.' " Coincident with the announcement enter curled up within. • • • steamer next week. This does not that the new immigration law which At the trial of Horne Tooke. Ix/rd went into effect June 3. "is unexpect The great spirit of Western en sound like Oregon is a frontier set lightenment must invade the East. tlement. She holds an enviable place Eldon, siieaking of his own reputation edly stringent in Its operation" arc .-aid: "1^ Is the little inheritance I published figures from Ellis Island, The young offspring of the pioneer among the commercial factors of the have to leave my children, and. by showing that 1.400 Italians. Crotians must send back a token to the leth world. Gods help. 1 will leave it unintitair- and Huns landed at that port Sunday ed." Here h<- shed tears, and to the last. argic dreamer, bidding him to awake The get-rich-quick fever has reach astonishment of those present. Mlt and know that the war is over, the An old Syrian woman in Denver, ford, the attorney general, began to highway to the West open for travel ed the Philippines. A native doctor weep. "Just look at Mitford." said a was bound and gagged so tightly that and that the greatest country on is under arrest for imposing upon bystander to Horne Tooke, "what on deatm ensued in her house. The dee«l was done to enable robbers to eatrth lies within a weex s travel of his unsuspecting brethren with a earth is he crying for?" Tooke re get her money, The robbery is Rup scheme equally as brilliant as the plied; "He is crying to think witat a Boston. posed to have taken pi» ce Saturday small inheritance Eldon's children last. American product. The body was discovered yes- Oregon newspapers have already are likely to get." terday. • • done more to bring the two sections Out of fourteen circuit judges in Fred Barber, aged 15. accidentally _________ _ Probably the most successful ap- of the country into closer communi Oregon, three of them hold over until cation than all other agencies com- the election of 1906. These hold-overs pearance ever made by anybody In fired a blank cartridge into a box of any theater occurred San Francis- fireworks yesterday at Glen's F'alls. bined. The work is not yet finished, are Judge Ellis, of the Sixth district co some years ago. at The place was N. Y. The merchant's entire stock Until every hamlet east of the Alle and Judges Sears and George of a colony of rough miners at that time became ignited and was destroyed, and women and children were seldom and the Interior of the building was ghenies has read the story of Lewis Portland. seen. One evening during a per wrecked. Several persons were bad and Clark and of Oregon’s great an The St. Louis street car men have formance at the theater, a child was ly burned. niversary event of 1905, Oregon jour heard to cry, whereupon a rough, nalists must not rest. It is almost decided to strike on July 4, unless hlackbearded giant leaped upon his NORTHWEST NEWS. startling to the average Oregonian to their demands are granted. This is seat and shouted: "Stop them d—n A brisk snow storm was experienc think that there are prominent peo a number on the celebration program fiddles and let’s hear the baby cry. i haven’t heard such a blessed round ple in Philadelphia, in Boston, in New not arranged by the committee on lor years!” And the Addles did stop ed in Butte on Wednesday. The Willamette Valley Baptist As York, in all the great cities of the sports. and the baby did cry, while tears roll aociation is now In session at Albi ed down the cheeks of wifeless, child East, who have not yet read of Lewis na. Gold dust amounting to *9.0(10 was less men. Tutuilla, June 30. and Clark’s expedition. obtained from beating the carpets in The steamer Imnaha has just been launched on Snake rlker at ix»wiston. the minting room at the San Francis FLOOD LOSSES IN KANSAS. Idaho. A little bevy of poverty-stricken co mint this week. Not many car Five thousand sheep were shipped corporations, not named in the news pets are worth their weight in gold. The daily palters greatly «-xaggerat- item, have employed a lawyer of ed the losses to farmers. It was as Tuesday from Baker City to Stock- ton. Cal. » The Northwest wheat yield for 1902 sumed that something like a third Portland and will test the validity of There are 20,834 school children in of Kansas and as large a portion of the corporation Ui law of Oregon. was 41,678,000 bushels, and less than Iowa and Missouri were devastated. Seattle, this year- a gain of 1.798 All right, gentlemen, test it. The 2,000,000 bushels of that crop now re In the first-named state was the great- over last year. farmers of Oregon, the stockmen and main unsold. The new crop has a eat loss. For 200 miles, over a strip Prize fighting in Butte will be pos of valley land two to five miles wide, itively prohibited after the present merchants who have been paying the clean granary. the water rushed for five days. In carnival closes. taxes and building up the state, are Japan is not satisfied with the the currents the crops are gone. Not Canada celebrated the 36fh anni willing for you to test it. The result Manchurian situation and talks war. more than one-half of this was tilled versary of the birth of the Dominion will only fasten the law more firmly on which crops were wiped out. confederacy, July 1. Talk, in Japan, as elsewhere, I h very. land, if the crop loss amounts to *3,000,00(1 on the statute books and your ef very cheap. Great distress now reigns at Ijidy the probable maximum, it will be forts to dodge a just tax will only smith, B. C„ as a result of the Duns but a trifle in a state which markets mttlr coal mine strike. make the people more determined The third term bugaboo has no *220.000,00o of farm products annu T. R. Sterrall. wanted |n Texas for that you shall pay it. Just a little terrors for President Diaz, oi Mexico, ally. • • • attempted murder, has been captur cool, deliberate reason on this mat who is nominated for his seventh A dozen towns lost from *35,000 to ed in Whatcom. Wash. ter will convince these dodgers that term. *100,000 each. Topeka's loss—by far Over 2.000 people attended the * t The Peoples Store TEUTSCH’S ALWAYS TIRED NEVER RESTEM To be tired out from hard work or bodily I ex«-rcise is natural and rest is the remedy, but there is an exhaustion without physical exer tion a:t<l a tin-d, never-rested feeling- a wean ness without work that is unnatural and shows some serious disorder health, ....... J1B orucr « is threatening the ........... --*. wavs tired, never rested condition " „.impure blood^and that ' Always- 1 lation. Unless I____ the body in nourished with nch, pure blood there is lack of nervous force, the mus- For over four year» I suffsre«! with s«Mr*) d*t>Uitv. cks !,< « ollie w«ak, the dl ca.iiing a Iboroijth breekin« o atn. y »r*4’“ d "J c.stir.n imi.;«ir«l and 2b^ut'“itT‘'l tr.L ■’cur»«« me - I Lesrwyjo- gestion impaired, and o* • general disorder occurs eombaend B. B. B. to »11 wbo msy feel tbe jo«XABBJri,rAIW throughout the system. tborougbly good blood Debility, insomnia, ner- 44 W. Hintb IM., Columbia, Tenn. dysjxpsia. L^sof appetite, strength an«l energy, and the ailments weoiten have are due directly to a bad con dition of the biood and circ ulation, an«l the quickest way to get rid of them is by purifying and building up the biood, ami for tl is purpose no remedy equals S S S., which contains the best ingredients »off cleansing tlie bloo»’ and toning up the ay stem. It is a vegetable blood Lur‘^ and tomccombiued, tbat«*nnclies thel»lood,«and through it tiieetit.re system is nourished and refreshing sleep < oni« s to the tir« d x L- THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLAHTA, S4. RED LETTER SALE Mam and Alta Sts. 2.500 Yards 0 * best field for baigaiuf*. They have been comin way lately and we expect to draw the procession wards if prices will do it. 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From start to finish, Plano Machines are built on the idea that ‘ the best is cheapest,” and that true economy in the harvest field consists in using the best and mot-t reliable machines obtainable. There is nothing ‘‘cheap” in its construction—nothing lacking in |»erfeetion of details It is a machine that will harvest your crops easily, economical I v and well under even the most trying condi tions; a machine that requires few repairs; one that you can depend on year after year. In addition to the Plano Binder we carry the Plano Headers, Mowers, and Rakes. A We also have the Famous John Deere Plows and Harrows The Celebrated Minneapolis Threshers and the Moline Wagons, justly considered one of the best wagons made. Come in and see our splendid line of Hacks and Buggies. Sold Only by- PENDLETON A. KUNKEL & CO. ATHENA