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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1907)
TlIE ORECON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, MONDAY EVENING. FEBRUARY 18, , 1007. DSii ' ;-71W AW -: rVii, v "Eager crowds, Saturday morning actually forced in the front doo rs. j When their eyes fell Upontheimmense stock and they-saw , how fine, how perfect it all was, they realized that the man or woman who" came an hour later, or for that matter in the afternoon, had just as good a selection. Come today or tomorrow and youll find the throng of people all day Saturday made apparently no impres sion upon the second shipment of '. ' C;Y' ; i r 'Bi, . ,"' ' : J 'r i: -'V-S- $43,000 of the world's best Clothing, Hats, Shos and Furnishings, bought at at at 1-3, :l-2 and 1-4 of LindenthaTs Prices This means that people of PortlantLari vicinity can buy their season's outfit from top to toe at LESS THAN THE COST OF MANUFACTURE. ; S i ; Don't be in arushthere's enough "good Clothing and Shoes in this department to outfit one-half the city. There's no pick and choice it's all good.- If you are one of the crowd tomorrow and can't get a clerk to wait on you " HELP YOURSELF. Everything is marked in plain figures and piled, in sizes-be patient. :l Impossible for Us to give you prices or a general idea of this - magnificent stock IT'S TOO VAST, TOO BIG. There's exactly 212 cases'. .A CARLOAD OF CLOTHING, HATS, Shoes and Fine Furnishings. Notice to Customers If you buy anything during this sale that you don't like when you get it home, bring it back and I will not only refund your money, but pay your car fare. PAUL STRAIN. No Outside : Orders Filled Come to the Store FLOOD'S SCARS III EASTERN OREGON Railway Construction Man De scribes Damage to Railroads ' and Livestock. HALF WHEELER COUNTY ; SHEEP LOST, HE SAYS : Got Himself Oat of Country AVork- tng With Repair Crew Fifteen , Honra a Dy m Water Waiit Deep Arlington's Great Misfortune. (hMUl DtiMteh t Tba Jonraal.) Tacoma. Fab. la, A. U. Mllla, a bridge builder, who haa returned to Tacoma from aaatern Oregon, brings a tale of treraendoua loea of property and live stock by reason or rioooa ana storms. In the John Da 7 country. In Wheeler county. Oregon, thousanda of sheen and eatUa vrere drowned in the recent floods and now a many more are dying of gtarrauosk - -v--. . ;.. The railroads, too, Mr. Mills saya, bar sustained enormous losses in east ern Oregon. He, accompanied -by his son. baa been directing the construction of a bridge across the John Day river In Wheeler county. After being shot off from the . outside world for orer two weeks on account of the floods, they bad to assist the railroad men in re pairing the washouts, working It hours day in water waist oeep. Cams Out Off IU Weeks. In the John Day valley the tempera ture stood at I degrees below aero, with a heavy snowfall. With the moderation of the weather oame the floods. 8peak ing of the conditions Mr. Mills said: -- "Tba thaw cut off all communication with the outelds world. For the last three weeks the people at the camp have received no letters or papers, and aa work, was out of the question, they eould do nothing aave to alt in their sheltera and watch the swirling waters of the river and listen to the mournful bleating of famishing stock. riftr re Oeat of took Killed. "Fully ft Pr cent of the stock in that part of Oregon, noted as- a profitable wool-producing section, has been killed by the flood or has died of starvation. Near our camp a stockman had 1,600 heap In a corral. He visited thorn -one night about two weeka ago and noted with apprehension the rising water, hot did not fear Immediate, danger. That night the river rose at the rata ef a foot per hour for seven hours. It swept down the valley, leaving devastation In Ita wake, and next morning the stock man found his sheep had all been swept . . 1.1. - J - '. J.- .j ..jj CASTOR I A - Jor IflXantt and Children. : Tha Kind Yea Im Alwajs Ecught Bear tha Bifcctturg of A PROMISING OREGON INDUSTRY . V' -V 11 K "V , , - 5 ; , . : . r , : V-'" : .4- Barreling Lime at Cheney Creek; Marble guarrlea. (SpMlat Plenetrk te Tke fcornaL) . Grants Pane, Or, Feb. It. The most extensive marble and ' limestone de posits on the PaelP.3. coast are those or upper Cheney creek, josepnine oouniy. There, are between 0 and 100 acres of marble exposed in these deposits. Ths marble rises aheer from tha mountain side, towering in great cliffs mora than 100 feet high. While tha deposits bava been and are being quarried to con siderable extent. they are practically untouched when tho vast quantity of atone they contain la considered. . Be sides ths marble itself, the deposits are of great commercial value, as tha stone burps Into a fine quality of lime. It la away . In tha turbulent flood. - Near Heppner, a few mllee distant, a flock of i,oo sheep was aeatroyed. Train Bam en Orutohaev - "Old rangers say that never before have - Oregon atockgrowera lost ao heavily aa during tha present winter, "It will be months before the wagon roads of that section can be repaired and made passable. . The thaw haa cut them to pieces and W will not attempt to haul any more - bridge material , be fore next summer." "We found tha Condon branch ef tha Oregon Railway Navigation Una wanned out almost all the way to Arlington. For 4t miles there was not a mile of road that did not Inoltide more or lees aerioua washouts. Our only chance to get to Tacoma waa te help get the railroad in shape and so we pitched In and with the assistance of railroad wreckere made temporary re pairs to the line all the way te Arling ton. In some - places . bridges . were washed away, together with 10 feet of approaches en either side. We planed temporary support under tha rails and ran tha train across the structures. , ' Xlrer Ban ThrongH Atllngtoa. "At Arlington great damsg was done by the flood, 'hut was formerly a mere Irrigation ' ditch had been trane- f nrmed , Into a small , .river. A great gulch waa washed, through tha heart ef mainly for thla purpose that the de poults are used, the distance from tha railroad and the rough moutatn roads making It almost Impossible te move tha marble Itself. . . Tha method of reducing the stone to lime la by burning In kilns. The old fashioned "built-up" kilns are used, tha marble being flret . broken ' into bits, piled. Into the kilns, and intenss heat applied by firing a furnace of pine wood beneath. In three days tha stone Is burned, and la reduced to a anow-whlte lime, pronounced by masons equal to the best eastern limes and superior to any other manufactured on the coast. It contains no foreign substances and la completely soluble. It la good both for brick or mortaring work and for. plas tering. . t Both the White Swan Lime Marble company and the Ashland Marble A Lime company are operating en Cheney creek. Because of bad roada they eaa operate their' kilns only during the summer, nut they burn several hundred barrels, '-disposing of the' produot In southern Oregon. When the proposed railroad from Grants Taes to Cresoent City la -mint It will be possible to operate tne quarries on aa extensive scale, aa the entire output ean be placed uirscuy. on tne ears," the town. Buildings were undermined and fell Into the ditch. A bar project ing high above the surface ef the water and having dimensions of lit . by 0 feet was formed, out In the Columbia river." . . . RELIGIOUS SERVICES DISTURBED IN PARIS ". Jeweel Special service.) ' Paris, Feb. II. There were some dis turbances at church services yesterday. In which a number of people were ar rested and high dignitaries were In sulted at tha Church of the Holy Apos tles. An attempt was made to Interrupt the service ef the Independent Catho lics. Archbishop Vtilatte and Dr. Marroa complained to tha police that they had been attacked by the editor of the Solid. , , . . top-Over waahlngten gas Congress.. First-class . New Tork ttcketa ever Pennsylvania llnee will be routed via Washington, If requested, at direct line fare. Ten days' stop-over at National Capital, now especially Interesting dur ing session of ongrees. Al"o ten days' stop-over at Philadelphia, . For particu lars write F. N. Kolluck, Diet. Agent, I'ortlana, Oregon.. .,. THOROUGH TESTS TO j BE MADE OF SUBMARINES (Joaraat Bpeelsl Berries.) 1 Washington, D. C, Feb. It. Compet itive tesU of 'submarine torpedo boats will ba conducted In Narragansetf bay thla week, the results ef which will go far to determine" the eourse of the United States In regard te the adoption of- thla type ef war craft. For these testa congress last year appropriated II. 000, P00 and a special board, ef which Captain Adolph Harts. IT. IV N., la pres ident, haa been appointed to try out the competing boats, giving a week or more of time to teste of each boat. ' The Octopus of the Holland type and a craft Which waa built by tha Inventor, Simon Lake, at Newport News, are to be the competing boats. In the opinion of the board It la not practicable to have simultaneous competitive testa. The apeed trials will be over a measured course of one mile In three conditions of vessels, that la: "In the light condi tion." with all oe.lla st tanks empty; In the "awash" condition, with the veasels showing not mor" than half of the eon nlng towers: anu in the "submerged condition, with the conning tower not less than It feet below the surface. KNOX UKD SMOOI EARN MINISTER'S I'KATH Dr. Paden Says Former Asked Americans to Acquiesce v - in Polygamy. . (Joanail Special service.) , Washington, D. C, Feb. It. A big anti-Mermoa meeting was held' here laat night at which Dr. William M. Paden, pastor of ths First Presbyterian church of Salt Lake and president of thrj Ministerial Association or tne jNonnwest denounced Senators Knox and Smoot. President Joseph Smith, polygamy and Mormonlsnu . . Dr. Paden aald the speech of Senator Knox waa merely a plea te Americana to acquiesce In polygamy, that the federal lawa of Itlt against bigamy In tha ter ritories had never been executed, that the meaaure was defective and that the law against polygamy was not' worth the paper It waa written on unless It also dealt with 'the polygamous relations of men and women. Dr. Paden referred to. Senator Smoot at "Reed Smoot, apostle, prophet, seer. revelator of the Mormon church." In concluding. Dr. Paden said: "Tola toleration of polygamous living means the . toleration of polygamy, the toleration of adultery, with rellgtoua sanotlon. Acknowledging, aa- wa may, that the majority ef the people ef Utah do not dare to do other than acquiesce, that. 8enator Smoot haa' acquiesced, 'Is no reason why the people of the nation should acquiesce. . Senator Knox calls upon Us to let polygamous living alone and to call our being aatiafled as no more tbsn religious toleration. "Reed, Smoot la In. harmony with tha quorum to hk'h he is subject when he acquiesced In the continuation of thla crirao against God and man: but ran It be ponslble that Senator Knox Is In harmony with his - constituency In Pennsylvania, In harmony ' with the moral and rnllgloua will of the people of the t'l'nlted States snd makes a plea for the religious toleration of -polygamous living as be did?" Dr. Frank Bristol and Mlaa Margaret Dye Kills, both of thla city, also criti cised Senator Knox's attitude. It Is believed in all circles here that Smoot will keep hla seat. Tha resolu tion on hla expulsion will come up Wednesday-afternoon.-and "the- debate Is expected to laat for some time. ANTI-CATHOLICS MARCH , UNDER THE RED FLAG (Jotirnal reelai ftenrtce V -' Rome. Feb. It. An anU-CathoIlo dem onstration was made here yesterday and was imitated tn many other places In Italy, About 15,000 people paraded and some wore red shirts of the Garlbal- dlana, while 120 red flaga fluttered over the marchers. The government bad the whole garrison under arm a, and all the principal atreeta leading to tha Vatican were Darncaaeo. me troops were not needed. t.rt-.,,: SOUTHEAST IVASHIaGTOrJ'S TRAFFIC PARALYZED - N Flood Waters Continue to Carry Devastation Railroads Cut in Short Lengths. (Special Dtotutch te Tbe Jearnelt " Waahtucna, Wash, b. It. Floods have caused much damage the paat 10 days In this locality snd the situation today Is not Improved. Between Kahl atua and ConneU the railroad is washed out for a long distance. 'For miles the O. R. N. roadbed is practically ruinci and must , be rebuilt before trains- can pse -At -Sulphur- lake-water 1 to 13 feet deep Is rushing through the snlhl rock railroad cut Houses snd sheep camps are floating en the lake. Trains cannot reach the Kahlatua district for at leaat twe weeka. SALEM GRADUATES f 0 PRESENT A PLAY llwrlil DUnelril te Th J.mni.. Salem, Or.. Feb. U.The acnior clans of the-Salem High school has decided to give "Tho Sweet Girl Graduate- ae tha claaa offering .t, M . festivities, A coach will ba secured and this laughable comedy will be elaborate ly staged. .. . ,. !fcrs a - Pity To go Without Liquozone When the Test Is Free. You who Uck Liquozone you don't know what you miss. And the product itself can best tell you, . We ask you again -in fairness to yourself, let us buy you l bottle to try. ' You' who are sick and discouraged you need it most. You who are still treating; germ trouoies in tne om, in effective ways. It time that you know, as millions know, what Liquo zone means to you. The results will surprise you, for nothing could be more convincing than tne- way in which Liquozone deals with a germ attack. - What Liquozone Is. Liauoxone is a tonfc-germicide, the virtues of which are derived solely from oxide gates. No alcohol, no narcotic, nothing but gas enters into it. The process of making requires large apparatus, and consumes 14 days' time.- The object is to so com bine the gases with a liquid as to carry their virtues into the system. The result is germicide so certain that we publish with every bottle an offer of $1,000 for disease germ that Liauozone cannot kill. ' It destroys them becsose germs are of vegetable origin. But to the body Liquozone is exhilarating,. Vitalizing, purifying. That is it main distinction. Com mon germicides are poisons when tak en internally. They are impossible. lor they ditroy ut tissues as well as the germs. That is vhy medicine proves so helpless in dealing with germ, diseases. ..Liquozone, on the contrary, acts as a remarkable tonic. We Paid $100,000 For the rights to Liquozone, - after thousands of tests had. been made with it, after its power had been dem onstrated for more than two years in the most difficult germ diseases. Con ditions which had resisted medicine for years yielded at once to it, and liseases considered incurable were cored. - That was five years ago. Since then millions of people in every part of the world have shared in the benefits of this invention. Nearly every hamlet, every neighborhood, has living exam- files of its power. Now we ask you to et it do for you what it did for them. -. Germ Diseases . r Most of our sicknesi has, in late years, been traced to germ attacks, me germs as in skin troubles di rectly attack the tissue!. Some creat toxins, causing such troubles as Rheumatism, Blood Pomon. Kidnev Disease and nerve weakness. Some destroy vital organs, as in Conaump- tion. Some like the germs of Catarrhs-create inflammation: some cause indigestion,. In one of these sys, nearly every serious ailment is a germ result. . . , germi- Liquo-" t Such conditions call for a cide, not for common dmiri cone does what oihrt mi. accomplish. And it is wrong to clina to old ways when millions of people know a way that is better. 50c Bottle Free. . If you Wish to know what Liquo zone does please send us this coupon. We will then mail yon an order on a local druggist for a. full-size bottle, and will pay the druggist ourselves for it. This is our free gift, made ti convince you; to let the product it self show you what it can do. In justice to yourself, please accept it today, for it places yon under no ob ligations whatever. I Liquozone costs 50c and $1. CUT OUT THIS COUPON rill It eat -wf If o T1 Lfnirtfr.M Compn7, 4AH-464 W.h.m, ., (1,1..,,., ( M ttve fr rl4 tK l.l.s.wlmV.'hs'.t IMT lwm full .Mr.. Wf r fwrew fHMnv mt H, tie!, tSJ tT )) f, Hi SWavrsj SMII m. ... r,t I 1tiMftun fa g ,ikT j (si jW A it v ' i -t -.r vt i... .... . I