' THE " OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, MONDAY EVENING, MAY"118, 18C3.
GRANGERS SUPPORT
URGES VOTERS
DEGREES
- ,y
'S RATE FIGHT
TO REl'MRB WORD
HEAVEN HUD HELL
11
THREE
fllLLfdEN
1 (Fa7TT
State Committee Declares
Bate Is In Their Own Interest, and that Lumber
men Should Be Aided in Every Way Possible,
! At the state convention of toe grange
hejd In Eugene recently the question
of adequate transportation and cheap
rate on railroads waa gone Into at
soma length and great thoroughness Dy
a committee on tranaporution. The
"' report of the committee, which la a
weeping and exhaustive one, la aa fol
' Iowa:
"One of the most vexing problems be
fore our people today is that of trans
portation, especially the two phases
adequate transportation and cheap
rates.
"One vear ago there was a shortage
.of l.Socafs. Today "0,000 cars
r sidetracked, and scores of Pacific
Sast sawmills are
of the main causes for idle the ;
1 cessation or consirucuun
?a7paclnc coast it is more largely due
to high rates lor lumoer. w v.
' Tafhen the interstate commerce com
' mission considered the question of rail
. road rites aa affecting the lumbermen
ifthe northwest early in ""ber it
took up one of the greatest jd "ost
vital questions ever coming before the
tribunal, and the lumbermen believe
Jhat if their view la accepted by the
commission eventually the railways will
be compelled to give them
, enouah to enable them to market orae
thing like W5.000.000 worth of timber
that la now wasted each year In the
foreata and in the mills. This
dous loas represents almost 0 Per cent
" of the annual timber production of the
aUte of Washington, or between a tnira
and a aalf of that of Oregon.
Battle of Millions.
"The contest of the railway" and the
, lumbermen is the most gigantic strug-
- glT ever waged in the northwestern
states, with milliona represented on the
side of the lumbermen, and many more
milliona on the aide of their oppopenta
And yet this great combat has been
precipitated by a very small thing
an ordinary dime, a 10-cent piece.
: -"One might expect cooperation end
harmony between these two immense
Intereata ao much are they depending
upon each other. The lumbermen, de
pending entirely upon the raHways to
reach the markets of the middle states,
would, one would think, do almost any
thing to avoid open rupture with the
; men who operate the great transporta
tion lines, and as lumber Is the great
staple product, can be moved with little
- reward to season or weather, may be
carried In almoat any kind of cars,
' needs no particular haste in transporta
tion, may be aidetracked for perishable
. or rush products with all thesa things
one would think the railroad would
aak to have no closer bosom friends
' than the-lumber manufacturer While
they both might wish to be frlenda auch
la far from the case.
' Old JUte Very tow.
"Th question is aimply this: Teara
ago the rallwaya needed the lumber
trafflo of Oregon, Washington and Idaho
; and made a low rate of haul eastward.
' Then they got ao much business that
. ' they could not take car of much more
than half of what the lumbermen of
fered and asked for an increase of car
rying tolls amounting to 10 cents per
1 hundred pounds or about 25 per cent.
Traffic officials say that the ost of
' nnaratlna- the railways has been con
stantly increasing and that they have
been compelled to haul empty cars
westward In order to accommodate the
. lumber manufacturers. They say there
is a constant tendency toward equalisa
tion in rail rates: that high rates are
' being reduced and low rates are ad-
vanoing to effect-a Just mean.
" 'They declare that lumber tariffs
are low and should go up in order that
" there be no Injustice to other commodl-
ties. They assert that they announced
the advanced rates after careful study,
and expect a big fight, as a result of
the advance, but they Insist there will
De no compromise.
"When one stops to consider the fig
: urea, the lumber business of the north
west is startling In Its proportions.
. The state of Washington Is the largest
lumber producer in the Union. Virtu
ally all this timber comes from west
I the cascade mountains, so the lnaus-
try 1 wonderfully concentrated.
- - v1t la estimated that there is $100.-
000,000 Invested In mills, machinery and
' . lumber equipment In this district. More
tnaa leo.uov persons are engaged in
the Industry when the mills are going
. - at run speed, and it is estimated that
, .-.more than 200,000 people are dependent
j upon ii inairecuy.
Kins' Bar Payroll.
v. , "'The annual payroll in the mllla and
logging camps when in full operation
' - reaches 1(0,000.000. More than 4,000,
000,000 feet of lumber can be manufac-
-tured In 11 months, worth 166,000,000,
"while the shingle production amount a to
117,000,000. Twenty-five million dollars
- In good years is paid annually to the
- j railways lor we transportation or a
" ; string of cars 1.015 miles in lenrth.
' About seven tenths of this long train
I is filled with lumber and the remainder
with shingles.
. ! "Here are a few figures showing how
:; ue iumnr inaustry compares with
; ' others In the northwest: The annua
output of timber la estimated at $82,
' 000,000: grain. $42,000,000: coaL 110-
000,000. Perhaps half the lumber out
put Is shipped by water to California,
: Hawaii. China. New Zealand and South
, America. Rates are based on 100 pounds'
shipments with a minimum load to a
ear.
" The railways are now paid 40 cents
NOW INSTEAD
OF LATER
Startling Reductions on Made-to-
Order Clothe, and the Reason
for this Extraordinary Sale
, - and Offer.
' .l2n$K.our prln lens for this
eaaons business we took last sprina'a
results as a basis as far a q u antlt Se
-.are concerned. You ell know h 7k!!
. financial atringency affected TtheIntir1
MlUlltrV anil nsaw 4 dlliltj
retail 'ttide. " Busing thl, .
therefore, did net cSm, p to oJr
pectattons. Our stock hT
heavy-some of it, will have to ba sac?
rificed eyantually-for we nevei
over pattern from one season toinZ
other." Instead of reducing our priced
, at tha end of the season, WE tin it
NOW We take our loss and tak H
quickly; costs and values are entlrew
disregarded. This is Indeed an excltJ
tional Opportunity come and take AdI
vantage of prica concessions such m
you rarely expect to find at the end of
the season, never, as in this ln..n.-
at Its very beginning.. ln addition to
our usual low prices we will a-iVe
lcial discount of ti per cent, also an
xtra pair "f trousers or a fancy silk
. ' 1 lnB pnc out not the
. quality.. We can refer you to overoo
watlsfied customers as to our ability In
' i? .u r' hulldlng- made-to-order
.... -...-.r -u cm t unaer personal
, . miun mi mr. Aiaxweil. All Clothl
marked In pial figures. Quality, work
rnnnip al fit guaranteed. -Garments
. in in.. ax weu Tailoring mm
lny. HI .S.vorvd street, near Aider,
fciure opn eveniugs. . . .
Demand for Lower Lumber
for transporting lumbar per 100 pounds
irom me .racino cqast to su faui. 60
cents to Omaha and 40 cents to enver.
while cedar and shingles take a 10 cent
mguer rate 10 eacn place. ine new
rate Is 10 cents higher on lumber to
St. Paul and 6 cents higher into the
Missouri territory. 7H cents higher to
" 'Most of the northwest's rouarh
product goes into the Dakotas, Mon
tana and Colorado, while the finished
grades of lumber are shipped into Kan
sas, Nebraska, Missouri and the other
middle states, where they come into
competition with the white pine of the
south and the woods of Michigan and
Wisconsin forests.
Kaon Competition.
"'Those competitive districts are
much nearer the market, and ao are
called upon to pay much less freight
charges, than the lumbermen of this
coast pay. "This new rate spells noth
ing but ruin for us, declared the lum
bermen In the beginning, when they
were called upon to pay the advance
demanded by the Hill and Harrlman
lines, and their dire prophecy has not
been far from fulfillment. There is no
question but what the lumbermen have
the more popular argument to set be
fore the people, for It Is the railroads
that have made the advance.
" 'Rough lumber at the mill Is worth
from $13.60 to $16 per thousand. The
lumber manufacturers assert positively
that their profits ordinarily are about
$1.60 per thousand at present cost of
operating and after paying old freight
rates. They figure out that this rate of
Increase means a further differential
against them of from $2 to $2.80. "And
then where do we get off?" they ask.'
"The foregoing statement applies with
equal force to Oregon and in but a little
less degree. Oregon and Washington
h'inber and other interests are Identical.
We have but to reach across the Co
lumbia, a, large part of our northern
border, to shake hands, and the Oregon
state grange ran make no mistake In
throwing its influence with that of
Washington In helping the lumbermen
and thus make friends with these pow
erful Industries and, in their winning
the battle, strike a telling blow for self
interest. '
Bow About Bates T
"It Is now announced that the Great
Northern railroad has ordered con
structed 600 fruit cars and 600 stock
cars to accommodate these great and
? rowing Industries. But how about
reight rates? We imperatively need
also lower rates for our fruit, for it
would enable us to ship thousands of
tons where we now ship -only hundreds.
"Our waterways can be made to cut
a large figure in the matter Of trans
portation. An open Columbia from Its
mouth to far up toward its sources
would mightily help the great inland
empire. For central western Oregon
an open Willamette to Eugene a large
part of the year, including free locks at
Oregon City, would save the farmers
thousands at dollars annually. A line
of steamers from Taqulna bay to San
Francisco and way ports again would
be of incalculable benefit
"Why should be delve and toil and
with the sweat of our browa raise prod
ucts that cannot be excelled anywhere
and then let so much perish because
transportation rates are too high for
profitable shipments?
"This is a 'booster year for Oregon
as never before. Let us catch the
spirit of enthusiasm surging all around
us, and join hands with the magnetic
forces that will speed us forward to a
grander destiny. The dream or the
grange for years, a parcels post, is near
fulfillment Every noble principle for
which the grange has stood all these
weary years Is growing to be the war
crv of the masses for equal right and
equal laws. More and more the grange
influence is permeating every nooK ana
corner of our vast domain, and some
dav there wil go up the mighty shout:
'Hail to the grange!""
L. C STRATTON.
1. A. MERRIMAN,
C. L. MORSE.
MRS. E. W. STAATS.
MRS. ELLA A. TOMPSON,
Committee.
EARLY EDITION
Headers All Through Wil
lamette Valle.v Enjoy It
at Breakfast.
With the enterprise that has charac
terised The Journal since it haa been
established ln the good graces of the
Oregon people, an early edition of the
great Sunday Journal was sent out on
the early Southern Pacific train yester
day morning that carried the news of
the state and world to the people of
southern Oregon on the day of publica
tion.
Readers as far south a a Cottage
Orove received yesterday's Journal be
fore breakfast time and at Ashland
The Journal arrived ln the afternoon.
All the newa of the world up to nearly
1 o'clock Sunday morning was contained
in tne Dig edition.
io set out the early edition meant
extra work for the Journal forces, but
this was cheerfully given ln" order that
the residents of the valley might have
the news of the day on the day it was
published. The great presses were all
ready, waiting for the last plates as
mey went through tne stcreotypers'
hands and were at last delivered to the
pressmen, when they were quickly
buckled on and the machinery started.
With great rapidity the edition was
printed and tied in bundles ready for
the expreaa wagons waiting to carry
the papers to the depot where they
were put on wie train ready to rusU
southward through the valley.
At Medford. Ashland, Roseburg,
Salem. Cottage Grove. Albany. Eugene,
Grants Pass and Corvallis the train
stopped, while the huge bundles of the
early edition were thrown off to be
gathered up by The Journal carriers
and, distributed to the homes of the
read era
The early edition was rrt f. tn-
The Journal and much appreciated by
its readera
SUNDAY JOURNAL
EMU CL0SSET JR
i DIES AT HOOD RIVER
Emll Cosset Jr.. secretary and treas.
?!L0iCU"et.., vera. dlad at his
Hood River residence at t o'clock last
night following an Illness of several
months. He was born In Portland. 10
years tgo and for the past 10 years had
been connected with Closset i Devers.
v?Z, y-ar" Ukng an interest In the
uf. H1 wa". popular member
of Multnomah Athletic club. He was
married in St. Louis last fall to Miss
Hcheydeeker. who. with his father, Jo
eph Closset. mother, twe brothers and
a sister, survive him. ,, .. .
Funeral arrangements have' not been
maae. . - ,- . - . -. . . ,
,.,Tnmrro.w -nd Wednesday 111 posl-
... yiM- tb dayt 'or l-unt on
aat side gaa bills. . . Portland oaf go,
iv-ron'':'-'
Eev. ErXelsoOllen Calif to
Mind What Ex-Sheriff
Accomplished.
LIQU0B MEN ALWAYS
REWAED SERVANTS
Pastor Points Out That, Strong Ef
forts Are Again Being Made to
Nullify Local Option Law, and
Therefore Indorses Tom Word.
Rev. E. Nelson Allen, pastor of the
Hawthorne Park Presbyterian church
delivered a prelude to his sermon last
evening on the question, "Shall we vote
with the liquor men?" He said in part:
A few years ago Portland was notor
iously a wide-open town. The liquor
men, gamblers and boss politicians had
everything their own way." Their first
set-back came with the adoption of. the
Initiative and referendum. Then to
their utter amazement came the adop
tion of the state local option law. Their
next defeat was In the rejection of the
Jayna amendment in the legislature,
Then after the most vigorous campaign
the
hey could inaugurate in oenair or an
nltiatlve amendment to the local option
I
law,
sfeated h
than 10.000 majority. Then they ques-
tinned the constitutionality Of the law
with the result that the law was upheld
by the supreme court and declared valid
in every particular. '
"Now they are marshaling their forces
In another effort to nullify the local
option law. Mayor Reddy of Medford.
with the. support of the liquor men of
Portland and throughout the etate, has
proposed an amendment to the constitu
tion which if adopted would have the
effect, as stated in the Morning Orego
nian of January 28, of 'Olvestlng sher
iffs and district attorneys of the power
to suppress poolrooms and Sunday sa
loons and give municipal authorities
power to run a town as wide open as
they desire.' It Is a law backed by the
most vicious element of the state and
for the purpose of entrenching all man
ner of vices ami Immoralities. It tn an
effort to make the legislation of corrupt
city councils superior to the criminal
laws of the state. .Jt will provide a
means by which a "liquor town may
force its behests upon the taxpayers of
a county, without proviaing mat ine
enormous expense of prosecuting crim
inals, maintaining Jails and almshouses
and extra police forcb shall be borne by
the towns alone who are responsible for
these conditions.
Sow Liquor Kan Work.
"This iniquitous piece or proposed
legislation certainly deaerves over
whelming defeat and will receive it un
less we vote with the liquor men. One
fact is to be constantly Dome In mind,
in the ceaseless warfare with liquor
men. they never fail to reward their
servants, nor to punish their enemies.
Witness the defeat of Judge George be
cause he upheld the anti-gambling laws.
Witness the defeat of Sheriff Word In
the last election by the use of fraudu
lent affidavits and the colonisation of
voters in Sellwood precinct. Witness
the attempted defeat of Judge Bro
naugh in the primaries for no other
reason than the fact that he favors the
local option law.
"The question arises, shall we stand
by the men who favor law enforcement
or shall we vote with the liquor men
for those who favor non-enforcement?
"We have now an excellent opportu
nity of showing our colors. What shall
we say of the office of sheriff? Two
years ago Sheriff Stevens was the liquor
men's candidate. Sheriff Word had
alienated all that element by his rigor
ous nollcv or law enrorcemeni. ine
Irhiia was clear cut then and continues
to be. What has Sheriff Stevens done
to merit his re-election? He has waged
no war in the interest of a better en
forcement of law. He has fought no
battles for the public good. He has not
taken a single step forward.
Wnat Word Accomplished.
"Lest we forget, let us call to mind
some of the things that belong to the
credit of Sheriff Word. When he came
Into office Portland was a wide-open
city. Gambling was everywhere. A
conservative estimate at the time placed
the number of habitual poker players In
the city alone at 1,000. Including tnoae
who played occasionally, the number
was augmented to 8,600. In the regular
rambling houaea there were employed
72 men. There were 200 men employed
In poker rooms located ln saloons, cigar
stores and other places. Over 1600,000
was paid annually to the employes of
these gambling houses. No . estimate
can be placed on the amount of money
lost In these places.
"The first big raid -was made by Sher
iff Word and his deputies on the Maze
cafe, August Erlckson's concert hall,
Ed and Eugene Blasters' concert hall,
and several score of players were placed
under arrest At one time there were 87
gambling cases pending in court to be
tried on separata charges. Their fines
ranged from $60 to $500. Every effort
was made to Induce the sheriff to de
sist ln his anti-gambling crusade. Fail
ing In the attempt at bribery, they
threatened his life. He was compelled
to spend a large portion of hia salary ln
the enforcement of the law.
"The heroic example of Sheriff Tom
Word in closing gambling in the city
of Portland haa been the means of sup
pressing the iniquitous business In
nearly all the cities and towns of the
northwest. It is up to the qualified
voters of Multnomah county to say
whether he shall be rewarded for the
tremendous work which he has accom
plished in the Interest of morals and
good citlsenshlp. If men shall receive
no reward for such heroic services:
what Incentive snau mey nave ior
serving the public good?"
DARK INDUSTRIAL CLOUDS.
Rev. G. R, Varney Thinks Self -Preservation
Is Being Asserted.
Gloomy views of the labor problem
were expressed by Rev. George R. Var
ney of Baker City, who filled the pulpit
at the White Temple yesterday at both
services in the absence of Rev. J. Whit-
comb Brourher. He declared that
was-ea are falline ln comparison with
the cost of living, and said there is no
wonder that an uprising or tne laoonng
classes Is imminent, because the right
of self preservation will assert Itself.
He pointed to the slums of the great
cities as an Illustration of his text,
and exclaimed, "If I were to dip my
paint brush in the seething caldron
whose stifling fumes ascend from the
pit of hell. I could not paint the black
side of the picture."
The speaker said that the conscience
of every man upholds the president in
Keep on hand for a quick
lunch
Post
Toasties
The most delicious toasted
food yet produced. ,'
- "ThTsitw UnserV . -
-v Mad by '
JPoetum Cereal Company. Limited,
- : i Battle Creek, Mich. --.
Christtaff-llianrepeaiker
Explains "Paradise,"
"Hades," "Gehenna,"
The annual convention of the Chris
tian and Missionary Alliance closed last
night. Rev. Milton ,M. Bayles D. D., and
Rev. Isaac Hess spoke at each of the
ihree services yesterday. The annual
of ferlDg for home and foreign Dila
tions was taken at tha afturnnAn r
services and . amounted tof
.' ima izjea la for foreign
missions and is the largest amount ever
taken by the alliance for that purpose.
Dr. RflVlAa mnA Umr T.bma U. .III
. " OOKV 11W Will
epeak Tuesday evening at the chapeL
East Ninth and Clav atreota. Th( will
do meir inat appearance at this time.
At the evening x service Dr. Bayles
took for his subject, "Is There a Heaven
and Where Is It, and la There a Hell
and Where Is It?" Dr. Bayles said:
"There are three stages of heaven and
three stages of hell. The first stage of
heaven is here on earth in men's hearts
and lives. To the extent that we sub
mit to the Lord and he lives ln us we
have a heaven, and we will never have
It anywhere else until we first have it
there. And according to the measure
of it here will be the measure of our
heaven elsewhere.
"The second stage of heaven Is para
dise, the intermediate state for th
saved. The word paradise means Dleaa-!
ure garden. "At his rlaht hand are
treasures forevermore.' Paul was caugit
uv iu ine mira neaven. -in rimt
heaven is the clouds, the second h
starry heavens. Above the stars some
where is paradise. There our loved ones
are now safely garnered. The third
itage of heaven will be this earth. At
the close of the mlllenium there will be
ushered ln the new heavens and the
new e&rth in which dwelleth righteous
ness, im meex snail mnent the earth.'
ine rignteous snail inherit all things.'
'Where sin has abounded, arrana ahull
much more abound.'
lhere are also three stares of hll
The first stare of hell is a man'a haarf
and life. To the extent that he sur
renders to the 'devil he ban a hall nn
earth to go to hell ln. But all un
converted DeODle of necesaltv tra hell
hound because they have rejected Jesus
Christ, the only name given whereby we
uiubi ua s&vea.
The- second stare of hell fhartaa In
the revision and in the Greek) will be
hades, the intermediate state for the
lost. There are 80 passages of scrip
ture that declare hades to be some
where ln the heart of the earjh. 'Hades
from boreath Is moved to receive thee
at thy coming.' There is one word
translated hades which is mora nrnn.
erly rendered cavern. The lost ln
hades have no liberties and are reserved
unto the Judgment of the great day.
The third stage of hell is Gehenna, the
lake of f'.re. At the close of the mll
lenium the unsaved dead are brought
out of hades to appear beforarthe white
throne of Judgment. Thejr are con
demned and cast Into the lake of flra
This la the third and last stage of hell
and It is eternal punishment"
ut. Bayles Is the author of several
works, and has two more in prepara
tion! This account of heaven and hell
is the closing chapter in one of them.
demanding the "square deal." Draw
ing his phraseology still further from
the gaming table, the preacher said:
"But step up to the financial table,
where the game between capitalist and
laborer is belnr nlaved. I think tan
minutes' observation will convince you
that ln this game the winning cards
have been dealt to capital every time,
while the laborer la lucky In he gets
out with a coat on his back."
Mr. Varney referred to flaniraa ahnw-
ing the material wealth of the coun
try, and said that between 78 and sn
per cent of It is ln the hands of the
capitalist. In 1870 the percentage ln
the hands of the few was only &3 jer
cent. He asserted his belief that tho
nation will yet solve the labor prob
lem, and that it Avlll come throuch
some sort of cooperative commonwealth
wnere ine ruie prescriDed Dy Chrlut
will be observed. "Bear ye one anoth
er s burdens." Selfishness must be
weeded out, the speaker declared.
FAVORS O. N. G. BILL.
Dr. Wilson Urges Hearers to Vote
For Appropriation,
Rev. Clarence True Wilson, D. 15.,
spoke in favor of the -state armory bill
before large audiences in the Centenary
Methodiat Episcopal church yesterday.
The bill came ud in the legislature and
was favorably acted on, but at the last
moment was killed by the State Grange.
Under the referendum it comes before
the people direct in the June election.
"By all means vote 'Yea' on measure
number 312," said Dr. Wilson. "It
means only $25,000 per year for four
years for the national guard of thle
state. In all Oreaon we have onlv
H.20Q men in tho national guard and
they are housed In rented buildings,
some of them only old barns. A nation
must have an army, and the way to
have peace is to be prepared for war
If necessarry. But when war comes it
la then too late to train your young
men without a terrible and wholly un
necessary loss of life.
"If we want to keep young men full
of animal life out of the saloon and
away from the race track and gambling
hell we must give them some place to
go. something to do, something manly,
not 'ladylike? Many church people
fancy that by training men to be sol
diers we would be encouraging them :o
violence. Now no nation never lived
unless its men not only would fight but
could fight And no body of men oan
fight without training.
"The time is past, when America carf
go blundering along in the old blind
way of the past century ln rearard to
other nations and to war. To be as
helpless as we are today, especially on
this coast, is to invite war. It is the
peaceful man with the gun who keeps
the peace. No matter how peaceful he
may be himself, if he has no gun then
no one pays any attention to him.
"Labor must take a serious and act
ive interest ln the national guard. Too
many laboring meh wrongly look on the
national guard only as a weapon of the
state lent to the corporations in times
or strikes to suppress laoor. But thet
Is no longer true. The laboring- man
should Join the guard himself. The
guard is tne training school of our ra
tional defense. Let everybody vote
Tes' by all means, that we may have
a national guard.
ASTORIA ON RECORD
FOR THK UNIVERSITY
(Special Dtapatca to The Journal)
Astoria, Or., May 18. At a recent
meeting of the chamber of commerce of
this city the following resolutions wera
adopted by a unanimous vote:
"Resolved, That the chamber Of com
merce of Astoria heretv nuts itself nn
! record as being heartily ln favor of as
sisting the University of Oregon in.
every way possible to become the great
est educational Institution in tha
west; that under no consideration does
the Astoria chamber of commerce be
lieve that the appropriations for the
stats university made by the legislature
should be reduced. We believe that the
state university IS In every sense jot tha
word the school of tha Deonla anri thi
any state can only become great as its-
Beupie auvance in ine cause OI educa
ton." '
The Peopls of Oat son rnnnt aa
friendly to the university and wlu sua-
mmii xiim Hyvruiiriaiiua OUfc oy a ISTSe
majority. The of fort to restrict the
state's leading educational institution
meets with no sympathy here. -
v 1 ; Building Permits, :
: A, Oleblsch, erect dwelling, Hftlsey
between Eaat Nineteenth and East
Twenty-firnt, 13,000; Jennings A Co..
erect store, Js Washington, 110,000;
u : V V HJf- VJ U U ILal U
WHEN YOU
H. H. NorthniD. erect dwelling. Eliza-
Detn, ena ox xwenuein. xy.duv.
. Democratic Itinerary. .
(9ped( Dispatch to Th, Journal.)
Pendleton, Or May IS. A speech
making itinerary for the Democratic
candidates of the county haa been ar
ranged by Chairman Will M. Peterson
of tha Democratic central committee,
and beginning tomorrow the entire list
of candidates will tour Umatilla coun
ty until the close of the campaign, the
last speechmaklng date being May 80,
In this city,A , s -
-
Tomorrow and Wednesday will bal
threly be the laat days for discount on
aat side gas, bills. Portland Qas Co,
C Metifer' sells' watchs 'for less.' " r
MOYER
VI -
ML
We are offering EVERY DAY in the
year the two greatest lines of cloth
ing in the United States At
We show hundreds of suitsthe
equal of any suit, sold elsewhere in
the city at $15 Guaranteed in every
way Yoiir money refunded if not
satisfactory At
We show suits that are marked in
uptown windows at $20 and $25
Come in and make us prove it.
SEE IT IN OUR
Now it's Different
It hasn't made so much difference in winter
your shoes. So long as you've had a correct pair
for formal functions, you could wear over-shoes
or rubbers with shoes that weren't strictly proper.
But now that Spring is here you'D have to be
more careful about the appearance of your feet
A prince of
shoes is the
ti
and Here
"Prince"
See this,
as other
1 1
models, in our
store in a wide
variety of shapes,
patterns, and
styks.
All Around N. W. Cor. ThJrd and Washington
F. - 'B. JONES & CO.
COAL and WOOD
PEC TON s$600 cRcoin
. LA?GE COAL WASHED AND SCREENED .
; NO SOOT NO DIRT
Home tV 1 77 1 Phones - Cast 7
AD IT'S SO
3rd and Oak
1st and Yamhill
about
good
s
as well
w7