The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, July 21, 1910, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, rOHTLAND, THURSDAY
,v;::n::;
JULY
mm
EASTERNERS INVEST ..
IN ORCHARD VENTURE '
IN DOUGLAS COUNTY
Experts of Opinion That Dcral
" not in California Was Dus
.' to Solar Heat.
if (TTntted PrrM mf4 Wlr.) V
Baoramento, Cal., July Jl.That x
Mansion of , ths rails due to the heat
cf the sun and the resultant buckling
pf the steel was the peculiar cause of
the wreck of the Oregon Express on, the
. .Southern Pacific at the .Feather river
rirtg noar Man's villa on 'Monday, in
' vhlch tliree railroad men lost - their
" iivett, 1 the official explanation of
the accident as given out .by the com
fcany. No blanvs attaehm to any.
rlovs of the road.
The evidence showed that the train
was running- at four.- miles an hour.
; The weather was unusually warm., Dur
ins the entire morning the rays of the
pun were storing up heat in the rails.
The- approach to the bridge, which is
frelng, newly ballasted and raised,' is
three per cent down grade. The rails
had crobably been, "bunched." or
erowded together owing to expansion
This bunching- was 'aggravated when
Engineer Condon's train came down ths
rrade toward the bridge with the air
brakes holding the coaches In check. It
I believed that the rails must have been
kinked out Of line by the heat Just a
few feet ahead of the locomotive.
. The engine then climbed the guard
ran on the bridge and plunged to the
river bed below. : Not a spike was
drawn from the rails and this, is held
as conclusive proof that the theory ad
i anced by the -company , i xorrecLi
SWEETHEARTS PATCH UP
f QUARREL 25 YEARS OLD
f '',' -i- .-nr i . ? $ .-.j:
i " (United Pmm LMd Wire. ,
4 Carden Grove. CaL. July 2L Separ
ated by a lover's, quarrel 25 years ago,
Bishop S. Garrison and his bride, who
was Miss fiva E? Rugg have started on
a honeymoon which they declared would
last longer than the Quarter century
they lived apart Garrison and Miss
Rugg were engaged when both attended
a little college In New York. The cause
of the, Quarrel which separated them
they have forgotten, but the vow of
celibacy each took was kept faithfully
until fate brought them together re
a week ago, - 4
Garrison and 'Ws ' bride will sUrt to
day for Oakdale, N. Y to spend a
part of their honeymoon near the scent
of their betrothal.- - -
LOSES CONSCIOUSNESS :
AND WAGER OF $2.50
V (Special Dlipttcb to The Journal.)
Cottage Grove, Or., July 81. While
Charles Dyar, a young man of this city,
was attempting to cross over ' Main
street hand-over-hand on a telephone
t cshla . ' 25 feet iLbova the afreet, ha be
came exhausted after having gone two
thirds of the distance, and fell to the
ground, ; sustaining a fracture of the
right 'forearm and badly bruising bis
right hip. fie had. made a wager? of
$2.50 that he could successfully accom
plish Ilia feat He 'was picked Bp un
conscious, : but speedily recovered. '.V,T
t
iZpecM I)lapMi to The Journal )
oaeburg. Or., July 21. One
enterprise has been developing
quietly in the TJmpqua valley
during the last year which
means a great deal to Roseburg
ana the Umpqua valley. It la
the Overland Fruit, Sc Develop
ment company,, which is planting
one of the largest and finest
orchards in ths valley simply as
a fruit raising proposition, . The
company has ths distinction of
not having a foot of land far
sals and of never having adver-
v Used Its stock In any paper. ,
x The Overland orchards are sit
4 uated at the head of Garden val-
ley, a few miles northwest of
Roseburg, and show a cultivation
equal to the best Visitors may
drive through aeore of acres la
which not a weed Is to be seen,
and not a tree Is out of align
ment ,
' The company .was organised In
Boston In June, 190S, with a cap
ital stock of $80,000, The presl-,
, dent is Donald McAllister of the
; Boston chamber of , commerce,
and the - treasurer and ' genera
manager Is Charles A. Brand,
who for eight years was 'manag
ing editor; of the Tilrrira Press
of Boston. The stockholders of
the company are quite largely
prof erslonal man, most of whom
cannot, come west to raise fruit,
but are sending their money ,
.west and are going into business
by proxy. . r . i
'
RDVAL ARTiST
LOVES lUffi'i
Princess Parlaghy of Hungary,
Who Paints Pictures, Pays
Fortune for Apartments.
COUGARS GET GOATS :
, OF COTTAGE GROVEITES
i . (Special Dlptrh to The jimroa!,) '
Cottage Grove, Or., July 81. Ellsha
Ger. .a. rancherjesidlng 12 miles aouth
of this city, shot and killed a cougar
meauurlng nine feet The ranchers of.
that neighborhood have been missing
goats from their bands for some time
past.- and yesterday morning the car
causes of five were found in the hills.
They-at once set out to hunt the cougar,
and the dogs treed it within an hour.
Cougars have killed SS goats In this
neighborhood this spring and summer. '
; Lutherans to Meet at Pen-Mar.,
l Pen-Mar. Pa . July. Jl.,-Ths big
Lutheran reunion, which has been held
here annually- for 24 hours, met today
with a larga attendance of representa
tives of the denomination throughout
Pennsylvania, Virginia; West Virginia.
Maryland and the District of Columbia.
s
JUDGE BRONAOgH WINS
' CASE FOR HIS CLIENT
Ex-Circuit Jvidga . B, ' C. Bronauah
appearea as an attorney In ths circuit
court yesterday for the first time sines
his retirement from the bench and won
victory for his client He took the
place of George S. Shepherd as attor-'
ney for Mrs. Zada Moore and resisted
an application by Frank, Matter, attor
ney for Anthony Moore, to have his di
vorce case set for immediate heartn
a matter of urgency. , 3 .
Tna application was mada bLii
Arthur J. Moore, son of Anthony Moo
wanU to sell a tract of land deeded by
his father. , His mother ma nnt t,.
deed, and so ; far , has . refused to do
so. As the father had only , life es
tats In the land, ? ths "mother had no
dower, but those negotiating for the
land havs turned down the abstract be
cause her name did not appear.. if
juage Morrow said his avmnathles
were with, Moore, but he was unwilling
to advanes the- trial -when neither hus
band nor wife Is directly interested, rr.
took the view ths court Is not obliged to
gt-wecause some ranat o who want.
buy land does not know the law. and
will not accept tha deed without Mrs.
aioore s signature. , ;t ?.t
WHITE RIVER POWDER
PLANT CHANGES HANDS
t PJT'.U1 DPStCB. to T Jodmsl.)
The Dalles. Or.. Julv ii Th tr.n..
fer of the electric power plant at Whits
River,; JO miles south- of Tha Dalles,
nam ins wasco ( warehouse Milling
company, to the Columbia Light Pow
er company, took place this week. This
plant furnishes light and power for Ths
DallesvDufur and Tygh valleyiall the
machinery In the -thre places' being
driven- by electricity generated at the
Whits River plant The new owners
hare begun enlarging ths plant and
promise to increase their power by too
horso power. Tha improvements . to
the 'plant will be completed by De
oerober 1..
(Colted Prcet Leases Wlr.
New York, July JLThat lovs of lux.
ury, even at the cost of lavish expendi
ture of money, goes hand in hand with
the artlstlo- temperament, has' again
been demonstrated, by Princess Parlaghy
of Hungary, who has reserved apart
ments for next season at tha Plaza hotel
that will cost her between $35,000 .and
$40,000. i . ,
'The princess is an artist1 She has
painted portraits of such Americans as
Joseph Choate and Edwin Markham, and
she hopes, to get a sitting from Presi
dent Taff. So, when she sailed back to
Hungary yesterday, she announced that
LET THOMPSON
(i
Fit Your Glasses
I01YPT0M?
WthoutlilRCSv
iri the vfe
juens
Ko edges to oolleo dast and dirt
To dark lines to Usd that "old"
appearance.
Ko wafers of thin glass to work loose.
Ko oamant to blur ths Tlsioa.
-, 't
t v
. i
mi
tew tears Ttt romTiAinj A1TD
THE LABOEST STtACTlCH Ilf
1KB PACiriO HO&TBWXST
Wa n a n n n t mumIv a m m v
rraeefiit or afflnlont oAntKinatini,
than Xryptok lenses In a pair of
Thompson1 linger rises , Kountlngs
HTOK-CUJIS WOBI AT THB
XOWEST POSSXBU . TBXOM
THOMPSON
EYE SIGHT
SPEOAUST
SOOHTrtOOS OOkBETT BUD CI,
txptk Aim Mowtisoir. ,
he would return within a few months.
In order to make her stay perfectly en
joyable when she comes back she con
tracted for the luxurious apartment.
Death of Dalles Woman.
The Dalles, Or., July ft The re
mains of Mrs. Busle L. Phillips, who
died at her home in this city Tues
day morning, were laid to rent in C-.1J
Fellows cemotery yesterday. Decease!,
whose maiden name was Suchkan, was
born in Germany on March 19, 1851, and
came with her parents to America when
only a year old. Her father was a
soldier during the war of the rebellion,
and came to Oregon in 1875.. In 1880
she was married to C. L. Phillips, who,
with an adoptel Cj.uj.Uter, survive hir.
Him Sorrice Llcctir-. -.
Detroit, Jllch., July 21. More than
100 delegates, representing millions of
dollars invested in the moving picture
business In the United States, rounded
up at the Hotel Pontchtrtraln today for
tl. a annual convention of the Film f -.-r
vice association. The association, of
which A. J. GUlinghanv of this city la
president, controls about 75 per cent
of the film licenses throughout tha
country. Various questions of Import
ance to the 'butitness are slated for dis
cussion at the convention.
TALKS, on TEETH
; . ST THE REX DXHTAL CO.
What Arc New Teeth Worth?
Many .an unfortunate wearing a par
tial -plate or .a bridge has said: TTd
give a thousand dollars for my old
teeth."' .
We can restore lost teeth for a great
deal less money. ...
All we ask Is that you have two -or
more teeth in either Jaw.
'The rest Is easy for us with ths
Alveolar Method.
. : Not only put them back, but restore
them to you will never miss those na
ture gave you. and which have been los
by poor -dentistry or disease. Hard to
believe, Isn't It? , s
?u lfic T; W the Ablngton bldg.,
l6ti 8d st. and all we ask la a visit
frornyou and the privilege of making a
carfol examination absolutely free.
If we decide that we can do the work
successfully we will tell you so. It is
palnlesa What is such work worthT
Patients of ours to whom we have re
f erred have said that It would be diffi
cult toput a value In dollars and cents
on the work if they were to measure It
rV tha fttlHTacttnn ami ,ninmu i, u -
brought PRICELESS i "u
a PorIh,e. (loose torJth), the . most
dreaded disease of the dental profession
rftmmonly known as Uiggs disease, a
d sease that dentists as a whole have
given up as Incurable, we claim to cure
and guarantee, the cure to be permanent
wo have hundreds of cases to refer to
mht here in our home city. There is
seldom a day that we do not discharge
one or more. patients from our office
as cured of this awful disease, .
.In a majortty of our advertisements
tve lay great stress on our specialty,
Alveolar ndentlstrv. reolaclng missing
toeth without a plate Or so-called i brldg-f
work. Thework.ls so Temarkable In Its
character that it is apt to overshadow
tKoe other cases which come to uZ.
t he simple cases. We don't want the
We -1 , obtain thatws are Alveola?
upcclsllsta , alone. We are that but
omethfn morn general practitioners
of the first class. We do dentistry In
il Jf. branches from the simple piece
cif filling up, and our charges are rea
sonable more so than that of the aver
fK first class dentist Send for Dr
booklet "Alveolar Dentistry":-i
Is tree. -, w.
.Along with this booklet we will send
j-ou a long li-t of patients for whom we
have don this Alveolar work as refer
rira. .411 mill .u-i L "
---- " iiieu. It lias j
i.L,i.t . "u '""nmoniaj letters from
-atip-fied tsllents.
lif-meraher that poor dentistry Is er-rt-Mtive
at soy price. Although the boat
H'sv co-t little rorwe In the bepln
it s the cheapest m th end. The
l-i x IVntl Co., (tlentlats. jh t9 114
ALM.jctn-, nd 106V, 5,1 st. "
iera.s r!i.it;ie pertpla.
ON THB
PACIFIC OCEAN
Leaves Portland 9:20 a. m. faWy. , Arrivei ocean pointf for luncheon.
Arrives Portland 10:15 p. m.
"Ocean Shore Limited
s Portland 9:20 a.' m. dallv. '
Leaves ocean points after dinner. ,
"Saturday Special"
Leaves Portland 2:30 p. to. r1' Arrives ocean points for 'dinner.
, Returning Mondays, arrives Portland at noon. .
Astoria &
Columbia River R. R.
. - - , .
t. ... ;' , .,., .Fast evening train leaves Portland 6:30. , ,
Observation, Parlor Cars and First Class Coaches.
ONLY DIRECT TRAINS TO OCEAN.
ROUND $4SS:.u mon,H :. .
TRIPS ; $3 JSffite
) , GRAND CENTRAL STATION , , ' '
.-i -City. Ticket. Off ices - - ' ' - ' ,
Third and Morrison Streets h ; ; - 122 Third Street
STOP! LOOK!
LISTEN!
r -
Af f m, m M ..a a It. , t . . a a ' I
AThe wise, take notice. Jor thev . know tha f,uZ T
ponuB, xor mey Know the folly of
k& eftkt watery ,-eyes and headaches ' are
-tlVre s varnit,f Thoy "P'ak plainly of eye
strain. We end It all with" proDer classes at ra!
Staples flic Jeweler "WSET
Tfie Last Casiosuffl 'of "CMo Fkeos
Five Alore Club "A" Pianos
THiS $350 PIANO FOR $237
PAYMENTS, $1 A WEEK
i ,
. JTHIS $450 PIANO FOR $297.50
PAYMENTS . $1.25 A WEEK
BSSS'SSnSSSSBSSSBJMaaaasaajM .f.',J" ,,r l'''MM'm1rtPrTTrvmti n u tm m i
t : '..!;:
V " ' i.W
a, i i - mm
ONE MORE CHANCE TO OBTAIN A CLUB "Af
PIANO, IF YOU ACT QUICKLY.
llMSTR C ARLO AD -. LAST CHANCES END NEAR OF
PORTLAND'S GREATEST PIANO SALE
.Thejast carload of club pianos has arrived. It contains the" final shipment of the 824 pianos for Eflera Coeperative Piano -club members. '
. Five more pianos for Club MA and eleven for fB were in this car. ; "A" and "B" have proved the two most popular clubs. If you -want
, one of these really elegant piangs, youll have toiiurry, is they won't be here long? . Positively no more $350 pianos will be sold at $237, nor $450
instruments at $297.50, when this lot is gone$X or $U5 weekly is all members are required to pay to own one. A few more Baby Grands and
. Player Pianos, which we have difficulty keeping in stock at even our regular price qjf $350, can be purchaseii on the club plan' for $586-exactry '
t $26 less and can be paid for as little as $2.50 weekly.. No home-can possibly "havev an. excuse, nor can blame any one for not owning a good
( piano, when such fine instruments, on the basis offered by Eilers Piano 'Club plan may yet be obtained. High-grade dependable Upright Pianos,
. Player Pianos and even Baby Grand Pianos can be bought at such remarkably low prices and on such absurdly low termslhat almost the hum
i b5 homt can pay for one, without hardly missing the money. Nearly 800 homes have shown their good sense in joinirig Eilers' Piano Clubs in -;
the last few weeks, practically obtaining their pianos at wholesale prices. Free musical Instruction, free insurance, free tuning and free delivery
! are advantages gained by joining Eilers Piano Clubs. ' i v H , ,. ..... , -
! Over 30 of America's finest pianos are here for you to select from including such well-known favorites as the Chickeringi KimbalL Decker
, Lester, Marshall & Wendell, etc, not to forget our New York's aristocratic piano, the Sohmer, and the Haselton. Every piano is doubly euaran'
..hi si y we maaers, men oy j.uers music nouse. xou can make no mistake by buying your piano now.
The mistake will be if you don't. After these clubs close you will have to pay $U3 to $264 more for the same
piano-and the terms of payment, too, will be more. ; Only , by selling so large a number of pianos and In one
sale, are we able to make the prices, terms and advantages given cfcib members. Don't sjelay another day, but
come in at once and select your favorite instrument. Delivery will be made at once. -No waiting. No red 4ape.
j 351, 353, 355 Washington Street, Comer Eighth (Park) St , Wholesale Department, 15th and Pettygrove Sts. -
Fpp SO Days Only
-ONE
66
,99
c9npc?tc Rcdy; for LJpc, Wlti-i Free Maintenance
(5 jfe
70 Net; -
Tills Heater Will Supply Hot Water forjlie Average '
Home Day aiia Nlgnt