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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 16, 1902)
SATURDAY, AUGUST 1C, 1902. OPYHItHT SUMMER IS HARD ON LINEN And it's hard on us, too, for that matter What with dust stains, perspiration, etc., laundering has its trials. We do the work, though and do it ro perfection. Send us your shirts, collars and cuffs and we'll do them up in a most su perior manner. You'll find our charges right, also. Give you first class work and satisfactory service at lowest rates. THE DOMESTIC LAUNDRY J. F. Robinsou, Prop. Peiulletou. I have bargained with a competent Timber Cruiser to locate Valuable Timber Claims On the line o. z railroad now under construction. This means a big chance for first-comers. See N.Berkeley Have some good farms for sale. UMBER Gray's Harbor Com. Co. Opp. W; & C. R. Depot t SUNDAY AT J TUF PUIIRPUFQ MIL. UIIUI1UMLU Congregational Church Jonathan Edwards, minister. Sunday services as follows: Sunday school at 10 a. m. Preaching service at 11 a. m. Subject, "God's Preparation to Man." Mid-week meeting on Wednesday ove nlng. A cordial welcome to all. Church of the Redeemer Divine fservico tomorrow at hours as fol- lqws: Holy communion celebrated at 7:30 a. m. Morning prayer and sermon at 11 a. m. Evening prayer and address at t p. ni. The Rev. John Warren will assist tho rector at. both services. Christian Church All of tho regu lar services at the court house Sun day. J. B. Lister, of Eugene, will probably speak at the 11 o'clock ser vice. It. A .Copple, pastor. Thompson Street M. E. Church Services for Sunday, August 17. Sun day school at 10 a. m. Epworth League at 7 p. m. The pastor will preach both morning and evening. John Uren, pastor. ! M. E. Church, South Services on Sunday as follows: Quarterly meet ing services, 10 a. m. Sunday school, I. E. Earl, superintendent, 11 a. m. preaching by the pastor, subject, "True ami False Comforters." The sacramental service will be held In connection with the morning service; 7 p. m., Epworth League, leader, Miss Ethel Thompson. Subject, "The Life of Faith." At 8 p. m.. preaching by Rev. .T. C. Thomas, of Snokane. ore sidinc elder of Sponane district This will be the last auarterly meeting of this conference year, and all tne members are .esneciallv invited to be nresent. The ouarterly conference will be held on Monday, at S p. m Praver meetintr on Thursday night at 8 o'clock. Subject word, "Shepherd E. B. Jones", pastor. 'PIOUS FUND OF CALIFORNIANS When getting figures from others on that lumber bill of yours, don't forget to come and see us. We carry a large stock of all kinds of Building Material including shingles, door, win dows, moulding, screen doors and windows in fact, every thing that is found in a first class lumber yard. Laatz Bros. FOR Wood, Coal and Building Material Delivered Promptly. We are in the transfering and trucking business and are pre pared to move light or heavy arti cles. OFFICE MAIN ST., Near Depot, Telephone Main 51. PENDLETON-UKIAH STAGE LINE BTURDIVANT BROS., Props. 8Uf e leavei Pond 1c ton dally, exrept Huudavn, t 7. m., or Ulclah and Intermediate point Jtetoa: To Pilot Itock, 75c 5 Pilot Hock and re tTB, J1.25: To Nye, Jl.25. Nye and return, U 1b Jtldff, II 76; toKldKoand return, . 60; To Altrn, n.t'r. to AUm and return, Jl OOjToUkian B.M; to Uktah and return, 11.00. OMcc In Gulden Rule Hotel, Pendletra William M. Penfield, of State Depart' ment to Plead at the Hague. New York, Aug. 16. William M Penfield, Solicitor of tho State De partment, sailed ou the Campania to day to represent the united States government as counsel before tho ar bitration tribunal which is to meet at the Hague next month to settle the controversy between the United States and Mexico over what known as the "Pious fund of the Cal ifornias." Archbishop Riordan San Francisco and several assistants who are to represent the Roman Catholic churcn in the arguments be fore the arbitration tribunal aro al ready on their way to The Hague, The proceedings of the Hague will be followed with close interest by all the countries of Europe as well as America because the case is the first to come before the permanent trlbu nal, and will, in a measure, serve as a test of the efficiency and necessity of such a body. Under tho treaty providing for settling the Pious fund claim, no citizen of Mexico or the United States was selected as an arbitrator. This agreement was the direct outcome of tho refusal of the Salvador aroitra tor to agree to the award made recent ly by the Salvador Arbitration com mission in favor of the United states The case of the United States has been prepared with great care by So licitor Penfield and James H. liaiston who will be the agent of the United States before the Hague tribunal Two question are to bo submitted to the court. They are: 1. Is this claim, as a consequence of a former decision, within the gov erning principle of res Judicata? !. If not, is this claim just? ..USE PURE.. Artificial Ice Slip JMw eiaption Main 105. No Sediment to Foul Y 11 r Refrigerator No Disease Germs to Endanger Your Health VAN ORSDALL k ROSS The court Is also to render such further Judgmont or award as may meet all tho circumstances of tho case. Tho Pious Fund originated in do nations given by charitable persons to Spain to tho Society of Jesus. Tho donations began in 1G97 and continued through tho first third of the noxt century. Tho society was given 450,-1 000 acres of land near lower Callfor- nla, for tho establishment of missions especially intended to evangelize tho Indians of the two Californlas. Af-I ter 17G7, when Spain expelled the; Jesuits from Mexico, including tho present state of California, the prop firtv was sold for S20.000.000. The Spanish government took over tho administration of tho runti, nowover, and continued to administer it for the benefit of tho Catholic missions. Movlrn nn olitalnlnc Independence, undertook to administer tho fund and did so until 1842, when It confiscated the entire property to Its own uses, but charged itself for a sum and price asserted by Its income, capitalized on tho basis of 6 per cent per annum. Tho proceeds of tho fund were paid over to tho two bishops of the two California's. The Mexican war re sulted in a division of the church and It was not until 20 years after, nn .Tnlv 4. 18G8. that, a treaty was made providing for the formation of a commission of claims to which tno bishop of the present state of Cali fornia presented a claim, in behalf of his diocese, for an equitable share of the annual interest due from the Republic of Mexi:o and with which It had charged Itself before tho Mexi can war. Tho commission awarded tho California church more than $900,000, which Mexico paid. Sinco February 1, 1869, thero has been no .ifot-tKitMnn nf Interest, nnd tho Unit ed States government now seeks through tho Hague tribunal to securo the share alleged to bo due to the diocese of California. Mexico op poses tho claim principally on tho ground that tho Catholic church lu California did not luhorlt tho rights and shares of tho Mexican church. BUFFALO BILL'S WORK. What One Good Man Writes About His Great Deeds. Opie Read, In tho Chicago Post, has written of Ruffalo Rill and his Wild West work as follows: "If man's greatest study is man, of what worth has Buffalo Rill been to the student? Strip him of romance, of history, nnd regard him simply aa a collector of the human species, nnd then note tho distance he ad vances beyond tho 'Bhowman. When Barnum gathered wild beasts from the dark corners of the earth, wise men applauded, for they declared that he had brought homo to every child the truth of natural history. "And what has Buffalo Bill done? He has opened a great school of an thropology, and not only wisdom hut royalty has been forced to applaud. Surely his entertainment Is the greatest that the world has over seen, and could it have been possi ble in tho vigorous days of Rome; had this mammoth play been enact ed in tho neighborhood of tho Eter nal City, the school boy of all na tions would today translate Its won ders Into his mother tongue. Morse has made the two worlds touch the tips of their fingers together. Cody has made tho warriors of all nations join hands. Who but this man has pnnpnlvnil so fantastic a nlav? "In ono act we seo tho Indian with his origin shrouded in history's mys terious fog; tho cowboy, nerve-Btrung product of tho now world; tho Amor Ican soldlor, tho dark Mexican, tho glittering soldier of Oormany, tho Im pulsive dragoon, and that strange, swift spirit from tho plains of Russia, tho Cossack marvelous, theatrical display, a drama with scarcely a word Europe, Asia, Africa, Ameri ca In panoramic whirl and yot as In I ut'uaM'ed as though tho hut! necer left their own country. "Buffalo Bill Jias taught tho know ing world a lesson. It wns a bold thing to undortako, hut this man from tho West did it. Thoro often arises a man who makes the world think, but how few have made the world Btaro? In tho years to come, when Cody has passed away, hund reds of Imitators will arise to scram ble and Btrlvo for a Bomblanco of his marvelous force, but ho cannot ho ap proached, for history has marked him as one of hor children. Colum bus discovered America. Tho cen turies rolled ono upon anothor and a man from tho Western plains com pleted tho discoverer's work and brought a baud of Indians to Rome." Athena Press: G. W. Bradley had a lively experience tho other night on the reservation near uayuso sta tinn TTo wns drlvlnc tho "babies' along the road when tho whole outfit went over tho grade and tumbled and rolled a distance of 30 feet. Mr. Bradley was considerably Bhaken up, the butrtrv was broken nnd nn Indian next dav caught the "babies down tho river. and Ranges Oye r 30,000 pound , .l Stoves!noursl0;eithes&- Court Street. " HOTEL PENDLEfi VAN DRAN BROS., hopP The Best Hotel in Pendlek flNrl - a kooq as any. BUFFALO FIRST, LAST AND ONLY VISIT PENDLETON Wednesday, Atg st 20 ADIEU 1WiL.u SOON EMBARK FOR Ei. Camp Pitched Next Season in England, Necessitating an Absence For Some 1 Pi' THE WORlD'SwT GREATEST ED!3G$TIiML EXHIBIT .: pPfrj!3l EMimACIN'O, AS IT UOH8. THE THIS YEAR THE ORIENT AND OCCIDENT hide Shoulder to ttu nunatMtnur all m una Shoulder gMSmSKU in the A Wjmt-! GREAT ilk IfajP As well as the strong, sturdy, Coast Guard Life Savers Thus exemplifying nil that there is in hold, duahiiicr, HEROIC MANHOOD In the saddle und on tho scuHhoro. The great WILD WEST ..AND.. WILD EAST Now United Hand-In-Hand. Step by ptep the pathfinder has Note the endlc'HH array of stii ling attractions. RUSSIAN COSSACKS BEDOUIN ARABS, AMERICAN COWBOYS, INDIANS, CUBANS, WESTERN GIRLS, MEXICANS, JOHNNY BAKER, BRONCOS, STAGE COAC&S EMIGRANT TRAEIft!, ALL THE FAMILIAR TEATURES, AND The World's Mounted Warriors COL. W. F. CODY BUFFALO BILL Who will appear personally at the head o! the GRAND ROUGH RIDERS REVIEW On tho morning otthe exhibition. Under the effective management of MR. NATE SALSBURY Will be nt-Aaitntori HISTORIC MILITARY SPECTACLE, THE BATTLE Or SAN JUAN HILL Two Performances Dally, 2 and 8 p. ra., Rain or Shine Admission, 50 Cents. Children under O Reserved Seato (Inoludlng admlwion) 1.00, on oale at Fraaler's Book Store, 724 Mala Street" III I I I n H mLt. V mBSSm, Headquarters for Traveling Ha Commodious Sample Rooms, Rates $2 pet day Special rates by week or month. ' Excellent Cuisine, Every modern ConveHtew, ' Bar and Billiard Room inConnectk: i i i k i i it iiiii'iiir I III lib W ly I 1 1 L U Ml .I ibi ib in ii in n Corner Court and JohBeonGtrnti, Pendleton, Oregon, M. F. Kelly, Proprietor. HEATED BY STEAM. LIGHTED BY ELECTRICITY American Plan, ratci tl.25toHHI. European plan, 60c, 75c, JLOO Special rates by week or montl Free Bub Meets nil Tttlas- . rummrrc i Trade sonqw Fine Sample Row Special attention given Country Trait HOTEL ST. GEORGE GEO. UAKVEAU, P' Room Boarding nlano, Tue truitoei. a rTT 1Q, ie ana