Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1903)
MAY SPLIT PARTY THE BUST MAHUMliTUnlnu UOMPAIt STEAM AND HORSE POWER MONDAY, APRIL ?0, 1903. mm 1mm MC M V Mil MM It .'1 It. 1' K. .V T.1 LABOR LEADER FAVORS ABOLITION OF ARTY. iiniimiiiMw i BUTTER I i T Gold Medal Butter, Pure, Sweet, Clean. The chief characteristics of good butter are purity and cleanliness. This butter combines both, and will letain its rich and delicate flavor to the last. Try it and you will never use any other. Your money refunded if you do not. like it F.S.YOUNGER . . & SON . . niiiuiimnimmnm HOMES In Pendleton and out a few miles. Farms or small Tracts. $10.50 per acre buys 160-acre farm with crop, 9 miles from town. $6,000 buj-s 480 acres, spring water. 9 miles out. $3,200 buys 160 acres, new borne, only 2 miles from Pendleton. $4,500 buys 360 acres, part bottom. some umber, growing crop a rare bargain. $SO0 buys 5-acre borne near city limits, mostly bottom in alfalfa Just what you are looking for. $1,500 buys 20 lots irrigated, fruit; buildings. $2.200 5-acre home; well improved bottom land, irrigated for garden and chickens. $2,600 A 10-acre home; well improv ed: fruit 440 acres; choice grain land, 9 miles. ones lhat wlu d'rectly b. out, $.7,000, I working classes. Possibly N. T. Conklin. :At Postoffice.: 'Phone, Red 277. HAY Fine baled wheat hay for sale at Dutch Henry's Feed Yard Charles W. Maier, Vice-president of Locomotive Firemen, Thinks Or ganizations Pf Wc-rklngmen Will Dominate Elections. Charles W. Maier, of Kansas, vice president of the International Asso ciation of Locomotive Firemen, is at the Perkins, says the Oregonlan Sir. Slaler was for a time in charge of the firemen who were endeavoring last month to adjust the wage scale on the Wabash road, and who were forbidden to strike by an injunction issued by the federal court. "This was in many respects the most Important difficulty that has arisen in labor circles for many years," said Mr. Maier yesterday, and the recent decision of the court stating baldly that the men had a right to strike, paved the way for a very satisfactory adjustment of the mnttnr "Ir Hntilrl u-hn nulic thp I road, is very broad on all labor ques ' tions. and I ihlnk his influence had mucn to do with the pacne settle ment." The most significant movement among labor unions, according to Mr. Maier, is a growing determination to enter politics. Vlthtn five years he says, the labor vote will be the doml cant force in national elections.' "I do not pretend to be a prophet,' , said Mr. Maier. "and, therefore, when ! I make a prediction I am forced to rely on hard facts. I believe I am in close enough touch with the unions to know with some degree of cer tainty what the general sentiment on this subject Is throughout the coun try. "The trouble lies in the fact that the ante-election pledges made by candidates of both the big political parties are rarely fulfilled. The man running for office addresses himself during the campaign mainly to the labor vote. It Is to this "class of voters that he makes his promises. After he is elected he may support such labor measures as the eight hour law, in a perfunctory manner, but the aggressive work that the workers hoped to see Is often ab sent. The time for this Is past. The la bor unions realize that only by em barking on the sea of practical poli tics can they hope to compel the men they elect to make the laws to make benefit the nt thp j nest presidential election, and cer tainly at the one of 190S. two import ant issues will be the eight-hour law and the abolition of government by injunction, which has in some cases been carried tc excess The men who lead the labor movement have for some time been sounding the pulse of the various organizations on this subject, and the sentiment seems to be strongly In favor of a wiping out of party lines. Doctor Monk We.. ;!: i thi List I at V a hippopotamus latirhlnt A LITTLE OF EVERYTHING. Kelekian's art objects brought at the second day's sale by auction $2, 700 nt New York. Colonel Alex McKenzie. corps of engineers, was yesterday detailed for duty as a member of the general staff of the army. Woodburn. X. J.. National bank offi cials say a man deposited $18,500 all In $20 gold pieces, that had lain bur ied In his back yard for years. Burton Parker, a sorter in the Chi cago postoffice, has been arrested on the charge of robbing the mails. He confessed. He is supposed to have secured SS"0. General J. C. Bates, the new com mander of the department of the lakes, arrived at Chicago yesterdav. General Sumner succeeds him as commander of the department of the Missouri. Passenger train No. 4. on the North ern Pacific, ran Into a freight on a siding at a station 12 miles west of Dickinson. N. D. Fireman Gleason was killed and the engineer injured. switch had been left open. Jim That man destroyed all my married happiness! Jam What! You don't mean to say Jim I do; he married the cook. Baltimore Herald. Brown Has Smith named his new country seat? Jones Yes; he calls it "Snlzzled Slivers" after that breakfast food he made his fortune on. Detroit Free Press. Hundreds of people unable to as sist, saw three small children of Orm Eddlngton and one of Wm. Dudley's boys drown In the Wabash Bottoms, at Clinton. Iowa, Friday. Eddlng ton, his wife and one Dudley boy es caped. The recent high tides at Coney Isl and, N. Y.. burst through the Bright on beach bulkheads, and the Inrush ing waters flooded the cellars and destroyed the work of the gardeners at Brighton Beach hotel. The waves rose as high as 20 feet. The J. Overton Paine company, a corporation dealing in stocks and bonds, assigned yesterday at New York for the benefit of creditors to William H. Galloway, who is also as signee of the firm of J. Overton Paine & Company, which assigned Tuesday. ; As McCormlck was the original Inventor of the reaper ana v.., er, so was "Best" the original inventor of the first successful Co bined Harvester. We wish to call the attention of our friends wh coMearh!. purchasing a Side-Hill Combined Harvester the coming season, ait we are still in the lead in the way of improvements, la harvest machinery, and which our farmer friends have rightfully named th. "KING OF THE HELD." After watching its work in the field ix. past sixteen years, and for the season of 1903 It will be stil bettc as we have made a number of valuable improvements. " ' The MACHINE is the stronest and most durable made. IMPROVED DRIVE WHEELS 5 feet 4 inches high, 22 Inch tit RUNAWAYS are a rare thing with us. There is a brake oi main drive wheel, which is controlled by the driver. HEADER is driven independently from the grain wheel of s arator, and is arranged with a clutch for throwing In and out of js when turning corners. THE SEPARATOR We wish to call your attention partlcnli.-'T to the separating qualities of our machine. We claim that no otic combined harvester on the market can In any way compare Tlth & for speed and thoroughness of work, in all kinds and condition! grain, and will require less team to operate it. AUTOMATIC governor uur patent wind governor on tit tans governs the blast so that at any speed at which the harreste may be traveling, the wind is automatically regulated and prereta clogging the shoe and carrying the grain over In the straw We take pleasure In inviting you to call on Temple 4 vvilccx. Pendleton, and make a personal inspection of each and every parte. our machines before placing your orders. Every machine vrarrat;. ed to do all we claim for it and to be first-class In ever" resper TEMPLE & WILCOX, Local Agents LET US FILL YOUR BILL FOR LUMBER We can supply you with Building Material of all descriptions and sa v e you money. To Permit Public Ownership. Springfield, 111., April 20. The house committee on municipal cor porations has agreed upon a bill au thorizing every city In the state to ! un u, cuusiruci, puruuu&e. uiuriUt! , ana lease street railways, it provjaes for leasing not longer than 20 years to any company incorporated under the general corporation act of Illinois but no city can do anything without the sanction of three-fifths of the electors. Bonds can be issued, or. In lieu of them, certificates of indebted- I ness. but not unless authorized by ! a majority vote of the people. Fundamentally the bill is intended to permit the City of Chicago to own the present system of street rail ways. The committee bill was read for the first time in the house, and made a special order on Wednesday oca w DOORS WINDOWS B u i ldin g paper, lime, cement, brick and sand. Wood gutters (or barns and dwellings a specialty. Oregon Lumber Yard Alta St., Opp. Court House Bargains in Real Estate I have a larger and better liBt of Farms, Stock Ranches and City Property to sll than ever before. Also a big lot of land in the coming wheat section of Eastern Washington. i N. Berkeley His Good-Hearted Guess. 'Jlmslty thinks his wife is an an gel." "That so! Why. I didn't know Jlmsley was married." "He Is a widower." Henpeck We are going West this spring. Easyllver Do you think the mate will agree with your wife? Henpeck Will it? It will have to. St. Paul Dispatch. cli- Judc Knox Don't you know It wrong to steal a pic? l'.amm Van, Kali. Iwt dry didn't bab uu ctilektin. y& lionah. CD CD CD CD m w 83 C9 Humane Harness In This age of advancement forward steps are taken in harness makinu as well as other branches of manufacturing. The greatest improvement in harness is the new attachment which makes harness humane. This new improvement is a sliding device which is attached to the hames and breeching and gives the harness an opportunity to move with the action of the horse's body. It works on the same principle as the latest suspender. The advantages of the Hu mane Harness are many and among them are i The comfort and ease they give to Horses wearing them ; Will outlast the old style harness; does away with the back band; prevents the rub bing of the skin and thus prevents sores and blisters. The Humane Harness is simple and made according to the most correct principles, one interested in harness should fail to thoroughly investigate th6 new idea. No Don't buy old style harness until you have seen the Humane Harness. It's a revelation in harness making. The Humane Harness is manufactured under contract with the patentee, exclusively by us, we having the sole right in Umatilla county, and will prosecute infringements. The Humane Harness device can be attached to an' harness at a small expense. Come and let us show how nicely it works and how simple it is to attach it. J A. SMITH, 218 Court Street Harness, Saddles, Wagon Covers, Tents, Spurs, Harness Oil, String Leather, Bridles, Whips, Brushes, Collars, Chaps, Etc. ft i 4