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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 12, 1903)
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1903. I Illuo mountains, tlinn to go 200 miles out of tho way to got to Portland by vnj- of Lcwlaton. I'ukllnhpit rrttr afternoon (except Sunday) EAST t lvndletoa, Oregon, bj the OREGONIAN Btato are respected, and Instead of diminishing the size of the code, every session of tlio legislature adds This 200 miles additional distance ! a fuw hundred pages to It. Fully one. I from Huntington to Portland by way halt the laws of Orogon nro dead lot of the Snake river route would mean COMPANY. I'hone. Main 11. Kl'llSCItUTION IIATKS. Dalit ou- yer by mall ..... ?3.00 Dally, sit uiontba by mall 2.30 Dally thrvr months by mall 1.25 Dally, one mouth by mall 30 Pally, (Hr month by carrier 15 Weekly, iiue year by mall 1.30 Weekly, al; months by mall 73 Weekly, four months by mall SO Semi Weekly, one year by mall .... 2.00 em!-Weekly, alx months by mall .. 1.00 Heml Weekly, three monthi by mall .30 PUBLISHING that shop, station, rolling stock and motive power equipment for two extra divisions would 'havo to bo purchased and maintained. Railroads arc shortening distances In these days of competition, not ex tending them. It Is more reasonable to believe that the O. It. & N. will build the Echo cut-off, strolghten out the curves nlonjr tho Columbia and The Kah Oregoulan la on aale at 11. II. lilch'a New Stands at Hotel Portland and Uotcl Perkins. Portland. Oregon. Uember Scrlpps Mcltae News Associa tion aii Francisco Unreal!. 40! Fourth St. Chicago Hureau. 1)09 Security Ilulldlng. WHsblnKtou, V. C. Hureau. 301 Nth St., . W Entered at Pendleton postoffice as aeccond class matter. UHlOWWlLAnCL ters today, where their enforcement Interferes with any "largo IntorpstB." B. H. Hnrrlmnn says Union I'aclflc trains will soon bo run Into Seattle. Evidently Jim Hill Is not doing all tho scheming on the I'aclflc Const. SOCIALISM A CONSPIRACY. ..! Whene'er we see a fellow-mnn arise above the crowd. While we against the hard ships pound and buck, We're apt to feel dejected and dissatisfied with life. And marvel at the other fel low's luck. And he who took the upward step relaxes not n whit His mighty perseverence and his pluck You see, ho knows as no one else, the tfars and years he spent At hardest kind of work to make that luck. Seattle Star. THE SNAKE RIVER ROAD. "Socialism ns a Conspiracy" was tho subject of Illshnp Jlntz" lecturo at the T non m nfnniin nlinlml In tlrtni'lip ft through Umatilla county and try to UCUK tho third of a series. The pre- shorten the distance from Huntington vlous discussions bad to do with tho to Portland bv 10 miles, rather than . history In general and tne biii-ciic ., . ,, .' ,,, , j lilara occupied by socialism In the that tho distance will be Increased j 'wor( tojnJ. 200 miles. Branches will rench out -socialism 1b u conspiracy ngalnst into tho rich valleys of the Johu Day . society," declared the bishop. "It de- aiid the Wallowa and 100 miles of i nles tho right of private property i.-...,i. n ,,,. ,in .!,,. i which It would condscato for the cheap branch line track will gather i ,t amtmyB , fnmlj. ljy tho In the rich products, of all the conn- j uumon of christian mnrrlngo; It nn try tributary to the proposed route tagonlzes religion by eliminating It down the Snake. ' from our schools and making the rls- ing generation nntlthelstlc." , , . . , The bishop declared It was not nec- The value of manufactured pro-, ossarJ. , KO furtlu!r ,, tlle hstt)r-. ducts In the state of Oregon Increased imt to go to tho bottom und seek out from ?IO,noo,DS7 In 1900, to $83.937,- the cause of It nil, which be declared 000 in 1903. The value of manufnc,"0 ho socialism, n war botweon me , , , , , t, i capllallst and tho laborer which would turing plants in the state at the close ',. re31llt Tn tho compll,tc of 1903 Is ?43,000.fi00 and the value stagnation of Industry. or mose in rortianit is s2,uuu,uuu. ; A BROOKLYN BELLE Pe-ru-na Promptly Saved Her Life. Ml Alice O'Nolt, 312 AiuZ " canaot say too much i 71 a year ago I was complete 1 VOf ft I cold and a hard cough any relie f unm I $ Ll that It did the w6rkth?Mll week I could see TJLt'r. l and I took Peruna t"urTT" health now. " ""'afiiijj The output of timber products, aside from lumber, such as logs, poles, pil ing, ties, cordwood, hardwood and alt other timber sold in the rough, leads the list of industries, with an astonishing value of $30,000,000 for "In socialism four great forces arc combined, acting under ono Impulse, aiming at ono subject nnd responding to ono signal. These are the power of the press, tho power of gold, the power of numbers nnd the power of organization. "The novver nf the mess the year. The lumber sales alone, ( mlr nBe It i8 the power of multiply amounted to $1S,000,000 in addition to ng indefinitely every expression of the above. Tho flouring and grist thought, every dream of tho Imngina- mill products follow in third place overy Bontlment of the benrt and with a value of SS 000 000 for 1101 0VLry clnm,,r "f tlle I'nsslons. witn a yamc of ?0,uuu,uuu ror lJiio, ,.j wm skntch br, thmj mUoM meat packing and slaughtering next, I ollltg of tlls 8cinllstlc conspiracy. .1,1. n .. rtrtn nun tlmln-l.n ,t ' . 11... - - I null u vmuu ui u,uuu,'juy, uuu liiu ' x lit; iiibl la MIMtulBUIIl. VIlt.'U U CUIt- flah rnnnprv iniliiHtrv romps in fifth splrncy Is localized and confined to place with $2,500,000. There are 4,500 , "nu I,ol,lt' j" uIow' a'lnilnlstored to , . , . . ,, , , , ' the proper time, may be sufficient to manufacturing establishments In tho crugh lt mU w,n th,H C(;ns,)lracy has siuie, ,i,u oi which nro in x-uniuuu. investeu a cunracter or universality The woolen mill product of the state Is valued nt $2,000,000, saddlery and harness at $2,000,000 nnd paper and wood pulp output nt $2,000,000. Com pared to the total value of manufac tured products, amounting to $S3,937, 000 of tho year, the value of the ag ricultural crops for the year nmnunts to $70,000,000, livestock sales $12,500,- The Eastern Oregon papers that are republishing the space-filling In terviews from Portland papers, con cerning the Lewiston-Huntlngton "Water-level" railroad, forget thnt the same story passes around each winter when news becomes scarce. Is It reasonable to believe that the O. It. & N. Is going to run a road, costing Incalculable millions, through the Impassable Snake river canyon, from Huntington north to Lewlston, making the distance from Huntington to Portland nearly 200 miles greater and ISO miles of that road through a country that does not yield, or can ever yield any great volume of pro duce? A boat line, with two small river boats on the Upper Snake and a branch road into Wallowa county from Elgin, surveys for which have already been made, will cover tho en tire territory that would be covered by this proposed I-wIston-Huntlng-ton road. And further, if the O. H. & N. stock holders had In mind the future aban donment of tho Umatilla-Huntington line, they would not now be expend ing millions of dollars annually In track and station betterments on this jtortion of the road. The O. U. & N. from Umatilla to Huntington has just been relald with SO, 85 and 90-pound steel rails, costly steel bridges have been put in place of wooden structures, millions of yards of gravel have been hauled over the line for ballast and millions of dollars appropriated for further bet terments are still unused. There Is no Immediate probability that the 212 miles of track from Huntington to Umatilla will be reduc ed to the humble degree of a "local branch." The main line of the trans continental Harriman Bystem will run through Baker City, Ii Grande and Pendleton for many years yet. It would be cheaper and more prac tical for the company to cut a tunnel 4,000 feet long through a spur of the Blue mountains between the head waters of tho Five Points and Butch er creek. In tho vicinity of Huron, and reduce the grade 70 per cent over tho nnd is found everywhere nnd the country Is threatened from ovory quarter, you must confess that the fatherland is In imminent daugor. NeJ C Miss, xy vv. Miss Alice O' WHAT 1T.OPI.K SAY 000. wool and mohair, $3,000,000, but ter, cheos.. and milk. $4,200,000, fruit 3,000,000, gold, silver, borax and coal, $0,000,000, making a grand total value of Oregon products for the year of $208,000,000. No other Western state can make such a remarkable show ing as this, and capital has not yet boguu to develop the fabulous resour ces. When the 3,000,000 acres of arid land in the state Is irrigated, tills amount will be Insignificant compared to the great valume of industrial and manufactured products passing through the river gate at Portland to the wnltlng markets of the Orient. The labors of H. E. Uoach aro bear ing fruit. As a result of his efforts, tho Portland Flouring Mills will double their capacity for tho Orien tal trade. The output of this reorgan ized Industry will bo 4,500 barrels of flour every 24 hours. Every 11 days in the month this great mill will load a 5,000-ton steamer with Oregon flour for Oriental markets. It Is up to the Pendleton mills to respond to tho Invitation of Mr. Dosch to lucrease their capacity. If the wheat now hold In Unjatilla county wcro ground Into flour, there would he two profits In stead of one, left in the county, each year. The flurry over the child labor law's application to children under 1C, performing in theaters, has all blown over. Tho child labor commission and the theatrical managers met in Portland yesterday, interpreted the law, passed upon it, decided that It don't mean what It says, and opened tho doors of tho theaters to tho little "tots," of all ages, at all hours of day or night. That's just about the extent to which half the laws of the The next salient point Is continu ity nnd permanency. It is this which constitutes Its most dreadful charac teristic. Today It conspires no longer In the dark, but In the full light of day. The last and most dreadful of all ( Its characteristics is its inexorability or lis impincnniiiiy. ahu, in luci, nothing like It has been known In the history of human conspiracies; noth ing can satisfy It, nothing can np pease It. "In the face of such a situation you might ask me: 'What must we do to save society?' I would nnswor: 'I.cnrn n lesson from the enoniy. Awnko from your slumbers and arouse your energies. Consolidate your bases with the proper protection of private property. ltospect your marriage vows and fo3ter the snnctlllcation of the family. Return to God In the sin cerity of your benrt, 'for unless the 1 1 . U., l..... I.. ....Iv, ul.ntf ! 1.1,111 UllllUUUl lilU I1ULIOV, 1" 1UIU nilt.ll they labor who build it.' " About Pe-ru-na ns a llenieily fur All lleae of Winter, Concha, CdIiIm mid Catarrh. That 1'eruna cures catarrh, roughs, colds, Ih well known to both tho medical profession and tho people generally. It In undoubtedly tho most popular remedy for this clues cf dlreaaeH In existence. Keud the following V. s lottora Te-ru-nn Cum a Cnld at th Outset. Miss E. M. Isaac, Armstrong, V:, Vlce-rreaulunt of tho Fortnightly Club, writes: "No one who has tried tho comforts Peruna brings would ever bo without It. I u?el to dread tho slightest cold, ns Its consequences wcro so lengthy and so unpleasant, mid the catarrhal condition which lnrii'lnlily followed so hard to "A few doies never falls to cure mo of a cold and I keep well through it uie." Mis. II. M. Ihaacs. Hon. W. J. l'unuau,' ux-member of Congress from Florida, write from 14s Q street, K. W., Washington, D. an follows : 'From representations to me and my own experience I feel Justified In "t rid of, hut olnrn I have known of tho ' recommending your Peruna to any and , ,..1 rniipf HHriired thrnncb tho ini-of all persons suffering with catarrh, lvrium. i..u i ceo from all this unpleu-. nervousness or stomach troubles. . I for such afflictions. I, utU whom I recommendti it, i It now with' beneficial i J. Purman, If you do not derive proBplJ factory results frum the tc! write ut mu'u to Dr. Haitian, full statement ot yenf cw,ujl bu pleuHfil to give you hit 1 vice grutU. Address Dr. Hartmin, Tim Uurtnian SinlUriu,C kiitne aitu irafferlug. I regard It as a great tonic and remedy OhXn. Ask your Druggist for a free Peruna Almanac for 1904. "My Sons, said a great businessman, "arc my partners and they need all the strength and courage I can give them," and he forthwith paid for a Ji.ooo.ooo policy in The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York Not without the most care ful investigation, however, extend ing over six months. He was con vinced by just such facts as led the President of a National Hank in New York to make the curious and shrewd provision in his will, which is contained in "A Banker's Will." Write for it and also for the account of the $1,000,000 policy, "The Largest Annual Premiums." Tfaia Company ranks Ftrit In Autta, Writ In Amount Faid PollcyOioldf ra. Jirtf In Age The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, Kicbabp A. McCoaD. FttaidtaL Alma D. Katz, manager, Boise, Idaho. Frank L. Hammond, District Manager, Pendleton, Oregon. AN IDEA GIVE HER A SINGER FOR CHRISTMAS All stylus nf the celebrated Singer Sewing Machines on display at our new onice, 509 College Street The Singer is recognized as the world's best machine. Cash or iustalhnents. Supplies for any machine made. Repair work a sjKJcialtj'. Stager Machines, $35 and up. P. A. LOVETANG, Manager. Its THE liTCRT THE MOOT WHOLESOME PROPERLY MILLED s WITHOUT A SUPERIOR BYERS' BEST FLOUR The Standard of Excellency. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S. Byers, Proprietor. RARE OPPOR1 HOti acre wheat ranch, !l from Ath'im. the UnlUadl county, f 1S.00O, with Ul jrrxxi worK now, inn lit and other niidilnen Itiwliimt fill nfirm la I tuban turarlier '27.flUl 1 1UH .fltl.niit ativi latin ery. One-half or two;tliirfl uecasn, tnianceou uuk. 2ucreBrainmica, house and barn, tthool 1 lulled from city, VM0. rriiuaa am harmtfru. Alfalfa land, 4 mlleitoel for sale very cheap. I ah nH nfXtverowill.l customers say we tw Fl the cheapest in inn a v. i Property In AUxm Call for prices. RIH0RN & SWAG Buom W.TjlMtt AgeatWorlh.Corf'' Mnnev Back fall to cure RhtnmatUa. A. C. Koeppen&Brw.AP1 IfOD uii ana 3wcn 1 ... ,..flTfl Are guarantee w --",7fi M A. C. KoepftM Brtw-.Af"- . Presemitls tflh&tt sire Oseffmll as Wei a BeamitfiiiM Wrist Bags and Purses A complete assortment of all the fashionable ideas. Wo buy direct from the manu facturers, and ean sell at a a price that wili suit the public. Cttt Glass Is also one of the protty things we have forXmas. Everything from Bon bons to Punch Bowls. Cut Glass is always ac ceptable. Jt is rich in appearance and prices will be a pleasure to purchasers. CASH GIFTS We will 'give away New Year's Eve THREE CASH PKJZES i st GIFT 2nd GIFT 3rd GIFT $30 IN GOLD i5 IN GOLD $5 IN GOLD Every dollar purchase entitles you to a ticket on the $30 gift. Fvery 50c purchase entitles you to a ticket on the $15 Gift- Every 25c purchase e ntitles you to a ticket on the $5 e''- Perfumes We have an elegant line of Alfred Wright's, Paul Rei ger's, L. T. Piver'e, Rogers & Gablot's and Colca'uV. We also have tluir lines of Toilet Water and Sachet Powders. Knie collection of Fancy Bottles. Miscellaaeo Toilet Cases. Triplicate Mirrors. Hand-pnintel Chid Steins. Manicure Sets. Statuary. Pictures. Gold-plated Pictured Fancy Lamps. TA LIMA N & COMPANY OREGON .ca'l