PAGE TWO. DAILY EAST ORBGONUN, PENDLETON. OREGON Tl'ESDAY. Jl'LY 27, 105. EIGHT PAGES. A Common Saying :: lnicangetitat:i Y'UUNolfs Fine Stationery New Music Vricelf McKinley Music The com plete line, 998 copies, choice for . 10c Come and consult our list. FANCY TABLETS, latest shades with stylish envelopes to match. TOILET SOAPS a strong line to select from, 3c to 24c a box. Frederick Nolf & Co. GENERAL NEWS. Fire at Nashville, Tenn., Sunday arieht. destroyed $600,000 worth Qf mropet ty. Fire destroyed the Union Pacific vmnd house at Evanston, Wyo., Sun day night Loss, 175,000. Secretary of War W. H. Taft and party will be Invited by the Austral ian government to extend their tour la that country. The Polish locksmith who threw a fcamb in Moscow last week, injuring ate policemen, has been sentenced to 29 years at hard labor. The wreck of the New York Cen tral flyer at Mentor, was not caused ky the high speed and the fast sched arte will be resumed again at once. A fierce range and forest fire near Ogden, Utah, has destroyed crops, raits, buildings and Improvements valued at $50,000, in the past three ay- Mrs. Watt C. Gregg, of Grand Lake, Col., became deranged Monday aad shot and killed her four child ren and then attempted to kill her self. Inflicting a fatal wound in the cad. The entire Ussurl district of south eastern Siberia has been denuded of sod in order to furnish the soldiers at Vladivostok with provisions. All applies from Russia are cut off from Vladivostok. The German government has pur chased a site in Washington, D. C, Car an embassy arid will erect a cas tle there, in representation of the Sans Soucl castle of Frederick the Great at Potsdam. The British Indian Steam Navlga toon company's steamer Ikhoma, was aank by the Russian cruiser Terek Jane 5, 150 miles north of Hong Kong. The crew was landed at Singapore by the Dutch steamer Pon- tak, which the Terek met June 19 Tae Ikhona was carrying mails and rice from Rangoon to Yokohama. NORTHWEST NEWS. Washington's new school book law is now in force, the old law having been in force for five years. The Mazamas of Portland will eel ebrate their 12th annual outing this year by climbinf Mt Rainier. The Portland team won the whist tournament played by clubs of the aerthwest, in Portland, last week. Garrett Busch, a German fur trad, er of Nulato, Alaska, has Just arriv ed at Portland with $25,000 worth of fort. Because they expect to be married eoon, 18 teachers In Portland public schools have failed to apply for their eld places. W. J. Kolkett has lust celebrated his 25th year as assistant postmas ter of Seattle. He has been retained by seven postmasters. Oscar Stephens, the sheep king of Fergus county, Montana, has sold 4..000 head of sheep at $2.40 per bead, including lambs, to the Custer Sheep company. Twenty Seattle delegates will go to the Epworth League convention In Baltimore In July with the Intention ef bringing the next national con ventlon to Seattle. Roy Fitzgerald and bride of two weeks, were thrown from their bug gy and seriously Injured at Garfield, Monday morning, their team be. coming frightened at a train. Mrs. Florence Smith, a widow aged tC, Jumped from a fourth story win dew of the Good Samaritan hospital ta Portland Sunday night, breaking bath arms, dislocating both hips and receiving Internal injuries from which he will die. General merchandise stock for sale. Invoice $5000. Annual business, 114,000. Store building, warehouse and residence can be bought or rent d. Located in small country town. Oeod location. Business established SI years. Owner to retire because of eld age. Inquire or write to E. T. WADE SON, Office In E. O. Building, Pendleton, Or, . . . Poetomce Box 324. Black $111. 1 SENATOR 1KNT LIKE THE RAILROAD COMMISSION. Says it Will Not Please Eastern Wash ington Folks Millie on Puget SouihI the Senator Talks Entertain ingly of the Industries of die lacl flc Coast Alaskan Fisheries Are Profitable ami Extensive. 'Governor Mead will find out that his railroad commission does not meet ith the approval of the people of eastern Washington," Is the pertinent oemment of Levi Ankeny, senior 'nited States senator from Washing ton, to a reporter for the Seattle News yesterday morning. "Mr. Mead as elected governor and doubtless ntends to be the governor himself. nd I have no doubt he Intends to do right. I have no criticism to offer on his actions. The commission Is ppolnted and will stand on its own merits and on the merits of the .work it accomplishes." Senator Ankeny arrived in Seattle from Belllngham, where he has been attending the sessions of the Wash- ngton grand lodge of Masons. Ac companied by Mrs. Ankeny, he is now on his way to Portland for a brief visit to the exposition for a shor visit to the exposition. He has al ready been to the exposition for a short visit, but wishes to spend a long er time in the exposition city. While in Belllngham the senior sen ator took much Interest In the sel mon fisheries there and In the catches which are being made. Mr. Ankeny Is one of the best Informed men on the subject of fish and fisheries in the state. He haa long taken a deep interest In the salmon Industry and In the artificial propagation -of the fish as a means of preserving that In dustry. At its last session congress made an appropriation for the establishment of a salmon hatchery In Alaska wa- ters," said he, "and the hatchery will be establishedy this summer. Addi tional hatcheries will probably be established from time to time. The work should be extended until there Is a hatchery In every stream to which the salmon come to spawn Hatchelres do not cost much to construct, they do not cost much to sustain, and the Industry is sufficient ly important to Justify the expenditure necessary to maintain and continue It The output of canned salmon In Alaska now amounts to $9,000,000 a year. If It Is not preserved by means of artificial propagation it will suffer serious deterioration as a result of the depletion of the runs of fish. 'I was much Interested In watcn in the fishermen unloading their catches of fish at the Belllngham and Anacortes canneries. In one of the catches I noticed seven sock-eyes, al though It Is not yet the season for the run of that fish. At Anacortes I saw a fish taken which had on It a mark which the men told me was put on at the Clackamas, Oregon, hatchery. - I do not assume that the presence of the fish there, is a disproof of the theory that the fish leturn 10 ineir Daront jtream when they are reaay to Bpawn. The fish are absent from the parent Btream four years between the time they are hatched and the time they return to spawn and die During their absence they may go" to all carts of the world. This fish may have been up at Anacortes on a sum mer pleasure tour Instead of bent on its mission of spawning. The salmon cannery men of British Columbia are beginning to look with much more favor on the proposal or the Washington fish commissioner to establish International hatcheries on tho Frazer river. The Frazer river fishermen are beginning to realize that their salvation as well as that of our own fishermen depends on the es tabllshment of such hatcheries and they are coming round to favor the proposal." SEWER CONNECTIONS MADE. Nearly All the Residences in Sewer District Are Connected. Practically all of the houses within the district covered by the sewer sys tem have now been connected there with, according to Sewer Inspector W. R. Wlthee, who, under orders from the city council, has been forcing property owners to comply with tne regulations regarding such connec tions. While there are a few places that are still unconnected, Mr. Wlthee states that they are so few as to be of no Berious menace and the number is gradually growing less. Considerable of a problem now confronts the council in regard to fur ther extensions of the sewer. Several times during the past few months ap plications have been made to that body to have the system extended Into certain neighborhoods, but so far nothing has been done by the council toward granting any of the requests. STEAM LAUNDRY AT ECHO. Mrs. J. Halstead Will Start a Flrst- Clase Business There Soon. Mrs. J. Halstead, of Echo, left Pen dleton for her home this morning, after completing arrangements to open a first-class steam laundry In that place right away. Mrs. Halstead will erect a building especially arranged for the purpose, and put in a modern plant and place a competent and experienced . laun dryman In charge. She expects to open within the next four weeks, or as soon as her building Is completed. No Secret About It. It Is no secret, that for cuts, burns, ulcers, fever sores, sore eyes, bolls. etc., nothing is so effective as Bttck len's Arnica Salve. "It didn't take long to cure a bad sore I bad, and Is all O. K. for sore eyes," writes D. L. Gregory, of Hope, Texas. 25a at Tall man A Co.'s drug store. Highest cash price for second-hand (9ds at Sharon Eddlngs. HOTEL ARRIVALS. The St. George. J. J. Burns, Portland. W. R. King. Ontario. W. H. Wilson. The Dalles. Charles S. Monser, San Francisco. Edward Lucas. Portland. W. II. Broadwell. Kansas City. Robert Kitty, Denver. W. E. Potts. Helix. K. Cuiraii. Pittsburg. Charles Pustin. Wuitsburg. V. . TMllun, Chicago. C. C. EMes and wife. Athena. Will M. Peterson. Athena. John Miller, Athena. F. K. Shipley. Echo. W. D. Allard, Portland. George Stults. New York. J. N. De Jarnette. Omaha. E. Williams, Portland. - M. H. Anderson, Portland. Dr. J. H. Cross and son. Walla Walla. F. Wuden. Portland. A. Anderson. St. James. Miss Nellie Elliott. Paragould. J. Watson, Spokane. J. W. Collins, Chicago. Kalph Suling, Weston. G. M. Martin, London. J. H. Dunlap, Cascade Locks. James Cuser and wife, Weston. William Dunn, Portland. J. A. George. Portland. T. C. Wheaton, Portland. A. F. Van Cleve, Denver. C. E. Bott, Helix. H. L. Grover, Helix. Max Michael, New York. M. F. White, Spokane. The Golden Rule. W. L. Jones. Pilot Rock. Horace W. King, city. J. Lees, Starbuck. J. J. Johnston, Cambrig. W. A. Mlkesell, Echo. E. Evans, Pilot Rock. E. F. Read, Kohlotus. Mrs. O. W. Scott, city. Lou Patton, Pilot Rock. O. G. Allen, city. G. N. W. Wilson. E. H. Burke. J. W. Baker. . Mrs. I. L. Taft, North Yakima. Miss Bessie Cellars, city. Alex Walker, Weston. Mrs. C. Walker, Weston. Mrs. Jorgensen, Everett Beulah Klnert, Everett. G. W. Gray, city. Mrs. E. C. Bowen, South Bend. T. L. Lovell, Irrlgon. J. H. Fletcher, Moscow. Miss E. Senn, San Jose. Miss L. Senn, San Jose. F. O. Rogers, Garfield. Mrs. Rose Bergevin. Minnie Bergevin. P. C. Adams, Lechleville. W. W. Wolf, Echo. W. E. Hanscom, city. A. J. Mclntyre, Weston. The Pendleton. Edwin J. Burke, Hartford. Charles H. Green, San Francisco, J. C. Lindsey, Portland. F. B. Chapman, San Fronclsco. Tom Thompson, Portland. .1. 1. Bent'ey, Portland. H. H. Vlnor, Caldwell. E. H. Moile, Portland. S. Harris, Portland. W. H. Garrett, Portland. L. Hlrshland, Baker City. H. K. Dent, Seattle. E. H. Van Patten, Dayton. Robert Kennedy, Portland. W. R. Glendening. Portland. John Skpgland, Portland. C. W. Madden. Portland. ' O. D. Galley, Portland. A. E. Green, San Francisco. W. R. McRoberts, Spokane. A. P. Whltford. Chicago. V. Webster, Medford. Sam GUI, Spokane. C. W. Staub, Portland. C. W. Williams, Spokane. P. F. Rosse, Seattle. C. E. Dupuis and wife, Weston. Mrs. F. E. Alvord and daughter, Omaha. C. H. Edwards. Portland. B. K. Taylor, Portland. R. Brandan, Spokane. T. G. Laird, Indianapolis. T. F. Rourke, Portland. DEMAND FOR OREGON BUCKS. CI varies Cunningham Will Ship S000 to Colorado and Wyoming. Umatilla county will supply Colo rado and Wyoming with a high grade of young Ramboulllet bucks this season, Charles Cunningham having just made arrangements to ship 3000 to those states within the next 10 days. Mr. Cunningham will open sale pens In Denver, beside filling large orders for bucks which he has re- celved from different parts of those states, and the grade of Colorado and Wyoming sheep will be Improved by the Importation of the Umatilla stock. Mr. Cunningham has already sent to Montana and Idaho a large num. ber of young bucks this spring, Wll llam Lindsay, of Glendlve, taking 400 and the Idaho Sheep & Land compa ny, of Boise City, taking 150. "When the season closes this year, said Mr. Cunningham today, "I will not have a buck left for sale, so great has been the demand this spring, Owing to the highly favorable con dltlons this year in the way of mild weather and good range and plenty of water, the lambs now growing are of even better, more thrifty and bet ter advanced for their age than ever before and the quality of young bucks to be put upon the market next year will be better than ever. PRAISES THE FAIR. 3. A. Brake Says No One Haa a Right to Complain at la. James A. ' Drake, who accompan led by Mrs. Drake, returned last eve nlng from Oregon City, where he at tended the G. A. R. reunion, also visited the fair on his - way home According to Mr. Drake, the exhibits are now much nearer completion than they were on the opening day. Four of the principal buildings, the govern ment, forestry, foreign exhibits and the liberal arts building, are now all complete and afford sightseeing enough for the average Individual. According to Mr. Drake, a person can well spend a week in the govern eminent building alont, consequent I Don't Forget CLOTHING AT EXTREMELY LOW PRICES. MEN'S AND BOYS' HATS AT CUT PRICES. SHOES THAT GIVE SATISFACTION. CHILDREN'S DRESSES AT A BIG CUT. Ladies' Waists & Skirts at 20 per cent Reduction. DRY GOODS OF ALL KINDS AT BIG REDUCTIONS. EVERY CUSTOMER WE HAVE CAN BE PLEASED, BOTH IN PRICE AND PATTRHN. The Fair Department Store ly no one should stay away from the fair now through fear that there Is nothing there yet to see. CALIFORNIA SUGAR PINE. A Timber Fit to Replace the Rest Grades of White Pine. Few users of wood know that' on the Pacific coast there is a vast quan- ity of lumber comparable in all es sential qualities with the best grades of white pine ever produced in the East. This is furnished by the sugar pine, a tree commonly found along the western slopes of the Sierra Ne vada mountains In Califcrnia. Even when compared with the giant "big trees" with which it often is found the sugar plno is not a puny tree, but frequently reaches a diameter of 10 feet and a height of 250 feet. A single tree has been known to yield 54,0 )0 board feet of lumber, and trees smal ler than IS Inches are seldom cut at present. These facts make It evident that sugar pine lumber. In respect to the sizes furnished, Is far beyond the eastern white pine even the pump kin pine of early days. The wood Is scarcely dlstlncruisha ble from white pine. It Is practically of the same weight and the same color. It Is somewhat more resinous, however, and perhaps a little brasher. It Is soft, straight-grained, and easily worked. It is used for everything for which whit pine Is available, and is especially valuable for pattern work. The wood is already finding Its way Into the eastern markets, and. whlla it is not likely that anything but the i best grades can be shipped long di stances, there is no doubt that sugar pine lumber will more and more re place Its eastern relative. There Is no dlflculty whatever In furnlshlnc; plank up to four feet In width and ab solutely free from any defect, at a price that Is low for material of that quality. The cut of sugar pine lumber In California has Increased from 55,000.- 000 board feet in 1900 to 120,000,000 feet In 1904. and it is estimated that there are 25,000,000,000 feet of It still I standing. Sugar pine does not form extensive! forests by Itself, as the white pine of the east once did, but grows with ! western yellow pine, white fir, Incense cedar and the "big trees." In North- ern California it Is found at altitudes between 2000 and 6000 feet above the sea, and in Southern California at altitudes between 5000 and 10.000 fect. The tree produces a large quantity of soeds. In cones that often are 20 Inches long. The seeds are large and edible, and onsequcntly are sought by squirrels and other animals. The In dlans also gather them to cat. On this aceount and because the seedlings are easily killed during the first five years by lack of moisture or proper shade, the sugar pine does not re produce Itself readily; but the lumber Is so valuable that there Is every rea son why an effort should be made to replace the trees that are cut down by others of the same kind. Bureau of forestry studies made of Its manner and growth Indicate that this Is entirely possible. A second growth of sugar pine may easily be secured by afordlng the forests in which the old trees are found reason able protection, and by giving .the young growth some aid In Its strug gle with the more vigorous competing speles. DALNY USEFUL TO JAPANESE. The City But Little Damaged by the Tide of War and In Good Shape. The streets of Dalny are much bet ter paved than those of Washington were before the war, and most of them not onjy have good sidewalks, but are bordered by rows of recently planted shade trees, which, If proper ly cared for, will ultimately add very much to the attractiveness of the city and the comfort of Its Inhabitants, ays the Outlook. The railway station, the administra tion building, and a third or more of the dwelling houses have been wholly or partly destroyed by fire; but enough remains to show that In this part of the city alone, the Russians must have spent millions of roubles legitimately, besides wasting hundreds of thous ands mors In showy and unnecessary ornamentation. The streets, gutters and sidewalks were admirably plan ned and honestly made; but the houses, with their endless, varied and often eccentrlo architecture, look as If they had been erected for the pur pose of making the utmost possible show. x In the course of our long afternoon's walk I was surprised to find that so much of the city remained Intact The splendid piers were uninjured; the big the At The Fair electric light plant and the machine shops were in working order; the dry dock needed nothing but new gates; and in the commercial quarters of the city I could see no traces whatever of destruction or damage. Perhaps the Russians left the place so hurriedly after the battle of Nanshan that they had no time to destroy their Improve ments; or perhaps they hoped that General Kuropatkln would drive the enemy back and reoccupy the city; but In either event they erred. The piers, the dry dock, the machine shops and the electric light plant have been of Inestimable use to the Japanese. Transferred to Yaqulna. Rev. John Warren, who has been rector of the Episcopal church at Heppner, has been transferred to Newport on Yaqulna Bay, and left rthls morning for his new charge, after visiting with Charles E. Bond ltist night. Son Born at Alba. A 12 1-2 pound son was born to the wife of Ed Rlnehart at Alba, Sunday morning. , W. E. Stlllinger, who is county at torney at Moscow, has been appoint ed deputy United States district attor ney. The position pays $1200 per year. DO YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK? Kidney Trouble Hakes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the news papers is sure to know of the wonderful . firpa mnde hv Dr. Kilmer's Swamtv Root, the great kid ney, liver and blad- e der remedy. it is the great med ical triumph of the nineteenth century; discovered after years of scientific research by Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and bladder specialist, and is wonderfully successtul m promptly curing lame oacic, uric aciJ. .catarrh f. Madder and Bnghf s Disease, which is the worst form of kidnev trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not rec ommended for everything but if you have u;er or b,Wer tsroubie(t wiU be fountl7ust the remedy you need. It has w tter1 in so manv wavs. in hosoital been tested in so mauy ways, in hospital work and in private practice' and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book tell ing more about Swamp-Root, and how to t findoutif you have kidney or bladder trou- ble. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send yonr address to Dr. Kilmer v. t i :.. ... ..... t .... N. Y. The reeular LSil fifty-cent and one- dollar size bottles are Bob at svanpaoot sold by all good druggists. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Bingliamton, N, Y., on every bottle. CHICKENS NEED SHELL BONE GRIT AND MANY OTHER THINGS WHICH C. F. Colesworthy CAN SUPPLY YOU WITH. 127-120 EAST ALTA STREET. Walters' Flouring Mills Capacity, 160 barrels a day. Flour exchanged for wheat Flour, Mill Feed, Chopped Feed, etc, always on band. . W. T. PARKER Dealer In Dry Goods, Groceries and Notions Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes and Farm Produce. I have just purchased the D. B. Richardson store at Helix, Oregon, and I am going to thoroughly remodel It and greatly Increase the stock. T solicit your patronage, and if good goods and fair treatment can hold your trade, then I know you will trade with me. Bring In your farm pro duce. Highest market price paid. HELIX OREGON ty Hotel St., George GEORGE DARVEAU, Proprieto. M a T European plan. Everything 'first- class. Accommodations the best. All modern conveniences. Steam' beat throughout. Roome en suite with bath. Large, new sample rooms. Tbs Hotel St George Is pronounced one of the most modern and model hotels of Oregon. Telephone and fire alarm connections to office in all rooms. Rooms 500 to $1.60. CORNER MAIN AND WEBB 8TS, Block and a Half From Depot. The Golden Rule ...Hotel.. (Formerly the Bicker's.) COURT STREET. Remodeled and refurnished through' out Everything neat clean and up-to-date. Steam heat . and eJeetrla lights. Best cuisine. Prompt servtc W. R. PARKER, Proprietor. HOTEL PENDLETON BOLI.ONS A BROWN, Proprietors. The Best Hotel In Pendleton and as good as any. The Hotel Pendleton haa Just bee a refitted and refurnished throughout 'Phone and fire alarm connections with all rooms. Baths In suites and single rooma Headquarters for Traveling Men. Commodious Sample Rooms. Rates $2.00 and $2.50 Special rates by week or month. Excellent Cuisine. Prompt Dining Room Service, Bar and Billiard Room in Connectloa Only Three; Blocks From Depot THE PORTLAND or PORTLAND, ORBOON. Amarlean plan, fs Pr dy tod upward, Headquarters for toorlats sad commercial traveler. Special rates mad to families nd ilngle geatlemea. The manaseiseat will be pleased at all times to ahow rooms and fire price. A modern Turkish kat establishment In the hotel. H. C. BOWERS, llaaatw. Insure in Reliable Companies That pay their losses promptly. Ou companies stand at th bead of th. list Aassts. ' Hartford Fir Insurance Co., $11,111. 071 Alliance Assurance Co. .. i,0SMIl London A Lancashire Fir. Insurance Co. .., 1,144,111 North British lf.rcantll. Co. Ii.fll.l74 Royal Insurance Co. .... iS.ii7.1II FRANK BCL0PT0N aokht , , . . , ', lit KAtTT COURT ITRXK! Jiff fSlffl '