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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1905)
J PACK FJUR. DAILY EAST ORSGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY II. lWW. f EIGHT PACES. ?v ft J? S . 'Si AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. PnMlshed every afternooo (except Saaday) at Pesdletos. Oregon, by the KAST OREGOXIAN PCBLISHTNa OX) MP ANT. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Daily, one year, by mall $5.0 Dally, six months, by mall.... t.St Dally, three months, by mall.... Hi Dally, one month, by mail (0 Weekly, one year, by mall I SO Weekly, six months, by mall 76 Weekly, four months, by mall.. .60 Semi-Weekly, one year, by mall, 1.60 Beml-Wekly. six months, by mall .75 Semi-Weekly, four months, mall, .50 Member Scrlpps-McRae News Asso ciation. The East Oregonlan Is on sale at B. B. Rich's News Stands at Hotel Portland and Hotel Perkins, Port land, Oregon. San Francisco Bureau, 408 Fourth street Chicago Bureau, 909 Security Bldg. Washington, D. C. Bureau, 601 14th St. N. W. Entered at Pendleton Postofflce as second-class matter. XOTICR TO AnVEKTISERS. Copy for adTertising matter to appear 'In tbe Pant Oreconlan must be In by 4 :45 p. n. of the preceding day : copy for Monday's paper mimt be Id by 4 :45 p. m. the preced ing Saturday. Ohio village which was Mr. Fairbanks' boyhood home, but the place Is not material. The law of the barber Is the same throughout the land, in hamlet or capital city, uniformly In flexible and Inexorable. It admits of no modifications. It contains no fa vored customer clause. In the barber shop there are no rebates, and from the call of "next" there is no appeal. And it Is the even and equable treat ment of Croesus and commoner alike which constitutes the striped pole a true palladium of the riehts of man. In tho barber shop, at least, exact jus tice survives. It may have departed I think that we'll get to the end of the way. In the light or tlie shadow, some day, some day! Where God and the world will have nothing to say. In the light or the shadow some day. some day! I think that we'll get to the end of the way. Where the weariest winter'll have blooms o' the May, And the blue skies'll gleam through the ghosts of the gray. In the light or the shadow some day. some day! Atlanta Constitution. LOOKING BACKWAItP TO 1898. PniNCK POTEMKIN. The battleship Knlai (Prince) Po- j temkln Is named after Prince Gregory Alexandrovltch Potemkln, who was I the great general and statesman of Catherine the Great, whose lover he Is reputed to have been. He was born In the village of Domnovo, In the gov ernment of Smolensk In 1739. being the son of a poor nobleman of Polish extraction, whose family had some time before settled In Russia. He first planned to become a priest, but found that calling not to his taste and became a soldier. He aided Catherine In her conslprncy against her husband In 1762, and gained her notice by offering her the plume from from court and council chamber, but ! hat- H soon became a favorite ana rose rapiaiy. ne servea against if it has left the bench It has been only to take up permanent quarters in the extension choir. IOSS OF GOLD. the Turks, but soon returned to St. Petersburg, where he gained control of the foreign policy In 1778. He se cured the annexation of the Crimea in 1783 and In 1787 accompanied Catherine to that province. He was commander-in-chief of on army of Something like $5,000,000 In gold 150.000 men in the war against Tur- has been exported during the last 10 . key In 1787-90, but Sonnaroff was the davs chiefly to Paris. . The French ; general and won the victories or . . . . ... . Bender and Ismail. capital has Impoverished Itself in an Potemkln mniJe a triumphant entry effort to help Russia and Is In need:lnto st Petersburg In 1791 and gave of the yellow metal. During the last a bnnquet In honor of the empress, 12 months over $30,000,000 has been ! marked by Oriental magnificence. Ctnn nftAi. Iila tionlrti ttrnke Hnwn nnd sent abroad, and there is no telling; . ,,, , tuui when the drain will stop. While t ravelins from Jassv to Otcha- There ore times when heavy gold ' kof f. he could not endure the motion exports would excite financial distrust, I of his carriage and was lifted out and lain under a tree, wnere ne uieu on The Seaside Mouse 1 Clatsop Beach, Ore. Is now open for guests. Tills fine old Resort situated on the banks of the Necanlcum river, only a few rodJ from the ocean, offers to Its patrons tho Only Ideal Spot on the Coast for fresh und salt water Bathing, Fishing, Boating and Hunting. Free 'Bus to all trains. Address all com munications to but happily nothing of that sort can occur at this time for the very Im portant reason that the balance of trade In our favor during the year ending June 30 amount to over $400.-000.000. Therefore It will be seen the gold sent out Is not to pay trade balances that might stand against us, but Is purely a loan that will return with in terest. The richest nation on the globe Is loaning a few millions to the old world. WORLD'S GREATEST BATTLE. October 15, 1791. His body was bur led at Khersom, but by order of Em peror Paul, who hated him. was dis interred and thrown into a ditch. Potemkln was remarkable for ex travagance and whimsicality. He had large estates. Immense wealth and thousands of serfs and one of his whims was to have several bound vol umes of bank notes in his library. He was arrogant and capricious and a man of grossly licentious life, his ex cesses being the cause of his early death. OX E "SNAP" IX PARLIAMENT. Not only does the speaker of the trnxon .,n,n,v,r,na antra tho T.rmrlnil If a battle takes place In Manchuria' ' ' ,,.,, hofit of any considerable Import before thej. ' nt ,vi., final treaty of peace between Russia' . a ' ' . ..... vr ,.., and Japan, It will be by far the great-r ' . ., nnH ,. hn. est in the history of the world, dls-!.'.. - ,'.., ,' ' .... .,. plate on election, but he enjoys the Whether the war with Spain did or did not make the United States world power, it is a remarkable fact that a majority of the principal actors In the drama have since died or re tired from public life. It was seven years July 3 since the destruction of Cervera's fleet. It Is less than seven years since Cuba was made free and the Philippines and Porto Rico were ceded to the United States. In that brief time President McKlnley and Vice-President Hobart Tiave died. So has Mr. Hay, the am bassador to Great Britain whose serv Ices did much to prevent European Interference. General Lawton. Gen. Fitzhugh Lee. Rear Admiral Samp son and Captain Philip are dead. Gen eral Miles. General Shatter, General Otis. General Young. General Wheel er, Rear Admiral Schley and Captain Cook have been retired. Dewey would have been retired but for his rank as full admiral. Secretary Long has returned to prl vate life. So has General Woodford, the minister to Spain at the time war was declared. Secretary Alger, now . nenntor. has lust announced that the condition of his health will no permit him to be a candidate for re election. General Eagan no longer tootle with the problems of the commissary department of the army. General Hawley, chairman of the military affairs committee of the sen ate in 1898, and Mr. Boutelle. chair man of the house committee on na val affairs, are dead. Cushman K. Davis, who as chairman of the senate committee on foreign relations and as a member of the peace commission had much to do with the treaty with Spain, has passed away. So have Senators Hoar, Hanna and Quay, and Speaker Reed. In Cuba Gomez and Garcia are dead. Spain has lost Premier Sagasta: De Lome, who was given his passports; Montejo, who was defeated by Dewey; Toral, who surrendered Santiago, and Martinez-Campos. Weyler and Cer vera are still alive. Lieutenant Colonel Roosevelt has become president; Colonel Wood a major general and Adna R. Chaffee, No. 81 on the list of lieutenant col onels at the beginning of 1898, Is now lieutenant general and head of the army. The days of the Spanish war may have witnessed a new birth of power, but tho days that have passed since then have removed so many notable men that the war of 1898 already -ems to have been fought by another generation. THE LAW OF THE BARBER SHOP, "If you want to be shaved." said TU.rber Ftckerson of Marysville, O., to Vice-President Fairbanks, "you must postpone your conference. This is my busy day and I can't wait" And there being no alternative the vice-presl dent left the politicians to cool their heels while the barber scraped his chin. The Incident occurred In the little carding as legendary the wild Greek tales of Xerxes army millions strong. The Japanese today have six nrmies it; the field composed of 26 divisions and tota'ling a force of at least 600, 000 men. Five of these great armies are understood as operating agulnst General LInevitch, or that the force opposed immediately to him will be at least 500,000 strong, and it may be even larger. The Japanese force of artillery is estimated nt 1800 guns. less substantial advantage of taking precedence of all other commoners. Hy an act of 1689 It was provided that the lords commissioners of the Great Seal not being peers "shall have and take place next after the peers of the realm and the speaker of the house of commons Figures even approximately correct of the Russian army are more diffi cult to get at. It Is known that the Russian army has been reinforced since Mukden, but it is believed that it does not greatly exceed 350.000 men with 1200 guns. If each side should bring Into battle Its full quota of men, therefore, nearly 1,000.000 of men and close upon 3000 cannon will be en gaged. The front of the Japanese armies covers about 100 miles, extend ing In one vast semi-circle from the Liao river to the mountains south of Kirln. the two flanks being advanced toward the Russians. ' In no battle of the past, at least not until the outbreak of the present war, have more than 500,000 men been lined up In opposing armies. The fol lowing were the totals engaged In some of the past historic battles from which the colossal scale of the pres ent war can be understood: Plevan, September, 1877 ....130,000 Sedan, September, 1870 244,000 Gravelotte, August, 1870 300,000 Sadowa, July, 1806 435,000 Gettysburg, July, 1863 .220,000 Solferlno, June, 1859 284,000 Waterloo, June, 1816 217,000 Leipzig. October, 1813 472,000 Borodino, September, 1812 ...251,000 BABY'S FACE The Seaside Mouse X SEASIDE, OREGON. 4 ELECTEUC EH MASS SORES Detecting- Plsli by Telephone. Ears Looked as if They Would Drop Off Body Entirely Covered with Humor Three Doctors Could Not Cure Child Grew Worse. CURED BY CUTICURA IN TWO WEEKS American fishermen, when seeking to capture pickerel through holes In the Ice In winter, sometimes make use of a "tip-up." This Is a visible sign which quickly attracts attention, and Is attached to a hard line. An Eng lish paper picks up a story to the ef fect that means have been devised by a Norwegian for obtaining hints of the nearness of a whole school of fish. The apparatus Is said to consist es sentially of a very sensitive telephone (or microphone), situated in the boat. Just what Is submerged does not clearly appear; but the Inventor as serts that with its aid the presence of fish, and approximately their num bers and kind, can be recognized. When herrings or smaller fish are en countered In large numbers they make a whistling noise, and the sound made by codfish Is more like howling. If they come near the submarine tele phone their motion can be distinguish ed. The flow of water through the gills produces a noise similar to the labored breathing of a quadruped, and the motion of the fins produces a dull rolling sound. Mrs. George J. Stecse, of 701 Coburn St., Akron, Ohio, tells in the following letter of another of those remarkable cures of torturing, disfiguring skin humors daily made by Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, after physicians, and all else had failed: "I eel it my duty to parents of other poor suffering babies to tell yon what Cuticura has done for my little daughter. She broke out all over her body with a humor, and we used everything recommended, but without results. I called in three doc tors, they all claimed they could help her, but she continued to grow worse. Her body was a mass of sores, and her little face was eaten away, her ears looked as if they would drop off. Neighbors advised me to get Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and before I had used half of the cake of soap and box of ointment the sores had all healed, and my little one's face and body was as clear as a new-born babe's. I would not be without it again if it cost five dollars, instead of seventy-five cents, which is all it cost us to cure our baby, after spending many dollars on doctors and medicines without any benefit whatever." SLEEP FOR BABIES Rest for Mothers. Instant relief and refreshing sleep for skin-tortured babies, and rest for tired, fretted mothers, in warm baths with Cuticura Soap and gentle anoint ings with Cuticura Ointment, the great skin cure, and purest ot emollients Cutlrnrm Sp, Ointment, nd PMa arc Mid thronffhosl thr world, rimer Oruglf Chm.Corp., Bnnon.Hulerru a r bend fur Uow to Cure Bb7 Uumure. ' WANTED First-Class Job Compositors Cylinder Pressmen - - -Platen Pressmen - - - - $2 1.00 Per Week $2 1.00 Per Week $17.00 Per Week Call Immediately. Permanent posi tions guaranteed to competent men. Strike on. San Francisco Typothetae Hotel Savoy, 130 Post St., San Francisco, Calif. IS THE CHEAPEST, MOST CONVENIENT, MOST SATISFAC TORY POWER KNOWN FOR ALL PURPOSES. IT IS READY FOR TO START THE WHEELS ROLLING AS SOON AS YOU THROW THE SWITCH, AND CAN BE SHUT OFF IN A MO MENT'S NOTICE. NO FIRES TO BUILD, NO WATER TO CONSUME, NO ASHES TO EMPTY OUT WE DO ALL THA TFOR YOU, AND SAVE YOU MONEY BESIDES. Prepare tor Hot Weather i FAN MOTORS WILL BE RUN AT THE FOLLOWING FLAT RATE. 12-INCH FANS $1.50 PER MONTH 14-INCH FANS 8:1.00 PER MONTH CAREFUL SERVICE Is characteristic ot our ex aminations. Our testa are un erring and yeur Eyes are al ways safe In our care. LET US SHOW YOU HOW WE CAN MAKE YOU LOOK. We can relieve that squint, take away those frowns, and In many cases overcome headaches and relieve much nerve strain, which If left uncorrected will causa Irreparable harm. From the wee child to the gray haired sire we offer this careful service. We can't af ford to make mistakes and Each Pair Fitted Sells Others. J Winslow Bros. JEWELERS-OPTICIANS. 817 Main Street. Near Postofflos ."if "'' 1 -.'",;, is n. St.JosephsAcademy PENDLETON, OREGON. Under the direction of the Sisters of St Francis, of Phila delphia. Resident and day pu pils. Special attention civen to music and elocution. StudtnU prepared for teachers' examin ations for county and state cer tificates. For particulars ad dress SISTER SUPERIOR. Weber Has Them SEE US ABOUT RATES FOR POWER. Northwestern Gas (& Electric Company F. W. VINCENT, MANAGER. Racine Buggies and Hacks and there are none better or more serviceable. Bain and Cooper Wagons built for this climate. Hodge and Keystone Harvesting Machinery. (Not made by the trust) All kinds of extras. Belting, oil, axle grease and lace leather. Harvesting supplies of all kinds. Fred Weber 329-333 Court St., Corner TlMmpno:i. A.C.RUBY&CO. I Breeders, Im porters and Dealers in Perc heron, English Shire Stallions and M am moth Jacks We still ha.-e on bud some of our best Horace and Jacks that we bare held back for the Stud, and aa breeding season la now on, we Invite all farmers and breeders to Inspect our trtock. We can surely show yon the best In the) country right at homo. A. C. RUBY & CO. Oregon Feed Yards, Pendleton,' Ore. MIIIMHHMIMMMHIIHUIHMMHMIMMMMIH TEETH EXTRACTED BY THE MOD ERN METHOD, 600. We are thoroughly equipped with all modern met'.ods and appliances, and guarantee oar work to be of the highest stand ard, and our prices the lowest consistent -with flrst-claa work. T. H. White DENTIST ASSOCIATION BLOCK Telephone Main 1M1. 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. I 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 CHICKENS NEED nnin.F, BONE GRIT AND MANY OTHER THINGS WHICH C.F. Coles worthy CAN SUPPLY YOU WITH. 127-12t EAST ALTA STREET. LAND SCRIP FOR SALE. Unrestricted forest reserve scrip for sale at lowest market prices. My scrip secures title to tim'.ered, farm ing, grazing or desert land. In any quantity, without residence or im provement Address H. M. Hamilton, The Portland, Portland, Oregon. ... 7