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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1905)
FADE TWO. DAILY EAST GRBGQ.MAX. PENDLETON, OREGON WEDNESDAY, JULY IS, 103. EIGHT PAGES. GOT TO GO! THE BIG SI MMER SALE IS STILL ON. SOW IS TOUR TIME TO BCY MCSLIN VST DER WEAR, WAISTIXG. SITTINGS, SHIRTWAISTS, SHIRT WAIST SUITS, -LACES, EMBROID ERIES, HOSIERY, ETC. YOU CAN EASILY SAVE FROM 25c TO 50c ON EVERY DOLLAR BY TRADING AT THE E BAD SHOW G I Golden Rule Store s THE BARGAIN STORE GOLDEN RULE TREATMEN T. COrNTY SCHOOL RECORDS ARE INCOMPW3TE. Harney and Josephine Counties" Re ports Are the Subject of Much Sur prise to State Superintendent Reg isters of Attendance Are Not Kept I'p and Make an Incorrect Showing of School Attendance Superintend ent Urges More Attention to TIiIm Matter. GENERAL NEWS. All the democratic county officers of Denver have been ousted and the i .a .......Uu........ . 1 . v. I. ' a supreme court decision. Portsmouth, N. H., has been defi nitely selected as the point at which the Japan-Russia conference will meet to discuss the terms of peace. James Hamilton Lewis, formerly congressman from the state of Wash ington, has been appointed corpora tion counsel for the city of Chicago, by Mayor Dunne. The Norwegians have offered to make Prince Charles of Denmark king of Norway, but he has not yet ac cepted the offer. He Is a nephew of Queen Alexandra of England. Five hundred more Chicago team sters will strike this week if the new cartage company just organized in the city attempts to deliver goods and expressage to the boycotted houses. Advices Just received from Samoa, say that a terrific hurricane swept over the islands on June 12, doing im mense damage to plantations and car rying hundreds of homes out to sea. Enormous Ice floes, the most threat ening ever seen, have completely spoiled Th fishing ?a:;ou n the coast of Labrador, th.s year. A fi.!iir fleet of over 2)0 vessels !j blockaded out r.t sea and cannot reach th fish-, ing banks on tb; coast. ( A firing squad at Lit'au. r.ss'a, which had been selected to shoot to death 23 mutineers In the navy, turned upon the officers Instead of firing at the condemned men. and 13 -officers fell dead. Nothing has been done with the mutineers as yet, as no officers can be found who will car ry out the death sentence. NORTHWEST NEWS. The steamer Zelandia, which has Just arrived at Seattle from the north, Bays the whaling steamer William Bayles arrived at Nome June 27 with a catch of five whales or 10,000 pounds of bone. Twelve miles of steel rails and two locomotives have been ordered by the Payette & Idaho Northern railroad and all preliminary arrangements have been made for an extension of the road next year. The Japanese convicts who escaped from McNeil's island have broken in to a clothing store at Ballard's and outfitted themselves with new cloth ing throughout, discarding their stripes and leaving them In the store which they entered. Walter St. Clair, of San Francisco, aged 11 years, hanged himself Tues day rather than chop wood for his mother. She told him -to get in wood to cook dinner with and soon after found him hanging by the neck, in the cellar. Strong efforts are being made to have the death sentence for Andrew Dodson, who killed William Dunlap, near Grant's Pass last spring, reduc ed to life imprisonment. Both Judge and prosecuting attorney have signed such a petition. The National Woman's Suffrage as sociation will send the best lecturers and speakers Into Oregon next spring to assist In carrying the state for the suffrage amendment. It is understood that 13000 has already been pledged by the national association for the campaign, also. Three Portland girls were nearly run down by a Southern Pacific train near Oregon City Tuesday. They were walking across a long trestle and one of them fell in front of the engine be twten the ties, while two rushed to the ends of the ties at the side of the bridge. The clothing was completely torn from one of them and she was bully biuleed. HOTEL ARRIVALS. Hotel St. George. J. A. Gurge, Portland. T. E Wheaton, Portland. W. H. Frcst, Chicago. J A. Athson, Portland. F. J. Gardner, Portland. G. L. Richardson, Portland. B. Stinman and wife. New York. M. W. Mintsh and wife, Cleveland, J. B. Smith, Pendleton. R. F. Glafke, Portland. A. M. Thomson, San Francisco. S. P. Gould, city. C. J. Rupel, Spokane. Geo. A. Davis, .Spokane. E. C. Warren and son, Portland. E. W. Dint, San Francisco. E. P. Walte, Portland. Geo. E. Mossu, Spokane. B. K. Loeb. Helena Blanche W. Haffle, Condon. William Behrens, San Diego. 'j. H. Hamilton, Philadelphia. Mrs. Lizzie Kirkman. Echo. E. Gensingtery, Pittsburg. E. M. O'Brien, Chicago. W. H. Uptank. Walla Walla. Geo. M. Coohn, Bermuda. J. H. Pratt, Chicago. Mrs. J. F. Dieterich, Boston. Bertha L. Coxe, Milwaukee. Nellie E. Co, Milwaukee. , M's. O. S BurrlUy and daughter Atlantic. F. I Mitchell, Portland. ' H. C. Gibbons, Portland. Hood, New York. J. SL Stannard. Los Anpelos. Ous Wells, Chicago. Mrs. H. C. Boyd, San Frannisco Mrs. Carrie C. Church, Sun Fran Cisco. Charles F. Bates, Canby. William Dunn, Portland. Golden Rule Hotel. Ellen Owens, Athena. J. T. Lamblrth, city. J. S. Beckwlth, city. Mrs. A. Smith, city. Joshua Swindler, Two Rivers. Mrs. L. B. Holslngton, Harris. Leah Morgan, John Day. M. Oester and wife, Sioux City. Geo. A. Forbes and wife, Weston. John Mather, Weston. Mat Halvoren. lone. E. Costlllo, Starbuck. S. A. Frans, Spokane. E. L. McBroom, city. A. Kotzman. Orient J. H. Butler, Olex. John Sauveda, Olex. W. L. Newotn, Harrington. L. G. Comely, Harrington. A. D. Blue, Mission. R. F. Estes, city. Hotel Pendleton. G. K. Patterson, Philadelphia. Edwin J. Burke, Panhandle. Chas. H. Green, San Francisco. A. A. Reardon, Portland. Otto F. L. Horse, Corvallls. Charles Nebergall and wife, Port' land. Miss Ella Goeck. La Grande. pv B. Wolff and daughter, San Francisco. J. J. McKoln, Agency. L. R. Qulgles, Jr., Kansas City. J. M. Russell, Pendleton. Geo. B. Chase, Spokane. J. Otis Camp, Portland. R. E. Paddock. Portland. F. Wleden, Portland. E. E. Wheel, Chicago. R. A. Seeds, Spokane. L. E. Hall, 8t Louis. H. Marsh, Chicago. T. B. Killin, Portland. T. K. Youngman, Portland. George Rhlnehart, Portland. Joe Plaver, Portland. Sam Gill, Spokane. M. E. Foley, Bingham Springs. J. F. Lamblrth. Pendleton. J. C. Llndsey, Portland. William J. Custer, Chicago. Peter Berult Wallace. Geo. King. San Francisco. W. L. A- Klnson. Seattle. J. Sheuerman, San Francisco. The county superintendents of Har ney and Josephine counties are the first to comply with the law In regard to the filing of annual reports of the conditions in respective counties, says the Salem Statesman. One particularly peculiar difference snown in the conditions respecting the two counties Is that while the 1905 census shows an Increase of 108 per sons of school age In Harney county over last year, or a total of 1114. the school attendance has fallen off to the extent of 24.121 days. In Josephine county the total school population for 1905 is given as SO 13 or an increase of 136 over last year. and there is also a healthy increase of 5410 days school attendance shown the school year 1904-05 over the previous years. In Josephine county there are 103 teachers employed, against 81 last sea son, the Increase being wholly In fe male teachers, and the scale of sal arles for female teachers has advanc ed from an average of $39 a month last year to $41 the present year, while the average of $52 per month paid male teachers last year has dropped to an average of $48. In Harney county there were teachers employed during the 1904-05 school year, whereas there was a total of 37 for the year previous and the salary scale has advanced from an av erage of $73.33 for male teachers per month, to $75, as shown by the re ports, and from $53.50 to $60 in the case of female teachers. In speaking of the falling off In at tendance In Harney county Superin tendent Ackerman said he could not account for it except through the fail ure of the teachers to keep an accur ate account of their registers. This could only be remedied, he thinks, by the county superintendent checking up the district clerk's reports and ascertaining the cause of the shortage In attendance and where it exists and inquire Into the cause. The onlv way that teachers couia be induced or compelled to keep their -acHatara nn and act them Into tne county superintendent at the close of the term would be to withhold me teacher's salary for the last montn ana pay it over to him upon the condition that he send In his register In due sea son for the verification of the super intendent. He also recommends, as a permu nent remedy to the failure of teachers and clerks to keep up their attendance nxristRr. the adoption of the system in practice In Washington oi nmMi.s i.. .rhnnl aDOortlonment upon me s"- eral attendance rather than the school population. PREPARED FOR STRIKE. effect at midnight there were some who had allowed that fact to escape their minds and they came down town as usual for their "morning's morn ing" They were confronted by an army of Vale locks that brought them to a rea'ii.lng sense of the change and they left the business district with an arid feeling that nothing short of a govern ment project could relieve. But they were for the most part richly compen sated. They discovered that they had plenty of time to go home and visit with their wives and children and they did It. to the mutual enjoyment of all concerned. Blow AlntOMt Killed "Mooolicrs." Perhaps the blow fell hardest upon the crowd of loungers who have made their beds for years In the cushion- j less chairs around the walls ot what I are known as the distinctively beerj drinking places of the city. They were unceremoniously routed out at 12 o'clock Saturday night. They roosted on store boxes in alleys and behind barrels. How they longed for the comforts of their former "easy" couches, Unaccustomed to the open air treat ment they were a fagged-out lot when the warm sun drove them from their new lodgings yesterday morning. In vain they hovered around the doors of their once happy homes. Deject edly they glued their eyes to the locks. As saloonkeepers pasesd along they begged them to open up Just for a minute and give them only one little drink. But the owners of the refresh ment parlors were unrelenting. They may have regarded the Sunday clos ing as a blessing in disguise because of the possibility of the operation of the ordinance freeing them of this very undesirable class of "mochers." "Go to work somewhere, you fel lows." said one saloon proprietor to a bunch of blear-eyed topers. "That thirst would soon leave you then." "Work!" they echoed dismally. "That'll be the next reform ordi nance passed In Boise," said the sa loon man. Five of the seven immediately start ed for the station In search of an un reserved "blind baggage." I A Big Clearance ! :: SALE ;: ...AT THE FAIR... CLOTHING TO BE CLOSED OCT ENTIRELY PRICES ARE MADE TO SUIT THE PURCHASER. THE CLOTH ING MUST GO, AND WE WONT QUIBBLE ABOUT THE PRICE, BUT SELL YOU THE SUIT AT ANY PRICE. . . ...18c .130 MO Summr Wash Goods, 25c and SOo kinds, to close out Summer Wash Goods, 15c, 18c and 20c kinds, to close out Summer Goods, 8c and 10c kinds, to close out Shirt Waists at less than actual cost of laying them on the counter before you. Dress Skirts at 20 per cent reduction from regular price. . - . Silk Suits at about two-thirds of their value. $19.50 Suits at $11.48; .$13.50 Suits at fMM OTHER LINES CUT TO THE QUICK-MOVING POINT. AND GET YOUR SHARE OF THE BARGAINS. COME NEGRO GIRL FOUND RICHES. We Are Headquarters FOR KODAKS AND CAMERAS, DRY PLATES, FILMS, PHOTOGRAPHIC PAPER AND CHEMICALS. Brock & McComas Company DRUGGISTS 'Phone Main 90. While Hunting Cons Stumbled Over Immensely Rich Quartz. A colored servant, Miss Nannie Brown, while out looking for a stray cow, stumbled over a gopher hole from which had been thrown out sev eral pieces of quartz which fairly glli- tened with gold, says a dispatch from Homestake, Mont., On account ot their beauty, she took several speci mens to her employer, who Immedi ately recognized .their character and in a short time the whole vicinity was staked out. Assays made by a number of Butte chemists show that the rock carries more than $1000 a ton in gold. Two shafts have been sunk 30 feet and two large, well defined leads carrying free milling gold In which the particles pan easily be seen, have been uncov ered. About $10,000 worth of ore has already been blocked out. Some years ago James Brown, city editor of the Butte Inter-Mountain located a claim only 100 feet from where the find was made, but aftT working some time, it was abandoned Northern Pacific Officials Send 30 Of fice Clerks to Take Place of Tele, graphers. Seattle. July 12. Thirty clerks from the office of freight auditor of the Northern Pacific railroad in St. Paul have been dispatched to Seattle for distribution over the system as sta tion agents at the smaller stations in case of a strike of the telegraphers of the system. The telegraphers have served tne officials of the company with a de mand for the reinstatement of certain employes discharged on account of their activity in the organization of the men, and a further demand for comDliance with the terms of an agreement between the railroads and the employes In reference to aunaay nav and the elimination of charges for rent where quarters are not furn ished. The controversy is expected to come to a head within a day or two. The clerks Just sent here it is thought will be able to keep the road In operation, should a strike be de clared. Most of them learned teleg raphy in the general offices of the company and do not belong to the union. None of them have naa any experience with train orders how ever, and train and enginemen may strike if they go to work. LONE ROBBER FOILED. c Electric light and steam baths. Fomentations, Salt Glow and Massage. TURKISH BATHS OVER. THE DOMESTIC LAUNDRY Hours: Ladles, 7 a. m. to I p. nv Gentlemen, 3 p. m. to 11 y. Pi- General merchandise stock for sale, Invoice $5000. Annual business. $11,000. Store building, warehouse and residence can be bought or rent ed. ' Located In small country town. Good location. Business established 3E years. Owner to retire because ot old age. Inquire or write to E. T. WADE BON, Office In E. O. Building, Pendleton, Or. , , . PofltofDoe Box S94. Black 8111. Attempted to Hold Up a Pullman Car in Idaho, A special from Spokane to the Ore non Dally Journal says: The daring attempt ot a lone roD- ber to hold up a Pullman car was frustrated last night by Pullman Con ductor Healey, of the Northern Pacific nasneneer No. 4. About mldnlgnt, lust after the train left Sand Point, Idaho, Healy found the robber In the vestibule of the sleeper ana piucKiiy EraDoled with him. In the scuffle the robber shot at Healey, the bullet passing through his coat He then beat Healey until the conductor waa almost insensible. Be nnt Her Double, coming rrignienea me - w VnM tin til n ftJIRP n ITf? TH. . rrt WPhKIL I 14 Vr Cliwiv v esw.v. f when I was Sk wHh typhoid kid- but tried to signal the engineer to stop . i.o. Mr. Annla Hun- me iraiu. i 0......0 ... . r-- i.uuw..;, - - . . I v, r-ar anH van shed. ter of Plttiburg. Pa., "and when 1 got " C. u... better, although I had one of the Healey was badly beaten but not ueuer, s roullv injured This is the third best doctors I could get I was bent a"u n., ,,t in the la,. double, and had to rest my hands on my knees when I walked. From this terrible affliction I was rescued ty Electric Bitters, which restored my health and strength, and now I can five years, reported. No clue to the robber Is BOISE'S "DRY" SUNDAY. ?SL?S Ted "2 Experience of the Old Drink era in Idaho's Capital. If there was anything "drier" than the city of Boise Sunday it was for tunate there was no one around to cure stomach, liver and kidney dis orders. At Tallman & Co.'s drug store. Price 50c. Mrs. M. A. Churchill, one of the touch a match to It, says the Boise oldest pioneer women of Eugene, died there Monday, aged 77. Statesman. Although the early and I Sunday closing ordinance went Into Houser Secures Another Mine. The Present Need mine, which has attained some prominence of late, owing to the mysterious disappearance of W. E. Gifford, has recently passed Into the hands of new management Zoeth Houser, manager of the Dixie mine, has secured a bond and lease on the property and will proceed with a systematic development. Mr. Houser has milled considerable ore from this mine at his Dixie mill and knows the character of the ore. George Baker will have charge of the work. Prairie City Miner. For a Time Constipation and Indigestion may give . . , , bama-w than 111 I. rue w notmng ww -- : tressed feeling or discomfort due to an overworked or Impoverished condition of the Digestive Organs. A done or two of Beecham's Pills will easily put this rigkt, but If neglected what a burden of illness may be the con tequence. Sold Everywhere. la boxes 10c and 2Sc .fit. ,','.; ( I 2 Long Beach w: E HAVE REPLACED the old Hotel Breakers which was burned down lost fall, with a handsome new building, plas tered inside and out, and practically fire-proof. The new building has twice the floor space of the old one and Is located on the same site about a stone's throw distant from the ocean. It has all the modern Improvements, electric lights, steam heat, private baths; it has both hot and cold salt water in the building. Our amusements include billiards, pool, tennis, golf, bowling, boating, fishing and other sports. Our new building Is equipped with a sun parlor and has a private livery. We own our own Jersey dairy and have a splendid vegeta ble garden in connection with the hotel. Rates range from $12 per week upwards, while special rates are given to families or parties occupying quarters for the entire season. You will find everything absolutely new and clean, and we have a well established reputation of doing everything In our power for the pleasure and comfort of our guests. You will find no pleasant place to spend your outing than at the Hotel Breakers, Long Beach. Good Dry Wood ALL KINDS I have good, sound wood which la delivered at reasonable prices FOR CASH. i W. C. MINNIS I Leave Orders at Hennlng's Ci gar store, opp. Peoplee , Warehouse. I Seeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaeeeeeeeeeaeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee BYERS' BEST FLOUR Is made from the choicest wheat that grows. Good bread la assured when Brers' Best Floor la "sod.. Bran, shorts, steam rolled barley always on band. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S. BYERS, Proprietor. Iba East Oregonlan la Eastern Oregon1 tepraaeartattM It leads and the people appreciate It a show tt by 'bear liberal patronage. It la the advertising medians of this aaetma. .lMIllMTllHTTMI IIIIMtIMMIlTt,lll IIIIIIIIM! CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS I CniHO CERTAIIl AMD QUICK RESULTS v mm w&nt aln mr a sltisaUon. want to bur. sell or trad anything, want to rant a farm, bona or room, want to recover some lost property, your desires can be satisfied thoroughly by using the Oregonlaa'a classified columns. Count six words to tbe Una, Mo ad taken under II aenta. Three lines, one Insertion Fifteen eenta Three lines, two insertion Twenty-five cents Three lines, six Insertions .Forty-five eenta Fire lines, one Insertion Twenty-five eenta Five lines, two insertions Thirty-five eenta Flrt lines, ate Insertions Serenty-flve eenta T I M