Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1905)
EIGHT PAGES. DAILY EAST OHEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1905. PAGE THREE. i Mid-Summer Clearance Sale Alexander's EVERY ARTICLE OF SUMMKlfr (iCK)DS DRASTICALLY REDUCI'J DURING THE MONTH OF AUGUST SUGAR BEET CROP GRAND RONDK WILL HAH- vest xton acres this year Watch this space for Our Big Announcement Later j The Taylor Hardware Co SCCCESSOR TO T. C. TAYLOR. 741 MAIN STREET. BYERS' BEST FLOUR Is made from the choicest wheat that grow. Good bread s assured when Byers' Best Flour U used.. Bran, shorts, (team rolled hnrlejr always on hand. ' PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. 8. BYERS, Proprietor. Bingham Springs THE POPULAR BLUE MOUNTAIN RESORT Bingham Springs Hotel, beautifully located In the heart of the Blue Mountains. The Umatilla river flows past the hotel, making an Ideal place for the lover of trout fishing. On all sides rise the tree-clad mountains, making Bingham Springs one of the coolest and most restful resorts In Oregon. The hotel maintains its own herd of cows, furnishing an abundance of milk and cream for Its guests. Our garden furnishes an abundance of fresh vegetables for the table. We spare no pains to add to the comfort or pleasure of our guests. Our swimming pool Is one of our most popular features. Rates, $1.00 and 12.50 a day. 115.00 a week for one, or $25.00 for two. Table board, 18.00 a week to campers. Camping privileges tl 50 each rer week. This Includes all privi leges of the grounds, including the use of the swimming pool. Address M. E. FOLEY, Bingham Springs GIBBON P. O., OREGON Insure in Reliable Companies That pay their losses promptly. Ou companies stand at the head of the list. Assets. Hartforu Firs Insurance Co $ll,ll.07 Alliance Assurance Co. . . l.01,i London ft Lancashl.-e Fire Insurance Co 1.144, (SI North British Mercantile Oo ll,m.7i Royal Insurance Co il,l(7,ltl FRANK BCL0PT0IN AGENT S EAST COURT STREET Mr. R. F. Payne, (Payne's pharmacy) Idaho Falls, Idaho, writes: "We have just sold the last cure, (TRIB), send one-half dozen at once. Trlb has cured five of the hardest kind of cases. One man here used it last Sep tember, and cannot smell wine, liquor or beer now without making him sick. He had been a hard drinker for It years." Father Desmarals, pastor of the Roman Cathollo church. The Dalles, Ore., writes: "I know of good results obtained by the' use of your Trlb in cur ing liquor and tobacco users." Wood & Coal Roslyn Coal $6.25 deliv ered, $5.75 at the shed Roslyn Ooal, after thorough exhaustive testa, lias been se lected by the U. 8. government for Uie use of Its war vessels, as It stood the highest test. Cascade Red Fir, sawed In stove-wood IcngUis, $6.00 per cord, delivered. Discount on large quantities. PROMPT DELIVERY. Roslvn Wood & Coal Co. PHONE MAIN M. t RIVERSIDE AVENUE , DAIRY ED MORGAN, PROP. Phone Black SMI. PURE MILK, Fresh, Puna end Clean. THY IT. i All orders promptly attended to. 2 MAI LET 178 FILL YOUR ' BIN WITH Rock Spring Coal Recognized as the best and most economical fuel. We as prepared to con tract with you for your winter's supply. We de liver coal or wood to any part of the city. Laatz Bros. MAIN STHf'1 NEAR DEPOT Eight Hundred Acres More Tlniii Ever Grown in the (oiiiily Before ; (ji l olal Ylclil or Mimir vt m lie ;. 000 Toiih or 7000 More Tlmn Ever liefui'ts I'ueliiry Will Run 00 Days anil Employ 150 People Cost of Harvest Will He $1100,000. H J w iv 1 UVmiiA li HatiOla Three thousand and three hundred acres i( HUKar heels. Thnt Ih the of ficial record of the acreage on the La I Grande beet sugar factory books, and j ( ibis Ih exactly MIO more acres than j g has ever been devoted to the culture j 8 of sugar beets In this valley In any I one Heason since the factory was en- j (J tabllshed, says the La Grande Oh- server. ' I According to the estlniale of the field superintendents, the total ton nage from these 3300 acres will amount to not less than 30.000 tons, which Ih 7000 tons In excess of any previous year. The growing and converting of this 30.000 tons of sugar beets Into sugar I will necessitate an expenditure on the part of the factory and grow ers of ' the snug sum of $300,000. A sum I ffi i.. .1..H,... ..-in 1 lie thrown directly Into circulation In this county, as the greater part of It will be cha-'g' d to the labor account. This, on account nf the extra acreage, ano the Increased yield, will be the most prosperous season the factory has experienced. A prosperous season for the factory means an additional measure of pros perity for the people of this valley, because the factory will of necessity spend a greater amount of money, which will provide the beet grower, laborer and factory band an Increas ed amount of circulating medium. According In the company's esti mate, the sugar campaign this season will continue fully 90 days, and as the factory employs nearly 150 men dur ing the campaign, It will be seen that the amount of money expended for factory help alone will amount to no Inconsiderable sum. Manager George Stoddard has taken due notice of the fact that the linct crop will he largely In excess of all previous crops, and has en deavored to meet the Increased de mands upon the factory by making every Improvement which seemed to him "advisable. The one change which will cause his praises to be sounded the loudest is the system of elevated railroad tracks and the new beet sheds which are now being erected at an expense of about $S000. This system of tracks and sheds will do nway with the old method of forking the beets out of the cars, as under the new system the beets will be brought to the factory In dump cars, and all that will be necessary to unload the car will be to pull the dump boards and the beets will fall Into the sheds and from there will be carried to the factory through the flume. This will result In a great saving of time and labor, and as the sheds will have a much greater capacity than those In present use, a much greater quantity of beets can be held In storage. As the heet Industry grows In this valley, this feature will have an nprreck.hle bearing upon the rugar In lustry. How About That New Wagon You Are Going to Buy? We can save you money on it. It will pay you to come and see use before you buy. We have a strong lino of wagons, hacks and buggies, Including the famous Cooper Wagon, and Uie celebrated Racine Hacks and Haggles. We believe that for the same money we can give you better goods or we can give you Uie same goods for less money than you can get in uny other implement house in Pendleton. Quality, however, U what counts and that you will find here. Quality, or the lack of it, is always In-fore you as long as you use the article, long after thep rice has lieen forgotten; so don't neglect to get quality, nor don't go elsewhere and buy something that is said to be Just as good, and whose defects are hidden beneath coat of paint. Take the case of Drills. We handle the Superior Drill, which Is true to its name, as It is the superior of any other Drill on Uie market. We are Uie agents for the Reversible Disc Plow and Uie Disc Harrow; also the Walla Walla Weeder, and the Lightning Weeder. Look over tills partlol list of what we carry In stock. It may suggest to you something you are In need of. Harvester Supplies, Drapers, Tank Pumps, Tank nose, Axel Grease, Machine Oil, Oil Cans, Sprocket Chains, Belling, Lace Leather, Babbitt, Carriers, Pulleys, Reaches, Singletrees, Hay Forks, etc. If yon want any of the ulrave or anything else In our line let ns know and we will take pleasure In serving you and filling our w ints. FRED WEBER I Successor to the Umatilla Implement Co. OREGON" PORTLAND St. Helen's Hall A GIRL'S 8CHOOL OF THE HIGHEST CLASS corps of teachers, location, building, equipment the best. Bend for catalogue. Term Opens September 18, 1905. FARMER MI ST PAY LICENSE. The East Orrgontan Is Eastern Ore gon's representative naper. It lead and the people appreciate It and show It hy - their liberal iiatrnnaga. It l th sdvertMns medium of the section Portland Passes Ordinance Creating City Market Master. Portland. Aug. 19. Farmers will be prohibited from peddling their produce In Jortland after September lr utdess they pay a license of $15 n quarter or secure a permit from the marketmaster of the city market for 25 cents a day, If an ordlnnnce Intro duced at the last meeting of the coun cil by Councilman Masters, becomes a law. The measure was Introduc ed for the purpose of regulating ped dlers In the Interests of the People's Market company, which will open a public market September 1, on the old market block, Third and Market streets. If a farmer who has produce for sale does not take out the city license he will be compelled to take his wares to the public market, where he will have to pay 25 cents a day for a stall and there place his produce on sale. The city marketmaster will then sup ply him with a certificate, which will permit him to sell his produce on the streets after 9 o'clock. her attempt to come near enough to j President" Roosevelt to shake hands j nil hhim. It was her plan to bring' her entire family along and present all of them tothe president, but for obvious reasons that plan was not feasible, owing to the fact that It would have been practlcnlly Impos sible to make room for her 112 living descendants. Mrs. Rants has six children, 35 grandchildren. 64 great-grandchildren and seven great-great-grandchildren. She is only 8 7 years old, enjoys per fect health and not only does all her housework, but also some very fine needlework In her leisure time. Mrs. ItanU's son John Is a great-grand-falber at the age of 60. His daugh ter. Mrs. Mary Lloyd, of Milton, Is a grandmother at the age of 40. She has two daughters who were each married when they were 20 years old, and each has children. James Wormian, one of Mrs. Rantz's grand children, has 18 children, Including three pairs of twins and one set of triplets. Mrs. Rantz Is the grandmother of one pair of twins, great-grandmother ot three pairs cf twins and one set of triplets, great-aunt of two pairs of twins; great-great aunt of two pairs of twins, and second cousin of one pair of twins. MARSHAL FIELD'S TAXES. WANTED TO SEE ROOSEVELT. Mrs. Rants and ncr One nundred and Twelve Descendants. Wllkcsbarre, Pa., Aug. 19. -There Is no more disappointed woman in this town at present than Mrs. Lydla Rants, of Danville, who came here expressly for the purpose of meeting the president, when he came here to address the Cathollo Total Abstenance Union and the miners, but failed In Chicago Millionaire is Not a Tax Dodger by Any Means. Chicago, Aug. 19. The contribu tions of Marshall Field to the public coffers of Cook county this year have been announced by the board of re view. Field will pay taxes on a real estate valuation of $30,000,000 and on a personal property valuation of $10, 000,000. Unlike many of the wealthy citizens of Cook county, who appear to think the system of taxation is without fair ness and Justice, Field meets his obli gation without even so much as a murmur of objection, unless he has been mado the subject of a flagrant injustice. There are those who declare that Field, were he to realize full value on his possessions, could sign his check for $200,000,000. The more conservative, however, estimate hlB wealth at between $100,000,000 and $150,000,000. Nobody but Marshall Field knows how rich Marshall Field considers himself to be. "It is a pleasure to deal with Mr. Field." said one of thu taxing offi cials. "His complaints are few and when he does utter a complaint there always Is ground for it. He is not one of those who deem it a matter of good business to escape paying their full share of taxes. He wants to be fair and square with the people. Ha does his full duty and he is to be all the more'admlred for It" a railroad company, the purp'se of which Is to connect the Harrlman railroads In the northwestern part of the United States with the Harrlman lines running to New Orleans and through the southeastern states. The new railroad will run through the Kansas wheat belt and will be chartered under the name of the Denver, Kansas & Gulf. The capital stock of the company Is $2,000,000. Of this amount $250,000 has been subscribed. The new railroad will connect with the Burlington lines on the north either at Oronoquo In Norton county, Kansas, or Republican Junction in Harland county, Neb. It will run south from one of these places to Hayes City, Kan., and then through Great Bend or Lamed to Pratt, and out of the state at Kiowa. At Chero kee, Okla., It will connect with the Denver, Enid & Gulf, a few miles of which Is In operation. It will run east from Oklahoma City to Texar kana, Texas, where It will connect with the Southern Pacific. The head quarters of the new company will be In Medicine Lodge, Kan. UMATLLA JOHN HATTER TOUCHED FOR WATCH AND MONEY. HARRIMAN'S NEW LINE. Kansas Wheat Belt Tapped by Branch of Big System. Topeka, Kan., Aug. It Application was made here today for a charter for Strike of Cotton Operatives. London, Aug. 19. Nearly all cot ton factories In Lancashire closed down for an indefinite period today in consequence of the strike of the operatives. There are between 60.000 and 70.000 operatives employed In the mills of Lancashire and nearly all of them stopped work this noon. They demand an Increase of wages amounting to 5 per cent and. so far. only few of the mill owners have ex pressed their willingness to grant the demand. There will be another con ference between representatives of the strikers and the mill owners and If no settlement of the differences Is reached, there will not be a spindle or loom working by next Monday. Railroad Blacksmiths Meet. Cleveland, O., Aug. 19. The Na tional Railroad Master Blacksmiths' association, a national organization with branches In nearly every state of the Union, and its ladles' auxiliary, opened their annual convention here this morning. The attendance is quite large. The business of the con vention will be finished today and at the conclusion of the work the dele gates and members will devote a few days to recreation. SHinlsh War Veterans Meet. Rock Island, 111., Aug. 19. The r.n iiual convention or encampment of the Illinois Spanish-American War Veterans opened here today. The attendance Is not us large as In for mer years, owing to the fact that many of the veterans Intend to at tend the national encampment, which will be held In Milwaukee on Septem ber 7, and find it Impossible to be present at the state encampment as well. It is claimed that there Is not a rusty field, or part of a field, of wheat In Lincoln county, Washington, this year. Railroad Officluls in Town New Conductor Between UniiiUlla and The Dulles Development League Elects Delegates to Irrigation Con gress A Macqiie and His Cjinpan lon Run Out of Town Town In fested with Opium Joints Prose cuting Attorney Hus Been Notified. Umatilla. Aug. 18. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Curtis will arrive home tomor row from Wallowa, after a two months' vacation. R.ibert Llngow says his boy will develop Into a fine switchman. Conductor Mahaffy, an ex-cham-plon football and baseball player, Is on the Umatllla-Dallcs run at present. Mrs. N. Gibson and sister, Miss Rulh Davison, will visit Portland and the fair next week. General Superintendent Buckley. Superintendent Campbell and Chief Engineer O. W. Boschke were In Umatilla last night, and left here this morning for points east. John Hatter was touched last night for his gold watch and a small amount of money. No clue to the guilty par ties. The Umatilla Development league elected as delegates to the Irrigation congress In Portland next week: A B. Stephens, Sidney Saylor. D. C. and Robert Prownell. A moving picture and Illustrated songs concert was given in the school house last evening. Taul Hubbard, the harltono soloist, was a pleasing singer, and received much applause. A "hobo" prostitute and her French male consort, who have been causing considerable complaint by their ob scene nctlons In Umatilla for ahout three weeks, were run out of town the first of the week. They have been living In a sort of muslin tr.t near the river, and a crowd went to their lair and took him down to the river and after ducking him until he promised to leave town, they gave them an hour to get out. Th v went. The above pair and others who have frequentel the opium dens In China town have boon a menace and dis place for a long time. On? C tT'ese Joints Is within 100 feet of the school house. The matter was taken in by the development leaguo and th i pros ecuting attorney notified of the facts, but as yet nothing has been heard from him. Parents who have children here nre becoming Indignant at theso tlings am declare something must be done, and tht matter will bo prosecuted with a'l the power ut hand. Lehman Springs Stage. The Lehman Springs stage will start Saturday. June SO. and will run till October 1. and carry passengers and the mall. It starts from Lindsay's table, on Cottonwood street. Rader Carpets Rader.