EIGHT PAGES. DAILY EAST OHEGOMAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, KATfRDAV, JANUARY 30 1006. PAGE THREE. PARUAMEN T OPENS JAPANESE FINANCES IN A TKOUllLED CONDITION. Tlio Government Want to Borrow $215,000,000 and Pay 175,000,000 to Oio DlNuliurgtxl Sodlcrs ujkI Knllors IIo to IUiIho tlie Entire Amount at Homo Government Will Set Asido $55,000,000 Ainiuully to He Applied to Intermt mill Kinking Funds Alone. Toklo, Jun. 20. The jiipiuiexc par llument reopened Its session toduy with the usuul ceremonlcB. The pres ent sesxlon will have to deal with many highly Important quentlons, none of them more Important than the problem of providing for the fi nancial policy of the county. A new loan of 1216,000,000 1h to be rained and $76,000,000 of that amount Is to be paid to the soldiers and sailors of Japan In recognition of their services. It Is tho Intention of the govern ment to have tho entire new loan mode at home. Of the total amount 1100,000,000 will be raised In the open market, which Is not likely to feel a pressure on this account, be cause In tho course of tho year the government Is to redeem the ex chequer bonds for the benefit of the murket. Of the remainder of the new issue $75,000,000, as already stated, will be paid to the soldier and sailors of the lata war. Forty million dollars, which need only be Issued gradually, Is to be taken up by the government's saving deposits bu reau. The reimbursement by Russia of tho expenses of the maintenance of the prisoners Is not Included In this financial scheme, because tho amount has not yet been ascertained. The new Issue will decrease by the amount of the payment receivable from Rus sia. The normal expenditures for the year, not connected with the war, are estimated at $115,000,000 and are to be met by the normal revenues lh ex istence. The expenditures resulting from the war, such as the service of the war debts, annuities, pepslons, maintenance of th garrison In Man churia and Korea, etc., are estimated at $400,000,000 and are to be met by the revenues from tho extraordinary special taxes and by other resources, which consist of the proceeds of the loans already Issued, the sale of the booty and other disused articles, and the new loan, already mentioned. For the payment of principal and Interest on the loans already Issued and to be Issued hereafter In connec tion with the war, the government will set apart from the revenues a sum of $55,000,000 annually, and the whole national debt Incurred In consequence of the war are to be paid In about 30 years. Besides this a sum of 118,000, 000 Is to be set apart each year for paying the principal and Interest of the loans created before the war. In order to Insure their proper handling a special account will be set up for these funds, keeping them entirely separate from the general account of the government. The national debts consolidation bureau and the national debts consolidation committee have been specially Instituted for that pur pose. '" There Is no doubt that the parlia ment will give the government the fullest support to make It possible to carry out these plans with perfect success. ARMY SIRGEON'S NEEDS. Effort to Increase Efficiency of the Morilcnl IH-partinent, Washington. Jan. 20. A committee representing the American Medical association and consisting of Dr. C. A. I Reed of Cincinnati, Dr. William Ij. Rodman nf rhlladephia, and Dr. William II. Welch of Johns Hopkins, Is In this city at present In the inter est of pure food legislation and for the purpose of appearing before the house military committee In behalf of tho bill to Increase tho medical de partment of the army. It will be urged thot the latter measure Is of PIANOS A little talk ab it PIANOS. If a merchant sold clothing for twenty dollars and then offered to deduct 70 per cent, or sell for six dollars, you find out that six dollars la all they are worth. Moral Buy your PIANO from the old reliable house of Sherman Clay company, the largest musi cal house In tho United States, with but one exception. One price to all. Jesse Failing Represent! them In Pendleton. STORE NEAR BRIDGE prime Importance In maintaining the efficiency of the military force of this country. It will be shown in the hearing be fore the committee that there Is great need of adding to the commissioned personnel of the medical corps and of placing It on a firm foundation and under such conditions as will attract to the corps the graduates of medical schools who are not now Inclined to enter the medical department, since promotion Is bound to be slow. INCREASED ASSESSMENT. Washington Railroads Must Pay More Tuxch. Olympln, Jan. 20. The assessors In slate convention at Olympia yesterday agreed to a schedule nf railroad valu ations for the coming year, which will Increase the taxable valuation of rail road property In the stole to about $32,000,000, or about one-third more than lOHt year. The valuation of main line right of way agreed upon was $14,520. Until recently It has been $6280. At the last meeting It was raised to $7600. Assessor Coouse last year placed a valuation of $9240 on main line In Yakima county, and the Northern Pa cific has thus far refused to pay, claiming that the valuation was ex cessive as compared with that In other counties. RAILWAY TO PAYETTE. Line Projected From Pnyelte to New Plymouth, Idnlio. A special from Payette to the Boise Statesman of today, says: C. W. Nlbley, the millionaire lum berman of Salt Lake, whose Interests In the lumber business and other In dustries extend over Utah, and a large part of Idaho and Oregon, Is In the city, In company with H. E. Dunn, traveling passenger agent of the Or egon Short Line Railroad company, for the purpose of taking the Initial steps towards building the Payette New Plymouth steam line, which the people of Payette valley have been assured will be built In time to haul the crops of the coming season. As has been made plain, the men promoting the proposed road do not ask for a bonus of any kind, but sim ply Intend to build the road as a business proposition because they be lieve that such a line, traversing the rich district It will. Is sure to be a paying proposition. All that they ask Is a free right of wny and terminal facilities, which, mere is reason to believe, will be cheerfully given by the people of the valley. The company to be formed Is to be an independent one, according to Information given out. with Mr. Nlbley as the chief stockholder. Mr. Dunn, who has been well ac quainted with the bright prospects of ine fayette valley for years, and has the greatest faith In Its future, will also be Interested In the new compa ny, ana it Is the Intention to place him in charge of the road as general manager, with headquarters In Payette. Illg Elevator Resumes Work. St. Josenh. Mo.. .Inn !n Tk. ki Mnrroun grain elevator at Elwood, Kansas, on the other side of the rivpr was reopened for business today. It is operated by William Nash of Chi cago and W. H. Ferguson of Lincoln. Aeo.. two of the learilnr irrnin m.n of the west. The eleva tor has hern rebuilt and Improved mnr-hlnrv in. stalled at a cost of $30,000. The ele vator had been damneerl hv a .ovo-o storm In May of last year and had to De placed out of commission. Tt wn found that it would be more advan tageous to put in new and Improved machinery than merely to him tho old machinery repaired. The original cosi or ine structure was more than $100,000 and Its capacity Is over half a million bushels. School Ship Saratoga Kails. Philadelphia. Pa., Jan. 20. The school ship Saratoga of the Pennsyl vania Nautical school, started today on a cruise to the Windward Islands which will, approximately last until April 14. After leaving the Delaware breakwater, the Saratoga will take a straight course for Barbados, thence to St. Kitts, St. Croix and St. Thomas, spending about one week at each place. The ship is well equipped and the boys will have a fine outing, be sides enjoying the benefit of the train ing which Is the principal object of the cruise. Half the World Wonders how the other half lives. Those' who use Bucklen's Arnica Salve nevr wonder if It will cure cuts, wounds, burns, sores and all skin eruptions; they know It will. Mrs. Grant Shy, 1130 E. Reynolds St., Springfield, 111.. says: "I regard it one of the absolute necessities of housekeeping." Guar anteed by Tallman & Co. and Brock & McComns, druggists. 25c. Hoping for Clemency. Annapolis, Md., Jan. 20. Recent events have caused something like a panic among the midshipmen at the naval academy, who have reason to fear to be disciplined for violating the rule against hazing. It Is said that an effort has been made to Inter cede In behalf of tho guilty middles and to Induce tho presldont to treat the offenders with clemency, when their conduct Is officially Investigated. ' For coughs and colds no remedy is equal to Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar. It Is different from all others better, because It expels all cold from the system by acting as a cathartic on the bowels. Affords Im mediate relief In croup, cougs, colds, whooping cough, -tc. Children love It. Sold by Tallmai & Co. Hoard of Directors Meet. The board of directors of the Echo Water Users' asoclatlon, meet today at Hermtston to transact some neo essnry business pertaining to the gov ernment Irrigation project. Last call. Teutsch's big sensational sale closes Monday at 6 p. m. JAW w Copyright 1905 by Hart Schaffner f Marx Style, Quality ana Price Those are the prime requirements of Clothing When you buy CLOTHING here you may be sure of getting what you want. --- HART SCHAFFNER i & MARX - :: CLOTHES are noted for style and quality all WOOL; no mercerized nor ? any cotton. We've priced them right the label is in them a small thing, for a big thing to find. Right now we are making some extra LOW PRICES which you should not fail to profit by. The Peoples Warehouse SAVE YOUR COUPONS WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE SANE YOUR COUPONS jjj jj j jjj j J J2J JJJJJ2JJJ JJ J5JJJ - - - - ' NAMING THF INDIAN FIVE CIVILIZED TltlUKS CAVSE COMMISSION GRIEF. Enrollment of Indians In the Indian Territory W as a Task of Great Dif ficulty Indians Have No Respect for Ethics of Granimur In the Selec tion of Tlieir Names Immense TaNk Is Now AlMmt Complete. Washington, Jan. 20. Of all the troubles experienced by the commis sion of the five civilized Indian tribes that of wrestling with the names of Indian claimants for enrollment, pre liminary to the allotment of land in the Indian Territory, was the worst. This commission has Just made its an nual report to the secretary of the In terior and Its farewell bow to official dom In general, for Its term has ex pired by law. The members of the commission. T. II. Needles, C. R. Breckinridge and Jams Hlxby, haven t enough euphol lous beauty in their names to be boastful, or bothered about the queer sounds or 111 effect Incident to on attempt to speak other people's names. It wasn't euphony; it was the indiscriminate way the full-breed In dian applied names, regardless of sex, to his children that caused the sleep less nights, as the commission roam ed over the territory and led It to beg charity of posterity should mis takes be found In the rolls prepared for the allotment of land. 'The Indian language recognizes no such thing as gender," complains Tarns Blxby, chairman, and his fel low commissioners, In the report. "The full-blood Invariably speaks of his wife as 'he' and persistently names his daughters 'Willie.' 'Joseph,' David' and the like. Strapping youths with no outward mark of ef feminacy sometimes answer to such remarkable names as 'Lillian,' 'Pearl,' or 'Josephine.' Surnames are changed over night. 'Brown' today will solemnly swear that he is 'Jones' tomorrow, while 'Care-co-can-thla, or Big Mosquito,' seized with a desire for an English name, becomes, without ceremony, plain 'John Smith.' In some cases two or more children of the same pa' rents are given Identically the same name. Information s to the age of both minors and adults Is often unre liable, If not absolutely lacking." ' With the exception of the roll, the commission Is proud of Its work, and says things are In such shape that Tarns Blxby. now known as the "Com mlssloner to the Five Civilized Tribes,' can complete the Job with ease. FORSAKF.S THE MORMONS. Professor W. M. Wolfe Cannot Longer Swallow tlie Faith. g W. M. Wolfe, professor of theology In Brlgham Young college, a Mormon Institution at Logan, Utah, according to a Logan dispatch to the Salt Lake Tribune. Professor Wolfe renounced his belief In the Mormon faith, re fused to pay tithes and severed his relations with the college. According to Prof. Wolfe, as the Tribune quotes him In an interview, his change of faith was due to a trip to Mexico, which satisfied him, he said, that the Mormon church had re ceded from the Woodruff manifesto and reinstated polygamous marriages. He found many young women who had recently entered Into the plural marriage relation, with leading elders of the Mormon church. Professor Wolfe Is quoted as saying: "The Mormon settlements In Mexi co are In close touch with those of Arizona, and in each case polygamy Is practiced as freely today as It ever has been." Professor Wolfe Is quoted as saying that he sought an explanation of these conditions of Apostle John Henry Smith, asking how these polygamous marriages could be reconciled after thg Woodruff manifesto, and he Is re ported as quoting Apostle Smith as follows: Why, Brother Wolfe, do you not understand that the manifesto was only a trick devised to beat the devil at his own game?" Professor Wolfe is a native of New York, the Bon of a Presbyterian clergyman. After engaging In the newspaper business he came to Utah 10 years ago and became a convert to Mormonlsm. Big sale at Teutsch's closes Monday. Men's and boys' clothing has again been marked down. Get In line for the closing hours. BAD BLOOD "I bad Ironblo with my bo we It whleb made mj blood tmpor. Mr face wm eoTered with pimples whleb no extort)! remedy coold re more. 1 tried your Catrarets and great wu my Joy when tb flmplet disappeared aftor month ra steady me, have recommended tbem to ail my friends d Qnit a few bare tonnd relief." C. J. Puich. 967 Park Ave.. Hew Tork City, N. J. Beat For ss. r . f r irwoowe.fi jji can cry cATrwmc Pleuftni, Palatable, Potent. TaiteGnod. Do OoM, Never Sicken, Weaken or Oripe. lOe. T6e, We. Kerer old In bnlk. The genuine tablet tamped OCO. Guaranteed to ears or your money back 8terlinf Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y wot ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES ft Big ten-day sale closes at Teutsch's Monday evening. Come Monday for your final shopping and the big final reduction. "CUT IT OUT" says the doctor to many of his lady patients, because he doesn't know of any medicinal treatment that will positively cure womb or ovarian troubles, except the surgeon's knife. That such a medicine exists, however, has been proved by the wonderful cures performed on diseased women, In thousands of cases, by WINE OF Woman's Relief It has saved the lives of thousands of weak, sick women, and has rescued thousands of others from a melancholy lifetime of chronic Invalidism. It will cure you, if you will only give It a chance. Sold at every drug store In $ 1 .00 bottles. Try It. CARDU WRITE US A LETTER freely and frankly, In strictest confi dence, telling us all your troubles. Ws will send Free Advice (In plain, sealed envelope). Address: Ladles' Advisory Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co., ChatUnooga, Tenn. CAVE UP SUPPORTER "I wore a supporter for years, for my womb, which had crowded every thing down before It, writes Mrs.S. J Chrisman.ofMannsville.N.Y. "Isuf fered untold misery and could hardly walk. After taking Cardul I gave up my supporter and can now be on my feet half a day at time." Bargains IN Land In Large and Small gnract8 Also'Qilt'yS fct Property So m" SmallJ Places desir-T able f or'J poultry farms. - See Rihorn & Warren Room lOOver Taylor's Hardware Store Egg Maker COLESWORTHT. BONE SHELL GRIT 127 -nd 129 EAST ALT A. Poultry and Stock Supplies. Bay. Grain and Feed. S Roslyn Coal $6.50 deliv- J ered, $6.O0at the shed Roalyn Coal, a "tor thorough m exhaustive tests, has been se- 2 looted by tho 17. S. government for tlie use of Its war vessels, as It stood the highest test. PROMPT DELIVERY. ! ROSLYN WOOD A COAL CO. a Office at W. a- C. R. Depot. "PHONE MAIN IS. i