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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1906)
TAKAH RETURNS JAPAN'S FISCAL AGENT I THE UNITED STATES. Ha Nngotlamd, In America, All the Foreign Iioaim Placed by Ills Gov eniinont Klncu tlio Wur With Russia Begun On the Kvo ir IIIh Dcimrt- ure to .luimii He TalkH AImhH the IVohuhlo Foreign and Domestic , Illicit of IIIm Country ax Arrcctrtl by Uiu Wur With HiihnIu. Hun Francisco, Oil., Jan. IS. Kor ckyo Takahlra, the financial commis sioner of the Japanese government, who was sent here at the beginning of the war between Japan anil Rus sia, to arrange for the placing of the Japanese loan, sailed from here today for Japan, having completed hln work In this country. "I have completed my work ln this country," Mr. Takahlra said In his modest way, shortly before his de parture, "and am returning to Japan now. The Japanese government has arranged Its financial program and does not need my services any longer. I expect to be able after my return, to devote some time to rest and to the arrangement of my own financial Intcrettts." "I feel quite confident," he said, when asked concerning the probable future of Japan, "that Japan will speedily recover from the shock of that great war. Destructive as It was It was to some purpose. If It had done nothing else than bring recogni tion for the country It would not have been In vain. But. It has accomplish ed a great deal more than that. It has made a new era of .peace and prosperity possible In the far east. "It Is but natural that a period of retrenchment should follow a devas tating war, such as Japan has Just passed through. Hut. I am advised by the Japanese government, that re trenchments will be made only so far as may make for the safety of the administration. The government must maintain Its powerful navy and - an army of sufficient strength to In sure Its own safety and peace. More over, the' terms of our alliance with Great Britain will render It neoesi.ary to maintain the army and navy on a firm footing. "Japan must now do a great deal In the way of commercial and Indus trial expansion. She must necessarily adapt herself to a new set of condl tions, and perhaps may find It to her udvantnge to profit, in a measure at least, by the example set by the Americans In the matter of commer cial progresslveness. She Is bound to grow and expand and extend the com mercial relations to countries that heretofore had little to do with her." AWITI, SLACGHTKIl ' WORKMEN. Private Fighting Rattle for Captains of Industry. Pittsburg. Pa., Jan. 23. Statistic for the year 1906 Just given out by the authorities of Allegheny county Indicate that during the past year more than 17.700 persons were killed and Injured In this county, while at their dally work. Of this number the blast furnaces and Iron and sleel mills are respousi Die for 9000. The other faetorl ?b and shops have 4000 to their credit and the victims of railroad numherel 4 -000, while those of the mines num bered 400. Besides this there were wveral thousand Injured whoso cases were not reported, as the Injured per sons were taken straight home nnd not to any of the hospitals or the nmrgueiR Several of the mills have furnished auch a large number of deatn and in Jury cases, that the Insurance com panies refuse to Insure men working there. A Modern M Intel. "Truly miraculous seemed the re covery of Mrs. Mollle Holt of this place," writes J. O. R. Hooper, Wood ford. Tenn., "she was so wasted by coughing up puss from her lungs. Doctors declared her end so near that her family had watched by her bed side 48 hours; when, at my urgent re quest Dr. King's New Discovery waa given hw, with the astonishing re sult that Improvement began, and continued until she finally completely recovered, and Is a healthy woman today." Guaranteed cure for coughs nnd colds. BOc and 10.00 at Tallman & Co. and Brock & MdComas', drug gists. Trial bottle free. Tobacco for tlio Navy. Washington, Jan. t3. For the first time In several years the navy de partment has this year been able to award Its contracts for tobacco for the next fiscal year to a concern not Identified with the so-called tobacco trust. Hitherto the prices of rival bidders have been such that the award of the contract had to be made to a firm believed to have been con nected with the trust Last year the contract was not awarded to the firm Whose samples were considered the best, because the price demanded was too high, but thlB year the firm offer ing the best samples, offered them at 35 cents a pound, which is considered a very reasonable price. Perfection can only be attained in the physical by. allowing Nature to appropriate and not dissipate her own resources. Cathartics gripe, weaken dissipate, while DeWltt's Little Early Risers simply expel all putrid matter and bile, thus allowing the liver to assume normal activity. Good for the complexion. Sold by Tallman A Co. Delay In lliillillng Battleships. Washington, D. C, Jan. S3. While the Louisiana, sister ship of the Con necticut, Is at last accounts slightly In advance of the latter vessel, the naval contractors Insist that the ves sel building at the New York navy eeeeaeaaaaaaaaaa..,.,..,.. ......... ............ Copyright iy5 Schaffner &? Marx Right now we are making some extra LOW PRICES which you should not fail to profit by. The SAVE YOUR COUPONS yard will be ready to commission ahead of the Louisiana. An effort will be made to discover the reasons for the apparent delay In the work at the navy yard. There have been some delays In the delivery of armor and some other materials, but the same delay affected the private ship building plants. It Is true, that some slight alterations la the jllans -of ihe Louisiana have been made, but it Is asserted that they were too Insignifi cant to cause any serious delay In the work. SALEM-rOHTLANTD LINE. Rapid ImrrM tm New Sh-ctrlc Itoall In the Valley. The Salem Statesman gives the fol lowing account of the construction work on the Siilcm-Pnrtlnnd electric line, which Is now assured: The grading on the line of the new electric railroad from Salem to Port land Is completed to Chemawa and ties are plied ready for distribution not only thnt distance but beyond there, waiting for mailable weather, when heavy crews will he put on and the work rushed with the dispatch which the company Is ae anxious to show. Some 10 carloads of rails for the track are now in Portlacd and will be In Salem within a few days. The remainder of the rails are on the way from the east. The construction en gine Is also at Portland and will be along In a day or two. The engine and rails will be brought to the fair grounds station and from there trans ferred to the present street car line. When the rnlls and engine arrive, work will be started within the city and In a very short time the track will be laid In Mill, High, Union and Cottage streets. The surveying parties are complet ing that part of tho work in the northern part of this county, through Clnckamas county across the Willam ette river and In Multnomah county. Tho prospects now are very good for getting into Portland with favorable arrangements on the part of the city. The matter of a franchise for the streets desired comes before the com mittee of the Portland council next Friday evening and there Is hope that fnvorable action will be taken. The people of Portland are realizing that the road Is a genuine proposition and no fake, but a matter nf square business and there Is now respectful consideration given to It. Half Uio World Wonders how the other half lives. Those who use Bucklen's Arnica Salve never wonder It It will cure cuts, wounds, burns, sores and all skin eruptions; they know it will. Mrs. Grant Shy, 1130 E. Reynolds St., Springfield, III., says; "I regard It one of the absolute necessities of housekeeping." Guar anteed by Tallman & Co. and Brock & McComaa, druggists. 26c. Some people Imagine that they are never talked about because they never hear It! DAILY KAST ORE lOXIAX, FEXDLETOX, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANVAttV Peoples WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE IN THE GRAND CANYON OF ARIZONA1LAZVLIVER Many years ago it was my privilege to cross the Atlantic ocean In the steamship Alaska, on the voyage to Liverpool, says William Winter In Pa cific Monthly. She took a northerly course and presently passed near to Icebergs, in a region of Intense cold: and there came a day when she was the center of one of tho most sublime pageants ever seen by human eyes. She was carrying sail at the time, as well as steaming; for the wind, though blowing a gale, was fair, and the sea, though rough and angry, was not tempestuous. Suddenly a great and dense haze of silvery mist swept over the ocean; a white squall struck the ship; and. In almost a moment, sail after sail was ripped from her yardarms, as If those sails had been so many sheets of paper; while, as she reeled and plunged In the welter In surges, her hardy sailors, respond ing to the shrill whistle of the boat swain, nimbly and with laughter, swarmed up the shrouds, to cut away the flapping canvas, and give It to the merciless wind. For .a little while nothing could be seen but huge, white-crested waves, all around the ship. Then, overhead, the white mist lessened and parted; the stainless blue dome of the sky became visible; the encircling vapors began to grow transparent; the whole wide expanse of ocean was once more disclosed agitated, and rolling fiercely nnder the stress of the tem pest and. from TW-ge to verge of the horizon, the henvens were spanned with colossal archee of brilliant rain bow. Never had It been my fortune to behold a scene of such commingled terror and glory; nor though was aboard the Augusta Victoria In Oc tober, 1889, when she nearly found ered In the most terrible of ocean storms have I gazed on any specta cle of natural grandeur commensur ate with It until now when I stand upon tho verge of this dread abyss. at once beautiful and awful, and look across the towers and castles, the crags and mountains, the weird cav erns and subterranean floods of the Grand Canyon of rizona. This terrific gash Is more than 200 miles long, and more than a mile deep, and Its area exceeds 2000 square miles. From the El Tovar rim, on which I stand, to the gleaming, snow- veined cralgs on the opposite side of this stupendous cleft, the distance Is IS miles. Human vision ran not take In the full extent of this wide pageant of terror and glory, nor Is It with the capacity of words io set forth its overwhelming splendor. The plain on which I stand Is nearly 8000 feet above sea level, and here, In a prodigious fissure gaunt, ab rupt, frightful and wonderful are assembled mountains, valleys, enor mous rocks, precipitous crags, ra vines of mystery and forests of gloom, Style, Quality and Price Those are the prime requirements of Clothing When you buy CLOTHING here you may be sure of getting what you want. HART SCHAFFNER & 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. Warehouse through which the black waters of the Colorado rush onward. In their resistless flow, and over which the dauntless eagle wings his upward flight to meet the sun. All the forms are here that Imagin ation tfould construct, and all the colors are here that glow In sunset skies. Far down in this subterranean vista the forests show like green lawns. Not less than seven geological periods In the physical history of the planet are displayed in the layers of tinted rock black, green, gray, red, brown, blue, pink, orange and ala baster, with many other mingled hues thnt constitute the walls of this colossal gorge; walls that seem con tinuous and unbroken, yet everywhere are rifted with lateral fissures, the beds of mountain streams that swell the flood of the great Colorado river. The American continent has no where else a spectacle to show com mensurate with this In beauty, grandeur and awe. SMITH FOR GOVERNOR. , Hood River Mnn Is Dtxinrcd to ne a Candidate. It Is stated with apparent authority that E. L. Smith of Hood River has decided to enter the political field as a candidate for the republican nom ination for governor, says the Oregon Dally Journal. When questioned yes terday on the subject Mr. Smith was noncommittal, simply saying: "I have not announced myself as a candidate for any office." Nevertheless leading politicians say that he has definitely decided to make the race. The appearance of Smith as a can didate will mean a new alignment of forces In the fight for the guberna torial nomination. Three other re publican aspirants, Johns of Bnker City. Geer of Salem and Wlthycombe of Corvallis, have avowed themselves as candidates and all are busily en gaged in rustling votes for the pri maries. In the Hood River country E. L. Smith Is well known. Ho Is one of the foremost fruitgrowers of the state and has amassed a comfortable for tune. He has been an active member of the Oregon Development league nnd is now entering on his second term ns president of the organization. Smith was suggested several months ago as a possible candidate for the congressional nomination In the sec ond district, and a considerable boom was started for him. But he did not take kindly to the Idea, and It was finally stated that he had decided not to seek the nomination. Some of hla friends then urged him to run for governor, and this, according to the latest reports, he has determined to do. Nuf sed. U C Rader. 23, 1906. SANE YOUR COUPONS w too that I would not b. Withoal th.n ... im.i.1 . - . . . i . - - .n - id., uu wua torpid llv.r tod headaeb.. Now .i.e. taking , . ' "T mien Miter I (ball carumlr recommend them to mj friend. u tho bolt medicine I bare erer teen." Asa. Bailaet, Oibora Mill Mo. t, fail Elrar, M.tt Best For rw. n . i CAN BY CATHARTIC kHSI P,Sab'- Potent T.tte Good. Do Oood, old In bulk. The tannine tablet atamped CCO. uoarautoed to cur. or jronr moner back. Bterllnf Remedy Co., Chicago or N.V. 6o ANNUAL SALE, TER MILLION BOXES Plymouth Rock Eggs Barred Plymouth Rock eggs for sale, BOc per setting of 15. Address Rev. J. W. Cornellson. Pendleton, Or., Box 374. "Phone, Farmers' 83. ... LETTER TO EAST OREGONIAX READERS. Tnllnuin & Co. Guarantee Ilyomel to Cure Catarrh or It Costs Nothing. Editor of the East Oregonlan: In view of the prevalence of catar rhal troubles at this aensnn nf the year, we want to tell vour readers thnt we have never sold anything that gave more satisfaction than Hyomel, when used In catarrhal troubles. Tou get lmmedlnte relief from the treatment. and consistent use will prove to every sufferer, as It has to many of our cus tomers, the virtue of this preparation. Personally we are Interested In Hyomel, for it Is made and sold on honor, and we do not want your money unless you are benefited and satisfied. There Is no stomach dosing In con nection with Hyomel. It Is a thor oughly local treatment for a local dis ease, and Its soothing, healing medi cation goes direct to the spot where It Is needed. The complete Hyomel outfit con sists of a pocket inhaler, a medicine dropper, and a bottle of Hyomel, and the price la only II, while additional bottles can be obtained for 50 cents. We positively guarantee a cure when Hyomel Is used in accordance with directions, or we will refund your money. This certainly shows our faith and belief In the virtues of Hyomel. Tours very truly, TALLMAN A CO. The East Oregonlan Is Eastern Ore iron's representative paper. It lead and the people appreciate It and snow It by their liberal patronage. It U the advertising medium of the aeetion. PAGE THREE. JDJREGON ako UNION FAWrlC TWO TRAINS TO THE EAST DAXL1 ThrOUarh Pnllman mtmnAmA Tourist Sleepers dally to Omaha and' Chicago; tourist sleeper dally to Kao saa City; through Pullman tourist sleeping cars (personally conduete4. weekly to Chicago; reclining chain cars (seats free) to the Eat dally. TIME SCHEDULE FROM PEN'DLi - 1U.1, EASTBOUND. No. 2. Oh rn irn RnJtnlnl n l a mm p. m.; depa-t, 6:40 p. m.' No. 6. Mall aV Expreaa, arrives 4:l p. m.; departs, t a. l.. - 12STBOUND. No. 1. Portion, SriMlal -.-4- a.ajf a. m.; departs, 8:60 a. m.' No. (, Mall & iTpress. arrives II p. m.; departs, 11 p. m. SPOKANE DIVISION. No. 7. Pendleton nmiMiMi- - .--. 6:36 p. m. 1 NP a. Pnokn n naaunMp .4 ... - I v m. WALLA WALLA BRANCH. SDectal nasspntrA! a i.r4iu. i.in m. ; departs 6:45 p. m. Morning train connects with No. 1. Evening train connects wltu No. I? No. 7 connects with No. t. OCEAN AND RIVER SOHEDIXB. FROM PORTLAND. All sailing dates subjects to changj. For San Francisco every five days- SNAKE RIVER. RlDarla tn Twltnn t ni . dall. except Saturday. 4:05 a. m. Leave T-awlann Hotlv . day, 7:00 a. m. B. C. SMITH. Aaent. Pend)teo- YOU WILL BE SATISFIED WITH TOUR JOURNEY' If your tickets read over the Derr ver and Rio Grande railroad, tho "Scenlo Line of the World." BECAUSE There are so many scenic attractions and points at Interest along the line between Ogden and Denver that the trip never becomes tiresome. If yon are going east, writ for In formation and get a pretty book that will tall you all about It W. a M 'BRIDE, General Agent, 1M Third Street, Portland, - Oregon RUNS PULLMAN SLEEPING CAtUt ELEGANT DINING CARS TOURIST SLEEPING CARS ST. PAUL MINNEAPOLIS' DULTJTH FARGO TO GRAND FORKi CROOKSTON WINNIPEG HELENA and-' BUTTE THROUGH TICKETS TO CHICAGO WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK BOSTON And all points East and South. Thronsb tickets to Jinan asd China. ar. Tacoma and Northern Pacific ataaniaaia ro. aad American Una. TIME SCHEDULE. Trains leave Pendleton dally ezeent Sunday at 6 p. m. For farther Information, tlm. eardav maps and ticket, call oa or write W. ' Adanu, Pend'.ton, Oregon, or . A. D. CHABLTOK, Third aad Vorruroa St.. Portlaad. Of. Washington & Columbia River Railroad TAKE THIS ROUTE FOR Chicago, St. Paul, St. Ixuls, ffanaae uity, eu aiosepn, Omaha and ALL POINTS EAST AND SOUTH. Portland and Point on the Sound. '; TIME CARD. Arrive Mondaw. Waiinaa.. -... day. 11:16 n. m. On TiiMri, tw day and Saturday, ions m' at 6 p. m. dally. Leave Walla Walla :it p. m. fo east Arrive Walla Walla at t a. m west. For InfomarlAa hmmIIu . iccomaodatloaa, call oa or address W. ADAMS, Atoat, l a CALDBRHIAD, Q. P.T!' : nana walla, Waahtagtaav