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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1906)
1 PACE TWO. DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREflOV, FRIDAY, JAW ART 26. 1006. EIGHT PAGES. Keep Your- Money Oregon in Every Loyal Oregcmian is in favor of that. Try it with your life insurance. The Ore gon Life Insurance Company, Fifth Floor Macleay Building, 286 Washington Street, Portland, Oregon. L. SAMUEL, Mgr. Keep Your Money in Oregon BACK FRGWl ITALY John grivktti: WRITES TO THE. EST OUEGONIAX. lVr 22 Yenr n llc-lilcm of Cold Springs, Ifl Miles North of PeniHe ton So Many I'linnso In Italy Tlint He Cotilil Not Slay There Amusing Experiences Willi Mirrors In Xciv York C1t Stopped at SMikane to Rest for n Time. here-you may bet I was pretty near tired out, so thought I would stop off and rest for a few days, but will be In Pendleton pretty soon, where I will feel more nt home. I have been a land holder for 22 years. I live 16 miles north of Pen dleton, near Cold Springs. Yours truly. JOHN GRIVETTE. I SIXG O. It. & X. TRACKS. The East Oregonlan has Just receiv ed the follow-in? interesting letter from John Grlvettc. an Italian citizen of Cold Springs, who has been on a visit to his native land for the past two months and w ho is expected home In e few days: Spokane. Wash., Jan. 23. (Editor East Oregonlan.) I started from Pendleton on November 28. 1005. and reached New York on the 3d of De cember. How I pot across the river frrm New Jersey I don't know. I was asking everybody I was where the boat was, and was on the boat nil the time and- did not know It until I was half way across. Well, when I cot to New York, I started out to find the Hanover bank, where I had business, and seeing nn extra fine looking building I thought I would step Inside to look around a little. T thought I was going to walk through a door, when a man grabbed me and said. "Hold on there, you will be smashing a hole through that looking glass." Well, I turned round and said, "I guess Its my treat. If I have lived ii, vears. I did not know a glass from a door." Of course I s:iw myself, but thought it was another man, as I had on a new suit of clothes I bought in Chi- Wtisliotits on thi Northern Pacific Forces That Road to Get Into Port- liinil by Way of O. R. & X. Because of high water and wash- outs on the northern Pacific near I Pusco, the trains of that system are j now using the O. R. & N. tracks Into Portland from Spokane, while the damage to the Northern Pacific tracks Is being repaired. Both passenger and freights of the Northern Pacific are now passing through Cmatllla over the O. R. & X. ! to Portland, but the damage Is not 1 heavy and It Is expected that the Northern will be using its own tracks again tomorrow. ! The Connell branch of the O. R. & ' X. Is also damaged somewhat by high ! water and last evening the Spokane passenger train was deluyed for two hours by high water hear Starbuck. j This afternoon the Northern Pacl j fic made arrangements to use all the ! O. R. & X. bridge carpenters aviill I able in order to rush the repairs need j ed on Xorthern Pacific bridges and j track. A large damage was done on i the Xorthern Pacific near Eltopla. EH G ciin WILL MEET S.VIT RDAY. I'EHIUARY 3, AT 10 A. M. Called by Clialrnuin Sillliiinii to Con vene nt Ills ori'K-e stlllnmn Trees I'lHin ilio Consideration of the DnuocriK.s of the County the Issues IH'voloiml by Events of the Past Several Years, ami Issues a Word or Caution and Warning in the Ap plication of tlio New Primary Law. The following official call for a meeting of the democratic central committee of Umatilla county, has been Issued by Cha'rman A. D. Still man, to be held In Pendleton on Feb ruary 3, 1906; Pendleton. Ore., January 26, 1906. Esteemed Fellow Committeemen: A state and county election occurs in June. A vast political breaking up is taking place throughout the nation. The crust of wealth, graft and special inivileKe that has protected the re- Tlie Secret of Success. Forty million bottles of August Flower sold In the United States alone since Its Introduction! And the de mand for It Is still growing. Isn't that a fine showing of success? Don't It prove that Aurust Flower has had unfailing suecoti In th? ciire of indi gestion and dyspepsia the 'two great test enemies of health and happiness? Does It not afford the best evidence that August Flower is a sure specific casro. I for all stomach and Intestinal dlsor- l stayed in New York three days, as j ders? that It has proved Itself the I missed the steamship La Savoy of ' best of all liver regulators? August the French line hv about 15 minutes. I Flower has a matchless record of As the water looked so rough I looked over 35 years In curing the ailing mil around for a good safe ship and final- j llona of tnese distressing complaints ly f'k the American line steamship i u--i- ' ""s as the fame of August Flower spreads. Trial bottles, 25c; regular size, 75c. For sale by Tail man & Co. Phll.-i.l..l.,ht..i which sailed three davs I " scope e ery , , abroad, later. I In seven days after a moderate rouu-li passage, two days of which I did not know whether I was alive or dead from sea sickness. I arrived at .Cherbourg. France, at 6 p. m. At 6 o'clock the next morning 1 1 was In the beautiful city of Paris. Ij li ft Paris the same day at 11 a. m. I Tlio Argonaut for January 2". The Argonaut for January 27, 1906, Is replete with articles of interest to readers of every taste. He who Is watching the march of events in the I and got to Torino. Italy, the next day . I Orient, since the close at nonn. I left there at 2 p. m. fori Geneva and arrived there at 9 p. m. j I st-iyi-d there four days, hut was only a.-nuMned with one man there. so I went back to Torino and stayed four'days. From Torino I went to j Covrf-a and stayed two weeks with m y folks, whom I had not seen for 31 I y a rr. Xo one know me. and everything; lool.ed so strange and .old-fashioned that I rould not stand it, and Just j withed I was hack again in Pendle ton. So I wished them all good-bye forever and started again for f t ee j America. I tck a cecond-class ticket from! Torino clear through to Pendleton. Ij sailed from Havre. Franco in the j French liner La Savoy on Saturday and reached New York on the next day a week, making eight days on the water, which was rough all the way over. Wh.-n I got to Xew York the offic ials tried to hold me on the ship, hut when I proved that I was an old American fit:zen. they lot me go, but all tiie otli-r Italian and Austrian pas sengsrs (about fcO'M they held on the ship till the train was ready to leave for tholr various destinations, when they were put on the cars like a lot of cattle and shipped off, and furnish ed with what provisions the govern ment thought fit to sell them at a dollar a head. Well, I arrived here at Spokane over the Great Xorthern from St. Paul, Minn., five days after leaving Xew York. I'.y th Mmo I reached will be Interested In or the war. Robert W. Ritchie's Important article on "Man churia's 'Open Door.' " Mr. Ritchie shows conclusively that the 11 Man ohurian cities which have been "open ed" are Inaccessible to foreign trade by land and sea. Jerome A. Hart writes on the freight blockade at the Isthmus of Panama In a style befit tingly humorous and trenchant. Cal ifornia writers tell the Argonaut read ers what two hooks they read with most interest und "pleasure during the past 12 months. The story Is con tributed by William O. McGeehan; it Is one of the most orlginul and strik ing of the author's stories of Filipino life. A Modern Miracle. "Truly miraculous seemed the re covery of Mrs. Mollic Holt of this place," writes J. O. R. Hooper, Wood ford, Term., "she was so wasted by coughing up puss from her lungs. Doctors declared her end so near that i her family had watched by her bed side 4S hours; when, at my urgent re quest Dr. King's New Discovery was given her, with the astonishing re sult that Improvement began, and coi tinutd until she finally completely recovered, and Is a healthy woman today." Guaranteed cure for coughs and colds. 50c and $10.00 at Tallman & Co. and Brock & McComas', drug gists. Trial bottle free. California Prune Wufcrs Are made from the fresh California fruit used all ovyr the land to cool .nil refresh the stomach and lntes tlnos. und to keep the bowels active. The most delicate Invalid can take these wafers lor Constipation, indi gestion and all Liver and bowel trou bles, without tear of griping or pain. They act gently but surely, stimulate digestion and hasten the passage and absorption of food, refreshing the whole of your body. Tallman & Co., Pendleton. Oregon. 100 Wafers 25 Cents. ered, $b.uuai me snea Itoslyn Coul, e'lcr thorough exhaustive tests, htm Imx-ii wj lectol by the U. S. government for the use of lis war vessels, as it stood the highest test. PROMPT ii:mvf..iy. ROSLYN WOOD & COAL CO. Of Hen at W. r. C. II. Depot PHOXE MAIN 2fl. Notice of Trustee's Sale. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned trustee of the estate of Joseph Hoch, bankrupt, under and by authority of an order duly made and entered In the matter of the estate of Joseph Hoch, bankrupt, will soli at public auction, for cash In hand, on Tuesday, the 30th day oi January, A. I). 1900', at two o'clock p. m. of said day, at the Hotel State, corner Webb and Cottonwood streets, In the city of Pendleton, Oregon, the following described personal property belong ing to the estato of said bankrupt, to wlf. The stock of wines, liquors and cigars, bar fixtures, casn register, 23 sets of bedroom furniture, and any and all other personal property be longing to the estate of Bald bank rupt not exempted by law, also the leasehold Interest of said Joseph Hoch, bankrupt. In und two said de scribed premises. Dated nt Pendleton, Oregon, this 16th day of January, 106. JOSEPH BASLER, Trustee of the Estate of Joseph Hoch, Bankrupt. publican party and given it Its pies tlge and from which It has drawn Its power, Is being broken In every di rection, and the campaign of educa tion running through the last two veara the Investigations of the big lite Insurance companies In New York, of the Standard Oil in Missouri, of the beef trust In Chicago, the breaking of corrupt republican rings everywhere have at last taught the people that what we told them In 1896 and again in 1900 was true. The democratic party has now an opportunity In state and national af fairs that It has not had for more than a quarter of a century. To It the people must turn for relief from the unbearable conditions that now exist, produced and fostered by those who have shaped the destiny of the republican party. Will we be great enough to lead st might forward on the path that Is opened before us, to take the oppor tunlty at high tide? If so we must carefully guard the Integrity of our organization nnd of the people, mem bers of our party, who have trusted their welfare to our keeping. The primary election law now in effect, if misinterpreted or given the interpretation that under Its provis ions any kind of an assembly where the business of the people, party prln clples, or the relative merits of can didates may be discussed, Is improper would be the greatest evil that has ever fallen upon the people of our state. Because then the people would be hopelessly and helplessly at the mer cy of the few usurping bosses, self anointed apostles, or an office-holding trust. The preservation of a single right to the people depends upon their being able to meet and "reason to gether." A number of nominating petitions are already being circulated, some by men utterly unworthy. Generally, as soon as a man registers, petitions are puked at him with request for his signature. Sometimes In all thought lessness, he signs, and will be cha grined to find later that a really fit or proper man for the office cannot be properly presented at the primaries because the careless voters have al ready wasted their signatures. Already, theie Is at least one can didate who is in no way suitable us a candidate or to hold office whose little scheme Is simply to secure as many democrats as possible to sign his petition as they register, all If possible, and thus make It impossible for anyone to contest with him at the primaries. Obviously. It Is unwise to sign any petition until the voter knows the I names of all those from amongst whom he may pick his candidate. Please aid as far as possible In advis ing our people to withhold their sig natures from all petitions until they have the full list of names to select from. As chairman, I hereby call a meet In ir of the democratic central com- mlitee, to meet at my office In Pen dieton, on Saturday, February 3 1 906, at 10 .o'clock hi the forenoon. This will bo In my Judgment more Important than any meeting ever held by this committee. Xew questions ate before us that we must decide. Some strife Is threatened. I trust that you and every other member of the com mlttee will be present. I would like to have present also as many lending or representative democrats from your precinct as can poslbly attend Yours for the rights of the people, A. D. STILLMAV, Chairman Umatilla County Democrat ic Committee, GENERAL NEWS. During a heavy fog Junuary 26, at Salt Lake, there were three collisions between street cars, In which 20 per sons, nearly all school children, were more or less Injured, but no one fu tally. : . ' . . The American Athletic union at an expense of $25,000, will send a team to Athens, Greece, next summer, to com pete in the Olympic games. The Portland Multnomah club hopes to have a representative on the team. A score of Chinamen engaged In a revolver fight in Chinatown. New York city. Chlng Yong and Lee Soon and two others whose names could not be learned, were killed. It Is a do tal! in the feud between the On Leong society nnd the Hip Sings. Stephen Decatur, a great-grandson of Commodore Decatur, first-class United States Naval academy, has been dismissed from the academy by Secretary Bonaparte in conformity with the sentence of the courtmartlal In his case on the charge of hazing. Governor Carter, of Hawaii, is dan gerously 111 at Honolulu with a fever resembling typhoid. Secretary Atk inson, who Is In Ne-v York, has been notified and will not Rtart on his pro posed trip to Europe for the present. Atkinson succeeds to the governorship In the event of a vacancy. The result of the Rrltlsh parliamen tary elections so far Is: Liberals. 32S; Irish nationalists, 81; laborites, 4S; unionists, 142. The new house of commons already contains 13 Jews, with several constituencies to be heard from. This is a larger number than previously recorded. VORTHAVEST NTOS. The Multnomah club, at Portland, Is In debt $37,000. When It moved Into the new club house nve years ago. It owed $63,000. Claude nnd Paul Ford were badly hurt at Yakima by an explosion of calcium light chemicals while pre paring for a moving picture perform. ance. The hall was damaged about $250 worth. Mayor Lindstrom, of Aberdeen, has appointed Frank Drake police Judge and has ordered all gambling to close down Immediately. The policy for the ensiilng year will be strict repres sion of vices. The largest band saws ever made are on exhibition in Portland. They will be used by the Hoqulam Lumber company. One Is 65 feet long, 1 Inches wide; the other 50 feet long and 18 Inches wide. At Gardiner, Perkins brothers and Frank Varrelsman anil son are under arrest charged with being in the loon business In a dry precinct. These are the first prosecutions In Douglas county under the local option law. General John S. Harris, aged 81 years, Is dead at Butte. He was a na tlve of Vermont and a "carpetbag senator from Louisiana from 1869 to 1 S 73. He came to Montana as sur veyor general of the territory, ap pointed by President Arthur. A Great Xorthern passenger train was wrecked near Rock Island, Wash. by running into a landslide. The en gine, tender and baggage car were thrown into the Columbia. L. M. Murray, the baggageman, was drown ed. Xo one elso was Injured seri ouMy. The oldest native Oregonlan yet to register at Portland, Is S. H. Abrams. tailor of 501 Jefferson street, 6 years of age. I he oldest man Thomas Johnson, an Inmate of th poor farm, aged 91. He Is an Irish man by birth and has lived In Ore gon 49 years. Truth is stranger than fiction to the average married woman. Half tlio World Wonders how the other half lives. Those who use Bucklen's Arnica Salve never 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 & -McComas, druggists. 25c. Poultney Bigolow tan resigned by request from the position of special lecturer upon Intemntlonal law at Boston university. This is nn effect of his unsubstantiated attacks upon the Panama canul management. Wanted nt Once Architectural draftsman; state salary expected, Write or call. 'Phone Black 3301, C. E. Troutuian, Architect. Pendle ton, Oregon. Box 484. Lost Black grain leather bill book, between Pendleton and Pilot Rock, Finder kindly notify B. F. Chllson, at Uklah, Or. Some "Toccrs sell Schilling' Best tMklnr-powd flavoring cxlractl picas oJa eoff moneyback ; some don't. 1 hev have their reasons both ways. Are You Up to the Hark? If not feeling as well as you should, do not make the mis take of letting your health take care oi itself. Kesort to tseecnam's Pills Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10c. and 25c. Spring Styles) We have just received a complete line of samples in Ladies. Suits, Jackets and Skirts No Two Alike We can save you 25 per cent on your Spring Jacket, Suit or Skirt. Call and we will tell you how we can do it ALEXANDER'S! Pendleton's Reliable Store FRANK B. CLOPTON & CO. Real Estate, Insurance, Loans and Investment Brokers, DIRECTORS. FRANK n. CLOPTON, President; T. C. TAYLOR, Vice-President; F. W. VINCENT Second Vice-President; MARK MOOIUIOCSE, Sco re v-Trcastircr; F. W. BIATLOCK. IT WILL BE DONE RICHT All plumbing and tin, sheet Iron or copper work entrusted to ma will be done right and guaranteed. I have removed my shop to Court street, second door east of Golden Rule Hotel, where I am better prepared than ever 'to do the highest class work. Plumbing done by experienced and proficient men, a I have In my employ one of the best plumbew In the business, and water, steam and other pipe fitting la solicited. A specialty of tin, sheet Iron and copper work. B. F. BECK THE OLD RELIABLE PI.lMllF.lt AND TINSMITH. Court Street, Two Doors East of Golden Rule Hold. Found at last a place where one can trust their best linen or dnlntlcst lingerie to he laundered. We use only hnrniless materials to cleanse all articles en trusted to us. A trial order will con vlneo you that wo live up to our ad vertisement. Pendleton Steam Laundry 'Plume Mnlu 1711. I'isiiman a Pir..:n.s. Pr... 0mmm ELECTRIC LIGHTING Is as cheap ns nny ether illumlnant, nnd far more convenient. r Let Us Figure With You nbout wiring your home, office or store. We can get you up n handsome window display. Uetter tulk with us on the subject. J. L. VAUGHAN Phone Main 139 122 West, Court SB OUR STOCK Is of fine, selected Lumber. We can give you any sort you require. LUMBER In largo or small fiuantltles, dressed or In thu rough. Fine flooring, Fram ing Timbers, Joist, Siding, etc. Give us a trial order and see how thorough ly satisfactory it will be filled. Oregon Lumber Yaro Near Court, House Pendleton Oregon. 'Phone Main 8. e BARGAINS IN REAL ESTATE located Two fine building lota, J200 each. 6-room house, two lotB; good wall; near school, price J1060.00. Good D-room house, larce barn, two large lots, nice shade and fruit trees, large chicken yard. " rice $2500.00. House and lot near West End school, J600, House anil two lota Maple St., $660.00. House and barn, 7 lots, good orchard, plenty well water, $2,000.00. These three pluces must be sold within 30 days. Come early and fo cure bargain. 360 acres Birch creek, 25 acres alfalfa; a gret bargain, $7,500.00. 180 Mre ranch n McKay creek, to excha' -e for city property. New house, 8 8-room house, large lots. Price $3600.00. . barn, chicken a half mtlea south of ISO acres one and Athena at a bargain. Also vacant lota In all pnrta of the city. If you wish to build we can sell you a lot and furnish you the money to build your home. Finest residence $7,600. V nt lot on Jane street, near Court, $625. 800 acre wheat ranch, 850 sown In wheat, $16,000; 12 miles from Pen leton, 8 miles to market and iwo lots In t a city. 960 Mrea; city. In whoat, 12 mllea south of HARTMAN & PHONE MAliI M. BENTLEY COURT BT., PENDLETON, ORJC. If