1!
PAGE SIX.
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 190.
EIGHT PAGES.
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and keeps you up
IS TO
Our delicious Cod Liver
preparation without oil
Better than old-fashioned
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Old people, delicate children,
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throat and lung troubles.
Try ft on our guarantee.
BROCK ft M'COMAS CO.
LAZY LIVER
Tlad CuearaU ,0 fooa that I wool
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I ihili nrtalnlr momnnni M,m to m ir" 4,
aa lk best nedtetn, 1 hart 0Tr imd.
Am BuloM. Oaeora Mill Ho. t. Fall Ptar, km.
- Beat for
& t
I 1 rs uuweis j
CAM err catvoatk
Ftouant, Ptlatable. Potent. TuU Good. Ho
VTr Sicken, Weaken or Grtf. ttc. e. Mc. Vcvtt
old In balk. The genuine tablet stamped CCO.
Kwrmntd to car or roar money back.
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.T. 6ot
AH UAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES
OKLAHOMA
INFORMATION ABOUT A
GREAT COMMONWEALTH.
Enormous Growth In Population,
Wraith and Railroad SUleage Has
No Bonded Debt Hag a Common
Soltool Endowment ot Great Muni
ficence, and a Per Cent of Illiteracy
Anions Whites ot But Three Per
Cent. 1 ' '" T " ' '
The following entertaining histori
cal and statistical sketch of Oklaho
ma is taken from an address by Hon.
Charles Dick of Ohio, which was de
livered In congress preceding the ad
mission of Oklahoma and Indian ter
ritories to statehood:
The 23,000,000 acres of land In Ok
lahoma represent an agricultural In
vestment, exclusive of Improvements,
crops, or stock, of $232,000,000. said
Mr. Dick. Adding to this the value
of implements, machinery, and live
stock makes the total $319,780,903
as the figure of agricultural wealth of
the territory. All kinds of fruits are
raised successfully there, and in some
varieties the territory rivals the
world. The total assessed valu",t0n
or tne territory xur na 130
721. which is about one-f.
value, in ui 1
was a little over
190
000 acres of unappropriated public
land.
The present population of Oklaho
ma is about 20 to a square mile as
against about one to the square mile
in Arizona and New Mexico.
Settlement ill 1905.
In the year ending' June 30, 1906,
477,000 acres were entered for set
tlement In Woodward and Beaver
counties, in the extreme northwest of
Oklahoma. It is claimed that the per
centage of householders owning their
own homes is greater than In any
other state In the union except three,
and that no state shows such a high
percentage of homes entirely free
from debt. .
The percentage of Illiteracy In the
population over 10 years of age Is 5.6
per cent, the same as In New York
state, and slightly less than In Massa
chusetts, as compared to 33 per cent
of all the population In New Mexico
and 34 per cent in Arizona. There
are 31 states having a greater degree
of Illiteracy than Oklahoma. The per
centage of illiteracy among the whites
Is less thnn 3 per cent, but among tr
blacks It is 26 per cent, and
raises the total average.
A TRAINED NURSE
After Years ot Expedience, Advises Women In
Regard t.0 Their Health.
.
vol
SAW WRECK IN A
Sad Incident of
. DHE.YM.
A spe
scene
.jI assessment
-tfA ftftrt ftnrt an A in
increased' .;
These fl (im snow a gteaiy and
substant, frowth- -parm property
'"creased n assessed value from
1 .Al tr. tnc in nrin nnn
WITH HUMANITY
WAS THE
OPERA HOUSE
TUESDAY NIGHT
ANXIOUS TO SEE
AND HEAR
Dr
War
The doctor again perform
ed wonderful cures, the stage
was filled with old an young,
anxious to be treated. Sam
uel Lane, W. W. Becrman
and P. C. Peterson were
. made to hear a whisper In a
few second. Edward En
wriglit, Buffering from sciatic
rheumatism, was operated
on, v. lien lie ran around the
stage like a boy wltliout pain
or distress, while the doctor
broke Ills crutches again
proving new and advanced
methods of treating chronic
diseases.
His office Is thronged from
morning till night. A posi
tive and permanent cure on
all cases accepted. Now la
the time to commence. De
lays are dangerous.
HE TREATS ALL CHRONIC
DISEASES.
OFFICE AT
I. H
10
0
iSS,oOO,0. In recent years there
has been developed a gas and oil field
that rivals the great state of Penn
sylvania, with coal and manganese
and asphalt beds and gypsum beds
granite quarries rivaling the great
state of Vermont, and a magnificent
magnesium limestone rivaling the
wonderful quarries ot New Bedford,
Ind.
Railroad Mileage.
The railroad mileage In the terri
tory has moved forward by reaps and
bounds, and there are over 3100 miles
of track, exclusive of siding and right
of way in the territory. The year
ending June 30, 1905, added 432.71
miles in new mileage. There are
over 12,000 miles of toll line and tele
phone wires In the two territories.
The newspapers published number
345, including 30 dailies. There Is an
excellent state university, with build
ings and grounds worth about $250,
000; a university preparatory school
and three Btate normal schools; an
agricultural and mechanical college
representing $250,000, and a colored
agricultural and normal school, all
supported more or less by the terri
tory. The total number of banks In
the territory, which reported to the
bank commissioner, was 262 terri
torlal banks and 85 national banks.
During the past year only one terri
torlal bank and one national bank
failed, and In neither case was a dollar
lost to the depositors.
The railroads are assessed for tax
atlon on their main lines from $5600
per mile down to $5000 per mile, and
less amounts on the more unimportant
lines and the various sidetracks and
branches.
Oklahoma Has no Bonded Debt,
Oklahoma has no bonded debt. Xo
vember 30, 1905, it had an outstand
Ing warrant indebtedness of $735,240
On the same date the territorial
treasurer had on hand $710,842 cash
and the school land leasing board had
on hand $259,317, rentals of leased
lands not yet turned over to the treas
urer, leaving cash on hand over and
above all Indebtedness of $234,920.05
At this date practically none of the
territorial taxes for the year 1905 had
been collected, as they did not be
come payable until December 1 an
delinquent until the 15th day of Jan
uary under the law.
Magnificent Endowment.
The territory has 1.413.704 acres
of land reserved by acts of congress
for the support of the common schools
of the new state, which Is confirmed
to the state by this act as a grant.
It has 322,006 acres of land
served for agricultural and mechanl
cal college, university and norma
school purposes, which reservations
are confirmed to the state In this act.
It has 315,165 acres reserved for
public buildings and the erection of
charitable und penal Institutions,
which reservation Is confirmed by this
act to the new state as a grant. It has
also cash on hand In the treasury,
$438,406, accumulation of rentals of
the lands reserved for public build
Ing purposes, which It has not been
authorized to expend and the accum
ulating rentals of which are beln
held by the territory for the use
the new state In furtherance of the
purposes for which the land was re
served and granted. It Is confidently
believed that if these lands could be
retained by the state, the rentals of
the same would pay the Interest on a
sufficient amount of bonds to build
all of the state Institutions which
must necessarily be located when Ok
lahoma becomes a state,
By this act congress has made a
grant for common school purposes to
the new state of $5,000,000 In lieu of
sections 16 and 36 granted in Okla
homa, and which under the conditions
In the Indian territory are unavaila
ble, there being no public lands In
the Indian territory subject to such
grant.
The bill also provides for grants of
public lands to the various educa
tional Institutions in the territory ag
gregating 1,050,000 acres. In addition
to the grants of land for the purposes
heretofore mentioned. There la in the
territory available for the satisfaction
of these grants approximately 1,600,-
,rte IMsnstcr nt Flor-
WW, Col.
,M from Florence, Col., the
fit the terrible collision on the
.fiver & Rio Grande, last Friday, to
th Denver Post, pays:
One of the pathetic tragedies of the
disaster was the wiping out of all but
tw of the family of Taylor Hewitt,
of Leho, Kan. Father, mother,
grandchild, and the wives ot the sons
are missing. The two sons, E. A,
Hewitt and W. L. Hewitt, are among
the injured in the hospital here, each
of them having a leg fractured In ad
dition to other injuries. E. A. Hewitt
said tonight:
"Our party consisted of my father,
Taylor Hewitt, my mother, Ellen Hew
itt, my sister, Pearl, aged 15 years; my
brother, W. L. Hewitt, my sister-ln-law,
Winona, aged 31; my wife, Cath
erine, aged 17; our 4-months-old baby,
Clausus; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Con-
ley, and Fred Jones. We were going
to Joseph, Ore., to work in a sawmill
for my grandfather, H. M. Rlcker.
Saw It in n Dream.
"A dream that I had several months
ago In which our family was all killed
kept coming to my mind. I saw lust
as plainly as later I saw the real
wreck, everything that took place
after the collision. I saw people try
ing to draw themselves out of the
cars, saw strong men plead to be kill
ed; I saw my own wife and baby con
sumed by fire before mjr very eyes,
and as I struggled vainly to rescue
them I awakened In terror and with
cold beads of perspiration crawling
slowly down my face.
"I went forward to my party. My
wife was sleeping soundly. Our little
baby was Just half asleep. Catherine
wakened and said: "Good night, sweet
heart,' and I leaned over and kissed
her and she smiled.
Aroused by Crash.
"I sat down again and closed my
eyes but in a few minutes was arous
ed by that crash. When I tried to
move I found my leg was broken. I
heard my wife calling me, but could
not go to her. Someone dragged me
out. I screamed for someone to res
cue my wife and baby, but nobody
paid any attention. Men were running
madly about calling for their wives.
mothers were wildly screaming for
their children, some were throwing
themselves In the snow. I saw Fred
Jones hanging out of the window of
the burning car pleading for someone
to kill him. The flames shot up about
him and he fell forward dead."
Hewitt and his brother will return
to their home In Kansas and bury
their dead.
Mrs. Martha Pohlman
of 65 Chester Avenue, m
Newark, N. J., who is a
graduate Nurse from the
Blockley Training Schoo'
at Philadelphia, and
six years Chief C'j,,
Nurse at the Philad Wjhi
Hospital, writes U blotter
iate,A below- Bhe baa
the advantage' jf al
experience, h
Pr,e8?loFs'. education,
.. to say
upon ' absolutely relied
jinny other women are
afflicted as she was. They
van regain health In the
Same way, it is pruaem
to heed sucn aavice irom
such a lonrce,
Mrs. Pohlman writes:
"I am firmly persuaded,
after eight years of experience
with Lydia E. Pinkhain'i
Vegetable Compound, that It
is the safest and best medicine
for any suffering woman to
9 a. m. to 9 p. m.
Consultation Free
" Immediately after my
marriage I found that my
health began to fail me. I be
came weak and pale, with
severe bearing-down pains,
fearful backaches and fre
quent diziy spells. The doctors
prescribed for me, yet I did
not improve. I would bloat
after eating, and frequently
become nauseated. 1 Had
pains down through my limbs so I could
hardly walk. It was as bad a case of female
trouble as I have ever known. Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, however,
cured me within four months. Since that
time I bars had occasion to recommend it to
a number of patients suffering from all
forms of female difficulties, and I find that
while it is considered unprofessional to rec
ommend a patent medicine. I can honestly
recommend Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, for I have found that it cures
female ills, where all other medicine fails. It
is a grand medicine for nek women,"
Money cannot buy such testimony as
this merit alone can produce such re
sults, and the ablest specialists now
agree that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound is the most univer
sally successful remedy for all female
diseases known to medicine.
When women are troubled with ir
regular, suppressed or painful periods,
weakness, displacement or ulceration
of the female organs, that bearing
down feeling, inflammation, backache.
bloating (or flatulence), general debili
ty, indigestion, and nervous prostra
tion, or are beset with such symptoms
as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excita-
IPobWn).. t'fa J
ly Svl It
-: 1 c.i-3
I. -"1 U'.illUl
u csicva ti2
H Fast trains daily,
1 in Oregon and WasHnstun, :
M Chicago, I'nion Pacific ..ml Word.
W Western Line, t'.ic route cf Tl:?
W Overland Limited, over Merloni !
"I track rr.i'wav between tlie MiFoun
S I'Vernnd Lhicairo, making uircL.
3 connection .".t Chicago with all li:
to the hast.
THE BEST OF CVEfiYTHIN:.
Knr further information npply "
W. A. Cox, (lenerat Act. C. & N.-W. Ry.
153 Third Street, T.rtiana.
Indigestion Is much of a habit,
Don't get the habit. Take a little Ko
dol Dyspepsia Cure after eating and
you will quit belching, puffing, palpi
tatlng and frowning. Kodol digests
what you eat and makes the stomach
sweet. Sold by Tall man & Co.
California Prone Wafer
Cure liver diseases and all stomach
troubles; they act gently but surely,
strengthen the bowels and stmulate
them to healthy action. Tallman
Co., (23 Main street, Pendleton, Ore.
100 Wafer SB Cent.
YAKIMA CANNERY A CERTAINTY.
Bussell, of Seattle, Will Build $50,000
Plant.
C. B. Bussell, of Seattle, is the mil
llonalre capitalist of Seattle who made
his money In tide lands. He Is the
gentleman who Is most largely Inter'
ested In the projected cannery for
this city, and his trip here at this time
Is on business connected with the can
nery, says the Yakima Republic.
"I brought the plans for the build
Ing over with me," said Mr. Bussell,
"and have already submitted them to
the various contractors of your city
to be bid upon.
"I have Just returned from a trip to
San Francisco, where all the machln
ery for the plant was purchased, and
this will arrive here between the 1st
and 10th of May. By this time every
thing in connection with the plant
will be ready to receive the machln
ery, and as soon as this necessary part
of the cannery has been completed w
will be ready to run f,ti "
"Have you made any changes In
the plans since your last trip here?"
asked the reporter.
"Yes; the plans have been changed
In several particulars. In the first
place we have decided to build a $50,
000 cannery Instead of a $20,000
plant as formerly calculated upon,
This will more than double the capac
ity of the plant as figured on previous
ly. It Is our Intention to run night
and day during the fruit season, and
the fruitgrowers of the valley will be
called upon to keep the machinery
going. ' 1 ,
"The plant when completed under
the present plans will have a capacity
of 35,000 cans per day or 3000 cases,
which is equivalent to five carloads."
Mr. Bussell stated that he had se
cured the services of a first-class can
nery man from California and he will
be the superintendent of the cannery.
He left here Friday night on his re
turn. He will be here again In 10
days, at which time work on the plant
will be commenced.
bility. Irritability, nervousness, sleep
lessness, melancholy, "all-gone and
"want-to-be-left-alone" feelings, blues
and hopelessness, they Bhould remem
ber there is one tried and true remedy.
L,ycna u. rinknams Vegetable jom
pound at once removes such troubles.
No other female medicine in the
world has received such widespread
and unqualified endorsement.
The needless suffering of women from
diseases peculiar to their sex is terrible
to see. The money which they pay to
doctors who do not help them is an
enormous waste. The pain is cured
and the money is saved by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
It is well for women who are 111 to
write Mrs. Pinkhsm. at Lynn, Mass.
The present Mrs. Pinkham is the
daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham,
her assistant for many years before her
decease, and for twenty - five years
since her advice has been freely given
to sick women. In her great experi
ence, which covers many years, she
has probably had to deal with dozens
of cases just like yours. Her advice
is strictly confidential.
lydia E Pinkham's VefctaMe Compound Succeeds When ethers Fall.
"Suggestion" Mugazlnc.
The current Issue of Suggestion, a
magazine of the new psychology for
thinkers, discusses health without
drugs, auto-suggestion, the law of
mental suggestion, mind power, sug
gestive therapeutics and allied sub
jects; It tells how to live without
drugs and without grumbling; how to
break undesirable habits and how to
form good ones, and how to be hnp
py, successful and prosperous. The
magazine is optimistic, and teaches
that man has sufficient inherent pow
er to overcome all obstacles.
YOU WILL BE
SATISFIED
WITH YOUR JOURNEY
If your f kets read over the Den
ver & - R!o Grande railroad, the
"Scenic Line of the World."
BECAUSE
There are so many scenic attractions
and points of Interest along the line
between Ogden and Denver that the
trip never becomes tiresome.
If you are going east, write for in
formation and get a pretty book that
will te't you all about It
W. C. McBRTDE, General Agent,
124 Third Street,
Portland, - Oregon
Roslyn Coal $6.50 deliv
ered, $6.00at the shed
Roslyn Coal, .cr thorough
exhaustive teats, has been se
lected by the C. S. government
for the use of Its war vessels,
as It stood the highest test.
PROMPT DELIYE-IY.
ROSLYN WOOD OOA'- CO.
Office at W. -- C. R. Depot.
PHONIC MAIN 80.
ARE YOU TIRED OF PAYING
BLUNDER TAXES"
a
Many a business man pays as much money for the luxury of blunder
ing as a steam yacht, or a private touring car would cost.
"Blunder Taxes" cannot be evaded whatever else waits, these must be
paid. If a business man gets Into the habit of making the same blunders
more than once, the taxes will soon amount to confiscation
"Blunder Taxes" are levied with amazing frequency upon store adver
tisers. Among the blunders which are assessed at "full value" In adver
tising are these:
Selection of poor mediums.
Using too little space In good mediums.
Devoting less attention to preparing t'.e dally store advertisement than
to the storing of some empty boxes In the basement.
Stopping the ad altogether for one or more days now and then.
Figuring the advertising appropriation on the basis of what you can
"afford" after all other expenses are provided for.
The use of "programs," schemes, circulars, posters, fence-signs, pla
cards and Jim-cracks, under the impression that you re securing real pub
licity, and that somewhere, somehow, sometime someone will be Influenced
by some of these things to come to your store and buy something.
YOUR "BLUNDER TAX" BILL GROWS SMALLER AND SMALLER
AS YOUR USE OF NEWSPAPER PUBLICITY GROWS BIGGER AND
BIGGER.
CONTINUOUS PUBLICITY IN THE
WILL PREVENT PAYING "BLUNDER TAXES."