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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1907)
EIGHT PAGES. DAILY EAST OltQUNiAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANCARY M, 1907. TAGM. FIYat 2 days of Special Drives in All Departments. General Landslide of Prices which will Please your Pocket Book, Listed for Tuesday and Wednesday. As these Reductions Include Every Article in Every Department, We Attempt no Quotation of Prices But Invite You to Come. Two Days that will Mean Much Saving to You, But a Heavy Loss to Us. The order has gone forth that many lines must disappear, so it's up to you, for we have trimmed tha prices as they were never trimmed before. LEE TEUTSCH'S Department Store, MAIN & ALTA STS., PENDLETON, OREGON CITY BREVITIES All kinds of good, dry wood. Sea MlnnlB. Private room and board, J1S South Main street. Ppeclal sale of hair good at Mn. Campbell's millinery. Houses and rooms, close. In, for rent Apply John Vert. Embroidery sale on at the Wonder Store. Don't overlook It. Charles Lane Son put In window glass. 'Phone black S071. See Mlnnls for good, dry wood that burns.- Lots of It on hand. Music hall, LaDow block, for rent for dances, etc. Apply ohn Vert Charles Lane Son for paints and wall papers. 807 Vincent street Nice Curnlshed housekeeping rooms for rent. Inquire 301 Logan street For Sale Three gentle mlch cows; terms reasonable 'Phone Main 163. Don't forget that the Wonder Store carries a full line of popular priced shoes. Tou can save fuel by using building paper. Better try It. Oregon Lum ber Yard. Buy building paper and cut your fuel bills half. We have a large stock. Oregon Lumber Yard. Cercna S. Drlscoll, voice, piano and elocution. Studio tOi Thompson street. Telephone Black 2281. Wanted At once, coal sacks at Potlatch Lumber company; will pay highest market price for same. When In Portland stop at the Hotel Oregon, nates II per day and up ward. European plan. Free 'bus, 230 acres summer fallow for rent northwest of Pendleton. One and a half miles from depot. Apply John Vert. Lost Lady's purse, between tele phone office and Aura street, con taining some silver. Leave at tele phone office for reward. fell! I K I'JlltKAK I :l t A PIIEACI1EK. 4,!tOT." C. SI. Smythe, Formerly nn O. 11. A N. Ilrnkemnil Out of Port land. "Uev." C. M. Smythe, who resigned from ll'e pulpit 't n Portland church to become a passenger brakeman be tween Pendleton and Portland on the O. It. & N., is again in the limelight. He 13 now working as a strikebreaker on the Portland street railway nnd the We have a well equipped WATCH HOSPITAL where nil the Ills of watches can be repaired. We guarantee all our work and nssnwi vou our prices are the lowest consistent with good work. LOUIS HUNZIKER, JEWELER AND OPTICIAN. 72 Main ft. Oregon Dally Journal says of him: Rev. C. M. Smythe Is now working a.i a strikebreaker at 23 cents an hour. Ills number Is 46 and you can see him any day collecting fares on an O. W. P. car. Rev. Mr. Smythe will be remember ed a tl.e Congregational minister who gained i great deal of notoriety lost August hy entering the pulpit of a former filerd In the Congregational church et St. Johns and there de nouncing him In the most sensational terms. Incidentally Smythe Is said to have taken a-reporter to church with hun to Insure fullest publicity of tho denunciation. The former Men was Rev. Fred J. Warren. "You are a traitor and I denounce you, Fred Warren," cried Smythe dra matlraily. "You despoiled my home, won tho love of my wife when you were my gueft and I have waited long for thlB opportunity to ralnt you In yo'ir true colors before your own congregation." Mr. Warren's congregation was not disposed to believe the word of his accuser, and after a good deal of recrlminntlon the matter blew over and Sinythe disappeared from public view. The whereabouts of the former pas tor of the Mississippi Avenue Congre gational church might have remained unknown to the public had he not proved rash In his enmity toward the striking carmen. Yesterday, while on duty on his car, Smythe Is reported as having drawn a revolver from his pu ket and of having brandished It in the faces of several union pickets. "This Is what I'll have for you to morrow night," nld he. On behalf of the union Organizer Burton applied to Chief of Police Orltzmacher to either arrest or disarm the strikebreaker. Oritzmucher promised to look Into the matter, but nothing has as vet been done. WILL DOUBLE TRACK THE '. P. From Tallinn, to the Sound, Says Pres ident Levy. Vice-President Levy of the Northern Pacific on the witness stand at Yaki ma, says the Yakima Republic, before Judge Rlgg In the Noith Coast con demnation proceedings, said that It Is the purpose of his company to double track the road through the Yoklma valley and to the sound. This statement was brought out In answer to questions propounded by the attor neys for the North Coast, who were attempting to show that the former statements of the possible damage to the Northern Pacific are not based renlly upon anything but the fact that the company Is trying to prevent the building of a competitive line through the valley. He also said that the road now has more business than it can handle; that the North Bank road would be completed by the first of next Octo ber and In operation. This, he said, would divert a great amount of the freight originating along Its line east of the Yakima valley to Portland and the Sound via Vancouver. Mr. Levy did not think the building of the Milwaukee road would take away any of Its traffic, because It Is building In a new territory and that the business of Us own territory Is still Increasing rapidly. He did not think that even the building of the North Coast would very much en danger Its business In this valley be cause the great Increase In business attending the building of the govern ment Irrigation projects and the car rying out of other schemes In the val ley would be large. The company. In other words, be lieves that the business of the Yakima Agents for Delicious New York Candies. i'y.2.r.i'2a The Drug Store that Serves You Best. valley will grow to such an extent that even the building of the North Coast would not take away the necessity for double tracking the Northern Pacific, which now wants to hold Its right of way through Union gap for this pur pose. Mr. Levy also stated that the line would have been double tracked had It not been for the proposed con structlon of the Milwaukee line. PERSONAL MENTION CONDITIONS IN SIBERIA. American Ccnsul Write,- of the People of Northern Asia. Vice-Consul Falrchllds at Mukden, Manchuria, writes as follows to the department of commerce and labor or. conditions In Siberia, since the Russo Japanese war: The bulk of the population of Slbe rla Is made up of emigrants and exiles from Russia proper. At present the exiles form only from eight to nine per cent of the whole, and this pro portion Is decreasing, while the num ber of volutary emigrants Is growing each year. The latter are chiefly far mers, who are given government land, rent free for a number of years, af ter which they are obliged to pay a small tax. The native population consists of nomadic tribes the Kirghiz. Tartars, Turks, Mongols, Bukharlots, Samoy edes and Buriats living In felt tents. They are not agricultural but pastoral races. Their flocks and herds pro vides food, clothes and shelter, and they rely on the frequent fairs held at large towns to meet and exchange commodities for their other needs. The natural resources of the coun try are great, large mineral deposits being found throughout; gold, which Is the most Important, forming one of the chief sources of wealth. After It, In the order named, are coal, Iron, silver, lead and salt, as well as quan tities of precious stones. These mines are worked by primi tive methods, though in the Tomsk district some modern American ma chinery has been Introduced, and the output Is at present very considera ble and annually Increasing. Al though the numerous coal and Iron deposits have not been extensively ex plolted, coal Is furnished In sufficient quantity for railroad use, and a cer tain amount of pig Iron is exported. Silver, lead, salt mines and oil wells, though not as Important, are profita ble, and contribute to the general wealth of the country. Timber also, if felled under proper restrictions. should be a constant source of rev enue both to the government and to the lumbermen. Alva Balcom of Nolln, Is hero today cr, a trading trip. E. D. Collins of Kennewlck Is here oday on t brief business trip. Mrs. C. B. Daniels has gone to Ne vada on a visit with relatives. ' Montle B. Gwlnn has returned from a brief business trip to Portland. Louis Hunzlker has gone to Port land upon a few days' business trip. Mrs. Frank Richmond of Helix, Is lr. the city today on a shODnlnir trio. Allie Knight visited at Hermlston yesterday, returning home last evening. F. ft. Lucas the broom maker of Athena, Is in the city today on a trad ing trip. Attorney S. V. Knox of Weston, It hero today on business bf fore thri clr- cu't court. F. L. Woods of Milton, was In hte city today on business before the cir cuit court. B. B. Hall, cashier of the Farmers' Bank of Weston, has been in the city on a short visit,' J. XV. Preston and wife of Spo kane, ure In the city today looking ?r the country. Ti. P.. Hall of the Farmers' Bank at Weston, was a business visitor In Pen dleton yesterday. Sheriff T. D. Taylor has been at Umatilla today for the purpose of serving civil papers. F. O. Mcintosh, formerly of this city and now located on the sound, Is here upon a short visit J. R. Means left today for Hermls ton, where he will reside for a time, perhap permanently. Major O. E. Edwards of the Uma tilla Indian agency, is In the city to day on a business trip. Attorney C. T. Godwin of Mliton, Is In th city today attending to business before the circuit court. Charles Wamsley of Hermlston, was a visitor In town yesterday and a guest at the Hotel St George. Rev. H. B. Knight has lust return ed from La Grande, where he went on business for Pendleton academy. Will M. Peterson and partner, S. D. Peterson, are here today for the purpose of attending, circuit court Mrs. J. M. Scarborough has left for Ilartville, Mo., to visit with relatives and friends for a month or more. Mrs. W. W. Berry, who has been In ta Grande for several days on a visit, has returned to her home In this city. A. C. Crawford, secretary of the Water Users' association, was up from Hermlston today accompanied by his wife. Mrs. W. A. Storle and daughter Edna, will leave tonight for Portland to make their home there In the future. SALE Muslin Underwear $H.(Q)(i Gowns, Skirts. Coret Covers and Drawers. Garment no better sold elsewhere at $130 and $2.00 See Window Display. THE ALEXANDER DEPARTMENT STORE The Oldest and Most Reliable. Orvllle Turner of this city, Is now employed as freight brakeman on the O. R. & N. between Portland and The Dalles Miss Loin Myers, the professional nurse, has returned to the city after having been away for several weeks upon a case. Charles L. Swain, Charles L. Swain, Jr., and R. L. Aldrlch, all of the hy drographlc surveying party, are here today from Milton, i J. P Gregolre, city recorder at Ad ams, and J. O. Garret, city marshal, also of A Jams, were In the city today on a business trip. B. K. Hoyt, H. M. Culter and Roy Thome, all residents of the Cold Springs country, were here yesterday and returned home this forenoon. George O'Conner. traveling freight agent for the W. & C. R., who has been in the city for several duys, re turned to his home at Walla Walla this morning. James M. Moore, county clerk of this county from' 1888 to 1872, Is among those In attendance at the session of circuit court He now lives at Touchet, Wash. W. A. Johnson, representing the Dwight Edwards company of Port land, Ore., wholesale dealers In cof fees, teas and spices, Is In the city In, the Interest of ms company, R. R. Johnson, attorney for the Umatilla Water Users' association, and who Is engaged In the practice of law et Echo, came up from that place last evening on a business trip. Mrs. H. E. Hotchklss, of Enterprise, who has been visiting friends In Elgin, went to Pendleton Wednesday even ing to secure medical, advice regard ing her daughter Erma. Lostlne Democrat. Notice to Members Bnshee Chapter. Buhee Chapter No. 1, Order East ern Star, will meot tonight In regular session. Institution of officers All members requested to be present The entire area of Japan Is 161,1(0 square miles, or less than one-half the area of Oregon, Washington and California, and the population of Ja pan Is 46,000,000. Read the East Oregonlan. Nasal QATARRH la all lis Stages. Ely's Cream Balm4 c1eni)9es, soothe and heals tho diMd membrane. li enre caUrrh and drives away a co'.d In the head, quicklv, , Cfeam Halm Is placed into ttie nostrils, epreaoa over tlie membrane an J Is absorbed. Relief Is im mediate and a cure follows. It Is not drying does JM produce sneezing. Large 6ixe, 60 cent at Drug gists or fcy mail j Trial Sire, 10 cents, ELY BROTHERS. 66 Warren Street, New York Estrayetf, Strayed from my place on the res ervation, one grey mare; weight 1300 pounds; branded "LW" on left shoul der; crippled In front legs; liberal re ward for return or Information lead ing to recovery. L. F. Anderson, Box 98, Pendleton. Aerated Water. Artificially aerated drinking water, were the Invention of the chemist Jo seph Priestley, who In 1772 published bis "Directions For Impregnating Wa ter With Fixed Air In Order to Com municate to It the Peculiar Spirit and Virtues of Pynnont Water and Other Mineral Waters of a Similar Nature." Some one has calculated the consump tion of aerated waters In Great Britain and Ireland to amount to 200,000,(XXi gallons a year. London Standard. The Rullna; Pasaloa. "Now I've queered myself for good with Miss Prettyfate." "What did you do?" "I started to write a proposal to her, but I'm so used to writing business In stead of love letters that I told her 5 wanted the refusal of her haud." Baltlmore American. Order. Order Is the sanity of the mind, the health of the body, the peace of the city, the security of the state. As the beams to a house, as the bones to the microcosm of man, so la order to all things. As Itchtna- On. Miss Country Maid I understand that In some hotels one often sops palms about the dining rooms. What kind of palm Is the most prominent' Mr. Dlneout The Walter's. Society takes us away from on selves. Ie Lambert. !Fate! Secrets Things that Should be Told the Public N 1 O MATTER how catchy or well written an ad may be, how attractive the article advertised, or the magnitude of the bar gain represented, it will count for naught as long as you confine these valuable selling pointers i6 yourself and Immedi ate friends. CjYou mast pat these facts before the people, to make sales. CflYou may ask yourself, "How will 1 do it ?" That's easy. tTo reach the most, peo ple at the least, expense to yon -: :-: Advertise in the Newspaper with the LARGEST CIRCULATION Then you know that yon have'reached the buying public, that your wares and prices are thoroughly understood by those whom you could not reach other wise :-: :-: :-: :-: :-: :-: : : Circulation CoUntS So say Lhe successful business men. Why not. be one of them, by using the columns of f-he Larger circulation thanall other publications in Pendleton combined. Call up Main 1 All the news all the time In tha East OregonKn.