East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, April 17, 1907, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO.
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1907.
EIGHT PAGES.
SHEEPMEN FINED
NO MORE CLANDESTINE
GRAZING IN WYOMING
Shocn In rrimslt Cannot bo Unloaded
mill Grazed on Wyoming Ranges
Without Puylng Fie and Giving
Noilre Slate nonrd of Sheep Com.
mlfsloners Is Active In Proteethiff'l
Wyoming Ranges.
SUPERB SHOWING
OF '
..HANDSOME NEW HATS..
Many new styles have lately arrived, making our Millinery
Display far superior in assortments and newness.
We are making a special display of Misses and Children's Street and Dress Hats;
very specially low priced at Q, 2.50 and 3.50
New handsome headwear for the baby, very charming and catching styles in Lawn
and Silk, lace and embroidery trimmed, at 35, 50, 75c Up to $2.25
Come and see these ample variety of styles to make
selections easy and satisfactory.
The Peoples Warehouse
Save Your Coupons
Where it' Pays to Trade
GEN-31AL NEWS.
Near Wheeling. West Va., four
Hungarians were ehot from ambush
and killed hy unknown parties. No
known provocation exists farther
than race antipathy.
The Rippey building, one of the
largest and most Important struc
tures at Paker university, Baldwin,
Kan., was destroyed by fire early
on April 14. The loss Is estimated
at 100,000. Insurance 115,000.
The American Baptist Mitionary
union has been assured by John D.
Rockefeller that he stands ready to
contribute $200,000 to the needs of
the union this year. The first In
stallment of $125,000 already has been
paid.
At Pasadena, Calif., Mrs. Shipshy,
a gu-st at the Elvara hotel, was kill
ed by frilling down an elevator shaft
In the hotel building. Mrs. Shipsby
was the wife nf a member of the
Great Northern Implement Manu
facturing company, of Minneapolis.
Mrs. Sarah A. Albaugh, a widow
73 years old, living In West Madison
street, Chicago, was found dead In
her bedroom with her throat rut
She was stricken with apoplexy while
standing near a window and fell
headlong through the glass, severing
the Juglar vein.
F.eiause his brother was accused
of embezzling money to take hlrr to
a higher altitude for his health, H.
A. Haynes, suffering from consump
tion, died April 14 at Abilene, Tex
as, of a broken heart The brother,
J. L. Haynes, was lately arrested at
Trinidad, Colo., where the two went
for the sick one's health.
HOTEL ARRIVALS.
Hotel St. George. -E. L. Stowe, Se
attle; W. W. Reed, Rochester: F. C.
Henley, Portland; J. A. Allison, Port
land; James W. Manllton, Spokane:
D. P. Ellis and wife, Omaha; R. E.
Nolen, Pocatello; W. Nelson, San
Francisco; H. 8. Farnum, Walla
Walla; Mil Wetherell, Lincoln; R. B.
Wilson, Spokane; George McGllvery,
Spokane; R. J. Gordon, Portland; W.
R. Hunt. San Francisco; W. E. Wilson,
Portland: O. W. Innlningstad, Port
land; C. A. Ponies, Chicago; E. M.
Frysmlth, Portland; N. Y. Healy,
Chicago; Robert Harklns and wife,
Chicago; H. E. Mayer, Portland: R.
Mclrven, Galesburgir j Ora Millard,
city; 8. E. Dodge, Datroltv L. D. Cole,
Portland; Charles F., Sodendrey, Spo
kane; H. D. Moore, New York; E. O.
Stanley, Walla Walla; Mrs. E. E.
Blrge, North Yakima.
Golden Rule Hotel. H. L. Chand
ler; J. E. Blodgett; E. E. Jones; T.
F. Meeds: J. B. Sullivan, Kansas City;
W. W. Buttler. Spokane: W. Holiday.
Spokane; T. W. Marklln, Portland;
Robert H. Lcffler, city: John H. Had
ley, Latah; Miss Cora Slpfle, Spokane;
Minnie Bergeoin, Adams; S. A. Frang.
Spokane; R. S. Seeds, Spokane; S. C.
Ives, Athena; C. H. Gurdane, Echo;
W. Harman, Adams; H. B. Ketchum,
city; J. F. McPhersin, Athena; Miss
Viola. Provo City; Miss Verna, Scran
ton City; F. W. Godby, Echo.
RECLAIM BLALOCK ISLAND.
Dr. N. G. Blalock Will Raise Canta
loupes and Potatoes.
A veritable paradise will be made
upon Blalock Island in Columbia river
this season If the plans of Dr. N. G.
Blalock are carried out fully. Several
large pumping plants by which water
will be lifted from the Columbia river
will be Installed and a number of pipe
lines covering the entire cultivated
portion of the Island will be put In
place.
This season two special crops, can
taloupes und Burbank potatoes, will
he tested on the Island and It is hoped
by Dr. Blalock to make a success of
each of these crops. The potatoes will
be raised especially for the Alaskan
trade.
Dr. Blalock was in the city today
assisting Dr. C. J. Smith in a diffi
cult surgical operation at St. Anthony's
hospital and left this afternoon for
Irrigon, from where he will take a
boat to the Island. He will remain on
the Island for several days on a vaca
tion before returning to Walla Walla
to resume his medical practice.
"Three boats will soon be In opera
tion on the upper Columbia river,"
said Dr. Blalock, who has been one of
the pioneer agitators and promoters
of upper river transportation, "and
we hope to have sufficient business to
keep therm employed. The upper
country will supply more and more
traffic for the boats as the people
become educated to the benefits of
river transportation.
"I hope to see a regular fleet of
river boats employed In carrying pro
duce down from the upper country In
few years. It will not Injure the
railroads but will make business for
them. The history of every navigable
river Is that railroad business parallel
with the river Increases as river traf
fic Increases. Cheap and rapid trans
portation induce people to grow more
stuff and as the facilities for ship
ping Increases the traffic Increases.
For Sale
480 acres adJoin:nr city limits, Pen
dleton, 860 acres In vhcat. Will cut
two tons per acre. Price, Includ
ing crop, $12,000. Easy terms. Water
on every quarter. You had better In
vestigate this.
I have several desirable atock
ranches In Cames Prairie, for sale.
A hotel at Pilot Rock, very cheap.
Wheat land In large or small tracts.
Suburban homes with fine orchards.
E. T. WADE
'Phone black till.
' Office B. 0 Building.
4
NORTHWEST NEWS.
The book and stationery store of
V. H. Burghardt & Co., of Salem,
ivas robbed of $2S0 cash and a dai
mond ring, both taken from the safe,
whl:h apparently had been opened by
someone who either knew the rnm
'ilnation or woHked It by chance.
P.v. D. E. Loveridge, aged 84
years, has resigned the rectorship of
St. Mary's Episcopal church at Eu
gene, a position which he hus held
fur IS years. He will continue to re
side in Eugene, where he has a flno
vineyard and orchard property.
Manager McElrath of the Hotel
Perkins, Portland, announces that
the building is to be torn down next
year and a steel structure 15 stories
high erected on- tho quarter block In
Its place. The new building will be
nn office structure with mlscel
ianeous lines on the first and second
floors.
At Walla Walla, Robert J. O'Con
nor of Troi.p L. Fourteenth cavalry'.
has been sentenced to IS months at
hard labor on Alcatraz Island and
will be dishonorably discharged for
unlawfully disposing of army cloth
ing at Fort Walla Walla. The acts
for which this heavy senutence sen
tncii was imposed were committed
larl February.
At La Grande, Al Andrews' tailor
Ing establishment was damaged by
fire, water and smoke about $1200
worth. Employes had . occasion to
Hsht a fire In the stcve upon which
the Irons are healed and, on leaving
shortly after 6 o'clock, -the fire had
not been extinguished. In some way
a pn.-ce pf cloth or furniture must
have become Ignited, causing the
blaze.
At Orant's Pass, Elmer Spauldlng,
George Fay and Ernest tlmphlett,
young men about 18 years of age.
took a boat belonging to Bert Jewell,
a fisherman, without Jewell's per
mission. When they returned an al
tercatlon ensued which resulted in
he boys "rocking" i Jewell, from the
efffctx of which he Is expected to
die, till skull being broken, rlhs
crushed in and lungs Injured.
That It will he Impossible for Ore
gon sheep buyers to unload their
sheep on Wyoming ranges for the
purpose of fattening them for mar
ket, hereafter, Is shown by the fol
lowing from tho Cheyenne Tribune,
which says:
The activity of the state board of
sheep commissioners In protecting the
Interests of Wyoming flockmasters Is
evidenced hy the action Just taken
against the fleber Land & Livestock
company of Heber, Utah. Secretary
O. S. Walker, of the sheep board,
gives the following details of the
case:
The Heber company, on March 28,
shipped In 2000 head of sheep and
200 bucks, which wero hilled to Chi
cago, but were unloaded at Carter
station, In Uinta county, not one of
the authorized sheep unloading
points.
In order to unload In the state at
unauthorized places It Is necessary
to give the sheep board ten days'
notice, have the sheep Inspected and
pay a fee nf three cents each for each
ewe und 25 cents for each buck. This
was not dono.
When the fonts became known to
the board the sheep were Inspected
by Inspector Verry and promptly
quarantined. ' Action was brought
airnlnst the owners and they pleaded
guilty In the district court at Evans
tor, und were fined by Judge Craig.
Thin is the plan adopted by sheep
men from states west of Wyoming to
secure excellent grazing In this state.
While, sheep are billed through to
eastern markets they are taken off
In Wyoming, grazed for two or three
months, and, when fat, are sent on
to market. This is the third time the
Heber company has been prosecuted
for this offense.
HAD FAITH IN NORTHWEST.
Vast Estate of Sea Captain Wlio Lo
cated In the Wilderness.
A romance of the late 'BOs was re
vived here on, the occasion of the ap
portionment of tho property of Cap
tain and Mrs. Edward O. Eldridge,
valued at half a million dollars,
among two children and two grand
children, says a Belllngham letter.
Mrs. Eldridge Is now almost In her
eightieth vear and resides on the
original homestead taken up by Cap
lain Eldridge shortly after his ar
rival here.
The estate is a monument to the
foresight of Captain Fldridgc. After
spending years at sea and visiting
every port in the world, he selected
this city In the late '50s as the place
to found n fortune for his children,
the benefits of which they are now
reaping.
The property Is known ns the Te
resa Eldridge estate nnd consists of
about 200 acres of land cut Into 500
luts and Is valued at not less than
$500,000. The descendants to re
ceive the apportionment nre Hugh
F.Idrldpe and Mrs. J. J. EJens, chil
dren of Captnln and Mrs. Eldridge.
and Mrs. Sabine Carr and Mrs. Henry
Jukes. irrn1chlldi-pr. '
Reclaim Valuable River Bottom.
Two surveying parties now working
In the Duwamish. river valley are be
lleved to .'bei securing data necessary
before arrangements can be made by
the United States government to
straighten the stream from Its Inter
section with Black river to Its mouth,
a distance of approximately 10 miles,
says the Seattle News. A conserva
tive estimate places the Increased
value of the river bottom land, In case
the government straightens and dred
gea the stream, at not less than $10,
000,000. It will practically double
in value and the owners of land In
the valley are eagerly waiting for the
first definite announcement that the
government has at lust determined to
undertake the reclamation work.
WALL STREET has had some bitter
struggles recently and many have
fallen victims to the unsettled market
conditions, which caused panics and
failures in financial quarters; It will not
pay you to speculatee when it comes to
BUYING CLOTHING,
patronize us and you are sure of getting
the best t f t t t t t
Our ALFRED BENJAMIN & CO.
clothing represents all that is meant by
QYALITY, STYLE and FIT.
BOND BROTHERS
Pendleton's - Leading - Clothiers.
dfor." The were being made of por
celain, which will give them greater
durability than glass, and also per
mit of a higher voltage than will
glass Insulators. Pocatello Tribune.
The stage between Malta and Zort
man, Montana, was held up by a lone
highwayman, who demanded that the
express be thrown off, which was
done. He escaped with $28,000.
Some members of "Kid" Curry's
gang of train robbers and horse
thieves I supposed to be the holdup.
Six years ago the Curry gang held
up the Great Northern train In the
vicinity of Malta, securing $43,000.
Many of the pals of Kid Curry still
live In northern Montana.
If you see It In the East Oregonlan,
It's so.
"Pneumonia's Deadly Work
had so seriously affected my right
lung," writes Mrs. Fannie Connor of
Rural Route 1, Georgetown, Tenn.,
"that I coughed continuously night
end Jay and the neighbors' predic
tion consumption seemed Inevit
able, until my husband brought
home a bottle of Dr. King's New Dis
covery, which In my case proved to
be the only real cough cure and re
storer of weak sore lungs." When
all other remedies utterly fall, you
may still win In the battle against
lung and throat troubles with New
Discovery, the real cure. Guaranteed
by Tullman & Co., druggists. 60c
nnd $1.00. Trial bottle free.
New Pattern of Insulator Invented.
C. R. Slusser, of the eBar Lak Val
ley Railway & Electric company, has
applied for a patent on an Insulator
to be U!cd in electric light and tele
phone service. Instead of fastening
the wire to the Insulator with a "tic
wire," as Is now done, It Is run
through a groove In the Insulator.
The opening or groove Is made from
the top and Is so constructed that
when the transmission wire 'is once
strung it cannot get out, even though
the insulator is attached to the cross
arm In an Inverted position. Mr.
Slusser claims everal advantages for
his Insulator which he Is confident
will bring it Into immediate use. First
It tc.ves tho cost of the "tie wire"
which amounts to a considerable sum
to telephone and electric light com
panies. Second, by. the' use of his
Inmlatnr wires can be strung much
more-rapidly than at present. Third,
they will do away with the expense
and trouble of going over a line af
ter a severe storm and replacing
broken "tie wires" as Is always ne
cessary with the Insulators now iited.
Fourth, by using a "tie wire" every
half more or so. It will be Impossible
for a transmission wire to fall to. the
ground in case It breaks, for the rea
son that It caiinot get out of the
groove.
Mr, Slusser Is having Insulators
made now under "patent applied
ssbisssssssbsbvbsbbsbbbssjssbbhssbsssbsvmbh
Known For Its Strength
The
First National
Bank
Pendleton, Oregon
Designated United States Depository
Established 1882
I
Capital Surplus and I An (in 110 fl 0(1
Undivided Profits -f D 0 U U , U U U . U U
Levi Ankeny G. M. Rice
President Cashier
W. F, Matlock Geo. Hartman, Jr.
Vice President Asst. Cashier
Interest Paid on Time Deposits
SECURITY
All the good qualities of Ely's
Cream Balm, solid, are found In Li
quid Cream Halm, which Is Intended
tor use In atomizers. That it Is an
unfailing cu'o for nasal catarrh Is
proved hy an ever-Increasing mass of
testimony. It does not dry out nor
rasp the tender alr-pnssngts. It nl
lavs the Inflammation and goes
stralKht to the root of the disease.
Obstinate old cascis have been cured
In a fivv weeks. All druggists, 75c,
Including spraying tube, or mailed by
Kly Pro?.. 5 Warren street. New
York.
. Read the Fast Oregonlan.
PAS
w
GOOD
TU.RE
FOR.
HORSES
Commencing May 1st, I will pasture on
the north fork of the John Day river,
150 head of horses at $1.25 per head
per month. Good running water.
W. A. MIKESELX
For further particulars, enquire at
O. K. Feed Yard,. Pendleton, Oregon