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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1908)
EIGHT PAGES. PAGE TWO, DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OIIEGOX. SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1908. GREAT BARGAINS FOR THE WEEK at the SACRIFICE SALE 8 and 10c Figured Lawns at, yd. - - 3 1'2c 20c Sleeveless Vests at, each 14c 50c Sleeveless Vests at, each 35c 15c Figured Lawns at, yd. - 7 1"2c 15c Light Colored Percales at, yd. - - 9c All Calicoes at, yd. - - - - 5c Best Apron Ginghams at, yd. ... 5C 15c Dress Ginghams at, yd. 10c 25c Swisses and Lawns at, yd. 12 12C 12 l-2c Checked Glass'Toweling at, yd 95 15c Bleached Linen Crash at, yd. 12 65c Bleached Table Linen at, yd. - - 48c 75c Bleached Table Linen at, yd. - - 59 89c Bleached Table Linen at, yd. - - - 67 All FANCY WHITE WASHINGS at HALF PRICE. Men's and Boys' Ready -Made Clothing at Great Sacrifice. . . $ 6.00 7.50 . . 10.00 - - 2.65 - - 3.35 3.85 5.95 Men's 12.00 Two Piece Suits at Men's 15.00 Two Piece Suits at Men's 20.00 Two Piece Suits at ' Boys' 3.50 Suits, all kinds at Boys' 4.50 Suits, all kinds at Boys ' 5. 00 Suits, all kinds at -Boys' 7.50 Suits, all kinds at - NEW YORK HEAT IS 1 KMUTl. SI MMKU TUAGKDY OF 111G CITY. The total resources of the bank are "IS, 191. 24, the loaiiH and discounts amount to $945,679.05, the cash on hand amounts to $143,048.71, with $371,381.84 due from other banks. The deposits at this time amount to $1,298,982.13, the capital stock to $200,000 and the- undivided profits to $74,806.87. The liinnaKenient U well pleased with this condition and business has been especially good during the sum mer mouths. ' Sun Blistered Puvciih'IUn Arc Terrl blo PiinMiiiient for Denize u4 of Gotham Children Almost SufM-iiitfd. Men's Summer Underwear Sacrificed. Men's 50c Summer Weight Underwear Men's 75c Summer Weight Underwear Men's 1.00 Summer Weight Underwear Men's 1.25 Summer Weight Underwear Men's 1.50 Summer Weight Underwear 40c 60c 85c 90c 1.20 Pure, Wholesome Groceries at Lower Prices. Get our prices on Harvesting or Camping Supplies of all kinds. The Peoples Warehouse Where it Pays to Trade Save Your Coupons Xew York, July 18. Yuma, Arizo na, will Kliuuy go away duck ana mi down. Let us henr no more of Its lamented citizens who died and went elsewhere and sent back for his overcoat. The much mallnged metropolis of southwestern Arizona Is no longer entitled to the palmleaf fan as the hottest spot this side of Tophet. The hot wave which swept over Xew York the first of this month, ceasing tem porarily to gain fresh breath for an other sirroeco, entitles the' American metropolis to pre-eminence as the hottest town on the map. Abas. Yuma. Records of the weather sharps may not serve to prove this contention Heat, however. Is not a thing to be registered by figures on a dial. Hu n-.MIty and congestion add terrors to a Xew York summer that even Yuma knows not of. The narrow streets, lined with their sky-piercing buildings, become swel terlnar canyons through which the choking air-waves swirl sluggishly on their mission of death. Under the sun's rays the asphalt pavements come to resemble rivers of Xew Orleans sorrhum. boiling: and sizzling in a mighty vat. Worse even than the downtown streets Is the East Side, its squalid tenements filled with huddled, hope less millions, breathing despair and death with every gasp of feted, filthy atmosphere. Here Dante might set the scene of another Inferno more ter rible far than any that existed in the realms -of his exuberant Imagination. Here the evangelist, preaching of fire and brimstone, mfkht well stand silent and aghast and cease his feeble, futile prophesies. Tragedy and pathos become com monplace on a summer day In the East Side. Mothers fall to their knees on the blistering pavements and lift their hands to a sky of brass, praying for a cooling zephyr that 'does not come. Little, naked babes, too weak to cry out their misery, fitfully gasp their lives away. Scantily-clad child ren, from whom all the Joy of youth has departed, wallow wearily .on the stoops of tenements or' wander list lessly through the walled lanes of this city of dreadful light. And the aged, the ill and the In firm, shut in by the four walla of a dungeon of Xew York's inquisition surely no haunting thought of "some thing after death" can frighten such as these. Xew York on a winter night, with its homeless and friendless vainly seeking shelter from a blizzard's Icy blast, is a thing to wrench the heart strings; but the Xew Yolk of a sum mer day is too frightful and fearsome to be encompassed by mere human pity. FOREST HEADS RESERVES ARE TO BE GIVEN' CLOSER ATTENTION Administration of tlie Forest Service Being Brought Nearer to the Pen pie Experienced Men to Have Charge of the Several Forest Dis tricts ol the West. Washington, D. C. July 18. In or der to expedite and render more ef fective and economical the work of administering the national forests, field headquarters are to be estab lished by the forest service In the west, and the clerical force needed to complete the organization will be mainly drawn from the force now em ployed In the Washington office. The change will take place not later than January 1, 1909, and will prob ably begin by October 1 of the pres ent year. At present the national forests are grouped under six districts with headquarters as follows: District 1, Miqsoula, Montana; District 2, Den ver, Colorado; District 3, Albuquer que. Xew Mexico; District 4. Salt Lake City, Utah; District 5, San Fran cisco, and District 6, Portland, Ore gon. These headquarters win remain unchanged under the new plan of administration. Each district will be In charge of an assistant forester who will deal directly with the supervisor of the forests of his district. Only questions of special import ance will be submitted to the Wash ington office for action. In this way the regular business of the forests will be much expedited, while the men who have charge of the business will be In almost constant touch with the users of the forests. The men to take charge of the sev eral districts have not as yet been selected, but they will be chosen from those In the regular service force who have had most experience In the work on the national forests. The growth of business on national forests resulting from the use of their resources by the public, has been steady and rapid ever since the pol icy of wide use supplanted the policy of restricted use, at the time when ti.e management of tho national for ests was placed under the forest per vice. One of the big problems of admin istratlon has been to get Into close touch with the users of the national forests, and this has already been par tially solved by various expedients, such as delegating to local national forest business. In this way the pub iic and the service have been con stantly brought closer together. A second step In the same dtrec tlon was the recent transfer of head quarters for supplies from Washing ton, D. C, to Ogden, Utah. A third step was the placing of a branch of the office of engineering, which has charge of permanent Improvements on the forests, also at Ogden, which Is centrally located. The contem plated change Is, therefore, merely the completion of a plan which has already been partially worked out. Probably one-third of the clerical force now In Washington, mainly ste nographers and typewriters, will go west to complete the organization re quired in each field district. It Is ex pected that a sufficient number of clerks in the Washington office will desire assignments to the field head quarters, so that It will not be neces sary to send to the field those who do not wish to go, and no new ap pointments will be necessary In making selections for the new posts the Individual preferences of the clerks will be consulted so far as the work permits The change will not affect the form of organization of the forest service In Washington. The offices will be retained as at present, but with a smaller force. All of the Investigat ing work done by the service, except that dlretly connected with the administration- of the national forests, will continue to be directed from Washington. Hundreds of people who suffer from backache, rheumatism, lams back, lumbago and similar ailments are not aware that these are merer symptoms of kidney trouble.. Pin eules for the kidneys act directly on the kidneys, bringing quick relief to backache and other symptoms of kid ney and bladder derangements. SO days' trial $1 and guaranteed or mon ey back. Sold by A. C. Koeppen Bros. TK1F.S TO BLOCK XEW ROAD. X. 1. Serve Not lev on Nez Perce Trolley Builder. Lewlston, Idaho, July 18. A4- though General Manager Xutt of the Northern Taclflc railroad, agreed to make traffic urangeinunts with the Xez Perce & Idaho Electric compa ny, a small line now under construc tion from Xez Perce to Vollmer, the fact that James E. Itabb served no tice on Z. A. Johnson, the builder of the road, and on thb contractors that they must not trespass on any of the Xorthern Pacific's alleged right of way Is taken as an Indication that the Hill railroad will attempt to block the Independent feeder. Mr. Johnson declares Xorthern Pa cific officials told him to go ahead with the construction, that they would be glad to have the line built, and that they would not attempt to harass him In any way but, on the contrary, they offered him exceptional traffic concessions. Mr. Habb, as attorney for the Xorthern Pacific, has warned the builders of the proposed line that they have a right of way from Voll mer to Xez Perce which must not In any way be Infringed on. It Is true that several years ago the Xorthern Pacjflc surveyed a line which Is al most Identical with the Johnson line, but no right of way passed Into the hands of the railroad company and the survey had been forgotten. Xo attention will be paid to the notice, as the landowners who have donated or sold to Mr. Johnson will fortify him with proof that the Hill road has no rights which are sufficient to block construction work. Headachi TP" You Dfobablv think it's cawed by 'something you've eaten. Of coune it is but if vour stomach, liver and bowels were O. K. you could eat anything that others eat and never have an uncomfortable moment. You can cure the headache and the indiges tion that caused it by putting your liver in shape. Lazy liver is at the-bottom of nine-tenths of hu man ills. Put the liver right and constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, skin troubles all ailments of the stomach, bowels and kidneys are bound to be cured. Prove it take an tablet tonight and you'll feel better in the morning. Better than pills for liver ills never gripe nor sicken, always and absolutely effective. Get a 25c Box of IflaWwwtiiedi Mf 1 1 JT2l w ill r THE A. H. LEWIS MEDICINE CO. Sl Louli, Mo. iimij i TALLMAN&. CO. PENDLETON, ORE. Delay In commencing treatment for a slight Irregularity that could have been cured quickly by Foley's Kidney Remedy may result in a serious kid ney disease. Foley's Kidney Remedy builds up the worn out tissues and strengthens these organs. Com mence taking U today. Pendleton Drug Co. JUDGE JOHN F. CAPLES DEAD. Pioneer Ijmyer and Prominent Kc publican in Portland. John Fletcher Caples died Friday morning at 5 o'clock at his home In Selwood. surounded by members of his family, says the Oregon Dally Journal. Judge Caples, as he had been fa miliarly known for many years, was born In Ashland county, Ohio, Jan uary 12, 1S32. He was educated In Risdon, now Fostorla, Ohio, and at the Ohio Wesleyan university at Del aware. His early legal training was with the firm of Stanton & Allison of Bellefontalne, and he was admitted to the bar In 1853. He was a dele gate to the Ohio state republican con ventlon In 1856 and attended the Chicago convention which nominated Abraham Lincoln for the presidency. He made an active canvass for his election and remarked a few days ago that the coming presidential election would be the first In which he had not actively participated In all the In tervening years. In 1865 he brought his family to the coast via the Isthmus and San Francisco to Vancouver, Wash., where he served as city attorney, removing to Portland the next year. In 1872 he was elected to the state legislature from Multnomah county and served as chairman of the Judi ciary committee. ' Judge Caples was elected district attorney In 1873, a responsibility which he maintained for 'six succes sive years, his territory comprising Multnomah, Washington, Clackamas, Columbia and Clatsop counties. , He served as presidential elector for Oregon In 1892 and was the mes senger selected to carry the state's vote to the national capitals. In 1896 Judge Caples served In similar capacity for President McKln- ley, by whom he . was appointed In 1897 as the government's diplomatic representative at Valparaiso, Chile, a peculiarly delicate responsibility, owing to the complications resulting from the Spanish war, the solution of which brought Into play the un usual diplomacy and tact which were characteristic of , his entire career. N'ottcv of Dissolution. Xotlce is hereby given to all whom It may qonern that the partnership of George R. DeMott & Co., of Pendle. ton. Oregon, has been dissolved by mu tual consent; that Will Ingram re tires from the firm and that all of his Interest has been sold, assigned and transferred to' Mary H. DeMott and the business will be carried on hereafter under the same name of George R. DeMott & Co. Dated this 15th day of July A. D, 1908. GEORGE R. DEMOTT, , WILL IXGRAM. Town Threatened by Fire. Forest fires have been raging around Koplah. 12 miles east of Cen- traliii. Wash. Several squire miles are already burned over, says a re cent report1, and the town of Koplah Is threatened. COFFEE Good is so good and poor is so poor; have Schilling's Best tomor row. Your rotr returm yo money U joa doo't Ulu it; we pay him 1 1 7 m .w ar Jr w , e MALTOUA S&VX&THt NEW Vflfeim -;temperakcc, grew a It's wholesome It's pure It's good For sale at all leading temperance drink stands. Guaranteed Xon Intoxicatiwo NORTH PACIFIC BREWING CO. ASTORIA, OREGON J For Sale by Byers' Best Flour I niiule from the choicest wheat Uiat crows. Good bread Is asJAir- ed when BYERS' BEST FLOUR to used. Bran, Shorts, Steam Rolled X Barley always on hand. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS 1 XV. 8. BYERS, Proprietor. For sale at the East Orcconiaa olfioe Large bundles of news papers, containine over 100 biir papers, can be had for 25c a bnndle. GOOD BANK SHOWING, First National Has Made Steady Pro grtm In All Department. , The report of the First National bank made today upon the request of the comptroller of the currency shows sn excellent condition and that Insti tution Is making progress In every department BINGHAM WARM SPRINGS NOW WENAHA SPRINGS irtizU M I: i This famous old Blue Mountain Resort, will be open June 1 5th, for the season of 1 908, under the manage ment of J. A. BORIE, the new owner. ... ' - :. Roads, bridges, buildings and equipment repaired and renewed. Hotel and dining-room service, will be a special feature, being under the care of the best steward ana chef obtainable. .For further particulars, write to( WE-NA-HA SPRINGS J. A. BORIE Prop. GI3BON POST OFFICE UMATILLA COUNTY ORE. I N