Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1910)
EIGHT PAGES. PAGB TWO. DAILY EAST OHECOMAN, PKVDLET05, ORKGOX f UlnAV, JANVAUY 81, i10" 'en's Sweater Coats at a Bargain In order to reduce our stock of sweater coats which is entirely to large. We will give the following 2.50 SWEATER COATS WILL GO FOR - ?l-5 $3.00 SWEATER COATS WILL GO FOR . . - - $2.35 $3.50 SWEATER COATS WILL GO FOR - - $2. HO $3.75 SWEATER COATS WILL GO FQR - - ?2.9S $4.00 SWEATER COATS WILL GO FOR - - ?3-15 100 Silk Petticoats Saturday Only THE GREATEST SPECIAL OF THE SEASON All colors, good grade silk, regular tf O O C $5.00 values, Special Saturday Price ' Jhoe department Our shoe department is in itself a complete shoe store, the busiest in Eastern Oregon. Something doing all the time. We are offering greater bargains in our sale men's and women fine footwear. Coiwp while we have your size. Men's shoes dt $2.95 Women's shoes at $2.79 Don't forget the '"Red Goose" the finest and lest school shoe for boys aul pirls. THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE, wh " Trad Agents for Carhartt Overalls, Jno. B. Stetson Uats, Red ldri Collars, BW-ts Gloves. PACIFIC COAST IS SINKING (Fai CURES SjSoSb BLOOD POISON I1HITI..YN l t KOI.il M 1ST a T A K ES ISM'K WITH CONTKMPOKAKIES Claims Lifetime. Study of Ciixriogkral I'Ih-iioiihmiu I" Norlliwcwt Qualifies lllin lo Ho Host Judge Objects to Other t'urrvnl Hyoptlioses. SHE USED HER BRASS KNUCKLES WOMEN PUGILISTIC MATROX CLEARED KOOM AT SOCIETY MEETING .Incurred Enmity of Her FeUow Co- '. horts. But Undismayed, Faces Thmn and Scauors Them With Brass Knocklcs Fined Five Dollars in Court. gotten. Mrs. Cepola was fined $5 ' the execution of a. bond in this man and costs by Judge Ford. ner would not be doing business w(th- - in the stte, within too meaning- of 31 A. bUAhi mm lrt..f l.J. line law. i-edeilyl nvriiDixG ox OLDEST STREET IX U. Pittsburg. Mrs. Mary fhletiK lookin? vounir Wtlmerdine. is under conviction of at tacking Mrs. Stella Pokal and others comprising the Ladies' Beneficial so ciety at Wilmerdlng. There was developed in the trial much of the humorous, and Judge had been thA knuckles until she knocked down twice. The court hearing developed that Mrs Pokal had been treasurer of the irnmiT.'. Rpnpfiriarv society for 'Ixve Me, IiOTe My Dog" Motto Re stilts in Banishment of Offlcrc. Washington. Col. Clarence Deems of Fort Hancock, X. J., who has been j WashinKton.More than usual in a problem Tor the war department , Urpgt Bttache8 tQ tnp 8electIon re. for some time because among other renty ma(le by the trea depart things, of the devotion he has for ' ment of the site for the federal bnild dog. has been ordered away from his Plymouth. Mom. For this pur- station at that place and sent an the th? rt of the Baptlst way out to the Presidio at San Fran- church L.y(,cn anJ Mam ptrppt8 Cisco. And the litf.e waggle-taded ca- been acfuire(J nine was one of the remote causes for n nappens tnat these are the two the change. oldest streets in the United States. Some time ago Col Deems was In ou 1620 Tne ,ot commanu or i..e ru.,Cu '' selected is the one originally assign ed to William Brewster, the "Rul inir Khier" of the Pilgrim church. On this spot Brewster lived and dissemi nated that religious liberty which dis tinguishes the United States among tho nations. Governor Bradford's house was on .the opposite comer, hardly 100 feet away, and at the head of the street is Town Square, overlooked by his ' t, Tic Burial Hill. The government house of the col ony, which gave way in to the court house, in 1S20. became the town house. The latter is still in Hi.. n the municipal office center. the site was $22,000 Cepola, an Fort Howard, Maryland. While at matron of that post his constant companion was a little dog so constant a companion in fact, that his brother officers said that it toddled at his heels In the day time and slept at his feet at n'ght. The dog became such a source of discomfort to the other officers and Ford showed a great deal of interest men at the post that protest was In the case after it had been shown made to the war department a.nst that Mrs Cepola had used brass Colonel Deems on this ground Other knuckles in a fight in which she ad- objections were filed, but the dog oc- mittedly whipped the rest of the La- eupled the center of the arena in the dies' Beneficial society, consisting of nuiet investigation that followed. It re fha twenty women. The court was after this that the department -.I J,u imSSP,i with decided that Col. Deems who didn t the defense of Mrs. Cepola, who de- seem to gibe temperamentally with ,s on)y 200 fcet distant from the dared that she had not resorted to the officers under his command ana rostofflce slte. The price paid for lllSlsieu Oil puiii'imfi i-.. should not be p'.aced at the head of a district. Accordingly he was re lieved from command at Fort Howard and sent to Fort Hancock unaer coi- SMILE. DAMS YOU, SMILE," MOTTO OF I'KESIDEXT Women's ueneiiciary sueir,, waiter Howe aome time, and there had been some ona" ' ' . . :isn ICIun. i rtMui iii ci. a Now President Tar aea ! is alreadf famed in song and story, make Howe a 'f1" ! u is the outward manifestation of ge to rlaee Col. John V. X hite ,n "-" eoo(i wi and humor. But bad blood politically between her and Mrs Cepola. Mrs. Cepola nad ae manded an auditing of the society books, and it was brought out at the trial that Mrs. Pokal had asserted that she would whip Mrs. Cepola, v h. wnuifl whin Mrs. Cepola slght" M a trouble make, A nTJo was considering the --s of can B La. i uru u. . that brass be mand of Fort Hancock. As , , uently lt hU,es a predd-n- White Is Junior to Ool Deem. It a.j anJ even a neoessan- to transfer the latter. The , t'ai ui vv troubles of Col. Deems have never j nea pridt-nt reached so acute a stage as i to nece- , ..onBlder1n the names of can- Pnrthmil "Thf v)io)i Piiplfii ii,nflt it sinking notwithstanding the con sensus of opinion of scientific experts of the XTnlted States geological survey and others to the contrary. I can prove it by conclusive arguments una I can back my arguments with irre futable data if I can only get a hear ing. I have devoted a lifetime to a detailed study of geological phenom ena in the northwest and I know that t am right. But because I stand alotip In my theory I havo not been able as yet to prevail upon any scl ent fir- tournul of note to PUDlisn me facts that I have gleaned after years o delving into tne mysteries or Sim la." Such was the forceful statement made by W. Hampton Smith, a pio neer geologist or 1'ortianu, at a scs sion of the Portland Academy of Sci ences lust Saturday night. rnn -Xilvflnen Tronf "My worthy contemporaries in the fiol,i nt irnf1i-!rln riwnreh have fur ther promulgated the hypothesis that the basaltic formation found In the Wlllamettn vallev and elsewhere on this coast belongs to the miocene or some later period of the tetiary age. They are absolutely wrong about this. I can, I think, advance conclusive proofs of their error." he continued. "No, the government experts are surely mistaken when they say that the Cascade mountains, for Instance, are of mieeene origin. From labori ous Investigation I have become con vinced that the. formation dates back, at the very latest, to the end of the cretaceous period, or the early part of the eocene- period." "No more palpable error can be made by a geologist than to say that the Pacific coast Is rising. This Is not true. The geological movement is downward. Every mark, charac terstlc and phenomena of submerging coast Is evident from Behrlng sea to ih r.,r nf T.ower California. No, la dies and gentleman, this section of the globe was never uniler sail water In the miicene period of the world's I evolution. "It has been said that shells bear ing the marks of the miocene period have been found' on this coast. I seriously question the correctness of this. I never found any such shells. That shell game, I am inclined to be lieve, has been overworked. r:.v,.i neiwwlr of Cdarlnl Origin. Mr. Smith ndso advanced many ar guments to show that the gravel de posits of the Willamette-valley are of glacial origin, in spite of the fact that the government experts hold to the idea that they are the result of stream action. One of the most telling points was that the gravel could not have been deposited by the Columbia and Willamette rivers Tor the reason that i; is found scattered all over Multno mah and Clackamas counties. Had the gravel been deposited by streams. he maintained, it would nave oeen found only along their courses. Tile geologist told some Interest ing facts observed by him in the course of 50 years of study of the u, trf.r:. He explained the phe nomena of cedar trees with basil t cores and basalt bark by expressing , the belief that hollow logs wen , caught in the glacial period and while i the lee were filled with lav.i pour e 1 forth in immense volumes from (one of the many vents in the Cas cade ranges. Talk of Logs "d Mumps. Ttiese logs, he said, might have r..r hundreds and tliou- neeil , e i ; .1 - . andH of miles before be, tig dropped where they were found. He told of stone stumps, and even of stone brush plies, which he h id found in various lo.nr.tles of the noithwest. .. . - i ait imt is necessary to cure "iurvinR tne owwaru symptoms i. m.. -- --. ,,.sn xtor- Oontupioua Blood Toiaon. The virulent germ winch pro Juce tl ese extn cure can be efT-cted. '.Hie least taint loft in the elrciiUit on r later cause a fresh outbrtak of the trouble, with utl ' of ulcerated mouth aud throat, coppcr-colond spot. laUmu T- ulcers, etc. Only a blcd purtfler can care CotaKiou lilood Town. Medicines which merely check the symptonu for u tune, b ocause el uieir strotiK mineral nature, and toave the poison smouldering m thssj. wm. have .... , Tkn i mm '-.! -i wax's returns niter uch treatment. S. S. S. cures Contagious Blood I'on ami cures Jt per manentlv. It roes Into the blood, and removes every particle ot the i making the circulation pure, rich and healthy, nor Hoes 8. S.S loave tne slightest trace of t.c itiase for future outbreaks. S3 3. shgtuest trace or tne uisease tor iuiuiu um.u- - , - - . y,nrUs, any mineral I:..yclM:t. but Is made entirely of roots, herl bs an J b wta. wuicn are niosr vniuuoie m mts- umvuTuij.in i - -i - . . . j . . .ii. ii.... ..... nritirn vRt.em. ii you same time speciucauv aaapt.su io uuuuiu u - "----" . .r have Oont.ioua liiood Poison S.S.S. will cure you because 11 '"'' oughly puruy your liiooa. noma iruuiuwui. 7" . free to all. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. RAILROAD YARD TWO UNDER GROUND IDAHO MJXE 1HS ONE BIiASTED FROM ROCK Morning Mine of Guugcnhelms- Has Largest Railroad Yard Underground Work Bono by Old Football Star Electric Care naiullo Ore. Spokane, Wash. Blasted out of solid rock, two- miles underground, In the heart of a mountain near Mullan. Idaho, is a fully equipped railroad yard with electrically propelled cars hundling the rich lead-silver ore pro- : duced by the Morning mine, owned by t the Federal Mining & Smelting com-i pany. The work, Just completed un der the direction of Charles K. Cart wright, formerly a University of Pennsylvania football team, required more than a year and Involved the ex penditure of several hundreds of thousands of dollars and the labor of many men. The yard, which Is the only one of its kind in the northwest and the largest In America, Is 200 feet In length and 36 feet in wiutn. tne height ranging from 20 to 100 feet. The electrical apparatns, hoisting machinery and boilers are in a cham ber, 50 by 78 feet and 20 feet high, while in the rear of the foor-com-partnieiit shaft, now under construc tion, is an ore bin, 20 by 26 feet high, with a capacity of 1500 tons. The shaft will be sunk to reach a depth of 2500 feet. The foremost mining experts in Spokane and in the Coeur d'Alenes j say the fact that the Federal com- , pany. which Is controlled by the Gug- : cr..i,h..im Interests, is expending a for- . tune in deep mining is proof ot faith ; in the permanency and richness of the ore deposits at great depth in the ; Coeur d'Alene district. ( This work has reviod Interest in the district, which produced about 40 l r cent of the total lead output of the I'nited States in 1909, and indi- cations are that many properties -hi,.h h:.ve been idlo for years will , be put in shape for active operation , during the coming year. There is al- , so renewed interest m placer mining in that and other parts of northern Idaho. i ment for nurses at Sacred Heart hos pital In Spokane, la making a raca against death In an effort to reac tho bedside of her mother, wife oc James Mockett, owner of the Bavor hotel In London. Eng. When a ca blegram came to Miss Mockett rroas tho king's specialist who has charga of the case, announcing there Is onif a fighting chance that the womaa will live until her daughter . Englond. she lost no time In board n the fastest train for Chicago, solnf thence to New York to board the swiftest steamship from that port Liverpool. J. J. Brown, owner of a string of banks In eastern Washing ton and northern Idaho, and Mr Browne, who brought Mlas Mockett to the United Statea four years aa when she was 17 years of age, com pleted arrangements for the trip or telegraph from Chlcage, where they are visiting. "Clothes don't make a man," sal the Self Made Merchant to his soa. "but they make all of him during bus iness hours except his hands an face." Such clothes as Hart Schaff ner & Marx make, sold by the Pea pies Warehouse, makes some pretty good looking men. See Jacobs-Stine Co., representa tives today. Their Portland real es tate proposition is a good one. Early selection makes best choice. In SauMary 25c & 50c Tubes mm Write or Ask Drujxflists For this t ree Sample There U rnoiiL-li Konlnn' Cntnnal Jelly In this freo immpli! m-oc !r penny pt.il (or teveral u:iys' trciit mcnt -emiuL'h to g've Instant r-ll f from coM in too hend or muni catarrh, olo. Tin wonderful, viae remedy (in iwni tary tubes) l nptKv! diri-et to tits r:i , Ruriaccn. ItU i i sootliine nnd henllnif that It civet Instaut relief, and im con tinued u -c will i-ure permanent iy all form of catarrh. ver 'iSWO ilniulsla !! It In 25c and Sue tuhi. l(eei"rs, nurm. drtitTKists recommend it. The HiircpUt proves. Ask your (Iron,;!! cr wrim to day for free sample. Konrlon Muniitactnrlofj Ci'. Minneapolis. Minn. ytiiiuiraiHi!!? i fwn Pnre Z?. to Eat j.?t,'j',""M,,i. IfiWUtlfM'JUH'jl".! i,ti lllllllll till fiCouiimAji.iwiinrl Mil " tV-rJtwiiuoroTi'I l.llil, MAKES ILCE TO ENGLAND AGAINST DEATH Spokane,. Wash. Florence Mock ett. a student in the training depart- fllllUUIIIHJ! i'lU'lil Hn'lili!? for the nresident to make the ap pointments. Speaking of the matter to one of his cabinet officers. President Taft said, rather ruefully, as he contem plated the upsetting of his long la bors: "Look at these last-hour returns. I've got to do the work all over again Gee! If I couldn't smile I would have to resign from the presidency. ' . . . iav.iv in etart Ing nor did Mrs. Pokal delay start- , Caught In the Rain u.,egrams making all kinds of charges ie for Cepola One of the members then a cold and a cough let It ran , . th Uvo men and substan ln.g ' t . -DlfViM .orietv said on-get pneumonia or consumption. h it was lmp0SSible rr i lie lMUica -w- .. rrar i . " .v.. 7.o., that m. Pokal "sort of that's all. No matter now for ranr ass iz fn the back of the neck. - A. C. Koeppen & Bros. Mrs Cepola appears to have become down she reached into TVl( lrea8Ury dt.Part ShT S8 'ulrenTorstate licenses of surety Pokalhowel In court the scar which companies as a Prereauislte to doing Mrs Cepola made on her face when business with the Ln.ted States ihT" fSt swng with the brass Under the existing regulations of the ,he first swung , d mcnti a bond cannot be accept- v Cepola appears to have had ed by any officer in the treasury de things pretty much her own way af- partment If executed by a company or things preny ""- .. ... , , - ta.tB where the com- r eBhand The hammered bo S not obtained a state license. P '? i liiiL clTdng the whole Under the opinion lust promulgat nJ 1' i i members of the La- ed. the department rule, that an of- dies Benef c'al wra then by a 8urety company at IU home of- weather without the.r wrap y ouUide of the KSSl it ' boundaries of the state wherein It has ig J?hal Sponger Mrs. Cepola ' no license, for a principal residing in was hon that the v or fo ra contract to be per- Tre "Pokal l time ; Stat'es are id "and enforceable 7n. kr?uckfes but found her ' against the company whether or not without the knuckles, out iou ,",,. . .ency In the state In roln rotUh bre.Uneg Zl which the prlnclpa, reside, and that! Hay for Sale. Oat. mixed alfalfa, wild grass and timothy hay for sale at $15 to 20 per ton, f. o. b. cars Elgin branch. ELGIN FORWARDING CO., Elgin, Ore. rimliv. Wheat Farm for Sale. 800 acres 2 miles from Helix; fair Improvements; fine well. Price $50,- 900. Leased to Easy terms. JOHN A. GROSS, 814 Boyer Ave., Walla Walla, Wash. r:irt Why have your shoe soles nailed on when we sew them on at Sac s pair. No swell dressed man or wo man wants their shoes full of nails. A. EKLtTND. LEMONS STOP WHISTLING. PUhK-r Has Hi lOntrregation Whistle isoys ITodoce lemons, AMiist- lins Stoiw. . Spokane. Wash. Seven bnKlU newsbovs. eaih carrying two Juicy lemons, started a small riot in First Baptist church of Spokane, where i-.- T V Irnmer. O.TStor. in- I I .ev. J i . a . - ' troduecd a novelty by having the con- ..n eiitlon whistle the nlrs or the reli gious hymns instead of depending up on the choir. The minister caiieu iui Need Thee Every Hour, and 700 members of the congregation and a couple of hundred visitors rmckercd their lips and went to uie heart of the composition. Just then the small boys, stationed at puces u .n,..n broueht forth the lemons and bit into the yellow skins in an .nduavor to extract the Juice. A in ter ran over the auditorium and then there was a noise not unlike the ex haust of a blacksmith's bellows, some ..t ihnu. not in. range of the sight of the boys with the lemons kept brave ly on, but they took notice in a snori time and one of them grabbed for the boy nearest to him. The young ster escaped and his getaway was a signal for the other six Dr. Kramer tried to rally the whistlers, but the sight of the lemons had taKun out an the pucker and the rest or me nmn were sung. Anro-aranees are deceitful," said the Self Made Merchant to his son. "and so long as they are, better nae em deceive for us Instead of against us." If you get Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes of the Peoples Ware house your appearance will speak well for you. , No Interest, io taxes, title free and all Improvements included In price of lots. See Jacobs-Stlne representative today, sure. KNOWN FOR IPS STRENGTH WHAT IT MEANS A BANK'S CAPITAL. U to protect Us depositors from vosilde loss, .Werefore lite larger it Is, the greater protection the depositors havo. Hits bunk baa a Capital of ..$230,000.00 Surplus und net profits 175,000.00 Shan holders liability .. 250,000.00 A total of - ?675,000.00 This means that this bank must I oho over 2-3 of a million dol lars, before its depositors could oe a cent. This protection Is for VOU. The FIR.ST NATIONAL BANK Pendleton, Oregon SECURITY PKTJf.5t,! HOTEL OREGON " 4 ..... i'S ' ' V1? 4 1 Sr-J A f 7 ! A. -15. l "X IssV-r- & " K"il Jit "v Cheese Is now being made from the soja bean. The hitherto respectable and unassuming bean is forming as sociations that may bring It Into Ill-repute. LoiuK d on the corner of Seventh and StnrV streets, extending through the block to Park street, Portlund, Oregon. Our new Park Street Annex is the only fireproof hotel building In Oregon, Rates $1 a Day and Up. European