pagk nx. DAHiT EAT ORBQONIAM. PENDLETON. OREGON, MONDAY, MAT S3, 110. EIGHT PAGES. D Heavy Nickled li Fixtures and accessories that will LOOK WELL ANT) LAST WELL. Just think a minute aad see if you could not use soma of the following articles: TOWEL RACKS, SOAP CUPS, SPONGE HOLDERS, TUMBLER HOLDERS, TOOTH BRUSH HOLDERS, ROBE HOOKS, TOWEL BARS, TOILET PAPER HOLDERS, ALL KINDS OF GOOD GARD EN" HOSE AND SPRINKLERS. Being Pendleton's only ex clusive plumbing ahop, we must stand or fall on the class of work we do. We have gained business steadily since we started the highest compliment that could be paid us. If you have any plumbing let an experienced plumber do It you will save money and temper by seeing Beddon & Lliller EXCLUSIVE PLUMBERS. Court and Garden Sta. Phone Black J65I. Jap-A-Lac The Home Beautif ier Murphy Bros. The paint men will tell you about Jap-A-Lac TIEKTIE Cass Matlock, Prop. BEST PICTURES MORE PICTURES LATEST PICTURES awl illustrated eongg in the city. Shows afternoon and eve nings. Refined and en tertaining for the entire family. Next to French Restaurant Entire change three times each week. Be sure and see the next change. Adults 10c. Children under 10 years, 5c Icq Broom Sherbet Ices Punches Candies Pastry Made to Order We make a specialty of speci al designs and colorings that will match your table decor ations or lodge and club colon. Pure Materials and Skilled Workmen Out of town orders receive our prompt and careful atten tion. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Hohbach's Phone M. 80. 121 E. Court St. INCREASES 262,343 riXPLE OP STATE WILL Xl'MBKR 673.243 Slate linn Miule Great Advance, Ac cording to Census Figures Assure Another Oongrcsaiiinn Cities Grow ing; Rapidly t'luutilla Has Gained 2000. - . V . The census enumeration of tho state of Oregon, so far as St can be con firmed by officers of the census bu reau, will show a population of 675,- 879, says the Sunday Oregonian. The net gain to the state will be 262,343. While official figures are not ob tamable, a comparison of the totals for each county, as gathered during the progress of the work, the votes cast for Judges of the supreme court since the census of 1900, and the vote on congressmen, warrants the belief that the Oregonlan's figures are ap proximately correct. An Interesting feature , of the result pertains to the total number of con gressmen which will be awarded to the state, and the. possibility that Multnomah county will be declared a separate congressional district. On Congressman to Be Gained. Representation in the present con gress Is on a basis of one member for each 194,000. Congress Is likely to be Increased by the addition of 20 members on a total population of 90 000.000 In the United States. On that ratio representation would be on a basis of one for each 215,000 people Oregon would hen gain at least one member. In both congressional districts the work of the field enumerators Is still In progress and will probably not be concluded prior to June 1. At that time all of the remaining records will be boxed and shipped to Washington for tabulation. Estimates furnished from Director Durand, of the census bureau, indicate that official figures as the result of the content will not be available before October. Drifts Still to Cities. Immigration to Oregon appears to have held close to the lines of rail ways and water routes, as it did prior to 1890. During the 10 years preced Ing that date, 95,832 people came to make their homes In Oregon, and of the , total population 183,642 lived In the 114 Incorporated towns. Census supervisors have found their work in the cities and towns during the present enumeration. Widely scattered settlements In the Interior counties of central, eastern and southern Oregon 'have consumed much time In efforts to reach each homesteader, but the net results to the total population- have been rela tlvely small. Since 1906 Oregon has steadily gained on the total of homebullders seeking locations In Malheur, Harney, Lake, Klamath, Crook, . Wheeler, Grant and Wallowa counties following the old trails and stage roads Into the fertile valleys which are soon to be come Intense rivals of Willamette productiveness. Without railroad transportation and unable to market the grains and hoof products of their farms, the pioneers of that section have remained without neighbors un til within a short period of time. With an east and west line of rail road under' construction by the Hills, and running from Ontario to a Junc tion with the Deschutes road at Bend, an exodus from the east to the unde veloped counties of the interior em pire Is in full tide. Rome Counties Double. Union, Umatilla and Wallowa coun ty wheat lands have steadily merged Into Imense tracts, owned by a sin gle individual or corporation and while the production of cereals and livestock has steadily climbed, the number of emigrants have steadily balanced the total of immigration, ex cept in the principal cities. La Grande. In Union county, has more than doubled the 2991 popula tion allowed on the count of 1890. Baker City, the chief city of Baker county will probably show a small gain, while the county will . not more than hold its own. Ten years ago Baker county was booming because of the new mineral fields then at tracting attention, her mining camps carrying a large fluctuation popula tion. Today the mining camps are on a .steady producing basis, where they are working at all. and the "drifters" of the boom days are gone. Baker county has conteracted that shortage with a substantial growth among the ranchers and in the farming country. Taken entirely from the territory of Wasco county. Hood River will show a large population, but without pos sibility of comparison. Wasco coun ty, deprived of the 6000 gobbled up by the new county,- will show a clear gain over the figures of ten years ago had Its territory remained Intact. Gain Made in Four Tears. Practlcallv the entire gain made by the state has been Becured within the past four years. Beginning at Ash land on the south, Jackson county, Josephine, Douglas. Lane, Benton, Linn and Marlon located in the ricn valleys of the Umpqua, Rogue and Willamette rivers, have awakened a large Interest In horticulture and farming. West coast counties have waited in a large. measure the railroad devel opment necessary for reaching their harbors and handling dairy products, but a clear gain In population has been experienced. Clatsop, Tillamook. Lin coin, Curry and Coos show an increase of from IB per cent to 50 per cent, the gain In Coos being the largest. It is probable that Salem, jumping from 4258 people In 1900, to 18.000 during the present enumeration, will lead all cities of the state outside of Portland. The first congressional dis trict will have seven cities which ex ceed 5000 population, Salem, Eugene Albany, Medford, Roseburg, Ashland and Grants Pass. Roseburg Oregon City and Corvallis are clamorlnc for admission to the select circle. When the state shall -be redlstrlct- ed by the legislature in order to ac rommodate another congressman that body will be asked to designate Multnomah as a district. -The sug gested plan' then places all of eastern Oregon, including Klamath and Lake counties, Jn a district with Clackamas, Washington, Columbia and Clatsop, where 40.494 votes were cast In the last election. The remaining district would contain all Willamette valley counties, together with southern Ore gon and the coast, except Clatsop and would have 43,494 votes. The following table shows popula tion by counties and congressional dls trlcts: . -Totals by Counties. First congressional district: Census. Census County of 1910. of 1900 Benton . , . 10,780 6.706 Clackamas 25 689 19,658 Coos .............. 14,416 10,32 Curry . 2,112 1,868 Douglas 20,552 14 565 Jackson 23,817 13,698 Josephine .... 12,812 7,617 Klamath 9 856 . 8,970 Lake . .., 4.660 2.847 Lane 35.667 19.604 Lincoln , . . .. 4,286 3 675 Linn 26,613 18.603 Marlon 88.401 27,713 Polk '. 13.715 9,923 Tillamook 6,679 4,471 Washington 20,986 14.467 Yamhill 19,723- v- IS 420 Total 289,564 192.929 Second congressional district: . . Census. Census. County of 1910. of 1900. Baker 15,289 - 15,597 Clatsop ..: .. . 14.906 12,765 Columbia 9,121 6,237 Crook 6,182 - 8,964 Gilliam .. 4,115 3 201 Grant 5,699 6,948 Harney 4,351 2,598 Hood River 6 257. Malheur . 5,621 4.203 Morrow 4,802 4,151 Multnomah 248,000 103.167 Sherman y 4.117 3,477 Umetllla . 20,511 18.049 Union 18,298 16 070 Wallowa 7,331 ' 5,538 Wasco 9,302 13,199 Wheeler 2,513 2 443 Total ..386,315 Total for state in 1910 220,607 .676 879 Total fon state In;i900 413,536 Net gain through out state. . . 263.343 Hood 'River county created out of Wasco. A Man Wants to Die . only when a lazy liver and srtiggish bowels cause frightful despondency. But Dr. King! New Life Pills evpel poisons from the system; bring hope and courage; cure all liver, stomach and Kidney troubles; Impart health and vigor to the weak, nervous and ailing. 25c at Tallman & Co. PROFESSIONAL FASTER RELATES EXPERIENCES Chicago. Fifty days without a morsal of food! This Is the record reached by Rich ard Fausel, long time faster, and he claims he has scarcely more than started. Seven weeks ago Fausel, who Is staying at a sanitarium' . at Forty second street and Grant boulevard, decided he was getting too fat So he quit eating. Going without food hasn't bothered him at all. He has a lot more time to do other things. Fausel loves to fast. He does it every once in a while. ' A 'year ago he weighed 870 pounds. He went over to Battle Creek and fasted for 43 days. It cut down his weight to 235 pounds. Then he went back to his home in Doland, S. D. Several weeks ago he decided to be gin another fast. Since .he came to Chicago and quit eating he has lost a pound a day. Fausel thinks -he can beat the record of 80 days, und is out for it now. - - "Tomorrow makes my fiftieth day without food," he said. "I'm all right. Look!" He picked up a chair in each hand and waved them around s if they were feather dusters. "I drink about three glasses of Lake Michigan water that's .thick enough every day, and that seems to be all I need. .1 fast every once in a while when I get to- fat. I've done it a number of times. "I am going to keep this up until the sixtieth day. If I am feeling good then, good as I do now, I'm going af ter the long distance record. , "It isn't a hard trick at all. The first two or three days re uncom fortable. Then It Is easy.- Only be careful when you start eating again. A little grape Juice and an apple once a week is all you dare tackle at first." Second Annual Convention ...... Oregon Thresher Ass n Albany, Oregon, Jane 2 and 3 1 0 Round trip rate of one and one-third fare on the certificate plan yill be made by O. R. & N. and S. P. Cos. Tickets on sale May 29th to June 3d inclusive, good for return until - June 1 Oth. Important subjects will be discussed includ ing an address by a Special Representative of the U. S. Government. Fot further information as to rates, dates of sale, etc. call on any O. R. & N. or S. P. Agent T. F. 11 Pendleton, Oregon. Age rit BLIND CHANCE GIVES YOUNG ACTRESS TITLE Paris. Mile. Juliette Thaldy now shares an almost vice-regal throne. Six months ago she was an unknown young actress. The other day she was quietly married to M. Merlaud-Ponty, governor of French West Africa. The story of. her engagement and court ship was rapid and dramatic. Last September a company in which she was touring was homeward bound from South America. At Rio de Janeiro the manager de cided to give one performance at Pakar, on the coast of West Africa, where the ship called for 12 hours, and he cabled to that effect. The boat was due at 6 p. m., and the per formance was announced for eight. A storm delayed the vessel several hours, and she stood .off Dakhar at midnight "No matter," says the manager, "we will give the perform ance." Blacks rowed the company ashore in canoes in the dead of night. and toward 1 o'clock the perform ance was ready to begin. - "Where are the spectators?" "In bed." "Then wake them up," said the manager, and he was obeyed. "Where Is the governor?" "In bed, too." "Then wake him also," and awakened he was. By 2 a. m. the audience were in the theatre, rubbing their eyes, the governor among them. Before the curtain rose the gov ernor gallantly paid his respect to the country women behind the scenes, entering the dressing room of' the leading lady, and, the latter relates, "stood transfixed." He had beheld In a corner of the room Mile Thaldy, a young colleauge of the lead- ins; lady, and' it had been the coup de foundre. Henceforth he would love only her till death did them part. He never took his eyes off her during the performance. At the close he en tertaintd the company at supper in his house towards 6 a, m., and at 8 he 'accompanied them on board to bid goodby to the lady who should bo his wife or he would die single A month or so later he obtained leave came to Paris, married the lady, who had accepted him by letter, and took A Senile. is a pretty hard thing to accomplish when you're blue, bilious and out of sorts. There Is a sure cure for all kinds of stomach and liver complaints constipation and dyspepsia. Bal lard's Herblne Is mild, yet absolutely effective In all cases. Price 60 cents per bottle. A. C. Koeppen Bros. BABY'S BIRTH SAVES LIFE OF MURDERESS Berlin. Augusta Zabel, a Berlin milliner, who murdered her rival in love, Frlda Barthold, owes her life to the birth of an heir to the Grand Duke of Mecklenbug-Schwerln. There wer arreat rejoicings . on the happy event, and the grand duke or dered the reduction of sentences on the criminals Imprisoned. Among them was Augusta Zebel, whose ex ecution was to have taken place this month. The sentence was commuted to pen al servitude for life. The woman's crime was committed at Rostock, where the young opera singer, Frlda Barthold, was appearing. Zobel's Jealousy was aroused by her lover de sertlng bet for the singer, and she went to visit Frauleln Barthold with a revolver concealed In her muff. Af ter the tragedy the murderess was arrested at the railroad station. his bride back to Dahkar, where she now reigns with him over French West Africa. - MEET TO REGULATE AERIAL NAVIGATION Milan The first International Juri dical Congress for the regulation of aerial navigation opens on May 81 at Verona. The congress will discuss the state ownership, the nationality of airships and flyers, and the prob lem of extra-terrltoriallty. The congress will also be concerned with the rights and functions of the state In the shape of taxes, custom and duties; also In relation to publlo health and safety. The delegates are mainly Juris-consults, who will devote their energies to formulating an International cod. for use In time of peace and In time of war. Men's oxfords cheap at A. Eklun&s. LET AN ELECTRIC MOTOR DO YOUR WORK Steadiest, cheapest and most reliable power for .small or heavy work. Less danger and easier to operate you tors a lever and It does the work. The Housewlfe'swork will be lessen-i ed when Electiicty and Gas come into the home COOK WITH GAS Make the work essler for ker and save on your fuel as welL No dirt, dust and excessive heat No fuel to handH and fires' to kindle and U costs leas. For Her sake, put gasjln your home befose thehot weather arrives Northwestern Gas & Electric Co. Phone Mate Ml Mai 4 8av money by reading today's ads. tfJOien You BUflLD, BuiOd ifco STAY! Re-enforced concrete and concrete blocks are cheaper in the end; are prettier, more substantial and far more comfortable in either cofd or warm weather. Concrete stands unsurpassed for Basements, Founda tions,-Walls, Fences and Curbing. It looks better and lasts longer than stone See my many beautiful designs in concrete blocks before you build your home. 1 will furnish your estimates for' any class of work on application. D. H. MRY Contractor and Builder Cor. Railroad amd Willow'Sts. Pendleton. Ore