East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, February 15, 1911, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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AIIiY BAA ORBGOlflAK. FmfDI7IOir, ORXOOlt, WED X ESD A Y, FEBRUARY 15, 1911
PAGE! THRK8
GOOD ROADS FOES
FINALLY CAPITULATE
SUCCEED IN 1IADL.Y
. MUTILATING MEASntE
IIIidway Hoard and Highway Com
mi hh luii Will Ilo Succcwtful Ifo
State Aid and No Convict Labor.
Opponents of the state highway
board and highway commlsHloner
surrendered yesterday, but not untU
they had ' gained some concessions,
says a special from Salern. These In
cluded an amendment to the Gill bill
prescribing a method by which conn
ties shall Issue bonds for improving
Toads and an agreement by friends
Of the Good Roads association not to
Insist on the passage of the state-aid
bill, appropriating $340,000, or the
measure providing for the working of
state and county prisoners on the
public roads.
In pursuance of the compromise,
the house yesterday afternoon passed
the bill creating a state highway
board and providing for the election
of a state highway commissioner, and
also Gill's bonding bill. Marinera
bill appropriating $340,000 to aid sev
eral counties in road building was
put on the table, while the measure
for working prisoners on the roads
and highways. It will either be post
poned indefinitely or It will be placed
on the table with Mariner's state-aid
bill.
Hard FlKht Fought,
It was not until late today, after
liavlng a long and determined fight
against the highway plan, that oppo
nents of the bills of the Good Roads
association capitulated. At the
opening of the day's 'session Carter
- iras successful In a motion having all
road bills re-referred to the special
committee of five members, of wnrch
McKlnney of Tinker was chairman.
Representatives of the state grange
and the Farmers' union went before
the committee and renewed their re
quest that the highway commission
bill be chnnged to dispense with the
proposed commission. They were
willing to accept the highway com
missioner, but objected to the crea
tlon of what they termed another
useless commission. But the com
mittee would not yield another inch.
Insisting that It had granted every
. concession It could consistently and
still desire the enactment of the bill.
After further discussion before the
committee the supporters of the sub
stitute bill providing for the commis
sion agreed not to urge the enact
ment of the st.ite-ald bill and the bill
working prisoners on the roads. At
the same time both sides agreed to
the amendment of the Gill bonffrng
bill so as to make It optional with the
people petitioning for a bond issue ns
to whether or not the ballots In the
special election should specify what
road or roads were to be improved
and nt the same time indicate tne be
ginning ami the terminus of such
roads to be Improved with the money
produced from the Issue of bonds.
This arrangement met with favor on
both sides and the hatchet was burled.
,( --psiixWAV'N
When You BUILD,
Build to STAY!
Re-enforced concrete and concrete blocks
are cheaper in the end; are prettier, more
substantial and far more comfortable in
either cold 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 design in concrete blocks
Deiore you build your home.
I will furnish your estimates for any class of
work on application.
Contractor I and Builder
Cor. Railroad amd Willow Sis. Pendleton. Ore
months to get an O. A. C. graduate
to take Charge of his 100 acre walnut
grove near Springfield, Ore., Is com
ing to the college to press his plea,
and Prof. Lewis has only graduates
of the present short course to offer
him, all former graduates being prof
itably employed.
In the Yakima valley and other
parts of Washington are large tracts
of fruit land held by a Seattle firm
which has asked for an orchard su
perintendent, and a similar man is
required by two Portland business
men for their combined holdings
comprising large fruit ranches In the
Willamette valley.
At the first of last July the'ollege
had refused twenty requests for grad
uates to fill good positions, being un
able to get men for them, since the
demand is not only for college fram
ing, but for western experience. If
there were B0 or 100 graduates every
year they could be placed advanta
geously. The college needs men for
Its own experiment work. If the
legislature now In session grants the
appropriations requested for the es
tablishment of new branch stations,
the college will need nine more men
for this one brunch of extension work
nlone, next June.
DEMAXI) IXU TRAINED MEN.
Oreirnn 'Agricultural College Can Not
Fill Many Culls for Horticulture
Gnwln.
Prof. V. I. Lewis, head of the de
partment of horticulture at the Ore
gon agricultural college, has had
thirteen calls for graduates to fill po
; sltlons of importance for weatt.,y
corporations and Individuals having
large orchards, within ' the past
month, which he has been unable to
supply, since all of the graduates are
cither conducting profitable orchards
of their own. or have already recelv-
.ed appointments elsewhec-3.
The demand for trained men wtth
western cxjierlenee is not alone for
fruit ranchesvon the Pacific coast, but
also for eastern growers t who wish
,to adopt similar method. A large
corporation In Maryland controlling
:Sopie thousandi- of acres of orchards
wishes to plat t several thousand
mirre and has ru ked for a mar. of suf
ficient cnliber to demand a salary of
2.r.f0.
Am eastern university write for a
man to fill the .position of h?ad of
tho department of horticulture, and
tho Canadian depirtment of agricul
ture, which appointed an O. A. C.
man Inst June, new wants another.
Pacific coast methods are to be .In
stalled In large orchards near Cleve
land, Ohio, and an Oregon man M
wanted to conduct the work.
One of the biggest development
companies on the coast, having thou
sands of acres In Its holdings, and
making extensive developments in
volving the expenditure of enormous
urns, will .give $2000 t the right man
and wants one from O. A. C. Thirty
Dakotana havo a tract of 6000 acres
for which they want a foreman to su
perintend the planting, spraying, irri
gation and general care.
An Immense eastern company with
a capital of over a million, now mak
ing big developments In various parts
of Oregon, asks the college for a man
to superintend 10,000 acres of or
chards among Us holdings. Some 000
acres In western Washington are own
ed by a Portland corporation which
has asked for a foreman.
A man who has been waiting six
Life Saved at Death's Door.
"I never felt so near my grave,"
writes W. R. Patterson of Welling
ton. Tex., aa when a frightful cough
and lung trouble pulled me down to
100 pounds In spite of doctors' treat
ment for two years. My father, moth
er and two slstets died of consumption
and that I am alive today Is due sole
ly to Dr. Klng"s New Discovery, which
completely cured me. Now I weigh
1S7 pounds and have been well and
strong for years." Quick, safe, sure,
It's the best remedy on earth for
coughs colds, la grippe, asthma, croup
and all throat and lung troubles. BOc
and II. Trial bottle free. Guarantee J
by Koeppens.
PRIZE IJTESTOCK'rOU COM.WiK
O. A. C. Gets Moro SlifoMiiciits for
In Student Judging Classes This
Week.
A carload of Berkshire pigs from
the farm of C. E. Harrows of Crab
tree. Ore., has Just arrived at the
Oregon agricultural college, and will
be used by the classes in stock Juog-
Ing in the short course. Nearly all
the animals are prize winners from
j the Oregon state fair and other fairs
of the northwest, and are from one
"I me IilitPl n I un ill Lot: nt-m.
Another shipment of fancy stock
will arrive at the college shortly,
Thomas Brunk of Salem., Ore., hav
ing offered to loan the stock judging
classes some fine Poland China swine.
and J. B. Stump of Monmouth, Ore.,
having made a similar loan of blood
ed Perchcron mares.
In January the college was loaned
some of the Shorthorn cattle and
Southdown sheep from the herds of
Frank Brown of Carleton, Ore. These
loans give the students opportunity
to become acquainted with the very
best types of the various breeds of
nnlmnls discussed in tho lectures and
classrooms.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas
County m.
Frank 1. Cheney aakc oath that Be la
senior partner of the firm if V. J. Cheney
Co., doing koslneas Id the City of Toledo,
bounty ana State aforesaid, and that Mid
firm will pay the son of ONE HUNDRED
DOLLARS for each as every case of ca
tarrh that cannot be cared by the use of
Mall's Catarrh Cor.
FRANK i. CHIN BY.
flworn to before bm and subscribed la y
Bonence, this fltta day of December, A. D.,
I
Seal A. W. uLKAION,
Notary Pnblle.
Hall's Catarrh Core Is taken Internally,
and acts directly on the blooaj aad ntocons
forfarea of the system. Bond for testl
n on la la free.
Sold by all Drnggtets. TB.
Consul Homer M. Bylngton write
that the infantile death rate of the
English port of Bristol, which for the
i last decade averaged 1.61, was reduced
I to 0.9033 In 1910. This was duo to
I children being carefully looked after
, nnd to a good climatic year.
LAND ENTRIES
MANY PENDLETON PEOPLE
ARE GIVEN TIlElIt PATENTS
Oilier Entries Cancelled and Former
Residents Will bo SiirprL-Kxl to
Iicuni the Kate of Their Claims.
The land department has shown
great activity the past few months in
cleaning up the records of all Uma
tilla entries, either by passing to pat
ent cases which have long been sus
pended and delayed, or in issuing ex
piration notices in those cases where
proof has not been submitted in sup
port of the Umatilla entry within
seven years from the date of filing.
It is stated by one familiar with the
cases that many persons who form
erly lived at Pendleton will later be
greatly surprised to learn that their
entries have been canceled by the In
terior Department upon expiration
notices sent by the La Grande land
office to the entrymen addressed to
Pendleton, Oregon, but not received
by them, owing to their removal.
The Commissioner of the General
Land Office cancels entries upon a
notice sent to the record address
where the letter Is returned undeliv
ered the same as though it had been
received. The same informant stated
that all interested persons not lieini?
fully advised as to the action taken
in their particular cases should ad
dress the Register nnd Receiver of
the La Grande land office to ascer
tain the status of the same. Among
those whose L'matilla entries have
been recently patented are:, Iee Buck
ner, George W. Borinan, Harley J.
Xewcomb, John H. Armstrong. Wes
ley W. Harrah, Charles M. L'mbar
Kcr. Christopher C. Hendricks, James
M. Ferguson. Lewis C. Rothrock,
John R. Crews. Ephrlam D. Turner,
Daniel Shaw. Marlon Jack, John W.
Bryant, Elmer E. Ferguson. Thomas
Lonegran, William Baker, John W.
Rothrock. Alexander McKenzie, John
H. Ferguson, Clinton E. Roosevelt,
Benjamin A. Marquis, Abel D. Smith,
nnd Edward X. Smith.
Worn Out.
That's the way you feci about tho
lungs when you have a hacking
cough. It's foolishness to let It lo
on and trust to luck to get over it,
when Ballard's Horehound Syrup will
stop the cough and heal the lungs.
Price 2fic, BOc and II per bottle. A
C. Koeppen & Bros.
BLANKET SALARY BILL
1X)U COUNTIES. BURIED
Salem, Ore., Feb. 15. Classification
of counties of the state by population
for county salary purposes, as propos
ed by Senator Barrett of Umatilla in
senate bill 201, was voted down in
the senate yesterday by 4 to 22. In
a short discussion it developed that
large increases would be made by the
bill. Calkins said it would raise sal
aries In Lane county to the extent of
16000. Dimick characterized it as a
blanket salary bill, carrying large in
creases, and Barrett of Washington
objected to increoses for the county
Judge and sheriff in his county.
Barrett of Umatilla had drawn the
bill to put the assessor and county
clerk on the same salary in each
county, to raise the county judge In
most instances, nnd to fix a minimum
of $1000 for county school superin
WESTERN WATER-USERS
INTERESTED IN LAW
Water-users in western states nre
Interested In the action of the legis
lature of tho state of Washington with
reference to the water right code,
prepared by o commission named by
Governor Hay. The measure Is de-
CERTAINLY ENDS
INDIGESTION, GAS AND DYS
PEPSIA GO IN 5 MI?
A Little, DiapepMfn Now Will
Your Out of Ord(T Stoin
FiiM DiKOits All Your Food
Ing Nothing to Ferment an
You can eat anything you
ach craves without fear of
tlon or dyspepsia, or that yc
will ferment or sour on your
if you will take a little Diapc
casionally.
Your meals will taste good, and
anything you eat will be digested;
nothing can ferment or turn Into acid
or poU'on or stomach gas, which
causes belching, dizziness, a feeling
of fullness after eating, nausea, in
digestion (like a lump of lead in
stomach), biliousness, heartburn, wa
ter brashi pain in stomach and in
testines or other symptoms.
Headaches from the stomach are
absolutely unknown where this ef
fective remedy is used. Diapepsin
really does all the work of a healthy
stomach." It digefts your meals when
your stomach can't. A single dose
will digest all the food you eat and
leave nothing to ferment or sour and
upset the stomach.
Get a large 60-cent case of Papers
Diapepsin Srotn your druggist and
start taking now, and in a little while
you will actually brag about your
healthy, strong stomach, for you then
can eat anything and everything you
want without the slightest discom
fort or misery and every particle of
impurity and gas that is in your
stomach and intestines is going to be
carried away without the use of lax
atives or any other assistance.
Should you at this moment be suf
fering from indigestion or any stom
ach disorder, you can get relief with
in five minutes.
signed to settle numerous Important
questions, to avoid interminable liti
gation and to protect the public as
well as the holders and the users of
water.
A draft of the code, received by
Arthur Hooker, secretary of the Na
tional Irrigation congress, which will
have Its l!Uh annual sessions in Chi
cago, December 5 to 9, shows that
It is purposed to create offices for a
state hydraulic engineer and two su
perintendents, the former receiving
a salary of $5,000 a year. The pay of
tho superintendents is to be $2,400 a
year. The bill ,also provides that
these officials shall compose the state
water commission.
There is a provision that no water
right shall be granted without com
plete investigation, also that immedi
ately following the passage of the act
the auditors and clerks of the several
counties shall prepare and send to the
commission abstracts showing all wa
ter right filings and decrees In their
respective offices.
Heavy penalties are provided in the
bill for Interference with irrigation
ditches, flumes nnd canals, for steal
ing water and other offenses against
Irrigation property. The commission
is empowered to void any rights for
failure to use the same within a lim
ited time.
Baby Bands
will get Into mischief often it means
a burn or cut or scald. Apply Bal
lard's Snow Liniment Just aa soon
as the accident happens, and tho pain
will be relieved while the wound wtil
heal quickly and nicely. A sure cure
for sprains, rheumatism and all ains.
Price 2Bc, 50c nnd $1. A. C. Koep
pen & Bros.
For Sale or Trade
Fine 8 Room House nicely furnished,
fited up for house-keeping apartments
is now renting for $45 a month, would
consider proposition from some wheat
man who wants to exchange 1 60 acres
for a good home. Only two blocks
from Main Street, this is a splendid
piece of property. If you have a trad
ing proposition see about it at once.
4-room house partly furnish
ed, worth 11000, if sold In next
few days 50 will pay for It
1300 cash, balance monthly
payments.
Modern cottage on North
side. If sold at once 13200 will
buy It. Part cash, balance easy
terms.
LEE TEUTSCDfl
The Real Estate and Insurance Man.
550 Main St.
Phone M. 5
The average woman Is an enigma
seldom solved.
Orpheum Theatre
HIGH-CLASS1JUP-TO-DATE MOTION
PICTURES
ForJMen, Women and Children
SEE PROGRAM IN TODAY'S PAPER.
Program Chaages on Saadaj'a, Tuesday's aad Fridays.
iDytrttstxYt ;a n cnW
J man that is always at
JtaJ I work, but never worries a
customer ; uiat cans on tne
same man until he is con
vinced, but never annoys
him with its insistence; that wastes
no time, wastes no words, and that
can always gain an audience and a
hearing. Alone among salesmen, ad
vertising has free access to the li
braries of President Taft and Mr.
Morgan; it marches unchecked past
the secretary of the big merchant and
enters without hindrance the store of
the retailer. When it cannot tell its
story to a man in his office it can al
ways gain his attention in his home.
Ihe door of the housewife is never
fclammed in its face, No country is
so remote, no village is so dead, that
it does not go there for orders and
get them.
Saturday Evening Post.
This in it's entirety is
applicable only to
Newspaper Advertising
BO
PEOPLE
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AMERICA'S GREATEST MUSICAL COMEDY
TWINS 3 -With Victor Morley and Bessie Clifford
PRICES: $2.00, $1.50, $1.00 and 75c, TICKETS AT HANSCOM'S
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