EVENING EDITION EVENING EDITION WEATHER REPORT. Rain or . enow tonight and Sunday ; ' warm er tonight. Largest pUI efrco lation of any pP l Oregon, east of Port land. CITY OFFICIAL PAPER. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. NO. 7315 PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY G, 1912. VOL. 24. f B Bll B nHLS icimii snnns Organizes on One Hundred th Anniversary of White Man's Coming. . ELLIOTT MAKES ADDRESS v Walla Walla Historian Recall Move ments of Men Who Fin Found Umatilla Valley While" Searching for Opening to Pacific Coast. It was just 100 years ago today that the first white men set eyes upon the broad acres In the Umatilla val- lev. for It was on January 6, 181Z, ac cordimr to all existing data, that the Wilson Price Hunt warty reached the top of the mountains that separate TTnlnn anl TTmatilln. counties and looked down upon the land that was destined to become the greatest wheat land in the country. . In recognition of this centennial, a meeting is being held this afternoon in the Commercial club rooms for the purpose or rorm Ing a Umatilla County Historical so ciety as a branch of the state , organ' ization. Judge Stephen A. Lowell Is presld Imr over the meetiri and Hon. T. C. rciliott. the Dromlncnt Walla Walla histonian. made the principal address, his discourse being an account of the earliest travelers on the Oregon trail: In Dart he said: It is to be noted that the year 1911 is anniversary year in the Pacific northwest. At Kettle Falls in June the centennary of the arrival of Da vid Thompson on the Columbia, at as torla during the summer the centen nary of the founding of that city, and now at the beautiful valley of the Umatilla river the cntennary of the arrival of the first white men In east em Oregon. Wilson Price Hunt was the first traveler over the Oregon Trail from Shoshone Falls to the Pacific ocean He was the senior officer of the Pa cific Fur company lit their Astoria en terprise, and although not himself ex perienced in field expeditions from his business life at St. Louis he had a working knowledge of the fur. trade of the Missouri, which had been car lied on for years prior to 1810. He preferred to take the land route to the Pacific rather than tho trip by sea and he endured hardships and overcame difficulties that do ' him great honor. He returned to St. Lou! after the affairs of the Pacific Fur company had been closed out at As torla and became. a prominent citizen there, and served as postmaster for nearly 20 years. He was a neighbor there of Captain William Clark of the Lewis and Clark expedition. The (Continued on page five.) WEST EXTENSION HEARING JAN. 24 Washington, Jan. 6. Secretary of the Interior Fisher, In conference yes terday with Senator Chamberlain, said that government engineers would hold hearings on the West Umatilla project January 24, at Pendleton and Hermiston. provided that date proved acceptable to the people there. Chief Engineer Davis of the reclamation service, Engineer In Charge Hopson District Engineer Henny and Attor ney Morton of the reclamation service will Be in attendance. The govern ment's purpose will be fully explain ed and arguments for the opposition will be heard. IT WAS R. J. SLATER, APPEARED IN COURT FOR BYERS COMPANY It was R. J. Slater, not Judge 'J. A. 1 Fee who appeared for the Byers com pany in the United States court at Portland when the demurrer to the Caldwell suit was overruled and Cald well thrown out of court without his knowledge. In a 'phone Interview yesterday Clerk Cannon of the federal court In Portland Informed this paper that Judge Fee appeared and Informed the court that the plaintiff did not wish to argue the demurrer. It is evident, however, that the clerk was mistaken or confused as to the identity of the . two local lawyers. CONFESSES MANCHUS IN TERROR AS REBELS APPROACH Seven Hundred Slain in Ter rific N Fight at Hankow. Imperial Capture Troops Who Mu tinied fill ted States Will Probably Send a Force. Peking, Jan. 6. Terrified gy reports that SO.OOflurebels are advancing on Peking from Nanking, Manchu princ es today summoned Premier Yuan, who assured them, saying that he had dispatches that the Imperial army is to menace Nanking, the rebel capital, and that this would stop the rebel ad vance. It Is' unknown whether the rebels really Intend to attack Peking or are merely feinting to bring the Manchus to surrender. Seven hundred are reported to have been killed in a battle at . Hankow yesterday and more fighting today is expected there. Considerab'e fighting is reported from the vicinity of Lan Chow, be tween the 3000 imperialists who were rushed to put down the mutiny there and the former Manchu soldiers. The mperiullBts succeeded in capturing them. . The question of peace and war ap- parently rests on whether wu can in duce Premier Yuan to visit Nanking and discuss peace terms. mw, niu1v at Manila Manila. Jan. 6 Troops here are ready for immediate orders to sail for China. It is believed the fifteenth lnfantrv -lli h wnL if anv. Thirty five hundred men will be held In re serve here and 1500 will probably be sent. Sadllng Date Undecided Washington. Jan. 16. When alvls- ed that the Fifteenth infantry -is pre- na, state department officials said to day that 'it is unknown when the troops will b eordered to sail. They said the would decide when they Heard from Minister Calhoun at Pe king. V. S. Troops to Ciiina. Washington, Jan. 5. Secretary Knox and First Assistant Hunting ton Wilson today held a lengthy con- rerence It is believed, in reference to tne reported movement to sena American troops to China. It Is be- lleved tne war aepartment will De Immedlately requested to send troops from Manila. WOMAN GETS 6,000.000 NAMES FOR PEACE LIST London, Jan. 6. With 6,000,000 signatures to a woman's peace peti tion to be presented at the next Hague pnnforAncrt In 1911 np 1Q1K M!tn Anna B. Echsteln. principal of a school of languages in Boston, has arrived in London after a tour of America, Ger- many. Denmark, Switzerland, Aus- trla; Sweden. France, Belgium and Holland. More than f.000.000 trade unionists of Great Britain have sign ed the petition. Miss Eckstein says she will have 100,000,000 signatures . .... . Transit llouso Burns. Chicago, Jan. 6. The Transit house at the Union Stock Yards, for 40 years one of the most widely Known noteis in me west, was reaucea to ruins today In a fire which cost one life, for time trapped many per- nuns ttiitx- iur iiuurs mrcciiencu me i stock yards with a general conflagra- nun. ijg Ittp.uiy uiu mo names unwp through the building, a five story structure of brick and wood, that guests were forced to flee down fire escapes and In many instances were dragged from the burning building by Algonquin, 111., was the sole victim. NOT JUDGE FEE WHO Judge Fee stated to the East Oregon Ian today that he was not In Portland at all and that it was Mr. Slater who appeared for the Byers company. Mr. Slater confirms this statement. Mr. Slater returned to the cltjr yesterday and in a conversation with William Caldwell during the afternoon Inform ed Caldwell that his former attorney, D. W. Bailey had told him some time ago that he, Bailey, would not appear in court when the demurrer was up. According to Mr. Caldwell he was In Ignorance of such intentions on the part of his lawyer and did not even know the case was to be up. 1 ii PROGRESSIVE, BUT JUDGE STEPHEN A. LOWELL. Pendleton's Candidate for United States Senator Announce? Splendid Platform. - ... Judge S. A. Lowell has Just filed with Secretary of State Ben W. Ol- cot, hla formal declaration of his candidacy for the United States sen atorship to succeed Jonathan Bourne. In compliance with the provisions of me uireci primary law ne nas siaieu briefly the platform upon which ha seen siecuon. it is as iouows: " nominated and elected I will dur- Ing my term of office favor: Govern: conservation of natural resources. wlth reasonable present use thereof; nation-wide, presidential primaries; Imprisonment of offenders against anti-trust laws; 'banking system free from W'all street domination; popular Lenatorial eIectl0n8. m0derni'zed pub- GETS $100 FROM YOUNG LADY WITH FORGED NOTE J. B. Gerton, Well Known Young Pen die ton Man is Imprisoned on Serious Cliarge. -n flrgt arrest made by the new cnief of police war that of J. B. Ger- ton, a weli known young man of the city, when he took him into custody this morning on the charge of forg- ng the. name of J. Roy Raley to a note on which he secured $100 from Miss Ethel Thompson. Young" Gerton wus taken before the grand Jury which was in session and an indictment will probably be returned against him at the report of the Jury this after noon. Miss Thompson is an employee of the O.-W. R. & N. company and be- ln wf lacq"aniAnte Gerto,n ad yanced him 100 when he turned over ' her a, no.te t0 ?ch w h,B name- ",B "ow n " nte which Raley had B'ened wa3 Sood' he considered she was making a good investment. However, a few hours later her sus- Pleln8 ere. a"d 8ne com" munlcated with Chief Kearney who, after a brief investigation, confirmed her fears. After a short search, he discovered Gerton and placed him under arrest. He had on his person at th time 176.46 anrt declared he nad pald of( several debts with the balance muTIS1I SHII.rEUS cuy AGAINST "FREE" CANAL T-nnHnn Tan A rirof lnJIrntln , expresse(1 here by Br,ti9h shipping , the 8Ugge;tl0n that a pref- erence Bhou,d be ,yen Amerlcan vea. , , through the Panama ca- na, The 8r0posltlon ,3 regarded with incredulity by the leading shippers who declare that such a policy would be a breach of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty. PACIFIC COAST PLUMBING TRUST IS ENJOINED Los Angeles, Jan. 6. Federal' Dis trict Judge Owen Wellborn today is sued an injunction in favor of the gov ernment against the so-called Pacific Coast Plumbing trust. The defend- ants consented. The combination for years' has controlled the plumbing I business on the coast. INDEPENDENT MOOSE CANNOT INCORPORATE Sacramento, Calif., Jan. 6. The I secretary of state oday turned down articles of incorporation for the In deendent Order of Moose of the World, organized at Los Angeles on tho ground that the nam ewas too I much like the name of an existing or 1 der. NOT A RADICAL" lic land laws; government coasuns vessels operated in connection with the Panama canal; reformed court procedure: graduated income tax, equal legislative consideration to la- bor and capital; moderate, equitable and stable protective tarirr; pronioi- tion of alien lanaioraism; jusi waiia- portation regulation; ' development of western harbors; ample navy In Pa cific waters; gradual government as sumption of express and telegraph business; Justice to Oregon in federal appropriations. After my name on the nominating ballot I desire printed: Lincoln Re publican a Progressive, but not a radical. ( STEPHEN A. LOWELL, Candidate for Senator in Congress DEMOCRATS GATHER FOR NATIONAL MEETING William Jennings Bryan is Again Cen tral Figure and Wllsonites are Flirting With Him. Washington, Jan. 6. Hundreds of leading democrats are either here or are coming today for the national committee meeting and the Jackson Day banquet Monday. It is evident that William Jennings Bryan Is again the central figure anj the big question confronting the lead- ers, is what "will Bryan do?' .Bryan will arrive Monday. Governor Woodrow Wilson arrived this afternoon. His adherents are Dusiiy laying tneir wires, to get ury' an's support for him. Thomas Taggart, of Indiana, is the only candidate for the chairmanship of the national committee. He favors Governor Harmon of Ohio, for the democratic presidential nomination. NEGRO ARRESTED WITH $5000 WORTH OF OPIUM IN GRIP Los Angeles. Calif., Jan. 6. Fifty- five tins of opium, valued at $100 each, were found in a suit case car ried by a negro named Davis, shortly after his arrival here today on the Southern Pacific New Orleans ex press. His arrest, it Is believed, will throw light on the operations of the opium ring which authorities have been after for weeks Davis' attempt to slip quietly away from the depot aroused the suspicions of a policeman, who opened the suit case. INDIANAPOLIS READY TO RECEIVE ORTIE M'MANIGAL Indianapolis, Jan. 6. Two rooms In the federal building today are rroar ed for the reception of Ortle McMau - lgal, the confessed dynamiter, who Is en route from Los Angeles. He is expected to arrive here Monday. Commits Suicide, Olympia, Jan. 6. Having taken an overdose of carbolic acid, laborer, who gave his name as Gus Walker was found asleep on the door step of the Fred Carlyon home, south of the city, and brought Into Olympia' early this morning. He died before noon at the police station. Nothing Is known of him and it is believed that he com- mitted suicide. FLYNN AND JOnNSON TO SIGN AGREEMENT TODAY Chicago, Jan. 6. Jim Flynn and Jack Johnson this afternoon will meet to sign fight articles for a champion - Bhlp bout. Each, It Is reported, is to put up $10,000 as evidence of good faith. The date will be decided later, IJLM1 SUFFERINGS OF POOR IN EAST INCREASES Temperature Still Falling - and Death List Grows , Cliarities Forced to Close Doors In Faces of Freezing Hordes, as Funds Are Exhausted. Chicago, Jan. 6. With the ther mometer at 10 degrees below zero this morning, Chicago and the midd:e west have endured the sixth day of cold witti no relief in sight. It is the worst siege In five years here. The condl tion of the poor Is piutul in me ex treme. Many leading charities have been forced to turn the poor away. Train service Is demoralized and bus iness Is at a standstill. The fire department has been call- id upon 168 times in twenty-iour hours. The Children's Aid society, one of the largest charitable institutions In the city, is penniless and was com pelled to c'.ose Its doors today with a long )ine of freezing women, outside SO Below In Canada. WinnlDee. Man.. Jan. 6. The tem- perature dropped to 60 degrees below zerQ at white River on the north gnore 0j Lake Superior. Through the Canadian west, the temperatures range to forty below zero. Many trains are stalled and the engines art g0lng dead. Four Die In St. Louis. St. Louis. Mo.. Jan. 6. Four deaths and appalling suffering are a few of the results of a terrific buzzard that swept down on this city early today, The temperature was four below zero at 8 o'clock today and it is predicted that it will drop to 10 below before night. Trains are running 12 hours behind time. New York, Jan," 6. Shivering at eight degrees above zero here this city Is suffering from the coldest day of the year and a blizzard Is blowing. Municlpal shelters are overcrowded. the department of charities has or dered the steamers Lowell and Bren- nan moved alongside a pier and hun dreds last night s'.ept In the cabins. TONG WAR BREAKS OFT IN N. Y.; ONE IS KILLED Xew York, N. Y.. Jan. 6. Fifty ex tra nolice reinforced the Chinatown sauad todav in anticipation of another battle in the Chine.se tong war which was renewed here last night after several months' peace. One tong lead er was killed and another is dying in a fight over a slave girl. Seven Chl- nese are being held as witnesses. ALL WESTERN SHOPMEN MAY GO OUT ON STRIKE San Francisco, Cal., Jan. 6. There is a possibility today of a general strike lof shop employes on all rail roads west of the Mississippi river. Word has been received from the executive board of the railways de partment of the American Federation of Labor, to tho effect that the move Is under consideration. It Is being considered In answer to a plea made by striking Harrlman lines shopmen who want a sympathet ic strike. WORST SNOW STORM YEARS SWEEPS DOWN l PENDLETON One of the most persistent snow storms Pendleton has experienced in many years is now raging and with i approximately a foot of snow upon the ground the storm shows no sign of abating. About four inches of snow fell here last night and another four Inches covered the ground during the forenoon. But while the fall of snow is heavy It Is causing no worry on the part of farmers. Prominent ranchers who have been in from the country today 1 say the snow is beneficial. It Is now sufficiently deep to thaw out the ground from the previous freeze and I the snow blanket will serve as a fine protection for the growing wheat. I Sheepmen and cattlemen, however, are not Jubilant over the outlook for I the storm means expensive feeding for them. Trains Are Late, Storms farther east have been re sponsible for continued delayed 1 trains. All westbound trains have I been behind schedule for several days, I No. 6, the early morning westbound passenger, passed through the city SLEW HER TO , WED HEIRESS Remorse Siezes Rev. Rich son When Insanity Play is Unsuccessful. ( THINKS HE IS STILL GOOD Expecting' No Leniency from Courts, Coward Claims God h Still Show ing Him Mercy May Get Ofr Wltto Life Term in Prison. Boston, Mass., Jan. . Having con fessed to murdering His wrmer sweetheart, eighteen-year-old Avis Llnnell, Rev. Clarence Virgil Kicne son, until his arrest last October pas tor of the? fashionable tlmanuei uap tint church of Cambridge, a suburb of this city today is not exhibiting the same symptoms or Insanity mat ne has attempted to show fof some time past and he Is now facing death in the electric cluilr for his crime, although It is thought possible that the prose cuting attorney may consent to a life? prison term.' Murdered to Marry Ilelress. Rev. Richeson's confession was made yesterday afternoon In a letter (Continued on page eight) STOCK FINE; SNOW DEEP IN SOUTH END That the stock cattle in the Camas Prairie and John Day country are in splendid condition is the declaration of Edgar F. Averlll, deputy game war den, who returned yesterday from a week's horseback trip into the south end of the county. Up until ten days ago, Mr. Averlll says there had not been a forkful of hay fed to the cat tle, the open winter enabling the ani mals to graze. Since snow began falling ten days ago, the farmers have been feeding hay In large quantities, but as this feed Is remarkably cheap this year, ranging from $4.50 to 5 00 a ton, Mr. Averill declares the farmers are not complaining but on the other hand are rejoicing that the snow Is coming so heavily this early in the season. They believe It means that the hardest part of winter will soon be over. Mr. Averlll reports Borne extremely cold weather In the south end, the thermometer being It degrees below zero when he passed through Uklah. The snow Is ten Inches deep there and measured twelve Inches at Alba while on Yellow Jacket Hill it had reached a depth of twenty Inches. Mr. Averlll was accompanied on his southern Jaunt by Milton Sullens, special deputy game warden, and the two men went south as far as Rltter, across the north fork of the John Day on Ice. The trip was a part of the campaign the game authorities have undertaken to prevent the ruth less slaughter of deer during the win ter and the deputy game warden be lieves he will prevent a repetition of the wholesale killing of the past few years. EXPERIENCED IN about 9 o'clock this morning. No. 17 the noon train, is marked five hours late. Yesterday No. 17 did not arrive until after 8 o'clock. The motor car from Umatilla was delayed by the snow this forenoon and did not arrive until noon. The outgoing Northern Pacific train was stalled three times while pro ceeding eastward on Webb street this afternoon. It took the train a half hour to get under way. Clear the Sidewalks, The heavy snowfall last night and today has brought forth strong calls for the enforcement of the ordinance requiring people to clear away snow from the sidewalks adjoining their premises. Under the city laws it is a misdemeanor not to clear away the snow and unless the ordinance la complied with arresta may follow. In the business section the ordi nance is being observed fairly well. Yet there are parties who have not cleared away the snow and it remains piled high to the discomfort of pedes trians. In the residence districts the situation Is far worse as some of the walks are almost Impassable.