TEN PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAK PENDLETON. OKFION, SATURDAY. FEBTtUARYlQ1912. PifGE SEVEN If You Wartt Information Regarding the 1 9 ! 2 iSELF STARTiNG Do Not Ask Jealous ' Competitors. 4$ Seeing is Be lieving Know ledge is Power. Stop the Firs) Cadillac Owner you seo Ask him how he likes his car Ask him about Cadillac service Ask him' about the electric lights Ask him about the electric starting de vice Ask hira about the' ease and comfort Ask him nil al)Out his Cadillac car. If that does not satisfy you, 6top all the Cadillac owners you see. There are Cadillac owners throughout the State of Oregon and they are easily found. Do not hesitate asking any owner, they are all proud to talk about their car9. Ask them how they are treated by the Covey Motor Car Comany and anything you want to know about service of the car. If you still seek information ask any 1911 Cadillac owner, ask any 1910, 1909, 1908, 1907 or even the owners of cars before that date, what they think of Cadillac cars and Cadillac service. We rest our case entirely on what the own ers tell you. The Car With the Reputation If you 'want a 1912 Cadillac we advise you to order at once Oregon Motor Garage B. F. Trombley Prop. 3 1 5 E. Court Street Umatilla County Distributors A V D HISTORY IS Gill PRES. IOID OK IIERMISTO.4 ENLIGHTENS ENGINEERS I,euda Itoclanuition Men Tlu-ougli Three Mlllim Year8 of Habitation of Jack KabWte and Rattlesnakes to Present Time. JUlb Mi COMMENCING AT 10:30 O'CLOCK A. M. The undersigned will sell at the Thomas Hampton ranch 2 miles northeast of Pendleton, the L. D. EATON STOCK, Consisting of the following: 2 Caso Separators. 1 20-h. p. Oaso Traction Engine. 5 Wheat Wagons. 10 Head Young Work Mules, well broken. 1 Six-year-old Single Line Mule. 2 Two-year-old Mules. 1 Sucking Mule. 1 Four-year-old ITorse, well broken, good size. 1 Eight year-old Horse, well broken, 1100 lbs. 1 Saddle Pony, four years old. 1 Cook House on Trucks. 10 Header Beds with Nets. 2 Water Tanks. 1 Road Cart. 1 Single Seated Buggy. . 1 Set Double Buggy Harness. 8 Set Butt Chain Harness. 3 Set Chain Harness. 1 Three-bottom 14-in. Oliver Gang Plow. 1 Two-bottom 14-in. Oliver Gang Plow. 1-Two-bottom 14-in. Cassady Gang Plow. 1 Two-bottom 14-in. Columbia Gang Plow. 1 Buckeye Grain Drill, G horse. 1 Monitor Grain Drill, 4 horse. 2 Six-horse Harrows. 1 Eight-horse harrow. Blacksmith bellows, Vise, anvil, drill, grind- diet0n, Hermiston, Umatilla and Ir stone, leader bars, chains, lorks, etc., etc. (Special Correspondence.) Ilermiston, Ore., Feb. 10. At the banquet given the englners of the reclamation service by the people of Hermiston Wednesday evening, am ong the principal speakers of the evening was Elmer P. Dodd, precedent of the Hermiston Commercial cluD, His address was as follows: When moat of us came to Hermis ton there was little else than rabbits, rattlesnakes and reclamation engi neers. The rattlers have disappear ed, the long-eared Jacks are on the run. hut the engineers are with us still, and we hope ere here to stay. A long article In the Oregonlan the other day told us that Oregon was three miUlon years old and it is my opinion that if the rabbits and rat tlesnakes could make nothing more than a sagey, sandy waste of this re m'arkable region in such aeons of time, it is high time we were welcom ing most anyone to drive them hence. After the engineers came to inter rupt this long unvaried course of na ture, we came. Like true Americans we followed the flag. We have scal ed the ramparts built by the wild elements of nature and a cultured race Is breeding culture Into the "sands of time." In a country for got three million years, we, in the fullness of our faith in the demands of the century set foot upon wild soi'.s and are taming them to gentle ness in half a decade. And nov like the old Conqueror, we yesxn tax more worlds to subdue. It Is to show how strong Is our faith and how great that yearning has been shown by actual deeds, that I was appointed to write for you a brief history of the popu lar support that has been given the West Extension by the people who know most of the government recla mation work here, and the character of the proposed west extension. The editor of the Irrigation Age wrote, after years of travel and in vestigation, that the desert sand soils are the richest and most enduring of any soils in the world. The forces in them are latent and need but to be released by chemical action to be come the most fertile of all lands. Because of this fertility of the soil; because of the mild climate in such latitude; of the low elevation; of the excellent transportation facilities and nearness to market we have estab lished our faith in the country, and since the cry of the time is "back to the land" and the demand of the age is diversified farming, we know of no greater opportunity to satisfy the calls and needs of the people, which is the purpose of good government and which makes good history. August 25th, 1909, the secretary of the interior withdrew from entry lands now In the west extension. For some months these rands had been open to the public, but for much longer prior to that period they had been in a reserve. The placing of them back into a reserve raised quesilon in our minds as to what the government had up its sleeve. So, we as citizens of the immediate vicin ity began to figure a little and in quire. We got a hint or two, and with a hunch . or two made a long guess or two and went to work to promote the construction of the West Extension of the Umatilla project; or, in lact, the real original Umatilla project. We believed, that, as citi zens of the first division of the Uma. tilla project, it was our duty to rep' resent as well as we could the popu lar sentiment side of the question. We believed that other things were ne cessary than the creiiion of a re serve and the engineering feasibil ity. There must be a demand shown for such great public works, and we set about to prove to the authorities In control that there was such a de mand. We knew hat the feasibil ity or unfeaslbllity of the extension would be presented by the reclama tion service. With that we had little to do, but we did know other merits ot ihe enterprise, and we have done all we could to present them on all occasions. On November 17, 1909, a mass meeting was held in Hermiston in the form of a banquet like this. One o our congressmen was present and we presented the matter and urged and received a promise of his hearty support. At that meeting, a num ber of Pendleton citizens were pres ent and invited us to attend a similar meeting in Pendleton on November 27th. A large number of Hermiston citizens went to Pendleton, and also citizens from Umatilla and Irrlgon It was a big" meeting and Pendleton pledged Its unanimous support to the cause. A committee of ten wast ap pointed by the president of the Pen' dleton Commercial club five from Pendleton and five from this locality. This committee raised funds in Pen- cwaMA- All sums under $50 cash; over $50 time will be II UMIIub given'until October 1st, 1912, on approved notes bearing 8 per cent, interest. 3 per cent, oft tor cash. FKEE-LMWCM-AT NOON STOUFE R, Ourior, E.L. SMITH, Clerk. Co!. Vm. F. Yohnka, AUCTIONEER rtgon for Its work. We began to pe tition the director of the reclamation service, and the secretary of the In terior. A sub-committee of three prominent and influential citizens of Pendleton was selected by the com mittee of ten to go to Portland and arouse Interest among the organized bodies of that city, and with the press, and a statewide campaign was thus inaugurated. A great demand went up that Oregon, the greatest contributor to the reclamation fund. be recognized. Then congress con vened. Senator Borah - proposed the thirty million dollar bond issue. We urged again the appropriation for the West Extension, but Mr. Balling. er, unfortunately did not sleep well on It over night. The proposed bond Issue was cut to twenty million, and the army board rtder was put on. In due course of time the army board of engineers arrived. They were shown about, and we banqueted them. ed, and only 110 could be seated, but nearly two hundred were present that evening. Including many from surrounding towns. The governor of the state, J. Bowerman, came and pledged the dignity and support ot Oregon to the cause. Judge Wallace McCamant, In a brilliant speech, pledged the unanimous support of the city of Portland, and Senator Chamberlain and Congressman Ellis pledged their support as members of congress. Other prominent citi zens of the etate came to Hermiston to add the support of their localities and demand a Just recognition from the national government of our rights; of our claim on the reclamation fund, to which we had given so liberally through bur resources. Things mov ed on. The army board went around and you know the result. Idaho with its great Borah's thumb pulled out a splendid plum. Montana with its faithful Tom Carter and other slates that had no bearing plum trees ate the fruits of our resources. Ore gon with a body of land so rich that it could maintain a family on every ten or twenty acres, was neglected for Montana, Wyoming and Idaho, where at leaat eighty acres is neces sary. Oregon with lands that "no man dates estimate the possible val ues thereof" was sidetracked for land that can never be made to yield divi dends on over J 100 an acre. Oregon land, with almost tropical climate, in a vivacious latitude, was forgotten for stretching plains with hard winters and short summer seasons. w with both water and rail transporta tion easily settled, near to big mar kets and the Pacific ocean, the great highway of trade were patronizingly passed up as O. K., but the money must go elsewhere. Well, we had fought a good fight, we had kept our faiih, but we had ftniahoA our coarse. That was nia in tn ee. We had some political sense. We had a lot of courage and we refused to be humiliated. We tightened our belt another hole and ombraced the fray once more. Up to this time, Portland and western Oregon support had been more or less luke-warm. The Portland Com mio nriranlzations had said: "We ivl-i hPln von all we can on the quiet but we do not want to draw me um nnhlielv. lest we antagonize Kiamam, and that trade that we are teasing will flv away down to San Francisco. But the turn-down by me hoar threw down all obstacles, ine state o' Oregon had been insulted, and Portland awoke. Portlana new spa res, hpcame frenzied. Prominent Portland citizens went to Washing ton. J J. Hl'l was then entering Ore gon, and Howard Elliot called on the president. Things got warm. We her began to have the Ilgnt iaen off our shoulders somewhat, but we unf husv. Letters were sent iff Washington, and petitions were again renewed. Our members In congress were kept in action, or as nearly so as we could do, and as a result our appropriation of $50,000 was made for surveys which partly pacified us nnd we waited all summer for the fi nal report. Then like a cloud out of the clear sky arose opposition to the West Ex tension within our own camp. Out at a farm house on the proposed res ervoir site, four men formed one of the Umatilla River Water Users' as sociation; then another, and another, and yet another association was in spired and formed by the promoters of the first. A few newspapers began a frenzied attack and frightened a number of water users out of their wits. We, of Hermiston, took no no tice of the turn of affairs for a time because we knew' the motives and causes- But the noise grew louder, and we began to fear that our silence was being considered as sympathy with the movement. The Commercial club of Hermiston called a mass meet ing in the form of a smoker and an nounced the object. Nearly 300 cit izens and settlers attended. Resolu tions denouncing the opposition and renewing our unqualified support were adopted and signed unanimous ly by all present, and forwarded w the president and seretary of the in terior. Then the opponents of the West Extension Induced the Pendle ton Commercial club to reconsider its resolutions of two years ago and to sit an a 1urv. so to speak, while the opponents and supporters of tne wesi Extension argued the question. Her miston secured a speetal train, and with Irrlgon and Umatilla, went to the meeting 125 strong. They won the decision from the Pendleton Com mercial club. It was a dramatic oc casion, and the enthusiasm of the west enders plainly showed the strength and unanimity of their sup port. The fallaciousness of the argu ment of the opposition was made ap parent and they began to quarrel among themselves. Personal inter ests charged betrayal, and different factions sought to discover new ar guments: shifting their positions from time to time as one after anoth er point fell from want of logic. The broad policy of general good was ig nored and selfish motives only guid ed their acts. They continually re fne,i fo face the actual facts, and have been on the run ever since they j were routed In Pendleton last De cember. Shortly after that meeting came the announcement that you, gentlemen, had been chosen as a board to review the facts and consider the report of the engineers' work of the West Ex tension In 1911. Tou are here ful filling vour duty, and we most heart ily congratulate you on the consider ation vou have shown the public. Tou have listened to the claims urged by the opposition as well as to the ar gument in favor of this splendid en terprise, and we feel confident your best judgment will prevail. We be lieve you will be able to sift out the real facts and true motives and that In a short time dirt will be flying on one of the best tracU of lnnd In the northwest. go nn boor as a Jobbing Centre Glioico Form Lands (Vancouver News-Adv., Jan. 13.) Too great Importance cannot be at tached to the movement now on foot for a railroad connecting Vancouver with Fort George and the Peace River country. This Is the opinion of a num ber of the leading business men ot s the city who gave their views to a representative of the "News-Advertiser" today. By the construction of this line, a long step will have been taken toward assuring Vancouver of com mercial preeminence on the Pacific Coast of Canada. With the opening of this railway, wheat, coal and other products of the Peace river country and the central interior will be shipped to Vancouver' either for local consumption or ex port, and in return Vancouver will send North her lumber and commer cial goods of all kinds, shipped here from abroad. In other words, Van couver will be a metropolis of the North, as Edmonton hopes to be, un less this Vancouver-Fort George line Is rushed to completion. It is expected that during the pres ent session of the legislature the pre mier will make an Important an-. nouncement concerning the railway policy of this government. FORT GEORGE is the geographi cal and stragetic commercial center of British Columbia, Canada's larg est and richest province. All railroads building through the Peace river or Central British Col umbia must go through FORT GEORGE In order to maintain water . grade. Therefore FORT GEORGE must be a great railroad center. FORT GEORGE is the supply point for an immense territory rich In agri cultural, timber and mineral resourc es, and will be able to compete with Edmonton and eastern cities for the trade of the Peace River country as well as the whole of Central and Northern British Columbia. FORT GEORGE is at the Junction of the Fraser and Nechaco Rivers, with 1100 miles of navigable water ways. With the opening of the Panama Canal, freight rates to FORT GEORGE will be lower than to Ed monton, thus making FORT GEORGE a great wholesale and Jobbing center. FORT GEORGE will be one of the largest cities In the West. An enor mous development will take place dur ing 1912. For further Information apply tt Teutsch & Bickers, agents for East ern Oregon and Eastern Washing ton, for the North Coast Land Com pany Limited, Vancouver, B. C. then he answered: "Yes, most cer tainly I will." Thus Morra Potter, twenty-three years of age, employed in the insu lating department of the General Electric Works here, says she pop ped the question fo Robert James Reece, twenty-two, of this city. They appeared at tte office of City Clerk Hull and Miss Potter asked for a' marriage license. Then she made a certified statement of her leap year proposal and will win $500 in prizes offered by local merchants through the Pittsfield Journal to the first leap year bride lu this city. "We have been lovers for five years," said Miss Potter, "but some how Robert didn't seem to have 'gumption' enough to propose. When I saw a chance to get $500 in prizes I made up my mind I would take ad vantage of leap year and I Just did." Miss Potter is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Potter, who moved to this city from Hosick Falls, N. D.. three years ago. She is a blonde and has a winsome manner, as her 'suc cess in wooing proves. She Is a reg ular attendant at the Morningslde Baptist church, sings soprano in the choir and teaches a class of boys in the Sunday school. She and Mr. Reece are to have a church wedding here with the Rev. Harry C. Leach officiating. LEAP YEAR PROPOSAL WINS $500 AND A MAN Pittsburg. Mass. "isow. Robert, as we have been going together for the last five years, I think that it is about time we were getting' serious, and as this is leap year, I want to ask you will you be my husband " PENDLETON'S POPU LAR PICTURE SHOW THE COSY Where the entire family can en Joy a high-class motion picture show with comfort. Fun, Pathos Scenic Thrilling All Properly Mixed Open Afternoon and Evening. Changes Sunday, Monday, Wed nesday and Friday. Next Poor to St. Georgo Hotel. Admission 5c and lOo. . UUI vwi..j , ....... He hesitated for five minutes and