The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910, June 09, 1909, Wednesday Edition, Image 3

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AIRSHIPS FOR ARMY
Leading Officers Convinced by
Zeppelin's Achievement.
The Kind You Have Alwavs linno-iir. ini
turo of Clias. II. Fletcher, and lias been made under his
personal supervision for over iiO years. Allow no one
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
J"st-as-goodj are but Experiments, and endanger the
health of Children Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
Boric, Drops and Soothing: Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic ,
substance. Its agre is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverisbness. It cures Diarrhoea and AVind
Colic. It relieves Teething: Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Dowels, giving: healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend.
The KM You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signati
THREE DEPOTS ON EAST COAST
FAIR IS OPENED.
First Day's Attendance at A.-Y,
Exposition 89,286.
Seattle. June 2. Seattle came into
P HONOR TO REGULARS
fcrninyr Speaks on Noted
Field o Gettysburg.
General Allen, Chief of Signal Corps,
to Submit Plans to Congress
Would Patrol Coasts.
ire of
m B1M Seaaaaa
In Use For Over 30
Years.
THK eCNTAUH ,4MMNV. TT MUMMY .TBtCT, NCW YORK CITY.
3E
A flaToring used the same as lemon or vanilla.
By dissolving; granulated sugar in water and
adding Maplejne, a delicious syrup is made and
a syrup better than maple. Mapleine is sold by
grocers. If not send 35c for 2 ox. bottle and
recipe book. Crescent Mfg. Co., Seattle. Wn.
Cleaning Dyeing
VIENNA STEAM CLEANING & DTE WORKS
224-26 Third Street, Portland, Oregon
Clothing tMTMgU?
Wc Cku. Dr ud Carl
Ts km Twr
Oeucd or Dved,
md Mike Ortr SoiM ui OH Ostrica
Follm. Mn'i Fek ai Punas Hah
Qeued ud Blocked. The Cod it Ulk
CMnpand with the results. W as Be lareetl ex
press ud aail order business. Write for psrtksUrl
The Embnrrnialng Troth.
"The vindication of Dr. Harvey W.
Wiley is a great triumph," said a
Washington diplomat, "for pure food.
Dr. Wiley tells the truth, and the truth
Is painful to certain types of food pro
ducers." The diplomat laughed.
"Dr. Wiley was talking the other day
about the painfullness of the truth," he
resumed. "He said it reminded him
of a morning call that he once made
on a young lady In his youth. In an
swer to his ring a tiny tot of a girl
opened the door, and Dr. Wiley said to
ber, as he walked Into the hall :
"'Where is your auntie, Mabel?'
"'Upstairs in her nightie,' chirped
the tot, 'a-lookin' over the balustrade.' "
Well, from 8300 Down.
Wiley I do really need a spring
bonnet
Hubby How
Wifey Well.
from $10 up.
Hubby I'd rather
much "down."
much?
I could
get one for
know from how
C. Gee Wo
The Chinese Doctor
This wondefuf man has
made a life study of the
properties of Roots,
Herbs and Barks, and
is giving the world the
benefit of his services.
A No Mercury. Poisons
&i or Drugs Used. No
ito Operations or Cutting
Guarantees to cure Catarrh, Asthma. Lang,
Stomach and Kidney troubles, and all Private
Diseases of M n and Women.
A SURE CANCER CURE
Just received from Pekin, China safe, sure
and reliable. Unfailing in its works.
If you cannot call, write for symptom blank
and circular. Inclose 4 cents in stamps.
CONSULTATION TREE
The C. Gee Wo Medicine Co.
162V4 first St., cor.JMorrison, Portland, Or.
Mo Objection to Telling.
"Do tell me, Pulsatilla," begged the girt
under the inverted waste basket, "the
Becret of that wonderful bloude bair of
yours. It defies detection."
"I will," said 'the girl under the In
verted coal scuttle, "if you won't tell
anybody else. I selected for my grand
mother and mother two women who bad
hair just like mine."
Sounds Plausible.
"What is your principal object, any
how." asked the visiting foreigner, "in
building that Panama canal?"
"Well," answered the native, "we have
an idea It will limit the size of future
battleships." Chicago Tribune.
A cold on the lungs doesn't usually
amount to much, but it invariably pre'
cedes pneumonia and consumption,
Hamlins Wizard Oil applied to the
chest at once will break up a cold in a
night.
Glorlona Victory.
"You had a political debate in your
district school building last Saturday
night, Uncle Sime, I understand. How
did it go off?" - .
"We win. Whenever the other fellers
tried to talk we turned loose two dozen
cowbells, a lot o' fishhorns, a bugle, a
bass drum, an' a horse fiddle, an' they
guv it up an' quit. By George, they
didn't git to say a blamed word I"
Washington, June 3. Under the in
struction of Brigadier-General Allen,
chief of the signal corps of the army,
plans have been prepared, it was an
nounced tonight, showing what is neces
sary for the aerial defense of the
United States. If congress would ap
propriate the money he would begin at
three points along the Atlantic coast
Washington, New York and Philadel
phia where dirigible balloons and aer
oplanes would be stationed. At each
point one large balloon and an aeroplane
would be placed. This would require
more than $500,000. General Allen
has had prepared a map showing points
along the other borders of the country
and in the interior where he believes
there should be aerial defense stations.
To carry out the entire scheme would
require about $5,000,000. The war
department is convinced, in the light
of achievements of the Zeppelin balloon,
that aerial navigation has arrived.
In anticipation of favorable action
by congress, the signal corps has been
instructed to prepare the plans re
ferred to.
' 'It is intended," said an army officer
tonight,' "that the coast dirigible shall
not pass off its own station except in
cases of extremity and that the sailing
distance shall be 125 miles south and
125 miles north from its depot. In
this manner the entire coast from Maine
to Florida will be patrolled and in case
of war it will be virtually impossible
for a hostile fleet to approach the coast
of the United States without being
discovered long before the sentinels on
land could see the vessels. Once dis
covered, the fleet's movements could
be watched with safety and with the
use of wireless its maneuvers could be
sent the length of the coast.
"The plans will include an elaborate
system of vertical searchlights, by
which the airships will be guided dur
ing the night flights. - These lights
will mark the various batteries and
the balloon depots and they also will be
used in signaling the swiftly flying
ships overhead. Most of the signaling,
however, probably will be done through
the medium of the wireless.
threatening skies opened the exhibition
that has been the dream of her exis
tence for the past two years. Aside
from this, Seattle demonstrated to the
world that she had become a full
fledged city, capable of caring for ex
position crowds as well as any of the
more Eastern cities that have wrestled
with the problem. In fact Seattle
surprised herself, as well as her thou
sands of visitors today, and acquitted
herself well in everything.
The gates at the fair grounds opened
at 8 o'clock in the morning and there
was a crowd on hand to rush them in,
though there was nothing on the day's
program until 10 o clock. But the
crowd didn't care ; it surged through
the gates at a rate that promised well
for the attendance figures, and it kept
surging in just that way for the rest
of the day.
At 10 o'clock the military and naval
pageant commenced, soldiers and sail
ors of the Union as well as the Wash
ington guardsmen acting as escorts to
the exposition officers and visiting
Japanese officers in a parade about the
grounds. The parade pleased all, and
passed the reviewing stand in the best
of order.
The first days' attendance at the ex
position, according to figures given
out by the management tonight, was
89,286. The greater part of this was
in the daytime, more than 79,000 per
sons passing through the turnstiles be
tween the opening hour and 6 o clock
tonight. The night attendance was
cut down by a severe rainstorm,
STRIKERS GAIN GROUND.
DR. T. P. WISE
DENTIST
Crown and Bridge Work a Specialty
208-209 Merchants Trust Building
126V4 Washington, cor. Sixth PORTLAND. OR
DAISY PLY KILLER
pi a eel ay
w her?- attract
I andkllUall flit.
nat, clean, orna
mental, con Ten
ent.t'hfmp. Laati
all Made
of metal, cannot
pill or tip OTr,
will not soil or
Injure armhirwr
Guaranteed affeo
ure, vr an eaien or tens prepaid lor w oenu.
HAROLD S0MERS. 150 DeKalb Avu.. Brooklyn. N. Y.
(rRE$CEIMT fePWhate
BAKING HUWUtKl
WOl DO All
THAI ANT
NGHrfJCED
rOWDOt WILL
C DO AND
DXKTBKTTO
Capture Light Plant, and Place City
in Darkness.
Sisson, Cal., June 3. While state
troops are on the way to McCloud to
suppress lawlessness, the power house
and lighting plant at that place were
captured by the striking shingle mill
hands today, and the town is in dark
ness tonight. Between three and four
hundred armed strikers marched on the
plant in a body late tonight, drove off
the 25 armed deputy sheriffs on guard,
and took possession, compelling the
men at work to quit. The deputies re
ceived warning of the intention of the
strikers to capture the plant, but they
deemed it useless to attempt resistance
and left when ordered to do so. Not a
shot was fired and no one was hurt.
Six hundred strikers formed in line
and paraded the streets this afternoon.
There was no disorder, but, with ban
ners flying, the men tremped by the
company's store and offices as though
on review.
Sheriff Howard admitted this after
noon that he needed .help to handle the
situation. In reply to the sharp criti
cism of Governor Gillett, who declared
that the peace officer should have ar
rested the ringleader, he said that to
have done so would have precipitated a
riot he could not hope to quell and
which must have resulted in the loss of
human life.
OPPOSED TO REDUCTION IN ARMY
Expects Congress, With Aid of Hot
Weather, to Adjourn by June
20 Monument Unveiled.
DR. W. A. WISE
& Tears a Leader In Painless Dental
Work In Portland.
Out-of-Town People
SHORTAGE IN LEWISTON BANK.
Discovered by Bank Examiner Stock
holders Make Good.
Lewiston, Idaho, June 2. Defalca
tions amounting to $137,000 have been
found on the books of the Lewiston
National Bank by National Bank Ex
aminer Claude Gatch.
Clarence Robnett, former teller, and
J. E. Chapman, former bookkeeper,
are accused of responsibility for the
alleged shortage. Robnett was con
victed of Idaho land frauds three years
ago and is said now to be in St. Paul
Chapman is thought to be in Tacoma.
Pittsburg dispatches about ten days
ago accused Bobnett of passing worth
less checks to cover land deals near
Spokane. It is alleged that his short
age in the bank is due to speculations
in irrigated lands.
Beyond the statement that the stock
holders of the bank have made good
the alleged shortage, Bank Examiner
Gatch refused tonight to discuss the
si tuition.
Examination of the books show the
alleged embezzlement has been carried
on for the past five years and has been
made possible without detection only
through the conspiracy of the teller
and bookkeeper, and the manipulation
of the adding machine used in comput
ing the daily balances.
Zeppelin Airship Wrecked.
Goeppingen, June 2. After cover
ing a distance of about 850 miles in 87
hours. Count Zeppelin's airship, on its
return trip from Bitterfeld to Fried
richBhafen, came to grief in an open
field near here today. In maneuvering
for a landnig the airship came into
contact with a tree.
The damage to the airship is much
more serious than was at first beleived,
A cursory examination directly after
the accident showed that the envelope
had been torn and it was thought that
the injury could be repaired and that
the vessel would proceed tonight. A
more careful examination, however,
disclosed that the prow was broken
and that considerable time must elapse
before the journey can be resumed,
Gettysburg, Pa., June 1. Yesterday
was the day of tardy honor to the "reg
ular ' at Gettysburg. An imposing
shaft of granite, erected by congress
to the memory of those of the regular
armv who fell in the three davs' battle.
was unveiled by the president's daugh
ter, Miss Helen H. Taft, while the
president paid tribute to officers and
men of the United States army, past
and present.
The president puts himself on record
opposed to any reduction in the
standing army. He told of the preju
dice that often had arisen againBt the
possible aggressions of a regular army
and a professional soldiery, and of th
corresponding difficulty in arousing
that love and pride in the army which
expresses itself today and baa fre
quently expressed itself in the past in
behalf of the navy. The president as
serted that the services of the regulars
had never been commemorated ade
quately by congress or the nation.
"The profession of arms always has
been an honorable one," he declared,
"All honor to the regular army of the
United States. Never in its history
has it had a stain upon its escutcheon.'
On the way to Gettysburg from
Pittsburg, the president's car was side-
tracted at York for two hours and dur
ing his stay he made a brief address.
in which he declared again his hope for
the early enactment of a tariff law,
adding:
"I have been called an optimist for
predicting that congress would adjourn
by June 20. Perhaps 1 am. But if
the Lord is good to us and the weather
gets hot enough in June, I think our
national legislators will be mighty
glad to get out of those two close
chambers at Washington."
Four regiments of the regular army
were here to participate in tne exer
cises. There also was a personal es
cort to the president composed of vet
erans of the regular army who fought
in the Gettysburg campaign. The
president was taken for a drive over
the battlefield. At several points he
alighted and stood on the prominences
overlooking the valley below and the
mountains in the far distance.
The ceremonies of the unveiling
were simple. Miss rait punea toe
silken cord that released the flags
draped about the monument. In fall
ing one of the flags caught on a bronze
eagle decorating one of the inscribed
tablets. A trooper gave the flag
tug, but it could not be released until
a large hole had been torn in the folds
of the stripes. After the president'
speech, Secretary Dickinson presented
the monument to the battlefield com
mission. After the unveiling the pres
ident reviewed the troops. A mounted
battery of artillery which recently
served in Cuba was a source of much
interest. When the review was con
cluded, the president hurried to his
train.
Should remember that our force Is so arranjred
that WE CAN DO THEIR ENTIRE CKOWN,
BRIDGE AND PLATE WORK IN A DAY if
necessary. POSITIVELY PAINLESS EX
TRACTING FREE when plates or briiltrea are or-
a red. WE REMOVE THE MUST SENSITIVE
TEETH AND ROOTS WITHOUT THE LEAST
PAIN. NO STUDENTS, no uncertainty.
For the Next Fifteen Days
We will rive you a good 22k cold or porce
lain crown for sa.wj
22k bridge teeth 8.60
Molar crown 6,00
Gold or enamel fillings 1.00
Silver fillings 60
Good rubber plates 6.00
The best red rubber plates 7.00
Painless extractions Ml
ALL WORK GUARANTEED IS YEARS
.IMim,JlTO.WWp,W,,1.,11..,.,,,,W,,.
f )
i
Dr. W. A. Wise
President and Manager
The Wise Dental Co.
(INC.) Third and Washington Sts.
PORTLAND, OREGON
Cheap Riding;.
Uncle Zoke (back from the city)
You talk about cheap ritliu'I I rode
twenty miles on a street k'jrar, an' all
It cost me was a nickel.
Uncle Jed Gosh I That ain't noth-
In'. When I was thar last year I rode
to the top of the tallest bulldln' In
town an' It didn't cost me a blamed
centl Chicago Tribune.
Mothers will find Mrs. Winston's Boothlna
Syrup the best remedy to use lot their children
luring tha teething period.
A Grave Doubt.
Caller So your cook has passed
away to a better place.
Hostess Yen. but I don't know If
she'll stay ; poor Bridget was very hard
to suit. Boston Traveler.
You Can Get Allen's root-Case fREC.
Write Alien S. Olmsted La Riw. N V tnr a
free sample of Allen's Foot-Ease. It cures
sweating, hot swollen, aching feut. It makes
new or tight shoes easy. A curtain cure for
corns, ingrowing nans and bunions. All drug.
, 11. 2DU.
gists soil It.
Don't accept any substitute.
Bless Her!
When lovely woman buys a bonnet
Constructed of some shredded bay
She piles a lot of fruit upon it
And walks along the Gay White Way.
New York Evening Mall.
PITC Dsnce ana orrons uiseeso psrauv.
II 1 J neatly cared lr Dr. H .toe's Great Nerve B
storer. Hand for FREE sl.00 trial bottle and treatise.
Dr. R. H. Kilns. Id., 931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa,
A pprehenal ve.
Fellow Statesman Senator, that
speech of yours in favor of the Income tai
was one of the strongest arguments I
ever heard.
Eloquent Senator (with some uneasi
ness) You don't think it changed any
votes, do you? Chit-ago Tribune.
PUT LINCOLN ABOVE ALL.
DO YOU WANT A TYPEWRITER f Tht
Wholesale Typewriter Co,, 87 Montnomery St,
San Francisco, will sell you one at 40 to 76 pel
cent discount from factory list, all makes on mar
ket, all fully guaranteed.
The Nova Scotia government has ap
pointed a commission to examine into and
report on the feasibility of old-age pen
(ions for workmen.
Rockefeller Has No Kick,
Tarrvtown. N. Y.. June 2. Action
of the Tarrytown tax assessors in add- were closed in order that tribute might
insr an item of $150,000 to the assess- be paid the nation's dead, ihepnn-
ment of John D. Rockefeller, did not cipal exercises were at Arlington, un
perturb him in the least. This was der the auspices of the G. A. R. Every
grievance day for the taxpayers here, grave was marked with an American
A FULL POUND 25c
Get It from
your Grocer
Guaranteed trader
all Pare) Food
Laws
Jaqnea Mfg. Co.
Chicago.
) DAKinfi -FODDER l
I ( Stands for
)' Quality ;
r
1
.cQUMCESr
LlfiCJ
r .ar
Economy
Purity
In providing the family's mcals,don't
be satisfied wltn anything out tne
best KCbguaranteed perfec
tion at a moderate price. It
makes everything better.
'Perfect
or
Money back.
German Anarchists Meet.
Leipsig, June 8. The Anarchists of
Germany are at present in conference
here and the attendance is large. To
day the congress adopted a motion de
claring that membership in any church
or religious sect was contrary to the
principles of anarchy and called on all
anarchists to cease their membership
in churches. Dr. Friedborg, of Ger
many, read a paper in which he said
I the cultural goals of anarchy t-bould be
fought for by cultural methods. The
discussions were purely academic and
the police did not interfere.
Jail for Wife Deserters.
Los Angeles, June 3. Probably the
first prosecution in the state making
wife desertion a misdemeanor punish
able under maximum sentence by two
years' imprisonment in the pemten
tiary or a fine of $1,000 was begun in
Los Angeles today. The law was
passed by the last legislature and be
came effective May 1. The case is
that of Lester L. Adams, of Eagle
Rock, who is charged with deserting
bis wife and their two children.
. Trv and see. J
Empress Honors Women.
Tokio, June 3. -Misses Isabella and
Mary Prince, pioneers in education of
women in Japan, have received practi
I cal recognition of their long and faith
ful services from the empress. Tbey
are now about to return to America af
ter having been here for more than 20
I years without a visit borne.
Hollingsworth Protests Against Honor
Paid Jeff Davis.
Washington, June 1. Memorial Day
was generally observed nere yester
day. All the government departments
and practically all the business bouses
but Mr. Rockefeller not only failed to
register a protest, but through a repre
sentative, announced he was well sat
isfied with the valuation of ?545, 898
on. his country place. The new stone
mansion just completed is assessed at
$250,000.
Oil Found in Arizona.
Yuma, Ariz.,' June 4. Locators of
oil lands who have returned to Yuma
from the scene of the discoveries near
Tacnac report immense excitement in
that district. The original find -was
made by Henry Laudemsilk, who,
cleaning out the shaft of an abandoned
mine a few days ago, found on the
110-foot level a fluid he believed to be
oil. His decision was confirmed by
others and the news of the find spread
rapidly. Every foot of land in the
vicinity baa been filed Upon. An oil
expert will visit the district'
Auto Goes Bottom Up.
Walla Walla, June 2. As the result
of an automobile turning topsy turvy
yesterday afternoon, Mrs. Henry Heis-
ler, of this city, is seriously injured
and is not expected to live, while her
hubsand is also in a critical condition,
Mrs. Heisler was attempting to drive
the machine and in rounding a curve
threw on all the power instead of shut
ting it off as intended. In her fright
she turned the steering wheel in the
wrong direction..
Shocks Felt In Panama.
Panama, June 2. A slight earth
auake shock was felt here about 8
o'clock today. At 7 o'clock this even
ing a much stronger movement oc
curred. No damage baa been reported.
The weather is extraordinarily hot
flpg, while flowers were strewn every
where. Appropriate exercises also
were conducted at the Soldiers' Home
National cemetery and other burial
places in the city.
At the Soldiers' Home Represent
ative Hollingsworth, of Ohio, was one
of the speakers. He referred to the
recent discussion in the house when he
protested against placing the head of
Jefferson Davis on the silver service of
the battleship Mississippi, declaring
that "it would be a dark day indeed
for the republic when the name of
Abraham Lincoln ceases to be revered
above all other figures of the civil war
period, or when it shall be replaced by
that of Jefferson Davis in the hearts
and affections of the American people,
The thought of it is as shocking as the
first thrill of horror that followed the
firing on Sumpter."
Wireless 8avea Steamer.
Guymaa, Mex., June 1. Through
the use of wireless telegraphy, the
American steamer Precursor, rendered
helDless by a broken propeller, was
rescued from a dangerous position and
towed into this port yesterday. The
Precursor had drifted aimlessly for
three days. A tug was sent out and
brought the steamer into port Some
of the passengers had become uncon
trollable from fear and bad to be
locked in their staterooms.
Spain to Try Reform.
Madrid. June 1. A bill providing
for the reorganizatoin of the Spanish
postal service was adopted by the
chamber of deputies today. The bill
nrovides for lower postal rates, a par-
eels post, a money order system and a
1 postal savings bank system.
Nan
plot.
Fan That's
Isn't it?
Cooking Up a
-I like a play
Iteason.
with a stirring
the kind that thickens,
PIMPLES
"I tried all Vimh of blood remedies
which failed to do me any good, but I
have found the right thing at last. My
face was full of pimples and black-heads.
After taking Cascarets they all left. I am
continuing the use of them and recom
mending them to my friends. I feel fine
when I rise in the morning. Hope to
have a chance to recommend Cascarets."
Fred C. Witten, 76 Elm St., Newark, N. J.
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken, Weaken or (Jrlpa,
10c, 2Sc, 50c. Never sold In bulk. The genu
ine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to
curs or you money back. Sii
COFFEE!
TEA SPICES
BAKINO POWDER
,o EXTRACTS ,
VJUST RIGHT
CLOSSETflDEVEM
A CURE FOR FITS
The Treatment Is to Accomplish
What Sc'ence Hat Been Strug
gling to Attain for Centuries
The Intone Interest that haa bam manlfaatad
th oua-ho.it the country or th wonderful cures
u.at are belns accomplished dallr by epileptcide,
still continues. It la really surprising tha vast
number of people who have already been cured C
fits and nervousness. In order that everybody
may have a chance to test the medicine, larce trial
bottles, valuable literature. History of Epilepsy
and testimonials, will be sent by mall absolutely
free to all who write to the Dr. May Laboratory,
648 Pearl Street. New York City.
PNU
NO. 24-0
WHEN writing; to adrertlsers pleas
anamilea this paper.