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KH1IIT PAGES. DAILY EAST OltEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. MONDAY, .TITLY 5, 1909. PAGE FIVE. FTfc . 700 Pairs Men's, Women's and Children's OXFORDS In Black, Tan and Oxblood on sale Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sat urday at Less Than Whole sale Cost Stock up to last all summer F. . Livengcod & Co. FHEE LOVE ENDS COLONY'S LIFE rAOOMA SETTLEMENT BREAKS UP AFTER TWENTY YEARS arm Consisting r 217 Acres Will Be Bold Colony is. Began iy so cialists Who Decide "To jiuvc All Things in Oonunon" Colony i- Luler Moved unil Attempt Made to Kstuhlisii Industries Free Love nod Anarchy is the Lust step. LOCALS TF.IXS OF CKUELTIES OF WHITE SLAVS TRAFFIC Pastime pictured pleaae all. Hock Spring coal, Henry Koplttke. Watch Tallman ''lruB store corner. Beddow St Miller, exclusive plumb ers. See Henry Koplttke for Rock Springs coal. Phone Main 178. For Sale Feed and ch.ip mill, practically new. Inquire this office. If yiu want good dry wood, ring Dp Henty Koplttke, phone Main ITS When In need of plumbing ring BtddOW & Miller, phone black, 3569. Automobile stage to Lehman springs. Inquire Pendleton Auto Co, More moving plCtttfM shown than any other theatre In the city the Pastime. For n-tit Three furnished house- keeping rnoma. tnqulrs 205 West Webb. Six houses and three tents for rent. Inquire of Mrs. K. O. Curren, Ocean Park, Wash. For rent Four room cottage, good location and condition. Inquire 100 K. Hluff street. Prompt plumbing wark at right prices. Heddow & Miller, the exclus ive plumbing shop. For the next 10 days we will sell all our summer millinery at cost and below Campbell's Millinery. C. C. Hendricks, agent for the Ver mont Loan & Trust company, will place loans on Umatilla farm lands. Header boxes, feed racks and cook shacks made right and on short no tice. Prices are reasonable. Pen dleton Lumber Yards. Are you going camping? If so, how Is your outfit? Will you need a tent, stove, hammock, gun, fishing tackle, ammunition or camping outfit? We have a fine line and Just what you want. Come in and see us. LaDow & Peterson. Proper glasses will put a stop to that constant head ache. If your eyes are weak and watery they aeed glasses. If you are wearing glasses and continue to sur fer such troubles then your glasses are wrong. With a practice In Pen-, dieton extending over 6 years we are prepared to give you dozens of ref erences. Eyes examined free. Prices reasonable. Dayton Pros., eye special ists, over French Restaurant. Chicago, July 5. Telling a story of horrible cruelty, Kiia Qlnbles, the pret ty IS-ycar-old Irish lacemaker, who Id accused of stealing lace from Miss A gms Barretts, her former employ er, went on the witness stand today In her own behalf. The girl is th ama who recently created a great sensation when she was found bound and gaged in a bathroom in the Hotel Wellington. Three times during the time she was on the witness stand she was over come with emotion and had to be re vived by a physician before she could continue her story. The girl said that on the evening of January 4 of this year. Miss Barretts, requested ln-r to come to the Welling ton, promising that she would pay her money due her as wages for her work In lo r lace establishment. When she went to the hotel, she al l ged. Miss r.arrctte and Mrs. Cecelia Kenyon locked her in a room and tried to Induce her to become a "white slave." When she refused, she said, they pretended to search her for valu ables they alleged she hail stolen and during the process, choked and beat her. She was making a hard fight to es rape when a man entered the room and helped the women heap indlgnl ties upon her. Her cries were smother ad with a pillow and she could not summon help. Finally thev took her money from her and let her go, half clad, she al leged. She then related the Incidents that led up to her discovery by the police In a bathroom In the Wellington ho tel. She said she had tried to enlist and to prosecute her tormentors but had failed. Mrs. Kenyon has died since the time when the Incident described by the girl are alleged to have tuken place The courtroom was crowded today when the girl told her story. Most of the spectators were women and many bandkercMefl were in evidence much of the time. Switzerland protects one of its greatest natural resources by a law forbidding the transmission Into for eign countries of electricity generated by water power, except upon a per mit granted by the federal council, re vocable, Is necessary for the public good. Watch Tallman drug store corner. KOEPPEN is showing something newjin LCOHOL Gas Stoves that are money savers The home kind and the camp kind. "The Drug Store That Serves You Best." 1 Tucoma. The communistic or an archistic colony at Joe's buy, after a life of 20 yours, is a thing of the past. The. entire 217 acres, compris ing the farm and settlement site of the colony has been platted and will be placed on the market und sold. . The colony had Its beginning near Katoiivllle. in the southern part of Pierce county, where a number of socialists ucquired lund and, amal gamating their holdings, "had all things In common." After a trial of five or six years the colony remov ed to Joe's bay, and attempts were there made to build up a typical com munistic industrial community. Hands were held out to any person who wished to unite with them who ap peared to be sincere. A sawmill was started and various kinds of manu facturing undertaken. The colony appeared to be unable to puss a certain milestone of pro gress, and the same was true in the matter of expansion of membership und property owned. This was due In purt to a constantly changing membership. There was nothing to hold any one after he grew tired it life at the colony, a fundamental principle believed In being the In violability of Individual choice. This constant changing kept the mass of the colonists forever in the kinder garten of communistic development. Leader- llTCsted for Fiery Talk, At the time of the assassination of President McKinley the wave of In dignation against anarchists, com munists and socialists resulted in the head men of the colony being arrested and brought before the federal courts here for Incendiary speeches an for writings in newspapers published at Joe's bay. Hut they wi re released, public opinion finally veering in their favor when It was known that the actions were principally instigated by prejudice. The principles believed in by the colonists were multiform Many ad vocated and practiced the doctrine of nonresistance. Others believed in the "strung arm and the knockout." Free love was practiced by miiny, ac cording to reports, and during a number of years the colony's exist ence the marriage tie was msregaru- ed. Many men and women lived to gether by mutual consent and sep arated when one or both tired of the other. In a conscience-stricken spasm a boatload of these one day came here and were married. In the matter of religion there "was a confusion of tongues." many being out and out Infidels and others ad mitting a Deity, but there was a gen eral disbelief In the divinity of Christ and the vicarious atonement. Colony a Financial Failure. Financially the colony was a fail ure. With the rest of the northwest growing with great strides, It stood still. Wave-like impulses of activity would sweep over the colony, during which land would be cleared and In dustrial achievement undertaken. But out of these the colony would drift Into the "doldrums" of Inaction. Many very bright men have belonged to the settlement. to sleep, so he again boarded a car and rode to the end of the line. A frli ndly station offered protection dur ing the night, and Klrner slept on the hard floor of the tiny shelter. Thurs day morning with not enough money to get u light meal, Elmer was found by a kind-hearted man who was early at the station to catch the first car. Hiving the boy a car ticket on which to go home, the man accompanied him to the east end of the Morrison street bridge. Here the Jud took an Oaks car, and was soon wistfully looking over the high board fence which sep arates the pleasure seekers from the "maddening crowd." With the instinct of un experienced traveler without funds, Elmer says he leaned over the fence and his hat fell on the opposite side. Appealing to a friendly officer, he wus allowed to fol low the headpiece, and a few minutes later was permitted to follow Chief Probation Officer Teuscher buck 10 the courthouse. The juvenile court ordered the boy Into the custody of his aunt, Mrs. Mil ler, East Alder and Eleventh streets, It being shown that he had gotten be yond the control of his mother. The Report First National Bank Pendleton, Oregon of the condition, June 1 909, to the comptroller of the currency 23, Condensed 1 1111:1 1 REVIVES HEROIC STORY (aliunt Effort of Sailors to save Com panions Illustrated at Seattle. Seattle. An Interesting story of the wreck of the U. S. S. Saginaw ana the marooning on a small islnnd In mld-Paclflc of the crew In the year 1870, is revived with the exhibit, In the main government building at the Seattle World's Fair, of the sextant. made from scrap, which the volunteer crew of five men used In crossing the ocean 1.500 miles to secure aid. It was after finishing work at the Midway Islands that the V. S. S. Sagi naw started to return to San Francis co. The captain desired to run over to Ocean Island, In mid-Pacific, which wus out of the ordinary track of ves sels. During a rough night the Sagi naw herself was wrecked on an out lying reef of the island, but happily all hands reached shore In safety. Plans were at once made to send a crew of four volunteers under Lieu tenant Talbot I". S. X., to the Hawaii an islands for aid. One good sex tant had be saved from the ship, but as it was believed that the five men would never reach their destination, ii was thought advisable to retain the gond sextant and build a schooner from the wreckage Therefore a sex-t.-.nt was made for the small boat out Of a dial plate from a vacuum gauge, an old copper bolt, wire, etc. The tools used was a hammer, a file, cold eblsel and pocket knife. Sailing and rowing, it required a in .nth of a stormy passage and guid ing the little boat with the impro vised sextant before land hove in sight. It was the Hawaiian group. While trying to land through the breakers the boat was capsized und all hut one drow ned. The American min ister sent n ship at once and rescued the men on Ocean Island. HESOUHCES. Loans and discounts. . $1,349,219.77 Overdrafts 34,931.73 U. S. Bonds 255,000.00 Other bonds and securities Bank building Cash and exchange. 20,826.35 10,000.00 444,700.70 $2,114,678.55 LIABILITIES. Capital stock $ 250,000.00 Surplus and undivided profits 134.267.45 Circulation 238,300.00 Due to banks 17,651.93 Deposits 1,474,469.17 $2,114,678.65 FIVE YEARS GROWTH OF DEPOSED. June 23, June 23, June 23, 1904. 1905 1906 June 22, 1907 June 23, June 23, ..$ 631,042.33 .. 939,990.63 987,861.04 .. 1,053,152.08 1908 1,304,329.50 1909 1,474,459.17 I, Geo. Hartman, Jr., Asa' Cash ier of the above named lank, do solemnly swear that the within statements are true to the best of my knowledge and belief. GEO. HARTMAN, JR., Asst. Cashier. Increase in deposits since statement April 28, 1909, $114,419.39. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 24th day of June, 1 909, C. K. Cranston Notary Public for Oregon. aa44a. 'YTHIAJi WEEK AT EXPOSITION ATTRACTS GREAT GATHERING Seattle, Wash. Pythian week has MAKE DEFENSE OF THE NUDE IN ART -:. I ipi j J I; III OPVSIO-T For Breakfast there Is nothing more toothsome than one of our steaks. When nicely broiled and served with proper vegetables, they make a meal that even Lucul lus would welcome. Our meats nre elected with every care, and patrons can rest assured that, wnether they ill sire I f, mutton, lamb, veal, pork or sausage, they will get not only the best, but get It fresh, juicy and of lus cious flavor, because It is kepi in our il. clean, gUiSs show case. 0?s?!r?! Meal Market Berkeley, Cul., June 5. Clothes are only of value In art In so fur as they convey an Impression of whnt Is be neath them. In other words, they are an impediment of art, is tne de fense of nude artistic expression by Professor Frederick Mortimer Clnpp, of the University of Chicago. His as sertion has created unlimited discus sion In university circles here. Professor Clapp, who has spent years In the study of art In the Eu ropean centers, is staff lecturer at Mr. Rockefeller's university and Is delivering a special series of art lec tures at the University of California's summer session. His defense of art in the nude, following closely upon the discussion In Sun Francisco nrt Ircles during the past week, was made during the course of a lecture. 'The human body In painting," he said, "gives the opportunity of con- eying the most direct message from the master nrtlst to the spectator. We are human beings and our bodies are all Important from the ar tistic standpoint, since they. In their mobility, portray quickest and most sincerely the stream emotion ." attracted the largest fraternal gath ering in Seattle, ever seen in the northwest. In connection with the meeting of the Grand Lodge of the Domain of Washington, a jubilea is being bald and lodge men are attend ing from Oregon, Idaho, Montana and British Columbia In large numbers. Every lodge In this state is well rep. resented. Some Knights from as faf east as the Atlantic coast are alsu here. The coming of the lola drill team from Dayton, Ohio, has been made the big feature. Its presenta tion of the dramatic story of the friendship of Damon and Pythias, on which the order is founded, has beeh attended by large crowds In the nr mory. The monster parade the first of the week, proved to be a noteable turnout. Grand Chancellor Otto A. Case Is well satisfied with the assem bly. The last two days of the week at the exposition will be turned over to the Pythlans. The next big re union is that of the Elks, which comes OH July 27th. All wearers of the ant lers will participate in a circus at the Fair on that day. Many delegates from the grand lodge at Los Angele3 are expected to be here. Prompt and Practical Watch, Clock and Jewelry EPAIRING A. L Schaefer Successor to .Louts Hunzlker. HOTEL PHILIP, Portland, Ore. FOURTH, FIFTH AND UCRNSIPE STREETS. New Management, Phone Main 7&59. European Plan. New concrete building, all outside rooms, trie light, bells, phones. Hot and cold water. 75c PER DAY UP, RATES: SPECIAL Steam heat Elec Free Baths. WEEKLY. New people are constantly arriving iu the Justly celebrated "John Day" valley, as the new extension of the Sumpter valley railway is to be com pleted and In operation to Prairie City by November. STARTS TO SEE THE WORLD. 108 E. Alta St. 'Phone Main 3$. Portland Lad Leaves Home Willi SI. to In His Pocket. Portland. Attacked by the wander lust while he bad $1.10 In small change In the pockets of his well worn overalls. Elmer Black, aged 11 years. residing with his mother al East Ai der and thenth streets, slatted Wed nesday to see the world. His Itiner ary led him to Council Crest, to the end of the Wavetiy-Woodstock car line and to the Ouks before the law readied out and demanded a return to the simple life. Elmer had been given a dollar by his mother and in cents by his aunt. Mrs. Miller, residing near the hoy's tome. With adventure in his mind h started out, without telling anybody of his intentions Landing at Council ("rest, he rode the merry-go-round and the "bumpy" railroad until most of his cash M.n i change. I owners. Night overlook him without a place Sfte PACIFIC MONTHLY PORTLAND i OREGON The Leading Magazine oftheWest Beautifully Illustrated Timely Articles Readable Stories. RenJ Jack London's Vivid and Interesting Story Now Running Serially. Articles each month describing the resources and opportunities to be found in the West. Rt.J tkt Stmial Clubbing Oftr is Ihii mar. If you want to ie whs! thf miriT'M is M;c Mote inbscnbios . BM lac coupon y Read the Want Ads. and Locals in this Paper. They May Save You Money and Trouble. THE PACIFIC MONTHLY Portltutd, Oregon Gentlemen: Enclosed U 25c for which you mny tend me three late numbers of your mnjine. THI PENDLETON DRUG CO. IF IT'S GOOD WE HAVE IT After the Celebration. Rest and recuperate among the pine trees at Wenaha Springs Throughly prepared to handle the crowds. You will be entertained royal ly on July 4, 5, 6 and 7. Dancing evenings, music by Johnson's orchestra. Good rooms; fine dining room service; large pool for bathing. J. A. BOR.SE, Proprietor