Image provided by: East Oregonian; Pendleton, OR
About The east Oregonian. (Pendleton, Umatilla County, Or.) 1875-1911 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1904)
SATURDAY’S LOCALS FRIDAY. AUGUST 12, 1904. FAMOUS PENOLETON STAL- A NUW PRINCIPLE IN MEDICAL LION DIED IN VERMONT SCIENCE. For years it has been the practice of med ical nien to treat patients suffering from pile* by locaL external application*. These treat ments give but temporary relief, but have never aitected a positive cure. After months of research and study, ac companied bv actual expenence with various patient*. Dr. C. A. Ferrin arrived at a posi tive conclusion as to the exact action of the various part* of the bowel system, under diderent conditions, »nd when subjected to j various prescriptions. History of the Rise of the Wonderful Pacer Under Frank Frazier’s Able Training—After Fra- and Skillful zier Sold Him He Utterly Failed to Make Good His First Records it was with genuine regret that turfmen and horsemen in Pendleton learned of the death of Chehalis, the ______ _ stallion. for so many famous ______ pacing years (he property of Frank Frazier of He finally prepared that wonderful inter I this city* When the colt Chehalis became the nal remedy known as D r . F errin ’ s P ilk well Srxcinc, which is put up in bottles, retail property of Mr Frazier, that ing at all reliable drug stores for »1.00 each. known horseman little dreamed that 1 one day tbe animal would cause his This internal remedy has been on the mar name as well as its own to be known ket for the past ten years, and in all of that I in every racing stable aud ou every time thete has been but three cases where a track from the Pacific to the Atlanti» positive cure has not been effected. . For it was Frazier's understandiug of Dr. Ferrin’s File Specific is sold under a the driving of the hors«’ that caiis«1«! After positive guarantee by the druggist making ■ him to make such goo»i time the sale, to refund the full purchase price, Chehalis was sold by Frazier the ant providing the remedy fails to cure. This is ma! failed to show up as well as in the absolute proof of its merit. Any man fermer years While driving the hors«’ to sleigh or woman who sutler* from blind, bleeding, itching or internal piles can try this internal and buggy Mr Frazier bec*me con vinced that the stallion was speedy, remedy with the absolute ceitainty that it and he began training him for the will cost nothing unless it cures. Here is ; track As a 3 year-ol<! he raced first what one sutferer says of this wonderful <ia Irvington track at Portland. Ore remedy: in the 2:18 class, takiug third money Of 13 races in which Chehalis start- Dr. C. A. Penis. Helena. Mont -1 wish » thxnk ycu tor die Cura ro-ir won-iertul meUicure ha. dose lor I ed in Oregon in his fifth year. he won me I had the piles s. me 4ra year* and r • Jer the 12. Before the s«»ason closrei he had advice oi a doctor had them removes by rhe k»ile and I lowered his rev'ord to 2:074 felt tree for awhile, but they returned and 1 at once got Dan Patch's two-mile record of 4 17 a bottle ot your Femn’s Pile SpeciSc and one hottie has entirely cured rnr and 1 am uy-oa aa l ever *•». made at Memphis last year, was the Youn truly. first time since 1897 that Chehalis J a . x S cu JV as . was obliged to give up the long dis October 1« I*«. Oucago. Better get a bottle of your druggist today 1 tance championship. During 1897 the and get relief from present and future : famous horse »mashed the world’s 1 two-mile record by going in 4:19%. suffering. ' According to the best critics and horse Da. F errin M edical C o ., II klkna . M ont . : race judges of America, track condi- ’ tions considered. Chehalis two-mile 1 gait was superior to that of Patch. THE NEW ECONOMICAL • That the horse was a beauty none who ever saw him will deny, Of him the Horse Review said, when he first NO COST OF OPERATION. appeared on the grand circuit in lttS: "He is only 15 hands and an inch high and Is rather a light boned horse but In hl* make-up, end to end. he Is a model of beauty, and his conduct at all times would indicate that he know* it. But he not only wears hobbles, but he wears them down on his legs half way between the knees and his el bows. and on his front feet he wears lv-ounce shoes and four-ounce te«* weights.’’ W M Scott, of Helix. Is in the city today A B Rothrock, of Adams, is a guest at Hotel Bickers. I 1» I’a.vne, of Touchet. Wash , ar- rived in Kendleton last night on a brief visit. L H MeLaugtuiu. of Gurdane, H at th«» Biekers today whil«» in the city on business. G. W. Hunt, the well knuwn pio neer stockman, and alialfa tanner of Foster, Is in the city ou business. Mrs E Dunlap yesterday accom patiicil her friend, Mrs C Traver to Yoakum, where she will visit for som» time. County Commissioner Horace Walk er and family of Helix, ware In Pen- dleton yesterday and left this morning for Lehmans Springs to s|>end the summer. John Clark, who is farming one of the Cunningham places near Pilot Rock, has threshed his wheat, which is said to be of excellent quality and quite heavy yield. Jo»1 Counolly ha* over 6000 sheep >n mountain pasture, which is fine this year. He is in town today with 1 bunch of horses which be Is taking ,’rom the Cold Spring* eouutry to the mountains. Seymour Swauger, a well known cattleman and farmer of North Fork. was in the city yesterday evening. xml reports haying over and grain harvest now in progr«»ss in the foot hills of the Umatilla river Frank Michaels, of Pilot Rock, has hreshed 2o0 acre-s of wheat, the quality of which is said to be unusu ally good, and yield heavier than Is common jn that neighl>orhood. though the exact figures could not he learu«»»! William Yohnka, three miles north of Yoakum is about half through har vesting betwi'en 1200 and 1300 acres of wheat '» fa. as he has gone, the average is not less than 30 bushels I per acre, ami the quah.y is excellent I throughout. H cost of the sacks tor the Kraln an«! the warehous«' charges. It is such things as these which make Uniatllla county tartu landa worth $50 to $6" per acre for the land I without improvement». Land is usu ally worth whatever amount of money I SHUNG KEE. OF PENDLETON. it will pay interest on. If every year DETAINED AT PORT TOWNSEND was the »'quill of this, it would only be | a short time when a farm could nut be purchas«’») for less than $100 I»«T C. L COX REVIEWS HISTORY Immigration Inspector J. H. Barbour acre. it >n the City Investigating the Chinaman's Right to Admission 4s a Merchant—Many Chinese Claim to Be Merchants Who Are Plain Cheap Cooks Seeking Admission. Shung K»»«. who declare»» he is a Chinese iirerchant of Kendleton, is in th»- detention shed at Port Townsend. Wash awaiting identification so that he may return to this city. J. H Bar- bour, of INrrtland. in»|H-etor tn charg»*. United States immigration service in Oregon. a< < ompanleri by his Interpre ter. Seld Gain, arrived in Pendleton this morning from I at Grande tor the purpose of inves.tgai.ng the Shung Kee matter. Shung Kee left the United States in 19<»2 for a visi to China. He re- turned a few days ago, but must re main in the detention shed until his ’chow ch««»’’ or certificate is proper ly identified The Chitaman's papers allege that he Is a merchant of the firm of Goey. Tong Y»-ck Comjiany, of Alt* street. Th»- Chinaman may be all right.” said Mr Barbour, this morning, "but we never know until we make an inves tigation 1 recall one Celestial who declared hf* was a Pendleton mvreh- ant and it develop«»d that he *18 a iviok " inspector Barbour »ays that his de- partment ha* all the work it can at tend to at the present time. " W. have b.«n making a number of ar rests,” he declared. declared, "but have been unfortunate in »«uuring conviction. The people of Portland appear to have * sentiment against the arrest of Chi nese who are violating the Immigra tion law* They appear to think we ar»» oppressive I am merely obeying instructions in trying to s«*e th»* laws followed out " Mr Barbour re-mar k»-«l >>n the busy appearance of p.-ndleton. ”1 believe.” | he continued “that Prod Ion is the best town outsid»' of Portland, m this state Baker City and Astoria have to depend the one on It* mines, and the other on its canneries, for an ex- istence Pendleton has natural re source* around ir ’hat make the bus iness " The insp»»ctor and his interpreter will return to Portland tonight OF UMATILLA COUNTY. CANDIDATE FOR INSPECTOR John Rust, of Butter Creek. Will Have Petition Before the County Court In addition io the tn ion» of A H Sund- • rman J E Bean. Jam»-» Hack- and ri P. Gould for stock inspector, be pre-sented to the county court, M th«- next term the people of But l er »■reek will pr<-s»-nt the nam»- ul John Rus t.a» ke»l by a large tuition of r*-pre*< utatlve utative stockm»-n Mr Rust ts a well known citizen tnd la said by his friends to be high !y qualified for the position he seek* HI» i supporter» are making a hard fight ' for his apjolntmenl and will -ome r to the rounty court with what th«^r consider the strongest petition bi e presented by any candidate for ’hf office. Abe Miller < I Pilot Rock, h» acour vd th$ southern portion of Umatilla ounty with J E Bean e petition and ha*» M-» ured a heary support for the nt iBCumbeot, who ia making a ard f t for th* retention of the pn tío® Jack Brigham, whose place Is on the Reservation, about t ight miles from town, ha* in 5<i0 acre* of wheat which is threshing out 25 bushel», and th. quality is fine \(r Brigham cut with 1 header and threshed with a station ary of his own R M Alcorn, who lives 12 miles northwest of Pendleton, has just threshed 300 acres from which he har vested 370« sacks, averaging 135 pound* E»i Ternev and Al Norton of th,- same neighborhood, have rojoyed .about the same yield Robert .Manning who Is farming the NEARING PENDLETON William T» mple place, on Middle Cold Spring*, about nine miles mirth of Three Hundred Men Doing Bench town is today finishing cutting 240 Werk West of M.lton. acres of wheat with iombin<s. The FALSE REPORTS PUBLISHED SOLDIER FROM AFRICA J W Bancroft and E L Gaines average yield is 25 bushy!* per acre, ON LABOR CONDITIONS are urveying and staking the ;>oie Young Scotchman Now in Pendleton and the quality is excellent lor th«- • lectrfr jower company W M Scott ha* returned from Teel Someone Working for trie SpoWesn-an Who Served in Boer War. into I Pendleton Ijvst evening they had Spring* to look after bis wheat crop Review Must Have a Grodge at Yroterday a strapping well-built broai gh' the line down to a point about at Helix. Mrs Scott will remain at Thi* City—The Exaggerated Flood ’ wc young Scotchman dropped into the > an»! a half mil«« this side of Saxe. the springs for some time yet Seven- shoe department at the Boston »tore Reporta Dareaged the City and Now Th« («lea l«:!e* have been strung nearly to ty acres of .Mr Scot t’s wheat was so ¡rnd bought a pair of harvesting «hr*»* Thi* Adds Insult to Injury Havana, ani an i will follow the li line Into badly damaged by the frosts ax to be He discarded the shoes be had been abar.d»>i •ned for Kendleton a* fast as the poles <an be eton as grain and wa< cut f«»r Th»- report published in the Spoke* wearing, and thereby hangs a tale procured M«ssr 1. Bantroft and hay \ -nan-Review to the effect that busl- They are utterly unlike anything in Gaines will ha»e the line surveyed ne«« ha< » ’ »mated at Pendleton, car the shoe line ever before s«en in Pen and staked inio Pen«, .eton some time SUIT CAUSED FIGHT. jP»nter* and builder* are- Idle, and dleton. They are of heavy leather next week. Write today for free illustrated book. | thing* are at a standstill. gnwaJljr I without lates or buttons and are fas Athens Citizen« Engage The ha* succeeded in em- in a Fist‘C will cause many a smile of pity for the Columbia Engineering Works I tened by a strap that fastens around ploying more men during the past 10 igrx>rau<* or di»hon«»»ty of tbe reirre* Encounter Over a Note. 10th and Johnson St*., Portland. Or the ankle On the heel Is fastened a days, and now ha* 3x>o m»*n going at The latest chapter to t-e added to loudent «ho »rot opt such a report xnd near the headquarters east of heavy plate of steel. They were is- from h««e sued tc him while serving in the Eng- the trouble* of Moses Taylor since Miltot A very large par. of the force The fa»’ 1». nut an idle man is to s employed on his wife sued for divorce, occurred in lis'u army in South Africa the rock work and are be found in Prodle ’ or, and there is The nam« of the young man is R Athena Thursday afternoon when the making the bench for the barrel D. McFarquhar He is 25 years old farmer and R. J. Boddy. a butcher, more building in progress right now flume. They are being worked In against whom he has brought action than at any p»-rtod In the history of nigh: and day shifts, so the work is but looks older "Two years’ service in South Africa to recover on a promissory note, met tbe city, since the Court street blocks «01 ng on continuously wil! age a man 10 years.” said Mr Mc in a fistic battle Just what passed were erected som»' »» von and eight years ago. Farquhar He etdiated in January between the two men Is not known, LOST HALF A CROP. »illy a quarter of a million dollars UM. in Ros» vounty Northern Scot but they suddenly began fighting. are now being expended In elegant Frest D d an Immense Amount ©f land, in the Se«x>nd Seaforth Highland Friends stopped the fracas before new building* every brick mason, car- er* and was later transferred to the either man was Injured Damage in Grande Ronde Valley. neater, plumber, painter am! other! Tayor filed suit against Boddy and s»-<ond Scottish Horse He wa« dis 'Fully one-half the grain In parts of charged October 1901. The Victoria his wife in this city Wednesday, to building tradesman Is busy at living Grand Ronde valley was killed by the »»«••* with the h»ari«h<r siege of medal he wear* was awarded for gal collect 51624 38 and costs frost, and much of this frost-bitten building f*»r the M-a»on yet to come. In lantry in the battle of Wittebergen Train is being cut for hay," Is the way th«- construction of three new school Mere Wheat to Be Sown. W tl Howard, an old-time settler ot If all of Britain's defenders are of house«. the same sturdy stuff as this young Union county expressed It y«'*:erday Narcisse Bushman believes that Su»h reports as the following hurt ■’Highlander," Britain would be able considerably more wheat will be sown evening to an East Oregonian repre a city with strangers who do not KNOCKED STUFFING OUT to maintain her supremacy on the ri-servailon this fall than last know the actual conditions, and the sentative I "It is the worst frost tn the history in the first place, the unusually heavy damage done to Pendleton by report* r." splinters, may have AFTER STOCK SHEEP yield for the reservation this year is of Pendleton’s destructive flood, and of the county, and did more damage and broke it been the fate of your carriage whet a great encouragem»-nt. second, a this utterly false report on building than ran be computed in flcires. and yet an abundant crop of all kinds of it was run into by something; but More Nebraska Buyer* Ar* in the large acreage of reservation land lay condition* cannot be computed I fallow this summer because the early "there is balm in Gilead." or there 1» Umatilla Margets. The Spokesman Review whlch eri- «Tain and hay are being harvested "The loss will be felt by some, but pleasure in knowing that in our shop Howard Stevens and L B Hunter. rains forestalled Its being cropped dently “ha* it in” for iendletoB ft will not hurt the general condition you can have it made good as new I of K»amey, Neb., are In the county this s»-ason. and it Is probable that strong, say: if the roun’y. The same mi*for*une We do all kinds of carriage repairing I negotiating for stock sheep If they very nearly all this fallow land will "A large p » t cent of Pendleton’s and blacksmithing in a skillful and | can find what they want they will be sdwn to.wheat this fall instead of >arp»-nters and joiner* are out of cm will probably* not happen again tn ■ superior manner. We set tires with send several thousand head to the waiting to put it into spring <*orps fdoyment owing to the falling off of half century Early frost* are» not common, but a frost as late as this hydraulic pressure; does it better I plains of Nebraska for full feeding the nev year building The prosp»»et» in the spring one 1* a rare thing, in fact something Woes it while you wait; does not burn re.ming winter. were- better than they had ever been never experienced before." or deface your wheels and adds to Heavy Yield for Pilot Rock The tendency of the sheep men to before, but for »ome various reason* the life of the rig. Call and see it bold out for good pric«t* is making Levi Eldridge, of Pilot Rock, has very little of the proposed work has Heppner Family Stricken. work. We have Winona Wagons terms difficult to arrange between threshed 3700 sack» of whAat from i»wtl carried out Several buildings Hacks and Buggies, and Stover Gaso the buyers and producers, but the 250 acre*—an average of approximate hav« been p«»s’pon»-d on account of th The burial in one grave of the two line Engines. little children of Mr and Mrs Mack th« general feeling Is that the sheep ly 32 bushel* to the acre, and the local option law being passed NEAGLE BROTHERS. producers are liable to get a little the quality is excellent. Thia is an unu "Carpenter* are leaving town every Gentry ha* teen the s*<1d»-s’ event of The Blacksmiths. better of the rejtnpromises that arc sually h»*avy yield for the Pilot Rock day. some going to Portland, some to the ; n»' week. On July 27. Guy Ross country, which is not accounted strong B»»i»*e. but the majority ar* going to Gentry the bright little 4-year-o!d imminent. An incident which lends color to on wheat. Off 110 acres of barley. Walla Walla, at which place work is boy, died from dysentery, after a short but painful illness, the ftinera! this belief Is the fact that central Mr Eldridge threshed 1639 sacks—an plentiful and southcentral Nebraska this year average of approximately 34 bushels "With the prosjw»cts of the two being arranged for Friday, the 29th OF PENDLETON. raised an immense crop of forage of to the acre 1 large »chool bouses to be ereete»! soon On that day the baby. Joseph Ray all kinds peculiar to that country, I the two bri»k bhick* now b«’lng con Gentry. ag»»d 2 years, passed away CAPITAL........................................ 570.000 and the facilities of the feeding sheep Large Camping Party. structed and numerous cottages plan front the same complaint. The little SURPLUS....................................... »60,000 men to fatten cheaply and quickly are A party has left town and will camp ned. there will be plenty of employ on«»» were burled in one grave on Frl Transacts a general banking busi greater than at any time for several on Meadow creek, above Htarkey ment in all «if the branches of the day. and the parent* were rendered ness. Exchange and telegraphic trans years prairie in the neighborhood of A. B building trades as soon a* cool w»-ath childless at a blow.—Heppner Ga Mtte. fers sold on San Francisco, New York, Nobles ranch. They will be absent er < «im«-* ” Chicago and principal points in the for a couple of weeks It is one of HOTTEST IN 14 YEARS Shower* of Grasshoppers. Northwest the largest single ramping parties that SURPRISING RECOVERY. Drafts drawn on China, Japan and Corn on the Umatilla Countless numbers of grass hopper» It is com- River Below has left town this season last Europe. Pendleton Is Burned Badly by Hot posed of A D Noble and wife Miss Luther Dehaven Has Use of Both Feet l<egan dropping in the »tret* night and this morning the sidewalks Lizzie Noble. Adam Noble. Alfred Makes collections on reasonable and Does Not Limp. Weather. and store entrances were covered Horn. Chari«-* Bloom. Stella Gilliland terms. Lui her Dehaven the young man with thousands of the insects, dead ' The hottest weather experienced and Gladys Rah» crushed by the whose feet were in 14 years' residence here." is the and alive This reason for this LEVI ANKENY, President. whirls of a box car while he was I «trange phenomenon is not known way B C. Kidder expressed it today, Cutting Partnership Wheat. W. F. MATLOCK, Vice-President. trying to board a train some week* The clouding of the sky and the ap in speaking of the warm wave that G. M. RICE, Cashier. J. Peters and Engem McCoHey are has been caressing Pendleton the cutting 54H« acres nt partnershio wheat ago. has recovered from the effects of proach of a storm is thought may th«’ accident with the most surprising hav»’ caus«*d the hoppers Io seek she! mometers during the pa«f few day« between Middle Cold Springs and “The gardens, and especially the North Cold Springs, which Is averag rapKoiy. He 1» now able to walk, and er Around arc lights the insects corn, are badly crinkled by the heat ing 30 bushels p«r acre, and the qual walk without a limp, and this without were the thickest and within the losing «•ven a toe It was believed and many of them are suffering se ity i* fine. Progress in it is slow on globes and on the ground beneath ORGANIZED MARCH 1. 1889. at the time of the accident that De- verely on the river below town account of the rains and winds of haven wouid of necessity lose both were myriads of dead "Crops are looking well and fruit is CAPITAL.......................................>100,000 ripening rapidly but the green gar some time ago having lodged the feet. Building Machine Sheds. Transacts a general banking business. dens are badly in need of a little grain considerably The accident took place on the out- J Peters, who lives between Col<l Intersst allowed on time deposits. side of the sharp curve at Horseshoe cooler weather for the purpose of Funeral of Thelma Doane Exchange bought and sold on all completing their growth." Bend, and both f»»et were run over Springs and .Middle Cold Springs, is principal points. The funeral of Thelma Doane. the squarely by the wheels of both truck* having a 12-foot windmill erected to Mr. Kidder has resided In Umatilla Special attention given to collec county for a number of years and has 2monthsold »laughter of Mrs. Lillie ot a box car The surgeon who con- replace the mill which blew down some time ago. Mr. Peters has just tions. been a »lose observer and he says Doane, was held this afternoon at troled the case positively refused to that crops and gardens are suffering 3:30 o'clock from Rader's undertaking perform snv amputation, and adjust broken ground for a combined gran ary and machine sheds, which will W. J. FURNISH, President. more from this temporary hot wav»- parlors. Rev. R. H. Coppie. of the ed the broken and dislocated bones J. N. TEAL. Vice- President. First Christian church offlciat»»d. The of the feet as beat he could and sent cost $500, anil is to be completed some than he has ever witnessed before. T. J. MORRIS. Cashier. child’s death occurred last night at the young man to the hospital, where time this fall La*wis l-a<li'ux has the I J. W. MALONEY. Ase’t Cashier. the home of Daniel Shockey. he r«*mained several weeks with his contract for the stone work, including News of Athena. the foundation, and George Riordans feet in piaster casts Athena, Aug. 3. — Mr. and Mrs Fred No. 7301. lias the contract for the carpentering Sue on a Subscription. Treasury Dei>artment Offk« of ComptroUer Kershaw of Milton, have moved to of the Currency. The case of the Fourth of July com- BUMPER CROP REPORTED. Athena, where they will make their Wuhinaton, b C.. Jone 14, 1904. Daily Average 410 Sacks. Whereas, by FatlufTctory evidence, pre home. Mr Kershaw has resumed his mittee against W. H. Sullivan for bls Alva Pierce, w-ho lives near the sented to the under-i^ued it has been old position at the W tc C. R. depot $25 Mubscription was continued yes Tract of Land Near Adams Yields 52 made to appear that The Coin menial Na state line, about 25 miles northwest John Bell’s wheal in Sand Hollow terday for a hearing on Friday, his at- Bushels Per Acre. tional bank of Pendleton,** lorit^d In the of Pendleton. Is cutting 8«X) acres of • ity of Pendleton, In rhe county of Una is averaging 50 bush»!», and Cass Con torney C. H McCulloch, having flle<l The latest big wheat yield* to Im wheat with his own combine, and it Tilla. and state of Oregon, han com nor’s 45 bushels. Hei ry Smith's made a d.’murrer.— Sumpter Report»-r. reported come front James F. Simp Is threshing out between 30 and 35 plied with all the provisions of the statutes 45 bushels, and Link Swaggart's field, son, foreman for Mayor T. A I.leual- bushels per acre. One day this week of the United State», required to be com- The "White Horse Combines." plb*d with before aa a»ao<latlon shall be which was damaged by hail, is averag l» n. say* the Adams Advance. this combine turned out 447 sacks of The Drumheller Brothers, of Walla authorized to commence the business of ing close to 50 bushels. From the 80-acre trai t known a* the grain, and Its daily average has been banking. Walla ar»- operating three larg»> com It is hoped that Athena will avail Now. therefore, I. Thomas P. Kane, dep Ada Adams land and the 80 acre piece 110 sacks «»ver since cutting began. uty ..nd acting comptroller of the curren herself of the opportunity which she bined harv»’sters on Eureka Flats and known as the Charles R urr I c allot cy. d<- hereby <rrtiry that ’The Commer will have later on, to put in electric every one of the 40 horses us»»d about ment. the yharvested 3420 Racks of clai National Bank of Pendleton," located Digging 50 Acres of Potatoes. the machines is pure white, no other in th. city of Pendleton, in the county of lights and power. grain with an average weight of 138 color being found in any of the teams. Umatilla and state of Oregon H authors L. G. Pell and John Ferguson have Some thief visited Charles Gay and pounds of No. 1 wheat. to commence the business of banking. Will Peterson’s offices from the back The first named piece of land is hegtin digging their 50-acre field of po- j ;« m provided in Section Fifty one hundred Grain Was Lodged. and sixty nine, of the Revised Statutes of doors, anti helped himself to a re short the amount of land used for a tatoes on the Armstrong place ad- ' the I nlted tS»ites. volver at each place. No clue was left D. Richmond, near Warren Station, road across the east end, while the Joining town directly on the south. | Jn testimony wb*r*nf witness my hand to show who the thieft was and George Ness, near South Cold second piece had I wo swath of hay The yield Is known to be unusually and seal of office this fourteenth day of Mr. and Mrs. Green Estes, who Springs, had considerable trouble cut cut from the four sides. heavy, but the work has not progress June, 1904. I Seal I T. P. SANK. have been spending the summer at ting their wheat because it had been ed far enough to determine ho»- much ’ The net amount of land cut will be Deputy and Acting Comptroller of Cnr- Kamela, have returned home. lodged by the rain and winds. How about 52 bushels to the acre, Or at It will be per acre. rycy. ever, their average was 25 bushels per the present price of wheat an______ income acre, and the quality is fine. Forty-five Bushels Per Acre. The East Oregonian 1« Eastern Or Thirty-five Bushels to the Acre. of something over $31 per acre. egon’« representative paper. It l«ada Charles McAlavey, who is farming Herman Soule, whose place Is about Another very nice return from a Born to the Brlghama. and the people appreciate It aad John Caplinger's place, one mile east wheat crop In thia vicinity was a draft 10 miles north of Pendleton, has fin Then- was horn to Jack .Brigham received by J. R. Adam* for »4300 ished cutting and threshing 320 acres ahow it by thair liberal patronage. It of Belli, cut 87 acres of wheat which la the advartiaing medium of thl« averaged 45 bushels per acre and the and wife of the reservation August from about 200 acres, which repre- of fin»» wheat which averages 36 bush qutllty is fine 2, a daughter. aectlon. sented the amount r«celv«<l les* th« els to the acre IRRIGATOR Phillips Hydraulic Ram » © ♦ A ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ © ♦ © © ♦ ♦ ♦ © ♦ ♦ © © © © HORSE HEAVEN WHEAT Eighteen to Twenty-five Bushel* on Land Regarded Worthless. II C. Craig, the shipper for the Northwestern company, . has ret urned from a trip Into th»» Horse I Heaven country. He say* the average yield of wheat in Horse Heaven la from 18 to 25 bushels, and the quality Is excel lent on soil four and five years ago supposed to be too light and dry to t>«- of any use whatever. Iu fact, five years ago it was accounted worthless Mr Craig states tnat the wheat in Umatilla county is testing from one to three pounds lighter than last year Mr Craig does not think the acreage sown In this county this fall will equal that of last year, when the farmers felt overconfident about the high price for wheat being permanent, and put In all they could reach. He will not say that he believes the high mark has been reached in acreage of wheat, but merely til«*» the opinion 'hat more was sown last year than ,vil| be sown this. The First National Bank Pendleton Savings Bank ■®Mi In 19 Years' Experience Has Seen the Rise of the Industry Through All It* Phase*—John Vert Brought One of the First Shire* Ever Imported Here—Cox and Frank Frazier Stock. ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ « ♦ ♦ Clearance Sale ♦ ♦ ♦ Summer Regular Regular Regular Regular Regular Regular Regular Minor and Later Imported Blooded Au. 10c 15c 20c 25c 30c 35c 40c value valu»; va! ue val ue value value value summer summer toummer summer summer summer summer dre «A dre«a dre « dre « dre -i dress dress ,«.>.< apron ch« ■ k gltgba . gfxxls goods goods g(XXÎM goods good* goods ............... ................... 5c ............... ..................... 7'/>c ............... ................... 10c . ................... W/aC 15c ............... ................. .................. 17'/zc ............... ................... 20c yard yard yard yard yard yard yard ♦ and colon 5c yard ail siz i ch«- We are showing a new lift«- of ladies' neckwear In all the latest Eastern novelties from 35c to 31 <••• C. L. Cox, the horseruan, talks en tertainingly of the history and pros- pects of the horse industry in I’ma tilla <ounty, after 19 yeara* experience within iti» <enfines at handling every thing from the crudest broncho U> the , rn® th and heavy drafts When Mr. Cox's observations here began hi lbb&# there were just two thoroughbred horses in the county— both Percheruns, in sddition there being stood one grade roadster, which was a fine animal, but by no in* ana a thoroughbred. Before that (wo ironing stallions had been here for a season, and two running ata! lion*. Th»- «fleet of ich !>r»-edlug upon * <M k Wide up of a little ot most anjtbing that wat> ever ■ ailed hor»e, can be Imagined Ther- wire no r»-»»ultA that were in any a« - um * consistent, or tha* appealed to th» kjv»-r <>f a |$oc>d horse, or to one *h<> loukto at a horse simpiy from (he doiiar» and cents standpoint. A n mentioned. *.be original a 3 k a <-onglomerate mix up—a sere»* of Morgan, (’¡yde, Perchtsron. a trace of America® Standard Running stork. bre«i a< mas he -ral stock that < country Ard I anywhere, wi'h t noted On te of mala »»Fi ought in J«»hn Ve i-rt who ed Shire—a ver ■ie»«endan:» »-an Odds and ends broken line ; or ladiew sbom and Oxfords, at one- halt pricer :♦ : i : Alexander Dept. Store THE (ÌIVERS OF BEST VALLES ‘•••••••••••••••••••••••••••eseoesoeeooeeeeoeaeoesee PLUMBING and SEWER WORK HAVE A FULL LINE OF P l UVB i NG GOOO8 AND FIRST CLASS WORKMEN; ALSO MAKE SEWER TiMATCS FURNISHED ON ALL WORK 1886 Mr Cox and hl* partner Mitujr, brought to the county Abi a rt-gtstrrwl rotter, and hi* im • I* alili >e<p* n tarougho'!* the CONNECTIONS E8 WORK GUARANTEES IAYLOR In 1891 Fran Frazier brought to county two iooded trotting stal- lion >—ChehaH, and Westfield. and th* :mpro»ement of roads’er« and of the lighter built aii-purpose borse in I ma'iila comity really dates from th« brin Ing of t be three horses nam«»ri atxr «. and i’i'came noticeable from ibai ’ time ime on All these horses have 'iaraivndants al! over the county. in tact all over Eastern Oregon Mr C 'ox speass of the exce.ien»« c many of tbe I ma’Illa county riding •>or»«-s nt the early days They were •he product of the origtnai pony stock *nd occasional racing horses brejugh’ aero«« tbe plains by movers Nearly every lafg.- caravan tad at least one man with a pen« h. taut for fast horses aud 'hese runnitq g tors«-» were the very ürst weli-br* «d animals wrought into this country and not mat y of then. •fere bk»d« - 1 or registered, al- ’hough many of them w«re excellent anim'ti* Their inGuroce was no-: last ing. and few 'race* can be discerned now of their »¡»-»etidau:* Mr Cox d.»» - not believe there is la Umatilla re inty a first-class •Ai r »tailion. wbe »-*» there should vera), and th« r should be well patronized Every ondition here Is favorable to the vel .pmrot of a splendid strain c»f saddle . » horses The only way ti ;o bn d f >r a saddle bor*» at present is Is to treed to a trot ter. and such procedure i* never sal- procedure- is istactory because trotter* du not have th«- confurma’lon to begin with. Mr Cox thinks there should be money in breeding for pure saddlers He believro that $le ■ 0 <»»u)d not t»ow pure have 1« really first <*!** saddlers in Umatilla couaty To get the best »add’ier is a matter of crosaing the Amerhan thoroughbred with an.mals which nature has chanced to build and gait for saddlers. For the best all round farm horse Mr Cox believers grade Percheron, Clyde* and Shire* are preferable. though the tendency i* ever toward too h«avy a horse for the average farm purpo*e. When this results the heavier animals can be marketed iu the cities, and the lighter animais kept for farm work. He regards the best all round roads- ter 'o t*e the produc^ of the Standard American Trotter crossed with the mo»; suitable native stock wherev«er it < oin»’s from, or of whatever breed it may be. That is. that kind of a »re»*» 1* hi* first choice. His second ¡•r» f«T»'nce i* for a cross with the Morgan- a horse too sma!i for all pur- poa»-s. but an animal which has never been »-qu*i«sl for al! purpo*»»s for its size ' Tt<E hardware man » •••••••••••••••ossssossssssssesss.-sooessoeseossooss s LOG CABIN » e e s e e • e e -, • fame is lea Crsus can sga n be obtained at tbs c.d fa * -rite Log Cabin Soda Fount*: a The Popular Prie« DRUG STORE A. O KOEPPEN A BROTHER' I». HARVESTERS SUPPLIES. UNIVERSAL STEEL RANGES ITEWARE BUILDERS’ HARDWARE. GENUINE CHRlSOLITE GRAN A FULL LIKE OF PLUMBING TOOLS AT THE Goodman-Thompson Hardware Co. : I 643 MAIN STREET. A E tNISH EST - ATES ON PLUMBING AND SOLICIT YOUR WORK One Hundred Dollars Reward One hundred dollars is a pretty g «>! reward for five nr.nute« work, yet that * what J. E Strode, of Wait trg Wash., got from the R*«- Oreg• man In our last subscription contest He received with the cotnpll ent* of ;he East Oregonian, witbou’ a <»ct of expense to himself, a $100 __ We propose to conduct rubber tired buggy c tid jct another subscription contest on **■ "~ basis: the following The French public Is little concern From now until November 4th we will take new subscriptions sen: in ed over the break with the Vatican our subscribers and to tbe one who guesses nearest to the vote received the winning presidential candidate in this state, we will give onebalf of the money received from this contest. i or example, if you sink President Roosevelt will receive the major Ity of votes in the coining election, fill out the coupon, _____ _ "Rooeevelt’s total vote in Oregon will be . — and put in your estimate. If our subscribers cooperate with us as they have us previous contests ind as we . xpect they will in this, we will take m seferal hundred dollars ind ixvssibly much m ire. one-half of which will go to the person who yu -*es n»'*re»s« to the vote in Oregon tor the winning presidential condi | late. If you are Interested in Oil Painting, see us Our line Iw all names SENT IN MUST BE THOSE OF NtW SUBSCRIBERS. Renewals of sub- complete nption wil! n * be counted in this cx»ntest Subscribers can participate ACADEMY BOARDS n ’hl* way Ge’ some neighbor to take the Weekly East Oregonian for our months for M cents Send tn a money order for the 50 cents: or tn STRETCHERS c an ! 2c stamps or silver ai cm; a:. •>•! by »our guess on the presidential BRUSHES cote If you do not want io ask some neighbor to subscribe, send in ARTISTS’ SA«-’. S I enis and the name of some friend in the East who is interested in the | western country, l^et him read the Weekly East Oregonian and it will will BLENDERS -uve him more news about the resources ot tbe Inland Empire than you SKY BRUSHES ould if you wrote him a 50-page letter a week. For everv 50 cents you PLAQUES »ill be entitled to one guess. If you get four of your friend» to take it TUBE COLORS ir months each, you will be entitled to four guesses, or If vou get one iew subscripUon tor a year for the"Weekly for $1.50 tou ari entitled to We make a specialty of hre-e guesses Some one of our subscribers will get one half of all framing PICTURES Newest money taken in on this contest It may be only $50. or it mav be several •lundred dollars, but whatever the sum the one who guesses nearest to the stock of frames 'residential vote In Oregon for tbe winning candidate, will ret one-half of the money. Rememtier the guess is on the vote cast in Oregon for the aucceaeful s e presidential candidate. Opera House Block s • Only new subscriptions count. e •••esseeseooseoeeseesseoes A subscription for 50 cents gives you one guess. You can send In as many subscribers as you wish and tor each 50 cents you get one gu ss. ♦ « This contest closes November fourth, so be sure to tend in your guess before that time. ♦ The total vote in June. 1904. was 92.608: for republican candidate for ♦ supreme judge, 52,946; for democratic. 28.729; socialist. 6419 and prohl- bition. 5514. Per set, $5 00; gold crown«, $400; silver filling, 50c; ex tracting, 50c. My estimate on ... ♦ .. vote in Oregon for President « We are thoroughly equipped Is with all modern methods and ♦ ♦ appliances, and guarantee our Name ... r. work to be of the highest stan « 4 dard, and our prices the lowest 4 Postoffice address...........• •••••••••••••••«« consistent with first-class work. 4 Fill In the first blank space the name of the candluate you think 4 ♦ will win. Fill In the second blank space with your estimate of the number of votes he will get in Oregon. Enclose with 50 cent* *na mail to the East uregonian Publishing Co , Pendleton Oregon Dentists. « sh ; : : TEETH White Bros Association Block 'Phone Main 1661. 4 4 : i Send paper to Address