Image provided by: East Oregonian; Pendleton, OR
About The east Oregonian. (Pendleton, Umatilla County, Or.) 1875-1911 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1904)
W""“X/5- voir® are impossible, yet the other conditions for irrigating large I tracts of valuable land are favorable. ’ In hopes of securing consideration of this feasible system of irrigation, re FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 11. 1904. liable statistics of the most vital na AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. ture are to be collected. Farmers re Published every Friday at Pendleton. ceiving one of the lists of questions Oregon, by the ! are urged to answer fully and return ~ EAST OREGONIAN PUBLISHING ' promptly to the secretary of the Com- COMPANY. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dally, one year, by mail............... Dally, six mouths, by mail........... . Dally, three mouths, by mall......... . . Dally .one month, by mall............. . Weekly, one year, by mall . Weeklv. six months, by mall......... Weekly, four month», by mall.... . Semi Weekly, one year, by “«l>- Semi-Weekly, »lx months, by mall... Semi Weekly, three montha. by mall ’ mercial Association in this city. The 1 government is anxious for such in formation. and it can only come from actual irrigators. 00 2.50 1.25 50 1.50 75 The Weston Normal School, us 50 200 Eastern Oregon's only state institu 1.00 50 1 tlon, is growing ât a more rapid rate than was ever anticipated by those Member Scripps McRae New» Awoclatlon w ho secured its establishment. Locat The East Oregonian 1» on »ale at B. B ed in the heart of a settlement in Kleb s New» Stands at Hotel I ortland and Hotel Perkins. Portland, Oregon._________ Easterrt Oregon, in a community hav ing the best moral surroundings of San FraBctoco Bureau. 40S ,Fou£t^1 ?*' any in the state, convenient to every Chicago Bureau. 909 Washington. D. C.» Bureau. 501 14th St.» portion of the country which it is in ». W. _____________ _ . tended to accommodate and gradu- Telephone Main 11. atlng teachers of the highest stand- Entered at Pendleton Poatoffice as second ard. at a minimum cost, the normal class matter. school must be supported by the peo ple of Eastern Oregon with untelter- seal. Heretofore, Eastern Ore- teachers have spent their money time ln Western Oregon institu tions. reached at great expense by Ef you Yarn to love the path long rail and stage lines. Now, the you go by. to take each step the normal is at their doors; they get the very best you know how. to think how sightly the little same finished education, at as little bushes and grass by the way cost, and save the great expense of side is. never to fergit that the travel. This is Eastern Oregon's only- head. w'y. blue sky is over your state institution. The expense of you've walked your path the maintaining It is infinitesimal compar way God meant you to.—Grace McGowan Cooke. In Overland. ed to the enormous appropriations for the state institution located in West ern Oregon, and the need for increas Clyde Pennington, a former Uma ed facilities in Eastern Oregon is ap tilla county boy. now sheriff of Union parent to every observer. The com county, is doing something in the way ing session of the legislature must ex of enforcing the laws, that all the tend the educational advantages of combined city councils, mayors, con this section of the state, if possible. stables and prosecuting attorneys of by making the Weston Normal more Union county failed to do before. He able to handle the large patronage has quietly, but firmly closed gam accorded it. • •••••••••••••• • ••••••••• • • • • • bling and enforced Sunday closing of saloons, and is not making any cam paign bluster about it, either. He found the law on the statutes of Ore gon and decided that it meant what it said and began its enforcement. The result is that there is not very much prohibition talk in Union county. On March 3. 1897, when there was no steel trust. American steel rails were selling in this market for $18 to $20 a ton. Foreigners can still get them for that, but Americans have to pay $28—an increase of from 40 to 55 per cent, The trust has main- talned the $28 rate for home cue toners without variation since it was organized, representing a net in crease of profits of over $70,000.000 above a normal amount for that time. Iron miners and steel miU operators are working for less wages today than in 1897, the cost of manufactur* ing rails has decreased because of Improved machinery, yet the trust has raised the price one-half. The companies using steel rails must charge more for freight rates and passenger tares in order to pay the exactions of the steel trust, so the ul timate burden tails on the common people who pay all bills at the last. An aged tramp, not able to walk work. any further and unfit for hanged himself near Halsey. Ore., the other day, as a speedy and certain way oct of a bad mess. Such a hap pening no longer stirs even a tem porary ruffle in the money-getting program of today. If anybody stop ped long enough to bury him decent ly or inquire Into his condition and life, it was the coroner, who was paid for the task, and even he dispatched the job with the greatest possible haste. Selfishness, supreme, domin- ating. mad and unmindful of every thing else, rules the world today. The finer sensibilities are deadened, in a majority of minds, and only the mer cenary and debasing sentiments are active. The great world lay all around this man. He was one of the great family, one of the wheels of human activity; yet the selfishness of his brothers and the injustice of civilized laws, denied a spot of earth on which he could lie down to rest in peace and honor. Once every nine months the Port land Oregonian has a spasm because the East Oregonian was chirstened the "East Oregonian" 30 years ago. Its peurile. idiotic anger over this fact is shown to be the cause of its abuse of the East Oregonian Its alleged indignation at the exposure of its clandestine plans to put its Impious fingers in the pockets of the Lewis and Clark fair fund is only skin deep, but this exposure served as a text for a periodical tirade against the name of the East O regó The nlan. Oregon is * big state. English language is not patented by any pompous libertine whose chief claim to a literary Individuality *s comprised in the vileness of its epi thets and the seductive, mock-heroic terms in which its mercenary creed Is launched. The Oregonian might as well deny the East Oregonian the right to do business in Oregon as to deny it the right to choose two un- patented words of thè English ling uage. as ua tltle. The succeas and progress of thè East Oregonlan. from a small beginnlng in thè sagebruzh district to Its present proportlons should cause the Portland paper to feel a Cush of pride to think that at least ln thia one instance, the word "Oregonian" as applied to a news paper. is a synonym for fearlessness, progress and candor, and growth, unimpeded hy moss. Active work of collecting the Uma tilla county exhibit for the Lewis and Clark fair is now in progress, The commendable public spirit of the county court in this matter, and the active co-operation of the Commer cial association, has assured a firn class exhibit of the various products of this county. Space should be lo cated early, in order that a desirable location may be secured, and prepa rations made for a tastily arranged, typical Umatilla county exhibit It will be worth while. Everybody la urgently requested to co-operate with Mr. Forshaw. who is now in the field collecting the exhibit. The perfec tion of the exhibit will depend, after all, on the individual interest of the citizens, for it will be impossible for the agent to see every man in the county who has produced something suitable for exhibit. The people of Umatilla county are invited to send in to 8. H. Forshaw, at Pendleton, anything in the way of fruit, grain, or other products that would be suita ble for exhibit, or drop a card to him and he will call for it. This is one time for Umatilla county to “spread herself." Pendleton Commercial Association is sending out circulars to the practi cal Irrigators of Umatilla and Mor row counties, asking for reliable sta tistics on winter Irrigation. The questions included in the list to be answered by the Irrigators are made to correspond to the wishes of the reclamation service on the subject, and the Information so gathered, will be compiled into a report on winter Irrigation, to be submitted by the Co lumbia River Basin Irrigation Asso- elation to the reclamatlon service, through John T. Whistler. In hopes of interesting that service in the subject of winter irrigation or the open canal system. In many places t NO TOLL VI CM. ■y The misfortune of the modern city is that men of seemingly the best moral standard in private life are always ready to take toll from vice, w hen In office. The suggestion that they would countenance a close association with the lowest forms of immorality as private citizens notild be taken ns a gross insult, yet when elected to public office one of their first estimates of the resources of their city includes the regulur toll from the most degrading forms of vice and Immorality This is the most degenerating ten- dency In niunicipal governments to- day. It iowers the moral standard and the moral Ideal of every man Young connected with the sy item. men. boys and i girls, seeing parents, brothers, uncles or good friends in official positions i legalizing vice by the payment of a small monthly pit tance, lose all their abhorrence for Immorality. They feel that It can be brought tip to a respectable plane by paying toll to society. They can not doubt the policy of their parent, brother or friend, whose moral stan dard seems to be perfect. The foundation for lowered morals is laid in this way. When the repul siveness of vice is swept away by ac ceptlng a fine from it. then it ts placed on a legalized basis; It is no longer a thing to be shunned, If city governments license It. as they do peddlers, craftsmen and other le- gltimate enterprises. It becomes a mere business institution and lose» Its terrors from a social standpoint, The plea that it Is necel ry to license vice In order to meet expenses is ; a fallacy, Suppose the state should throw up Its hands and decide that it was necessary to 11- %rlgands and cense train robbers. i counterfeiters, These criminals are in the country* and are bound to op- erale more or leas, at all times. Sup- pose the state government should "They are going to rob and say: murder anyway; we should license them and get a fee from them.” What would inspire more horror In the minds of thinking citizens than such a surrender to vice, and yet cities surrender to It In just such a way when they accept its toll and legalize it. In the basis of civilized govern- merit the toll from vice was never In corporated as one of the resources of government. Rich men. with loose morals trying to escape taxa tion have Ingrafted thl» principle Into modern institutions. It is ar rued by many well meaning citizens who are friends of the port age road project that the benefits ol that road will not be so great as con templated. They say the wheat dis tricts 20, 30, 40 and 50 miles away from the Columbia river wlll still be at the mercy of the rail lines, until built from the interior to the river mun lea tlon with the river. The East Oregonian does not anticipate any such limitations to the benefits of the portage road, Business will bring conveniences when the river 1» opened to the sea. and competition In transportation for 400 miles Into the Inland Empire, to the very limit of navigation on both Snake and Co lumbia rivers is established, capital will be only too glad to build lines from the wheat districts to the river. The river will reach such a large pro portion of the productive districts of the Inland Empire (without the aid of additional railway lines) that the general result will be satisfactory The isolated districts that will need Were branch lines will only be re quired to ship over the old rail lines to the river, a comparatively short distance, when the present long rail h: u! is considered, The people of the Inland Empire i must not be turned aside by these stock argu m*nts of the opponents of the port age road. They must build the port age. The bsists on which that pro- ject is founded is right. Past calcu latlons and estimated savings In transportation charges have not been dimmed nor diminished. Competi tion will secure certain results, just as self-evident now as when first conceived by the pion-* ». who have been fighting for .in ope.i rtver fur 30 years. pollflcs in working overtime, The fifth cabinet during the year 1004 has just assumed the reins of gov ernment at Santiago, Chill. 4 O11 the third reading of the bill to give uM tuxpaying women In Ver mont the privilege of municipal suf frage, It was defeated by the close Vote of 99 to 97 In the house. October 31. the Worlds Fair paid off all <»f Its Indebtedness to the gov ernment except $191,000 and the net receipts for November are expected to far more than meet that shot luge. Two unknown men quarreled with a third at Masontown, Pa., and threw him headlong Into a coke oven where he was completely Incinerated In a few momenta. The murderers escaped. The bridge commissioners ol New- York have estubllHhed a waiting eootn with a trained nurse In att mdanee. on Brooklyn bridge, to look (f.-r peo ple who may faint or who are Injur* I In crushea I he 4. anadlan duty on American Steel rails went Into effe< t November I. 7 he rate Is $7 per ton. During the imst two months 25.466 tons, valued al $6.>2.645. have crossed th** line duty free. I'HYNKIANH. I W G cole , OFFICE LN JUDD building Office hour». 10 to 12 a. m : |, m T< lepl«*n»»; «Xfk-e main ; residence main 1301. A Little Sermon on Fountain Pens SMITH A RINGO. OFF1CB OVER (be Pendleton Harin«» bank. TelepboM h*<l ; residence telepbooe cualn 1591. THE TEXT. "Clean pen» make clear consciences, but Inky fingers excite unholy words.” We have just received a large shl|>men' of WATERMAN IDEAL EOI NTAIN PENS. Probably tijere 1» no article which serves more varied require ments than the pen. The taste» an*l needs <»f Individual u*w-ra dif fer In very widest degree. Thus, while the first care of the pur chaser should be to secure a pen that 1» mechanically perfect, durable and reliable, his next la to secure a holder adapted to his use and a pen point fitted to hla hand. In our stock you can find any kind of a point you want, from extra fine to a stub. GUARANTEE. Every Waterman Ideal Fountain Pen we aell 1« unreservedly guaranteed. Pen points may be exchanged as often as necessary in order to fit the hand, or the tul< purchase price refunded wlth- la 30 days If the pen 1» not entirely satisfactory. STYMMIRAPHIC PENH. We carry the "Indepen lent" Stylographic Pen and the "Cap itol" Fountain Pen, the best dollar pens made. FRAZIER’S Book and Stationery Store V. C. Place, of silver City. N. M , »mi < ha., .Al Shannon, of the same place have put up property and cash to the value of $40.000 each on the presidential election. Place bets that Roosevelt will be elected. A recent competitive examination •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••a for mall carriers at Paris. Ky.. re sulted in the appointment of four ne groes and two white men as carriers in that place, and the people refuse to recognise the former terms. As a tribute to the completeness of Pendleton mercantile stocks, to the extremely low prices on all classes of goods, and to the extensive advertis ing of Pendleton merchants, the vol ume of mail order business done in this city is woefully small. No other city in • the Northwest, having the same facilities for such trade, does as small volume as Pendleton, This is the highest tribute that can be paid to Pendleton merchants and their en ergy. Money heretofore going to swell the Incomes of foreign con cerns, now remains at home to go into increased stocks, increased salar ies, increased improvements and cor respondingly greater revenues from taxes. Readers are invited to study the advertisements of every firm rep resented in the columns of the East Oregonian. Every statement found there has a direct meaning for every person who must buy supplies for himself or household, The ads are the barometors of trade, They are the sign boards along the tortuous GENERAL NEWS. path of the shopper. If the Informa- tlon they contain was not valuable, it It is stated that there is not now would not be so persistently set be a case of yellow fever In all Cuba. fore you. It is now said that the pope's recent aliment was gout pure snd simple. The liberal victory in Canada TKo boys under 12 years of age, means an emphatic indorsement of set fire to five houses in one day, at a progressive Canadian policy. Rail Fall River, Mass., "just to see the de< roads will be fostered and encour partments turn out." The entire number of men ln aged, settlement will be invited and Terclo, Colo., coal mine, which internal improvements will be made. ploded October 28, was 18, and The victory presages a period of are now known to be dead. great prosperity and success for the Two soldiers from Fort Ethan Americans within the Canadian bor len, Vermont, are accused by a farm der. It is a step toward ultimate an er of holding him up and robbing him nexation—one link in the chain of of $30. They are under arrest. Four robbers blew the postoffice "manifest destiny" of the North safe at Chicora. Pa., with dynamite. American continent. They were bunglers and one was kill ed on the spot by the explosion. If the next session of the legisla At Conewago, Pa . Alfred Ander- ture finds the portage commission son and John Brannon quarreled an d •till undecided as to the construction ran for their guns, Each fired four of the road, the money still lying Idle ■hots at the other and both were in the treasury, the people doing killed. A new steel barge yet on it« way« nothing to help the matter along, and at (julncy, Mass., slipped and caught the railroads on hand with a strong two workmen ln Its track. They were lobby against the project, the bill will absolutely flattened by the vessel slid be repealed. Then both Washington ing over them. and Oregon win wish they had not J. C. Megensdorf, of Cleveland, gen eral ticket agent of the city suburban waited for the other to move. lines and a member of John D. Rock I k missing, The last shot of the campaign 1« efeller's Sunday school, and so I k $6000. always the nastiest,»meanest and most Otto Burtshardt and Anna Koen. cowardly. It reminds one of two boys sweethearts, quarreled, at Glendale, who have Just finished a fight, turn N. Y. The girl took carbolic acid Ing simultaneously to throw a brick and the young man promptly bat at each other, as they run away. drowned himself. D. W. Trotter, of Chicago, wealthy There will be very few stay-at- and treasurer of the Linseed Oil Co., He Imagines that home voters in Pendleton tomorrow. has gone insane, Presidents and vice presidents are of agents of the Standard Oil Co. are trying to poison him. ■mall concern in the presence of pro Henry A. Tullen, formerly on the hibition. supreme bench of New York, has Elmer Erickson, captain of the been admitted as a pauper to the Stoughton. Wis.. high school foot charities of the Outdoor Poor depart ball team, Is dead from concussion of i ment of New York City. the brain received during a game. I The wig-wag of South American After a lung separation Henry E. Eaton and wife met at Lowell. Maas, xnd apparently became reconciled at the home of his »ister. As they were leaving the premise» together drew a pistol, killed his wife then himself. It is very nearly proven that Russian battleships in the North Sea fired upon two of their own tor pedo boats, which came unexpectedly within range of the searchlights, out yf the fog. The fishing boats hap pened to be within range. At Westfield. N J . M. Wilcox, scare away a ¡.arty of Hallowe'en joker«, fired a pistol, but was careful to dL-*charge it In the opposite direc tion. Owing to the darkness he did not see a ¡«arty of children, one of whom, a boy. he shut and killed. Rear Admiral C. W Rae declares that the weakest point In the per sonnel of the American navy Is a tack of ambitious engineers. He strongly advocate» putting engineers and firemen In the line of promotion to Inspire ambition and the »elf-sac- rificing spirit. T M. HENDERRON, IdlYHICIAN • nd »urgeon offi*. In H»risg» Bask l-ullging. r*xxn 1 Office 'pbone main 1411. residen** red 1323. HE Bl is A < HI.AP ONE, when price is the only thing a man knows about buggies, After he has had some experience, quality come» first. and you always get ttukl In the V ehleles at Neagle's. Winona Wagons, Buggte, and Hacks, and 'he best made, We sell them. Bone-dry timber. well painted and ironed, and v. arranted d by us. ♦ DENTIST*. lamp« are never overfilled Air tight and easy to lake oil from. No tipping of can and no »pilling of oil. THE DELPHOS ROTARY CORN POPPER No burnt com. Every kernel nt com pops convenient to fill and empty. V. STROBLE M H KERN, DENTAI. SURGEON office. r*x«z 1.'» Jadd b>.l Illag I-!*®» black 12«! lilt A VAUGHAN, DF5NTIMT. OFFICE LN J’.dd hrl.dlnk* f*b**ne r»d 1411 I.IAk- 4M» BROKERS. FI BBT NAIloNAL BANK OF ATHENA. «»r*roo < apitaL $.V».(iO» »arpias sod r«rofìt», SI2J><»><»> laterear «■ :1 cm de ¡xwita I*eal» io foreign and 4-x&rttlr «- <'*,b~ une» pr*,ttp«1y »-tended to lf*ery <' Adzaa. president . T J Kirk. » president F" k LeGrow. -»»tier ; I. K-mp. *»»'>taat *«»h>*r No Lending over in THE DELPHOS OIL CAN Easy to operate. 2 10 Court St STOYES. FURMTLRE \M> CARPETS. *«-»14*11? J R Ki.g «re. -'aabi^r ; director» i A Barrata. M M T J PrW, . I« G a < J F Kllg r*. E l«*r? Jam*- •0«. G W Prorbate! Grays Harbor Commercial Co (>|itx»-ltr W A C 1Í I>epot Co ! A Little Money Saved The Commercial National Bank of sa c 4 AND WASHINGTON STREETS PORTLAND, OREGON Established in 1866. O|x*n all the year. Private or class instruction. Thousands of graduates in posi tions; opportunities constantly occurring. It pays to attend our school. Catalogue, specimens, etc., free. TROUTMAN. ARCHITECT AND perIn-mdent r>x* 13 JbM b.ork. Pendleton. Oreg-® F H oward architect and $r- perizteedn* M»k»v -owpie-e sal rv- liabl* p'-ir.« for bclW.sr« Ir. the city se -oostry R«oa 17 J odd beUdlag MOI;«« À DUNLAP. CONTRACTORS AND bulkier« Ear Uñates gives cc short so- «Ice lei. ■ rler» st office of Grays Har txr T.-.nHer Co. I *»r Ho< and < obi ikrink- Lsery thing the br-t Ail the la tree drinks. 4 « MAY. rOXTRACTOR AND BUILI^ al! klata x*c®ry. '•♦«*111 va!ks a • < * w a : : * !>►«<* erdera at Eart Qregaalaa of 4 « BI-ACK«MITH Horseshoeing, general repair ing wagon making and repalr- The way I have built up business is by doing noth- but good work, Prices rea sonable. Cor Cottonwood BOX RDI NG Hand Bags «* Chain Purses Wc have a fine asHortnient. .50 to $10.00. The prices on Peggy« run from Handbag«. $1.50 to $7.50. Everyone Is a good value and sure to suit. KOEPPENS The Popular Prior Drug Store. A. C. KOEPPEN BROTHERS WD LODGING Alta St«. ATHENA HOHL LEADING HOTEL IN the city. $1 «> Io 11 50 per day H P Millen, j^oprleter Expert Collectors We have located a brar.rh office it Pendleton, and will make collecting lefunct bills a specialty. No ac count too old for us to handle. Our plan is: "No collections. n> charges. Suits instituted. Judgment, advertised Dic Van Al«tin¿-Gordon A Co. Mer cantile Agency. H. V. Upe A Co, Mgr«. IIS E. 4'ourt St. Telephone Main 111 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• Buy Real Estate Now HELIX H<«TE1. I NDER NEW MANAGE sseet Good B«eU zzd rl«u 1*4» If • c..me oo * yea will k—T • - w'T finly whlte beip «apioyed Ecperial st- •*r- u xtvee '• <'r.auz»’vta: trzvelera Mr »ad Mr» J P Nsvta. proprietora THE < !TY H*>TEL PILOT ROt'K RE modeled sad refnmished Everything first-el»«» Mm C H Belt*! has agals charge. >ECON’I>-H IND DF. LITTUL V STROBLE. DEALER IN SECONIk b»ad good» If there I» anything yoe -•—d In new and «er-cd h»n.l frmttnrv. <t vea. granlteware and crortsry. cali »nd t»t hl« price No 21$ Court »tree« lAMKlMT i\D I AND Ri SI NESS I-krK- number of very desira ble ranches and residences at bargains. See us. 900-acre ranch. 100 acres bot tom land. 100 cows. $0 year- ling heffers. 13 iJ horses, horses. 4 wagons. 1 milk wagon, 300 tons hay; cleared $400 I last year; $35 per day income. $35.000. A good business proposition, Terms to suit purchaser, ne two-story residence. 8 rooms, 6 block» from Main street ; modem improve- menta; very desirable neigh borhood. $5000. Terms to suit purchaser. City property and ranches in all localities and to suit all de- sires. < hartman abstract co . makes reliable abstract» of title to all lan<te n Umatitla cocnty I.'MM co city and "arm property Bare and »e!l» all kind» < rvol «state D.we a general br Aerage Gislrew Par» take» and make» laveet- aenta for n-n resident». Reference, any bank In Pendleton G A HARTMAN. Prva G A HARTMAN. JR. YlcwPreo IMATILLA COUNTY ABSTRACT CO — I«oe't boy a piece of property and after «ard ftnd a flood ne thè tlt'e We wlll •nake you an accurate sbstract of tltle at a reas- nab'e etiarge «'oasalt us wben la •ed . f an abstract I mattila Abstract • office In Savlng» Bank batldlag 1 M BENTLEY REPRESENTS TH« :$<wt »nd m.wt reliable flrv «od seel Sot ln«ur»nce composi«» Office wltb Hartmao Atwtrsct Co. JOHN HAILEY. JR. U. g LAND COM- mlesi.'oer Specialty made of land ftp no an.1 proof. In.nranc and collection. •'Hcc In Judd building, rooaalg W. E. Davidson & Co »i:\IIRX\l ORDERS II» COURT STREET. • ••••••••••••• c->••«••••••• 1« *‘l , * hsi >1 kton lodgi . A . K**ul*r flrut and hint Tìinr«d»y» of each month AU ! n Ò h i» J M to •"en,, «•” lB LaDow »IT' ü A Hartman. Sr. F- R . (. ■ E. Bean, »ecretary. i i \ i i; y Latest Styles Wc have jn-t recrlvcd a new lot of those Peggy from Pari* SHEER A COLE <<INTRA<TGRS AND bolliiera E»rts>a*»s fcrs»i*d os »bort sofie* Job work » sperlalty. ProspC oa Bluff «freet. twar Maia DRUGGISTS A. P. A rmstrong . LL.B.. P rincipal that we have been celling so fat this season. BANK. \p.< iiiTK-rv AM» bolder *. Don’t Forget Our Fountain H. M. SLOAN RAVINGS «T national bank of ri:Ni>LE- Capiks! surplus »ad undivided • $5on.«w< Trsasacts » ges -ebklug n-aitt*»» Ex-haag» bought •ad »old '• all ps--» of the «arid. 1» »• •• ia!d *e Tim- deposita Mik-e ollertfsBs *m ressoeaUe terms Levi Aa- :»-»S4*e- tv F Matlock, rtewpeesl- RP». cashier : George Hart- l«-»u- rashler and l»>wney'e Clkoco- lau— and Bon-Ik-n« lllklrrtii V«-i»«-< Mola-w-x >kl FajdiMrOcd HorvtMMind Drwfk«. (for your cold« ) Brock & McComas Company PENDLETON E > rsp»’>! fUXijtOU ••jrpl STS MB; ►cwt <«ö ali ’«□>• Ex ita* L-oirtt * d 4 a*44 c® al! principal at* Hp*<ial attesti«® <!▼*» to cx41*e- M 'V J FnraWib. ;.r*wl4*®t : J X. Teal. tV* pr*»i4*at T J Manta» ^aahtar : Ma.« <**7. a •• tata a? '■»hier For You Big Dissolution Sale Dindinger, Wilson THL FARMER!«' BANK OF WEBTOM. WMUm, I**!*« a g «-aerai hjv I imm I t >.?.■ atd •«'44- . <-» pr x;'iy a’T^ied *■■■ E Jam* BRING TOUR BH.I. TO AND (.FT OUR 114.1 HEN. SWEETS Shoe Bargains MRM M N HAWTELLE. COUNTY MAN •ger of tb* Northwest Viari Co., 620 Cosble street I'endletoo. Grngun t.K T I I.LO1 • GSAI.I ATRorTHMGRAND • «I» V* -rinary < oil»*- *4 Grarxl Rapid«. Ail« :mso«» o< dw»a»ot:e »nimals »eWw. Scalb treat* I -p< ».tyot leat;»try -p«y nr wr« >-n • 4 r*.4»eiing bora* '.&*• st - k McComas 4rog »tore. F.I7I I * sIPPI.Y YOL WITH THE DELPHOS LONG HANDLE DUST PAN Pan is free to sw*ing in any direction* taking up dust. bl: LENA ALLEN Bob.NE. OSTEOPATH Koldenre. Tti'.mpw.n street. between C., .rt zr.d Wster »Irret» black 1624 Servos» dl*»»»»» a »p»ci»!ty MTEItlNAin HPRGEON—DR D C MrNsbb rrfflr* at T»llauin • drag «tere I HE BLACKSMITHS. <• «M-II fj»e Sioirr («asoline Engini*e. Dimension lumber of all de- seripUot • Hash. l«oora. Blinds. Moulding. Building and Tar Pa- Three new, useful houM<*huhf articles that are a Llg improve* ment over the did style. K HLAKEMLEE. i'HKOXIC bit LYNX 1 and dl**-a*ea of and n»-rvo»j« Judd building. <omer Main ^and women office *pboBe main 721 ; Court afreet« X Kay Therapentlra residen** red 1153 \ l/I F RIX %KY M KG EONS. Neagle Brothers NEW IDEAS Ro-eberg Is to have a new postof- 11 ce building Chehalis Wash . has a total lebte In ess of $40.$75. It took $C.311.30 to run the city of Boise during the month of October. Lewiston Is to have a gas plant Shors of all grade*; felt ami velvet «dipprrv f re-dì fr» un the work upon which has been begun. al BARGAIN PR1< T-S. James Jeffrie», the pugilist, is ourlng Oregon a» the star In "Davy carry onh tiw BEST ;;Yadr-» of J kics and slipper* and you TrocketL" them al the Muñe price juu juty for tradì There will soon b* shipped from Bellingham Bay to New York around the horn. 1.590,004 shingles. Harry Morton, a Northern Pacific vnikeman. was run over and killed it Centralia. Wash.. November 5. Salem Is to have a city health of- leer at a salary of $<■> per month, mder the provisions of her last char ier. (¿««id St»oes <Y»eap»T Than Ever. A sheepherder named Lewis was •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••a «hot twice November 3 near Mineral, daho. by unidentified parties and •nay die. Peo Peo TallpL a nephew of Chief loseph, is his executor and is expect- •d Jo succeed him as chief, by com- • non consent During the month of October Meat Inspector Rolls condemned 111.893 EVERY WEEK WILL AMOUNT TO A COMFORTABLE SUM IX poun-ls of meat tn Seattle, All was •old as fertilizer. A SHORT TIME There Is a promise of more busi HOW MUCH COULD TOU SPARE OF YOUR SALARY ness In sight for the new Lewiston reamery than the dimensions of the WEEK’ FIGURE Ur HOW MUCH IT WOULD AMOUNT EACH ■riglnal plans i can handle. The Sal mon i river arid Lewiston TO IN A YEAR IF LAID BY—THEN ADD THE FOUR PER llstricts have had a dearth of fall CENT WE PAT ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS EVERY S 1 X ,*alns and the pasturage is lnsufflc- •nt. Stock 1« i beginning to suffer. MONTHS. Ed Benjamin, near Leland. Idaho, BRING A DOLLAR OR MORE AND OPEN AN ACCOUNT Irank concentrated lye, mistaking It .'or milk and was found nearly dead — MAKE THE FIGURES FACTS. •ome time afterward. He will die. The Christian Scientists at Boise nave Just completed a pressed brick hurch building 41z55 feet which cost 14000. The church was organ.zed In 1195. The new Northern Pacific steel Pendleton d'Oreille at jrldge over the Pend iand Point. Idaho. 1« completed. It ost $1.000.000 and in it is 310» tons >f steel. ••♦•»♦♦•♦•»•♦•♦•♦••♦a» Two drug stores at Tekoa were obbed the night of November 3. and jnly drug stock was taken. The ash registers and tills were not ln- erfered with. There were three holdups tn Port end the night of November 3. selng secured. In every case robber, who Is believed to be one In- iivldual. escaped The American farmer is the greatest man in the world to day because he is master of the soil he is gaining in intelligence quite a« rapidly mb hi* product* are increating in magnitude Our recent combine* of capital in united States measured in monev are enormou*. yet such figure-* sink into mnig- mficance when compared to the money, brain and brawn invented in agricultural indu*trie*. For instance, thr farmer* of Minnesota and Dakota have received $gjo,- ooo cm for their product* in a mingle- year Th<- farmer know* what Nature will bring forth for him from his experience in the pa*t He know* if certain red* are planted and properly cared for that Nature will take care of the rent ln thr *ame wav you art maitrr o/ your ou n driltuy. Providing your blood ib in good order, it only need* a little effort on your own part to keep healthy and strong— rid your body of the poison* that are apt to accumulate and your ayatem is ready to ward off the attack of th«- grrni*of disease D t Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery make* rich red blood—by increasing the number of red blood corpuscles. There is no alcohol in this great tonic to shrivel up the red blood corpuscles A* an alterative extract, made only of herlm and root* it goes aix>ut its work in nature s way. It stimulates the liver into proper action and feeds the worn-out nerves, stomach and heart on pure blood. Used for over a thin! of a centurv it has sold more largely than any other blood mrdiciu« *.i the I'niled .States More bottle* of Di T erce's ('»olden Medical Discovery are sold to-day than ever before— that is a true test of its medicinal value after thirty eight years of deserved popularity. Dr Pierce s "Medical Adviser” sent on receipt of stamp* to pay for mailing <>w/y Send 2i one cent stamps for book in paper cover», or 31 stamp* for cloth bound vol- •me. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo N Y I> J M KAI !.. JIDD HMM K. TELE bone main »31 : residence black 161 Building Material NORTHU I >T NEW S. The American Farmer the Beat Io the World. II H GARFIELD, M D. HOMEOPATHIC l.byririan and »urgeon Office In Judd lldlnt* Telephone»: Office, black 1411; uldo-m **. black 24 Mr». Carlson just received the latest of art material, namely; RERUN. llUN'GAlUAN. HAR- l> \N(.I K. MOI \ I Mi l I K I \(.l.l«ll I Al I I I l 1 NRIl 1 STIl.HTTO. PYROGRAPHA' M ATERIAL Such ns Leather. Wood Pieces, the Sets and a complete line of all materials for same. Stamping patterns, the very latest for waists; letter cushions. Japan Embroidery, which is the very latest embroidery for cushions. Lessons Free in all the Latest Art Dept, at Hasbrouck’s \\ i> i i i (t x j m| j.j. 1«F IMT STAHI E. •’OTTONWiMD STREET ’SS1 f’*«’ -I* «tab!* Horxe* bought and s, id rig» at reasonable peine Stuck bcw-M«! bI 'r Ring u» on d»k^r night. •• w, have ln 7^ steezrt A Llndeay, proprieton* cm livery stable , alta street C«rt,.-v »Kennedy. «Top. I leerv < »b line In connection Th .ne main 7"** MISCELLANEOUS. ATI AS IN<RTRA I t ' c ST s P p «K t ' r .'*«» •tree». Ws)l. Walla l‘b.«n, Oble I,..u., of the kind In th“ J?**“ •?I- ■rtralts finished at home «<> »»'«Mi When clrlnx v'ur ora*; i ' —Lrrz1]'Lr'*,u FOR SALE AT THE EAST ORFvñv7T¿ «trice l.rK<- bundle. <rf • .Inlng over 100 blx M for 25 cent« a bundle «•waia THE MI N S RESORT CLEANING »¿R prenx parlor. L.dle.' ,B<| work given careful Sttentloa im SJ* btoek Court »treet Telephone |-E\ 1 ETON STEAM DYK WOIU . \ ~UT7‘<1 ,,n*' Cleaning. d»elM «tul repairing <;Md> called fur Í5 llvered. Phone main ld»i. na a