Closing Out Sale Continues BARGAINS? NOTE FOIioSs 25 yards Prints .-...$ 00 20 yards Amaskeag Gingham i 00 20 yards Bleach Muslin . t 00 25 yards Ooting Flannel. . . i 00 J0cand5c Lace, per yard 05 75c Corsets for 39 (leaver Bros. D-G.Co CLOSING OUT WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1902. BREVITIES. James A. Howard, farm loans. Nicest candy In the cl'-y. Dutton's Ice cream chocolates. Three rollS crystal crepe paper, 25c, lit Nolf's boolc store. Stockmen intending to purchase ,ock salt should -write the Standard rocery for prices. The Standard Grocery can sell you esh ranch eggs cheaper than any tore in Pendleton. Wall paper, wall paper! Where? JLt Sharp's big wall paper store, opera louse block, Court street. The Standard Grocery has Just re ceived another large, shipment of the walla Walla Health Foods. Money to loan at lowest rates on wn or country property. J R. Dick )n. East Oregonlan building. To make space for new goods, all :oves and ranges now on hand, at jst. This week only. W. J. Clarke Co. Mulr & Wall .have moved their ressmaking parlors from Association lock, to their home at 301 East rebb street. m 4 L .Tt. ! . J tail Jmttt ill PLAIN SOLID GOLD RINGS I I carry them in all sizes I and guarantee them to be 4 I just as stamped. $ t L. HUNZIKER f Jeweler and Optician Next door to R. 'Alexander's J riJiiitiifidfiifiJii--" .h m m . m r V 'm nrrTTTTT 'A J T i "f 1 M 1 J ?1.00 to $1.50 shirts to close, 49c. Cleaver Bros' Dry Goods Co. New invoice of dill pickles and olives in bulk, at Hawley Bros. Wanted A girl who is a first-class cook. Inquire of Mrs. Rose Camp bell. Ladles' Mcintosh $2.35, regular price, $6.50. Cleaver Bros' Dry Goods Co. Big red apples, honey in comb, rad ishes, cauliflower, celery, etc., at Hawley Bros. If you want fine meats, go to Shcwarz & Greulich. They handle the best there is to be had. Two hundred yearling wethers with wool on, for sale. Rihorn & Cook, Taylor building, room 10. Ask to see 4111 black hose. We are selling them at 25c; worth 40c. Cleaver Bros' Dry Goods company. For rent, newly furnished rooms, bath in connection, 309 West Court street, two blocks from Main street. The most beautiful line of pattern hats ever brought to Pendleton are now on display at Mrs. Campbell's millinery parlors. Lady Bees of June Hive will swarm on Friday evening, March 14, in secret society hall. Fine program and em blematic supper, all for 25 cents. Speltz seed, a new cereal, a great hay and grain producer, $3 per hund red. For sale at C. F. Colesworthy's, corner Alta and Cottonwood streets, For Sale All kinds of city and country property, part cash, balance in yearly payments. Will buy you a home, you pay for it by the month. Houses rented, collections made. Ri horn & Cook, room 10, over Taylor's. Alert Hose Company will give a hard times masquerade ball on St Patrick's night, Monday, March 17, Music by Kirkman's orchestra. Cash prizes offered. Admission, gentlemen maskers, $1; spectators. 50 cents. lady msakers, free; spectators so cents. The Carrier millinery establishment is maae urnuant with the latest fash ions in ladies' hats and t.rlmmlni?H. Mrs. Carrier recently returned from Chicago and an elegant stock of spring millinery Is now arriving, which the ladies are invited to call and see on display. The linmllnnf man n QonjiM.. " - wuuicwu as Well as trio nnnrinnmoof n-nA - 11 i . . ' . uie luvuea 10 can on any druggist and tret fre a trial tmtio n T-,t Balsam for the throat and lungs, a rciutjuy mat. is guarnteea to cure and relieve all chronic and acute coughs. ttomiutt. urwncmus ana consumption. Price 25c and 50c. For sale by Tall- uiuu os (jo soie agents. SASSAFRAS BARK We have just received a direct shipment of Sassafras Bark from the New England states, which is very fine in flavor and riCn in MpHir-al Prrof fTco lfi We also havfi thp. cmitlmrn QmUr U..4- r. j .1 New .England Bark far ahead of the ordinary. iiijfrrciflN S DRUG STORE 65 Steps from Main, Street Tard ft?o0') si TUa !pitare Is on'eyery 'box pfjihe eeaulne Born, Tuesday morning, to Mr. and Mrs., Hermau Suhl, of Cold Springs, a girl. E. Bosse, who represents a largo syndicate of Green Bay, Wfls., wis es tablish a flax fibre plant in Salem for the manufacture of linen goods. Mrs. J. R. Hammond, aged SO years, died at Salem Monday. Sho was a resident of Paisley, Klamath county, and leaves a husband and two young children. Abraham L'uman, of Portland, tail or, has filed a petition in bankruptcy in the United States court in Port land. His liabilities amount to $7, S36.75. His assets are not mentioned. Edward S, Wright, or Woodburn, has filed' a petition in bankruptcy in the United States court in Portland. His liabilities are given at $2598.42 and his assets amount to 3G1C.7S. County Assessor Cadman, of Walla Walla, holds that deposits in the banks are proper subjects of assess ment and taxation. If he is correct he will add $2,000,000 to the valuation of Walla Walla county, and many mil lions to the total valuation of tho state. A dispatch from Azusa, near Los Angeles, Cal., announces the death at that place of Mrs. J. P. Galbraith, of Albany. She had gone there for her health. ' She was born in Tennessee in 1843, and came to Oregon in 1875. She left a husband and eight children. R. Martin, the groceryman, is now located in his new store in tho Qus Lafontaine new brick, three doors north of his old stand, where he has a more commodious room and a much better place to display his goods. The building he was in will probably be occupied by a restaurant. Dr. Christie received a telegram this morning stating that G. F. Greer, who is representing M. C. Gray, of Nebraska, will arrive Thursday with a consignment of stallions, that will be for sale at the Garrison & La fontaine stable. The Greer horses are well known here, several of them having been sold to Umatilla county residents last yeftr. What might have been a serious runaway was narrowly averted this morning on Main street, in front of Schwarz & Greulich's butcher shop. Henry Miller, a farmer living in tho Ccld Springs country, had brought in a li'ji to the butchers in a hack, and, while trying to back the team up to unload from the. hind end of the rig, the horses became unmanageable and started to run. They ran across the street and struck a telegraph pole, at the corner of Main and Webb streets, where they were stopped. The only damage was the breaking of tho neck yoke. The dance to be givgn Friday night, the 14th, by Mrs. E. N. LeRoy, for the entertainment of her friends, Is expected to be one of the swellesraf fairs ever held in PeAdleton. This is the first dance ever given in Pendle ton by the colored race, and it is caus ing considerable interest among the whites, who are anxious .to be per mitted to look on, but It has been an nounced that no spectators will be allowed. Quite a number of colored folks are expected from Portland, Baker City, Walla Walla and other neighboring towns and elaborate pre parations are being made to entertain them. THE 1902 STATE FAIR. Secretary M. D. Wisdom Says It will be Better Than Ever. N Secretary M. D. Wisdom, of the stntd board of agriculture and tho state fair board, was interviewed re garding tho 1902 fair. Ho said: "Wo shall undertako to advortlso to tho public Just what wo will do, and then do what wo say; carrying out our promises to- the letter. As In years past, wo will toll tho people what wo intond to havo and have it. "Tho livestock exhibit will bo bet ter nnd larger than ever before, as wo have more money for premiums in this department than ever before. There will be little change, boyoml the class of exhibits and Increase of premiums from last year. "Tho American Shorthorn Breed er's association havo given us $1000 this season, in addition to an equal amount of our own for premium lists In this breed of cattle, and tho Short horns will be fully represented. "The American Hereford Breeders association has donated $500 for pre miums for Hereford stock. There is great rivalry bctweon those two beef breeds, for the Pacific Coast market, in tho selling of bulls, and wo expect to seen a big showing put' up by both breeds. "I am glad to say that the state fair as an advertisement for Oregon is having its effect. Last year when in Chicago at the great 'stock show' all tho big breeders wore well posted in what wo aro doing; and asked many questions about this section of the country, with the view of estab Ushing breeding farms; and tho an nouncement in tho Telegram that C. R. Thomas, secretary of tho American Hereford Breeders' association, would ship to Oregon 200 head of thorough bred Hereford bulls is partial evi dence of tho good effects that tho dtate fair is having in tills direction. "The agricultural department is be ing devoted to state products exclu sively, and is creating universal In terest. Farmers aro making" plans for a large display, and In all tho de partments work Is progressing most satlsfactorially, and I think wo may say that tho Oregon state fair for 1302 will surpass any previous oxhlbi tions held." Surgeon's Knife Not Needed. Surgery is no longer necessary to ,cure piles. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures such cases at once, re moving the necessity for dangerous, patntui and expenslvo operations. For scalds, cuts, burns, wounds, bruises, sores and skin diseases It is unequall ed. Beware of counterfeits. Tall man & Co. and Brock & McComas. Attended a Wedding. R. Alexander returned Tuesday evening from La Grande and Baker City. In the former place he attend ed the marriage of Miss Marie Somers and Albert L. Morris, a prominent traveling man, of Denver, Col. The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Somers, of the Somers hotel, and ves one of tho leading society young ladles of the town. The wedding was a brilliant affair, it being attended by a large circle of relatives and friends, Mr. and Mrs. Morris left immediately after the wedding for Portland and will then go to Denver, where they will make their home. To the Yellowstone. The Oregon Railroad and Naviga tion company announces that ar ranKements have been comnletod hv the Harrlnian lines for tho transpor tation of passengers to tho Yellow stone National park by way of Mon Ida, Idaho. A round trip rate of $40.50 from Pocatello to tho park has been made. At present a lino of stages runs between Monlda and tho park, a distance of about 60 miles, but it is understood that automobiles will be placed on the line during the com ing summer. Where Consumption Can be Cured. The superintendent of tho govern ment sanitarium at Fort Bayard, Ariz., reports that he has demonstrat ed that consumption in every stngo can be cured by that climate, and ad herence to a simple regimen tho best arid purest food, absolute rest for those most exhausted from tho disease, and life as far as possible in the open air. He not only claims that patients are benefitted, but cured, and that those in tho latter stages or the disease aro cured. It Pays to Trade at the Peoples Warehouse. Tailor Made Suits and Skirts Now on sale, the most complete and elegant assort ment of Ladies' Outer Garments in this state, out side of Portland, fashionably cut, reliable, stylish and well made at very moderaate prices, Ladles Tailored Suits, Silk; Waists at)d Petticoats Separate skirts, novelty wash waists in madras, tincnV and nainsookc. flmong the New Spring Dress Goods Our Wool Dress Goods present every popular weave for the present season, in all the spring shadings. Minstral This is a canvas weave and very popular. We are showing several qualities in all colors at 50c to $175 per yard, Prurjella This is a satin finished, all wool material, lustrous and durable.all spring shades and black, at $1.00 per yard. Therefore a Great Many Other Weaves Too numerous to mention in detail, among the lot are Wool Crepe, Drap de Paris, Albatross, Henriettas, Cheviots, Mohairs in a range of qualities. f 11 rapes li Patterns! PENDLETON, OREGON. Mall Orders Pilled Send for Samples. Frazer Opera House, Goo. L. lUkor, Lcsseo nnd MnnAgor, Jn. It. Welch, Local Manager. SATURDAY, MARCH 15th, 1902. WHITMAN COLLEGE GLEE CLUB... COME AND HAVE A JOLLY TIME Rousing Chorouses, Glees, Humorous Sonus and College Songs Old College Men, Young College Men, Everybody will henr Soma of the Old Songs, Some of the Now Bonga, Good Sluglug. Prof Hauerbach, Dramatic Reading; Prof. Fischer, Violin Soloist; Prof. Lorlng, Pianist, Stallions For Sale. There will arrive on Thursday morning, from Beatrice, Nebraska, six Imported stallions from England and France, all registered, the finest ever brought to this county. All In tending purchasers are Invited to call and see them at Lafontalno's & Garrison's stables, on Alta Btreet. GEORGE H. GREER. Red Men Attention. All members of Umaholls Tribe No, 18, I, O. R. M., are requested to meet Tat Hendrlck's hall at 1 o'clock sharp, x"rjday afternoon, to attend the fun eral of Brother Ben Hagen. ROY W. RITNER, Chief of Records. For Rail". Twelve bufldlng lots in block 14, on the north side of the river In Raley's addition. Fine location and well grad ed. ''Inquire of N; W.' Potwlne, Pendle ton, Oi. - ' A ' riromlnenf Mancliurl'an' censor nag memorialized tho throne for the removal of Vu'Tlng" Fang, the Chin ese minister to the " United -States: The' densor' 'asserts1 that WU Ting Fang corruptly1 retained, ostensibly for repairs to the Chinese legation 10 Washington, 80,'000 of the Tien TbIo- silver- refunded by the American government.: t j . -j ...', ' HHHMBHHaHHIII Boston Store Shoes I FOR MEN I DOUGLAS 1 $3.50 ' r. ... FOR WOriEN GLORIA $3.50 FOR CHILDREN AND HISSES SCHOOL jygJJ HOUSE- for neN OWN MAKE $2.50 Boston Store 'Smoke Pendleton Boquet Cigars.1 BYERS' BEST FLOUR To make good bread ubo Byoro' BfBt Flour, It took first premium at the Chicago World's Fair over nil competi tion, and givea excellent satisfaction wherever used, Every sack is guaranteed. Wo havo tho beat Stoara Rollod Barley, Seed Rye and Beardless Barloy. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S. BYERS, Proprietor. The Bunch Is Off ! ! . . AND THE . . CLEVELAND LEADS . . yiTH THE . . CRESCENT A CLOSE SECOND WUUiAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAJ PRICES $25, $35, $40, $50 " for Inferior Bfcvcle? f 4 v -t CALL FOR A CATALOGUE JAMES B. W E L G Hft Aj5 E N E v. yx . ? i -i n LEGAL BLANKS .SilfCtJ: afogtfe of them'. A full supply always kt in stock, if'.: r.f ii- .. . . Hid ') V IVi J of . W .,,1 K.H "tt '-t$ v.Ui t tta, ii M ; ii'