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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1902)
3 IS 1 ' V ;sffl' I SHOES For Won, Boys and Childron , : We claim to have the best assortment of popular priced Shoes in the city, Childrens' Shoes $1.25 to $1.50 . Boys' Shoes 1.25 to 2.25 Mens Working Shoes. . 1.40 to 2.75 Mens' Dress Shoes 2.5010 5.00 We have just received a Hue of Canvas und Bicycle hoes, which we ateselling twenty-live per cent cheuper than any other store iu the town. BAER DALEY One Price Glothiers, Furnishers and Hatters, Pendleton. THURSDAY. MARCH 13. 1902. GENERAL NEWS. President Roosevelt has appointed Charles Gorham, of California, as melter and refiner of the San Fran cisco mint. Doorkeeper Glenn of the house of representatives iu Washington died Wednesday afternoon of inflammation of the lungs. The steamer City of Providence sunk near Davis Bend, Miss.. Wed nesday and the engineer and clerk and 15 negroes were drowned. The five-story hrick building of the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company in Chicago, was destroyed by fire Tuesday night, the loss being $175 000. When the pope received Mbnsignor Sbare'tti on Monday before the depar ture of the latter for the Philippines, he urged him to make every effort to work with and conciliate the Ameri cans. The committee of congress on oceanic canals, at a special meeting on Wednesday decided to report with out amendment the Hepburn bill, prp viding for the construction of the" traus-isthminn canal by the Nica raguan route. The Allis-Chambers company in Milwaukee, have posted notices that on and after April 1 a raise of 5 per cent would be made in the wages of all employes and they would be given a Saturday half-holiday. This in crease will affect S500 employes of the company in various parts of the country. The semi-centennial or 50th anni versary of the Wells-Fargo Company occurs on March 15. To appropriate ly commemorate the event, evory em ploye who has been in the service for one year will be remembered with a silver medal, portraying the meth ods of carrying express, past and present. Charles D. Thompson, ex-supreme finance-keeper of the Supreme Tent, Knights of the Maccabees, who some time ago confessed to a shortage of $57,000, was arrested at Port Huron, Tuesday. The warrant contains nine counts, four of which charge Thomp son with having embezzled $57,000 between February 12, 1001, and Aug' ust 12, 1901. PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEWS There are eight cases of smallpox in St. John's, near Portland, among workmen of the O. R. & N., at that place. The financial report of Charles A. Redmond. '02, manager of the 1901 football team of the Oregon Universi ty, shows receipts of $2023.80, and expenditures of 51752.40. This leaves a balauce on hand of $271.40. R. E. Wilson, fi. J riart and R. A. Glltuer have incorporated the Oregon Coast Navigation Company, with a capital of $125,000. Tho purpose of the company is to operate a line of Bteamers between Portland and Coos Bay. H. C. Messunger and J. P. Cotton, both saw mill men, quarreled at Cot ton's mill, three miles from Ashland, Southern Oregon, and the result was that Messonger shot and fatally wounded Cotton. Messenger is in custody. Mury A. Stackpole lias brought suit in the United States court against the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, to recover $20,000 damages for in juries received in a collision which took place, near Garrison, a Bmall lown tn Montana, on the run from Deer Lodge to Portland. In the counties comprising tho Spo kane land ofilce district there is about 025.000 acres of surveyed government land which has never been entered upon, and about 1,700,000 acres of unsurveyed government land. The district is made up of Spokane, Stev. ens, Forry, Lincoln and Adams coun ties, and a portior. of Whitman. HOTEL ARRIVALS. The Pendleton. W. H. Fayle, Portland. W. M .Phelps, San Francisco. J. F. Walker, Memphis. Daniel Sully. Augusta True. Miss J. de Grignon. F. Wieden, Portland. William M. Gleson, The Dalles. M. S. Rosenbladt, San Francisco. A. S. Heatfield, Spokane. C. Roffner, Seattle. G. S. Youngman, Portlaud. R. B. Coman, Portland. E. L. Ferris, Kansas City. Mrs. Ferris, Kansas City. Lee Hirsch, New York. William Maher. Portland. C. M. Smith, Portland. IH. C .Paulin, Camden. Ward T. Smith, Tacoma. J. B. Bache, Seattle. George W. Gaines, Philadelphia. J. Burmanger. J. B. Crosfield, Portland. L. B. Mandel, San Francisco. O. B. Pearl, Portland. J. W. Sawyer Walla Walla. George M. Halloway, Seattle. H. R. Jackson, San Francisco. Thomas Kerney, San Francisco. J. M. Rice, Portland. George W. Evans, Pullman. Mrs. Evans, Pullman. Meyer Abraham, Portland. J. E. Froome, Athena. E. J .Flyun. Portland. B. F. Davies, Milton. J. B. Stoddart, Salt Lake. The Golden Rule. J. H. Reed, Portland. H. H. Williams, Leadville. Joseph McCahe, Walla Walla. J. R .Candish and family, Hunts. Miss Evans, Walla Walla. J. A .Nelson and wife, Athena. W. H. H. Scott, Athena. J. L. Jones, Walla Walla. Helen Nelson, New York. Christie Miller, New York. Sam Lee, Spokane. A. E. McBreen, Spokane. William Huston, city. Frank Hanlan, Meacham. William Folsom, Pilot Rock. H. L. Shute, Thornton. .1. B. Switzler, Umatilla. W. N. Maxwell, Portland. G. A. Nichols, Union. William Nichols, Milton. A. J. Van Aerman, La Grande. J. E. Williams, Baker City. A. Hubbard, Salt Lake. P. Sullivan, Salt Lake. R. Gault, Sprague. L. E. McBee. H. C. Rogers. John G. Griffin. New York. Robert Blaylock, New York. ' C. W. Hess, Spokane. J. Caughlin, Spokane." C. L. Downer, Spokane. S. A. Frans, Spokane. F. S. Heck, New York. W. F. Kohman, New York. G. W. Bradley, Athena. J. S. Connors, Walla Walla. C. J. Freese, Spokane. D. H. Nelso citv. G .H. Greer, Beatrice. .- A. C. Hemphill. Pilot Rock. C. V. Dyment, Walla Walla. 5100 Dollars Reward, S100. ' The readers of this paper will bo pleased to learn that there is at least one die mil disease mm science nas oeeu UDie to cure In all it lacco.uuu luHi is euiarrn. Hairs catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known tc the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease requires a constitutional treat ment, Hall's Caturrh Cure is taken internally, 1 acting directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of tho disease, and giving the pa- iiciisiu uy uuuuing up ine constitution and assisting nature In doing tta Work. The nrnnrlitirt hnvn en mnAh fnl.l. i .1..- . - I - hw ..MW. IHIIU til IW9 UUnillYU powers that thoy offer One Hundred Dollars for , 11 it inns hi vuio. oenuiorustof testimonials. Address, o i.. . J OHENKV CO,, Toledo, Ohio. Bold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's hnifllly I'llls aro the best. May Sell Reservation.. Five prominent Indians from the Coeur d'Alono reservation in North ern Idaho, have returned from Wash ington. They state that the presi dent told them that if they wanted to sell their land to go ahead and sell. It is olaimod tho plan now is to drive all half-breeds off tho . reserve, then sell the land to the government to be thrown open. This would leave all the money for 400 or 500 full-blood Indians. FRUIT MAY BE INJURED. DlAr.t.t VUimtU.. Ctit-tiMn tha Trnoc I ibiiomi. .ibu.iiki w.M. hi ' y . iwtaw and Buds Which Frost May Kill. Will there be any more cold wcatli or that will effect the fruit buds? Is the question tliat the horticulturists are asking each other but all arc slow in making any predictions either way. It is admitted that the buds are stnrt ing very early this year sevoral weeks earlier than is usunl but it is earnestly hoped that the weather will be favorable and that the people of Pendleton and Umatilla county will not be compelled to send out of the country for fruit for next season. Trees arc budding all over the coun try and if tho present weather keeps up it will only be a few weeks until the trees, as well as the grasses, will be putting on their summer coats and summer will be here in earnest. While it is impossible to toll yet what knid of a fruit crop will lie in this country, the orchardists are feel' ing somewhat uneasy about the out come.. In speaking of this one horti culturist suid today: "It is too early yet to make any predictions as to what kind of a fruit crop we will have, but if nothing hap pens from now on there is no reason to believe that there will not be plen ty of all kinds in most sections of the county. Of course, in places, peaches and cherries have been in jured, but this does not reach all over this section and while some orchards will be short of these fruits others will have good yields. The prospects are as good as usual for apples but the buds are swelling considerably al ready and it is quite early for this. Should a cold snap or hard frost come now it would be of more injury to the fruit than later for when the trees just begin to bud they are easiest killed. After the trees are in full bloom or the fruit is formed it will take a harder freeze or more cold to effect them than it does when the buds are just beginning to swell." Already orchardists are getting themselves ready for the spraying season and it is expected a more strenuous effort will be made this sea son to rid the trees of the worms that infest the apples than ever be fore. Last year's apple crop was not up to the standard of excellence be cause of the worms that infected so large a per cent of them, and, al though there is a law to enforce every man to spray, this is something that is not done generally. It should be, however, and every effort should be made to keep the fruit, as well as the trees, free from disease. RECOVERED FROM INJURIES. George Spere, Fireman, in Town Vis iting Friends Just From Hos pital. George Spere and wife are in the city visiting friends. Mr. Spere was fireman on the work train that wasJ wrecked one mile east of The Dalles the 13th of September, and has just got out of the hospital in Portland, I having not yet entirely recovered from the burns received about the face. The train wrecked was a double header gravel train, which ran into a bauk of sand that had been piled on the track by the wind and both en gines were thrown from the track, with the result that two engineers, Tom Harland and Ed Rees, were In stantly killed, and Mr. Spere was so badly burned that it was thought he would die. After the accident he walked almost all the way to The Dalles, where he could get relief from his suffering. Mr. Spere had only been working for the O. R. & Com pany 13 hours when the accident oc curred, having come from Montana, 'i.!e he had been working on the Short Line, just a few days before going to work for the O. R. & N. George Spere is a son of J. J. Spere, a well known Umatilla county farm er, and has many relatives and friends hereabouts who are glad to s ee him out and around once mere. DR. BlfoGHAM LECTURES. Delivers an Interesting Address at Whitman College. Before tho friends and students of Whitman college Monday, says the Union, Dr. J. E. Bingham, of this city, reau an exceptionally well prepared paper on "The Profession nf Mnrll. cine." Dr. Bingham's paper was one ot tue regular series of "The Choos ing of a Life Work," work lectures, which were instituted by the Wilt man faculty last fall and which hnvn been given on various professions from time to time. In part Dr. Blng ham said: "Surgery and medicine may be pleasant pastimes as studies but the pnii (Icing of them is a very serious turners. When the student of medi cine once reaches a point in his ca reor where he fully apperciatut his responsibilities in life ho is vrv m.f to wish he had chosen some other oc cupation. He may, after completing his studLs abandon till nn!ri.slnn as did a well know American autlirr who gave in "his reason thnr in niv. Ing the statistics and mortality re ports he found that each ilnrnr nf medicine who practiced his profession for any average length of time lost 1500 patient. He said lie had con cluded to let his 1500 live and so took up journalism. "Lawyers aro not apt to pose ueforo the public as saving life when thoy address juries ami imi ?na In flirt tome of prisoners acused of murderj They are applauded and praised on all sides for their' efforts in this di rection, even when their clients de serve tho severest punishment that the law inflicts. There is a huml. sentimentality about such praise that does not appeal to the inet'icil man -at least not In a way wh! jh is as on vinclng as the sheriff's subpoena. Mr. Attorney addressos himself to a jury of his countrymen in tho selec tion of whom the strictest impartial ity is shown. Whntever dofocts of character they possess, in this re spect they must be unimpeachable. They must he totally ignorant of the merits or farts of the case, or as one of our western statesmen puts it, 'They must know nothin about noth in'.' Should our legal Demosthenes fail to convince the jury, the judge may set aside the findings and grant a a new trial, or tho supreme court may find that something was callod by a wrong name and set the man free, and if these fail an appeal to the gov ernor may still be successful. No matter what mistake our legal friend may make there is still a chance for his client. But it is different iu the sick room, where a man's life de ponds upon the decision and acts of his physician, who, if he makes a serious error, cannot get the penalty sot aside. From the decision of his jury there is no appeal." Good Advertising Matter. One of the homeseekers recently arriving from the east told the Walla Walla Union reporter that to reach the heart of the homeseekers the homeseekers the daily papers of this section should be sent him. He con tinued: "Copies of Walla Walla papers sent to different sections of the east and middle west would do more to bring settlers to this section than all the advertising matter of the folder va riety that could be scattered. While the people in the land from which these settlers must come are better posted now than they were a few years ago as to the advantages in ed ucational lines possessed by the northwest, there is nothing which tells the standing of a community as well as the newspapers which is prints and through them is the pro per manner of advertising." Can't Keep it Secret. The splendid work of Dr. King's i New Life Pills Is daily coming to light. ' No such grand remedy for Liver and Bowel troubles was ever known be- i fore. Thousands bless them for cur- ing constipation, sick headache, bil-l liousness, jaundice and indigestion. I Try them. 25c at Tallman & Co.'s drug store . Notice to Contractors. Sealed proposals will be received at Baker & Ogg's up to 12 o'clock noon, of March 20th, 1902, for the erection of a one-story brick building at Athe na, Oregon. Plans and specifications can be Been at Baker & Ozc'b. The right Is reserved to reject any and all bids for the work. H. L. SWAGGART, March 11, 1902. Pendleton, Or. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Brorao Quinine Tablets. A'l druggists refund the money If It falls to euro. K. W. Grove'" signature is on each box. 25c When yotf are DEAD Everyone, speaks well of you When you are very much alive some speak ill. It' anyone speaks ill of MB its because we are VERY MUCH ALIVE One thing is certain you get better groceries for less monev when you buy of F. S. Younger & Bon. Don't believo the knock ers; try them for your selves; order of F. S. YOUNGER & SON, an'' get your goods delivered promptly. For Health, Strength , and Pleasure urink Polydore Moens, Proprietor. .n rr n -r -r i "n r a rn r vr O rn -w v Cromwell DrcnrriiM ctahd clothing DUJ iUn DIURC DEPARTMET Timothy Seeds Brone Oralis Seeds SEEDS D S Alfalfa Clover Seeds feeds Thompson Hardware Company JESSE FAILING ...THE CARPET MAN.,. We Are Cleaning Oat... Our Wlntor Carnots to make room for our Now Spring Stook It's a sweeping reduction in prices, too. and the wise housekeeper will do well to tuke advantage of them. Coruo now and make your selection of Lace Curtains, Portiere, Rugs, otc. Closing out an elegant line of Hope Portiere, Matting and Wall Pupor. Sewing Machines of All Kinds. AMERICAN PLAN. $3 00 per Da) and Upwards. THE PORTXAN wn.i r . n POR1,LA-ND, OBBQON. Special Whtph tn Pti.ti... rt 10 tourists and coMmercl.!tr.VelerV7 w '"""tf. C. BOWERS, n ninii.. LOTH IN tff We are gU& annftffflre. it. v- tug rival of ad shipment of latest styles of and . T7. 1UI aa). AY JL-&U Suits for . . . Sprifl of . . 1902 Superbly nuii and finished oi merchant tailo suitings. 0 Get Out Prices Sj Yoti Bay Garden Seeds ini or Package. 631 ria Phone 1 Finest m in the ifjj mm