Counties," which hegan In Whitman rotmty, saw its ollmnx in Walla Walla county, and the finale in Pendleton. Monday, march 21, 1902. PERSONAL MENTION Rl OOP Children's, Misses' and Ladies' SHOES We have on our bargain counter now a few broken lines of Children's, Miss es' and Ladies' Shoes, "ROMANCE OF THREE COUNTIES" ENDS HERE. which we offer you at prices that will surprise you. The prices are low, but the goods are of the best quality. You will get the cut price on these Shoes whether you ask for it or not. DINDINQER, WILSON & CO. Successors to Clearer Brother! . HAGEN-NARKAUS. Wedding Occurred Last Week at Pastor's Home. On Vrtd.iy. Mau-h 20, at 11 o'clock. In the forenoon, Mt. Isaac Hagen and Miss Gertrude Narkaus were united in holy wedlock at the residence of the German Lutheran pastor, the Jtov. H. W. Voight. Miss Olive Brace acted as bridesmaid and Mr. Emil Blum as best man. After the ceremo ny the bridal couple drove to the home of Mr. Hagen, at Gibbon, where they will reside. Mr. Hagen is a young stockman. His bride was a teather at Athena. A Great Violinist. Leonora Jackson and a strong com pany of artists will be in Pendleton on Wednesday evening March 2G, and will give a concert at Frazer's. The fame of Leonora Jackson is so uni versal . that she ranks among the greatest virtuosi of the world. Her extraordinary career the past four years in Europe and America has been a succession of veritable tri umphs. She gave lGi concerts in this country last season. Of lady vio linists, Leonora Jackson is acknowl edged beyond question the peer. Young Wife Goes Back to Her Pa rents at Waitsburg, Having Dissi pated Husband. Only a week ago a story was print ed in the East Oregonlan headed "A Romance of Three Counties," which told a thrilling story of how one, Ml3S Jpsslo Stevenson (Mnry Tweedy) had been wooed and won by a young man who appeared at the ' ilnnr nf linr nt rtn.f n Mi or'fl hnmiv 111 i Whitman county, one hot sultry sum i mer day four years ago; how the i heart of Miss Stevenson, who was i onlv 1(5 vears of aire, had warmed from friendship to love for tho young man, whose name was S. O. Reed; linuf n fmu mnntlia lntor thov wont to Spokane to get married and the auditor would not issue tho license until the bride got a written permit from her parents; how a newspaper man, who was acquainted witti ail parties, came to the rescue and re lieved the anxious young people by getting the consent of the mother over the 'phone; how they then re moved from Whitman county to Walla Walla county and how one day Reed disappeared. He did not go any too soon, how ever, for the officers of the law were after him. It was found that he was a bigamist and had a wife No. 1 in Nebraska. Before his departure from Waits burg, a little flaxen-haired boy was born to them and Reed loved his wife and little one, an dthey loved -him. He' got wind that the officers were after him and knew that unless he left the country and his loved ones, he would be arrested and torn from them by the arms of the law. So he bid thnm srondbvo. with trnrR In bin eyes, and that is the last time he has ueen seen or nearu ot by the wife. That was about two years ago. Find ing out later why her husband had so suddenly disappeared, she began to investigate and found that their marriage was not legal and that her name was yet Miss Jessie Stevenson blie did not sit down and not sit down and fnld hnr arms when she found this out, but be gan to look around for another heln- meet. She did not look lornr until h .m ,Uh,y un L man hv tl, m TiMniT I U,U,,,IUB IOr ller nomo m UanU Fred Martin, of Alba, is In town. Oliver Dickinson is in town from Athena. Earl Glllandors is In town from Meacham. Matt Mbsgrove was in town Sun day from his home in Milton. B. Stanfleld, the. Echo cattlo man, is registered at the St. George. H. Council, roadmaster for tho O. R. & N. at Umatilla, is in town. H. H. Edwards, the popular clerk at the St. George hotel, Is in Port land. Miss Francel Duncan, who spent Sunday in Pendleton, returned to Ba ker City this morning. Mrs. Mary Tweedy, sister of Thom as and Henry Sfeans, is in town from her home in Waitsburg. Mrs. C. J. Ferguson is in Walla Walla on a visit to relatives. She will be absent a week. Mjrs. Eugene Tausick, of Walla Walla, is the guest of Mrs. M. F. Kelly at the Golden Rule hotel. Miss Kntlmrhin Duncan, nf Echo. was a guest of Miss Celestino Moor- liouse in Pendleton on Sunday. G. W. Hunt, founder of the W. & C. R. railroad system, and W. T. Smith, of Echo, are at Hotel Pendleton. Mrs. O. G. Myrlck, of near Helix, is reported to be seriously 111' anil her life Is despaired of by her friends. Miss Francel Duncan, teacher in the Baker City public schools, spent Sunday in Pendleton with friends. The child of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Witliee, who has been exceedingly sick for many weeks, is Improved to day. Charles Cameron returned Rumlnv evening from Walla Walla, where he spent the day with his sister, Mrs. N. A. Jones. The Rev. S. B. L. Penrose, nresi. dent of Whitman college, wbb in town today, en routo homo from Union to Walla Walla. Senator George W. Proebstel, waB the guest of the Golden Rule hotel yesterday on his way home from a business trip to Portland. . Miss Marguerite Leasure, who has spent several months with tho. fnmllv of Sheriff W. Mi. Blakley, left Sunday TIE II M HERE'S THE FIRST LINE-UP FOR THURSDAY. For Sale. Partnership books between John Soibcrt and mvsnlf In o tnlln Di.nn room formerly occupied by Wheeler's photo studio, also a broken contract signed by John Selbert. See A. SCHWARTZ. found a man by the name of Hezekiah Smith, a junk dealer in Walla Walla, and they soon became friends and within a few weeks were married. They remained in Walla Walla until recently and were happy. About a month ago they came to this city, where .Mrs. Snith has two uncles living. Her husband gathered junk and sold it and made plenty of money to keep his wife at a hotel. and the little boy, who now is three years old, clothed in the best of style. He Became Dissipated. After coming here Smith got Judge W. R. Ellis left this mornine for Heppner, where he goes to dis pose of some cases before him in the court. He will return on Wednesday Louis Hunsiker left for Walla Walla Saturday to join his wife, who is in tne Hospital in that city, and .Yin jnuuauiy us away a week or longer. iv. Vinson, tne marble dealer of waua walla, is in town in tho inter ests of his business. Mr. Vinson is preparing to remove his marble works from Walla Walla to Lewiston. n ; Erltunrrl Gtl.. , 1 ir . --- ; j ...... uuiiv, mo JU-yuu.r-olU BOn drinking, and becoming jealous of his i of Mr. and Mrs. A. Stine, left on the For a Fir st-Class article in Stationery, Blank-books, Office and ewriter Typ Suppl les Go to wite, threatened her life. She was heartbroken at this suden turn of things, and tho coldness with which her husband had been treating her. Wlhen he threatened to kill her she wired her mother. Mrs. Tweertv nt Waitsburg, to como down at once, as sue was in trouble. In the monntimn she had eono to annthni- ninnn tr board and had refused to let her hus- nana see her. Ho was snmnwW taken back by her acts and threaten- eu to Kin himself unless his wife re turned to him. This she was afraid to do and told him she would not live with him again. Ho then went to a saloon and ordered a class called all his friends around him and told them that ho was tired of life and was going to end it all. Ho said: "I will see the sun rise in tho morn ing, but I will never see It set." That was Friday night, hut ho has not carried out his threats, and is still walking tho streets bemoaning tho loss of his wife. He now prom ises her if she will como back to him ho will treat her right and has no in tention of doing her harm. She fears him and rnfnuPB War i .- IMULKLT U 111 V - oil Saturday ovening and Mrs. Smith 1 13- KinK to leave tomorrow with her "Ku'h seoif protection under tho na- TALI-MAN & GO. THE LEADING npnnnicTc rontal root in waitsburg. "'1 This ends tho "Romano 0f Three A $10.00 SHOE If not properly fitted is not worth 3oc. As it not only injures the feet, but does not wear. Our Shoes at $3 and $3.50 The Pendleton Shoe Company " ueiayeu u. k. &. N train tminv the hospital at Portland whom Ha goes to try and get relief from rheu matism irom which he is suffering. H. O. Koeppen started this morn nig wun a torco of carpenters and stono masons for Warren, where Koeppen Brothers, tho contractors, .no erecting a largo and handsome residence near that place for Julius ruiiieman, a prosperous farmer. The report on Saturday that Mrs wean anuil and child had mnnni was not true. They were 111 and the symptoms resembled those of that disease, but when Health Officer Cole examined them ho found that it was not. mis disease. They aro much im proved at present. Donutv Shfirlfr n r tvi j a., i ; ' " return- w'n,?ayv?.nlns .from th0 hospital "v ,urt wuiju, wnero Mrs. Davis was operated on for t ago. Mr. Davis reports her now out ui imager ana getting along as well as could bo hoped for, although hor iv was mspairea of for soveral WUJfO Frank Leatherman and wife leave on tomorrow mnminn'o n i . . . u v. xv. oc ri, train for Spokane, whero they will "X . " "U1"- inoy navo been residents of Pendleton for a year rai' iurB- ainerman says alio hones Rnnl,n,,n ...in ' "M'u in?a? p,!l(1!0tn and she will bo ""i,ai" " wuii u as a homo. Heit Carl, nnw nnn-oof.j i n. io. f lie V "-&vu .ii mo writ ing Ot lifn lnRiirnn.n l.nn .1 . tl. T . "i oiauuu with the Jules Orau Opera Company, for nnrt In TvT ' " Wl" 8,06 ""tOn part in tho now opera now bolng fin ?!0tl.,.!?f ih company's presonta Pnri . n 1SU5S J Beason. Mr. r it, , ."kui 01 great prom so. and his Pendleton friends expect to hi? some excellent roiiorts from himX Ste mro tawble than UW5n neard in tho Vereln Elntracht Dance. There is to bo a grand ball at Ar. mory hall. Monday, March 31 hv tn Voroln Elntracht Socliy; TiVets for lady and gentleman l; 0xtra ladles' tickets BO cente. Tickota nr on sale at Joo Ell's V frM? ar? Chairman, May Be Changed Before the Game Is Called With Whitman. Sunday afternoon the baseball boys got together on the Alta street diamond and did some practice work and are getting themsolvcB in readi ness for tho game they are to play with the Whitman College hall team Thursday, tho 27th. The team is not yet complete for tho season, hut Manager Cohen and Captain ZIogler know qulto surely who they will play, as they haVo all their men picked. Of course, there may be a chango later on, and something may happen tltat some of tho players now in view may not get here. In case of Biich a tiling' happening, other quarters will have to bo looked to. The line-up for the Thursday's game, as now mapped out is as fol lows: Willner, pitcher; Clnud Pen- land, catcher; Clemens, short-stop; Hartman, first base; Clarence Pen land, second base; Ziegler, third base; Balrow, right field; Knox, left field; Cornell, center. This is not given positively as tho line-up, as there may be a chango before tho day of the game. Two or three other playors aro ex pected here in a fw days, and it is possible that Brown, who played through the season last year with Portland, will be hero in tinio for Thursday, and he may Jo part of the eatch'iig. A Homo Hcyoml Hie Ornve. nun, rt colored iiuin, was employed as porter In n niprcanfilo cstnlillKhtni'iit In a town In Florida, ami his duties re quired hlin to have the store swept by 7 o'clock in tho morning. He had been Into for nmny inornlngs, nnd on the sixteenth consecutive time his i-inploy-cr rpinonstrnteil with him thus: "Dnn, why can't you get hero on time?" "Well, Mr. L.," said Dan, "yor see, I live the other side of Mount norinon cemetery and can't always get yore on time." "Why In the world do you live so far from your work?" said his employer. Without a moment's hesitation Dan responded: "Yor see, It's dis yere way, Mr. L. I'll be hones' wid yer 1 wants a.hoine beyond the grave." UI 111311 A WRECK OF A FREIGHT. Cnrlylo'n VIimv of Apronw. Carlyle in his "Sartor Itesartus" wns able to Hurt n deep philosophy in aprons. "Aprons are defenses against injury to cleanliness, to safety, to modesty, sometimes to roguery. From the thin slip of notched silk (as it were, tho em blem and beatllied ghost of an apron) which some highest bred housewife litis gracefully fastened on to the (hick tanned hide girt around him with thongs, wherein the builder builds and nt ovening sticks ills trowel, or to those Jingling sheet Iron aprons wherein your otherwise half naked Villains hammer and smelt in their smelt fur nace, Is there not range enough in the fashion and uses of this vestment?" 1 1 ci wuii it incntini: I L r f i enr nni ... r tt no in packages, hut ,:u .X' mom "uwl SnecinlY coffee that J give a 1 lie approval of all who trvi. Iflsu blend of Mocba Z nnd two other coflfees tS makes all horse-feed, put imeknges, take a back gejtPtt THY IT OKCE-You will,,... Cheapest place in Oregon Pendleton-Ukiah Stage Huston & Carney, Pror,'i T navn V!!? 1rt4iti nvnfif A . . . jviugu, aiuu nnu L'jsmii, Gobi . "'"mg iipirrr City oflice at Tallnian t store. PA 1 JOE Accident Passcgers Delayed by an Near Meacham. The west! ound overland O. 11. X- N. train, due bore at 8 o'clock tliis morning, did not arrive until 1:10 this afternoon. The cause of the delay was from the breaking nf n wlinol under a freight car, two miles beyond aieacnam, which crippled tho freight until It could not cet out of tho wnv of tho passenger and it was compell ed to wait until a wrecking train ar rived and roplaced the broken wheel With a new truck. With thn nvnnn. tion of the breaking of the wheel no otner carnage was done other than the straining of the patience of the passengers on board tho passenger train. HEINZE'S BIG COMPANY. He Will Float One In New York City. Butte, Mont., March 24. Following the announcement of the acquisition of tho Cora mine by F. August Heinze comes tho statement that Mr. Heinze will shortly attemnt to float thr Rtnrir of a big company in New York City. il is uuuerstoou that tho Cora is to be the principal asset of the now company, The Cora is a property that has been worked for many years with varying success. Its output while Heinze operated It under lease, has ueen nnout au tons of ore of moder ate value daily. For Sale. Twelve building lots In block 14, on tho north side of the river in Italey's addition. Fine location and well grad ed. Inquire of N. W. Potwlno, Pendle- ion, ur. STORE: Special Sale of Ladies' Kid Gloves We have just received direct from the manufacturers. nOO pnirg Ladles'JIid Gloves. We will put these gloves on sale I f I iV i I A 1fD ITTXT1 HT.TW-.TTr.. 11 r . . L'nn r VT-rr. nrin.tr s-.t-t We will oiler our $1.50 grade for $1.26. We will oiler our $1.25 gratie for $1.00. Wo give a guarantee wilh every pair of these gloves. If they do not give satisfaction, gloves can be returned ana a new pair given in place, or monoy refunded. These are certainly the best gloves ever ollered in this city for the price, we make this sale to introduce our gloves, and when tho sale week euds, we positively will not sell for less than regular prices Yours Truly, THE LYONS MERCANTILE CO. Styles that Bear y PATENT LEATHER Dress Shoes !! I r- ,. j' FOR LADIES Nice ones either WELTS OR TURNS $3.50 and $4 FOR GENTLEMEN A Fine Patent CalfSkin $5.00 Enameled Calf Skin $5.00 You will noed them with those i-.nsuir uiotuee, The Stamp of Fashion. That is the sort of Hats that make up our line. You will find no better styles, no better materials, no better workmanship, no better prices than we offer you. Our reputation is the result of Six'J-khn Ykars in this one line and we are proud of our reputation for honest dealing. iIT IS BACK OF EVERY HAT WE WIAKt CARRIER MILLINERY We are Headquarters Seeing is Believing Carpets Carpets Carpets Furniture Furniture Furniture a. ana weDb streets Pendleton, Orego Y TT o t. J atOCk Food nr l,n, ' .i . piiwwc. Kow Kur fnr vr:iM. i?eu'vii'meai Mi l"" SEED SPELT7 ani M. A. RADER. Peoples Warehouse 1 u-r; Lrivune COLESWORTHY, tiav. flrln mA BsM M la mm