East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, March 28, 1902, Image 5

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    Closing Out Sale Continues
BARGAINS:
NOTE FOLLOWING
. . . PRICES
ffy 0
25 yards Prints . . . . $1 00
20 yards Amasfceag Gingham i 00
20 yards Bleach Mslin i 00
25 yards Oating Flannel . . i 00
iOc and 5c Lace, per yard 05
75c Corsets for 39
1
MINILD
f
Qeaver Bros. D.G.Co
CLOSING OUT
FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1892.
BREVITIES.
James A. Howard, farm loanB.
Baseball headquarters at Frazler'B,
Nicest candy In the cl'.y. Dutton'a
Ice cream chocolates.
Wanted. Girl wanted to do gener
al housework. Enquire at this of
fice.
Ladles' Mcintosh $2.35, regular
price, ?G.50. Cleaver Bros Dry
Goods Co.
Stockmen intending to purchase
stock salt should write the Standard
Grocery for prices.
The Standard Grocery can sell you
fresh ranch eggs cheaper than any
store in Pendleton.
Have you noticed Mrs. Campbell's
millinery window of beautiful Easter
hats lor children? -
Money to loan at lowest rates on
town or country property. J. R. Dick
sou, East Oregonian building.
' & Lubken, Pendleton's new
photographers, 118 East Webb street,
Indian pictures, landscapes and Butter
creek rabbit views for sale. Copying
and enlarging a specialty. Call and
eee us,
WE HAVE
The Latest
Tie Newest
The Prettiest
Sash Buckles
in the town.
Just in
J. i,.i..
j 'vvo 1 1 Ul 1 L
$X.25to$3.00
9a t ?
v v
f
T
f
i
L. HUNZIKER
Jeweler and Ootician
X Next door fn P AlAvnnrlAf'c 3!
- .- . 1 HIIUIIUUI j
4 mMm
Fishing tackle at Frazier's.
Fifteen yards fine oil silk line, 10c.
Noll's fishing tackle store.
1 ?1.00 to $1.50 Bhfrts to close, 49c.
I Qeaver Bros' Dry Goods Co.
A fine line of Easter neck ribbons
just received by R. Alexander. See
them.
Heinz's bottled goods are the purest
and best on earth. Call at Hawley
Bros.
Go to "The Missouri" blacksmith
shop for all kinds of repairing, horse
shoeing a specialty.
The Milwaukee beer manufacturing
trust will open a wholesale liquor
house in Walla Walla.
James B. Chambers,, a prominent
business man of Eugene, died Wed
nesday, aged 72 yearo.
If you want fine meatB,- go to
Shcwarz & Greulich. They handle the
best there is to be had.
The Standard Grocery has Just re
ccived another large shipment of the
Walla Walla Health Foods.
Good land for homesteads, spring
water and timber. Apply to J. R,
Guthrie, Pendleton, Oregon .
N. H. Cottrell lost a very fine cow
a few days ago. She fell over a high
bank and died from her injuries.
For rent Furnished rooms for
house keeping on Garden street
Inquire at 301 South Main street.
Ask to see 4111 black hose. We
are selling them at 25c; worth 40c.
Cleaver Bros' Dry Goods company.
Magnolia cologne, the new Import
ed perfume, at Koeppen's drug store.
You will want some for Easter Sun
day.
For something fancy and first in
quality, ask for Heinz's goods, the
only complete line found in the city
at Hawley Bros.
John Maxwell Young, one of the
most popular young men of Astoria,
died Wednesday from consumption,
after an illness of about a year, aged
25 years.
E. A. Frengel, a mining engineer,
died at Oakland, Cal., from injuries
received by falling over the banisters
at the Sangamon hotel, in Baker City,
in February last.
N. Berkeley, the real estate man,
has sold, for the Equitable Mortgage
Company, the J. Walter Scott ranch,
southeast of Pilot Rock, to the, Wag
ner brothers, for 1350.
For Sale All kinds of city and
country property, part caBh, balance
In yearly payments. Will buy you a
home, you pay for it by the month.
Houses rented, collections made. Ri-
liorn & Cook, room 10, over Taylor's.
Magnolia Cologne
The new imported perfume. It's the sweetest and most
fragrant Perfume wo have ever been able to offer.
50 cents an ounce
a special price for this lot Oome early, onr supply is limited
KOEPPEN'S DRUG STORE
65 Step, from Main Street Toward the Cort Hove
TUm tigottmn to oa.cTfy box of the gaula
Laxative prows QHime
HOW THE RAINS GLADDEN
HEARTS OF CALIFORNI ANS,
Famous and Long Sought Mother
Lode Discovered on San Antonio.
Santa Ana, Cal., March 29. Up to
the 24th of February wo had had but
four Inches of rainfall and peoplo in
all the various Industries in this won
derful country of diversified interests
began to take on a color as nearly
resembling a dark blue, ds you could
put your finger in your eye. Four
successive dry seasons Is quite too
many for a country with as many
inches of "developed" water even as
this has. But since the last above
mentioned date there have been di
vers and numerous rains, and the rec
ord for tho season now stands at
about 10 inches, which is quite am
ple to insure as good crops as tho
country has any record of.
Grain which a month ago was dy
ing, absolutely burning up for want
of moisture, is now waving in the
rippling breeze as green and vigorous
as a newly fledged political leader.
Rainfall In this state has a slight
variation. For Instance, we have 10
inches here, four inches at San Diego
and 80 inches at Mariposa. The Mar
iposa record will seem quite large to
some people, and yet tho amount Is
quite insignificant compared with the
fall at Yaquina Bay, Oregon, where
120 inches would hardly be sufficient
to excite passing comment. Most of
the grain farming here is done on a
large scale. The San Joaquin ranch
of 110,000 acres is rented out in one
and two thousand acre tracts, and
the poor devils who do all the work
and take all the chances are compell
ed to give young Irvine one-fourth of
everything they grow, even down to
the stubble.
This year he is compelling them to
plant one-eighth of the acreage to
beans. "By grab," as Umatilla coun
ty's candidate for governor would say.
won't those eight or nine thousand
acres produce a vast quantity of the
luscious, melting bachelor strawber
ries. Found Rich Mother Lode.
For more than forty years men
have been scouring the gulches,
ridges and ravines around Mount San
Antonio, or "Old Baldy," for the
mother lode that has supplied the San
Gabriel river with the thousands of
dollars of placer gold that has been
washed from the bed of that stream
each year, but the secret was so
securely locked in the rugged and
almost lnaccessable mountains that it
seemed the treasure must forever re
main undiscovered. Last fall, two
prospectors "accidentally stumbled on
the ledge where it had been laid bare
by a recent freshet. The ledge Is said
to be 30 feet wide and of almost phe
nomenal richness.
A large crew of men are now at
work on a grade over which they will
haul the necessary machinery for a
40-stamp mill.. Another ledge, or per
haps an extension of the same ledge,
has been discovered several miles to
the east, and a mill is being erected
on it. Thus you see we have a little
mining excitement right at our very
door, without having to go trudging
off to the snow-capped peaks of
Thunder Mountain, or the Ice locked
shores of Norther nAlaska.
1500 Cars of Celery.
The trains this week finished mov
ing the last of this season's celery
crop. A recapitulation of the figures
shows there were 1500 carloads, and
the net profits to the grower was in
the immediate vicinity of 12 cents a
dozen bunches. This, they "claim,
leaves a very nice margin for the
grower.
This year several thousand acres
of the celery lands will be planted to
beets on contract with the reflnory
at Chino. Last year the Chlno fac
tory shipped beets from as far north
as Ventura county, and even then the
refinery was run at full capacity for
only a few months. There is consid
erable talk of putting up a sugar fac
tory at Imperial or Calenco. These
are -new towns on the Colorado delta
near the Mexican boundary line. It Is
claimed there is a fine body of land
there with unlimited quantities of
water for irrigating purposes. The
cenal company have sold water stoch.
for 400,000 acres, and the rush lor
land seems to not abate a fraction.
The place evidently holds iu store
great fortunes for somob-jilv but !
fear it will redound more to the profit
of the wily land speculator r'ian to
the actual occupant.
;'Wellf By Grab."
Through reading the East Oregon"
Ian I get the impression that Mr. Fur
nish enjoys a very fair prospect of
carrying off the top plum on the tree.
Well, "by grab," I would not be sorry
to hear it, for while he haB loft, dug
out, or absconded from the good old
democratic party, he is undoubtedly
tho same old frank, whole-souled,
open-hearted Bill Furnish that he used
to be. Besides, in these rushing times
when men shift their religion, poli
tics and habitations with the velocity
of the rapid transit, it ia no wonder
we wake up some morning and find
a good man on the other side of the
fence. Although I have tried to be a
.consistent follower of the good old
JeffersoniaB doctrine for 80 years or
more, it some one should nsk mo
w-linf lol.-nt np tinrti- nrmiilliillnti 1
was going to affiliate with tomorrow,
I would bo comnened to say m nu
candor, "Damflno."
D. W. M DANNALiD.
ATHENA WON.
Athena, March 28. Athena won
agnlnst Whitman today by n score of
12 to 8.
A Rummage Sale.
The young ladles of tho St. Agnes
Guild will hold a "Rummage Sale"
Monday afternoon and evening, April
1st, at the Parish House, l cxt door
to Episcopal church. This Is the place
to find bargains in clothing, house-1
hold articles, books, magazines, etc.
In addition to tho rummage salo thero '
r-ill ln fnnnv nrttflns nit flnwnrs. I
aprons, etc., for sale. Light refresh
ments will bo served and a pleasant
time is assured all of those who attend.
CUtem titntlntlcs.
A cistern 10 foot deep and 10 foot in
diameter will hold, approximately, 150
barrels of water. The most common
size is 12 feet diameter by 10 feet In
depth, which makes a capacity of u
little over 200 barrels. One of 13 foot
diameter and about 15 feet doptli will
hold 14.4SU measured gallons, or 37:2
barrels, counting forty gallons to the
barrel.
Snlted Popcorn.
Economical, easy to prepare and
Wuolesome for a party Is salted pop
corn. Trepare after the corn Is well
popped exnetly as you would salted
almonds or peanuts and heap In low
glass dishes. It will not hurt the chil
dren, no matter how heartily they ent,
and makes n pretty ndditidn to tho ta
ble. Mournful.
Toward the end of the mince pie
stage Willie put down his spoon and
pushed away his unfinished trifle.
"Why. Willie." said his father,
"what's the matter? You look quite
mournful!"
"Yes," replied Willie, "that's just It.
I'm more'n full." And the innocent
child wondered why everybody laugh
ed. Loudon Globe.
Horses Wanted.
Will be in Pendleton Friday and
Saturday, March 28 and 29th, at La-
fontalne & Garrison's feed yard to
buy horses weighing from 1050
pounds and upwards, and from 5 to
8 years old. ,Must be fat, sound and
blocky built. J. u. haxks.
The homllest man in Pendleton, as
well as the handsomest, and others,
are invited to call on any druggist
and get free a trial bottle of Kemp's
Balsam for the throat and' lungs, a
remedy that Is guaranteed to cure and
relieve all chronic and acute coughs,
asthma, bronchitis and consumption.
Price 25c and 50c. For sale by Tall
man Sc. Co., sole agents.
Representative Hlldebrand introduc
ed a bill in congress appropriating
$357,837 to pay Joseph's band of Nez
Perces their pro rata share of in old
appropriation made for tho entire
tribe of 1893, in which this band did
not share. .
Lindsay W. McCartney, the only
son of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. McCartney,
of The Dalles, and a most popular
young man, who died In tho family
residence Tuesday, after a prolonged
illness, was buried Wednesday. Ho
was 20 years of ago.
Cyril Whitehouso, son or an English
clergyman, aged 1G years, and an ap
prentice hi a ship in Portland harbor
stands a self-confessed thief In the
police court in that city.
Smoke Pride of Umatilla Cigars.
We are just in receipt of
the largest shipment of the
Celebrated
DOUGLAS
$3.
SHOE
oo
AND
50
That ever came to Pendle
ton. NEW . . .
SHAPES
STYLES
LASTS
COMBINES
LEATHERS
' SPRING WEICHT
FOR.1902
Boston Store
It Pays to Trade at the Peoples Warehouse.
Stpise Sale? No. J 93.
-FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1902
20,000 Yards Vallenciennes Laces
will bo placed on our counter and ottered to vott at Lmvor Prices
tlinn you ever saw Ircforc 33 1-3 Por Cent Discount will bo the
reduction for this day, which menus tlmt Lace that sold for
12c per do.
ISo per do.
a4o per do.
30o per doz
45c per doz
Too per doz
do regular
0c regular
lilo regular
ICo regular
yds wiU be at Hurprtae
yds will lie at Surprise
yds will be at Surprise
yds will be at Surprise
yds will be at Surprise
yds will boat SurpiNo
prlco Lneo at Surj rise
price Lni'o at Surprise
prlco Luce at Surprise
price Lace at Surprise
112 yds for 8o
lilydsforliic
111 yds for Kin
112 yds for 120o
112 yds for 30o
112 yds for 50o
per yard -lo
per yard (to
per yard 8o
per yard lOo
This sale Includes every yard of ValU'iielennes Lace in the house. These
prices nro good for this day and tills day only. Not over $5.00
wortli of Laeo to one'pento'n.
Now Skirts, Now Waists, New IVttlooata for Easter; 100 New Tailor
Made Suits for Easter; New Suits for tho Hoys and Little
Fellowa; New Shoes for all of you.
Agent
Butter-
ick
Pattern
Tho ppdn po Wnrphn cp
1 b blip bu If II b Ullub
MEN'S OUTFITTERS
nail
Orders
Piompt
ly Pilled.
Send for
Samples
HARD WART?
FISHING TACKLE
SHEEP SHEARS
V KENTUCKY1 "
(WHISKEY
W. J. CLARKE & COM'Y
Dal.y East Oregonian by Carrier,
only 15 cents a week.
For Gentlemen
who cherish
Quality.
3l
Bold by JOHti 3"HMIT
The Louvre Saloon
ENPI.ETON ORKOOK
BYERS' BEST FLOUR
To make good broad nao Byoro' B'nt Flour. It took first
premium at tho Chicago World's Fair overall competi
tion, aud gives oxcellont Batisfnction 'wherever used.
Every sack ia guaranteed. Wo have the beat Stoam
Rolled Barley, Seed Rye and Beardless Barloy.
5TON ROLLER MILLS
W. S. RYERS, Proprietor.
LHCJA.L "ianfor arceit-
afogtie of them. A fII supply always leept ia stock.
It Pays to Trade at Ihe Peoples Warehouse
Three Great Specials for Easier
We will give all tho Ladioi in town a chanco to get a now
Hkirt for Jiaster at a Reduction
$1.79 black sorgo and alpaca
skirt reduced to
$L00
$L98
$2.05 black' Hergo and alpaca
skirt reduced to
Sklrtain Oxford Clroy, medium Clrey, Cadet bluet, aud Navya from
$2.39 to $ 1 5.00
Black Silk
Skirts
In all the lat
est styles from
$6 to $50
We are showing
a larpre assortment
of tailor madeaulta
from
$5.95 to $50
IiJaok aud wool
Cheviot SkTrtn
Tailor Aiade, Nlee
1 y Trimmed i u
TallehiHnd Moire
at
$549
AGENTS
BUTTKKIC1C
POTKRNB
TUB
PeoplesWareliouse
PENDLETON, OR BOON
HAIL OH
OKH8 FIU.XD
PROMPTLY