Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1902)
losing Out Sale Continues iARGAINSt NotE ffis f f 25 yards Prints . - . . $1 00 20 yards Amaskeag Gingham J 00 20 yards Bleach Mtralin J 00 25 yards Otfting Flannel . . t 00 iOc and. i 5c Lace, per yard 05 75c Corsets for 39 leaver Bros. D.Q.G0 CLOSING OUT (TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1902. BREVITIE8. nes A. Howard, farm loanB. best candy In the ciy. Dutton's ream chocolates. bckmen Intending to purchase salt should write the Standard ery for prices. Standard Grocery can sell you ranch eggs cheaper than any In Pendleton. . Ive you noticed Mrs. Campbell's aery window of beautiful Easter for children? knted A 'girl to do general Ibermald work in a hotel. En at Hotel St. George. aey to loan at lowest .rates oa or country property. J. R. Dick- East Oregonian building;. & Lubken, Pendleton's new bgraphers. 118 East Webb street. pictures, landscapes and Butter rabbit views for sale. Copying enlarging a specialty. Call and is. bedtime Itake a pleasant herb I, the next morning I feel bright my complexion Is better. My says that it acts centlv on the kch, liver and kidneys and is a ant laxative. It is made from I, and is prepared as easily as is caned Lane's Medicine. Family Medicine moves the each day. Price 25e anil KOn. pie by. Tallman & Co., sole HAVE Tic Latest The Newest The Ptettiest ash Buckles i in the town. Just in Pees fromaMK $.25 to $3.00 $$ HUNZIKER eweler and Optician fxt door to R. Alexander's Broom grass seed at Hawley Bros. Official league balls $1.10 at .Nolfs Stationery and Book Store. $1.00 to $1.50 shirts to close, 49c. Cleaver Bros' Dry Goods Co. Everything new and fresh in the vegetable line at Hawley Bros. For Rent Five-room furnished house. Inquire of J. P. Walker. Lost At dance Monday night, pho to button. Leave at this office. Get .jour garden and flower seeds in package and bulk at Hawley Bros For Sale A few good fresh milch cows. Inquire of Platzoeder & Min ger. Ladies' Mcintosh $2.35, regular price, $6.50. Cleaver Bros' Dry Hoods Co. Born, Monday, to the wife of H. H Copeland, who lives in the west part of town, a boy. If you want fine meats, go to Shcwarz & Greulich. They handle the best there is to be had. The Standard Grocery has Just re ceived another large shipment of the Walla Walla Health Foods. Neagle Bros, have Just received two carloads of iron-clad hub Winona wagons and Gate City hacks. E. Boettcher has Bold a quarter sea tion of land near Echo for $2000. John S. MlcGavern was the purchaser. Ask to see 4111 black hose. We are selling them at 25c; worth 40c. Cleaver Bros Dry Goods company, Our stock of millinery is still com plete, notwithstanding our great East' er sale. Come and see us. Miss Rose Campbell. The Parish Aid of the Church of the Redeemer, will hold the regular monthly meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. G. A. Hartman. Augustus F. and Frederick A. Hill have sold a fraction over 21 acres of land in section 7, township 2, to Cyntha A. Bryant. Consideration, $1093.75. Our line of neckwear surpasses any thing ever shown In Pendleton, both In variety and colors, and bear in mind we sell cheaper than any other store In town. Baer & Daly. For Sale All kinds of city and country property, part cash, balance la 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. WW AND CHICKEN TWO WEARY WILLLIES AND A LUNCH PAIL. One of Them Tells His Story After Coming Here to Jail. Constable John Dykes, of Milton, brought two' men to the county jail Monday evening who were sentenced by Justice J. L. Miller, to 12 days In the county Jail in' default of paying fines of $25 each for stealing two dinher palls. They are of the genial hobo type arid their names are Ed Pollock and Ray Shafcr. They claim to bo from the East, are men of about 30 years of age, typical Roving Wil lies; for their hair is long and mat ted, and their clothes fit too soon arid show that they were not made espec ially for their occupants. The story of one of the men is: "We live in the East and were go ing to Walla Walla. When we were tramping along the road the other side of Milton, we found two dinner palls sitting near the road, and we stopped to look Into them. There was a nice lunch, such as we Jiad not seen since we quit eating "our mother's cooking, and after we got a whiff of the chicken leg, it was all off with us. We forgot all about everything else but our hun ger, and. the temptation was too great to resist. No one was in sight just then and we took the pails away and sat down to do .something for the in ner man. About that time the owners of the buckets hove in sight, and were too close for us to get away before we saw them. We were taken to town and pleaded guilty to larceny, and the judge, he did the rest. It seems ha.rd ior a man to be sent to jail for 12 days just because he is liungry, but the judge was the doctor and we have to take our medicine." Greek Ilaabnnd Housekeepers. In Greece it is the custom for the man of the house to go out early in the morning and not only to order the day's food, but to send along withthe boy who delivers It explicit orders how he wishes to have it cooked. In this connection it should be remarked that any man of Greece can cook any Greek dish. Grecian women seldom go to market and often do not know how. to cook as well as their husbands. Tnese people eat very lightly in the morning, the meal consisting of, fruit. At noon comes the first real meal, the breakfast. From noon until 4 o'clock they sleep. This is the mid day siesta. To call upon a Greek at this, time were quite asude' to call upon an American, at a corresponding hour in the morning. At 4 o'clock an other light luncheon is. eaten. The din ner, or hearty meal, 1b not eaten until late in the evening, sometimes as late as 9 or 10 o'clock. Good Housekeep ing. , The Gammed Flower. You may buy upon the street flowers which to the eye are of a bloom as tine and a growth as fresh as any which could be procured at the most costly establishment. You, buy them for a song and bring them home) when, lo!, to your astonishment and dismay they fall to pieces at a breath like u cardboard house. They have been sub jected to one of the "tricks of the trade." It is known as the "gumming process." A single drop of gum is in serted with a sharp pointed instrument into the center of each calyx, and by this means the conformity of the bloom is preserved until the flowers are, sold. The composition of the gum is such as to dry up and set immediately, becom ing invisible even to the closest scru tiny. Everybody's Magazine, SLOPPING HOGS. An (Experienced Breeder Telia Jvat Iloir He Does It. A writer wlsbc3 that some one would Invent a cheap way to mix slop,, and John M. Jamison discusses the ques tion as follows In National Stockman: He speaks of bnving 175 bogs on his farm to care for this winter when feed Is high. Now, If lie puts slop for these troughnbnrrel or tank, mixing It In that way before be gives it to them, I do not wonder thnt he wishes for a cheap mixer. lie also finds a V trough a wasteful one. The use of this trough I have In the main discarded on ac count of the waste from It. I find after many years' experience In handling slop that, the pig Is the best and cheap est mixer. But the mixing by the pig cannot bo done In a V Bhnped trough without too much waste. The right kind of a trough for this Is one with n flat bottom. Ten Inches wide Is about right, with the sides four Inches nbovc the bottom of the trough, making them any desired length. I have them from 3 to 12 feet loug; 0 to 8 Is long enough, as they are easier to handle. For ease nnd convenience In doing the work the pigs or hogs should bo fastened out of the lot while the feed Is being pre pared In the troughs. The troughs should be as nearly level as possible before the feed is put In. Put in the nmount of dry feed required and then pour over it about an equal amount of water or kitchen and dairy wastes. Then opeu the gates and let the pigs (o the troughs. If hearty and properly fed, they will mnkc no qunrrel with their owner because he has not mixed more labor with the slop. They do the mixing in nn enrnest and rapid manner and waste little, if any, feed. With the feed In a V trough very much of It will be worked over the sides of the trough and lost I do not know any way that the la bor of preparing slop can be reduced below this, nor do I know any way to prepare it that will make It more ac ceptable to them. If the troughs are placed on a clean space a floor or clean straw or cornstalks under them and with the feed lots well covered with straw and stalks, there is no need or reason why the slop troughs should become filthy. During winter or doubt ful weather the troughs should be turn ed upside down after feeding; then tbey will not have to be emptied of water or Bnow. Taken all together, It Is a safe esti mate to make that no protection against the changing weather adds 25 per cent to the cost of feed. Protection cuts down the cost of feed. How to keep up growth and shorten the feed ex pense should be the leading point this winter. At the same time it Is well to remember that Just sustaining the an lmal without gain is a throwing away of tbe feed given. It Pays to Trade at the Peoples Warehouse. SIX GREAT SPECIALS Kid Gloves 25c Ladies' Hose 9c a nice line of LISLE THREAD HOSE at X9c 25c Hose for Children 17c WAYNE KNIT and BLA'CK CAT HOSE 7c J 5c Ladies Belts J 5c Ladies' Belts in Leather and Satin from 15c to $1.50 Ladies Kid Gloves 89c These Gloves are nicely made, just the thing for Eas ter. Shift Waists 50c la all the latest styles, nicely tucked, in all colors 50c Neck Ribbons Fancy Wash Ribbons, new effects, pretty styles at 1 5c, 25c, 35c Agents Patterns i Peoples l 116 MEN'S OUTFITTERS nail Orders Prompt ly Filled. Send for Samples O S 0 & For Sale. Twelve building 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. Potwine, Pendle ton, Or. A report reached Baker City that E. & E. mine had been sold for ? 250,000. As a deal has been pending for the sale of this property the report is credited. The Way of the World. Funny world we live in. A man who has six horses standing idle in a stable walked two miles out in the country on a little matter of business a day or two ago, while another man who bad no horses and very little money hired a team to go the same distance. This was an actual occurrence and shows the perversity of human nature. He who has the facilities for driving pro fers to walk, while-he who could much better prefer to walk and has no team goes and hires one. Men are crazy to own a team,' and it soon becomes a bore to give the horse necessary exer else. It has always been thus and, we presume, always will be. Next Sunday at "The Temple." The Reverend Levi Johnson will conduct divine services next Sunday at 11 o'clock a. m., April 6, the sub ject to be: "What Is a Christian?" He cordially invites everyone to at tend. We are just in receipt of the largest shipment of the Celebrated DOUGLAS 1 n n 1 mm M --j j j A BIG SUCCESS That's what we are having in our new store Do Yoti Wonder Why? It is because we keep things neat and clean, ' we give special attention to quick deliveries. We receive daily all kinds of early vegetables, such as radishes, green onions, lettuce, turnips, etc. Come and see our new store and give us a trial. ' ''-M. We ate Sure to Please Yotr IIS 11 Ml 0 0 agnolia Cologne frf?Yin,Sorted perfume. It's the sweetest and most ""grant Perfume we have ever been able to oiler. ' cents an ounce special price for this lot. Come early, onr supply is limited KOEPPEN'S DRUG STORE Steps from Main Street Toward the Court Hose BSectiof GmvMutlon. If a man weighing twelve stone were to be transferred to tho moon, the weight of his body, measured at least by the attraction which tho moon would exerclso upon it, would bo re duccd to about two stone. If his mus cles and his frame remained the same, It would seem as if he would be able to Jump over a wall twelve feet high on the small globe without any greater exertion than would be required to clear a wall two feet high on tho earth. An Anticipated I'leannre. A congressman of Mississippi, after making a speech in opposition to the expensive funerals of congressmen, Kays ho received a letter from a con stituent saying: "When you die, John, we M'on't ask congress to pay tho ex pense of your funeral. You've got enough friends down here, John, to give you a respectable burial, and we would take pleasure in doing it." $3. SHOE 22. Xnd" 50 That ever came to Pendle ton. NEW . . . SHAPES STYLES LASTS COMBINES LEATHERS SPRING WEICHT FOR 1902 Boston Store S) .iiwrrrinirr mn"'imrrr'"rr-rrr irrrrrrrrrrrtrtmnirinirimMttiM BUY THE Best Babbitt Metal IN 10 POUND BARS. For line shafting and all bearings of machinery of the mill or factory it cannot be surpassed : : : IT ar dwarf FISHING TACKLE SHEEP SHEARS Made from Type Metal. East Oregonian Office, Pendleton, or. L4ft lAf rffc V f I I expect people to know what ri J WW LJ J I J VJ you have to sell If you don't The new titer rn nvar ho m. m. m mmm m mmm m mm 4 W. J.CLARKE St COM'Ylknown unless It advertises MUVtH j I OC WO m