OUR Men's Furnishing Goods DEPARTMENT Seasonable wearing apparel for men at very low prices; varieties and stylc3 the very lwst, aud the saving worth consideration. $1 25 25c 1 Men's fancy percale, stiff bosom shirts, cuffs to match, all sizes and great values 75c, $1.00 and Men's light weight cashmere hose, the kind other stores sell at 40c, per pair Men's large silk handkerchiefs 25c and 50c Men's light weight summei underwear, per suit oOc Men's Balbriggan underwear (what 3ou usually pay $1.50 per suit for), cur price $1 00 New hats, all sizes $1.50. $2 00 and $2 50 Straw Hats, Caps, Neckwear, Gloves Every Day Is a Bargain Day Here BAER 8f DALEY One Price Clothiers, Furnishers and Hatters, Pendleton 'IT 1LUI WALLA WHAT IS GOING ON AT THE STATE LINE CITY. S3200. and Moss retains the wlngi crop. Mr. Anderson has also bought. -William Rogers' S-acre tract in the edge of town, paying SI 0 for It. Frazler Brothers have sold their, steam threshing outfit to John Wei des consideration J2000. CELEBRATE AT WALLA WALLA . till.. ftS.rl VAShilp . on a Spree-Berkely Crosses Bats Nation's Birthday Will Be : Properly With Walla Walla-Barbed Wire Observed in That City. Telephones Are WorK.n, VStaS j Walla Walla. June 4. A coroner s , d "mmittees and sub-committees I inquest was held yesterday afternoon gre beinr selected to take charge of over tne body of Frank Cassity. thejtne affair for the organization ..cu stranger found dead in the city jail after being locked up drunk. The SUMMER Ui'NUCKWtiA fats of a spree, a drunken stupor, and the finning of ,the man by the po- , ,wn pomnleted. The following j officers and committees have been se lected to take charge ot uie ceieuiu- tion: President. Y. C. Blalock; secretary, ( .lice were all that could be learned; John M. Hill; treasurer. Joan -tviriv, bv the officers. The man was good 1 man; president of the day, Judge, 'looking, vounc and annarently well-! Thomas H. Brents; grand marsna j raised. On hTs person was found ajE. S .Isaacs; committee on music, t letter from which identification was j H. L, Burford. Guy Allen Tllr""'' J ' secured and friends communicated , Harry Turner; program committee with. The body has been sent to St. 1 l. l. Tillman, Joan m. rim, " Louis for burial. j Caswell; committee on sports. J- J-j This afternoon the local grounds Schiffner. Emil Sanderson. John Mc are being occupied by BerKely, Cal.. Feeley; advertising committee. W. A. and the Walla Walla teams, in a game Hooper, Julius A. Levy, R. E. Guli which has aroused more interest than, chard; transportation committee, any played here this season. Nearly Joseph McCabe, Robert Burns, C. F. ; all the business houses are closed Van de Water and S. B. Calderhead. j and every effort has been made to WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1902. GENERAL NEWS. HOTEL ARRIVALS. At Amsterdam since the news was received that peace had been conclud-; ed in South Africa, Mr. Kruger has; declined to receive visitors or express an opinion on the subject. The cable between Hong Kong and Manila is interrupted. Telegraph ! communication with the Philippine! islands, tneretore, is stopped. Fre quent steamers from Chinese ports Tvill carry telegrams. Justice Scott, in the criminal branch of the supreme court, has set September 1'2 as the date for the be ginning of the second trial of Roland B. Molineux, accused of the murder of Mrs. Kate B. Adams. In passing on the case of the Han over National Bank, New York, vs. Mas Moyses, the United States su preme court in an opinion delivered by Chief Justice Fuller Monday, de cided the national bankruptcy law to be constitutional. Mrs. Carrie Nation walked from the Shawnee county jail Monday a free woman. Governor Stanley, of . Kansas, has issued her a full pardon, also remitting the $1U0 fine. Mrs. Nation was imprisoned May 16 on the proven charge of smashing stored sa loon fixtures. She was to have serv-i ed 30 days and the $100 fine at ?lj per day. j The dead body of a man was found; floating in the Columbia river, near White Bluffs, May 25, by Charles Mc Laughlin, a farmer living near the! place. There was no Indication of foul play. The head of the man was badly bruised, indicating that he had fallen a distance and struck some hard object. He was well dressed, having on all his clothing, but the hat was gone. On the body was found an unfinished letter on a Scandinavian. CI 1 1 ... . opunuue nouae letter neaa, and a check for ?300, made payable to John Peterson. It is the supposition that tne man fell from a Great Northern train as it was crossing the Columbia river near Wenatchee. The Pendleton. G. S. Youngman, Portland. W. A. Williams, Portland. H. C. McConnell, New York. T. E. Raster, Portland. J. B. Eddy, Portland. C. E. Dickey, Omaha. E. B. Colby, New York. Bert Rosenfield. Gus Lindbeck, St. Joseph . H. H. Gramp. Minneapolis. Thomas Nester, Portland. George Stevens, Spokane. W. E. Krutz, Portland. A. D. Chase, Portland. David Horn, McKay. E. Coman, Portland. J. T. McDuffie, Grangeville. C. I. Deshiell, Portland. E. W. Brigham. Boston. W. G. Page and wife, Haidley. B. S. Weed, Ellensburg. L. B. Mack, Walla Walla. T. J. Boumont, St. Joseph. A. S. Maclow, Spokane. J. W..Harrock. San Francisco. R. H. Caston, Spokane. J. J. Burns, Portland. T. E. Inman. Tekoa. H. B. Rees, Spokane. G. C. Lint, San Francisco. give the visitors a royal reception. The game promises to be interesting and hotly contested from the start. Fifteen miles of barb wire tele phone line with a number of talking macnines connected, is a new enter prise in, this section, whereby farm ers are given the benefits of city life with none of its expense and incon venience. 'lue line connects FOR HORSE STEALING. Tim Townsend Will Be Tried on Wed- nesday at Canyon City. On" Wednesday next Tim Town-, send, arrested some time since on a j charge of rustling horses in Grant1 county, will be placed on trial ai uan- 25c 50c a garment. It is the best thin?0 market. 00 a garment, and one of the biggest prices. At this price many kiE SVHiaUie wi'iguw aim wiuia. u i. i r- nv, .00 v'"au5 ana nnenfta mm ntv nnn mnrn rlolinata A "llUUJgS uuj lucBo juu win not regretit. Another tavonte price. Most price is light weight, but of I1UC UUIblllUg. 75c $1.00 $1.25 teed a perfect fit tiere tne raaners claim to give thai value. iJut we claim only a value in ance with the price. Every garment .ItK ' von City. Townsend was well known .i.t i. ii... . ,-. n it i nere auu tuusiuciauic nuclei. O. T. Cornwell, Emmett Evans. Frank 0hwW8 W of the line is estimated at $300. Con-! couuir, muuuuj "V e nection has been made with the cen-i He was a"ested shoJ . tu, Christmas on Camas prairie. lie iiuu run, su n a jucj, $1.50 tne extra superhne underwear tUt. tastiaious aressers. Kite ibB STUDIED HIMSELF CRAZY. some warm friends. His home was at Corbett, Wash., and the body was shipped back to that place for interment. Young Enoch was of a religious na- I ture and it was his overwhelming ue- sire to become a missionary and car ry the light -of Christianity to the I heathen of foreign lands that led to his death. He attempted to crowd himself in school and it is said that he was an apt student and under took to master thA Rtnilicx: thpt The Golden Rule. should have taken him three vears. in S. A. Ash, Wallula. one. and the result was that his hraln G. W. Bradley, Athena. cave war and he became a ravine A. C. Brotherton and wife Vansycle maniac several months ago. He was then placed under the care of the most skilled physicians in Portland. in the hopes of saving his reason and curing him, but it proved of no avail and he parsed away Saturday after suffering the most horriDle agony im aginable. He was 17 years of age. after ! where : a I n 1 1 1 1 ' iii 1 1 1 j i n t r um .i t inuui iuu. ; So intense was the feeling against ) Student at Whitman College Over-' bin! among stockmen that when he worked His Brain With Fatal Re.:was being taken through Southern . Camas on the way to Hardiman to get su evidence, it was reported here that Because he studied too hard, Wil- the stockmen of the Ukiah country t- ired tnoch, at one time a student of ' had wrested him from the officers and ; Whitman college, at Walla Walla, ! lynched him. Townsend was finally 1 died a raving maniac in Portland lodeed in jail at Canvon Citv after : last Saturday. Enoch was only ! numerous threats and some demon- siightly known here, but he had : stratlons bv the rustler-cursed stock men of the John Day. Subsequently Grant county officers went to La Grande and recovered a number of hotses which had been rustled from this county and run to Union county . for sale. All the stolen bands except two or three were recovered Wo Vitiva nlcn tlir rplfrrntfr1 "Rrin Rnn'i I: t... . - . nut ma H frnm ?Cfv Ynrk and Portland at trip nrtrpc tt-o .1 - r- ' unci ujj est staple on the marKet. m ai m mm m m m. -mr im PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEWS. The state of Washington has con tributed $044.74 to the McKlnley me morial fund, according to a letter re ceived by Governor McBrlde from Myron T. Herrick, treasurer of the McKlnley National Memorial Associ ation. Of this amount, $31.74 passed through the governor's hands. From the result of what was ap parently a trivial puncture of his sole of his right foot with a nail, fore- ( . . :i . . .... ' ing 11s way tnrougmnls shoe, George W. Pettit, 35 years old, a teacher in the Adventist school at Montavllla, lies at the home of his mother-in-law. Aire. itownB, or St. Johns, critically 111 with lockjaw or tetanus. Fire In a box car on the Southern Pacific track at Oregon City Sunday night, caused the destruction of the woodwork of the car and most of its contents, which consisted of the household effects of G. Voorhies, of .roruana, wlilch were being shipped to Medford. Besides the household furniture there were two horses in the car. Both animals were saved, though one was badly burned on the back. The blaze was probably caus ed by spontaneous combustion. Died of Alcoholism. Walla Walla, June 3. -Frank Cas Bity, a stranger, died here last night of alcoholism, after being locked tip in the city Jail as a drunk. Nothing is known of the deceased. M. Stevens. Iowa. William Willaby, Athena. Mrs. F. Knowlton, Washington. Mrs. E. A. Showennan, Wisconsin H. H. Showerman, Walla Walla R. M. Powers, Weston. J. C. Wolf, Silverton. A. E. McBreen. Spokane. N. Q. Tauquary, Denver. Al Vaughan, Spokane. Mrs. Killian, Vancycle. F. M. Evans, Freewater. A. McFarran and wife, Helix. R. Raymond and wife. Helix. John S. Vinson, Freewater. C. W. Stephen, Omaha. H. C. BranBtetter. Mrs. Ellis Jtinehart C. E. Ferguson, Pomeroy. Stephen Wiper, La Grande. Doc. .Uaple, city. James Kinney, Pilot Rock. James Nelson. MILTON DOINGS. Estate Stat xor oruo crrr or toltdo 1 renter partner 01 doing biuine Quite a Boom Is On in Real at That Place. Milton. June 3. Milton polled ouite a heavy vote yesterday, and, while there was a good deal of interest manifested there was no disorder. James A. Tate, of Nashville. Tenn.. closed tne campaign for the nrohlbi tlonists by an address in the Chris tian church Sunday. Mr. Tate spoke for over an hour to a large audience. ion the question of right and wrong as applied to politics. Milton is having quite a boom in real estate lately. W. R. Anderson Taxpayers Kicking. Walla Walla taxpayers are becom ing worked up over the heavy expen ditures of the county funds by the commissioners of that county" and will shortly make a thorough investi gation of the manner in which the' revenues of the county have been ex-' pended. The books of the county au ditor are being inspected and at the next meeting of the Taxpayers' League a full report will be made upon them. The ancient historians say that, over 1000 miles of the lower Nile were protected by artificial embank-' nients and other works of engineer ing skill. aer makea oath that he ! the bought of Dan McEachern, of Walla TOyTa4 '"' n" on "pper Main street. 1 .1 . . ' . . . ' I ni)V SinH fnr thorn TT 1. ii 1 . v " " aw lubui. xiu una 1CL ouii iwc BiurcBaiu, nuu in&i gam nrm win it tha (llln rt fnA T I .1 n.n w I . 1 . . . ' "r-Lrr: . y. "U".UI. fumnrorweaana tne contract tor a 51J.UU cottatrp to hp every caM of Catarrh that cannot be cared br hiit uaTn the dm ot Hall's Catarrh Cure. I DUIlt on tnem. nworn to Deiore me and gubacribed in my Mr. Anderson has also bought the tf.iKse: Uraying business of J. L, Vinson for. ?u&o, Air. Vinson not being able to !.-.T 1 HaU'a Catarrh tre 1. UkeSmernS I "ad ?".ed to the 18S while he is rti. J uu luo uiuuu iuu mucoui turiacea ! "u'uiub lue uiuce 01 inarsnai ' "c jicia. aeua lor icjiimoniau, tree. T. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo. Ohio. are the best. Bold by dragglau, 75c uairi Famiix Pim C. J. Moss has sold his S0-acre farm lying just north of the Odd Fel- lows' cemetery to J. A. Anderson, fori Frantz Joseph Taute. Frantz Joseph Taute. the 3-year-old child of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taute, liv ing two miles south of Pendleton, uiea faunuay, June 1, from the effects of brain fever, ufter 10-days' Illness and severe suffering. The remains were buried Monday afternoon at the OIney cemetery, Rev. H. W. Volgt conducting the services. Beside the neighbors a number of the friends of the stricken family from north of Pendleton were present. FOR Baby's Bath USE CUTICURA SOAP. Don't Ue Too Many Words. Multiplication of words Increases the expense and decreases the effec tiveness of advertising. Say what you have to say In aB few words as It can oe taia then stop. By bo doln juii can set -wnat you want to say In lurKer typo. SO that It wilt mmmmri tne attention of more readers than would a wordy discourse set In mail I type. It prevent chaAng, redaeM, and ronghneaa ot the akin, aoothes Inflammation, allays Itch. log and irritation, and when followed by gon tleappllcaUons of Cuticoua Ointment, the great itln cure, pedlly cure all forms ot stln and scalp humors and rcatorcs the hair. Tonic Port Is not a beverage, but a tonic the best tonic. It builds up the consti tution, strengthens the nervous system, re stores sound refreshing sleep and promotes good digestion. It is a product of the St. George Vineyard. It combines tonic); qualities with a pleasing tastej it is in-" dorsed by the1 medical profession generally. s n a i i i m - l r tt n' n it vm m. wstaima,iA m m a mi ' r s o i in And All K Ynric nt HavMff I D ware. THOMPSON 0SfiD.fi! The Big Carpet Vnn r.an Reat Our in itior this nno trnv ineru kind of beating all right in nnnrl nnwnnf n Tin lit. d iu o-iij w!' vou can beat that wjuw our new une oi r- Main 24. Mates of Happy Low nrices. coupled Deis ana iuaiw"6 " . nualitv. nrove attractions a J ble. Mattinrr. where best obtain tied with promptness in where good style anu , make low prices so empn" ; rtakers of nW7 F. W. Schmidt & Co., Reliable DrugClafs, Association Block. ThBPn l Nn OuestiOH ABOUT THE MERITS OF BYERS' It is the finest grade it is possible to make. NotI!; hut tu i,: ...i. ;ntr Vivas ' n?ui," satisfaction is the result whererever it is used W or fancy baking. PENDLETON ROLLER W. S. Byers, Ptoprietot. For Health, Strength and neasure Urink (I yorWoensi Proprietor. )l II II