: ! ,.u ....77inc Regents Elect Faculty. I i - REPORTERS WITH MUZZLES MEN'S CDDlVn fir 5 .on? HAPMPNTQ FOR... SUMMER WEAR We are nequnintine proaer num bers of the mn f rh'? vh-lnlry wi'h the runny ndvnDtn:r?s t at lie in makinc selections f-nm mir excep tionally well appointed stocks of faultlessly tailored garments. THAT IS WHAT THE UMPIRE WOULD LIKE. Regents Elect Faculty. of recents for the r Alexander and J. H. IUle, of Scriber. of la Grande: C W. James of Baker City ! $2. SO to So. 00 Saved on Kvery Suit or C'lothlnir Ilonsht nt Our Stort). Suits of Fancy Mixed Cheviots and Tweed, $9 50 to $17.50. Suits of Surges, $10 to 15. Outinc Suit in laree variety. Tiousfrs, $1.50 to $5. Summer Underwear, good goods, 25 and 50 cents a garment. BAER & DALEY, ONc-PRIGE Gi-0"H ERS i... -o mmnanv hp navins ueeu u member of the Woodmen in good stan.i.nc and a member of the local f.:t i:t :a::rrent. THURSDAY. JUNE 12. !!':. GENERAL NEWS. HOTEL ARRIVALS. The Pendleton. James C. Newcray. San Francisco L. O. Lakin. Portland. William Maher. Portland. F. B. Wood, Chicago. H. A. Boyer, St. Louis. J. W. Morrow, Heppner. W.- W. Robinson. Portland. X. Payne, Nebraska. R. H. Caston. Spokane. j. W. Scriber. La Grande. A. G. Lcng, Portland. v.. B. Colby. Philadelphia. Two men were killed by lightning near o'.umbus. Ga.. Sunday night. Six hundred employps of the Em-! pire Bridge Company, of Williams- burg, N. Y.. have struck for recogni tion of their union. It is said theirs action will delay work on many new ; C. M. Smith. Portland bridges in the West. f In connection with the commence- i ment exercises at Princeton, X. J., ; formal announcement has been made! of a gift of S70.000 by the class of '00 and '01, to be used for special . purposes at the university. ! A number of large offices in Xew ; York have been fined by the authori-! ties for using soft coal instead of an-i thracite. The violators of the ordi- J. C. Lonergan, Tacoma. H. B. Brandes, Portland. C. W. James, Baker City. Edward Smith. Spokane. L. Allen, Portland. William Newberry, Portland. T. W. Jackson. Spokane. . J. H. Swart, Athena. i Soap: The Golden Rule. A. J. Cowman, Kansas. nance protest that the coal strike! M- Stevens, Iowa. precludes the use of hard coal. The Chicago & Northwestern pas senger train was wrocked near St. ' Joseph, Mo., Tuesday afternoon, and although the train was running at the, rate of 40 mile an hour and several , coaches were thrown into the ditch, , no one wr injured. Governor Jeff Davis, of Arkansas, , Las just leen' reinstated in the sec- ond Baptif-t church of Little Rock j which had shut him out of the fold 1 on account of the action he took in j the recent contest for United States Benator from Arkansas. I The" third trial of Jessie Morrison, who killed Mrs. Olin Cartle, in June, 1900, by cutting her throat with Bi w . ... . , . . razor, was begun at Eldorado, Kan., j J t bedtime Itake a pleasant herb Tuesday. The prisoner cried when 1 drtnk- lhe ne:rt morning I feel bright Judge Alkman refused a change of! m? complexion is better. My venue. Attorneys for the defendant , doctor fa that !t acts gently on the allege prejudice. ' stomach, liver and kidneys and Is a liicasuut liuuuvt;. u is maue iruui C. Cunningham, Portland. J. C. Macdonald. San Francisco. Allen McCaully. Wisconsin. B. D. FItzpatrick, Michigan. H. D. Ebey, Portland. F. M. Canfield, Heppner. W. H. day, Heppner. A. G. Howard. Spokane. F. E. Klise, Portland. W. E Johnston. Portland. Julius F. Wagner. Pilot Rock. R. C. Hager, Bingham. S. White, Freewater. Roft Watt, Alba. J. D. French, Gurdane. R. N. Adams, Le Cunningham, Portland. PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEWS. herbs, and Is prepared as easily as tea. It is called Lane's Medicine. William Dexter Clark and Elmer : JJleSTI fXfi Thomas Connell. of Portland, have; S?e?,i ?r ti i r S earned the degree of B. A. at Am-! For tsa,e by Tallman & c- sole, hurst College. agents. , A rruit Growers' Union has been started in The Dalles for the purpose oi nanunng and marketing local crops .. . , . - t durinsr the coming snasnn. Men Who Escaped from Grant Coun- Mr. Maskrey Objects to Criticisms of j. W. Morrow. o W'' His Umpiring and Says H.s Cup Is nf on. - FjJ Full to the Brim With Wormwood. jTjnwdir and after transacting the Pendleton. June 12. To the Man- ;r routine buVines of the school asms; Editor of the East Oregonian: piected the following five mem Dear Sir: In the account of the ' of the old facuity to succeed same or baseball of Tuesday, played he,selTC8 al the next term: Dr. J letween the Berkley and Pendleton Beatie president; G. A. Peebles teams, your reporter saw fit to make tf Rerbert Rittridare, Miss Nel" the followins statement: Stevens and Miss Spankler. "A feature of the performance was The gcnooi was foond to be In good the umpiring, which was something audition by the regents, who are fierce, the rotten decisions being weU plea5ed with the work of the a!out equally divided, however." 1 past Te(,r ( You will no doubt agree with me ; , that the position of umpire in a game , Filthy Temples in .ndia. of baseball between two crack teams: gacred cows often defile Indian, is no sinecure. As the umpire upon . tempies, but worse yet is a body ; the above occasion, I believe I have-that.c polluted by constipation, the right to differ in my opinion from - j.. permit it. Cleanse your system ; that expressed by your reporter. I wltn Dr. King's New Life Pills and , do not believe that the statements avoid untoid misery. They give live- he made are true, and I do not like ly livers, active bowels, rood diges , his diction. ; t'iori fine appetite. Only l'5c at Tall- : A writer who has no better vocab-1 man & Co's drug store. ' ulary should devote his time to the , study of the English language instead , Funeral of Leo Eggerth. of to the criticism of umpiring. If The funerai Df Leo Eggerth was he has no more thorough knowledge , beJd a the family- residence, 726 Gar of what is fair umpiring than he has den street tnis afternoon, under the . of clothing his ideas in words he nf the Modern Woodmen and blJUUUl uesililie IU luurvc UlU man statements, or well-Informed ladies and gentlemen will be led to believe that he has written his criticism in accordance with the sentiment of the adage that '"fools rush in where an gels fear to tread." This thing of a reporter of a news- paper acting as judge, jury and exe cutioner in a matter of this kind is scarcely the correct form. It is true i that the Berkley boys protested against some or tne necisions oi tne umpire. The Pendleton boys did like wise, and for that no one can be just ly blamed. From these latter facts the reporter was undoubtedly led in to error. Simply because the batter demurs to a decision of the. umpire, when a strike has been called, is not suffic ient to stamp the ruling of that of ficial as "rotten." The pitchers were throwing balls which deceived the batters, and the latter were of course anxious to do something to redeem their poor sight by making a bluff at the' umpire. Again, the pitchers would throw balls wide of the home base, and the batters would wfuse to strike. It would then be the turn of the pitchers to swell up because the umpire had not seen the ball "cut the plate," when as a matter of fact it had not been a "good ball" accord-1 ing to the legal baseball definition of the term. When those sitting in the grand stand and on the bleachers see a play ' on the diamond with which they are not familiar, and the umpire makes his ruling, they are generally willing to abide by it without much question. If it were possible for the umpire to judge balls and strikes while sitting in the shade of the grand-stand he would no doubt be stationed there. But he cannot, therefore he gets out in a position where he can see wheth er or not the ball is thrown over the, base by the pitcher. Not only that, but he is out there alone and unprotected, liable to be eaten alive by the blood-thirsty base ball players, who keep holding a con tinuous council of war as to the ad visability of killing him right then and there, or waiting until the con clusion of the game. Many of these things are discourag ing to an umpire, and his cup certain ly Is filled to the brim with worm wood when after he has performed his duty, overlooked the billingsgate and vile language uttered In the heat are the ones that leave the skin as good or better than they find it. You can't pick up safe soaps everywhere. Some makers depend on scents rather than quality to sell their goods. THE MISSION of toilet soaps is to cleanse and to do nothing else. We offer you reliable soaps. "We buy them as carefully as we do druga, and buy only of makers who have reputa tions at stake. Try a cake of Curutive soap, 15 cents. F. W. Schmidt 8c Co., Rel'nble Druggists, Association B; Phone 51 Summer School for Boys Summer Season of HILL MILITARY ACADEMY PORTLAND, OREGOK Open from July 1 to Auguit 31 . For day and boarding students School session only ia forenoon; ;ecreation all the aftrnoon. Fo fiartioulrtr ouply or write tp DR. .1. IV. HILL Principal Hill Military Academv Mar-ball and .'itb St . Portland, Oregon. BOSTON STORE rt Waist and Skirt SALE WAIST SALE Bis cut in Ladies' shirt waists, $1.00, SI. 35 and $2.00 values, last year's styles, reduced for this sale to 50c 25c for 75 and $1.00 VALUES $11 Ladies' white pique and duck skirts, $2.00, $3.00, $3,50 and $4 00 values, for this sale For SKIRT SALE $.00, $.25, $.50 and $1.75 Values Linen skirts, blue trimmed, 75c values, t:v this sale NEW TODAY New capsheaf safety pins oc, 10c New Ohio dr'ss shields 25aud 30c New hose supporters, all prices New Lyons silk liDiug 50c New Pongee feilks 50cJ New Liberty satin ribbon all prices New Grenadine silks New comfortables New trunks and va'tees Boston Store We Can Supply You with Forks, Pulleys, Ropes, JFIexible Steel Cable And AH Kinds of Haying Hiri ware. THOMPSON BARDIARE (I WAIT TOP. The Big Carpet Store You Can Beat Our Carpels In just this one way they'll stiri&j kind of beating all right. Yosts' beat 'em in style, in variety of psttai inlsmallness of cost, in lengthof in any good carpet quality. Jost" you can beat that WILTOKwo telling at J.: a yuru. our new line of fiber carpet. I Main 24. GOCMRTS Regular beauties. Prettiest ever brought to THEY GOT AWAY. of battle by the players, made his mi- DnTrnnTTnTmnnnnrTTmnnnmTTTTTTfTTTS Pendleton. Largest line- Lowest trices. A recent typhoon caused much ty Jail Have Vanished. ' damasie to the telenranh lines To date no trace has been found throughout the Island of Luzon and of "Spotted Tail" Robinson, the eel many native boats were wrecked ' ebrated stock rustler of Grant coun Charles Y. Burr, formerly a res!- ,?nd accomplice Ernmett Kim dent of Baker City, was found dead b"Hs who made, !,8cai,e f??m Tuesday evening in his cabin, nearltbe Gran-1 cnt B" at Coa Clt Sum;.ter. The cause of death is not,8?0"? weeli aR- atho"sh a feward yet known. ' ot 00 was oCered fr "their cap- God Jar's sheep shearing outfit, 1 UTnese men were waiting sentence,' Ta u u w2 , b J1 Cat Cre3' after being in jail at Canyon City for Idaho, has just finished up, after. week8 when the jall door waa open.' having sheared 122 000 sheep. An-,e(1 wKh a sketelon key operated by h snA ' 8hear-; someone on the outside, the prison-, ed 150,000. Iers made thoir escape jnt0 the fast-' It has been announced by the com- nesses of the John Day country and mittee in charge of the Fourth of Jury It is doubtful if they will be re-captur-celebration at Freewater, that they ed. will positively not allow gambling de-' As soon as he discovered thei vices of any kind to operate in their escape of the prisoners. Sheriff Lau town during the celebration. ' rence did everything possible to cap- ... ' . ture them, but although he followed After 20 years of continuous sen?.' them wlth a p08se for sorae tIme tnel Ice aB a member of the board of trus- t returned discouraged, having, tees of Whitman college H E. John-! given Up the chase. ' membership of the board at his own' request. In Mr. Johnson's stead was Notice. elected Louis F. Anderson, of Walla1 Modern Woodmen are requested to Walla. ! meet at the Owl Tea House this eve- A grand banquet will be served at",nS at 8, '??c Xo arrage '"l thC the Port and hotel on June 26, the 1UUC' Ul "suf bbc"" ings impartially. Kept the game go- c ing, escaped from the arena with his EE life, to read that "the rotten decls- t ions were abou. equally divided." EJ Even if the article had stated that gj the rotten decisions had been exactly t divided, it would have been but poor C consolation. As a matter of fact, E such flippant statements, made as though d elivered from the throne, do a great deal more harm than good. My wish Is that you keep your re porter muzzzled, or have him give a fair statement of facts. Yours truly, CIIAS. A. MASKREY. c t c . t It t occasion being the celebration of the coronation of King Edward andj Queen Alexandria. The banquet will . be given under the auspices of the British Benevo'ent Society of Port- GEO. A. HAMBLEN, Consul. For Sale. Pure bred Scotch Collie puppies, land. Covora will he laid for about $15 each. Write B. M. Britta, 1015 150 people. Raleigh atreet, Portland, Or. Mothers and Children Rejoice in the cleansing, purifying, and beautifying properties of Cimcuiu. Soap ,nd Clticuhji Ointment, purest and sweetest of (emollient skin cures. These gentle yet effective skin purifiers and beautlfien have node thousands of homes happy by curing torturing, disfiguring humors, rashes, and irritations ot infancy and childhood, and relieving parents of care and anxiety. n Si4aM(kMlthWMt4. Poms Dtco aub Cant. Go., imflMlcXL. AU J&aui lUk' Ski,' (m. Bingham Springs... ...NOW OPEN... Health and Summer Resort Twenty-two Miles East of Pendleton on 0. It. & N. Excursion Rates Irom all points For further information address Manager Bingham Springs GIBBON, Ore. a ! 31 3 1 3 31 3 : ii 3; 3, 3 3 II: 3f 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 REFRIGERATORS that will save you money on your ce bill Furniture, Stoves, Carpets, Etc ftniiunumiiiimimiimnnmnimmmf-j There Is No Question ABOUT THE MERITS OF BYERggg It is the finest grade it is possible to -make. Notha'jj but the choiceht wheat enters into Bycrs' flour, satisfaction is the result whererever it is used for r or fancy baking. PENDLETON ROLLER MB5 W. S. Byers, Proprietor. For Health, Strength and Pleasure Drink ::::::: Polydore Moens, Proprietor. sfm