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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 25, 1902)
ii in mill 1 1 mi 1 1 ATTRACTS. QUALITY DECIDES. DOUBLE EVENT Pwo Important events tfre slated for this week's business jnethat wm Deneniyou ana one mat will oenent otners. i will be very mncn mioresiea in doih movements, so ase road on. . tST YEAR'S SHIRTWAISTS I Shirt Waists that were 60, qli Plou ttUU NOW 9c 4 Shirt Waists that were $1.50, $2 and $3, NOW 8c IT WILL PAY YOU 'TO SEE THEM. lexander Dept. Store H IHIIM MM MM I Ill MM Tm!M!!M!!MMnMMnHMHMMMMMMMM!IMM!!MMMl!M?MMHMMMMMmnU BEAUTIFUL HOME! WE ALL LOVE THAT lave the FIXTURES (gas and electric), the OVER- r 1 VTTTlTnT P lin hUb'M L'lUL'UI AI'L'U 4nnt l H 1 iem express your taste, ana your nome is lovely, we 3 Blieve we can suit your taste. We offer you hundreds 3 BtyleB to choose Irom. lc John Barrett Company NEW STORES ler Sixth and Alder Opposite the Oregonian 'Phone Main J 22. PORTLAND, ORE. liiiiiiiiniiiiiwtnuiumiuiiiuuuiiUimuiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiniManm DRTH OF JULY ASEBALL BETWEEN THE GAM E PRESERV ES tampions of Eastern and Western Oregon: EN DL ETON'S INDIANS -AND- reqon City July 4, 5 and 6 irst Class Clean Sport Between the Two Fastest Teams In' the State- campions of Eastern Oregon AND tampions of Willamette Valley ROOSEVELT'S PLEA FOR THEIk ESTABLISHMENT Sounds Warning of Destruction of the Big Game of the United States Though Lack of Proper Preserva tion. The following enersretlo. an a mr. nest plea f6r the better nrotnotlnn and preservation of the big game of the United States Is culled from the author-president's book, "The Deer Family: At the present moment thn rront herds of caribou are being butchered as in the past the great herds of bi son and wapiti have been butchered. Every believer In mahiliness, and therefore manly sport, and every lov er of nature, every man who appre- ciaics me majesty and beauty of the wilderness, and of wild life, should strike hands with the far-sighted men who wish to keep our forests and our game beasts, game bi.-fls, and game flsh indeed all the living creatures of prairie, and woodland ana seashore from wanton destruction. AhnVCk till vr' n rVin..U M j i . yu oiiuuiu . ieaiizo inai the effort toward this end 1r tially a democratic movement It is entirely In our power as a nation to preserve largo tracts of wilderness, which are valueless for agricultural purposes, as playgrounds for rich and poor alike, and to preserve the game so that it shall continue to ex ist for the benefit of all lovers of na ture, and to give reasonable oppor tunities for the exercise of the skill of the hunter, whether or not ho is man of means. These preserves ofter serve a niast useful purpose and should be encour aged within reasonable limits; but It would be a great misfortune if they increased beyond a certain extent, or If they took the place of reat tracts of wild land, which continue as such, either because of their very nature, or because of the protection of the state exerted in the form of making them state or national parks or reserves. The very wealthy man can get hunting anyhow, but the man of small means is dependent solely upon wise and well executed game laws for his enjoyment of the sturdy pleasure of the chase. True sportsmen worthy of the name, men who shoot only In season and 4n moderation, do no harm what ever to the game. The most, objec tionable of all game destroyers, of course, the kind of butcher who sim ply kills for the sake of the record of slaughter, who leaves deer and ducks and prairie chickens to rot after he has slain them. Such a man is wholly obnoxious; and indeed so is any man who shoots for the purpose of establishing a record of the amount of game killed. It is to be earnestly hoped that every American hunting or fishing club will Btrive to inculcate among its own members, and In the. minds of the general public, that anything like an excessive bag an ydestruction for the sake of making a record is to be severely reprobated. After all, this kind of perverted sportsman, unworthy though he is, is not the phief factor In the destruc tion of game. The professional skin or market hunter is the real offend er. Yet he is of all others the man who would ultimately be benefitted by the preservation of the game. The frontier settler, in a thorough, ly wild country, Is certain to kill game for his own use. As long as he does no more than this, it is hard to blame him; although if he is awako to his own Interests he will soon re alize that to him, too, the live deer Is worth far more than the dead deer, because of the way it brings money Into the wilderness. The professional hunter who kills game for the hide or meat, or to sell antlers and other trophies, and the rich people, who are content to buy what they have not the skill to get by their own exertions these are the men who are the real enemies of game. Where there is no law that checks the market hunters, the Inevitable result of their butchery ls that the game is completely destroyed, and with it their own means of livlihood. If, on the other hand, they were will ing to preserve it, they could make much more money by acting as guides. It is to be remembered that the preservation of game is by no means meerly an affair of the sportsman. Most of us, as we grow older, grow to- care relatively lesa, for the sport itself than for the splendid freedom and abounding health of outdoor life in the woods, on the plains, and among the great mountains; and to the true nature lover it is melan choly to see the wilderness stripped of tie wild .creatines that gave it no small pprt of its peculiar charm. It is inevitable, and probably ne cessary, that tfl0 wo1' flna the couear should go, but ,tbe black-tail and the wapiti grouped on the mouptain Bide, the .white-tail and moose feeding In the .sedgy ponds ;theee ada beyond measure to the vildenieds landscape, and if they are taken away the leave a lack that nothlum else can quite make good. So it is with those true birds nt the wilderness, the eagle and the w von; and Indeed of all tho wild things furred, feathered and finned. There are many sides to tho charm of big gamo hunting; nor should it be regarded as without its solid ad vantages from tho standpoint of na tional character. Always In our modorn life, the lifo of a highly complex industrialism, there Is a tendency to softening of the fibre. This is true of our enjoy ments; and It is no less true of very many of our business occupations. It Is not true of such work as rail roading, a purely modern develop ment, nor yet liko that of thoso who man our fishing fleets; but it is pre eminently true of all occupations Which cnuso men to load sedentary lives in great cities. For thoso men it is especially necessary to provido hard and rough play. Of course, if such play is made a serious business, the result Is very bad; but this does not in' the least affect tho fact that within proper limits tho- play itself is ood. Everybody's for July. Tho fiction In tho July Every body's Is of unusually strong quality. William Bulfin, who is doing for tho Pampas of South America what Gil bert Parker has dono for Canada, has a capital story "Herself and Himself." O. Henry, one of tho now men, contributes "An Afternoon Mir acle." A dialogue by Caroline Duor, "The Independence of Mr. Hastings," and "The MontmorencI Election," by William Henry Drummond, have real humor. "Bolshazzar," William Stearns Davis' strong story of tho fall of Babylon, is concluded. Tho final scenes are as vitally interesting as their predecessors. "Tangled up In Beulah Land"-is also in its last chapters. Rain which began falling Tuesday afternoon In tho Willamette valley, i3 heartily welcomed by farmers of that section, as the hot, dry weather was commencing to do considerable damage to the crops of the valley. AN UNHEALTHY HAIR DANDRUFF FALLING HAIR finally BALDNESS Destroy the cause, you remove the effect Kill the Dandruff Germ WITH NEWBRO'S HERRICIDE The only preparation that will destroy those parasites. EXCELLENT HAIR DRESSING... For Sale by all DruggUti. PRICE $1.00. 87 DYSPEPSIA "For atx jreara I was a victim of dya pepalain its worst form, 1 could eat nothing but milk toast, and at times my ittomach would not retain and digest oven that. Last March 1 began taking CA5CAKETS and since then I have steadily improved, until I am as well a 1 ever was In my life." . David II. MURFiir. Newark. O. CANDY CATHARTIC TWAOI MARK Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Toate Good. Do Good, Merer Sicken, Weaken, or Grip. 10c. Ke.tOc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... SLrliel Utmttf Cobmv, t'kl., "'. SU u ft Tl BIP Bold and guaranteed br alldruf HU" I U'lAll glata to CVKE Tobacco Habit. The Pioneers of tie Pacific- X Strictly Up to Date Insurance Organization. Aiford Absolute Protection and Pays Claims Promptly, hiad owcb; PENDLETON - OREQON g Is Well Established C In Seven states. 8 0LICIT0R82 WANTED. JLJUUUJUiJUUUUJt.O PJUUUUUU. sL I SMOKERS' Supplies CIGARS, the best brands TOBACCO finest for smoking and chewing PIPES to suit; all. 6. NEWMAN gijiiiauaiiiuuuuuuuuuuiaUUsiitui fl n Mil n Is tho Komlor Stock nt tho Grout Closing-Out Snlo. People nro anxiously soizing on to tho goods while tho opportunity is horo. DOLLARS ARE BEING SAVED Don't lot tho clmnco go by LOOK AT ... . THESE PRICES ' 10-pound box Crnckors, per box 65c All kinds of Tea, per pound 40c Lamp Chimneys less than cost French Sardines, per box iOc Galvanized Tubs 70c to 90c Wash Boards.. 20c to 40c SYRUPS Kemler's host 2-gal jackets cut fr'm $1.15 to 90c Kemler's best 3-gol " " " 1.65 to $t 25 Kemler's best 4-gal " " " 2.15 to i 75 Choc'late Cream 2-gal " " " 1.25 to 00 Choc'lato Cream 3-gal" " " 1.85 to 45 Choc'late Cream 4-gal " " ' 2.40 to t 90 CANNED GOODS Tomatoes, corn, beans, peas, regular price 2 for 25c per can XOc Monopole fruit,high grade,cut f'm 25c can to 20c Standard table fruits, 7 cans for t 00 Salmon, 4 cans for 25c Hams and Bacon, per pound i4c Oatmeal, per pound 4c Rope, per pound, from 8 J to J 2c Schilling's baking powder, per pound 40c Schilling's Typical blend coffee, per pound 20c Cane sugar, per sack 4 90 Beet sugar, per sack 4 80 Potatoes, per hundred : 50 Best cream cheese, per pound 6c Silk soap, 6 bars for '25c Golden Star soap, 6 bars for ; 25c Dairy salt, 50 pound sacks, per sack 90c Flour, per sack 75c Dahy butter, per roll 25c Creamery butter, per roll 50c Macaroni, 1-pound package JOc All kinds of lye, per can JOc Sea Foam, large packages, 6 for 25c All kinds of axle grease, per can 5c and JOc Arbtfckle's and Lion Coffee 8 pekgs 00 Mason Fruit Jars, Qts. 75c, Half-gals 90c Dot Everything else in Oar Grocery Cot Accord ingly. Cash Only Goes at this Sale. No Credit Given Anyone. All parties knowing themselves to be in defcted to me will please call and settle in cash or by bankable paper before July t. AU on settled accounts July i will he put in the hands of my attorney for collection. D. KEMLER Closing Oat Sale GRAND FREE PICNIC baV KINE'S grove Dancing Begins at 2 o'clock each Sunday. Busses to and from the grounds day and Ni;ht RESTAURANT Q)S GROUNDS. The grove can be eigaged for ioaio parties by applying to PETER SMITH, at HoUl St. George, This signature b ou ovory box ot tho nmul" i Laxative Brorno-Oulnbu: ir. . m ' y