I ; . ". : IT'S JUST IN i And sparkles all over with newness, The Minnehaha Line of 5 SHOES FOR MISSES These Shoes are models of Footwear, Beauty and are correct in every detail. $- Misses' kid, low heel, kid top, sizes 2 to 6 $2.35 Missss' kid, spring heel, patent tip, sizes 2 to 6 3 50 jfc 4, Xittle Gent's box calf shoes, just like papa wears 1.50 g ; Go&SOC9 DfcuUnge, Wflson & Co. Successors to Cleaver Bros . "WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1902. PERSONAL MENTION. T. H. Fowler Is In Portland. O. M. Morris was in town Tuesday Irom Adams. Mrs. C. E. Roosevelt Is visiting Iriends in Walla Walla. .Q. C. Osburn, manager of the Athe na baseball team, Is registered at Hotel St. George. Dave Roach, a recent arrival from Walla Walla, has taken a position ;with B. P. Beck, the plumber. W. F. Butcher, of Baker City, is a sufferer from a carbuncle under his arm, at his home In Baker City. --ilrs. Freak b. fihsrpstein has re turned to her home in Walla Walla, after a few days' visit in Pendleton. Charles Darr, of Adams, Is in town attending court. He is a witness In the case of the state against John Tharp. Will Sturgis has returned to Berk ley, Cal., where he is attending the summer school of the Berkley uni versity. Prof. F. Xi. Forbes and Rev. J. K, Diven have gone to ther homesteads on Meadow Creek. They will return Saturday. C. E. Roosevelt, proprietor of the Boston Store, and Charles Bean, one of Mr. Roosevelt's clerks, left thlB morning for Spokane on business. Miss Mamie Hays and Miss Cora Bunch, sister and half sister of Mrs. J. C. Neil, arrived from Missouri, and are visiting the latter in this city. W. E. Bond is In town from his recently acquired home In Walla 'Walla. Mr. Bond has purchased a half interest in a brewing plant in Dayton. -THE- Time is Here TO TAKE F&S Bitters It is a gentle system tonic and a correction for,, the aumerous summer ail ments. TALLMAN & CO. WE LEADING DRUGGISTS AND STATIONERS i Our Shoes AND Our Prices Fit the Purse This combination, backed by Jiighest quality means a cutting down of your shoe bill. Just think of us when you want shoes and let us satisfy you. THE PENDLETON SHOE COMPANY Phone Red J 26 645 Main St ltlllllltlniimininiiiiitiititiHy1 Fkat CUa work and fcept material used by C.BERQU1ST the Shoemafcer, Skop 11th PlldlltM ShM Ctaptiy. William Krassig, the barber, and wife, have returned from Walla Walla, where Mr. Krassig visited rel atives and "Billy" went to "take in" the ball game. W. P. Rihorn returned Tuesday evening from the mountains, south of Pendleton. Mr. Rihorn says he passed through snow within a few miles of Teal Springs. J. S. Beckwith, court reporter, will leave this evening for Spokane, where he goes to assist in reporting a mining case to come oft there. He will be absent 10 days. Chas. Wilson, of Pilot Rock, is In town. Ho says that the grain is burning quite badly in the vicinity of the Rock and some will be fit to har vest for nothing except hay. Miss Lea Perard, who has been at tending school at Montreal, Canada, for the past nine years, will leave there on the 28th of June for her home in Pendleton, having graduat ed. Jack OrtHg, of the Adams Advance, wild was in town Tuesday, loft in the evening on his way to Tekoa. Wash. where he li to meet Mrs. Craig, who has been visiting friends in the Coeur d'Alenes. F. H. McCarter, Jr., wife and fam ily, arrived in Pendleton last even ing from Grand Forks, B. C. Having disposed of their interests in the north country, they are looking for a new location. Mrs. Minnie Everette, of St. Paris Ohio, who has been visiting her sis ter, Mrs. Louis Hunzlker, has gone to Walla Walla to visit another sister, Mrs. Everette 1b contemplating re maining in the west. Robert Pond, one of the assistant professors in the Pendleton Academy, will leave in a few days for his home in Topeka, Kansas. He will spend the summer at home and return here at the beginning of the 1902-1903 term of school. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Judd, father and mother of E. Y. Judd and F. E. Judd, of Pendleton, left their home in Hart ford, Conn., for Pendleton, on Tues day, and will arrive here Saturday on a visit of several months to their sons and their families. Desire and Albert J. Perard, sons of A. Perard, of Pendleton, home for vacation, were among the very sue cessful students that attended the Gonzaga college at Spokane. Desire Perard took first premium in Chris tian doctrine, first in geography and first in penmanship in that school, and Albert was first in French. Mr. and Mrs. Will D. Felster are in town the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Orve Turner. They are on their way to Walla Walla from Portland, where they were married Monday. Mrs. Felster was formerly Miss Ethel Meach, and is well known here. where she lived for several years with her parents. Mr. Felster Is em' ployed as a brakeman on the O. R. & N. line between Pasco and Walla Walla. He was formerly running be tween Pendleton and Spokane and Is also quite well known here. Fit Feet better schools THE BUILDING FUND OF THE PENDLETON ACADEMY. Totai of the Fund to Date, $13,723, and the Amount Wanted Is Fully $20,000 Can't You Help to Get It and Share In the Benefits of Better Schools? An effort is to bo made to complete the fund for the now Pondleton Acad emy building to bo erected on the north side of the Umatilla, just cast of the old city cemetery, the most sltely location in Pendleton, and ono fully as convenient for the clildron to attend the school as any. Those who have not subscribed to the fund should do so at once, as work on the building must begin in the next few weeks, or it cannot bo completed this season, before win ter, as is greatly desired. The Pendleton Academy has done good work in Pondleton and shown its worth as a school. In the future it will do still better work, as Its faculty will be stronger in several ways and the school better equip ped. It is' desired to raise at least $20, 090 for a new building, including the $4000 which probably can bo obtain ed for the present buildings and six lots on which they stand in East Pen dleton. Recently there has been sub scribed to the fund $5000 by the Pres byterian Board of Aid in Chicago, and $1000 by William M. fcadd, the Portland banker, who ta.es a decid ed interest in Pendlet'on and the ef fort to build up a good academic pri vate school here, and Mr. Ladd has no property Interests in Pendleton to enhance In. value. There is not a citizen, property- owner or taxpayer In Pendleton and vicinity who cannqt afford to give liberally to this fund. First, because a good private school will have influence in making the nubile schools better. Second, it will add to Pendleton's and Umatilla county's school resour ces. Third, it will provide education that would have to be obtained by sending children away from nome, thereby saving parents a great deal of money. Fourth, it will add to Pendleton's eaulnment as a business town, sup plying one more "Industry" that hrlnes trade to Pendleton. Fifth, it will make a bettor Pendle ton. Sixth, the conduct of the school will save to the general taxpayers of nublic school district No. 16 from $4000 to $6000 a year, that would have to be spent additionally upon the public schools of the district out of the public purse In educating the children who attend Pendleton Acad omy that is not a public burden, but maintained by individual effort and the receipts from tuition. Here are reasons enough why every taxpayer in the district should give liberally to the Pendleton Acad emy fund. Those who have subscrib ed already are as follows: Mrs. Lina H. Sturgis $ 250.00 W. J. Furnish 250.00 C. E. Roosevelt 200.00 W. M. Ladd i... 175.00 T. C. Taylor 150,00 J. R. Dickson ..i . . 150.00 It. Alexander 100.00 C. S. Jackson , 100."00 Frank B. Clopton .., '. 100.00 Haldane Dickson 100.00 W. F. Matlock lOO.uu John H. Converse ......... 100.00 Jesse Falling 100.00 C. J. Smith , . ... 100.00 James Crawford . .. ..i., 100.00 peoples Warehouse 100.00 C. B. Wado , 100.00 W. R. Ellis 100.00 u. J. Murphy v...,. 100.00 P. L. Forbes ..i luO.OO H. S. Scales , 100.00 F. J. Morris ..i 100.00 F. E. judd ,.. 60.00 Tallman & Co ......,..,. 50.00 E. J. Summervllle C0.00 E. D. Boyd 60.00 T. G. Halley ,. 50.00 Judge Robert Eakin .) 60.00 H. J. Bean ,.. 60.00 W. M. Blakiey i. 60.00 Pendleton Shoo Company ... 50.00 G. R. Demott 50.00 .Frederick Walters 50.00 G. W. Rigby ...i... ,. 50.00 Thompson Hardware , Co. .,. . 25.00 Baer & Daley 26.00 ;D. A. May 25.00 Frederick Nolf 26.00 Oliver & Co..,. .....i 25.00 J. F. Noylln . w. 25.00 R. J. Diven , , 2K.nn C. M. Hogue 20.00 Levi Johnson ... vi,. 20.00 E. A. Vaughan ... 20.00 E. T. Wado 15.00 D. tKemler . , 10.00 T. D. Taylor 10.00 W. H. Bleakney io.OO George D. Peobler ......... 10.00 W. H. Leo .., io.OO E. iM. Lyons 10.00 E. F. Redd 10.00 Chris Ranley .... g.00 S. C. Elder .. i 6.00 Dennis Nichols ...... , 5.00 J. A. Bl&klar , 5.00 W. L. Van Nuya ( 5.00 W. E. Haynio ,. j.oo 1.00 1.00 Total 3723'00 Other Subscriptions. Estimated sale valuo present Slt0 ' V 4,UUU Presbyterian Board of Aid wf m. lu'; pwtiami: : : : ' w $10,000 Total of nil subscriptions Jo date ?13,7.M.uu If your namo is not in tho abovo list seo that It Is added for a liberal subscription nnd sco that your neigh bor has similar opportunity to help swell tho fund by much or littlo. Pendleton and Unrotllla county peo ple can afford to donato for this pur pose of higher and better education, $10,000, and that amount is needed toward a substantial stono nnd brick academy building. After the building fund is complete and tho building constructed within that fund, there arc reasons for be Moving that the school will bo given a handsome endowment fund. In other words, if Pondleton people will do something for themselves in this matter, others will como forward and do something for them additionally. Tho saying: "That God helps them who help themselves," should be borno In mind. Now work for the Pendleton Acad emy. It Is the duty of ovory cltlzon. Do your Bharo and you will bo proud of the result, BASEBALL CHATTER. 'News of the Diamond as 11 Appertains To Pendleton. Manager Cohon, of tho Indians, has received from Chas. W. Zieglor, field captain of tho team, tho follow ing telegram regarding the game between the Pendleton and local teams nlayed there yesterday: "Pendleton 18, Pomeroy 7. Wilnor, Knox. Brown. Home run ivnox Spokane cannot play us. May book Moscow for three games." Tho team will bo back hero on tho 30th and will meet tho Oregon City team on the Alta street diamond on July 4, 5 and C. This team has been beating all the crack amateur teams of the western part of tho state, but the local enthusiasts are confident that it will como to grief when it goes up against tho husky redskins Manager Osburn, of tho Athena team, is in the city today but It is not yet known whether he will ar range for the long-projected and much wished for series of three games for the purposo of settling the supremacy between tho Yellow Kids and the Indians. The Pendleton boys stand ready at any time to play three games on neutral grounds with an Impartial umpire for any sum from $500 to $1000 a side tho winner of two games to take the entire amount, and some enthusiastic fans aro now do claring that Athena can get a bon us of $1000 for tho man who will rub up tho sports of that place to put up their end of a bet of $1000 a side for the series. Athena, however, or at least the Walla Walla papers, purporting to be speaking for tho Athena team, de clare that no attention will be paid to this challenge until It comes from Manager Cohen direct It is notice able that tho Athena team, both play ers and manager, aro making no talk regarding tho matter and seomingly prefer to let tho question of super iority remain In status quo. Tho meeting of tho managers of BUY the BABY a pair of slippers red or black, 60c and up Ladies' Low Cut Shoes Welted Soles or Turned Cool, comfortable and worth all they cost every day of this hot weather $1.50 TO $3.50 A PAIB Oxford Ties for Men PEOPLES WAREHOUSE Qeorgo Cnmpboll F. H. Glttnian . tho various clubs which may be in cluded in tho proposed fall season leaguo takes placo In this city to morrow, Thursday, when representa tives of tho Dayton and Walla Walla, itti. nnrl Pnmllntnn. T.a Ornnilo vuoij., - - and Baker City teams, will bo .presont and it is conucionuy uxpocieu mat tho leaguo will bo organized and nn interesting Borles of gameB arranged. BACK FROM JOHN DAY. Joseph Hoch Talks of His Trip Through That Section. Tnannh Mnch hafi returned from a I recont trip Into tho John Day coun try, whore ho wont to look nftor hla stock and land Interests. Mr. Hoch says ho never Baw range bottor in tho John Day country and that stock is looking flno. , A great many cattle aro'bolng sold tim mirintr saleB from the rango just beginning a few days ago. Tho nrico Is ranging irom a.oo iur moors to $3.25 for cows. Ho also stated mat Bomo grain was burning in different partB of tim nmintrv. especially weBt and southwest of Pendloton,. "but this is nothing now," said Mr. Hocii, "aB the this part of tho country where the soil Is bo light, always burns. To take it on a wnoie, proB pects aro bettor than last year." Try, Try, Again. A new suit was inaugurated this fnvnnrtnn bv J. C. SaltmarBh against the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company, a corporation, to recover judgmont against defendants for $30, OOOlnJuries to biraBelf and $117 injur ies to wagon and team, In a collision with a freight train, at the crossing of Chestunt street, in 1900. ThlB Ib the second action brought against the railroad company for tho same thing, tho first being tried In tho present term of court and a verdict rendered agalnBt tho plaintiff. T. G. Halley and John McCourt are attor neys for the plaintiff. A. Blefgon, a 16-year-old boy at Cheney, Wash., shot himself through tho head with a revolver on Satur day last, dying before becoming con scious. It was a clear case of sui cide. No reason assigned. ST. .IflF STARI uur diu ixcuutuun oaic V M WILL CONTINUE UNTIL JULY 1st, $902 n 3 J i. r l 4- .11 Janitt. UUI11H SHU LUUH UUVH.ULU.lfH UI II III- 1IIW U1MUUB 1U OU UCilur ments ol our big store. Remember: Money Saved Is Money Mait THE LYONS MERCANTILE THE LEADERS Millinery Sale We have too many TRIMMED HATS, bo ;maKe pnew move them. This gives the ladies a ohance to get A HAT CHEAP at the height of tho season. i AnnBT,S-'JtV miv u-m mm m h arm. m. u w wr.iM a tlM Street Ruftl nr i ) .mvc Urt!.-Jv . -... . -. er, - ---J- moDers, The goods are All Ri and sn 5c , 2 SC. I lief 4 II .A. i . " u inifiw . J TV 1 11 IP II 4 . Pride Coffee vp i 301 COURT STB ' E.T.WAI Real 1 1t Ti,-,l- T . J it x wm Ranches a Specialty -a.vyMV VIA VUVl A. 11 LC I B LA LP I Association. Office in E, 0. 1 m. m lf A MTC 111 WW mi i IV II UI 1 I V " , MARRY .1 - If FM -ib a ' 1 . art SllfTlft.. f f a ; 1 !J OTlfl I1UW.C . Wl tWft aH aWl aWk atM dWi Bt. Mt. WL XM -M flf W W 4