V - ; In 'I MS. a. - i I TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1902. m THE FAIR SPEC ML. CLOTHIN G SHE Our Special Sale on Men's and Boys' suits will continue ! all week. Special reduction k i uu tin suus sum mis ivccn. '3. Buv vour new suit this week j and save money enough on 1 it to buy you a nice dress 1 shirt. Tic Fail Where Whole Families Can . Trade - . . - i BUY YOUR LUMBER AT THE Iregon Lumber Yard Alti St., opp. Court House. RICES'. AS LOW AS THE LOWES! All Kinds of Building Material, Including Doors Windows Screen Doors and Windows Building Paper Lime Cement Brick a and Sand UmI Don't Forget Our Wood Gutter For Barns and Dwellings The Columbia Lodging House NEWLY FURNISHED BAR IN CONNECTION IN CENTER OF BLOCK BET. ALTA & WEBB STB F.X. SCHEMPP,Prop. annniiwnwnnniinwnnnnnnwnnnng J The Strahon Rooming Home Martin Block: Everything New, Clean and first class. Good Beds and Well kept and Cool Rooms. CONDUCTED BY MRS. STRAHON Formerly ol the Deipaln 3 nni.immmnuiuunmi.imuHHumn i Cbttkkd Exposition 1900. 0HMID1 fHi Louvr Saloon 6f. , , wbr.fowi MMVUtrOK ... OUMI STOCK SHIPMENTS MANY HEAD GO EAST FROM OREGON RANGES. Heavy Shipments of Cattle From On tario and Big Bunches of Range Horses From Burns Give Cause for Congratulation. That Ontario is the largest ship ping point on tho Oregon Short Lino is evidenced every day by tho long trains of livestock, wool, etc., which start from there on their long Jour noy to tho eastern markets, says the Argus. Tho heaviest shipment at this season of the year is cattle, and scenes of unprecedented activity are witnessed daily at the stockyards There tho cattle are loaded into tho cars and carried away, tho empty pens being immediately filled by waiting herds, which are coming in steadily from all directions. Harnoy county is sending immense herds, and not a day passes but sees long lines of cattle on the way to the stockyards. The shipments are aver aging a littlo better than a trainload a day. Buyers Coming In. Buyers are coming in from many points and prices continua strong, Prime beef cattle are at top prices and the supply, owing to the short ness of grass due to the cold back ward weather this spring is not any- where near up to the demand Stockera and feeders are plentiful, but the demand is so strong that prices maintain their strength with good prospects for the future. The presence of a large number of cow boys in town adds much to the life and picturesqueness of this busy lit- ..USE PURE.. Artificial fee Telephone Main 105. No Sediment to Foul You r Refrigerator No Disease Germs to Endanger Your Health VAN ORSDALL & ROSS sn i iiooo enougn -for anybody! All Havana Filler FL0R0D0RA " BANDS an of samt value as tags from " STAR," HORSE SHOE," "SPEA RHEA D,""STA NDA RD NA VK" " OLD PEACH & HONEY," "SAW LOG." " OLE'VARCINY" fit "MASTER WORKMAN" Tobacco. 11 1 WA I IliWBiiMMMMWMMMW . . . - l-ZrggSl. tlo. city, and contributes not a littlo to tho material prosperity oi us en lorprlslng business men. Range Horses Going. A Burns exchange says thero is causn for concratulatlon in tho fact that so many range horses have been taken out of Eastern Oregon. mo nroHHiiro nf circumstances lias in great measure deprived tne average of ranee horses of value that is, thoy have not of late years ueen of ready salo upon a fixed market. Has Been Specific Demand. Tho demand has been for animals of specific classes, and has left tne herds in much less than first class order. Assuming that the price which an indenendent stockman will accent for his herd of horses ropre sents their full home value, tho movement of herds In their entirety means a great deal to tho producers. It relieves them of tho care of stocic, and sometimes costly, effort. Room for Better Stock. Moreover, their absence means greater room for more proiunoio stock, and is an Important factor to the process of improving quality at the expense of numbers. The ex change of loose herds of horses with out fixed value for stock that will find ready sale at good prices will constitute a great step in advance for the range country. Eollpue of the Honeymoon. Romance gets but small chance now adays. The modern man and maid are nothing if not severely practical ana ostentatiously free from the romance which animated their grandparents. One by one are cast aside the tradl- tlons which for generations have clung about all that is associated with love's young dream. And now even the hon eymoon is being sacrificed. Time was when brides and bridegrooms spent the first month of their married life entire ly apart. It was supposed and right ly, of a surety that they would prefer to be away not only from their friends. but from nil social distractions, during those first halcyon days when they realize that they belong to each other. By degrees, however, as marriage has come to be taken less seriously and love Is spoken of as something old fashioned and essentially middle class, the honeymoon has been cut down, and it Is a sign of the times and their spirit that there Is a marked tendency on the part of brides to Ignore the honeymoon altogether. Rumor has it that in due course its extinction is bound to be brought about That the modern bride cannot endure tho sole companionship of her husband for even the first few days of married life and that Benedict must have golfing or playhouses or the society of friends lest he should be bored by the woman he has Just taken as a life companion Is truly a pitiful exposure of the spirit in which tho holy estate is entered upon by the present generation. Philadelphia Ledger. "New Women" of Antlqattr, The "new woman" is not so "new" after all, for, according to Altamire's 'HIstoria de Espana," she flourished in Spain fully a thousand years, ago. At that time the teaching of religious law was not seldom intrusted to wo men professors. Girls enjoyed the Bame primary Instruction as boys, and then devoted themselves to professional studies, some of which were practiced; ror example, medicine and literature. serving in the latter domain as secre taries and writers In the caliph's civil service. So widespread was .education among the women of Cordova that In a single, ward there were 170 of them busied in copying tho Koran. So hieh ly was the education of women rated that a prince of royal Spanish blood wedded a negro slave woman merely on urcjuui oi uer intelligence and knowl- n .A. - M - . I edge. Another prince was captivated by the woman who became his wife tnrough hearing her improvise verses. Ue For Art TicUliijfa, The art tickings now so plentiful in the upholstery shops and department stores may be utilized for a variety of pretty and ornamental articles for household use and ndornment. A sew- inir basket covered with n nmttv rlo. sign of cretonne and brightened by a ribbon bow or two Is useful as well as pretty and for holding embroidery silk n crotonnp mil Is nf miinh Rr.n-i in the' ornamental lino Is a scnipbasket lined with denim arid covered with cretonne In pflW-tlve pattern. Sale Flouring Mill .Plant. Sealed proposals for the nurehaso 'v. nVZa ?0? M"L Countv. OrTn win 5" tho undersigned trustee in bankrupt i Ji ..w,fu ? MWbMimn7 cy oi saiu Mining uompany, to and Including July 10th. 1902. at Athono ne Julv in7h nana V ""u Oregon. Tho right to roJect anv nnil uii uius reserved. O. Q. aHAMBERLAIIf, Trustee Need More Help. Often the overtaxed organs of dl. gestion cry out for help by Dvanon- dlll'a' lUltno Mnitanfi nlnl. wT a iiKiuu, oouowi, wiiiiuoo, neau- aches, liver complaints, bowel dlsor- r"-" u"",wi iui iirumpi use ofTDr. King'a -Now Life Pill J mi,.. i 11 xuujr .o Buuue, luureuBo ana guar- HIS VERT .ift. .... MM I ffl Henpeck (picking up a latchkey): MRS. EMMY C. EVALD. The 3Ioit Prominent SwrdlHli Wom an In America. Mrs. Emmy G. Eva Id is a resident of Chicago and Is said to be the most prominent Swedish woman in America. Mrs. Evald is the daughter of the lato Rev. Erland Carlson, D. D., who came to Chicago half a century ago as one of the pioneers of the Swedish Evan gelical Lutheran church. He was tho pastor of Immanuel church for twenty- two years and gathered a strong con gregation under his care. He was suc- mm iiHriKXo MHS. K. 0, EVALD. ceeded by his son-in-law, Rev. Carl A. Evald. D. D.. who h. i-vp.i m fiJ ' "Wtft twenty-seven vears Mrs. Evald Is an enthusiastic cowork er with her uuband and a minister's Ideal wife. Mrs. Evald's interest In female sufTrago grew out of her church work, and her husband Is In full svm- patby with her. Each woman as well as each mau in tho church Is expected to pay an annual fixed fee. Unon the shoulders of the women also falls mucu or tne burden of church work, nnd yet tnoy are not Permitted to vote " organization, in Sweden 11 18 "'"cent, 'lhero the women are permmeu to vote In church nrfnlro M8, Bvn,d nas lonB been nn advocate u ,lut Dweu'su system in her church, "uu uPnn.i"e passage of the Inw mak- k iyuiul-h eiigmie ror the office of trustee or tne University of Illinois she uecame an advocate of nnlltinni urn. mnn 8iirTrni?o Eva,d'8 own beauUful home nnd .. cll,ldren r oppo- "-"lB no cnance to cavil. Mrs. Evald W 'nded, fair Utt woman' " ' Ogure and clear l-ui in upeecn, witn an earnestness nnd sennlneness that are calculated to carry conviction. Her activities h been numerous. 8he wbb the chairman of the Lutheran Women'B congresB aurlug the exposition of 1803. She or tanlzed nnd for ten year hB h President of a mlsa!onMv u.l. i n 1 -. " . 17 UCI vu milt uaB uone much good. She wbb a member of the Chlcngo Womnn' "" ur uvo years and until ltn mnnf IngB conflicted Twin, " " .V.lt8.tn.?ot" " vhhivii mines sue organized the 8wcdlah.Amrin .UMua m Jin-nerve tno HOIST THOUGHT. "Ah, I wonder what woman teat thai." home of the woman who made tho Qrst American Hag. 1 A painting of two lovely dnughters hanging in the Hvald parlor shows that this busy woman also hus found time I a. rtll lint, mi.iiik .1 rtl 1 1 I I i.e. f t .ttflH.intA the gentle urtu. Chicago Record-Her ald. A Warning to Blotbera. Mothers In teaching their little ones how to walk do not stop to think how the bones grow. The bones In u baby's legs are soft, half cartilaginous and very euslly bent out of their proper shape. Care should be taken not to al low a child to walk too soon nnd above ill Dot to keep him on his feet for too long a time, or when he is at all tired. When he is rendy, he will try of his own accord, and he generally knows what he is about. Urging a child to walk prematurely Is productive of lasting Injury, bb bow legs are only too easily formed. Let a child creep as long na he wants to. Give him plenty of room to kick around in, and he will be strengthening his mus :les and getting ready for work. Sup pose be is backward about walking, what difference doea it make7 A child who follows his own ideas In learning to walk will succeed much better and learn self reliance at the same time. The same rule holds good In regard to sitting up. If he is forced to sit up top soon, It will have a tendency to weaken his back and Interfere with his growth. Older children should bo taught to sit erect When tired. Insist apon a child lying down Instead of ilidlng down in the chair until be in literally sitting on the end of his spine. rucb a habit is easily formed and bard to correct, resulting in a poor carriage, bad form nnd narrow chest If you observe such a child, you will And he suffers from dizziness and head aches, as the curved form of the spine results In a pulling of the muscles at the back of the neck, and the difficulty Is ceriain to be removed if the child Ib taught to sit properly. United States Health Report Don't Wear BIournlnR. To all of womankind white Is almost universally becoming. Children should never wear mourning, and girls and young women If they wear It should do so ror only a short time. 1 do not ap prove of the conventional mourning dress for any one. If one must wear it however, I beg the discarding of the .niueous crape veil. It 1b benthenlsh The world 1b a sad enough place with out women walking around In crape veils. Woman's Home Companion. Proper Ventilation. A direct draft from a window open at the top and bottom Ib a menace, and fresh air at that price becomes oanger ous. The Ideal way of ventilating a bedroom thnt Is within reach of every one Is to fit a board about four or five Inches wide at the bottom of the lower sash. Then the room Ib well ventilated by the space at the middle of the win dow without a direct draft In the room. Worn tatyeclothB can be made into serviceable napkins and traycloths as we)l as polishing towels for fine china and silver If the.beBt parts nro selected and uently hemmed. Frederlka Bremer, a writer, did more to raise Scandlnavlan'wroinen to a level with thoso of other nations than did any other woman of her time. Never Rust i mar m. a. - a. 1 Piece. If nT . lcc.w'theacV. i i it.. , uiaimoJ . i 3..UU1U u rust you w J! hp 7'. '-or- We have a latEe L, . ' ll Lidk's tinware, B Vatlety ol;f "A- Garden Hose That Is Gaaranteed Lot Ub Save You Some Joseph Basler Complete Hocse IVe See Our Rnsh on the shirtH of a large proportion if the male population of PendWm. n -f.nvu. 4V Is much preferred owing to Its dUUaet superiority. We do un shlrd wiw. and culls in Al style-to perfectioib Tliat's our specialty, and we'reexfenV at the lumiuess. Hence our large ui higli class patronage. Bend us joir laundry. We'll do tho work itt neatnef?H and dispatch. Service the beat. Charges right. THE DOMESTIC Ulf f Mountain Resort - FOR SALE The celebrated "Bingham Sprinp," located in the Blue MoonUini the Umatilla River, complete, till furniture, fixtures, states and ttott Absolute control of five miles of tet trout fishing stream in Oregon, ffifl sell 8o acre tract including totel grounds with water privileges, or 960 acres, as desired; making fi rni-m . nntitrnlHiifr bit? ranee. Of will lease. Call on or address: Frank B. Cloptofl Pendleton, Otegon 1 ' WHY DON'T YOU Buy a Farm While Thoy Are Cheap? N. Berkeley Will Sell You Land at $1250 perAcre that will be worth0 witmn nvo Fifteen V investment in the 0 Pay on the while ORLAN tad cold wt i