Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1902)
.$9 4 - Giothing for Men Youths and Boys XEurnishing Goods, Hats, Caps Shoes i Our prices are the same to all and lower than elsewhere. A trial will convince you. BAER Sf DALEY One Price Clothiers, Furnishers and Hatters, Pendleton . 729 Main Street I TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1902 GENERAL NEWS. Henry L. Moss, the first United States district attorney for the dis rtrict' of Minnesota, died Sunday at St .Paul. The cholera is decreasing in Ma iilla, and in the provinces, and the liealth board has decided to relax the quarantine regulations. At the Manhattan Beach track Sunday, Lottie Brandon paced by single motors, rode 312 miles in an liour. Lizette's old record for women -was 25 miles and 125 yards. Two natives who were implicated in the massacre of American sol diers at "Binangonan, Rizal Province, Island of Luzon, on Decoration day. 2ia.ve been arrested on a charge of murder. The Peary Arctic steamer Wind ward, from New York, July 14, arriv ed Sunday at North Sidney, C. B. She will coal and proceed north to morrow, being joined here by Mrs. -Peary and her daughter. Seyyid Aeei has been proclaimed sultan of Zanzibar, in succession to Hamoud Bin Mahomed Bin Said, who died Friday morning from paralysis "Mr. Rodgers, the present prime min ister, has been appointed to serve as regent until the sultan shall have attained his majority. Many bridges were swept away and 100 feet of the Buffalo, Rochestei Motel arrivals. The Pendleton. Mrs. C. J. Ferguson, city. A. B. Galloway, Portland. A. J. Morgan, Chicago. A. Roderick Grant, Portland. TV". JR. Glendening. R. H. Caston, Spokane. H. R. Ingledue, Chicago. Mrs. S. James, Portland. F. L. Houston, Idaho Falls. A. R. Avery, Bingham Springs. S. B. Martin. E. A. Mann, city. C. Henley, Chicago. M. H. Patton, Spokane. L. O. Lakin, Portland. T. TV. Jackson, Spokane. C. R. Parsons, Adams. E. O. "Wilson, New York. Charles Green, San Francisco. Creutson, Chicago. The Golden Rule. J. H. Clayton. D. Kirkpatrick. G. "W. Bradley, Athena. Alison George, Spokane. G. G. Howard, Indianapolis. Mrs. OUara. G. D. Galley, Portland. D. C. Brown. James Newman. Judd Zicroff. TV. C. Kent. L. H. Russell, La Grande. L. M. Blevins and family, Vinson. J. C. TVyatt and -wife, "Vinson. C. L. Bruner, Illinois. TV. L. Davis, Minneapolis. D Mi UTTER NEWS OF THE GAME IN THE NEW LEAGUE. No Salary Limit Will Be But Four Team League Season Will Be a Success Gold Diggers Happy Percentage Changes. There will be no salary limit in the Inland Empire League. This was definitely decided upon at the recent meeting of the mana gers of the various clubs in "Walla "Walla. It had been proposed that a limit be put either upon the amount to be expended monthly for its team by each member of the league, or up on the individual salaries to be paid, but when the question was brought up for discussion it was decided that as all but one or two of the contracts with players had already been made, there was no use in establishing a rule which would be without practl-j Gatsch, who recently Joined with "Walla TValla, has the record in Spo-u-nnn nf dvlnr 12 men bases on balls in one game, and it wasn't a good, day for bases, either. 1 La Grande could do wonders by in-1 fusing a little more young blood in ! har innm The new men she has aM ready put In helped remarkably, but. there are still too many "old timers' f The Beet Pullers should gag Danny Shea at the beginning of every i came. Ho is fierce when he is play-- ingand is just as liable to bite some of his own team as one of the oppos ing players. "With the Tecent addition 01 -tamarack" Adams and "Sure Shofj Senilis, the Indians now have an on-t tire team of practically safe batters, men who can be counted on to fifind the ball when hits are badly needed.' "Doc" Schmidt, the Indians' second I baseman, is rolling up his batting av , erage like a prospector putting up his . hits two-baEcers. I three-baggers, home runs; they all look alike to "Doc" and he lands on them regardless of consequences. Don't Fall to Try This. Whenever an honest trial Is given & Pittsburg tracks were -washed out ' to Electric Bitters for any trouble It by the flood at Springville, N. Y, Sunday. Another layer of mud cov ers the crops which were badly dam aged two weeks ago, and will proba ily completely destroy them. is recommended for a nermanent I cure will surely be effected. It never ! falls to tone up the stomach, xegulate the kidneys and bowels, stimulate 'the liver, invigorate the nerves and I purify the blood. It's a wonderful ! tonic for run down systems. Electric Bitters positively cures Kidney and t Salem reports say that the weather Liver Troubles, Stomach Disorders,! PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEWS. for the past month has been exactly -what the hop crop needed. The placer clean-up from the Stur Sill bar in the Snake river is esti mated at fully $10,000 for thb present .season. A great rush Is reported from Ore-' Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Rheuma tism, Neuralgia, and expels Malaria. Satisfaction guaranteed by Tallman' & Co. Only 50 cents. ' SHEEP POLLUTE THE CREEK. gon, City to the new Janus of .the SI- Sumpter'.s Water Supply is Made, lm- letz reservation, which was thrown! ... ... . . . ' i pure ay ine Mnimais. i letz reservation, which was thrown open for settlement Monday. pHhere is reported to be every indi jcation of, a first clast coal rnihebe!ng s3eTeIbped - near Huntington, .but on the Idaho side of the state line. Sumpter has enjoyed drinking quite j thick water the past week, as 4a re- suit of sheep grazing on the water shed of Pole Creek, whence the sup ply is taken for the city says the Blue A splendid ledge of nlckle ore lias , Mountain American. Sheen have just been discovered on ButcherknKe ', overrun the claims, eaten off the creek, Josephine county. The ledge ' grass near the prospector's jabin Is said to be'Jully 100 feet In width, j where his only horse fed, trampled Charles Stahl. a carpenter, while the ore on the dump, and intruded enjoying an outing at Seaside beach every other way possible upon the Tosklessly .ventured too far out In quiet of Sumpter's adjacent mining me water ,ana was swept out to sea aisincis, um not im me present nave .and drowned Two suspicious characters fully equipped with skeleton keys and other burglarious paraphernalia were arrested in Salem recently and are now confined In Jail. Four men were killed Sunday morn" ing by an explosion of dynamite on the Lyle-Goldendale railway, In "Washington. They dropped a case of dynamite which they were moving, with such force that it went off. A fifth man was also injured but not .seriously. John L. Rogers, vice-president of, the McMinnevllle National bank and the pioneer druggist at McMinne vllle, died Sunday at Meadow Lake, after a long Illness of tuberculosis of the bowels. He was 44 ye,ars of age and left a widow and young son. He was a prominent member of the Masonic, ,Odd Fellows and A. 0. U. TV. fraternities. George Q. Carey, of the firm of Mc Creary & Carey, South Omaha, Neb., has recently been in the Camp creek country, where he bought 1,000 head of extra fine horses from Hackleman & Son, to be delivered at the rail road In August and September. This is 'jane of .the best-known lots of horses Jn Eastern Oregon, and con-' tains a large number of fine roadsters. the herders run their bands through the creek affording the water supply. Water should be protected by forest reserves, as was done by Baker City after the Bull run and other streams had been secured by that municipal ity. The government has shown a willingness to set apart a water shed for a forest reserve, If there is tim ber on it, and it 1b pointed out that the tract should be kept free of stock for the health of the people using the water. Stock should not be grazed on the mineral land of another man than the "owner. It is under stood that much of the ground at the head of Pole and Wind, creeks Is staked -as mineral claims, which should warn herders to keep away. If the .water is kept polluted by sheep a6 Jt lias been for the past week, the humble citizens of this city will be come so agitated that they will be ardent advocates of any measure to keep sheep out of the country. The homlleet man In Pendleton, aa well aa the handsomest, and others, are Invited to call on asy draggiit and get free a trial bottle of Kenp's Balaam far the throat and lungs, a remedy that la guaranteed to cure and relieve all chronic and acute cough, asthma, bronchitis and consumption. Price 25c and 50c For tale by Tall man k. Co.. sole agents. ingly dropped. But a Four-Team League. The question of admitting teams outside the original four into the league was also discussed at some length and it has been decided that no other teams shall come in as the; towns who wish to join are too far; away and the present schedule would j nave to oe entirely rearranged or tne games already played dropped out of i the contest. About Outside Games. i All the teams in the new league now have their certified checks up in j the hands of Walter N. Pierce, the. president, and the organization may now be said to be well launched. So far the games played under the league in various towns have proved ' most satisfactory and from the size of the crowds in attendance and the ; enthusiasm manifested, there is good, reason to predict a highly successful season and a reorganization of the league next year. The average paid , attendance at the games in all the; towns In the league runs over 300. ' which is somewhat better than was , expected by even the most sanguine. Gold Diggers Are Happy. The Baker City Gold Diggers ar-l rived in the city last evening on their , way home, where they will meet thei Sharpshooters on their own grounds j Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sun-i day of this week. The boys were; highly elated over their successful in vasion of the Sharpshooters' terri tory, the three games they won out of their series there putting them into second place instead of in the tail end, where they were after their mix- up with the Pendleton Indians. Some Quick Changes of Place. And speaking of changing places, the shifts which have been made since the league series was com menced are rather surprising, even though there have been but eight games played. The first four games played by each team put La Grande and Pen dleton a tie for first place and Baker City and Walla Walla even for hind- end. Then the Beet Pullers came tOi Pendleton and lost four straight,' which put them In third place, while' the Gold Diggers who were easyi things for Pendleton, went over to Walla Walla and did stunts with the Sharpshooter aggregation which cinched the hold of that team on lasti place and pulled the Diggers up to1 second. Meanwhile, Pendleton had , i slid out from tie for first place to a percentage which is exactly equal to those of both Raker and La Grande,' who stand second and third respec tively. The next four games, how ever, may turn things all around again. Line Hits. "Lefty" WHIard, formerly of the Yellow Kids, Is said to be making goody-good with the Gold Diggers. Ziegler, late captain and third base man for the Indians, is weeding the right garden for the Portland leaguers. Little "Bobby" Clark, of the Beet Pullers, showed himself in bis games here to be one of thesafest hitting pitchers in the league." Kelly and Hulbert, new men with Walla. Walla, are said to b among the fastest who have been playing in the Northwest league. They should "help some." (uticura THE SET $1.25 One thousand and forty million gallons of beer brewed yearly in the, United Kingdom equals tne toiai amount brewed by America, France and Austria. EGG Drinks are becoming more popular at our fountain daily. We know just how to mix them (there's lots in the mixing). The eggs are always perfectly fresh. Trv one of these: Egg Phosphate Egg Chocolate Egg Lemonade Cream J? off Chocolate Leghorn Pine Apple Frappe Egg Flip Cherry Egg Flip Pine Apple Goldenade Pike's Peak Coffee Frappe Served just right at SCHMIDT'S PHARMACY The One Who Rea& sQ Money I Shirt Waists at the surprise-price -of.., 25c Worth Many Times more Full Size Blue Wool Blankets $1.98 while they last The new cotton SUMMER Dress Goods are proving popular 10c, 15c yd NEW INITIAL Neckwear Black Satin, with White Initial 50c Shirt Waist .$MQvUnTO erj O rr ,r - - 'vCl .a reduction tonrtJ Dare ctr t Vl 4Ut iau good m.iu6 ouun Extra Va1i. r D'ble Blankets 55c, 67c, 75c Prices advanced, vet retain the old pried Overall ior the Little Folfa io pair left tog0 26c a pair Black Cotton, Vhhe Stripe WORKING Shirts 25c The Boston Stor ALWAYS THE BIGGEST VALUES Good enough -for anybody! ll Havana Filler Don't Let Your Wife Suffi Cool, comfortable homes are easily kept so if you use The Blue Flame Wickless Oil Slot The cheapest, most-convenient and most satisfactory cooking device known. Don't Fail to Call and Examine Them Taylor, the Hardware Mi Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humor. ConsUUng of CUTlCoa. Soap (23c). to dean the kln of cnuti and alw. nn4 often the thickened cuticle, Cvticvrx Olnt nient (Soc),(o lnmntljr allajr Itchlnir. Irrita. Hon. and Inflammation, and tootbe and heal nd Qvtkvma ttKWLViar (joe.), to cool and clean; the blood. u A aingle et It often anfflclent to cure the mM tortarinr. dUflgurins kln, walp, iZ "Wood humor,, raahe, Itching. r,d irrZ tton.. with p of hair, when the hen phyU daw and all oUier remedies fall. 7 FALUNS HAIR LtetfC 1 A A a m Gi I A A A I 741 Main Street " FLQRODORA " BAUDS en of same value as tags from "STAR," " HORSB SHOE," "SPEARHEAD."" STANDARD HA Vf," OLD PEACH & HONEY' . "SAWLOC," "OLE VARGINY" or "MASTER WORKMAN" Tobacco, CARPET BARGAIN Can always be had at W ... i oaaoAnL iallv net wet u uil lin have yet roawa ine. but we must mfe:Aj forDfalltmde..Kowl-, cheap. Remnants beau less tnan cost. 76c Carpete now tOc Carped Try the Victoria!; thing this hotwea- - JESSE FAW NEW VAN DYKE W The best wearing and easiest cleaned ware ever used m Our line is complete. We ihave everything yu your home : Cups, saucers, preserviag Keiucs, dippers of all sizes and numerous other articles. Tte THOMPSON HARDWAR For Health, Strength and Pleasure Drink ::::::: Polydore Moens, Proprietor.