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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1902)
I Vou always get GOOD .GOODS at Alexander's. Little Girls' Wash Dresses i Any lttle Girl from two to fourteen years old can be fitted I With 0ne 0 lucac viwiuuio, uiiigiiaiu, rciuaie, Irnsb and Madras. The materials are really excellent .for the bard service they are likely to encounter, and with the trim- X pings and splendid making these dresses would be a "good X huv" at twic: wnat we as ior mem. ine styles wui please Ilhe little Girls and Mothers too. They're cheaper than you can make them prettier too, than most people can make. 38c to $1.98 x Jexander Dept. Store! RELIABLE CLOTHIERS. mm 'COUNTY NEWS W7ESTON NEWS. Harvest In Full Blast Manv Fires ! Af 1 1 1 1J ..... M bnnntln Will I mvc I WWII Ml III. Weston, Aug. 1. Harvesting is in full swing all about Weston this week and the farmers are reporting a good average yiojd and a fine quality of grain. Several small fires have been, re ported during the last .week, from the grain fields, but nothing of any conse quence in that lino occurred until last night, when C. W. Steen, who lives about four miles north of this place, lost 1200 sacks of wheat. The Are caught from a setting that was threshed on Tuesday. The work has been completed on the basin for the new water fountain, at the corner of Franklin and Main streets, and by Saturday the pipe con nections will have been made aud the people will be able to get a cool drink of Adam's pure ale with small effort. The farmers on Weston mountain report a full crop of berries this sea son. The rain of the early part of the month hurt the strawberry crop to quite an extent, but the raspberries and the blackberries are making up for the loss. IS A GOOD FURNACE is cheap in the long run. A cheap furnace is dear at any price. If you can buy furnaces often and get your fuel free, by all means get a cheap furnace. $ It W. G. McPherson Heating and Ventilating Engineer 47 First Street, Portland, Oregon park and Washington', Portland, oregoN The school where thorough work is done; where the reason is rs given; where confidence is developed; where bookkeeping exactly as books are kept in business ; where shorthand is ide easy ; where penmanship is at its best; where hundreds of ookkeepers and stenographers have been educated for success in ife; where thousands more will be. Open all the year. Catalogue free. A. P. ARMSTRONG, LL. B., PRINCIPAL This signature la on every bor of the genalna Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablet TIT. w" Mi ii remedy that corea a cola iu one day. Readers of the East Oregonian are indebted to the Weston Leader for the following: Andrew Douglass cropped 60 bush els of Parley to tho acre from 20 acres ust west of town. Miss Efflo Miller is visiting at tho home of Mr. and Mrs. N. It, Springer, in Pendleton. Mrs. Augusta Moulo, of Pendleton, who has been visiting the Misses Proebstcl, returned Tuesday to Pen dleton. County Clerk Chamberlain Sun dayed at Weston, and duly admired the improvements in progress in this metropolis. Dr. R. E. Butler, of Waitsburg, for merly of Weston, has sold his drug store there, and will devote his entire attention to tho practice of medicine. Hugh C. Best, brother of Dr. Best, arrived in Weston recently from Bass- wood, Mich., and expects to grow up with this western country. Mr. Best will look after his brother's outside interests, enabling the doctor to do vote closer attention to practice. Ho expects to leave soon for Franklin county on a trip of exploration. William Fuson, who has been vis lting his sister and. other relatives at Weston for the past month, left Mon day for his old home state, .Missouri, being accompanied as far as Pendle ton by his nephew, J. T. Fuson. Mr. Fuson, who sold his Missouri farm for $10,000, expects to locate in Ok lahoma, where two of his sons have purchased land. TRACY CAPTURED. h But This Tracy Was Not the Oregon Convict. New York, Aug. 1. The young panther which escaped on Sunday from Bronx Park, and which has been dubbed "Tracy," after the Oregon outlaw, has been captured in Bronx ville by a crowd of farmers living in the neighborhood, and returned to his cage. Judge Stears, who lives about one mile east of the zoological gardens, caught sight of "Tracy" near his barns. He gave the alarm and about 200 persons responded, armed with all sorts of weapons. The panther was overtaken, but only two of the pursuers stood their ground. They succeeded in throwing a net over the animal and carried it back to the park. of the session and it is probable that most of the newspaper men of the state will be present. The after noons will be given up to pleasure trips. The latest Tracy story is to the effect that the notorious convict has appeared at the office of a Nebraska doctor, where he had several bullet wounds dressed and a bullet or two and numerous buckshot taken out of his anatomy. He then disappeared. The Press Will Meet A call has been sent out for the annual meeting of the Oregon Press Association, which is to be held at Newport on Thursday, the 14th, and the first business session will be held on the morning of the 15th at 9 o'clock. Interesting programs have been arranged for the various days Jollying the Girls. The Bloomer Girls, who played here last Monday night, are getting tho big Jolly all along the line, some of the newspapers saying that but three of the aggregation are girls, while others say the whole works are femi nine gender. All agree, however, that the game put up by them under the guise of baseball is nothing but a howling farce. Santos-Dumont's Flight New York, Aug. 1. New Yorkers are looking forward to seeing sights tomorrow, when Santos-Dumont, the famous French aeronaut, will make his first flight In America. Tho as cension will be made at Brighton Beach and if the weather conditions are favorable it is possiblo that M. Santos-Dumont may make his at tempt to encircle the Statue of Liberty. Judge Walte Assumes Office. New York, Aug. 1. Judge Byron S. Waite. of Michigan, 'today assumed the office of president of the Board of General Appraisers to which he was appointed by President RooHcvelt. Judge Walte succeeds Charles II. Ham, who resigned recently owing to ill health. Mercury potash ONLY SERVE AS A. MASK FOR. CONTAGIOUS BLOOD POISON They hide its repulsive form, and this serpent disease, stupefied by these drugs, lies dormant until the cITects have worn oft" or treatment is discontinued, when it breaks down the mask nnd becomes as full of life and Venom as ever. Mercury and Potnsh may dry up the sores and eruptions, but at the same time they drive the poison back into the blood nnd system, where it feeds upon the tender tissues, membranes nnd nerves, finally breaking out in most disgusting sores nnd even destroying the flcslt and bones. Mercury and Potnsh cannot accomplish n radical nnd pennnncnt cure. They have a palliative but not curative effect upon this treacherous snake like disease. These drugs produce mercurial Rheumatism, destroy the teeth nnd corrode the membranes of the stpmach nnd bowels, causing inflam mation and dyspepsia, nervousness ami general derangement of the system. S. S. S. is a Specific for Contagious Blood Poison, and the only nntidotc for the peculiar vims that spreads so quickly throughout the system, corrupting the blood aud infecting every organ nnd fibre of the body. fc. fc. b. destroys the serpent, nnu eliminates every atom of poison from the blood, it makes a thorough nnd radical cure of the disease, and at the same tunc builds up the general health. S. S. S. contains no minerals of nnv kind, but is a purely vegetable remedy nnd we offer $1,000 for proof to the contrary. Write us about your case and our physicians will cheerfully advise without charge. Our home treatment book will be sent free to all who desire it. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Atlanta, Qa. There Is No Question ABOUT THE MERITS OF BYERS' FLOUR It is the finest grade it is possible to make. Nothing but the choicest wheat enters into Bycrs' flour, and satisfaction is the result whererever it is used for bread or fancy baking. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S. Byers, Proprietor Fo POULTRY and STOCK SUPPLIES CALL ON Colesworthy AT THE- CHOP MILL 127 and 120 East Alta Street I W. F. EARMEART, Oflloe, Association Block. REAL ESTATE INSURANCE COLLECTIONS Lots in Pendleton from $30 to $500. Sevoral good homestead claims for homeseekers. Farm lands and grazing lands for sale. Harvest Hats Big size bandanas 25c 5c The great Savoy harvest glove $1.25 's black with white stripe -working shirt 25c 25c The Forker's Glove Underwear best in town for 25c Otfr Special value Underwear 50c 50c heavy and strong Suspenders 35c 1 'u.i 'H'in- Dimities Sun Bonnets Standard Calico Fancy Neck Ribbon I5c Special Lace baskets $2 and other shirt waists Summer Corsets Sc Sox for Men, dozen 5c 15c 4c 10c Ac 25c ,25c 50c Remnants of all kinds at 1-3 off Children's dresses, all sizes x.mL off Ladies' black Pardsols, 26 in 35c Crash Toweling, for harvest Linen Toweling for harvest, 10c 7c Cotton Blankets ,,?., ? 50c Bed Spreads 65c Comforts, the kind you want $1 or 75c Pendleton's Big Boston Store " i - nil I. A i ,iAU.iil'l'i'Jit';itr,?:.:..&.' j i