East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, August 06, 1902, Image 5

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    THE THIRTEENTH SESSION
It Pays to Trade at the Peoples Warehouse.
LEE TEUTSCH
TRANS-MISSISSIPPI COMMER
CIAL CONGRESS TO CONVENE.
It being impossible to get our NEW STORE in shape to
occupy before August 15, we will continue our Removal Sale
FIFTEEN DAYS
Longer. Everything must and will be disposed of. Do not
fail to come and see and get what you want before the best is
gone.
Stamps on PREMIUM DISHES given with
all sales.
Lee Teutsch
SUCCESSOR TO
Cleaver Bros. Dry Goods Company.
"wednesdayTaugust eri902.
BREVITIES.
J. A. Howard, farm loanB.
Fechter's-for Ice cream and aoda.
All lclnds of imported lunches at
"Grate's."
Crawfish cooked In white wine, and
fresh crabs at Grate's.
All kindB of fruits, melons and veg
etables at the -Standard Grocery.
Wild cherry phosphate, a fine sum
mer health drink. Found at Hawley
Bros.
Call up 'phone main 105 for pure
artificial Ice. Only place in town
you can get it
All kinds of city and country prop
erty for sale. IUhorn & Cook, room
10, Taylor building
Hot weather has no terrors at the
Golden Rule basement, where good
Schlltz beer is on tap.
Drop into the cool, comfortable
basement of the Golden Rule and en
Joy a glass of Schlltz beer.
Commercial Association library
open from 2 to 5 p. m. All library
privileges 25 cents per month. R. S.
Bryson, librarian.
Doctors predict considerable sick
ness of typhoid nature. Be careful of
your drinking water. Cool it with
pure artificial Ice. 'Phone main 105.
Telephone to Dutton when you
want ice cream to serve at your
homo. There Is no ice cream made
superior to Dutton's. We deliver it
ot your homo.
Harvesters
Do. you need any col
ored glasses, goggles,
eye protectors or cheap
watches for harvest ?
I have a full line of
the above named articles,
and my prices are guar
anteed to be the lowest
in town.
L. HUNZIKER
Jeweler and Optician
Next Door to-R. Alexander
Castle's for poultry,
oee E. T. Wade's ad today.
Castle's for fish, always fresh.
Get your clothing cleaned at Joer-ger's.
Full line of bakery goods at Haw
ley Bros.
Crawfish cooked to order at
"Grate's."
Men's dress straw hats while they
last, 45c. Teutsch's.
Large shipment White House Cook
Books, $1.24, at Nolf's.
For Rent Four-room house near
Academy. Inquire at this office.
Good lunches at Phillip's restau
rant, opposite Tallman's drug store.
Wanted A good reliable boy as
messenger. Apply at Telephone of
fice. Just received a most beautiful line
of up-to-date white beaver street hats
at Mrs. Campbell's.
Hungarian crab apples, the very
best jelly. Buy them at Hawley
Bros.' where you can get them cheap.
Rooms in the East Oregonian build
ing for rent. Steam heated, hot and
cold water and bath room in connec
tion. Lost Between M. E. Church and
corner Court and Johnson streets, a
ladles' point lace handkerchief. Find
er please return to Mrs. Dr. Miller,
and receive reward.
The August number of Sports
Afield contains a lengthy illustrated
article from the pen of Dr. H. S. Gar
field, of this city. The article is en
titled "The Bitter Root Mountains,"
and pictures in very glowing terms
the sport which is found in these pic
turesque hills for the true lover of
sports.
A family, consisting of the fahter,
mother and seven children, arrived
on Tuesday's O. R. & N. train direct
from Sweden, ,and took the evening
W. & C. R. train for Helix. They
could not speak a word of English,
but apparently had money to pay
their way and buy a home in this
county, which seemed to be their in
tention. At bedtime I take a pleasant herb
drink, the next morning I feel bright
and my complexion is better. My
doctor says that it acts gently on the
stomach, liver and kidneys and is a
pleasant laxative. It is made from
herbs, and is prepared as easily as
tea. It is called Lane's Medicine.
Lane's Family Medicine moves the
bowels each day. Price 25c and 50c.
For sale by Tallman & Co., sole
agents .
White Resigns.
Washington, Aug." 6. The resigna
tion of Ambassador White was re
ceived from Berlin this morning and
immediately forwarded to the presi
dent. It Is to take effect November
7th. U
RVTO&YT1 isayery unpleasant little crea-;
ture to have in the houseThltr
18 thfi finriA if fViA voai fsvi fham f n flnnoar TTaa arm a-'
SiiS DESTROYER
,wiu,fciu-thra'and keep thenvtaway- - 4
WI A PCHSON. BUT DEATUoffU J3Uljr2
'i, . ............ ir '
' ana.'iBseois 01 wiwnf;
UFKEfiPS DRUG'
S &V4mdvMin St. TowMdiCoutt How
i -r ?. h ! " l mu soda, feb? :
n.r-n I '7111101 1 ) .... ,7
Organfzatlon Has Dignity of Being
Greatest Commercial Movement In
the Country, Affecting Commerce
of Western States.
The thirteenth annual session of
the Trans-Mlssisslppl Commercial
Congress convenes August 19 to 22,
inclusive, In St Paul, Minnesota.
This organisation has the dignity
of being the greatest commercial
movement in the country having for
its consideration and recommenda
tion only Buch measures as affect the
prosperity and growth of the states
and territories west of the Mississip
pi river, including, of course, the re
cently acquired posessions In the Pa
cific ocean.
Ab its name Implies, the congress
is purely a commercial organization,
tabooing politics. This rulo Is rigid
ly enforced by a constitution that has
stood the test of the past fifteen
years, a period which has been pe
culiarly fruitful of dispusslons more
or less acute upon m'lMinl njasures.
The delegates comprising the mom
ireiiln nf this hciv are aunolnloil,
first, by the governor selecting ten
of the most Influential men or nis
ntnin. tha movnr RPlnoMne five from
the mp"st prominent citizens In his
city; the board or county commis
sioners selecting three of the Influen
tial men from their county; the com
mercial, industrial and other associa
tions selecting from among their mem
bership one Influential citizen for
every 100 members of the organiza
tion. These delegates, acting under the
call issued bv the executive com
mittee gather at the appointed place,
welcomed by the commercial organ
izations of the city which extendB
the Invitation, and form a remarkable
gathering, the deliberations of which
upon even a greater plan tnan mose
which characterize the iawmaKing
bodies of the country,
in fart It is. as the record of the
past 15 years shows, It is a lawmak
ing hnriv unto itself, for so high is
its reputation In Washington that
Its unqualified indorsement or any
ntrrMrnlnr measure, recommended for
.ifHnn tn the coneress of thetlnled
States, is at or.ee considered, as the
DOn(imoi,t nf thf 24 states ana ter
ritories comprising the jurisdiction
known as the TranB-Mlsslsslppl area.
HORSES SCARCE.
The Animals are Reported to be Hard
to Get.
Liverymen and horsebuyers who
some Into Eastern Oregon from the
western part of the state are com
plaining because they find the supply
of good horses for their purposes
growing short in this section ana
prices rising correspondingly.
Speaking along these lines ex
sheriff Frazler. of Multnomah coun
tv whn has hfien in. the eastern nart
of the state buying up a lot of horses
for general purposes, said to the
Portland Telegram the other day
ho fnnnd horses scarce and hlKh this
trip as stockmen quit breeding In the
dull time, when the price ot ncrses
dronnfid. In this they made a mis
take, Mr. Frazler thinks, as the lapse
of several years in borse-breeamg is
nnm hAltier felt when the Krowlng in
dustries of the country require more
horses than ever before,
"A few years ago all the horses fit
for cavalrv use were bought up by
agents of the American and English
governments," Mr. Frazler said, "and
this lnft a scarcity of these. At
nrasent no one is buying cavalry
horses, as all the wars are over, but
I still notice how closely the animaiB
were bought up In Eastern Oregon.
"Th comlnir harvest will reaulre
all the work horses east of the moun
tain anil the ble farmers of Umatilla
rnnntv" ari huvine un horses Instead
of selling them. I had considerable
difficulty in procuring what animaia
T AM.
"Horse raising Is like everything
else. When horses are nign, every
hnilv trlfis to ralnn some, but when
the price drops, breeding stopB, when
it should keep right on.
"The price of horses has advanced
K0 ner cent over that of five years
ncn. and the demand comes from the
logging camps of Oregon and Wash-
ingion, ' irom tuo iuc ui U6
Sound and from Alaska. Portland
has hecome ereat headquarters for
the sale of horses, and I am constant
ly receiving letters from people alj
niini Mnrthnroat xohn rieslrfl to
buf. Besides this; Portland herself
uses a great many ana tne aepieuuuo
must bJipp$ap fronV'year to year.
I look for good prices for horses for
seforalfcarg; joyej ' .
THE SCALP BOUNTY LAW.
Keep Cool !
Good advice, but how to do it, that's the question.
Get yourself into one of thoBe
-ox;
;u
SUMMER SUITS
that we are selling at reduced prices.
$6.00 Coats and Pants to clean up $4.00
$7.50 Goats and Pants to clean up $5.00 ,
$10.00 Coats and Pants to clean up $7.50
$12.00 Coats and Pants to clean up w: $9.00
The right kind, they don't rip, the buttons don't come off, thoy hang
right. Look at the well dressed men that wear our Clothes. m i( , . y
The PEOPLES WAREHOUSE
THE MEN'S OUTFITTERS.
am una inwrvaimn vtuvaujni.
TieUOiSgwjf li&&ture fill act
wisely by ' repealing the bounty lar
at the coming-session. Malheur Ga
zette. Iteferrig to the above, .the Oregon
Ian ,saya: .
"The ravages "of the rabbits .and
gophers iiave Jncreasedslnce bounty
law went into.)effec,t,,Bi8dlltbe farmers
are beginning to think that a 'coyote
does more good in killing these
pests than he does harm In killing
sheep. Since 140,000 coyotes have
been killed off, and the rabbits and
gophers have multiplied, perhaps the
remaining coyotes can now find food
in nlentv without attacking sheep."
There Is no weight in this argu
mont. Any nerson who understands
the nature of a coyote knows that
these animals would walk over
nath of rabbits and gophers to get
taste of mutton. Western Oregon
papers would make believe that tho
oovoto 1b a benefit Instead of a pest
There is only one logical way to look
at the matter. If the coyote is
benefit to the state of Oregon then
repeal the bounty law as soon ab
possible. If It 1b a pest, then con
tlnue the law. This Is the whole
nronosltlon. The coyote Ib an enemy
to one ot the great industries of the
-state. This Is a well known ract.
Tho scalps brought in are sufficient
nroof that the law. is bringing de
sired results. Three years ago where
coyotes were very thick, today tney
are scarce. Tho advocates of the
scaln bounty law point to these facta
The only objection to the law is that
It costs the state something. Eastern
Orfieon navs her share of state ex
penses without complaint no -matter
what part of the state is bonentea.
Heppner Gazette.
Complete Lines
At Nolf's . .
Always Enjoyed
Wood! Wood! Wood!
.Cascade red fir. Gray's Harbor
Commercial Company. 'Phone, Main
92.
$t or $2 for
SHOES
Go larther at the Big
Boston Store
Shjoe Dept.
jut now tkai you fragile.
JULY
tv. , : -floods at a 1
JANUARY
Price.
;.t, forget .the JDOffOMS
SHOES ar? alwayg leadiig ,'tiiii
INKS
Sanford's, Barnes', Carter's,
Thomas' and Diamond, 5 cents to
85 cents a bottle.
Pocfcetboofcs and Parses.
An excellent line to select from.
Purses worth 35c to 40c, here on
sale at 24c. Hundreds of other
purses ioc to 1.45.
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
265 Rolls Fancy Decorated
Crepe Paper, worth '15c, now ioc
a roll.
Frederick Nolf
Wait for the Great Landslide 01
Holiday Goods.
Arc the Meals
Served at the
French Restaurant
Large, comfortable dining
room and good service
Positively the
Best 25c Meal 'In Pendfetoxf
The French Restaurant
QUH. LA FONTAINE, Prop,
TRANSFER,
TRUCKING,
STORAGE.
CROWNER BROS.
TUphn Main 4,
u - ' '
I I A lag-
We Hare Them Now
A SEWING MACHINE
FOR 25 0A8H
Warranted, and will be kept
in repair for five years without
cost.
Remember my guarantee
means something. You don't
have to send your machine to
Portland or Chicago for repairs.
We itlfl bar tb Ktnfi of ail Sawing
Macalnaa 1
The White and Standard
10 MM asac4 ol all otbtn
o JESSE FAILING
GRAND PICNIC AT KINE'S GROVE
ioi ot SP'rnflwfeEfcavYSAndLw:! .Ami isJ
, r - .
wancinjujegins ounaay at p.miVmorJto dancinglat.
.1 grbauds day a'nd riight.vu " ofw
J em1
mm
m Ploiio parties by apflyiigio to FITSR ' - matMi'm
-rt
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