East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, August 11, 1902, Image 8

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SUMMER SHOES
FOR SUMMER COMFORT
The hot season will pass pleasantly if you use caution
in selecting the right footwear.
m Low Shoes, Canvas Shoes, Canvas Oxfords
1
S Are the correct things if 3'ou would enjoy the real com-
g forts of summer life.
ZLT Dmdtngct, Wilson & Co.
Successors to Cleaver Bros.
Phone
Black 91
lasmraaaBaQaMDOBecBCBaaacuBccuuubuDBBCocaaaaaaaa
MONDAY, AUGUST 11. 1902.
PERSONAL MZNTION.
Attorney L. B. Reeder left this
morning for Portland.
F. E. Judd and family spent Sun
day at Bingham Springs.
R. Alexander and family spent
Sunday at Bingham Springs.
- .Fred Lieuallen was in town Sunday
and left this morning for his home at
Adams.
G. TV. Proebstel and. John M. Tay
lor are at the Golden Rule hotel from
"Weston.
.1. R. Dickson has returned to Sea
side, where his family are spending
the summer.
Miss Flo Hallock has returnea
from a pleasant sojourn in Portland
and the valley.
Mrs. G. E. McCarter has gone to
Meacham to recreate for a week in
them ountains.
Miss Zelam Phillips has returned
from a very pleasant sojourn at Port
land and the coast.
Miss Christine Proebstel, of "Wes
ton, is being entertained by Mrs. F.
J. Moule, of "Water street.
Carl Greenawald returned yesterday
from Meadow Creek, where he has
heen spending a week recreating.
A, B. Galloway, the genial traveling
representative of Blake, McFall Paper
Company, of Portland, is in town.
I.eon Cohen, of the Peoples "Ware
hciisp and wife, have gone to Bing
ham Springs for several days' vacation.
"Kit" Carson, formerly connected
with the "W. & C. R., but now dealing
Jn Franklin county real estate, was in
town Saturday.
E. Limebough is in town from Seat
tle. He was formerly a Pendleton
citizen and is looking after his crop
Inteiccts north of town.
Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Miller and
George Robbins and wife, of the Owl
Tea House, have gone to Bingham
Springs to spend a few days.
Captain McGlauchlin and Lieuten
from Fort Walla "Walla, spent Sunday
in town and took in the baseball
game.
Miss Maggie Leonard has resigned
I her position as primary teacher in the
Pendleton schools and will go to Se-
atttle, where she has accepted a sim
ilar position.
Li. Greenawald, shoemaker at Din
dinger, Wilson & Co.'s store, will
leave this evening for Meadow Creek,
where he will join his family and
spend several weeks.
Miss Celia Renn has returned from
3 prolonged sojourn in Portland ana
the coast. She again assumed her
duties in the county clerk's office as
stenographer this morning.
J. W. Flack, merchant at Cayuse.
was brought to the sisters hospital
Sunday evening in a serious condi
tion from stomach trouble. He was
TIE NOW FACULTY
SECURED FOR THE
PENDLETON ACADEMY.
brought down on a hand car.
Mr. and Airs. Joseph McCabe and
daughter, Miss Olive, of Walla Walla,
spent Saturday, Sunday and Monday
as guests of Hotel Pendleton. They
will return home this evening.
Miss Bessie Gleeson, -who has been
visiting her sister, Mrs. W. E. Kemp,
left this-.morning for .her home at An
telope. She was accompanied by Mrs.
Kemp, who will visit at Antelope for
a while.
Mrs. Lillian F. Fredericks, of Wes
ton, is the guest of Mrs. Lee Moore-
house. Mrs. Fredericks is en route
to Shanghai, China, where she will
engage in missionary work among the
Chinese.
Robert Burns, general O. It. & N.
agent, and Charles F. Van De "Water,
ticket asrent for the O. R. & K at
Walla Walla, were among the promi
nent citizens who witnessed the ball
game Sunday.
A. F. Statter, editor of the Walla
Walla Union, came over on the excur
sion train Sunday and witnessed the
baseball game in which Walla Walla
walked off with the scalps of the Pen
dleton players.
Who They Are and Where They Come
From Outlook for the Future Very
Bright Progress for the Institution
and Courses of Studies.
President F. L. Forbes, of the Pen
dleton Academy, has announced his
corps of assistants for the coming
term.
For the past six years President
Forbes has been at the head of this
educational institution and to his ef
forts are due, to a great extent, the
present prosperous condition of the
Institution. Mr. Forbes anticipated
leaving the academy at the end of his
last term and taking up work in
other quarters. In fact, he earnestly
nrotested when the board reappoint
ed him to the presidency of the acad-l T ntln nr'nu nr German including
emy for the seventh term, but this i Engnsn 'science and mathematics,
did no good and the unanimous vote; m . f0r college entrance. The
confidence by the patrons
school.
Again it may be Btated that the out
look for the future never was so
bright as it is today. The academy
Inst yenr matriculated 200 students in
its various departments, and already
the outlook will warrant the assertion
that the number wilt be largely
swelled the coming term. The ncatl
cmv 1ms now become one of the fix
tures in Pendleton and has passed its
infancy and straggling period until
now it is in a condition to begin the
erection of a new building. ThiB will
be commenced Bhortly and be com
pleted for occupancy for some of the
coming term. A full description nnd
picture of the new academy has been
produced in the East Oregonian.
Three Departments.
The academy contains three depart
ments of academic grade, designed to
meet the needs of the different classes
of students, but it is intended to lay
main stress upon the academy prop
er. The work in this department con
sists of four years' course, based up
of the board and patrons of the school
caused him to reconsider and again
agree to take up the work in the
academy.
The Faculty
President Forbes is an educator of
ability. He is not only an educator,
but is a man with business ability,
who is able to see where to place his
energies to count for the most good
to the institution which he repre
sents. He is a graduate of Brookport
State Normal School, of Brockport,
N. Y.; has had the bachelor's and
master's degrees from Lake Forest
University. He also is a graduate of
McCormick Theological Seminar-, of
Chicago, .and Grove City College, Pa.,
conferred the dergee of doctor of di
vinity on Mr. Forbes a few months
ago.
W. S. A. Wilson.
W. S. A Wilson is a new man. He
arrived a week ago and will be assis
tant principal. He comes to Pendle
ton with a flattering reputation. For
the past 12 years he was principal of
Elder's Ridge Academy, at Elder's
Ridge, Pa. He is a graduate from
that school and the Edenboro State
Normal, and has an A. M. degree from
the Grove City College. He was in
structor in Latin in the Elder's Ridge
Academy, and taught the same sub
ject in East Liberty Academy, in
Pittsburg. The fact that he taught
for 12 years in as high an educational
institution as the Elder's Ridge Acad
emy is ample evidence that he is an
instructor who will prove of much
good to the Pendleton institution. He
has a wife and two children who are
with him.
comnletion of the regular academy
course qualifies the student for ad
mission into such high standing edu
cational institutions as Yale. Prince
ton or Stanford. The academy has
been placed upon the accredited list
of institutions whose graduates are
permitted to tnke the teacher's state
certificate so that graduates from the
academy, by taking a special course
of 27 weeks in special normal studies,
will be admitted to tho state exam
inations on tho same basis as grad
uates of any other educational insti
tution in tlif state.
Business Course.
The business course gives thorough
course in bookkeeping and commer
cial law, thus offering similar work
to that of the best institutions in the
west. The student has the advantage
to carry any studies in the academic
course while taking the special busi
ness course and while gaining a bus
iness education can be progressing
along other educational lines.
The courses of study include every
branch taught in any of the acade
mies in the country whose aid is at
giving the student a practical busi
ness education.
Agricultural Exhibit at Salem Will be
a Success.
No time in the history of the Ore
gon State Fair haB there been such
a good feeling among the agricultur
al classes towards tho Buccess of the
fair as exists at tho present time.
Every section of the state seemB to
be tnking an Interest in the fair and
promise to give it their hearty sup
port. There aro reasons for this
awakening of the people to the sup
port of the fair. One is, the manage
ment has worked hard and faithrully
to make the fair as broad as the state
itself. ,
The transportation companies have
come to their assistance and made
very liberal rates on hauling exhibits
of all kinds. Another ia, tho people
are beginning to realize that it is
time to let the outside world know of
the resources of our Btate, and be
lieve that the State' Fair Is the proper
place to meet the better cIbbs of home
seekers. This will make the fair
doubly valuable. It will give those
who are looking for homes on the Pa
cific coast an opportunity to see In a
body what our state can prooduce, and
where it is produced, without travel
ing all over the state at great ex
pense. It will also give the exhibitor
the best possible opportunity of show
ing his products, whether it be grains,
grasses, fruits, vegetables, livestock,
minerals or manufactured goods.
Flemish Wir.-
tu nave u . .
shipment of gSd
steins, fern d
jugs, cracker ia Jt."
Cra.ed
Come and see it. Ware-
Costs Nothing
To look at it,
. Remember' that we .,,,
A ouS lor
oat
Hand-Painted China.
The exhibition of hand-painted
china from the Gross China Decorat
ing Company, of Denver, Col., which
is to be held at the Tallman Drug
Co.'s, has not arrived yet. but Ib ex
pected any day. Due notice will be
given in this paper.
rrult Jars at CobL
We are closing out our line of Ma
so nand Vacuum fruit jars at ost
If you need fruit Jtrs, better come
now. The Standard Grocery.
Iowa's building at the World's Fair
will cost $50,000. and $75,000 will be
expended upon exhibits.
Owl Tea Hons
301 COURT STREET.
E.T. WADE
MEAL
EST A TE
DEALER
ltT,.,,.',flSr ,or,n "hort tlme 640 tm ti 1
h t lmid roll- tr ,m Phu.ii.,.?
buihels ot kthIii pr (-re, plenty nl wii7
T .in Aft ifa. 3 more' An S m il
and itrigHted Price, $16,000
ion ,-. t .
llBtnu.jJ acres on creek bottom, taltoettert
ho better garden laud ou earth. Pr eUioo
I'ralrCeW mZ "" IILnche Ie,t C""
Brick buslne b'oek SOxlOO, IWnitreet
To- n property of every ducriplion,
Propeny sbnwn In either turn or tmti
wit our expanse H you. Cme ind a u.
will tieot you right.
Office in E. 0.
P. O. Box .324 PENDLETON, On,
Carl Otto Kloepfer.
Carl Otto Kloepfer, of Plymouth,
III., is another new man on the staff
Frank F. Jesse, formerly O. R. & .uiur. e v , u
x operator in this city, passed : , ru V TT" A7
through Pendleton Saturday evening ? " , w .
,it f qvqq tn q.i, t"7 Academy and Michigan State
.. - w,.-..v. "". University. He comes with a very
Lake, where he goes to take a posi- Mh ... . ,
& i.wuiuutcuuaiuu UD a LtJaUUi Ul
German -which will ho a fonti.rn r
. -r Ll j r. mi I ' -" " """
curies .naruu, uruggihi, iiiunms the academv in the future mnro thnn
ant Bryant of Z SMS battery I V, L" during the pa8t He ha8 Vrrtad
ant Bryant, of the Thirtieth battery, I Bigt. E GuIchadr.( merchant; Ben yet, but is expected here with his wife
r .mi ri m 'in n nrn.nr' m ti i. H:nn.c i nu i i 11 r 1
. . w . w , . . .... I. u .....I. , . n 1 11 tut? near imurc.
shoe man; Harry Turner, Harry
Strong and T. D. S. Hart, were among M,ss M'riam strong,
the prominent Walla Walla fans who Miss Miriam Strong, of Portland,
witnessed the ball game Sunday on has heen secured to take the place
the Alta street grounds. of Miss Wallace, who resigned to take
Lucias J. Clark, who suicided at a college course at Whitman College,
THE PRICE
IS NOT CONSIDERED
by us in buying drugs; hence
we get the best. Careful
graduates fill your prescrip
tions. We have built up a
large patronage- because we
are exact in filling the doc
tor's orders. We never sub
stitute. We would be pleased
to have your prescriptions.
TALLMAN & GO.
ChicaEO a few davs aeo. was a Walla Walla. Miss Strong is a grad-
nephew of C. J, Freese, the Spokes- uate of tne Portland Academy and has
man-Review traveling representative, sPet two years at Bryn Mawr, Pa.,
of Walla Walla, who visits this city which is a school of high reputation
frequently. Mr. Clark was a proml- for &rls- Sne also has the very
nent promoter and capitalist of the highest reputation as a teacher and
Windy City, and no cause for his rash is a lad' ot refinement and culture,
act can be advanced by his friends. Mrs. Carrie B. Forbes.
He had a wife and five children. The intermediate department will
W. H. Dindlnger, of the firm of again be under the care of Mrs. Carrie
Dindlneer. Wilson & Co.. the shoe omes, wno nas been superintend
merchants, returned this morning ent of this part of the school for the
from a three-wqeks' vacation trip, Paat tour years. She also wished to
which he snent at his old home at resign the position but no one could
Pittsburg, Pa., visiting his parents, be found by the board whom they put
He also made stays at Chicago and tie conncience in to handle this de
other cities along his route and saw partment as well as she has, and she
many points of interest. Mr. Dindin- was again prevailed upon to take the
Tllfa LbAulNU UKUUllIbTS AND ger reports a very enjoyable trip ana Place. She is a graduate of Brock
All Were Saved.
"For years I suffered such untold
misery from bronchitis," writes J. H.
Johnstou, of Brighton, Ga., "that
often I was unable to work. Then,
when everything else failed, I was
wholly cured by Dr. King's New Dis
covery for Consumption. My wife
suffered intensely from asthma, till it
cured her, and all our experience goes
to show it is the best croup medicine
in the world. A trial will convince
you it's unrivaled for throat and lung
diseases. Guaranteed bottles 50c and
$1.00. Trial bottles free at Tallman
& Co.'s.
Charged With Robbery.
Henry McDonald, colored, was ar
rested this morning by Chief of Police
Blakley, charged with the theft of a
coat and vest from a young man
named Johnson. McDonald was work
ing with the harvest crew of Henry
iuolstrom, northwest of Pendleton.
Johnson was working in the same
crew and the negro got hold of the
coat and vest and appropriated it to
his own use. He was taken before
Judge Fitz Gerald this afternoon and
bound over to appear at the next term
of the district court.
ST. JOE STORE.
OUR JULY SALE
WAS SUCH A GREAT SUCCESS
We will continue this Sale until
AUGUST THE 15th
In order to make room for
BIG FALL STOCK.
THE LYONS MERCANTILE CO.
THE LEADERS
STATIONERS
is feeling much refreshed from his Port State Normal, of New York, and
j rest from his duties at the store.
lit Will Pay You
is considered one of the best instruc
tors in the state. Especial attention
will be given to the primary depart
ment of the academy the coming term
ana every effort will be made to
make it stronger than ever.
Mrs. Effie Patterson.
Miss Effie A. Patterson will have
charge of this department. She is- a
graduate of the University of South
Dakota and has had much experience
in primary work. She spent five
years at Gettysburg, S. D., and holds
state certificates from both that state
and Iowa. She 1b also specially fit
ted for kindergarten work and nature
study, and these features will be
strengthened by her.
Miss Grace Beagle.
Miss Grace Beagle, who has assist
ed successfully In the primary de
partment for the past three terms.
nas been re-employed. She Is a Pen
dieton young lady and is an excellont
instructor.
No Weak Points.
14. 1 I ,
First claw work and first class material make a first class job of re- seen that trTe new faculty is a strong
pairing. J hat's what you always get of L. iJEKUUIbT, the shoe one and the comlnir vears of thn n,r.
maker. BflOD in reaaieton BUoe Store. my may be looked forward to with
To call at our store and see the bargains we have to offer
you in Footwear.
We must reduce our stock, even at a sacrifice, and
our customers receive the benefits.
THE PENDLETON SHOE COMPANY
Phone Red 126 645 Main St.
m.i v asji'
" ff ft 9. JU SL 9 P. P 8 9 S JUtft i 4 B Jl SL i
The Story of the
LAST PAIR
OF SHOES
Is this. Whatever the price
might have been, they are on
sale this week together with
all broken lines and sizes of
Summer Shoes
At prices to make them go
quick.
Some that sold at in.co.
$4 oo, $3.50, $3.00,
NOW $1,95 per Pair.
Some that sold at $2.00,
NOW $1,19 per Pair.
All Low Shoes Reduced.
PEOPLES
WAREHOUSE
HIGH GRADE
NOW FOR
AN OUTING
during the hot weatbtr
We are headquarters fort
Tents, Lamp aioois, v-r -
Stoves, iois, en-,
We have a few
REFRIGERATORS
to close out at cost
A Fiist C sit lint cf
FURNITURE
At Rock Bottom Prices
IK. A. RADER
Main and Webb Streets, Pendleton
Undertaking Purlore in Connection.
We Make no Claims
for our Furnaces
That We Cannot Substantiate
We install them in no building where
not confident of success. We use n
handed methods to sell them.
W. G. McPfcetsoii
Heatinir and Ventilating Engine
47 First Street, Portland, OrefC
Laxative Bromo-QuaW,
.v.. fhat CCT3J o "JiU
yT 'V&Sf' tho reuiudy lint curaJ