Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1902)
Harvest Wearing Apparel We can supply you with everything in the Cloth ing, Shoe and Hat Line, you need during the Harvest Season. We are offering a regular harvest of. bargains dur ing our Special Harvest Sale, which is now in progress. I BAER &f DALEY One Price Clothiers, Furnishers and Hatters, Pendleton 729 Main Street TUESDAY. AUGUST 19, 1902. GENERAL NEWS. HOTEL ARRIVALS. Colonel Hemphill, the famous rebel general, died at Atlanta yesterday. 'Tracy, the pugilist, knocked out Reilly at Seattle in a 20-round fight Mexican outlaws killed two police men against whom their pal had a grudge. South African soldiers are making application by the score to join the American army. The pope of Rome has disregarded hi3 physician's advice and now feeels better in health for doing so. Gompers opposes the New Tork unions having anything to do with the proposed political movement. One regiment of soldiers protecting the operators in the coal strike, is composed entirely of union miners. Lincoln, Neb., experienced her hot test day during the season yesterday. The thermometer went away above the 100 mark. Frohman, the veteran manager, has I returned from Europe and announces the coming season. While boys were fishing off the wharf in New York, one acidentally struck the other on the head with a heavy lead sinker with fatal results. The Antarctic exploring expedition 1 is progressing slowly. It is imprison-j ed in the ice, but expects to sail fori the south pole as soon as the thaw, sets in. The Boer generals have left Eng- land, and after visiting President j Kroger, vili sail for America, where 1 they will spend some time with their former sympathizers in this country. The Persian shah on his visit to London, in attendance upon the king's coronation ceremonies, is re ported to have worn diamonds like "headlights," they were so large and brilliant. Hotel Pendleton. John Williams,, St. Louis. W. R .Glendenlng, Portland. M. H. Patton, Spokane. W. H. Colweli, Arlington. F. F. Clarke, San Francisco. C. A. Carlron, New York. H. S. Bryson, Walla Walla. Charles Edwards, Utah. James O'Conner, Spokane. A. Stenbury. Walter E. Logan, Seattle. G. G. Simm, San Francisco. Nester, Portland. Katherine Handley, Salt Lake. A. Roderick Grant, Portland. C. F. Werland, Indianapolis. A. Oppenhammer, San Francisco. S. L. Whistler, San Francisco. F. J. Hoover, Portland. E. C. Plummer, San FranciBCO. PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEWS. The Gotden Rule. L. Cunnnigbom, Portland. D. B. Richardson and family, Helix. S. W. McDonald, Bingham Springs Mrs. McDonald, Bingham Springs, Benlot McDonald, Bingham Springs Eva McDonald, Bingham Springs. J. F. Hayden, St. Louis. C. H. Pease, San Francisco. V. C. Brock, Walla Walla. W. J. Moore, Spokane. G. D. Galley, Portland. A. W. Tickner, Spokane. A. J. Hall, Spokane. C. D. Rinker, Spokane. Joe Anderson and family, SL Paul Mrs. C. A. Morey and mother, St Paul. Mrs. G. A. Lane, Lakeside. John Swind, city. Henry Beckett, Eight Mile. Frank Hughes, Piatt Center. J. Bragg, Huntington. H. Bragg, Huntington. J. E. Gould, San Francisco. George R. Bulis, Boise. J .M. English, Weston. M. Jensen and wife, Baker City. J. A. Eaberle. A. Vinson, Walla Walla . J. H. Jeutsin, Haines. A. Comstock, Walla Walla. W. J. Rockingham, Walla Walla. E. J. Leezer, Seattle. Mrs. Mather, Farmlngton. Miss Thompson, Farmlngton. The Portland library has been so overrun by patrons since it has been made a public library, that it is neces sary to have more books. J. J. Hill, the railroad magnate,' has purchased a steel plant at Great 1 Falls, Mont, and will enter largely1 into the steel manufacture. j The price of hops having gone up this year, also raised the price for picking. Picking will open at 50c a box, with a probable Increase a little later. Governor Geer has announced that the State of Oregon ought to pay Mrs. Waggoner half of the Merrill reward and that the Tracy reward ought to be divided between the five posseemen who made the capture and the Goldfinch boy who informed on Tracy. Bessie Mills, of Forest Grove, aged; 15 years, is reported to have fallen! Into a stream near that place and re- j malned under water 15 minutes be-1 fore she was rescued, but by the! good work of women who undertook to resuscitate her, she was brought to life and now lives to tell the story. A donkey engine weighing 10 tons has been received by the I. R. & N. branch of the O. R. & N.. at Nahcot ta. Wash., near the mouth of the Co lumbia, to be used in logging from that section. The engine is claimed to be the largest ever introduced in to, the logging industry in that sec tion. Dr. E. C. Kanter, a member of the posse that captured Tracy and who was first to reach the dead outlaw's body and take his revolver from his hand, has petitioned Governor Geer to order the sheriff, who afterwards turned up on the scene and took the revolver from him, to turn the revol ver over to him, as he desires to keep It as a souvenir of the capture. It is said that the governor will prob ably grant the requeat. There Is more Catarrh In thU aectlon of" the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few yean wm supposed to be Incurable. For a great many yearn doctors pronounced It to be a local disease, and prescribed local reme dies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incur able. Science baa proren Catarrh to be a constitutional dlsaese, and therefore re quires constitutional -treatment Hall's Catarrh Cnre, manufactured by F. J. Che ney & Co, Toledo, Ohio, Is the only con stitutional cure on the market It Uj tak en Internally In doses from 10 drops to a tenspoonfnl. It acta directly on the blood and mucous surface of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c Hall's Family Pills are the best DIAMOND utter PENDLETON LOST MONDAY'S GAME AT WALLA WALLA. SharpBhcoters Captured Two Runs In Last Inning, Which Beat the Indi ans Out No Game at La Grande Standing of the Clubs. WANTS MORE HOUSES. Newcomer Says Business Men are Turned Away From Pendleton. Editor East Oregonian: I have ,.. 1 I- Donillnlnn n RtlfHClCllt scarceij ueuu - 'length of time to entitle me to criti cise without appearing to ue some what fresh or Immodest, but there is one thing in which some of your people are perplexingly slow, and that is In not furnishing business houses and residences equal to the demand. To my personal knowledge there have been in the past two weeks four iinro searching for suitable j establishments. Neitner of them I have been successful, and as a matter of course, they are forced to go some where else. This Is baa, ana wwm an injury to your town. The geographical position of Pen iiiotnn Rtrencthened by her vast and This leaves Pendleton sUll well in bountiful resources Insures her to the lead, Walla Walla having pulled , but If she is to keep pace with un from third to second place and ; itf nr nmn-oss nnri to become Baker Citv fallen back to tie for last a commercial city of prominence and . . . I . . 4 l. tn Standing of the Clubs. Won. Lost P. C. Pendleton .... 1" 7 -70S Walla Walla... 12 12 .500 Baker City.... 9 14 -391 La Grande .... 9 14 .391 place with plucky La Grande, which is "in the league and in to stay." The next series will be played at Baker Citv and La Grande, the Sharp shooters going to the former place and the Indians whetting their scalp knives on the Beet Pullers. Pendleton Lost to Walla Walla. Pendleton lost the Monday game at Walla Walla by a score of 4 to 3, the Sharpshooters winning out by scoring two runs in the last inning. Thf fmmfi was fast and excitinsr and there were numerous good plays to liven the performance. In tne tntra influence, homes must be supplied to those who would come Here auu re side; and suitable business houses, must be found for men who are will ing to come and invest their money. Every man who has sufficent means to launch a business enterprise, or start in the mercantile business, has an influence with many others who will follow him and locate either in the city or country; and' his friends have their friends and relatives who will follow always in their "wake." It is through this influence that small towns have been converted into pros perous and pretentious cities in an exceedingly short length or time. the fact that a winter flow of consid erable mngnttudo, although less than the normal, might have been stored if resorvolrs had been available, and tho "further fact that a number of floods of short duration, resulting from violent rain storms, were left unutilized, have opened the eyes of the irrigators as never before to tho necessity for storage. Although the shortage has been most marked upon the eastern Blope of the Rockies the same Is true to a less extent upon the western slope. Whereas In the eastern streams there has been prac tically no high stage, water being ta ken in the irrigation ditches before any high Btage could be observed in the streams, on the western slopes the streams, while reaching a Btage considerable run-off, have neverthe less attained their maxima at early periods, and have subsided quickly, so that low-water stages have come from one to two months earlier than usual. These facts, taken in connection with the prevalent high charges for water and the Increasing value of land susceptible of lrigatlon, have re sulted in filings being made upon a great many reservoir sites through out the state. MD COIttl n ww mm su - w m mm nnm. 1 - beautifvin; XIV8? Wfito. i"i nu sweotwt f. .17, .,, ana. gishPoiuaT ' "wiE. RfilA ISmn.k 1 .v - 1 .-T' it strikes at th rJ.iN complexions, red. rouAWfi n r. ana baby hlomhhS r irritated, In; vix.,1 aimers uistom 1 trailers, Pretrfe,, vm.qilv iou uarrp a . jiinnr. miii m . , uvcu iac iiciiui"v.c xii v.. exceedingly suun, iuuiu ul t...l TM...nttsv nnnfnln f rv til O t vs. -n n . ..... ,.-r- ffmi tuning ui u cue, v.tpv4M iui j I'enuieiuu jnujur unwexo Sharpshooters, knocked a home run, apjtallsts and business men to leave n.l.lnTi ,1 ,1m o 11.- In fliaf Innlnc . n r ,i,nM tnnl.tltfv r which made the tally in that inning, The batteries for both teams were troori and Hnvs for Pendleton, nitch- ed his usual game, while Titus was also in first-class trim and did gooa work. Adams and Swindells behind the bat did their respective teams proud. Score by Innings. 123456789 Walla Walla... 00101000 2 i Pendleton 01000011 03 There was no game at La Grande esterdav. the reason for not playing is not known here, however. TOMORROW THE GREAT DAY. the city because of their inability to supply them with suitable quarters thev must not expect the "geograph ical position" and "vast resources" are going to convert even a healthy town into a bustling city. O. W. D. STORAGE RESERVOIRS IN WEST. Past Season Has Demonstrated the Necessity for Government Aid. indication of the agri cultural nroeress of the West is the growth of public opinion toward the fullest possible use of the streams for irrigation, and especialy toward the conservation of the winter and spring flood waters which now run to waste. A recent report received by the Unit ed States Geological Survey, in its study of the country's water re sources, from Mr. A. L. Fellows, resi dent hydrographer of the Survey for th state of Colorado, throws interest ing light upon the water situation Buffalo Bill's Big Show Will Come to Pendleton Tomorrow. Tomorrow Is the dav to which the Rmnll hnvR at Pendleton have been looking forward for many weeks, and some of the older generation have been almost as eagerly looking for- tio frJ fri- tnmnrrnir Ic the rlnv 1 1 0 Tl ', mut i mil i t . i i nvlctlnrr In flint Rtntf tfunaio bhi s great wiia nest auuw c.woL...b ill appear in Pendleton In their glo- me urgent neceatmy mi ""'w more fully demonstrated than by the great scarcity of water in Colorado during the present irrigation season. The gagings of the streams by the United States Geological Survey show lower stages than have ever been known before at the same season, and WATER FAIRLY PURE. Pendleton's City Water Contains But Little Organic Matter. It would appear that the water which Pendletonians are using Is not so impure as had been currently be lieved and reported. It has been gen erally supposed that the city water was very unhealthy and that persons who were forced to use it were liable to almost anything in the disease line. Dr. Cole, of this city, however, has recently made a test of the city water which was rather surprising in show ing that the water Is almost entirely free from organic matter, with which it was generally supposed to be fair ly loaded.. No test has been made for bacteria or disease germs, but those who have been afraid of the drinking water can rest assured that they are absorbing no more than tho usual amount of organic matter when they drink city water. It is boasted in Portland that alnce the new free baths have been In op eration none of the Portland boys have been drowned. Prior to the opening of the baths drownings were common occurrences among boys who were bathing in the Willamette. w rious entiretv and eive two perform ances, morning and evening, at which the greatest deeds of horsemanship or the known world will be exemplified hv riders ac.tnallv natlvfi to the coun- "w tries and nationalities which they rep resent. Tomorrow the busby-haired Cos- nnrik from the teenea of Russia and Siberia will appear in the same arena with United States soldiers, native North American Indians, Cubans who took part in the recent war with Spain, and rough riders and horse men from every nation of the earth , hlch has deveioned the handling ofi horses to any appreciable stage. This great exhibition Is Instructive, alike to old and young and none arej so eniigntenea as not to una some thing of deep interest in the perform ance. Watch for the great street pa rade, which is alone well worth the price of admission to the perform ance. It is declared by competent critics to be the greatest parade of its kind ever put before the public. Just Look at Her. Whence came that Bprightly step, faultless Bkin, rich, rosy complex Ion, smiling face. She looks good, feels good. Here's her secret She uses Dr. King's New Life Pills. Re ault, all organs active, digestion good, no headaches, no chance for "blues." Try them yourseir. Only 25c at Tallman & Co.'s. BARGAINS I Commencing Wednes day, Aug. 20, we will sell at actual cost 300 Boxes Fancy Stationery All shapes, sizes and col. ors from 5c to 75c per box. Stock must be reduced to make room for our ele gant holiday line. Sale will continue each day until all is sold. Come early if you want the best. FRAZIER'S 5P Book and I Stationery Store. Rich but not heavy. Appetizing but not watery. Delicious but not sickening. Chocolate Soda . . We don't believe that you ever tasted any chocolate soda like ours. We've got the knack of making it JUST RIGHT Everybody says so. No one ever dislikes it. It is a drink that pleases ladles and gentlemen, boys and girls, old and young. Try a glass and learn what a really good chocolate soda tastes like. F.W.Schmidt &Co. Reliable Druggists. Phone, Main 851. THE PENDLETON ACADEMY Offers: College Preparatory Course Business Course Teachers' Course 1 Takes all grades from Sub-Primary up. Graduates enter Prrt.1 man Class in such Colleges as Yale, Princeton, Stanford j Graduates taking U7 weeks Supplemental Work can take Btifel Certificates on same basis as Normal Schools. Fall term own ! ' tember 15. For catalogue address r F. L. FORBES, D. D., Principal. I State Normal School MONMOUTH, OREGON. Graduates ot the Bcheol are In coniUnte demand at lalarles ranging from H0 to (100 per month. BtudenU take the itate examln- tiona during their course in the school ande are prepared to receive Btate Certificate oa F graduation. Expenses range from to 1175 yVl J CO l . OIIUU( .lUiUUU luui.c auu ncu equipped Training Department. The Fill Tarm opens September 18th. For catalogue containing fnll Information, address J. B. I. BUTLER, E. D. RESSLER, Secretary President. iBlll!lllllllllllllllfflllllllHTTllHllilll!!llllll!flllllllllllHlllll i m I InnnilillHI' L3 OILS, AXLE GREASE AND COMPOUND . . I have a full line of oils, axle grease and com pound of the highest quality, in quantities to suit the buyer. Examine my stock before buying. Taylor, the Hardware Man 741 Main Street 1 r i Mead! Mead! ORLAN CLYDE CULLEN COTJNSELLOIVAT-IiAW U. S. Supreme Court REGISTERED ATTORNEY U. S. Patent Oillce U. f . arxJ FOREIGN PATENTS Trade Marks and Copyrights TOO 7th 8t N. "W., Washington, D. C We are offering this heavy all-wool Ingrains. week some exceptional tJJ These carpets were Ut t tterns m tnc a M from last year's stock and are worth 57c. You will see some of the patterns m ij , New coods iust cominc in. Look for September TkaHA l Ma iiimfttion ABOUT THE .MERITS OF J3YERgJ It is the finest grade it is possible to make. nj but the choicest wheat enters into fyerS, read satisfaction is the result whererever it is used or fancy baking. f"c PENDLETON ROLLER MD W. S. Byef s, Proprietor. i " . fTrn For Health, Strength and fi Pleasure Drink ::::::: ' Polydore Moens, Proprietor. J ii in