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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1902)
W I Sacrifice Prices lagaggwiBgoofwocpcccEnag BBBBcccpccDccnoppppn B O a a o COURT WINS CASE This week we will end the clearance sale prices on n Summer Footwear. Note these Bargains: GETS FINAL DECISION IN CITY RECORDERSHIP CASE. Ladies' tan Oxfords, regular price $2.50 to S3, now $1,25 Ladies' tan shoes, regular price $3.50 to $3, now $1,50 Ladies' canvas Oxfords, regular price $1.50, now $1.15 Ladies' canvas Oxfords, regular price $2, now $1,45 Ladies' white canvas Oxfords, regular price $1.50, now $1,00 a Men s white canvas shoes, regular price 1.50, now $1,20 Canvas bicycle shoes, regular price $1.50, now $1,25 a a B H U a a a u a B iuBMUJaaaaaaaaoaaococcpccaaacccccccpcccccpcpaaaaaaaa Dindinger, Wilson & Co. Successors to Cleaver Bros. Good Shoes Cheap Phone Black 91 TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1U2. PERSONAL MENTION. "Warehouse Company's business at ' that point. Mrs. Nell Wilson came up from The , Dalles this morning to visit her pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Smith. She . is a sister of Mesdames Joe Parkes , and Rose Campbell. debris carried on the track by a wa terspout near Weathorby. This has delayed traffic considerably, but the railway company is confident of hav ing everything In good running order jonce more within a very short time. Sweeney-Hudson. One of the most pleasant events of Judge Bean, of the Supreme Court, , jue season took place at the residence Affirms the Decision of County, of Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Hudson, at Court, Declaring That the Mayor. Freewater, on the 17th Their daugh ui Zi ,-.,. ,u. r- ,,L ter Marie, was united in marriage to His Right to Cast the Deciding Sweenor At precisely Vote In the Council. ; 11:55 a. m. the contracting persons The supreme court of the Btate of entered the hall and were met by the Oregon has affirmed the decision of bride's young brother, Master Jack the lower court in Its decision against Hudson, and little Florence Davis, of defendant in the case of John Me- Pendleton, who attended them to the Court vs. John E. Beam. parlor and presented them to thtTRev. This Is the decision in the manda- Evans, who read the beautiful mar mus case of John McCourt against riage service that made them man John E. Beam to compel defendant and wife. The bride looked lovely in to turn over the books, records, pa- white organdie and old lace and car pers, files and furniture pertaining to riea a shower boquct of bride roses, the office of city recorder, which was The groom wore the regulation black, started here early in the present one but intimate friends of the year. family were present. After the cere- Of Much Interest. mony tnose present were invuea 10 REESE CAPTURED. The readers of the East Oregonian the dining room, where they partook will remember that considerable in-, Tf , jn lunch, after 'Wchthe terest was tlrretTup in Pendleton . "d ald a -hower of last winter over the city marshal and ' 1 c """ " l ' , " , " siipjheio, luun luuu ucjiiu iui c iui a Charles Spencer is in town. J. M. English is in town from Wes ton. I D. H. Casey, who is farming the . .. fi h, chares were ' slippers, took !' thto dty' ffl SSSit MahalSuJ-rt wedding tour. C. P. D. town yesterday with some elegant Jl t- , m j samples of timothy hay which he and oer law-breaTers , New Music Box. .raised this Season OU JUS faim kk t,i i ' Hpnrro nnrrPAii the in?R. nrnnrl. E. P. Dodd visited La Grande Sun-j Charles Konasek, who is staylES'case of trouble. It was also charged etor of Hotel St George, has replaced My at Gibbon, where he is assisting his f that John E. Beam, recorder, had n!s o1q music box in the barroom, Elmer Searcy is In Spokane on bus-. father in running the O. R. & N. ' shared In these "rake-offs" with the a new machine which is a great lness (pumping house, is In town and will marshal and when the new city ma?-' Improvement over the old one. It is W. S Pauley has gone to Walla remain until after Buffalo Bill's visit or and council went into offlco the one of the famous Regina music ."Walla, j to the city. first of the present year, a crusade ' bo3ces anu Plays 12 pieces. "With a Frank Knox was in town Saturday. Fred Mosier and Dick Carson, ac- was started against these city offlc- nickel dropped in the slot it changes from Vancycle. j companied by their wives, arrived ials. After careful work, of an inves- the music itself and gives all the Mrs. Fred Judd has returned from rom Mt- Vernon country Monday ' tigation committee and due delibera- latest in ragtime or marches. Bingham Springs. on way 10 Pendleton to haul i tion, the charges were found by it, ' " V. C. Brock, circulation manager of Z? TheI ,wU1 .brins loaf8 .f n.ot lP have Testi&e oimi EJECTED FROM HOME. s Oregonian. is in town from VJM i .s"1 aa reiurn. ong uon, Dut it louna uem to oe aoso-; : r 1 1 1 1 ! i ' ( T" lira frtul "Walla. ' Ranger. Ernest Temple, a prominent farm- jj. a. Kicnardson, a prominent He- er of north of town, was in town , council was upholding the old offic-' in nusiness man, ana lamny, were in , Saturday. Mr. Temple is one of the town Monday. ; f6rtunate farmers who took advant- S. W. McDonald and family are at aSfe of the opening market and sold' the Golden Rule hotel, registered Ws wheat for 52 cents. He and his from Bingham Springs. j brother sold 25,000 bushels Man Wanted Here for Larceny Is Caught at Salem. A telegram was received at theH sheriff s office today Baying that Fred Reese, wanted here for larceny, had been captured at Salem, and asking what disposition should be made of him. The crime for which Reese is want ed was committed on the Umatilla reservation last Friday, when Reese stole some clothes and Jewelry be longing to a school teacher who lives near Arthur Rlgby's ranch. The stolen goods consisted of clothes valued at $22, a watch chain worth $16, and stick pins, valued at $5. "Reese came to Pendleton after stealing the clothos, and wore the clothes on the streets here, drawing a pair of overalls over the pants. On the lapel of the coat was a picture button from which Reese had the picture taken out and another sub stituted at--local gallery. He alsa had some picture taken of hlmBelf and ordered them rorwarded to his home at Salem. Reese left town Saturday morning, beating his way on a freight train, and when the teacher came to town to complain of the robbery there was no clew of him until the picture waB found at the photograph gallery. This gave the clew which led to his arrest He will be brought back for trial. iniun wiii al.. : rrtu. i city tmaSjWtt , 0 dock, in theL? inn no i . -""uoMi ,v: -v the foiwi:rauDa Ctefli4.7 ve in co III s'TTIA nnu " -MLH s a. aditor, state treaL stnicUon. InnJT . Wte i A 1 : "1 UI IB ready here and C is Bimmering. uucl CrawflBh "Gratz'B." cooked to Snaps . AWlce a week far ,u we , offer 75 dozen Joh t white pie plates fse. i! ai nve cents part. ii. Joe Reed in Trouble. Justice Fitz Gerald heard the case of the State of Oregon vs. Joe Reed, the prisoner being accused of stealing the sum of $8 from Henry Crook last Saturday night The men had been working in the harvest field and Crook, who had been paid off, had the money in a tobacco sack. The two slept at the City Livery stable and the next morning Crook missed his money. He had Reed arrested and the sack In which Crook had At the beginning of the'Sues Her Husband for Divorce Two investigation the majority of the; noure Tierwaros. .v""u"uu V """'nlnfPrt thP mnnpv trnR fonnrl nn thp ials, and the mayor and one or two;a"er having been ejected from her ' . nnnr 'ttna hm,n n of the council were against them. home, 870 East Twelfth street, by her husband yesterday, Mrs. Anna A Charge Decided Upon. Commins filed suit for divorce against it was aeciuea, nowever, Dy mose'john F. Commins, a prominent real Marlage license was Issued this! P. O'Gara and M. Barnhart will 7h?n 7. ZS estate oroKer or San Francisco. The forenoon by the county clerk to E. B. commence work In a few days on a'?? mhoi officials that wife alleges that her ejectment from Jones and Mary E. Weaver. i brick building at the corner of Court tese officer? should go and new men her home was the culmination of a Fred Shoemaker the hustling ren- and Johnson streets. The structure be aPPiated their places. Conse- series of harsh and cruel acts at the xrea ouuemab.er, me uubiung rep-. ouentJv. Josenh Blakler was annohit- hnmtc nt ho. ticl,nri lesentative of the Washington Insur-, Be ?ne story jusnnna joho leet, ; - - Mnf,n,-- p- " ... irirn o lorrrn noiiit" i ( 1 1 k nce company, is in town irom apo-; " s-t, v-vm. nu com-' ANOTHER VOLCANO. McCourt re-j !pleted and readv fm- - ,.corder. At the council meeting when, kan'e. Octofier 1. - oCCUpaBcy " thesa aDDointments were made a! TSd Shoemaker, represehtlng the" 'lively fight ensued among the cOun-, Great Eruption Destroped an Island, "Washington Insurance Company of, Orvllle Coffman Is in town from Cll -when the matter o hew officers , Near Japanese Coast. Spokane, is transacting Business m r; :: ' " v,lCime w a . 1UUI 0i e.tuT' Yokohama. Aug. 19.-The the city. father, William Coffman, have been minntnc n hnTllnp nllpv nnrt Rhnntlncr Among the Walla WaUa citizens in(galiery during the summer. He says town yesterday were A. Vinson, A. cold of past few Comstock, W. J. Rockingham and H.;have driven people out of the S. Bryson. I mountains. Mr. Coffman and family Miss Bertha Alexander left Satur- j wnj remain at the springs a few days 'flay evening for Portland, where she before returning to Pendleton. juineu me lamuj vl juuge y. xwu-i Q , Smith, formerly cashier of A 1 1 ' me to a voie, iour oi me cuuutu r.v.-. &n- -rjvha iihio voted for the new men and four for!island of Torishama was overwhelm- tne om ones, xne mayor uien iibeu , ed by a voicanic enipUon between his right as mayor to break the tie , Aueust 13 and 15 and Its lnhabi and declared Blalaey marshal and numbering 150 persons, were McCourt recorder. j undoubtedly killed. The Island 1b Taken Into Court. (covered with volcanic debris and all From this grew the suit It was the houses have disappeared. prisoner. The justice bound Reed over to the circuit court in $250 ball. As the prisoner could not furnish this he went io Jail. 201fes.Scgarf$f,oo,. 301 COURT STREET, Iure "White Jar Bnbben The Spreckles Libel Case. Fan Francisco, Aug. 19. The pros ecution in the Spreckles. Vlbel suit to day endeavored to 7,rove that Joseph Agulrre's Oakna residence was fur nished VnTOUghout with furniture m?jie at the state's expense at San Quentin. Objection was taken under i advisement by the court Aguirre, who has charge of the department's prisons, admitted that his harness and furniture had been made for prison purposes and the use of em ployes, though there was no regular department for making the same. wj II inn REAL ESTATE DEALER I will offer (or a ihort time (40 tea i k neat Mna 2 miles rrom bushels o! rrain per acre, vltstr acres in Alfalia, 'JO more as be Mb! and Irrigated. Fries, si 5,000. . tA u V ... V . ' ' 'n twttpr rarden lftnd on t!U. triatm,' A few more stock rind Ul fg ( Pralrlo. Brick buslnes block SQxlOi!,isMt Town property oi every taetpt. ithoat expense to you. Cose WW A IUUMIL 111 U1B .wmmvj - , I , I 1 1 I n and will accompany tbem to S. p - and SaZ?t ' shating hands with his many friends defected by the county court, Heath-. danerous fo vpaael ' tn ftTinroach the Clarence Adams, son of Walter ; m town. on bjH w fr0m Cincinnati I man dropped the fight, but Beam car- f ous Ior TesselB t0 aDProaca Adams, W. & C. R. ticket agent here, . to Portland. Mr. Smith has been .was in town Sunday irom uixie, Wash., where he Is operator and agent spending the summer with relatives and friends in the East and will leave ! the 28th for Shanghai, China, where Mel Dustin, of Galena, who went i he goes to take a similar position out to Pendleton last week for freight with the O. R. & N. Co., to the one he lor the saw mill, was expected to ar- .had uere. rive home Tuesday. Long Creek Ranger. Elks' Carnival Excursion. William Goedecke, formerly in bus-j O. R. & N. excursion rates to the JnesB in this city, has gone to Canon ) hlks carnival to be held in Portland, ried It to the supreme court The: main point on which the fight wasj waged was the wording of the clty( charter, which states mat ine com- to take charge of the Puget Sound Right Remedies Tor Summer F. & S. Bitters, the greatest of all system tonics. The correct tonic for all stom ach disorders. F. & S. Compound Syrup of Sarsaparilla, combined with burdock, mandrake, prickly ash, September 1 to 13 inclusive, will be $9.75 to Portland and return, from Pendleton, which includes one admis sion ticket will be sold on September 1, 3, 5, 8, 9, 10 and 11, and will be good seven days from date of sale. On September 3 and this date only, a special rate of-?7.45 for the round trip will be made, which also includes an admission ticket to the carnival These tickets will be good for return not later than September 10. Gordon Still in Jail. Clay Gordon, the young attorney who was smooth enough to "work' dandelion, stillmgia, iodide of nH nthar 0ia,ic , wh TOno 'f 1 mi t wi.4i v muww wmif i -aw ws, potassium ana iron, mis uom-Bmooth enough to get away when he pound is d powerful alterative, had run to his rope's end, Is still in tonic, invigorator and blood , the county jail awaiting develop- purifier Sold only by TALLMAN & GO. 'ments. What will be done with Gor don remains to be seen, but bis j friends are trying to get the matter smoothed over and secure his release ; wuhout the matter going into court T TJ T3flrffvACt nf AliANfaAn knfl THE LEADING DRUGGISTS AND been endorsed by the republicans of CTiTinKicnc Chehallis county, Wash., for oIAUUncKS gress. con- pr Yrree-fl-fl-g-fl s a b g g e mrtnmmm vrs a mvvr n mi b a g a c g gtn r mr i n S moved to the Teutsch room where it 3 Moving! Moving! 3 will be in better to serve the pub- We can supply your wants for foot wear. Come and see us at our new store. positon than ever S lie. 2 THE PENDLETON SHOE COMPANY Phone Red 26 645 Main St LflIBILBtgPBCOg..BCCUBnO.PC.BttlwBBpa Picnic every Sunday at Kine'a grove. Dancing begins at 2 o'clock. Music by Klrkman's orchestra. An Opportunity for You. I am sellinc mr household furnl- . .1. .l - . I tnrfi. inrltinlne' mv fitiA linrlfrnt nl. mon council snail, wnn me tuuaem - , , " of the mavor, appoint a marshal and ; an. also phaeton and harness and recorder who shall hold their respect, lakes' new saddle, very cheap Come ive offices during the pleasure of the see them. At home from 9 to 12 council, and be subject to removal, and 2 B dally; 515 Post street tmrr, nfflna of our lmo hv Ua rPBnlll. I -"IrH. A. Kline. tions." Mayor's Vote Valid. The defendants contended that un der this clause of the charter the mayor had no right to cast a vote in the election of marshal and recorder, and he was only to confirm the selec tion of the council, therefore alleging that the action of the mayor was not acording to the city charter and the old officers were supposed to hold their respective offices until a major ity of the council voted against them. in deciding the case Supreme Judge Bean declared that this was a wrong interpretation of the charter and the! mayor did have the right to cast the deciding vote in case of a tie. This ends the celebrated fight wag ed over the possession of two city of fices. HELD FOR RANSOM. Massachusetts Boy Has Been In Cap tivity Since June 17. Beverly, Mass., Aug. 19. Wilbur Clark, son of H. W. Clark, of this city, who disappeared on June 17, is alive and his father is now negotiat ing with those who took the child away for his return. mere nas wen a demand tor a large sum o fmoney by those who took the lad and now Mr. Clark 1b ready to pay and ask no questions. Mr. Clark has refused to make any statement, but one close in his con fidence states that the anxious father is afraid that any publicity given at this time may result In his losing the child again. This morning in an inconspicuous place In a Boston newspaper appeared this advertise ment: Personal tWill give amount asked. H. W. Clark. Thos Delayed Trains. The latest and most authentic in formation available regarding the de lay of west bound trains on the O. R. & N'., is to the effect that there was no wreck at Durkee, as reported, and that no track was washed out. but that the rails were covered to a depth of several feet by mud, boulders and Dead Indian Found. F!vrtt Alii- 10 Tho rtonH hntr nf. Without expenM to you ,17 ' i wlU treat yon njiH uu iiiuiiui wub iuuuu uuaung in me river at Arlington, Another man has been arrested on the charge of murder. Office in E. 0. BAg! mm: ft iiiriiiM.uxB P. O. Box 324 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 5.00, $4 00, $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 ST. JOE STORE. I THE BABBITT METAL, BEST in worm. In Mr. Priea tl nr Ur ,. SMt Oracosuui oc. 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 GO. LEADERS THE .... IV II (a, IV t lb IV IV Ik Ik It l V V V NOW FOR XT AT Tf iKG during the hot weathtf 1 We are hdqWjJJ Tents, Camp Stools, W Stoves, Cots, etc. We have a REFRIGERATOR to close out at cost GRADE FURNITURE At Rock Bottom Prices M. A. RADEB and Weit. Streets, Pw0 . . . l fnnnfCtlOU. Undertaking iarjui mitf HIGH Main LEGAL BLANKS alogoe of tlicm. A fall ppty wy r