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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 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 oSering a regular harvest of bargains dur ing our Special Harvest 'Sale, which"" is now in progress. BAER 4- DALEY One Price Clothiers, Furnishers and Hatters, Pendleton 729 Main Street THE HE SEHTION LIVELY HARVESTING SCENES BY RED MEN. "WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1902. GENERAL NEWS. A terrific storm swept the eastern part of the state of North Dakota, causing great havoc. . An electric storm wrecked all the telephone and telegraph lines in the vicinity of Keokuk, Ia Monday. it is announced that Judge Shiras, of the supreme court of the United States, expects to retire early next year. The carmen of the Omaha shops of the Union Pacific, have gone on a strike over 200 men laying down their tools and waWng out. Two men charged with attempting to defraud the American Express Company out of $28,000, are being held for trial at Fordsville, Ky. General Chaffee, in whose hands the work of subduing the Moros has been left, has been given full swing. and instructed to use his own discre-f tion. I HOTEL ARRIVALS. Hotel Pendlelon. Dr. Livingston Terrand, New York. A. D. Chase, Portland. -J. R. Cooke, San Francisco. "W. G. Armstrong. Seattle. N. B. Macklln, Portland. J. F. Walker. A, Nylander, Portland. J. F. Melcher, Starbuck. R. E. Bradley. Hall, San Francisco. M. S. Roosenslacht, San Francisco. C. J. F. C. children The supreme lodge Knights of Pythias, now in session at San Fran cisco, has decided against the prop osition to establish a sanitarium for sick members. The announcement that Senator Jones, of Arkansas, will be a member of the Isthmian canal commission, has started quite a row among the democrats of Arkansas. A masked robber held un Mrs. Frederick W. Prentiss, wife of the! president of the Hayden-Clinton Na-I tioanl Bank, at her home in "Colum- j bus, O., Monday and at the point of; a revolver compelled her to hand over $2600 worth of diamonds. 1 PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEW8. I The next camp of the Washington j state militia will be at Olympia, "Wash. ! The Golden Rule. W. Petty, St. Paul. Killian, Walla Walla. Gerlbring and family, Weston Henkle. iakeview. H. Francis, Lakeview. A. F. Benzer and wife, Lidgerwood V. C. Lidwell, Lidgerwood John E. Cleghorn and family, Echo .P. E. Hunsicker, Spokane. Anson George, Portland. C. H. Downer, Spokane. W. L. Davis, Portland. R. L. Dutcher, Spokane. S. Lee, Spokane. J. G. Helfrich, Spokane. Mrs. George Clay and North Fork. Mrs. S. A. McLaughlin, Gilmore, Miss Pearl Jones, Corvallis. Miss Jennie Jones, Corvallis. Mrs. A. Anderson and daughter, .Helix . George R. Bulis, Boise. H. McKews and wife, Boise. H. T. Hill. Helix. Earl Archabel, Helix. W. R. Hilton, Butte. W. E. Laatz, city. O. T. Carnes, Pilot Rock. C. F. Belts, Pilot Rock. C. Simmons, Oregon City. W. E. Albee, Oregon City. W. R. Bitney, city. Otto Reineman, city. H. Horbach, Port Orchard. William Cronen, Port Orchard Joe Kirschner, city. S. A. Saylor. Umatilla. E. Leezer, Seattle. to $1300 per ton In gold, it is a ua milling proposition. Wc have about 30 claims in all, and are Incorporated under the laws of Arizona, and known as the Blsbee, Orecon Gold Mining Company. I think this would be a good field for prospectors, as there has been very little prospecting done here. Elks' Carnival Excursion. O. R. & N. excursion rates to the rJks' carnival to be held In Portland, Septem'-cr 1 to 13 Inclusive, will be sn 75 tn Portland and return, from Pendleton, which includes one admis sion ticket, will be sold on bepiemDer 1, 3, 5, S, 9, 10 and 11, and will bo good seven days from date of sale. On September 3 and this date only, a special rate of ?7.45 for the rouhu 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. A Broken Arm. Charles Graham is wearing his left arm in a sling as a result of being thrown from a horse. Last Sunday he was riding in"u run down an in cline, about three miles north of town, and the horse began to jump. Mr. Graham was riding with a halter and when he pulled up on the halter the strap broke and let him fall .back wards off the animal. The left arm' was broken between the shoulder and elbow and he was considerably hurt '3 on the side. Sold to There is more Catarrh in tbla section of the country than all other diseases put Good Crops This Year on he Reser vation, With a Probable Yield of 500,000 Sacks Indian Wheat Haul ers improved Machinery. An East Oregonlan representative made a trip, in company with W. T. Rigby, over a part of the Umatilla reservation Tuesday afternoon. Crops on the reservation are fast being harvested and put in the sack and it will only be a few days until the whole of the 1902 crop in that section of the county, as well as other places, will be ready for the market. Crops Good. Oa the Tutuilla flat, especially, are the crops good. In that section very little grain had to be resown in the spring and had it not been for the heavy wind storm more than an aver age crop would have been harvested. As it is, the wheat is yielding about 25 bushels or almost that on an aver age. Many Wheat Haulers. In driving out on the Tutuilla flat rnnrt tnwnril fho foothills of th UltlP I Mountains, one is met now by dozens ! Reservation Lands. and almost hundreds of wheat wag- Call on E. D. Boyd, Pendleton, to ons bringing their loads of freight to 1 purchase reservation lands, Mission station, where it is being highest bidder. stored for shinment. Most of this. lnnrt u famuli hv white mfn lftit ' Picnic every Sunday at Klnes the Indians rig a wagon and team grove. Dancing begins at 2 o clock, together during the wheat hauling Music by Klrkman'B orchestra, season and make a few dollars haul- ing grain. Most of the wagons met are driven by dusky redskins of thei Umatilla. I 500,000 Sacks. It can safely be said that not a road in-the county has as much wheat hauled over it as the 10 mile stretch south from the Mission warehouses to the foothills of the Tutuilla flat. Mission station receives about 500, 000 sacks of wheat from this flat and other tributary territory every sea son. Of course, the amount varies with the seasons, but this can safely be said as an average amount ship ped over the O. R. && N. line from this station veach seasfcn. Mostly Combined Machines. In crossing the Tutuilla flat one can see dozens of large combined harvest ers running. However, not all the machines running are combines, but most of them are. In some places will be seen the header cutting the ; golden grain and wagons hauling it-to 1 the stack, where it is piled to await! the arrival of the thresher. Other fields are being cut by the headers 1 and a thresher following them un. threshing the grain as it is being dumped from the wagons. Some of these machines are run with horse power, but most are steam machines. In fact, the steam machine is not very much inevidence, as the combined . harvester has been found to be the quickest and most economical way oft caring for the crops, and farmers, 1 always on the alert to advance in j Ideas and improvements, have adopt ed them generally. Eczema, Psoriasis, xvixvxiii, i dter una Aw Belong to that class of inflammatory and disWw . ,7 cause more genuine bodily discomfort and I skia i&Jl diseases. The impurities or sediments which colW11 er of poor digestion, inactive Kidneys and other nrS, .esye&' taken tip by the blood, saturating the system xrMV 01 efia"a that ooze out through the glands and pores of . ..-l,VI ;t1i,nn- ntlrl V.: V 1 Still. TjrrwW: ' LUC jruiwn, v4vwj uuiaijt 1U1U1S HI CUTS for "p into crusts and sores or little brown it for 25 1 Wto8 and white scabs that drop off, leaving f. YietUB? "with no S12S J4 1 the skin tender and raw. The effect nuS ottU 8-'mS' oi uie poisuu iuuj tiiusc me sun 10 U13 w. Centrals " crack aud bleed, or give it a scaly, fishy arjoeararir.,.. Vfc consist of innumerable blackheads and ninmU T. ? .emp the face. Purification, of the blood is the onlv rmA TZ' 1 diseases. Washes and powders can only hide fnr n :r i blennsb.es. S.S.S. eradicates all pSS1 lations. Htit cW ti-i. Poas n. rT.D and s c r 6U iae natuial b. S. is the only cmarantewl - purifier. It contains no Arsenic, Potash or othtr hf-.i i . . - - uitiuui ininani Write us about your case and our physicians will advised ; have a hanteomely illustrated book on skin diseases toJr$! relieve the skin. S. We nave a nanasomeiy illustrated book on skin diseases uTia fn to all who Wish it- mm -ww m m. artcinc CO, THE PENDLETON ACABhS UNBEARABLE ITCHING Felt It Would Be a Belief to Tear Skin From Back. Cnred by CUTJCUI1A. I had a breaking out all over my back. The itching was almost unbearable, and at Umee I felt that H would be a relief to tear the akin off ray back. I tried doctors' pre ecriptiuni, ana several remedies, without even relief. I read of your CimcuuA reme died In the Indianapolis Sew. After three applications, my back quit Itching, and by the time the box of Ccticuiia Ointment wax half tued the breaking out bad all disappeared. J. fi. T1JOJ1AS, 2510 Cornell Ave., Indiana polls, Ind. CUTICUR A THE SET SI.25 Complete External and Internal Treat Bient tor Every Humor, conaixting of Cun CVRA Boat (25c. ), to cteante the akin of cmaU and ecalea, CcncuuA Ointment (Mc.), to allay itching, and too the and heal, Ccncn&t Rxsoi tent (vOc.), to cool and cleante the blood. Gold throughout the world. PotterDbco andChex. Corp., Sole Prop., Boston. "How to Cure Itching Humors," free. Offers: College Preparatory Course Business Uonrse Teachers' Course Takes all grades from 8ub-Trimary up. Graduates enter twiSI man Class in such Colleges as Yale, Princeton, Btanford. J tember 15. For catalogue address ' F. L. FORBES, D. D., Pribca, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniinuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiuiiiiiiiiinimiimip The Bartlett pear harvest is being together, and tnttll the laat few year wu gathered at Medford and the yield is . supposed to be Incurable. For a ereatl reported much heavier than that of , Jf 5 and bribed local rTmet last year. ' dies, and by constantly falling to cure ... ; with local treatment, pronounced It Ineur Marcus Mortsen, a 12-year-old As-1 able. Science ha proren Catarrh to be a toria lad, was drowned 'Monday after- constitutional dlsaese, and therefore re noon whilp swimmlne- In thp Pnlnm-; ouIr constitutional treatment. Hall' noon wnne sw imming in tne uoium-; Catarrh cm, manufactured by F. J. Cne- bla near nis home. ney & Co. Toledo, Ohio, Is the only eon- , , i stltutlonal cure on the market. It la tak- The 2-year-old son of S. J. McCrea-en internally In doses from 10 drop to dv, of Lebam, was run over by a J a teaspoonfnl. It acta directly on the train and instantly killed near South and Bneou rface of the -Titem. , , , ' . , , , . I They oner one hundred dollars for any Bend, Wash., last Saturday night. t fati8 t0 care. Send for circulars . , . I and testimonials. Dave Calbreath, proprietor of the Ad&nsa F. J. CHENEY. & CO., Toledo, O. Independence water works, has made ' Sold by Drnssbits, 75c a proposition to the city council of. UaU'n F8.nJ Pills are the best STEIN'S MOUNTAIN MINES. Dallas to put in a that city. water system for I SI S. Bantrum, forest supervisor of the southern district of Oregon, has Btarted on a three weeks' trip from Ashland, and will go all over the Cas cade reserve. Speculators In "Washington timber lands are preparing to. make a test case of the McCoy timber act, passed Harper's Ferry, the Gate to the Shen andoah Valley. Where the three states of Virginia, West Virginia and Maryland come to gether; where the Potomac and Shen andoah rivers unite; where the tow ering steeps of the Blue Ridge end abruptly, frowning upon the heights of Maryland and Boliver Heights in at the last session of the legislature Virginia, lies the quaint, his- of that state, , Vv j Brown baptized it in blood in 1859, C. B. Montague, member from Linn when he captured the town and the county of the last state legislature, j United States arsenal and made his slipped from the Albany local train j final and fatal stand In the engine as it left Woodburn station Monday house (known afterwards as John evening, and was seriously injured, j Brown's fort), alongside the Baltl- a hi nrinin i i 7nn orm, nf more & Ohio railroad. A plain shaft, timber land in the Palouse country, f,1"1' Inscribed, ntw markB the loca- and the consideration being $100,000, has just been made by the North western and Hypotheek Bank, at Col fax, Wash. Jerry Finn, a Portland young man who was reported drowned off What com, "Wash., last Saturday, was pick ed up Sunday by a passing steamer. His boat had capsized and be clung to it all the night. The Corvallis & Eastern passenger train collided with the wagon of Jo seph Hudson near Philomath, last Monday afternoon. Hudson and a man named Wyatt, wh.o were In the rig. escaped with a few scratches, but the wagon was demolished. tion. Again In 1SG1, grim visaged war seized the village and held it tight in its grasp for nearly four years. The deeds that were done, and the tales that are told concerning Harper's Ferry fill volumes. - The heights at Harper's Ferry guarded the Shenandoah Vallley. It was a most Important stronghold to be desired when some great campaign was planned by either army. From Harper's Ferry the Shenan doah division of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad extends southward to Charleston. Winchester, Harrisburg and Lexington. Battlefields surround the village In all directions. Homer Rambo, an Old Pendletonite, Is Engaged There. Homer Rambo, an old Pendletonite, who has been out of the state for some time, has returned, and is at Andrews, Harney county, opening mines in the Stein's Mountain dis trict. Speaking of the prospects, Mr. Rambo says: We have been -working eight men in Stein's Mountain for the past five I months, developing some mining! property I discovered several years ; ago when J lived in Pendleton. We are t now in about 100 feet in two different places. The vein Is from 25 -to 50 feet thick and is assaying from $10 Rich but not heavy. Appetizing but not watery. Delicious but not sickening. Chocolate Soda . . muimmnnimi 3 C4t. KT..f C-t-f fe H MONMOUTH, OREGON. 3 Graduates of the School are In coniUat i 3 demand at salaries raxtging from (0 to ifl) S 2 per month. Students take the state ezamlna. Z 3 ttoss during their course In the school sad E 3 are prepared to recelVe State Certifies te oa Z graduation. Expense! range from 1120 tolT5 E a per year. Strong Normal coune snd well r 3 equipped Training Department. The Fall : 3 Term opens Boptember 16th. For catalogo c 3 containing full information, address : 3 J.B.I.BOTLEB, E. D. RESSLER. : 3 fiecretarr President. ; imniinmiiiiinniinmiiMi BARGAINS Commencing Wedues- p day, Aug. 20, we will sell j at actual cost S 300 Boxes I Fancy Stationery i All shapes, sizes and col- j p ors from 5c to 75c per box. j Stock must be reduced j to make room for our ele- f gant holiday line. Sale will continue each .day until all is sold. Come early if you want the best. I FRAZIER'S V Book and I Stationery Store. 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 ladies 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. OILS, AXLE GREASE AND COMPOUND . . I have a full line of oils, axle grease and com pound of the highest quality, in quantities to .fe suit the buyer. JExamme my biock dhu buying. Taylor, the Hardware Man Farmers Custom Mill Fred Walters, Proprietor Capacity 150 barrels a day Flour exchanged for wheat Flour, Mill Feed, Chopped Feed, etc. always on hand. ORLAN CLYDE CULLEN CODNBELLOR-AT-LAW U. 8. Supreme Court REGISTERED ATlORNEY U. S. Patent Office U. S. ami FOREIGN PATENTS Trade Marks and Copyrights TOO 7th 8t., X. W., Waidilmrton, D. C 741 Main Street Mead! Mead! We are offerintr this week some exceptional J .: . - " . fc were 15. , heavy all-wool ingrains. inese Atpt from last year's stock and are worth 75c per yo, t 57c. You -will see some of the patterns in tne New goods just coming in. Look for SeptefflDei Tharui Im Ma flUBfttiOII ABOUT THE MERITS OF JBYggJ It is the finest grade it is possible to jnake. but the choicebt wheat enters into Byers d satisfaction is the result whererever it is used or fancy baking. ' iC. PENDLETON ROLLER MflA W. S. Byers, Proprietor. For Health, Strength and (I Pleasure Drink ::::::: ' Polydore Moens, Proprietor. J