Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1902)
Harvest Wearing Apparel We can supply you with everything in the Cloth ing, Shoe and Hat Line, 3'ou need during the Harvest Season. We are offering a regular harvest of 1bargainsdur ing our Special Harvest Sale, which is now in progress. WILD WEST III WEST THIS IS THE LAND OF THE STRENUOUS LIFE. I BAER $ DALEY One Price Clothiers, FurnisJiers and Hatters, Pendleton 729 Main Street Many People in Audience at Wild West Show Had Taken Part in Scenes Exactly Similar to Those Reproduced. The "Wild West show which appear ed in Pendleton Wednesday afternoon and evening was not as interesting: to the people of this city as to those living further east; as here it was a reproduction of the scenes which are actually witnessed by our people in even- day life. The West is the great land of cos mopolitanism, and while Its develop ment has been extremely rapid it has not yet out-grown in some sections I nroduced In the Wild I West performances are done by the I people or tins secuon uiciu n " "nctinc" about it. livery 011 01 wuu west life In this country is the genu ine lS-carat real thing. Counterfeit Five Dollar Bills. The secret aorvlco has discovered that some one is raising $1 bills to $5 by a clever method of changing the fl cures, and unless they are close ly nvnminofi will Doss unnoticed. It Jinn nlso been discovered that many unscrupulous dealers are refilling the bottles of the celebrated Hostetters Stomach Bitters and offering them to the public as genuine. These Imita tions have no merit nnd are so dan gerous to your health that In order to protect the public, the proprietors of this famous medicine have adopted a Private Stamp which is placed over the neck of each bottle. Please ob serve that the stamp Is unbroken when purchasing. The Bitters is a specific ramdv for such ailments as flatu- -4 feast (jqoxa THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1902. GENERAL NEWS. HOTEL ARRIVALS. Dewet, the celebrated Boer general, is "writing a book on the Boer war. The salmon runs In British Colum bian waters are reported to have ended. OH discoveries In the Peninsula of Y.ucatan are causing considerable ex citement Internecine warfare is reported among the native Moro tribes on the Island of Mindanao. A new plague disease is working havoc among sailors on vessels in the Gulf of Fonseca. 'More outrages on Christians are re ported to have been committed by Boxer rebels in China. A cloudburst at Cedar Rapids, la., Tuesday night, did damage to the amount of almost J200.000. The Shah of Persia is visiting King Edward in London and is reported to be having a great big time. A fuel famine In Pittsburg threatens to cause the closing of a large number I of manufacturies and the throwing out of work of 50,000 employes. Edward Croker, chief of the New York fire department, has been sus pended from duty and a new lock placed on his office so he can not take charge. Six persons are dead at Gering, Neb., as a result of injuries received in a fire caused by the bursting of a kerosene can. from which oil was be ing poured into a fire. Reports come that during a series of military manoeuvers at St. Peters burg, Russia, a troop of cavalry which was suddenly ordered to charge, gal loped into a river and 50 of the sol diers were drowned. PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEW8. 'Marion county hops are now selling -at 21 cents. A call has been issued for a con vention of the Hoppickers' Union at Albany. A baby tiger was born to one of the felines with Rlngling Brothers' shows while that exhibition was in Port land. The Portland City & Suburban rail -way has purchased considerable new machinery and will enlarge Its power plant. James Tisdale, a well-known log ging man of Everett, Wash., was ac cidentally killed by a falling tree last Monday. It is announced that Miss Maybelle Douglas has been elected queen of the carnival, to be held by the Elks in September. A new drinking fountain is to be erected at the corner of Main and Seventh Btreets by the Methodist Church of Oregon City. Three new stations for the ship ment of wheat have been established by the Oregon Water Power Compa ny between Greshara and Lenta stations. Miss Edith Morris, a Portland girl, accidentally shot herself Monday while preparing for a Bnlpe hunt at Ilwaco beach. The wound is serious, but not dangerous. An Indian woman was smothered to death near Conconully, Wash., last Wednesday, a wagon turned over on top of her and the other Indians with her being too drunk to extricate her. Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Newton, of San Francisco, fell out of a row boat at Green Lake, Wash., last Friday and were drowned. Their bodies were re covered Wednesday locked In one an other's arms. A young woman of Myrtle Point, while out walking with her sweet heart the other evening, proposed to shoot a mosquito off his nose with a 25-20 calibre rifle which she carried, She pulled the trigger and sent a bul let into his head. It is not stated whether she killed the mosquito. , Hotel Pendleton. Charles H. Miller, Echo. Mrs. C. H. Miller, Echo. L. A. Baker, Portland. Mrs. Baker, Portland. M. J. Buckley, Portland. J. F. O'Nell, Portland. Frank Spike, . cho. J. J. Burns, Portland. J. C. Fogerty, Chicago. Thomas Thwarte, Spokane. M. A. Durham, yonierov, W. T. Hislop, city. Lewis Soef, Pennsylvania. Mrs. J. Stanton, Athena. G. E. Hickey, Walla Walla. Mrs. J. King, Athena. J. J. Roulston, Adams. S. Steinbery, San Francisco. J. R. Sponagle, Athena. J. . J. Fomler, Portland. W. W. Robinson, Portland. Mrs. Kate Ham, Portland. G. W. Ford, Pullman. R. E. Crawford, Portland. A S. Hcatfield, Spokane. M. H. Patton, Spokane. J. W. Callender, Athena. J. J. Omillion, Spokane. R. E. Sams, Spokane. Ira Hamilton. South Dakota. H. B. Rees, Spokane. T. C. Elliott, Walla Walla. D. C. Abbott. A. Welch, Walla Walla. D. G. Romfield, San Francisco. Mable Beitel, Pilot Rock. George C. Banner, Echo. J. A. McCarty, Echo. T. F. Sheridan, Butter Creek. Glen McCullough, Echo. C. J. Allen, Echo. W. C. Allen, Echo. F. A. McKinnon, city. H. M. Sallng, Weston. George Sowers, Weston. The Golden Rule. Mrs. H. Connell, Alba. Miss C. Beeler, Alba. Myrtle Patterson, Spokane. Harry Patterson, Spokane. Nellie Duncan, Spokane. Gladys, Duncan, Spokane. T. H. Cloes, Chicago. E. H. Burke, Portland. Mrs. J. Keen and boy. Walla Walla. J. D. Matcher, Omaha. J. A. Mitts, Omaha. H. S. Hill, Helix. Mrs. Z. W. Lockwood, Helix. Miss May Lockwood, Helix. Charles Ferguson and wife, kane. P. Sones and wife, Spokane. Joe Cannon and brother, Spokane. V. C. Simpson, Athena. Lizzie Owens, Athena. J. A. Scott and wife, Helix. Cornelius Isaacs, Helix. C. Carmen, Rock Springs. W. E. Owens, Walla Walla. A. Mulhollan, North Yakima. B. Johnson, Helix. B. F. GUI, city. E. H. Caterd, Athena. T. L. Price, Athena. Dick Hughes, Athena. P. Doherty and family, Athena. C. W. Gates, Athena. J. Pritchard, Portland. John Hamilton, Walla Walla. Mrs. C. Mudge, Ech'o. Mrs. Webb, Echo. Stella Hackett, Oregon City. James Kinney, Pilot Rock. Bertha Gross. J. R. Sponagle, Walla Walla. W. O., Bosterick, Athena. A. Moran, Athena. J. Keen and family, New York. Mrs. E. L. Henderson, Pilot Rock. W. H. Cleary and wife, New York. E. W. Helm, Portland. Mrs. Dr. Seapp, Uklah. Nellie Sloan, Echo. Beda Atkinson, Echo. T. J, Gardner, Portland. W. W. Williams, Portland. M. R. Hilton, Helix. H. McBean, Helix. W. L. Rhodes and wife, McKay. Albert Rhodes and wife, McKay. Roy Simmons, Ridge, W. R. BItney, city. Charles Johnson and family, Athena George R. Bulls, Boise. J. B. Sayles, Umatilla. S. K. Jones, Colfax. George Cody, city. M. Chase, cltjj- E. J. Leezer, city, Albert Haralla, Adams, the bits of frontier life which are rep resented by the participants in the lency, Indigestion, belching, nervous mimic forays of the tented arena. ness, dyspepsia and liver and kidney Many Participants in Like Scenes. troubles. Try It In the audiences which witnessed the two performances of Wednesday there were men who had taken part in the battle of San Juan hill, which was represented in miniature; Uma tilla Indians, now civilized, but only a few years ago fierce and unrelenting foe of the whites, many of the red skins in the audience having notable records as fighters; men who served through the Philippine campaigns; old plains' scouts and Indian fighters; rough riders from the ranges of Grant and Morow counties who make no Elko' Carnival Excursion. O. R. & N. excursion rates to the nlks' carnival to be held In Portland, Septem'-cr 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 I & 1, 3, 5, 8, 9, 10 and 11, and will be good Beven days from date of sale. nn Ronfnmhnr 3 nnd this date OnlV. a special rate of C7.45 for the round .jig ALL WAS QUIET. Out of the Large Crowd at the Show, No Arrests Were Made. "Did you ever see so quiet a crowd?" This was tho expression heard on every side yesterday. There was some grounds for tho query, too, It seldom occurs that a circus comes to a city and pitches Its tents without a rough, rowdy crowd follows It and anvays mere 01 less trouble Is the rcKult. With the several thousand people In town to attend the Bhow, the police were not called upon to make a single arrest other than a drunken Indian. This would have occurred, perhaps, had the show not been In town. This Indian was Jim Badroads. He Imbibed too freely of firewater and be coming a nuisance, was thrown Into jail. This morning he was assessed $5 by Police Judge McCourt. The fine was paid. (Qticu Now Is the Time to Go. Tho seaside Is now at Its best The weather is juBt right Surf bathing delightful and fishing and claming better than an yother time. The O. Rl & N. Co. Is still selling round trip tickets, good until September 30, at ?10. Complete Extern! wont (S0c.Wn r-W.Ccnr A. filll? In fint l ... most torturing, dl flW Wood Immors .h Un.i2l FALLING HAIR f"S5fc5 Farmers Custom Fred Walton, Pr" Capacity 150 hs.m.1. . Flour exclmnr iZ.2?I fl -rtua JfniN ULxiL ACADEMY trip .will be made, which also Includes nn admission ticket to the carnival. more of mounting a bucking broncho' These tickets will bo good for return which has never before felt the 1 not later than September 10. weight of rider any more than thei ordinary mortal would of putting on a clean collar before going out into society; remnants of the once savage and dangerous, but now almost ex tinct Cayuse tribe of Indians; sol- I diers from the fort at Walla Walla, who have taken part regularly in the There Is more Catarrh In this section of the country than alt other diseases put together, and until the last few rears was 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 cere with local treatment, pronounced It Incur able. Science has proven Catarrh to be a cavalry drills and maneouvers as rep- constitutional disaese, and therefore re ,.,.j ii . ,i . ., .v, I quires constitutional treatment. Hall's resented, time and again; men hoatarrh Cure manufactnred by P. j. Chth Spo- have hunted the plains in early days and slain their buffalo by scores, one or two who were with the Strathcona Horse In South Africa, and numbers of Germans whe have served with the Hussars in the "Fatherland." A Cosmopolitan Crowd. White collared transients just from the East rubbed elbows with sheep herders from the south counties, and Boclety women of high degree sat contentedly in the next seats to the copper cheeked belles of the Umatilla reservation, an watcmng the per formance with eager eyes, and all ready alike to applaud any special feat of horsemanship, or reckless daring. A Western Wild West. As the crowd left the show grounds and wended Its way back to town the stage frofn Uklah came dashing up Main street, its four well matched horses dusty and Bweat covered from their long trip while close behind rode a bunch of Umatilla braves, bedecked with mirrors, feathers, and clothed in gaudy blankets, making al together an almost perfect reproduc-( tion of the Indian attack on the West-1 ern mail coach as represented in the) mimic productiou of the afternoon. I The passengers clung to their seats) insiae uie coacn, tne lnuians pressed close on -the flying stage, and it need ed only the introduction of a few rifle or pistol shots to make the Illustra tion complete. Ours the Real Thing. Lined up along the streets were nu merous pack horses which had been brought In by sheep herders from the back ranges, who came in to see the show, and at the same time lay In a new supply of "grub," while after the performance Sioux from the show grounds were to he seen hob-nobbing with bucks and Indian maidens from the reservation; the U. S. cavalrymen met old comrades, the German riders fraternized with others of their race residing in the city, and it took but little observation to discover that the town itself was every bit as "wild westy" as the show, with the very great difference that wlien ouch ney ft Co, Toledo, unio, is the only con stitutional cure on the market It Is tak en Internally In doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the Diooa ana mucous snriace or tne system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Bend for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY ft CO., Toledo, O, Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family I'll Is are the beat Offers: College Preparatory Course .Business Uourse Teachers' Course man Takes all grades from Sub-Primary up. Graduates ent tw"! an Glass in such Colleped as Yale, Princeton, SUnford ""H umuuaio) utiuy weotuj supplemental Work can t&k Bw. Certificates on same baste as formal SohooU. Fall term cmm St '' tember 15. For catalogue address F. L. FORBES, D. D., Principal, S 3 They Differ. Cleveland wants tariff reform: Bryan wants free silver; neither rec ognize the wish of the other. Cleve land voted against Bryan, and the latter would vote against the former If lie had the chance. Norwalk, (O.) Reflector. Reservation Lands. Call on E. D. Boyd, Pendleton, to purchase reservation lands. Sold to highest bidder. Picnic every Sunday at KIne'B grove. Dancing begins at 2 o'clock. Music by Klrkman'a orchestra. Rich but not heavy. Appetizing hut not watery. Delicious but not sickening. Chocolate Soda . . BAKliAJLJNS 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 'k Book and Stationery Store. 1 We don't believe that you ever tasted any chocolate 3oda 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 wJmt a really good chocolate soda tastes like. F.W.Schmidt &Co. Reliable Druggists. Phone, Main 851. State Normal School. MONMOUTH. OREGON. Gradnatcs of the School are In coniunt demand at salaries ranging from ?(0 to JI00 per month. Students take the state exmln-E ttons during their course In the school tod E aro prepared to receive State Certificate out graduation. Expenses range from 1120 to J 175 C per year, mroug normal coarse ana weu eauipned Training Deiiartment. The Ml Term opens September 18th. For catalogue E containing tun information, addrert t J. B. I. BUTLER, E. D. EE88LER, E Kecretarr President. E TTTnTfTTfinnTTMHffnTTTTTrn !HHIMTIITtMMIllT!MI!IMIIllMnilMMrffMlWffff ORLAN CLYDE CULLEN CO UW8ELL0R-AT-LAW U. 8. Supreme Court REGISTERED ATTORNEY U. S. Patent Ortl U. t. and FOREIGN PATENTS Trade Marks and Copyrights TOO 7th 8t H. W., Woshlnctou, . C 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 Mead! Mead! .1 inpii We are offering this week some exceptional heavy all-wool Ingrains. These carpets were w , from last year's stock and are worth 75c per yd; sa i 57c. You will see some of the patterns m w -New goods just coming in. Look for September 1 Jesse -ilaja-vj There Is No Question ABOUT THE MERITS OF BYERSFjgL It is the finest grade it is possible to make. Notbjj but the choicest wheat enters into Byers' ' flour d satisfaction is the result whererever it is used for or fancy baking. Z PENDLETON ROLLER MB5 W. S. Byers, Proprietor. ' 1 1 1 1 in 1 ffn ror Health, Strength and fl Pleasure Hrinlr II - . Pplydore Moens, Proprietor.