Arrival of Goods at the One Price Clothing House of aer $f Daley JLJ New Clothing New Hats New Shoes New Neckwear New Underwear For tfac Fall and Winter Trade EVERY DAY IS A BARGAIN DAY HERE BAER Sf DALEY One Price Clothiers, Furnishers and Hatters, Pendleton 729 Main Street SCHOOLS WILL OPEN of town, ami theso will be abandoned. The primary room taught by Miss j Lnno In the oast I'nd of town will also , be abandoned, j Outlook Good. ! t tnkfi nvorvthlnc Into cousidcra- ! THE WORK WILL BEGIN tnn egI)eclally. hi view of the j ON SEPTEMBER 15TH. , excellent COrns of teachers, the Pen- idleton public schools have never 1 A Good Corps of Teachers General i snvted upon a year with lnightor I 1- Ll.. D. Mirlo .,...,. tlimi fflt- tllO PnllllniT tOrill. I I m prove men is nc ueen ( uiiuiio wiou - J and a Successful Term Is Pre dieted. I ',,. ini.ln niul na tho school will IV33III .. Everything was run harmonious Inst v ir "under the directors1.!!') of Pro- I HOTEL ARRIVALS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1902. GENERAL NEWS. Attorney-General Knox will sail Friday from New York for France. Field Marshal Lord Wolesley, of England, says the American army is the best in the world. Thomas "W. Keene, aged 80 years, and the oldest Odd Fellow in the state of Illinois, is dead. Prices of bottles will be raised from 10 to 15 cents a gross, accord ing to a dispatch from Chicago. The monitor "Wyoming, under con struction at San Francisco, will make her trial trip in a few days. The United States and Great Brit ain have come to an agreement upon the international parcel post service Frank 1. Coombs, of Sacramento, Cal., has been renominated for con gress by the republican convention. After visiting the entire West and Northwest. President Hill reports good crops generally throughout the country traversed. Governor Jelks, of Alabama, has won the nomination over Governor Johnson for governor of that state, in the democratic convention. General Samuel Casey, who was a war congressman from Kentucky, and supported Lincoln, is dead at his late home at St. Joseph, Mo. It is now claimed that the price of! beef will go down. The enormous j corn crops throughout the Middle West will result in bringing down the prices. It is expected that the tumble will begin to take place about December 1. J President Roosevelt is speaking J about the trusts on his tour through New England. He says ,that they1 Bhould be controlled, that there is J need of better national legislation, and that the first thing needed is j publicity and then honest federal ad-, ministration of the law. I Hotel Pendleton. F. H. Madison, Portland. G. A. Hartman, city. C. B. Cotton, Portland. W. W. Robinson, Portland. W. J. Walther, Boston. W. F. Griffin, Chicago. F. E. Livingood, Chicago. S. B. Hamill, Chicago. George Harris, Portland. Andrew Nylander, Portland. A. D. Spencer, Chicago. N. H. Burg and wife. D. N. Gilmore, Walla Walla. J. F. Clarke, San Francisco. George Henderson, San Francisco, R. H. Caston, Spokane. F. W. Waite, city. L. Hunziker, city. A. D. Chase, Portland. William Fitzgerald, city. H. B. Reese, Spokane. Margaret Gray, Dayton. E. J. Cotton, N. Yakima. H. O. Hunter, San Francisco. The Golden Rule. Mrs. M. Russell, Spokane... Mrs. C. Scogglns and family, Fossil Mrs. J. L. Ward and family, Walla Walla. F. N. Parker, The Dalles. B. Lindsay, Ashland. Lillian Long, Boise. Mrs. S. B. Baisley, Baker City. H. Smith, Chicago. D. H. Hunter. E. C. King and wife, Tekoa. Frank Wolf, Spokane. " Miss A. M. Doherty, Omaha. A. W. Gordon, Spokane. William H. Quade, Spokane. George McGIlvery, Spokane. H. Stenenberg, San Francisco. H. Henry, Spokane. J. E. Friend, The Dalles. J. W. Peringer, Adams. M. Adams, Weston. H. C. Adams, Weston. Harry Rice, city. S. Uren and wife, Sacramento. Miss Nellie Uren, Sacramento. Mrs. Kerner, San Francisco. TV. P. Crydcomar, Walla Walla. J. P. Hayden, Portland. Mrs. J. P. Hayden, Portland. PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEWS. All Were Saved. "For years I suffered such untold t i. 1 .4 misery from bronchitis." writes J. IL . nnn Johnstou. of Broughton, Ga., that Idaho reports Just 20 days more and the 'familiar ring of the school bell will be heard In Pendleton and the merry laugh o the school boys and girls will ring when passing to and fro. The new corps of teachers have beeen selected by the school hoard and they will as sume their duties of teaching the young idea how to shoot on the 15th of September. New Faculty. At a recent meeting of the school board the following teachers were engaged: Professor E. B. Conklln, principal. Professor Conklln has been with the Pendleton public schools nnd been city superintendent for the past two terms and this will be his third year. This alone is ample evidence of his ability and popularity. He Is a good instructor. Roy Conklln has again been chosen assistant principal. He has also been in the same capacity for two years and has given perfect satlsfactiou to the school board and patrons. ( Louis Keeler, is the new teacher 1 for the ninth grade Mr. Keeler i takes the place of Miss Jennie Beatie, who did not care to remain with the schools of Pendleton another year. He is well known in this county as , an instructor and no doubt will give perfect satisfaction. i Miss May Ritner, who has taught , the sixth grade for several years i past, will teach in the eighth. Miss Carrie Epple will probably have the seventh grade pupils and the assignment of the remainder of the teachers has not been made. That is left to the discretion of the principal. The names of the other teachers are: Misses Rosene Epple, Eva Wood, Lucretia Conklin, Erma Benson, Sa die Baum, Eva Froonie, Grace Gil liam, Pearl Wills, Maud Taylor, Neva Lane, Elizabeth Parrot, Elsie Folsom, Mable Jones. All of the above teachers were. with the school last year except Louise Keeler, Miss Wills, Miss Taylor and miss Jones. u iiiuinr thn Rnme head and have practically the same corps of teach ers all the way through, there Is ground for the above assertion. Never was the Pendloton public schools worked under butter discipline and uoing better work than last year. In a literary way the pupils wero tniieht more than ever before and no branch of learning calculated to up build the schools and make thorn the best in the state was neglected. m mm mw Mmmmmm?m Enemy fo uTr" the liver and kidneys fail to act, and are poured intotlmw 78tent it becomes so polluted and sluggish that the poisons ffi the skin, and carbuncles, boils, abscesses, ulcers and v,t- y brealtWi Means bad air, and "whether it comes from the low lands and marshes of the country', or the filthv and towns, its effect upon the human system is the p5pes Ute These ntmospheric poisons are breathed i,,f l ,e- 0,1 by the blood, and the foundation of some lonir dnWiu ?-ngs a4 taW. Chills nnd fever, chronic dyspepsia, torpid and ewnUlny troubles, jaundice and biliousness are frequently duP tr.fi .liveri kid: Mnlaria. Noxious erases and unhealth v ,nH ln . . ."Kit mviciviTTV :,:: v..: i.:.i..;r j :j "'""v-i;vi'ccunthf.c.ui5iot 5i1n1nit rlmmrtor nnnear. tlnnlptitin- Mm . . .nous erunt!n. 7 , . ' : o "- oyau:ui, alio tbrpito r "JH The genus and poisons that so oppress and weaken tl, l Jng lifcit$d? the life-giving properties of. the blood, rendering it thin n yandd0T be overcome nnd carried out of the system before thr. V.Qm get rid of Malaria and its effects. the Patlet can hH o. a. o. uoes this and auicklv nmj change in the blood, reaching eve luting them to vigorous, hlffi JSC possesses not only purifying but tn? S,S-S, and the general health LJL .Pnpe& increases almost from the first dose. There is no Mercurv Pnt u or other mineral in S. S. S. It is strictly and entirely a ve4t-i .. j , W1U ITladiv 1io1 ' r advice to regain your health. Book on blood and. skin rV P J05,T THE SWIFT JPECinc CO., AtU Detroit Southern Expanding. Detroit. Mich.. Aug. 27. The pur chase of the Iron Railway of Ohio by the Detroit Southern was formally I ratified at a special meeting of the , stockholders of the last named road i.ta t . 1 .1 .. rrMm nniitcililnn rC ' ofVxfenslon ' to be built on' by Uio'd? f GX3 trolt Southern, will give the Southern g nn entrnncp lnio Ironton. Ohio, as their free. well as connection fields of Virginia, North Carolina. with the Tennessee coal and I Mead! Mead! SPICES ARE DRUGS good wheat yields as well as a splendid flax yield this year. Rainier, Or., is to have a new saw mill with large capacity, and also a now shingle mill. A -window in an Oregon City church will be dedicated to McLoughlin, the pioneer missionary. Two Portland boys have just re turned from a COO-mile tramp over the country, taken as a vacation out ing. Charles M. Wyman, a well-known Washington lawyer, died at Colfax, Monday after a lingering spell of ty phoid fever. Mrs. Margaret Sprague, while crossing a railroad track near Cen tralia, Wash., yesterday, was struck by a train and Instantly killed. It is claimed that Wilson, of Spo kane, will attempt to have the Spo kane delegation in the coming repub lican convention in Washington, vote against McBride's railroad commis sion plank In the platform. A big power scheme is on foot backed by Eastern people, to pur 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 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. ANOTHER FIRE. Small Boy and Matches the Fatal Combination. N. Joerger's barn and contents burned to the ground Tuesday after noon. As the afternoon mixed O. R. & N. train was coming into town, about 3:30. the fire was discovered by the crew and the engine gave the alarm. The house stands within a few feet of the railroad, just this side nf the hrldtre across the river, and the barn was just back of the house. It was only a small affair and had a small lot of hay in it. When the whistle blew for fire, several men chase the Eugene power plant and irking ; In the vicinity ran to the res. establish Buch an extensive plant as School Census Completed. The school census in the Pendle ton district has been completed and the enrollment has been found to be just 1342 young people between the ages of 6 and 21. Of course there was never a time that all of the enu merated children attended school. Last year the enrollment, actually in I school, was just a fraction above 1000 and the number of enumerated j children in .the district was very lit-1 tie less than at the present time. A 1 good many children, too, who were , not enumerated when the census was j taken, will be in town to attend I school this fall. Many families move to town in the winter to send their children to chool and move out to the farm again in the spring. It was during the time they were on the farm that the census was taken and conse quently all of these -were missed. A great many children come to town also during the winter and board or work for their living while acquiring an education. This however, is not expected to swell the number of scholars in the Pendleton public schools very much above what it was wlfeilast year. Eighteen Teachers. Last year the public schools opened with only. 1C teachers. Before the i term closed three others wero added, making a total of 10 teachers. This year the faculty numbers 18 to start with and it is thought this will be : all needed during the 1902-190 term. Changes in Rooms. Several changes will be made in the places of teaching this year. The purchase of the old academy building and lots will add more room to the public schools and none of the pres ent buildings will have to be crowd ed as they were last year. Of course, the academy faculty does not give up Its present quarters until the new academy building is completed, which will not be ready for occupancy until the first of the year. Then the public school will move five rooms into the newly purchased building. At pres ent threo rooms are being used for school rooms in the basement of the brick school building on the hill south Such as Cloves, Cinnamon, Pepper, Mustard Seed, Mace. Celery Seed and Nutmeg. The are all used in com pounding medicines and must be pure. You ma' have use for some of these. They are not more expens ive than the adulterated kind. When you need more, try some of the pure kind as sold by F.W.Schmidt&Co. Reliable Druggists. Phone, Main 851. We are offering this week some exceptional values i heavy all-wool Ingrains. These carpets were left 0v irom last year s stock ana are worth 75c per yd; sale -11 over 1 rv!. 57c. You will see some ot the patterns in the wind New goods just coming in. Look for September ad. to run a trolley system throughout the entire Willamette valley. The old pioneers and veterans of Jackson county will hold a meeting September 4, at which In keeping with their annual meetings, early reminiscences will bo discussed and the history of those times kept alive. Bank Wrecker St. John Dlx was convicted and sentenced to the peni tentiary from Whatcom for 10 years. Ho had fled to London and was cap tured there, brought back, and will now take up headquarters in the Walla Walla penitentiary. It Is claimed that tho Willamette cue and a ngnt was macie 10 save the house with water carried in buck ets. The bucket brigade did good work and saved the other buildings but the barn was a tot-i! loss. One company of the fire department got to the fire and tunnd on water after It was under control. The loss was something over $100 and the cause of the blaze was a little boy and matches. The fire was more than a mile from the city and just Inside the fire limits. McDonald Released. Harry McDonald has finished serv ing a sentonce In the Umatilla conn tv lull m1 was rnleased vestorday grasshopper which is doing so much ))y Unlted states Commissioner Hal damage to hops and othor vegetation, loy McDonaId was-arrested hero sov Is not of the same species as thol0ral montj,s ago on the charge of middle-west pest. It Ib claimed that seiung U(jUOr to Indians. Ho was tho WilJamotte species Is a native of bound ovor to ti,e federal court by -tJf. valley. ( Commissioner Halley and pleaded The" state will be compelled to guilty before Judge Bollinger, in Port seek a now source of water supply land. Bolllngor sentenced him to for tho state prison at Salem, the servo CO days In jail and fined him ..suprenaa court having recently de- 5100, He was unablo to pay tho fine elded that It could not divert from and served 30 days extra for thlH. Mill Creek Its present source, only! bo much water can bo pumped KJnff Edward Js still In Scotland through two-Inch .pipe. This and ha not Klvon out how soon he amoHaLsHHInaot sunnly the demand. I will lea.v lint mintrv Fot POULTRY and SUPPLIES -CAL-L ON- Colesworthy -AT THE CHOP MILL 127 and 129 East Alta Street BARGAINS Commencing Wednes day, Aug. 20, we will sell at actual cost 300 Boxes Fancy Stationery All shapes, sizes and col. jg ors from 5c to 75c per box. & rfwinrnl Stock must be to make room for our ele gant holiday line. f. Sale will continue each j day until all is sold. Come early if you want ; the best. ffi FRAZIER'S Book and , Stationery Store. VACANT Government Lands J. T. "WILLIAMSON La Grande, Ore. There Is No Question ABOUT THE MERITS OF BYERS' FLOUR It is the finest grade it is possible to make. Nothing but the choicest wheat enters into Byers' flour, and satisfaction is the result whererever it is used for bread or fancy baking. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S. Byers, Proprietor. SEWING MACHINES AT BARGAINS . . . During the month of August we vill offer special low pric es on WHITE Sewing Machines The White is recognized the best machine made. Come now and save money. JOS. BASLER'S Bargain Hoase Oregon's Blue Ribbop State Fair! Plats of any township in the La Grande land district showing all vacant lands, and all satries, frac tional lots, topography, etc., fur nished for $2 each; also plats of I class work and satisfactory service the Umatilla Reservation. Everv I at lowest rates. Q op r RIGHT SUMMER IS HARD ON LINEN A.nd it's hard on us, too, for that matter. What with dust stains, perspiration, etc., laundering has. its trials. We do the work, though and do it to perfection. Send' us your shirts, collars and cuffs and we'll do them up in a most su perior manner. You'll find our charges right, also. Give you first Salem ' SeptonjbarlSth to 20th 1902 You are invited to attead and see the greatest indus trial exposition and livestock show ever held on the Pacific Coast. Good racing every afternoon. Camp ground free. Come and bring your families. For any informa tion, write M. D. WISDOM, Sec'y, Portland, Ore. THE THE DOMESTIC LAUNDRY I, F. Robinson, Prop. Pendleton. ORLAN CLYDE CULLEN CO UNSELLOR-AT-IiAW U. S. Supremo Court REGISTERED ATTORNEY U. S. Patent Onice U. 8. and FOREIGN PATENTS uilding, La Grande, Oregon. j 700 7tu St., N. AV., AVoHitntou. D. c plat corrected from the U.S. Land : Office records at date made. ' Special attention given to applica- tion for lands on the unsold por tions of the Umatilla Reservation , and to all applications' before the 1 United States Land Oflice. Office in the U. S. Land Office ! ROYAL Cooper's old stand, Main St., Near & A royal good meal for only 20 cents. If you dine with us you always satisfied. A trial meal will make you a regular boarder. ACORN Store afld RANW Ova,3o,ooo.polol,heS stoves in our sioi Cotfft Street. For Health, Strength and Pleasure Drink : : : : : Polydore Moens, Proprietor. rrrr"7Tnrn I niTif nnn n o v mil unuiHiiR -r