Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1902)
- NY. ' FAiSri 'luf :ike Mi, . .trj' lllIffaygct GOOD GOODS at Alexander's. g - us Economical Buyers OK HERE LpIv Bareains for this Week to Loinen's Corsets, representing broken lines, which L continued, in black, white and drab, including I' u" ir i r r r r- , H known manes as wanicis jr. u. r., rrencn ' worth up to 3, your choice for 50c .1. Hrnr.aded Prunella Dress coods. id inr.hpc V ft ' f ' i 1 ------ one nau line, rose anu mat, jici yaiu at)C i fclish Towels, size 40 by icinches, only ....10c (xander Dept. Store RELIABLE CLOTHIERS. Money on Stoves By Retting the b-st at lowest prices. We handle only he best makes ot stoves. Wilson Air-Tight Coal Stoves, Wilson Air-Tight Wood Stovts, Trilby Air-Tlght Wood Stoves, Universal Cook Stoves and Steel Ranges. 'he Thompson Hardware Co. COME TO OUR STORE on are seeking the newest styles in furniture. Carpets. E. Portiere, etc. We have Borne new novelties never be- Ishown here. See the Antique Furniture we are Bhowing. 1AKER & FOLSOM Furniture Store near Poatoffice eEaseX'SGXsX'SGXsxsx r 'S IS OLD DR. KESSLER tnfiheJVorld's Greatest Specialists, Who Has Kept our case tle' Ji0,!,1K man' don't he ho careless. Dou't nut offany longer; rarrii e" tr tnduv, for your look- tll 011 you. You may conclude PhysicaliJ "If "av R,u' to Hvi happy you uiut be a mau rugged and .lion wis J,, D ,aeltall.V. So iimny divorce ease we hear of, If au In 'iehuaUr , '' wouli dinulose the fact that physical und nervous weak- yut as Biiioi. tBll!s lIe wire to llimlly Iiuto liiiu. Womeu love a mauiy Blotch! 1 ." ",ve beautifully developed, liealtliy, red-cheeked thl , i 1 2 l,,,ulle. bhow something wrong. All kinds of diseases 'ben Uunl rto5U,r- It U not necessary to go to tee him; lu a few dls- n k.i ".'P') 1! Knit rwl ninino.j -.1,1 ..!, It la l.ttur tn nwtevtwiif i 1 lel UHll,onscau l,e cureu at uouie. I.,BWnrt w home treatment; he always answers your letters in a you nV.rt lH. every (BB profound secret. Pav no attention to the Kweslike v..,. w' "ut l,l,Hl yourself 10 an old dootor wUo has been '2nt t.,"" for over l"arter of a ceutury in this city. Always lu- "e if Possible "dd w5itl"B for l!OU8ulttttloa alld seud 8raa11 bottIe ' J. HENPT Tf I7CCT DD TUT T Pa'r ofth V -iUaJ jl.v. S UMk q S ,tLoula Medical and Surgloal Dispensary wr5- a. M. to 9 P, M. Corner 2nd. anil Yamhill Sts., PorUand.Ore. ATHENA ITEMS. fay Le Grow Married and Other Bachelors Expected to Follow His Example. G. W. Bradley, the wheat man spent Sunday and Monday in Fondle ton. D. B. Jarman, one of our most prom- Inent business men. Is off on a trip to urook county this week. Miss Jeancttc Manasse spent Sun day and Monday In Pendleton visiting relatives and friends. John Davison has purchased a farm near town from James Bamford of Seattle. Consideration $3500. Miss Anna Kirk, who has been vis iting at La Grande and other places In Union county, returned home Sun day. W. H. Gould and A. D. Beaudlfelt, of Weston, were In town on business today. They say that Athena Is the "only town." Mrs. Minnie De Peatt will leave for Walla Walla today, where she will remain several days. She will bo ac companied by Mrs. Chares Gates. Colonel Fred Boyd has moved the Press office into new quarters. Hp has a line new building, plenty of room and will now be in excellent shape to get out his paper. The teachers who attended the in stitute last week have returned home and report an excellent time. They say the Institute was the best ever held In Pendleton; that everything was properly conducted and great personal benefit derived by the many lectures. The "fake" who -found lots of suck ers in Pendleton, spent a day in our town. Old men were mesmerized by his eloquence, and handed out the hard cash like little boys playing "chinquapins." It Is quite a joke on the boys, as he promised to be here another day and make things rights But promises are easily made, and he sought a new atmosphere, where he will find other suckers. Fay LeGrow, assistant cashier in the bank, who was married in Walla Walla several days ago, after spend ing an extensive tour on his honey moon escapades in California and other places, has returned with Mrs. LeGrow, and will soon begin house keeping In the George Gross proper ty. Fay is one of four young bach elors who are quite good friends. He has broken the ranks, changed the monotony of celibacy, ana entered the portals of happiness. In a few weeks longer, if rumor is correct. and the signs of the times come true, another one of these four friends will follow Fay's example. Thus there will be only two left to group In the dark. They don't know a good thing when they see it; examples are trod den in the dust; advice is cast in the fiery furnace, and the wisdom of ages trespassed upon. BUSINESS MEETING COMMERCIAL ASSOCIATION FAVORS YOUNG MEN. IPOK OUT FOR Smalest Delinquent List. Only $500 in taxes Is delinquent on the Benton county tax poll. It is believed that the Benton county sheriff has the smallest delinquent list i nthe state. Roseburg Review. Addition May Be Built to Association Quarters Delegates Proposed to Irrigation Congress. At the meeting of the Commercial Association Tuesday night, the com mittee of young men selected to sco how many names could be secured to join with the association In merging It and the proposed Young Men's Club, reported that 72 names had been secured. It was also stated that only a partial canvass had been made. and there would be no trouble In get ting at least 100, as were promised. The Commercial Association, as a body, acted favorable on the report. and it was decided that the plans as published In the Bast Oregonian for enlarging the association membership be adonted. The only thing now in the way of. the proposition Is room. To install all the paraphernalia wanted by the young men in addition to the Conv mercial Association's paraphernalia, will take more floor room than Is In sight at present. Just what will be done toward getting around that dif ficulty is not yet decided, but it Is likely that some additions will be built to the present association rooms and the two merged bodies will have their headquarters in the same place Mr. Milarkey owns the ground in the rear of the present rooms and It Is proposed that he build an addition that will give the young men amplo place to rail their proposed arrange ments., It was proposed that Presi dent Cohn, of the association, ap point a ways and means committee to work with the young men's com mittee In seeing just what steps wero best in the matter. The names of C. B. Wade, Leon Cohen and C. S. Jackson were pro posed as delegates to the Irrigation congress, which meets in Portland on Ihe 18th instant. The delegates are to be appointed by the mayor and county court, but these names were suggested for the proper ones to act upon. The request of the Women's Clubs for the association rooms in which to hold their lectures on parliamentary law. was granted. The women will occupy the rooms each afternoon of this week from 2:30 to 5 o'clock. Two new members were added to the association. The committee appointed by Mr. Cohen to confer with the young men's committee, is composed to T. C. Tay lor, Jesse Falling and J. F. Robinson. QTARRHW 1 Come To Us For your lumber and building material of all descriptions and you will save money and get first-class stock. We can sup ply you with Doors, Windows, Screen doors and windows, building paper, lime, cement, brick and sand. We make a specialty of wood gutters for barns and dwellings. Oregon Lumber Yard Alta St., opp. Court i!nu . Joseph Ell, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL? To Fight the Trust. One American newspaper has un dertaken to avoid the exactions of the paper trust. The Kansas City Star Company has purchased a block of ground and will erect a mill for the purpose of manufacturing all the white paper used In the publication of the Kansas City Star and the Kansas City Times. This mill will have a capacity of one thousand tons of white paper per month and Its cost Is estimated at $200,000. It Is report ed that It will give employment to 100 persons. The managers of the Star claim that they are the first newspaper publishers In the world to engage In tile manufacture of their own paper. Exchange. Oregon Lands. The land commissioner shows 14 mineral patents issued in Oregon and :tl claims filed for a total mineral area of (150,265 acres. Patents were Issued at the Oregon branch and Cen tral Pacific road for 32,691 acres of land last year and to the Oregon & California road for 04,800 acres. Pat ents to the Oregon wagon road com panies aggregated 156,788 acres The Mate received patents for 529 acres of land under a swamp grant, making a total of 241,006 acres patented. A Roman. Archaeologist. Even archaeology Is not a modern invention, and the ancients had other ancients older than themselves. When Hid tumulus at Carnac (Brittany) was opened lu 1875, and the remains of a Roman villa found, a number of pre Celtic relics were discovered arranged on some shelves like the objects in a museum. The Roman ownpr had f-vitlently been an archaeologist him self. Exchange. HARNESS-SADDLERY Traffic lu .Second Hand Legs. A very curios trade Is the traffic in second hand legs carried on by a man living near the hospital St. Louis In Paris. For years he has diiven a brisk trade. He buys his goods from tho relatives of one legged men who i'le In the hospital hard by. Ho claims to have the greatest assortment of wooden legs of any dealer In the world. Exchange. There is one rational way to treat nasal catarrh: the medicine Is applied direct to tho affected membrane. The remedy is Ely's Cream Balm. It re ctores the Inflamed tissues to a healthy state without drying all tho life out of them and it gives back the lost senses of taste and smell. The sufferer who Is tired of vain experi ments should use Cream Balm. Drug gists sell it for 60 cents. Ely Broth ers, 56 Warren street, New York, will mall it. When the cold wave flaj: is up, freezing weather Is on the way. Winter is here in earnest, and with it all the miserable symptoms of Catarrh return blinding headaches and ncurnlgia, thick mucous discharges from the nose and throat, a hacking cough and pain in the chest, bad taste in the mouth, fetid breath, nausea and all that makes Catarrh the most sickeninir and discrustintrof nil rnmninintc tt,co r..iinn nr nr. sonal defilement and mortification that keeps one nervous and anxious while 10 me company 01 omers. la spite of all efforts to prevent it, the filthysecretions and mucous mat ter find their way into the Stomach and are distributed by the blood to every nook and corner of the system; the Stomach and Kidneys, in fact every organ and part of the body, be come infected with the catarrhal poison. This disease is rarely, if ever, even in itsearliest stages, a purely local disease or simple inflammation of the noscandthtoat,andthisiswhysp rays , washes, powders and the various in haling mixtures fail to cure. Heredity is sometimes back of it parents have it and so do their children. In the treatment of Catarrh, anti septic and soothing washes are good for cleansing purposes or clearing tho head and throat, but this is the extent of their usefulness. To cure Catarrh permanently, the blood must be purified and the system relieved of its load of foul secretions, and the remedy to accomplish this is S. S. S. which has no equal as a blood purifier. It restores the blood to a natural, healthy state and the catarrhal poison and effete matter are carried out of the system through tho proper channels. S. S. S. restores to the blood all its good qualities, and when rich. Dure blood reaches the inflnmrd membrane and is carried through the circulation to all the Cattrrh infected portions of the body, they soon heal, the mucous discharges cease and the patient is relieved of the most offensive and humiliating of all complaints. S. S. S. is a vegetable remedy and contains nothing that could injure the most delicate constitution. It cures Catarrh in its most aggravated forms, nd cases apparently incurable and hopeless. Write us if you have Catarrh, and our physicians will advise you without charge. TNE SWIFT SPEOltlO OO., ATLANTA, HA. Manchester, Vt., Maroh 6, 1001. Qantlcmen!-! had all the symptoms thiit accompanr this disease, atioh M mucus dropping in the throat, a. ooa stant desire to hawk and spit, feallnir of dryness in the throat, cough and pitting- upon rUlnr in the moraine, ecaba forming- In the nose, which re quired muoh effort to blow out, loml. times causing- the nose to bleed and leavine me with a sick headache, X had thus suffered tot fire years. I commenced to take S. B. B. and after I had taken three Urge bottles, I noticed a change for the better. Thus encouraged, I continuedto take it and in a short while was entirely cured. JUD80N A. BELLA. 91. Main and Vine Ste., Rlohmond, Va. s Painting and Paperhanging Are our specialties and wo arc prepared to give tirst-class work. Our painters are the beat Our paperhangors are the bo&t Our paints are tho best Our wall papers are tho best Best Work Guaranteed at money saving prices. Let us figure with you. CC QW A 1? P fc' SHARP New Ideas. 3"AIV Opera House Block. 8 LADIES "yOU desire to be well dressed, and to have stylish clothing, then come in and see us, We promise to please yon and save you money. Our Business is to supply you with Skirts,' Jackets, Shirt Waists and Tailor Made Suits, and we aro in a position to do so and give yon entire satisfaction. We make the wearing apparel to fit you Individually and it 1b correct Tfce EASTERN CLOAK, SUIT, SKIRT and WAIST FACTORY, ED, EBEN, Prop., 645 Main St. Complete satisfaction at money saving prices LEGAL BLANKS ut ueeaX alogue of them. A full supply always kept in stock. I