Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 3, 1902)
"1 UMATILLA HISTORY always Interesting. Miss Maty Stock ton as "Dob" is a great artist and never falls to win the admiration of rr audience. kCom s at Substantial Savings -v offering should be particularly attractive to need'0? turs. ui iiiiujv, umih, iuuooq, ,i Collarettes, Scarfs, Boas in all the new shapes . tntc nnccs: -2 SO Fur Collar $1.'98 3.50 FurScaf 2.80 i.4S Fur Boa: 3 58 7.50 Fur Boa. 6.00 10.00 Fur Boa... 8.00 jugjber 20 per cent discount sale on Ladies SJfcts still continues. xander Dept. Store RELIABLE CLOTHIERS. GOOD THING AND WE'LL PUSH IT ALONG best and most convenient thing of kind we have seen is a neat little folder offine a calendar for 1903, a .lodge direc- v. -i i j i mi lirv, railroaa time cara ana car iares. inev for free distribution. Call for one M. A. RADER THE FURNITURF MAN (Concluded.) while the men hauled the cargo ashore. These chains still lie along the shore held by the, logs beneath. and while the rust is gradually eatlne them away they are still as firm in Do busting trucking and hauling description at reason- ices. horses will be well cared itaken to the Old Dutch Feed Yard, corner Aha and Lillith streets. ain and all kinds of light and sold. i for sale at all times. Wmil Prop., fto Hays & ConnerJey. Hotel Opei l&g. 36 by So, :Joe. Ell, on 5en Court and rj8 to the public. "Ggmedi and venti- r'urnished rooms. ffmin the build 1 improvements, elec- p wins, TJie Hotel In w,c V4"cc" House on Maini ryueen Choc House ? Hotel will be run 00 Messrs. Van Puymbroeck tors QlLLfirTE'S 7AL CHAMBER Cartridgts In Rifle tobh.r'v.ai'i -. i Special l . Mlliu i CI a. iVI wl w M1J Real Estate... Young mas. do yon desire to lay the foundation for wealth 7 Elderly men, do yon wish to insure yoareelres a competency? If so, do as others have done. Look around you and see who are the well- to-do men in the community. They are tho&p who hare invested in real estate. However small your means, bny real estate. Commence now. I will sell on small partial payments, or for cash, the following properties: A house with 6 rooms ar-1 cellar and lot $7M.0t A pretty cottage and lot .. 900.06 A house and two lots 70d.t A dwelling, stable and lot . 700.00 A dwelling, stable and 2 lots 900.00 Vacant lots' from f 150 to' $300. A block of 14 lots 1200.00 A half block, 7 lots 900.09 A plat of 4 lots 650.00 A plat of 2 lots 300.00 E. D. BOYD, 111 Court Street Laatz Bros. FOR Wood, Coal and Building Material Delivered Promptly. We are in the transfering aw' trucking business and are pif pared to move light or heavy arti cles. OFFICE MAIN ST., Near Depot, Telephone Main 51. panv. ROflzBCRQ, V lOJUWOH ORLAN CLYDE CULLEN COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW U. 8. Bupreme Court REGISTERED. ATTORNEY U. 8. Patent Office U. C. and FOREIGN PATENTS Trade Kukiand CopyrifbU TOO Itb.at, ft. W., Washington. D. A MILLION BARRELS. Enormous Sales Gives to SchllU Beer The Leadership. It is announced by the Jos. Schlltx Hrewing Co. that over a million bar rels of SchllU bee have been sold the ground as the strongest mooring , "riDK tthc cn,d,nK m DIOCK On tne scasnore ' "- wr nrera in i' w m m ill, i .. . . ; "wuu .uuwauKco wnicn approaencs a ounness roint. nnis extent of sales Umatilla was also a groat business , It Is not generally known that the point in those days. The only ple-i Schlltz brewery is owned by five lure or uic place now In existence Is an oil painting made in 1S64 for Mr. J. H. Koontz, who now lives at Echo In this county, and which he prizes very highly. It is said to be an accurate one and it shows a line of business houses of great longth along the shore of the river, and a street filled with frontier life, giving it the appearance of a bustling city. There were wholesale houses, retail houses, hotels, saloons and every class of bus. iness that was demanded by the ens tomers of those times. It is claimed that the town had at least 2000 popu lation at one time and the bulk of business is difficult even to estimate. J. F. Moody and iJine, and Guthrie were among the first merchants. Hill & Caine, who had established "Grande Bonde," moved up later. J. H. Koontz was also an early pioneer merchant, But there were scores of these, many of whose names are forgotten, Jesse Failing ran the "Orleans' hotel, and there was also the "Metropolitan." Was the County Seat With her rapid growth Umatilla naturally became the county seat of the newly organized county. A court house and jail were built and the county officers took up their homes at Umatilla. The old jail building still stands and is now occupied by a peaceable' Chinaman, who plies the trade or calling of laundryman, draw ing his principal Income from the railroad men who live at the place. It being the end of a freight division and also a railroad 'junction. The old courthouse has been torn away and no one knows what became of it Early litigation and the history of the first elections and biographical sketches of the early officers would also be Interesting reading. Many of them still live in Umatilla county, and some of the most prominent lawyers and officers and business men are de scendants of the early Umatilla set tlers as well as pioneers of other parts of the county, which Is ample evi dence that the early pioneers were made of that good material that lasts, and were men whose posterity will continue to form a portion of the good history of the country and seldom iisgrace it. brothers who received their education in the science of brewing In tho best schools of Europe. Every department! in mis orewery. rrom the Olivine or the materials to the bottling of tho product is In direct charge of these practical men, the owners of the bus' iness. Duble the Cost From the very start these men de cided to double the cost of ordinary brewing, in order that Schlltz beer might bo absolutely pure. They bored six wells down to rock, in or der to secure water without a touch of Impurity. They built a plate glass room for cooling the beer, and ar ranged so that all the air which touched the beer was passed first through an air dlter. They built machine filters for thor oughly filtering the beer before it was bottled. They installed the Pas teur system for sterilizing every bot tle after it Is sealed. They built refrigerating rooms of 400.0W) barrels capacity, so that the beer might be aged there for months before It was marketed. This was be cause beer which is not sufficiently aged causes biliousness. All this made Schlltz beer cost twice as much In tho brewing as a common beer need cost, and knowing ones said that they could never make pay. That people cared little for purity. The facts stated above indicate that they have made it pay, r.nd that peo ple do care for purity. 1 For the benefit of the organ fund of Presbyterian church, there will be sale of useful articles at the home of Mrs. Charles J. Smith, 116 Lewis street, on next Friday throughout afternoon and evening. All are cor dially invited. Indians. That Umatilla was once the ren dezvous of great bands of Indians is also as strongly evidenced as it is that It was the white man's abode, The sands of the river and the shore are not only lined with their work, but also with their bones. Arrow. heads and fragments of the flint from which they were made may be found here everywhere. The arrowheads are' now very scarce, but a few years ago were found by the hundreds. It is reported that one person alone has within recent years picked up a col lection at this point that is valued at more than $3000. There is much spec ulation as to how came these arrow heads at this place, but the correct theory seems, to he that the Indians made this their central point In early times and that here they manufac tured their arrowheads for killing game and use in war and that these were left behind. How or why. Is not explained, for most of them are perfectly-shaped and there wa6 no rea son for abandoning them. Then there is a theory that the Indians buried the property of the deceased with tbem and as the shores of the river were used as a burying ground, be cause of the fact that graves were easily dug in the soft sands, that these arrowheads were buried with de ceased Indians and they, like their bones, have from time to time washed to the surface, or have been unearth ed by the heavy winds which keep the sands on the constant move. (Continued.) "ALPHON8E AND GASTON." This Jingling Musical Farce at the Frazer Saturday. Manager Welch of the Frazer an nounces for Saturday, uecemner 6, the jingling musical farce "AlphonBe and Gaston," which has been creating such a furore n: this fceitlm the country of late. The company is an exceedingly competent ono and con sists of some 40 members, among whom there are Bobby Mathews, Her bert Ashley. Eugene Rogers, W. A. Dolan, C. H. Burroughs, Frank Kahn, Helen Darling, Vernlce White, Min nie Burroughs and a handsome and well-trained chorus of young ladles. The niece was staged by Frank Tan nehlll and the musical numbers writ ten specially for It by Harry Von Til zer and Ban M, Jerome. Seat sale opens Friday morning at popular prices. "A Little Outcast" "A Little Outcast" has a swing and a breeziness and a vigor that set it apart from the "majority of plays It Is soundly American wrougnour.. often exciting, often humorous, and What Shall We Have for Dessert? This question arises in tho family every day. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Pre pared in two minutes. No boiling! no baking I add boiling water and set to eooL Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Rasp berry and Strawberry. Get a package at yonr grocers to-day. io cts. 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 I gutter- for barns and dwellings. BETTER SEE THAT-r- BUGGY jj They Are Going to Give Away at The Boston Store Ticket With Every Dollar Purchase 0 O J ED. EBEN I Proprietor of the J ED. EBEN Proprietor of the EASTERN CLOAK SUIT SKIRT and WAIST FACTORY announces his Mid-Winter Clearance Sale on Jackets Waists Skirts and Ftfrs 9 a G I have bargained with a competent Timber Cruiser to locate Oregon Lumber fafcwwe Claims SHOALWATER BAY Oysters, fresh everv day, received in the shells di rect from our own beds We have closed our retail oyster house in the Golden Rule Hotel building, and will devote our en tire attention to supplying the public with fresh oysters by the pint, quart or gallon. Depot in Fechter's confectionery store, 23 1 Court street, Pendleton. Wo wholesale oysters in the sack or car load. Oysters served on the half shell by the plate. Wachsmuth Bros. AGREEMENT Pendleton, Or., Dec. i, 1901 This is to certify that we, the undersigned, have agreed between ourselves to establish uniform prices for the care and board, of horses by the month. One horse to hay by the month I12.50. One horse to hay and grain per month 114. Commencing Dec, r, 1902. Alts 8t opp. Court House. Despam & Clark Wholesale Com mission Merchants Will pay cash for poultry. The Market price always. Bring it in every day and all day. Chickens, Geese, Ducksamd Turkeys, Office in E. O. Building On the line 0. a railroad 1 now under oosBtrnotloa. TMb means a big cbanct for first-comers. 8ee 1 N.Berkeley G. M. Froome M. J. Carney S.F.Hays W. Lindsey. Hare some sale. good farms for 1 PENDLETON -'URIAH STAGE LINE HTURDIVANT HROB., Prop. tt 7 . m., (or Vklkh and Intermedial!) clou. &ve: -jo nu hoc, iuc, moi noc ua r tin, II. Sft: To Hr. Il.aa. Mr and return, W: T Hlitt. (1.761 to Bldi and return, n. 10; 7 AIU.12.: to Albnd rUrn,l w;ToUl Let Marphy Frame those Pictures for Christmas Don't put off having the work dene. If Murphy does the work it Avill be good work and you will be highly pleased, BesYstock of framing material. 1 E. J. Murphy's .ComeGetAtf'-QtfOt01 loilaolRuletlaiel',Pe4lttoBl I,eBl wok at lowept prices. Mm 4