East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, December 12, 1902, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Image 6

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    FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1B02.
Real
Est 0." a a
Young man, do you desire to lay
the foundation for wealth? Elderly
men, do you wish to Insure yourselves
a competency?
IT so, do as others hare done. Look
around you end see who are the well-to-do
men In the community. They
we thos who have ln -sted In real
estate,
However small your means, buy
real estate. Commence now. I will
sell on small partial payments, or for
cash, the following properties:
A house with 5 rooms a: cellar
and lot $750.00
A pretty cottage and lot .. 900.00
A house and two lots 700.00
A dwelling, stable and lot . . 700.00
A dwelling, stable and 2 lots 900.00
Vacant lots from $150 to $300.
A block or 14 lots 1200.00
A half block, 7 lots 900.00
A plat of 4 lots 650.00
A plat of 2 lots 300.00
E. D. BOYD, 111 Court Street
WHAT'S IN A NAME
A WIFE WAS FOUND
IN
UMBER
Gray's Harbor Com. Co.
Opp. W: & C. R. Depot
When getting figures from
others on that lumber bill of
yours, don't forget to come
and see us. We carry a large
stock of all kinds of
Building Material
including shingles, door, win
dows, moulding, screen doors
and windows in fact, every
thing that is found in a first
class lumber yard.
Farmers Custom Mill
Fred Walters, Proprietor
Capacity 160 barrels a day
Flour exchanged for wheat
Flour, Mill Feed, Chopped Feed, etc
always on hand.
Kamela Boy Has a Surprise Which
Ends In a Wedding Name Cut In
a Log Results in a ' Happy Mar
riage. An interesting story comes from
Kamela.
In the spring of 1901, when the
Oregon exhibits were being shipped
to the Pnn-Amerlcan Exposition, the
train containing the monstrous tim
ber exhibit, consisting of one stick of
Oregon fir. 70 feet in length, being
hauled upon two flat cars, Btopped at
Kamela for an hour or so.
All the residents of the little station
went out and climbed over the cars,
admiring the huge stick of timber
and speculating upon the surprise it
would bring to the eyes of the East
erners.
While his companions were alking
and wondering about the giant of the
Oregon forest, a locomotive fireman
carved his name and address deep
into the soft wood.
The train soon left and all the
glory of Oregon's exhibit was for
gotten.
A Letter Comes.
In about a month after, the boy
whose name went with the log to the
Buffalo Exposition received a letter
from a young lady, stating that she
was a waiter in a lunch room on the
exposition ground. Also that the
counter on which her pies were
placed before the hungry public, was
made from a section of a tree from
the Oregon exhibit, and that his name
was carved on the side of the block
next to her work, so it was impossl
ble for her to forget him. Whenever
she turned to the rounter. her eyes
fell upon the name and she was de
termined to write to its owner.
Then a plrl Comes.
The letter wns answered. Just a
modest, friendly letter was sent to
that little Buffalo peach, who wns
destined to stare at a name carved in
a thoughtless moment. Then another
letter came, was answered In a more
fervid tone and a money order for a
ticket to Oregon was sent and soon
the pie girl herself, quit looking at
the empty title, and came to Oregon
to view the man who wears it. It was
soon arranged. The Oregon exhibit
had done most of the courting. A
short period of preparation, in which
the young lady supervised the ar
rangement of the new home, was fol
lowed by a happy wedding. The
Jackknife with which the name was
carved will be an heirloom. There
is now one more happy family at the
summit of the Blue mountains. Some
of 'he other -nvs a '::g the
would be another exposition.
The Race of the Oregon.
Lights out! And prow turned towan
the south,
And a canvass hiding each cannon'.
I mouth,
'And a ship, like a silent ghost rr
leased,
THIS ONE. Is seeking her sister ships in th
I cast.
A rush of water, a foaming trail.
An ocean hound In a coat of mall;
A deck long-lined with the lines o' :
) fate,
' She roars good-bye at the Goider
Gate.
On! On! Alone, without gong or boll
rinf n lmrnlnc lire like a fire of hell ,
Till the lookout starts as his glassw!
j show
, The white cathedral of Callao.
A moment's halt 'neath the slender
I spire;
' Food, food for the men, and food for
1 the fire.
Then, out in the sea, to rest no more
jTill her keel is grounded on Chile's
I shore.
South! South! God's guard thro' the
unknown wave.
Where chart or compass may help or
save.
Where the hissing wraiths of the
deep abide
And few may pass through the
stormy tiue.
.
North! North! For a harbor far away.
For another breath in the burning
day;
For a moment's shelter from speed
and pain.
And a prow to the tropic sea again.
Home! Home! With the mother fleet
to sleep.
Til lthe call shall rise o'er the awful
deep.
And the bell shall clang for the battle
there,
And the voice of the gun 's the voice
of prayer.
Once more to the songs of the bold j
and free.
When your children gather about I
your knee, i
When the Goths and Vandals come
down in night, i
As they came to the walls of Rome
one night: j
I
When the lordly William of Deloraine
Shall ride by the Scottish lakes
again;
When the Hessian spectres shal' flit
in air
As Washington crosses the Delaware.
When the eyes of the babes shall be
closed in fear 1
As they list to the story of Paul Re
vere;
When your boys shall ask what the,
guns are for.
Tell them the tale of the Spanish war.
And the breathless millions that look
ed upon
iSOROF
The matchless race of the Orepon.
John James Meehan in Leslie
Veekly.
Odd Fellowship Ahead.
At the celebration of th fiftieth a
,lvorsarv of the grand lodge of North
iwt Odd Fellowship, hold n Sale,
last week, the following statistics o
'raternnl orders in the United States
vere read:
No. Odd Fellows l-M-Aj;
So. Masons r!o-
N'o. M. W. A.
No. Knight of Pythias M6.9
v n TI W 420.0110
No. A. O. u. vt
No. Red Men 1,7 V," ',,n
No. Woodmen of the World . 252,130
The bride loohed like a queen. The
groom looked like the 'l--;1"' Kc:
She rails that hrr football cont.
Why? Because it has a full bark.
Philadelphia Bulletin
Wa'Ia Walla is sptmlins, $30" per
montf ir. hc rftor tr stamp out
smallpox.
ULA
i ;af and one for
is an ncicuiuu. ',7 . .
which a tainted ancestry or blood Joisoii.
ed parentage is responsible. It is tiaus
' j ....!. h 1, nnd and shows
itself in swelling and ulceration of the
elands of the neck, catarrh of the head,
weak eyes, sores, abscesses and skin erup
tions, with a gradual wasting away of
strength and vitality. It also attacks the
bones and joints, resulting in white swel
ling, hip disease and deformities of every
kind We see the effects of this awful
blood taint every day. but it exists m so
many forms that often it passes for some
thingeUeand is treated asanothcrdisease.
Scrofula robs the blood of its nutritive
qualities, and it becomes too poor to pro
duce healthy growth pir-T
and development, and Hfc ulr I
thin, emaciated bodies .
and pallid, waxy com- ur M
pleiionsare the result. TAINTED
remedy, one that works ANCESTRY.
. i t. .i i.i ,i
reach a disease that has been transmitted
through generations or been lurking in
the blood since birth.
S. S S. cleanses the blood of all scrofu
lous matter and tubercular dejwsits, and
when rich, pure, health-sustaimng blood
is again flowing in the veins there is a
gradual disappearance of all the danger
ous symptoms of Scrofula; strength
returns, and a complete cure is effected.
S. S. S. contains no strong minerals to
further break dewn and derange the sys
tem, but can be taken by the very old, as
vpf1l ne ihf ttiiilrllr
aged and young, with
out any harmfulaf ter
effects, or the least
injury to the most
If you have any signs of Scrofula, or
your children are stunted or slow of
growth, pale and sicklj write us, and om
physicians will advise you free of charge.
The Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
THIS IS OLD DOCTOR Ki
One of the World's Greatest Specialists. Wh 'u.. '
From an Earlv Grave nr h i . . "
- ..... iiiMne Aiun
Now, look here, young man, don't
be so careless. Don't put off any
longer; bae your case attended to
today, for your looks toll on you. You
mav conclude tn cat married nnmo
day, and to live happy yt;u must be
a man ruggcu ana strong pnysicaily
and mentally. So many dlv ireo casts
we hear of, If an investigation was
made, would disclose the fact that
physical and nervous weakness of the
tuirihand causes thn wITa tn flnnlltr
hate him. Women love a manly man,
lust as much as men love beautifully
developed, healthy, red-cheeked wo
men, uioicnes ana pimpies snow
something wronir. All klnrin nf rtta.
eases are cured by this old doctor. It
is not neovmn . - ,
. ,, - w m
.m?tc WE
' - wuvuq, ojg
it is Detter to ees ih
iL'iii nr nnmn tf4t-.t
or, via UUT IPLTprt f. . J
f"
nnnL. rn A-a
, iU va tuTt
curing cases like roci
nrartpr nf o --.--
- . .uiu i j m
wnvc inrinffl in .
I dress,
J. HENRI KESSLER, M,D,
Ml W Arm AC TUP r - -..- . . .
M-.li -i wr i n , i. -uui9 mtUIUML AND SURGICAL
Offirr Mnurn Q A M O D mi o j j cm ..
T Rf-AT T AWCWffe.
faW M M I
atogoe oi mem. a lull supply always kept in
11
II
u
m
m
'-H
Holiday Hints
It Pays to Trade at tnc Peoples Warehouse
Christmas Gifts
To Holiday Buyers
Means Pendleton Indian Robes,
and we have every pattern in
stock that the mill makes, $3.00
to $6.00.
St
Vt5
i$
if
fa
$
It Si
Vipt
3y
S?!
ft?
it
SAv(
Sv
3
nit
GLOVES
Golf gloves in al lthe fancy
weaves, and all colors, 25e to
65c
Kid Suede and "ocha gloves,
silk lined or not, 50c to $2.50.
Neckweai
Never before have we had
the pleasure to show so large
and complete an assortment of
holiday neckwear, the widest
possible range affords you a
selection in the novel effects,
the newest ideas in silk designs
and weaves, 25c to $1.50.
We were never better fixed for the Holi
days than we are this season, and you can
come with the expectation of seeing the
greatest values this House has ever given,
and not be disappointed.
Hancfk'rch'fs
All lb" newest styles in silk
and linun. hemstitched, all
sizes, corded, with initials, all
the newest colors in silk, also
white with colored borders, 25c
to $1.50.
Umbrellas
A new line for Christmas 2C
and 28 inches long, swell han
dles, and if you are in doubt
what to get him, give nira an
umbrella a useful present, $1
to $8.00.
Fancy Hosiery
In this department we are
especially well supplied. I-ace
hose in all colors, embroidered
hose with drop stitches. Come
and feast your eyes. 25c to
$1.50.
Also the best blaak 25c hose
In the world.
r
0
I Comforts d. 'Jh$F7
of Home M?al
hvery man should have WiX (!
I an "R c- W" House Coat X wMJ J jv"'
j to fully enjoy the comforts !; 'V i&t&d'
tot home. It is not only a CMlm V JlA'
beautiful L-.irin..ni. Imt it vAWS . WffiVflT
! I affords a .rear den. llWSiX Tfiil
! "7" : V Mt
jiwjuiv Mini utjiivciinjiiuc is Vjf
at a very little outlay. ""
"U'o liuve all te ' ' M
t Popular and many jUm
CxcluKivs stylos jNmf
Fancy Sttsprnd'rs
Just received the President
suspender in silk webbing, one
pair in a box, $1.00 a pair;
Also beautiful lines of fancy
suspenders at 25c to $2.50.
SUIT CASES
VALISES
AND
Suit Cases, leather or Batin
lined, with toilet trays, 22 tb
2C inches, prices from $4.50 to
$20.00. We have a beautiful
asortment of alligator valises,
with leather lining and shoul
der straps, $3.75 to $18.75.
Couch Covers
We have the cream uf the
Pendleton Woolen Mills' pro
duction. All the no wltoman
stripes, 90 Inches long, just the
thing for a beautiful Xraas
gift. $9.00.
Men's and boji' neitet
ore, muiics vl -
. A W .
weaves. We tI5"'
, ,i,ih nttitteian,to
the biggest man,
RATH AND
LUUIIu"'" "
, a nnl(115.
nr pallor collars. Of
. .. i- mmethi 1 ?
nam roue
son can do without. W
you have one youH
.nrld did I
without lt!"$3i to l
THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE
A Hat!
just received m
newest shapes In f s .
liats. Come into the
asK to se
,Ve can r
shade to wear w '
suit.
MEN'S
iiT-riTTERS
ii -