Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 24, 1903)
5K0 IV- p3 j' 'You lirtJ( get GOOD GOODS nl AlMamlw'h 5s j.- 6 MS Si IS IT IE GREATER SALE CRUSHED TO DEATH cw( Hundred Yards Silkulii.o Drapery, per yard '.. ...v. .. g0j8' Gum Boots, the $2 00 Quol'ty rhildrpn'f Stylish Trimmed ijj Stetson's Pure Nutria Hats CJ Cg There arc norm belter . HP Golf Skirts made of- Scotoh 3 7T Bunnockburn .. . . M J Fast Black Ho?o foradios per ' J jT Men's Fancy Shirts, Dollar Fifty kind, each Black Figured Brilliantine, 44 inches wide, per yd Alexander Dept. Store 50c LIQUID AIM LECTURE AND X P E RIME NTS FRANK MARSH KILLED IN A CAVE-IN. Ad Enjoyable Entertainm nt of Novelty and Instruction Under auspices of Pendleton Academy B Thearle and H. M. Hanaford, Chicago, Exclusive Managers LIQUID 312 BELOW ZERO Freezes Alcohol, but Burns Steel; Makes Iron. tin and rubber brittle; Renders mercury hard as iron; Runs a steam engine and does DOZENS OF WONDERFUJf FEATS gStetl wd Freezing Strawberries In an Ice lunbwr containing ajhjuiu nu, FRAZER OPERA HOUSE, ONE NIGHT ONLY BOND AY JANUARY 26 PULMl PRICES, 50o and $li children under 15, 50c. Selection tats, Subscnbers only, opens at 9 a. nl. Jan. 24. bale ol seats, rsubsenbets begins at 4 p. m., Jan. 24, Tlie Columbia Lodging House ..NEWLY Fl'BNIHHEL BAR IN CONNECTION Df CENTER OF BLOCK HET.ALTA&YTEBB 5TP f.X.SCHEMPP.Prop. R SALE SSIDENOE PROPERTIES dwelling tlollM mid turn Wtty shaded lawn, on prom of court etieet. 2500. BE. fieVPIl lYiniYld .ntUrnllt. i 11 u ,0 "Suis, uaui ana ?iiu luuueu mwn, t-ouu. 'dwelling, stable and two g and lot, centrally locat- Stlllngs with lots from 700 from $126 to $300, wy property on easy ftlncrcaslnir In nnmilntl'nn ?? to real ear a to E Wore you have to nav more! lZrnu wlt until real es- Despain &, Clark Wholesale Com mission Merchants Will nav cash for poultry. The Market price always. Bring it in every-day and all day. Chickens, Geese, Ducks and Turkeys. Office in Savings Bank Building Come, Get Oar Quotations Seven Ton Rock Falls Upon -Him While Employed In the Monarch Mine, 18 Miles From Sumpter. Frank Marsh, bod of Mr. aud Mrs. Georgo Marsh or this clti, was killed by a cave-ih Wednesday at the Ore pon Monarch mine, IS miles froni Sumpter. Ho was employed with the tunnel gang, which follows up the miners with timbers to support the loof and walls. While the unfortu j'nte young man was engaged in thic work tlie cavc-tn occurred, and his life was crushed out beneath a de scending mass o earth and rock. A companion. Al Lake, was badly in jured. Frank Marsh was born November SO, 1S70, in Hickory county, Missouri, raid accompanied his parents to Wes ton in June, 1875. His boyhood days Wero Bpont here, and among his schoolmates and playmates "Sloklo, rs ho became known, was a general favorite. Eight years ago he went to California, lemainlng there until last reu, when he came home on an ex lundcd visit. In April he left for the Sumpter mines, where he had been employed up to the time of his death. Willis Marsh, of this city, and Charles Marsh, of Pondleton, broth ers of the deceased, left, as soon as possible for Sumpter to take charge of tho remains, which they will escort to weston for Interment. Weston Leader. , To tho above may be added a 'few fncts learned from J. B. Purdy, who was in tho neighborhood of tho tho accident when It occurred. He states lha tthe first cave-in caught his cous in across the feet and lower part of tho legs, holding him fast. Before he could be extricated a second fall came, breaking his back and causing other injuries that gave rise to the belief that death must have been practically instantaneous. The sec ond fall upon him was a seven-ton rock. Marsh's companion at work, named Al I.ake, was seriously, though not fatally hurt by the cave-in. In ad dition to the relatives mentioned above, by the Leader, there aro his cousin, J. B. Purdy, of Pendleton, and his sister. Miss Ida Marsh, who lives at Weston. ether chores .in preparation for the permanent Improvements which will to put upon the farm between now and spring. They are too fcoble to accomplish much. Mr. McDill says all tho inmates aro quite easily govern' c-d, and get along quite well with each other. They have been on the farm from a few months to seven or eight years. There have been two deaths within the past year. COUNTY POOR FARM. Snr now Pi 111 Court Street The Big GROCERY In a Small Room Best apples in the market, only 50c and 75c per box. 'Finest Walla Walla Creamery Butter; 2 pound .bricks, 70c. D. KEMLER & SON Alta, Street, Opposite Savings Bank Weston Leader Thinks it a Good Pur chaseThat It Will Increase In Value. The purchaase of the C. A. Chap man farm on McKay creek, near Pendleton, for $11,000, Is not only a good Investment on the part of the county court, but offers a much more practical means than the present in adequate system of caring for the county poor. Tho aged, sick and pen niless unfortunates whom the public is In duty bound to support, will be provided with a pleasant, healthful home, and those of them who are able to labor may become in a measure self-sustaining by tilling the rich soil of the Chapman farm. The place is well improved with houses and fencing, and well stocked with implements, horses and Jersey cows, which are Included in the deal. Forty acres are In alfalfa, yielding five tons per acre, and 120 acres more can be mado to produce this crop. At the rate Umutlila county land is In creasing In value, the Chapman place will never be worth less than the purchase price, and it can gradually be converted into an ideal poor farm Weston Leader, Parasites Cause All Hair Troubles. Nine-tenths ot the diseases of the scalp and hair are caused by parasite gorms. The Importance of this dis covery, by Professor Unna, of the Charity Hospital. Hamburg, Germany can not be overestimated. It explains why ordinary hair preparations, even of the most expensive character, fail to cure dandruff; because they do not and they can riot kill the dandruff germ. Tho only hair preparation In tho world that positively destroys the dandruff parasites that burrow up the scalp into scales, called scurf or dan druff, Is Newbros Herpiclde. In ad dltlon to Its destroying the dandruff germ, Herpiclde Is also a delightful hair dressing, making the hair glossy and soft as silk. COUNTY CHARGES., uperlntendent McDIII Has Eleven Men In His Care Eight ,Are Over 60 Years Old. There aie hut 11 Inmates of the county infirmary now, and all are men. Bight of tbe 11 are men from CO to 84 years of age, and all these eight wero citizens of the county when admitted to the home. One of them Louie Ragle has lived in Umatilla county 42 years. Three comparatively young men are all strangers who have lived in the coun ty less than SO days and so Are wards of the' state. Tho thrco mentioned aro 111 or diseased, and were admit ted because they were unable either to work or move on. There is not a female county charge now. J. B. Mc DIII, the superintendent of the Infirm ary, took the six who are most able bodied, out to tho now poor farm and tried their efficiency at light la bor, such as. raking .weeds and doing HOBOES JE BOLD LONELY DISTRICT ON O. R. & N. LINES. Robberies by Tramps Make It Diffi cult to Keep Section Men Wives of Section Foremen Spend the Day In Fear, Railroad men say that up on tho lonely Snake river cutoff of tho O. B.I & N., between Biparia and Wallula, , it is an extremely difficult matter to get section hands to remain any! length of- time, whether Japs, China-j men or Europeans. Section bosses) do better, because they are usually 1 married. It is not the Isolation that! drives out the underhands, but the' frequency ot the robberies to which! they are subjected by the passing ho-! boos' who occasionally are forced to) count ties from Biparia to Wallula from somo distant siding along the Snako where they have been ditched. At Page station, 50 miles down thej river from Grange City, trainmen have stopped ditching hoboes In the hobo season altogether, either through Instructions from the super intendent or through the entreaties of the few residents, who conplain bitterly that for almost every "ho" let down at Page, a burglary follows. This annoyance does not He In standing the section hands up at the points of guns for they usually have IUIIa .1 if . t, .... - .1 I iiiwt? liiuuuj, aim 11 muj uau, luuuirj is useless to the cut oft hobo. But in the absence ot tho section men on their beats their section houses aro broken into repeatedly their ef fects taken and their humble larder rifled. The repltltion of this by des perato tramps starving along the un inhabited canyon, with no farm house within many miies over the breaks, almost Invariably drives out the men sent in by the O. R. & N. to work. About four doses is sufficient for a Jap. A Chinaman will stand it a lit tle more, while the occasional Swede or Italian "lays down" early in the game. So far the O. R. & N, is unable to cope with this problem, save by send ing new men. Some of tho fast freights down tlie cutoff are thick with hoboes. If they are allowed to make the lone desert stretch between Grango and Wallula in peace, the in habitants of the canyon are saved. If the hobo is ditched it is to look out for property, for he must eat. KNOX HATS spffi ARE HERE. THE GREAT $5 00 LINE iCnUA $3.50 LINE THE GREAT $3.00 LINE LATEST 1903 HATS BIG BOSTON STORE GORDON SWEATERS ALL COLORS ALL SIZES ALL PRICES SEE THE NEW SPORTSMAN'S SWEATER AND SHOOTING JACKET The wives ot section bosses, who are left alono from early morning un til night while their husbands aro away miles on their district, have a ; lonely fearsome time. These women are trained by their husbands with rifle and revolver, and while the pass ing hobo Is usually cordially treated, he is compelled to keep his distance by the well-known propensity of the cutoff housewives to use the real Western prerogative of defense. Amen. Senators Pierce and Smith wero on the right side of the "clerkship graft" by which every senator Is al lowed a personal clerk. Thoy were enrolled in tho minority voto against it, and will generally bo found on tho I right side of ovcry question during tho session. Weston Leader. Halt soles at Teutsch's. fi-V f'-f- 17 The Children Enjoy Life out of doors and out of the games which they play and the enjoyment which they receive and the efforts which they make, comes the greater part of that healthful development which is so essential to their happiness when grown. When a laxative is needed the remedy which is given to them to cleanse and sweeten and strengthen the internal organs on which it acts, should be such as physicians would sanction, because its component parts arc known to be wholesome and the remedy itself free from every objectionable quality. The one remedy which physicians and parents, well-informed, approve and recommend and which the little ones enjoy, because of its pleasant flavor, its gentle action and its beneficial effects, is Syrup of Figs and for the same reason it is the only laxative which should be used by fathers and mothers. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy which acts gently, pleasantly and naturally without griping, irritating, or nauseating and which cleanses the system effectually, without producing that constipated habit which results from the use of the old time cathartics and modern imitations, and against which the children should be so carefully guarded. If you would have them grow to manhood and womanhood, strong, healthy and happy, do not give them medicines, when medicines are not needed, and when nature needs assistance in the way of a laxative, give them only the simple, pleasant and gentle Syrup of Figs. Its quality id due not only to the excellence of the combination of the laxative principles of plants with pleasant aromatic syrups and Juices, but also to our original method of manufacture and as you value the health of the little ones, do not accept any of the substitutes which unscrupulous dealers sometimes offer to increase their profits. Please to remember, the full iijine of the Company--CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.- is printed on the front of every package. In order to get its beneficial effects it is always neces sary to buy the genuine only. For sale by all re liable druggists. A-- v.. .: V'4. r r -.., "1GS V' m. 1 ( ....--1:. 'I. I 'hi '1. e,!.:; -WW '"mm-.J