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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1903)
Me. 1M "led 1G0 I'L. T . II Estiti -J1JM0. 3d tvoh how. Hail itb 1 to! h. bloctii 7 des: )U j 4t foJ ill iot3 iti Sa 41 JAILV EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1903. Sftrand Wrapper Sale Tomorrow morning Tuesday, August 4 we place on sale J48 wrappers which mast be closed oat at once. The fol lowing prices will sorely do it: ?2.oo Wrappers at Ji.so : 75 i. 50 1 35 1. 00 .75 1 40 1-20 I.05 1.00 .So 55 Don't overlook the big shirt waist sale 1 5c land up. WHEAT SITUATION etitsch's Big Department Store Corner Main and Alta I City Brevities I Sharp for paper hanging, Iters' supplies at Neumau's. Sharp's artistic wall paper. tfc best bread, get Itohrraan's. Irou going to Lehman Springs? Merries l.y the crate at Kem- R.'jln pens at half price. Kra- don't you go to Lehman at the Domestic Fresh fruits at Kemler's, Kresh fruit daily at Martin's. Best shoe work at Teutsch's. Kresb ranch eggs at Kemler's. Dining tables $5 and up. Rader's. Ladles' half soles 40c. Teutsch's. , Fresh fish, game and poultry. Cas ties. Get your clothes cleaned at Juer i ger a. stationery and office supplies. Fra-zlcr's. for tabulator on lerg v. anted I extra charge iDdcrwood. It fall 'o read the Underwood hiter aJ in this issue. po silguuy used ior saie cueap. I Empire Piano House. tlved dally, fresh tamaies, land crawfish at Gratz's. ly different styles of extension I from $5 to $30. Rader's. have fruit Jars and fruit jar mbtiers covers, etc. It. Rohr- fct sheet music. 10c, 15c. 25c l!5c Inland Empire Piano lid below cost all summer, mil- especially patterns. Mrs. 1 meat in summer must be care of That's the kind you i I Houser's, Alta street, opposite ki Bank. ! It forget our standing offer months' free Instruction given iery piano sale. Inland Em- ano House. PROSPECTS ARE FOR A TROUBLED MARKET. Divergence Between the Vlew of the Farmers and the Buyers Local Price Nearly as High as the i-iverpool Quotation No Agree. ment Among Farmers as to the Yield Barley Crop Is Short. The wheat situation Is as badly uuxeu up as a pot of mush, but mere are three things that arc evl ueni: mat tho crop Is short, the Prices high, and the farmers nre still uoimng for more money. .Mill feed Is way up in the air, bringing from Sis tn Sin fnr hr.ni. and from $19 to $20 for shorts. This In itself has an effect in hold-ir.-; the price of the mills In the top notch, for they enn afford to pay high for the grain when they will get such prices both for the outslcic and the Inside of the kernel. As long as the mill feed keeps so high the mills can afford to nay more for their I wheat without straining the earning capacity or the grain. ' Tho local lirlrn nf tho irnln la mm- i npnrK. nc l.fnl. no u I r ..t, ,ubi, uo nit- ijuuutwuus ut I the Liverpool market, and It may go higher, though In tho estimation of i the mill men the rise will not be I many cents. The mills In tho city I are paying from 6S to 70 cents, but I the wheat must he good for this price. 1 On the other baud, tho oxnort mar ket gives the growers from (14 to 65 cents for their grain. Hut what the market will be In the future It is hard to say, for the farmers nre wanting more than is now given and are holding that slnco the crop I? so light they should haw enough 10 j equalize the loss. It remains to be seen whether or not they will be able ' to convince the buyers of the equity i of their claims, but they think that I they will, and that is half of the bat at tie, especially If they hold to that view long enough. Lnst year the county produced auout 3,750,000 hushels, and that was Have your shoes repaired Teutsch's. Wanted Machinist and moulder at Rlgby-Clove Foundry. Try the Palm, 221 Court street, ! estimated to be 20 per cent short of (or nuts, candles and fruits , a full crop. This year some of the For Sale Good driving horse gen-' me" ,hat the yleW wln be 33 1-3 tie to tide; 025 Cedar street ' I ')er fent sllort of last year- " ,ne Tonio ,. . , I uiui uuuu some ciuim uiiti mi" yieni Tents, camp stoves, camp stools, . .,,, be mupll ,..., - ,. ls har(1 j to make an estimate of what Is right. ii i!ijciiue uu uir llla)Ubiui'll uiiii uiu to! irvesters Supplies etc., at Rader's Furniture store. Reduced prices on Hammocks I i iuiic uui uaiauce 01 siock. .01t 8. Ml Pieferlda, the best cigar made, at Rees' cigar store. Court street. All kinds of Imported and domestic ! lunches and clam chowder at Gratz's. Don't let cigars get the best of you get the best of cigars. Hanlon's. See Charles Lane about your paint ing aud paper hanging, S07 Vincent street. We don't intend to "carry over" a single hammock. Prices mean some thing. Nolf's. We are showing the largest and best line of tablets in Pendleton. In vestigate. Nolf's. Estimates given on short notice on painting nud paper hanging. Charles Lane, the pioneer painter, 807 Vin cent street. Wanted An office girl who ls a good penman and has some knowl edge of bookkeeping. Apply at Do-j mestlc Laundry. It Pays to Trade at The Peoples' Warehouse We had expected to carry over some of our Sum mer Goods, but the end of our Clearing Sale leaves us with so few on hand we have decided to close them out entire, and with that aim in view we shall sell what is left of our 12 t-2c Lawns and Dimities at 7c 20c Figured Dimities and Lawns at n 10c 25c Summer Dress Goods at i... J 2 -2c JO Percales at , . 5c 25c Scotch Sephyr Ginghams at . 161 -2c 20c bolt of lace, J 2 yards, at JOc 25c Bolt of Lace, 12 yards, at 12 l-2c 3c Laces by the yard at 1 l-2c 5c Laces by the yard at 3c 6c Embroideries at 4c 9c Embroideries at 6c 12 l-2c Embroideries at fic In the Shoe Department $1.50 Ladies' Canvas Oxfords at 39c $1.75 and $1.50 Chocolate Oxfords at 90c Boys' Canvas Shoes, sizes 9 to 13 1-2, at 95c Children's and Misses' Slippers . All Reduced enmlltlnn nf the mnn nnil t'l-nni wlinl . .. ..... .. " t.,,.. I t I'un oi wiu couuiy uu nuns. , uue man win come in niui tell that he is raising 35 '"t.shels, and the next man will haul in n long face and a wagon load of empty sacks and say that his place is not going mev nine bushels. So it goes, and so it will gi until the harvest Is over and the wheat be gins to come into the wniehouses here In good earnest. As yet there has no samples come In to amount to anything, and very little of the grain Is being hauled, and not until tho end of tho week will the hauling commence. Even then it may be light lor if the price has not advanc ed some of the large growers who can afford to hold will not bring their wheat to the market. Darley Is also short, aud Is clear out of sight when It comes to price, and yet the farmers will not sell. Last year at this time the mills could get all the barley they could use at money back if it dou't wake P That is the euarantee we plve with our alarm clocks. We I 'beni in many varieties. Don't ' good gold watch out in the st Held We can Bell you a re- tlraekeener In rlitmn rase lust IMiig for the harvest field. If pe It you are only out a dollar r- ou cau't afford to neglect Itjee. We have smoked glasses, protectors and goggles. rs 'our watch need renairiug? ppalr department ls thoroughly rro and our work guarantees 1 70 cents, but this Hr.iHon they frjr On a Business Visit. , S5 tentg lM van, T,e j-ioltl i? going W 1- Crawford, Northwestern i tiom 10 to 40 bushels, which Is pret manager of the Elaterite Rooting I ty slim for that coieni. Another Company, with headquarters at Port-! thing that will keep the grain up is laud, Is in the city today on a visit I the sale at Dayton of 200,000 sacks to the cities In this territory. Mr. I for 1 cent a pound. This was brew Crawford ls highly pleased with the I barley, but it will he a good pat business piospects for his roofing in, tern ror the rest or the crop, this city. He has secured the con- The wheat will go from 0 to 3t tract for placing the roof on the new I bushels and In some parts of the nnrvomi in hi nir on weuu sireei, . muntv more 10 me win. niuuuu The Peoples Warehouse Outfitters for Women and Men. and will place others as the building season nrogresses. The Thompson Hardware Company roofing In this city. handles the tUNZIKER THE JEWELER and OPTICIAN Something Doing. For the three months endlug July SI W J. Homer, agent for the In 1 dlana State Life Insurance Company, In this city, leads tho list of seven agents in the Northwest, having writ ten $112,000 worth of Insurance. Between 700 and 800 descendants of the Pilgrim John Alden, immor tallzed by lnigfellow. are holding a reunion at Duxbury. Mass Pilot Rock Tutul la and Echo and that part of tho county, tho yield will be short from 10 to 20 bushels ami It Is said not many of tho acres will get to the 20-bushel mark; nut as the land goes back toward the mountains the wops are heavier as they alwuys are. and that part or the county will snve the day. From all tho reports it Is estimated that tho yield will ho about 2-3 per cent of a full crop, of wheat to the acre and that me To Seaside Resorts and Return, grain was of good quality and clean. i,-,. nm u)(lu. occasion the (j, it. it would weigh on the average about i k lS- ,k'b special rale of $10 to 140 pounds to the sack. The district ( nll. ,)t following Heasldo resorts about his place was all about tbeiand return: Seaside, flearhart Park, same In yield, and the harvest wub , Holmiui's Sea View. Nowtons. Inig nearly over lly the end of the week most of the farms would either be threshed, or the machines would be In tho fields. As soon as the grain Is all cut the larmers will begin to haul to tho waichotibcs, though some of them will have a disposition to hold lor higher prices In the market. TUTUILLA WHEAT. WHEAT IN WAREHOUSES. F a package of good quality ras wax, ior canning 10c. otmnc lib, u mL-Pf fsk j - ttiui uaa uiu in 25c. Poison Fly Paper: en sheets in a package. Each package will kill a quart o( Ihcs. 5c. Imported Select Insect Pow der: the kind that gives sat isfaction. A z oiince package 10c. KOEPPEN'S DRUG STORE lSt.i.-troniMt.i Mi t tou-iml the Court H I About Six Hundred Sacks Are Com ing In Daily. ( The warehouses aro beginning to receive wheat from all parts or the I nearby wheat belt, but as yet they have not begun to hiiy. i m export quotations ate from 04 to Oi cents, and for this sum the fanners will not sell their grain at tills time at least. About 000 sacks aro coming Into tho warehouses each day now, and this will Increase as fast us tin- harvest Is over Until tno market settles and tho mills have their fill of tno grain and the farmers have to rail back on the export trade, there will not be much wheat bought at the warehouses, though they will buy to a limited ex tent for the milling trade. FIVE MILES NORTHEAST. Will Run From Ten to Twenty Bush els Harvesting Well Under Way. A. C. Larson, of the Tutullla coun try, was hauling some of his wheat to the mills hero today. H says that tho wheat of that part of the county will average from 10 to 20 bushels to the acre, nnil that It Is all of good quality. However, theio Is some smut In that pait of the county, und much of the wheut has to lie washed before it Is used in the mills, in spite of this the wheat Is plump and or good weight, and what there Is of It Is of tho best quality. Tho harvesting In that part of llm county Is now under way and will bo over In a short time, but the wheat may not begin to move towards the city for some time for tho growers that can hold, are or the mind tliut tlioy should have more for their wheat In view of tho sliortuge In tho crop, and the resultant greater local demand. Yet If the market now Is as high bh It will be, tho farmers will sell rather than hold all the year. Grant Elgin's Wheat Averages Thir ty Bushels and Quality Good, Oraut Elgin, one or the prosperous tanners about five miles northeast of the city, fame to town today to re turn some of the sacks that ho had not filled In the harvest, and to trans act business In tho city. Ho leports that his farm averaged 30 bushels Will Visit Michigan. II O. liurroughs left this afternoon for Grand Rapids, Mich., where ho goes to visit his parents, Mr liur roughs has been for some time past tho night agent at the O U, k N depot, and Is now taking his vaca tion. He lias not been to his home Kim.e the KimuIkIi war. having en liuinii nmi I'lme to the Islands and i.eive.1 there for the term. Since re turning to this country he has been in tho iimiilov of the railroad and has not had a vacation. Reach. Tlogn, Tho IlrenkeiH, Cran berry, Ocean Hide, I.ooihIb, Ocean Park and Nahcotta. Call at O. It, & N. ticket olllce and get one or those Restful Recreation Resort circulars of tho Pacific Northwest, giving full details of these resorts. Showing tho splendid scenery while Inking a trip down tho Columbia river on tho O. It. & N. Co. excursion steamer, T. J. Potior. Kor further Information call on or address F. F. WAMSLEYi Agunt. THE NOLF STORE Another large shipment of new and stylish tablets. Prices range from ioc to joc, $ SiVcs, note, packet and letter, n '15 10 9 VUK each MliKK IS 1 A Partial List Introducing Pairs of New .Boughs Shoes n it 1: Hi i I '.V Royal Hngliiili lloiul. Old Holland Linen New Flax. Coliweh Fibre Lancaster Linen. Currency Ilond. Crushed llond, Imperial China Silk. Royal Mail India Ciaiif Sovereign lloiul Kiiipie&s of India, etc s s ft s i ft The Very Latest Tablets g Full Ltue of School liookt aud ---! 1 Do you want to see them? Glad to show then) Boston Store I jA Nice, Jtiicy Steak in jul tho thing linn weullior. 1 1 iB too hot to roast or boil muiit IK'nIl or phono MIESCKE ,110 K Coitit l'lioue lied Sill i ; ; i i t ; X ;