Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1904)
PAGE SEVEN. I PAGES. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN; PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1904. Lace Curtains and Bed Spreads we will make a special showing of lace curtains and ThU wteK u.cnmr rfefilnns. and at Drlces way below PERSONAL MENTION. I ace r-rtalns 3 yards long, $1.00 per pair. I -..m 3 yards long, better quality, $1 50 per pair. -"vv ai u9fric inno. orciiy ucsiuns. .uu ucr oi h laltie. JVfl T ' . . - Lali(. ,rHe lono. very wide. 5Z.50 ner pair. uce Curtains, yz i 0 i- $3 00 $3-50, $4.00, 55.00 ana D.uu uunains are remarKaoie values. Bed Spreads, 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.25 to $5.00 each. See window. SEE WINDOW LEE TEUTSCjH'S I BIG STORE, COR. MAIN AND ALTA oai City Brevities . -.-..ik.1 ml will not nl- ways bring about a miracle; tut It will usually secure for jou a good servant which Is something near It. c 1M hats at the Boston. C C Ittder Get Sunny. Fresh fruit dally at Martin's. Bojs' clothing, Baer & Daley. Weinhard's beer at The Mint. Closing out dry goods. The Bos- Xw neckwear at Sulllvau & IxrcjUs and Hanan shoes. The Kcitas for fuel, successor to Hirtjou seen our new sweaters? Several loads of cinders for the . ... ..now nnvl tint rnira look at our line. Sullivan & Bond. e. Alexander Department Store. s office. ssei at Joerger's, 126 West auieu tame to laKe wiui our to casture in the mountains. and cold water and bath room (.-wvu, uciu uuu uunci fi IT! hllll. 1. A 11 r-aouuB mock ana sure to pro- n,. j. .... ?. . vui bcvus are amiable to mis j s: for the asking we will the correct time. Our tflulates the schools, the d everything Import- the city. "me Is the correct time r-.-v. wn nme-Keepers rrect. r In our store or call us J .n pu0ne and w will u H about them. HUNZIKFR 6 Main Street Get Sunny. TJ " Hader. New spring shirts. The Boston. Pure Welnnard's beer at The Mint. New line men's sweaters. The Boston. Dine at the St. George. Everything first-class. McAdams for dry wood. 'Phone Main 1211. Great bargains in shoes at Alexan der Department Store. Smokers get satisfaction at How ird's. formerly Rees' ciga, store. For Rent IJght housekeeping rooms, apply G12 Thompson street. The Sahlln corset, pompadour bangs and hair goods at Mrs. Camp- pell's. Ladles, attend the 19c bargain sale this week. Alexander Department Store. Murbles, baseball goods, striking bags, boxing gloves, tops, bicycles. Nolfs. 19c buys the Pony Stockings for boys and girls. Alexander Depart ment Store. Teutsch Is offering 97 hats, broken lines, regular $3 and $3.50 values, to close at $2.00. Sullivan & Bond can fit you with a shirt that you'll like, no matter how small or large you are. A fine high grade piano for sale cheap; must be for cash. Address 113 care Ea- Oregonian. Wanted To buy 15 head of choice dairy cows. See or address S. M. Richardson, Pendleton, Ore. Men'i hats cleaned and b.oeked; clothes cleaned and pressed. J. J. Comegys' 222 East Court street. Whether you live to eat or eat to live your cook should have good fuel. Only the best sold by McAdams. Dry wood, Keramerer coal, good measure, fair weight, reasonable prices, prompt delivery. McAdams, phone Main 1211. Wanted To rent part or whole of furnished house. Will consider un furnished house also. Address John T. Whistler, Hotel Pendleton. DEATH OF MRS. WILSON. Passed Away From Brlght'6 Disease at Home on Cosble. Mrs. Hattle Wilson, the mother of John Wilson, of the Peoples Ware- iim.Qi, riiori fit the lamuv uome on Cosble street, early this morning. after a long Illness irora unguis ms ease. tiiu AafaneoA wis r.9 years of age at the time of her death, and has been a resident or this cuy ior me past four years, coming here from m.irfio, niit-inc; rniintv. where the family had lived from the time of coming to this state irom Wisconsin In 1858. . ., . , Mrs. Wilson leaves a family of six children: Mrs. Jennie Wilson, of Sclo; P. A. Wilson and Mrs. Ora Harmon, of Riddle. The funeral arrangements have not as yot been completed, as all of the relatives have not been heard from. Date for Final Hearing. County Judge G. A. Hartman has fixed Saturday, April 23, as the date for the hearing of the final account In the estate of Sarah A. Beely, de ceased. Weston Land Sold. William P. Rldenour and wife have sold to John P. Rldenour for $1,800, the McArthur dlralnlsbod reserve, a tract of land In Weston. D. C. Brownell, of Umatilla, Is In the city today. G. W. Kelly, of Umatilla, Is In the city for a short visit on business, Sid Saylor, the old-tlmo barber of Umatilla, Is In the city today. Volna J. White, of Weston, was a business visitor in the city today. C. A. Cooper, -of Pilot Rock, was a business visitor In the ctly yester day. Robert McCowcn, of the O. R. & N. paint crew, Is In the city from Portland. .V. H. Boyd, the merchant of Echo, was in the city yesterday for a short bcslnofs visit. Ilrs. V H. Chnstaino, of Milton, spent thr day in the city as the guest of friends. Mr. and Mrs. II. B. Allen, of Athe na, are the guests of friends In tho city for n short time. Dave Gregoire left this mroning for Adams, where he will remain on a business visit for n week. C. E. Cochran, a prominent attor ney of Union, passed through this morning to Walla Walla. A. W. Robinson, of Echo, wns a Pendleton visitor today, having come here to transact business. Mrs. Nellie Langtry, of Everett, Wash., Is ,n the city to attend the funeral of her father, O. W. Fee. E. L. Harnett, one of the promt nent residents of Athena, was In the city today on a short business trip R. L. Knox, one of the prominent wood dealers of Kamela, was In the city last evening and today on on business. M. A. Ferguson, editor of the Ad urns Advance, Is In the city today at tending the meeting of the republl can county central committee. T. H. Crawford and wife, or I'nlon, passed through this morning to Walla Walla, where Mr. Crawford Is attorney In the Stubblerleld will ense. G. W. Ruckman, the largest beet farmer In Grand Hoiule valley, was In the city between trains, this morn ing, en route to Walla Walla on bus iness. Lee Held left yesterday morning for Portland, where he Is called as a witness in the land fraud investi' gallons now being made by the fed' ernl grand jury. Neiil McDonald, one of the promt nent farmers of Adams, was a visi tor In the city today, having come in to pay his taxes and attend to business matters. Frnnels Norton, formerly car nhprkor lor the O. R. & N. in this city, now baggage master for the same company at Colfax, is in the city on a brief visit. Mrs. N. L. Skiff and Miss Meda Munsey, both of Cornucopia. Baker county passed through this morning to Walla Walla, where they will each undergo an operation at the hospital there. TWELVE WILL GRADUATE. A Fine Class Will Complete the High School Work. The high school class has doubled In the past year, and then a little. Last year the cIbbs numbered five members, and this year just an even dozen young people leave the school on commencement day. The work of the class for the past year has been a source or credit to the members and of gratification to the teachers and the patrons of the school, each member standing high In the literary work of the school, taking a lead in the athletic work, and at the same time standing high In their class records. mm... n,nn,i,n.D ni tlio nl.'iKti are Dell m,.r.,,. nroaiHPTit Chloo Stanfield Bertha Alexander, Myrtle DIzney, Will Wyrlck. Ed Jay, Fred Hartman, Roy Alexander, Fred Vincent, Se Williams, Gertrude Sheridan and Nell Jay. OLD-TIME REUBEN DANCE. Men's Good Clothes If you want good Clothes, come to a store where you will be sure to find them. We do not use the term good In a narrow sense; when we say good we do not mean simply STYLISH. We mean that the MATER. IAL must be good; we mean that the WORKMANSHIP mutt be good. We mean that the suit ALLTOGETHER must be good. We wish you to understand that this Is the Peoples Warehouse definition of the word GOOD when applied to men's clothing. Whether you want a business suit, or a dress suit, call and see us and we will be Just at well able to fit you whether you be a big man, or a little man, a tall man, or a short man, a fat man or a lean man, a young man, a middle aged man or an old man. Come and tell us what you want; we will satisfy you. Prices range from $10.00 to $25.00. The celebrated makes of Hart, Schaffner & Marx and Alfred Benjamin & Co. These names stand for the highest art In clothing. The stock Is now ready for your Inspection. yjljitdPenjamins MAKERS MtwyRK "brnr 'Clothes far Afcn i ! xi i . T-za-'h-)''' . tw rilil IHW by iltit AtBt)br A Mil a The Peoples Warehouse WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE Spring Tonic and Blood Purifier I. Sassafras Bark Tea. She ecommends It for chronic rheumatism and cutaneous erup- e n furnish you with a very .elect SASSAFRAS BARK. J "uuna Pkage; 25c pound. iiPPENS TI ,KrB, A. C. KOEPPEN 6V BROTHERS Power From the Falls. A company has been formed to ex ploit Victoria Falls, In the Zambesi, and will build a hydro electric gener ating plant, with the expectation of supplying iKiwer to the Wankie coal fields. Buluawayo, the Gwelo, Seba klve and Hartley gold fields, all of which are within 300 miles. The falls are over 400 feet high, and, while the total amount of energy running to waste at Niagara Is 7, 000,000 horsepower, the corresioiul ing figure for the Victoria Falls In the wet season is 35,000,000. The railway has now been completed to within 70 miles of the falls anil will reach them before tho end of March. Cash In Frozen Rabbits. Shipments of frozen rabbits from Australia to Ixmdon has grown to considerable Importance. In 1900 there were 2,839,112 pair. In 1903 this had Increased to 3,650,000 pair, Altogether there were utilized for tho export market during that year at least 20,000,000 rabbits, some fro zen In tho fur and the rest tinned. The rabbits are of tho variety which was introduced for Bport, which de veloped Into a pest, and now, alaln for the 'market in lots of many thous ands, Is again a "good fellow" to the Australians. Apart from the goodness of Schilling's Best U Utkiuc iOdr pit cofl flavoring CktraCII Hrik how do you like the dealing in them ? Moneyback. THE Hanan Shoes Are Here Terpsichorean Jubilation Conducted by the Eagles, mi... inni .rl of the Eagles will soon have oue of the big dances of the season at Armory Hall. It will i... .ujimu ni.ni.un dance, with old-time flddlln,' calico dresses and blue jeans pants. It win noi u mask affair, and all will have their nwn to the light OI day. There will be more fun, more pretty girls ana more buu than has been since the days when tio-i, Uo,,i-rin led the cotillion In the old hotel at Pilot Rock, The date of the grand anair u . u.,n,ii. Anrll 4. when ueeu bci iui 1 -- - . everybody is rested up from the ong Lenten season, ana uie iiuiu- runs red. Marriaae Licenses. . 1 llnnnca WflU IsSUed this afarnoon "to W. Kelly and Miss Bessie Settlemelr. The prospec tive groom is engaged In tne butcher business at Umatilla, and the lady Is well known In that city, btng also a resident there. A marriage license was issued to Harry Dunn and Miss Ezzle Baum gardner this morning. The brlde-to-be Is the daughter of a well-known fanner of the Meadows. A marriage license was Issued to Frank Smiley and Miss Mary Sund qulst this morning, by the clerk. The young man Is from Walla Walla nnd the lady is a resident of Milton. Gone to Portland. Dr. C. J. Smith left this morning j ti-i,. ,1 wIiopa lin irnt8 to &t tend tho meeting of tho state board of health and also , tho joint co'.ven.JJjg B0St0Il StO HOn Ol lllU I4UU . . , officers, who hold a meeting for mu tual benefit. BSE LADIES OF PENDLETON THE DI8PLAY OF SPRING AND SUMMER MILLINERY WE HAVE IS WINNING THE ADMIRATION OF ALL WHO HAVE SEEN IT. WE HAVE THE BRIGHTEST IDErtS OF THE FASH ION CENTERS. ALL THE NEW, LOVELY CREATI0N8 OF MIL LINERY ART. THE STYLES FOR THIS SEASON ARE WORKS OF ART, AND ARE RAR BEAUTIE8. WE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO PAY US A VISIT AND EXAMINE OUR SHOWING. a CARRIER MILLINERY THE HOME OF THE 8TYLI8H HAT. PLEASES THE TASTE Ask for GOLD LEAF Brand mm THEY ARE THE BE8T ONCE USED ALWAYS USED CoHtu Rico Coffee In one pound packages. Java and Mocha Coffee In one pound packages. For sale by all up to dnto grocers Hplces, Teas, Extracts and Baking Powder. PORTLAND COFFEE & SPICE COMPANY Portland, Oregon. j Good Tools, Lighter Labor J YOU WILL HAVE GOOD TOOLS IF YOU GET THEM OF US. GARDEN TOOLS, CARPENTER TOOLS, BUILDING TOOLS, BUILDING HARDWARE, POULRTY JETTING AND FIELD FENCING. GOODMAN THOMPSON HARDWARE CO. Successors to Thompson Hardware Co, Shoes and Clothing WHEN YOU WANT A GOOD ROOF One that won't leak. One that will bo fire-proof. One that has proven to be satisfactory under the moBt exacting conditions. One that will last. When you are aftor that kind of a roof, you'll settle down on ELATERITE ROOFING. It costs no moro than cheap, worthless paper or any other unsatisfactory class of roofing material, but It's worth more. Lt us quote prices. The Elaterile Roofing Co., 10 Worcester Block, Portland. Oregon For sale at the East Oregonlan office Large bundles of r.ewspaper, containing over 100 blp. papers, can be had for 25c a bundle.