East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, May 11, 1904, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    PAGE
PAGE SIX.
DAIL" EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1904.
G. 0. P
KoS
$3
BOILS
LL NO S
SHERW1N&
in
I
!t
BUY THE
j UbOl OubUO
1 From I
I MSI I
I The SEEDSMAN '
Good Stock of Sweet Corn
Cabbage Plants
Bedding Plants
Pansies
Geraniums
Asters
Chrysanthemums
Double Petunias
Dahlias
Gladioli
Now Located at
THE WHITE FRONT,
217 Court Street.
LARGEST CONVENTION EVER
HELD IN STATE lO CONVENE.
Delegates and Alternates, to National (
Convention to Be Chosen City Full
of Candidates for the Nominations.'
Springfield, 111., May 11. The Illi
nois republican convention here to
morrow will be the largest ever held
in this state. There nre plenty of in
dications that it will also be one of
the liveliest. In nddition to choosing
delegates at large and alternates to
the national convention, the con
vention this year is called upon to
nominate candidates for governor
and other state officers to be voted
for this fall. The selection of dele
gates to the Chicago convention and
the indorsement of President Roose
velt will be little more than a form
ality. AH interest centers in the
nominations for state offices. The
city is alive today with candidates
for the nominations. Their friends
are also here In force.
The first candidate In the field
against Governor Yates was Col.
Frank O. Lowden of Chicago. Col.
Lowden Is a son-in-law of the late
George M. Pullman, the palace car
builder. During the last five or six
years he has encaged actively in pol
itics, but has never held public of
fice. Col. Lowden has brought all
his guns to bear against the republi
can state machine and his campaign
has been as active in all repects as
has that of Governor Yates. The
latter has been at odds more or less
with the present national administra
tion and it was expected when Col.
Lowden entered the race for the gov
ernorship he would receive valuable
support from Washington. Evident
ly, however, these expectations have
not panned out very well, for the talk
of federal patronage has failed to at
tract any great number to the Low
den camp, and furthermore. Senators
Cullom and Hopkins have declined to
interfere in the contest.
I
I
I
RED BOY MINE SOLD.
"runaway team.
Is sure to do more' or less damage to
carriage, but whether you need re
pairing from accident or ordinary
wear and tear, bring your vehicles to
Ncagle's. While our reputation Is
-widespread for doing all kinds of re
pairing In the best manner at lowest
prices, we feel, sure that there are
a few good people who don't know
tkat we are unexcelled In our line,
and we want them to know us.
We have the Winona wagons and
Hex bnggies, the best produced In the
world. Call and see our line of rigs
NEAGLE BROS
the Blacksmiths.
Stover Gasoline Engines, safe and
reliable.
CANTY'S PARLORS
OF AMUSEMENT
Open day and night. Billiards,
Pool, Shooting Gallery, Bowl
ing Alleys, Throwing Racks.
Good music every evening.
BASEMENT, CORNER MAIN
AND WEBB STREETS.
Under W. & C. R. Depot.
Famous Baker County Property
Brings $80,000 Under the Ham
mer. !
Baker City. May 11. Following an
order from Circuit Judge Eakln, of
this district, the famous Bed Boy
mine was sold under the hammer
yesterday evening, to the Chicago
syndicate represented by Alexnnder
Prosing, for JS0.0UO. the sum of $4.
000 being deposited on the purchase
price.
Prosing is the minority trustee of
the old Red Boy company, and bid
in the property for the purpose of
getting control in hopes of re-selling
nt a profit to clear the indebtedness
held against it by his company.
The company will Immediately be
gin development work on the mine,
and will open up two lower levels,
which have been unused for some
months. It will cost at least S&O.noo
to prosecute this work, but the com
pany believes the returns will repay
the outlay, and the management Is
anxious to put the mine in shape to
sell well.
PYRAMIDS OF PAIN
Most Plentiful and Troublesome
During Spring' and Summer.
It takes warm weather to bring out the hidden impurities,
humors and poisons in the system and stir up the sluggish
blood, and this is why boils are so common in Spring and
Summer. They sometimes come singly, but oftener in
pairs and triplets, and even 1:1 bundles ana clusters, ana
'! generally upon the tenderest part or tlie ooay. x ney are
Wlfsi. 4 the most nainfttl of all skin eruptions, and the blood is in
' a tunnoU ancl ll,e system in a feverish commotion from
tytSb'' ' the time these volcanoes of misery begin to form until they
burst and the matter is all discharged. But lucky is the unfortunate sufferer who gets oft with
only one boil, for even if another does not follow immediately, the poison that is left in the
blood is bound to collect somewhere else and break through the skin, and these p3-ramids of
paiu may be coming and going all through the Spring and Summer.
)Some people have a:i idea that boils are good for the health, that they are evidences that
the blood is too rich, but nobody's blood ever gets too rich; neither are boils conducive to
health. Irwpoverishcd or polluted blood, or a riotous, feverish condition of this vital fluid
causes boils, carbuncles, and other dangerous skin eruptions.
T -inrr-fwnfi'miBil ciol-tlr.ee lonvpc t1ir Vilrwl tnn wpnlr BOILS FOR OVER 15 YEARS.
-"""j J"'i'1-J- . ,
and sluggish to throw off the bodily impurities and re
lieve the system of the waste and refuse, which then
concentrates at some spot and a carbuncle or boil is
the result. To one already enfeebled by disease boils
seem to come with more frequency, causing the intens
est pain and greatest danger to the already weak and
debilitated sufferer.
All skin eruptions, from the sometimes fatal car
buncle to the spiteful little cat-boil, are caused by bad
blood, and the only way to avoid or get permanently
rid of them is to purify and build up the deteriorated, polluted blood, and counteract the
humors and poisons, and nothing will do this so quickly and thoroughly as S. S. S., which
is the acknowledged king of blood purifiers and greatest of all tonics.
Where theblood has become impoverished and is poor and thin no medicine acts so prompt
ly in building it up and restoriugits richness, purity and strength. The time to cure n boil is
before it develops, when it is in a state of incubation or formation in the blood, for boils are,
after all, only the impurities and poisons bubbling up through the skin, and this will continue
in spite of poulticing and lancing till the blood gets rid of its accumulated poison. The way
to stop boils is to attack them in the blood, aud this is what S. S. S. does. All danger of boils
is past when the blood has been ttiorougniy punnea ana
the system cleansed of all morbid, impure matter. If you
are subject to boils, then the same causes that produced
them last season will do so this, and the sooner you begin
to put your blood aud system in good order the better the
chance of going through the spring and summer season
without boils or other painful and irritatincr skin eruptions.
S. S. S. is guaranteed purely vegetable, aud can be taken with perfect safety by old and
young, and without harm to the most delicate constitution. It is mild and pleasant in its
action.and unequalled as a cure for boils aud kindred eruptions.
Write us if 3'ou would like advice from our physicians or desire any special information;
this will cost you nothing. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, CA.
WILLIAMS
PAINT
ONLY PLACE IN PENDL,
TON TO GET IT.
PAINTERS' MATERIALS
ALL KINDS.
E. J. MURPHY
Court St
Ocntlenien : For overflf teon years I hare suffer
cd more or less from Impure Blood. About a yoar
aso I had a boil ocpear on my lee below tbo knoa,
which was follov.-od by throe more on my neck, i
I saw S. S. S. advertised and docidod to try it. After
taking three bottlco all Bolls disappeared, and I
have not been troubled any since. I feel deeply
indebted to S. 3, fa. for tbo excellent health I am
enjoyine, as I have not folt so well In twonty
years. You have cortainly placed mo under many
obligations, and I must say that I will olways
have proat faith In S. S. S.
GEO. C. FEimG,
114 W. Jefferson St., Louisville, Ky.
NOTICE
TO ALL MY FRIENDS AND
PATRONS:
I TAKE PLEASURE IN
INTRODUCING TO MY
FRIENDS, DRS. L. L. AND T
H. WHITE, TO WHOM
HAVE SOLD MY DENTAL
BUSINESS IN THIS CITY. I
THOROUGHLY RECOMMEND 1
THE DRS. WHITE AS FIRST
CLASS DENTISTS IN EVERY
RESPECT, AND WILL ES
TEEM IT A FAVOR FOR
ANY OF MY PATIENTS TO
PLACE THEIR CASES IN
HANDS OF THE DRS.
WHITE.
RESPECTFULLY,
E. A. MANN
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
DISCUSS COTTON.
' Cotton Manufacturers' Association in
i ' Session.
I : Washington, D. C. May 11 The
critical condition of the cotton manu
; i factlirlng industry, due to high
ml
If you are interested In Oil
Painting, see us. Our line Is
complete.
ACADEMY BOARDS
8TRETCHEP.S
BRUSHES I
ARTISTS' SAI'LES I
BLENDERS J
SKY BRUSHES ;
PLAQUES 5
TUBE COLORS I
We make a specialty of
framing PICTURES. Newest Z
stock of frames.
C. C. SHARP
Opera House Block.
Drink
ESCENX
REAM.
OFFEE
It Is Fine
prices of the raw material and the
troubles in the Chinese market, is to
be thoroughly discussed at the con
vention begun here today by the
American Cotton Manufacturers' As
sociation. There will also be papers
hv einerts in every branch of the in
dustry, among the speakers and their
subjects being the following: R. M.
Miller, Jr., Charlotte, N. C, "Fine
Cotton Yams;" Professor R. C. Car
penter, Cornell University, "The Cost
of Power;" J. W. Norwood, Green
ville, 8. C, "Cotton Manufacturers'
TlnT.1. AAwnntDH P 17 rJnwnll rhlof
uuuiv "."i ...... ... f
engineer United States Geological,
Survey, "Forests and water rowers;'
W. L. Well. Vlcksburg, Miss., "Staple
Cotton;" William Hayes. Auburn,
Me., "An Improvement in Cards;"
Theodore H. Price, New York, "Eco
nomic Methods in the Purchase of
Raw Material."
W. C Heath of Monroe, N. C, pre
sided over the opening session this
morning and the principal address
was delivered by Hon. George B. Cor
telyou, secretary of tho department of
commerce and labor.
Nebraska G. A. R. lnual state encampment of the Grand
Kearney, Neb., May 11. Kearney i Army and the meetings of the afUli
is being flooded today with old sol- ated organizations. Tho attendance
diers and members of the Women's! is large, and the encampment, which
Relief Corps, Ladles of the G. A. R-i continues until Saturday, promises to
and Sons and Daughters of Veterans, be one of the most successful over
The occasion Is the twenty-eighth an- held In Nebraska.
I IN t Alio 2 LB.
, SEALED TINS ONLY
jThe Arlington
I J. L. SHARON, Proprietor.
i
i The Arlington Is a hlglwlass
.rooming house, equipped with olec
I ,rir. ti-htB fr baths and all mod
ern conveniences. It is centrally
located, being on Main street., three
doors north of Hotel St. 'George,
jver the Delta candy store. Rooms
by the day, week or month. Rates
30c to tl jx day. 618 Main etreet
Phone Red 1091.
Dt You Receive These Wireless Messages?
They Are About Your Health.
When your health goes the least bit wrong, a wireless message
is sent to your brain.
It says something like this
"You are not quite well-take a dose of
BEECHAM'S PILLS
at onco and It will put you right."
Do you attend to these messages when you receive them?
You should d s., liEECHAM'S PILLS often prevent a serious
illness, and so prove themselves
"WORTH A GUINEA A BOX."
Sold Everywhere In Boxes, lOc. and 28c
DITCH SURVEY BEGINS.
Pine Creek Irrigation Company Will
Reclaim Hudson Bay Land.
Surveyors, under the direction of
H. E. Marble, of North Yakima, yes
terday commenced the preliminary
work on a new ditch which is to be
construction in the Hudson Bay coun
try by the Pine Creek Irrigation Com
pany, of which Frank W. Paine, John
G. Paine and Chris Bowers are the
incorporators.
The first surveys were made this
morning and the engineers will pros
ecute the work as rapidly as possible,
The ditch will be about 20 miles In
length and will be commenced at the
end of the ditch constructed by tho
Freewater and Hudson Bay Irrigation
Company.
It will extend through a largo por
tion of the high lands In that localltv
and will end blow what is known as
the "Big Slide" on the Touchet river.
BECOMING
A MOTHER
u
an
ordeal which sll
women approach with
indescribable fear, for
nothing compares with
the pain and horror of
child-birth. Thethoucbt
of the suffering and danger in store for her, robs the expectant mother
of all pleasant anticipations of the coming event, and casts over her &
shadow of gloom which cannot be shaken off. Thousands of women
have found that the use of Mother's Friend during pregnnncy robs
confinement of all pain and danger, and insures safety to life of mother
nd child. This scientific liniment is a god-seiid to all women nt the
time of their most critical trial. Not only does Mother's Friend
carry women safely through the perils of child-birth, but its Ufe
gently prepares the system for the coming event, prevents "morning
sickness," and other dis-
s,T?,Mft'rcsi MOTHER'S
tx.oo per bottle. Book " m m mmaim m w
containing valuable information free. jffl3b XMtt W Fff
Hm Bradfield Relator Co., Atlanta. Ca. T WW sfJUt sfV MJf
State.
Supreme Judge Thomas O'Dsj.
Dairy and Food Commlssioiier-S.
M. Douglas.
Presidential Electors John JL
Jeffrey, T. H. Crawford, W. B. Dilte
and J. II. Smith.
District.
Congress, Second District J. I
Simmons.
District Attorney, Umatilla ul
Morrow J. H. Haley.
Joint Representative. Morrow iti
Umatilla F. B. Holbroolc.
County.
Judge G. A. Hartman.
Sheriff T. D. Taylor
Clerk J. E. Cherry
Assessor C. P. Strain.
Commissioner William Lloyd.
I Representatives W. D. CitaUf
lain and William Blakelcy
School Superintendent W S.
Mayberry.
Surveyor C. C. Berkeley
Treasurer S. G. Lightioot.
Ilocorder W. H, Fowler.
Coroner Dr. T. M. Uendersit.
Precinct.
Justice of the Peace S S. rv
nell.
Constable John M. BentlfJ.
Republican Ticket
For Presidential Electors.
W. V. Hampton
J. N. Hart
W II. Gore
, James A. Fee
For Supreme Judge:
"Justice F. A. Uoort
For Food and Dairy Commlsslotw
Maryland Republicans.
Baltimore. Md., May 11. The Mary
land republican convention to choose
,inifntnu tn tho national convention
at Chicago was opened hero today.
The platform will inuorso .rremaeni
Roosevelt's administration, and tho
delegates at largo Senator Louis E.
ifr'mnnu PonirreHsman William H.
Jackson, General Follx Agnus and
Stevenson A. Williams wm do in
structed to vote for him.
New Head of Case School.
Cleveland, O., May 11. Professor
Charles 8- Howo wns today Inducted
ir. m ns iiri'Hlilent of tho Caso
School of Applied Scioncos. Tho in
auguration ceremonies were partici
pated in by leading oducators from
many parts of tho country.
Women's Headaches
M2 1-2 Congress Street.
Poutlajii), Maine, Oct. 17, 1902.
I consider Wine of Cardui superior to any doc
tor's medicine I ever uicd and I know whereof I
speak. 1 suffered for nine months with suppressed
menstruation which completely prontratoil we.
Pain would shoot through my back and sidvs and I
would have blinding headaches. My limbs would
swell Up ana 1 wouia irei bu wttn i wow
stand up. I naturally felt discouraged for I
seemed beyond the halp of physician, but Viine
of Cardui came as a God-send to me. I. felt a
change for the better within a week. After nine
teen Says treatment 1 menstruated without sut-
t : .. nrnmiui T noiinllv liifl nnil armn became
resufar and without pain.
Wine of Cardui is simply wonderful and 1 wish that au sunor
isg women knew of iU good qualities.
v TreMuror, PortUnd Economic League.
Headaches are the danger signals of coming disease. Both men nod
-mn miffr headaches, but periodical headache fails only to the lot of
3ZS amUs tbmferring sigEof irregular menstruation and bearing down
rSs omDleteirprMtratr by nine months of mppresed menses, blinded
Fu i Ph 33 with pain Mrs. 8now was made a strong and
S wi SaSBeSS with Wine of Cardui no case is bolcss
bemuse AUKrcHt remedy cures permanently nineteen out of every twenty
e Tand ef fails to benefit a caso of irregular menses, bearing down
WINECARDUI
1 T W 'RallpV
For Prosecuting Attorney
G W. Phelps
For Joint Representative
I Dr. W. G. ole
For Congressman In Second
J. N. Williamson
For Iteprcsentnties;
John J. Balleray
Henry Adams
For County Judge:
i Henry J. Bcnn
'For County Clerk:
Frank Sallng
i For Sheriff:
C. A. Barrett
For Treasurer:
H. J. Sommcrvllle
For Recorder:
W. H. Folsom
For Assessor:
W. T. Rlgby
For Commissioner:
Horace Walker
For School Superintendent:
Frank K. Welles.
For Coroner:
) Dr. A. W. Botkin
, For Surveyor
, j. W. Kimbrell
For Justice of Peace, Pcndletcr
i trICtThomas Fitz Gerald
iFor Constable:
F. W. Earnhart -
I PROHIBITION TICKET.
District. ,
M. V. Howard J'S't
tlve Morrow and Umatilla
County.
N A. Davis. R0PrC8enta"'tlvf.
Robert Warner, RepreUve
G. W. Rlfiby, J" coma!-
! F H. Richmond, Couno
Uonvcr Dickenson. Sheriff
' w A Banister. County Cler.
, J IK Lcezer, Recorder
, a O. Richardson, Coroner
WO"-" ..Mr
beet
f three time
.ni lw t
V" ...turpi
Ida'
trial
need more
lotter &'"
- JilV"
and Susr '
. .hot VI'
I in
, less than
under
said Mr
i been '
U.-Bolse