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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1904)
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1904. PACES- PAGE SEVEN. EN - - - - Clothing and Shoe Sale flHssij 8C4 ckcsi sewn tcn.inoja, Have yon heard your neighbors talking about It? Wo have sold nearly all ot tho first lot of men's suits, and Wednesday morning BO more new up-to-date suits vlll bo placed on the bar gain table. Did you notice the reduc tion? $10.00 Suits $6.65 $7.00 Suits '! $5.50 $8.50 Suits $6.25 $12.00 Suits ' $7.90 $13.75 Suits $9.85 Over 1,500 pairs men's and women's shoes are be ing closed out at prlco. PERSONAL MENTION np Teutsch's DeDt. Store i Corner Main and Alta Streets . . nnrt riTirC .i. in mwu. ..wo nt firatz's. C Rider- uel o1""1'' s kits at the Boston, cream, the Delta kind. . i-.ti nt Mnrtln's. m threshers at Kunkel's. , tprlng shirts. The Boston. ..J Jt.l. h-.rrnn'e nt Tvtlnkfil'fl mil uiau a Piriama iatB lor .n. iaw sch. ) Panama hats, to close, $0.75. Tentsch. rsans wlshlne to ralso mules ! mares to Dig Bon. s. The Peoples Warehouse. i fl.nfrtnlnn nt Unnr. formerly Ilees clear store. ree cozen rananiu mu juat ic ed. Will be closed nt reduced Lee Teutsch, .i t.L a 1 t. L 11. n me not iruu hiuch hi. mo iuui d. and at midnight. . n.- ri.. 1 , three blocks cast of Main ck. one of the finest caterers on Dttial ratp tn Mnnnhnni nnd r- on aunaays. si.uu. luvorvuoav il.kt. r t El 211 1 lamn rrpv spa wlnrtntv o viuutuillUCU OUIttt Jf ver year, Must navo j ri tit miio l . i AlStlnp f nwlnn p. nn inn iai "w-i ouumne. I'ortlnnrt nrnirnn THE EYES Tbey are the most delicate t (Win. T or tne system and mom not be neirlecteii nr An. ""W to none but thoroughly X Practical n,i . .: Z . cAiitsnuucea opil- i ITS erAdiiataa A ft. I.. ... Ul lwo ol .uB optical colleges of f fnence makes us comnetnr va uo competent Jwect the defects of the to a sclentiflc manner. We ' (lasses Perfectly. HUNZIKER Th(l ProartMlve Jeweler. '26 Main Street. Zaclt Is In town. Get Sunny. U. C. Ruder. Wood and coal see McAdam. Got a "top coat." The Doston. Tho Delta ice cream Is delicious. SeoVItheo for (Ire extinguishers. Closing out dry goods. The Bos ton. Douglas and Ilanan shoes. The Boston. New Hue men's sweaters. The Boston. Chicken dinner and Ice cream Sun days at Gratz's. Best meals In the city served at Gratz's restauraut. Boys' clothing at wreck prices. The Peoples Warehouse. Furnished house for rent for two months, TJ. C. Itader. Men'B dress shirts at wreck prices. The Peoples Warehouse. All the latest books, muguzlnes and music, Nolf's stationery store. Clearance sale at Mrs. Campbell's. Closing out of all pattern hats. Ice cream, confectionery and ci gars nt Hatton's, 304 Court street. Mollne wagons, rubber tired bug gies, carriages and hacks at Kunkel's. The St. Georgo restaurant, open day and night. Mrs. Cooper, propri etor. Women's man tailored suits at wreck prices, The Peoples Warehouse. Got your clothes cleaned and pressed at Joerger's, 126 West Court street. Straw hats, summer underwear, linen dusters, line selection nt Baer & Daley's. Furnished room with Independent ontrance for ront, $S per month, 1002 East Court street. Good soven-room house for rent, corner Bluff and Willow streets. Call at Kemler's grocery. Straw hats, now styles and hats of other materials as well, all at wreck prices. The Peoples Warehouse. There will bo lay services at the Church of tlie Redeemer tomorrow at 11 o'clock. Sunday school at 10 o'clock. It is announced that tho Ladd's Metal Company will erect a 200-ton capacity smelter In the Seveu Devils I C. E. Bean has returned from Port land. L. N. Hart, of Wnlin wiin business visitor 1n Pendleton today. Mrs. C. L. Roderick, of Irrigon, Is visiting friends In Pendleton for n short time. Mr. and Mrs, Charles McBee, ot Echo, were the guests of friends in town today. Mrs, W. B. Hamilton, of Walla Walla, Is In town visiting friends for a short time. C.U. Freece. representative of the Spokesman-Review, returned to Spo kane this morning. Grant Horn, the sheepman of Pilot Rock, was In town yesterday attend ing the wool sales. Mr. and Mrs, L. w. Keeler, of On tnrio, are the guests ot Pendleton friends for a few days. O. R, Ball, representative of tho American Typefounders ot Portland, is a guest of the Pendleton, Misses Lorena and Jennie Bettor ley, of Weston, nre the guests of friends here for a short time. Dr. E. N. Hutchinson, of the bureau of animal Industry, Is in town for a few days on official business. B. G. Clommens, one of the well known residents of Athena, was a vis itor in Pendleton on business today. Miss Gertrude WMttcmoro Is tho guest of friends at Walla Walla, dur ing the commencement at Whitman college. Dr. D. C. McNuhb was a visitor in Weston today, having been called there to attend a friend who is criti cally 111. R. W. Dawsou of Portland, has ac cepted a place In the Krasslg & Sharp barber shop. He reached town this morning. Mrs. C. .1. Smith anil Utile daughter left this morning for Portland, whero they will lie the gue.'i of relatives for some time. Mr. and Mrs. S. Sams left last eve ning for Walla Walla, where they will be the guests of Mr. Sams' parents for a few weeks. Miss Pearl Wills one of the corps of teachers In the Pendleton schools, has gone to Weston, where she will visit for a few weeks. Mrs. Mary E. Stublilefleld, of Walla Walla, came down this afternoon to visit a few weeks at the home of R. M. Alcorn, eight miles northwest of the elty. MIhh Edith Hager, of Heppner. who has been the guest of her uncle, Dr. I). J. McFnul for a few days, left this morning lor Adams, where she will visit for a few weeks. Miss Cora Murphy, who for the past year lias been one of the teachers in the Pendleton schools, left last night for Portland, where she will spend her vacation with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Roberts, of La Grande, are In Pendleton for a Bhort visit with relatives and friends. Mrs. Roberts Is on her way home after a short stay with relatives In Heppner. Summer Outing Suits for Men and Young Men Summer Shoes for X Men and Young Men SHORTHAND BEFORE CHRIST. tills season. The Washington & Columbia River Railway Special Summer Excur sion Rates to Coast Points. Beginning June 1R, 1904, the W. & C. It. railway will have on sale tickets to Wostport. Long Beach, Clatsop Beech, Tokeland, Ilwnco, Seavlew, Ti oga, Pacific Park, Ocean Park, Nah cotta, Flavel, Gearhart and return at $10.00 for the rpund trip. For children of half fare age, one half the above rate. Tickets will be good returning until September 30th. For full Information call upon or address, W. ADAMS, , AgenL Bertlllon System Going Out. The Bertlllon system of measuring criminals Is cane out of date, 'the London nollco have found It unsatls factory and experimented with a new system. It has proved successful, nnd 1b going to bo adopted generally In England. The Berlin nollce have Inaugurated a card collection of Impressions ot thn tinners for recognition purposes, Xja system which tney can -jjaKiyiO' Perfect System Said to Have Been Irt Vogue Among Romans. "Stenography Before Christ." is the theme of an article In Cosmos, Paris. "Among the Greeks and Romans Its existence Is certain. The shorthand that they used was n form of writing In which ench word was represented by a special sign. "The letters of tho alphabet, with modifications, connected so as to ad mit of great rapidity of execution, formed tho element of these charac ters. They dale at least liom the first century before Christ. In the second century A. I), we find the term 'Kemeograplr (stenographic clisrac tor) in (lie Greek orulor, Flavins Phil ostrutuH. I "Orlgen of Alexandria (185-254 A D.i tells us that he noted his scr nums down In shorthand, and Socra tes, the ecclesiastical historian of the fourth century, says that part of the sermons of St. John Chrybostiim was preserved by '.he same process, "in the first century 11. C a dl course of Cato Utlcensls, If we may credit Plutarch, waj taken down by shorthand reporters. The develop ment of shorthand was due especially to Marcus Talllus Tiro, Born in Latl urn In 103 B, C, Tiro, who was a slave, was brought up with Cicero, who was some years his Junior. Freed, he became Cicero's secretary, and In this capacity aided him greatly. In the famous trial of Catiline (63 B, C.) the stenographic rapidity of Tiro was at its height." A Straight Tip! Kvery man who buys a Stetson Hat Makes the best kind of mi invebtnictit because every Stetson is a combination of the finest quality of materials the highest skill in workuiauship and unequalled beauty in design. The Peoples Warehouse Straw Hats for Men and Young Men Nobby Outing Shirts for Men and Young Men COMING EVENTS. June 15, 16, 17 Oregon oucamp ment G. A. n., Hood Rlvor. June 22 Thirty-second annual re union Oregon Pioneers, Portland. June 23, 24, 25 Northwest Sports men's tournament, Pendleton. August 22-27 American Mining Congress, Portland. Railroad Ties from Shoe Leather. The latest form ot railway tie Is made of leather. Tho scrap leather from shoe Bhops is taken Into a dis integrator, ground very fine, subject ed to a refining process and molded. Tho tension of the molding machine can be bo regulated that ties hard enough to take a spike or tics through which a Bplke cannot be driven can bo produced, The three great cssen- tlals In a cross tlo am apparently , found in this leather sleeper, lor it is guaranteed to hold u spike, the fish plate will not splinter In It und It will not rot. Sample ties which have al ready been down 28 months fall to show the least wear. PLUMBING ! and SEWER WORK I I HAVE A FULL LINE OF PLUMBING GOODS AND FIRST- J CLAS8 WORKMEN; ALSO MAKE SEWER CONNECTIONS. EB- J TIMATE3 FURNI8HED ON ALL WORK, WORK GUARANTEED, J T. C. TAYLOR ! "THE HARDWARE MAN." 741 MAIN ST. LOG CABIN iJb (JKjbAM. &PMa' . ortt, b, "mous Ice Cream can again be obtained at the old fa 8 Cabin soda Fountain. KOEPPens The Popalar Price! DRUG STORE A. C KOEPPEN &. BROTHERS l.M,tJUI.MJJJJJJJ.IXU.'...J The Finger Print. Tho finger print method of personal Identification seems to bo coming to the front. It has long been used as an adjunct to the Bertlllon system of measurement and now wo are told that In England It is superseding that system, being regarded as both sim pler and surer. The trouble with any measurement system Is that the meas urements of the same man taken by different persons or at different ages will differ slightly, and so the Identifi cation may fall. Finger prints, on tli iithor hand, tell their own story and are subject to no "personal equa tion"; while their system of ridges and whirls remain tho same from in- fnnev to manhood. Ill a recent n-uro- renorted In a French paper u murderer was detected through tho agency of a thumb print on the rail of a broken sash so slight a mark that It was scarcely visible hut pho tography enabled It to be studied suffi ciently for Identification. June Suc cess. Special Rates to Bingham warm springs. niiiL'hnm Warm Springs and return $1.75, limit of ticket following day from dnto of salo; $2.75 ticket In cludes your stago faro and threo monls and a bath. TIckots on sale Juno 1st to Soptembor 30th, 1304. For particulars call on or address E, C. Smith, agont O, R. & N. New Powder Without Recoil. Tests of a new powder which tho inventor claims is without recoil ui'ii nbout to be made by United States government officials. If the Inveutor'n clulm can bo proved true It will rev olutionize ordnance unci may perhups revolutionize methods of warfare Tho greatest difficulty that a maker of big guiiH has to overcome Is the recoil, which In time puts tho gun out of commission by destroying Its machin ery. The now powder, It Is said, bus no perceptible recoil, and n child may hold Its hand on the breech of a big gun when fired without fear of being Injured. "NOW HE'S TALKING" Hays Mr. Shirt: "I cortalnly feol clean splc und span aftor they aro through with mo." Tho "thoy" means In this case tho Intelligent workpeo ple at this laundry. Tho shirt's testi mony of tho excellence ot our work Is attested by hundreds who have tried It. Why not by you? Tost and attest. THE DOMESTIC STEAM LAUNDRY Potato Alcohol. i The use of potato alcohol to fur- nlsh light, heat and motive power has been developed rapidly and to a very high degree in Germany. Germany produces about 55,000,000 tonB of po tatoes u year and uses for human food, stock food and starch only about 35,000,000 tons, 'fhe remainder Is converted Into alcohol and used as a power generator for both land and wa ter motors and for cooking, heating and lighting. The alcohol vupor is burned like gas, In chandeliers and street lamps, and gives a very bright light. In districts distant from mines It Is cheaper than coal. BYERS' BEST FLOUR i Is mado from the choicest wheat that grows. Oood bread ti 2 assured when Brers' Beit Flour I used. Bran, shorts, steam roll- ed barley, always on hand. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS j W. 8. BYER8, Prop. 2 4 NOW OPEN THE NEW CLOTHING STORE 18 READY FOR BUSINESS AT CORNER OF MAIN AND WEBB 8TREET8. WE PROP08E TO MAKE OUR MARK IN PENDLETON OY" GIVING THE GREATEST BARGAIN8 IN CLOTHING, GENTS' FURNI8HINGS, HATS, CAPS AND TRUNKB EVER OFFER ED. LOW PRICES WILL BE OUR TRADE PULLER. EVERYTHING IN THE STORE 18 DRIQHT, FRE8H AND DIRECT FROM THE FACTORIES. WE WANT THE PRIVILEGE OF SHOWING YOU OUR GOODS AND TELLING YOU THE PRICES. COME IN. ONE PRICE TO ALL, t A IfVDiri vpir kti t'o "t rsf I if i Ufli lln ill IJjIm U UIjU ffllNG CO.