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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1904)
PAGE EIGHT. Celebrate the Foatth of July Right By buying a pair of our nlca, styllah, comfortable Osfords or Slip- pcrs. A now lot of Oxfords received today fresh from the factory. 5 Don't put off till the last moment to got your shoes, but como today and make a selection. J Tho baby will need a now pair of soft soled shoes or slippers, and wo can show you tho nowest and best. Remember, Ladles' Oxfords and Babies' Soft Soled Shoes and Slippers new today. ! DINDINGER, WILSON & CO. ! GOOD SHOES CHEAP. 'Phone Main 1131. The CHURCHES M. E. Church, South Rev. H. S. Shangle, presiding older of the Pen dleton district of tho M. E. Church, South, will hold the fourth quarterly conference at tho church at 7:30 this evening, and will preach at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday. Tho sacra ment of the Lord's supper will bo given at the conclusion of tho morn ing sermon. All are invited to attend. Sunday school and Epworth League at the usual hours. Congregational Church Services Sunday as follows: Sunday school at 10 a. m.; morning worship and preaching at 11. A cordial welcome to all. Jonathan Edwards, pastor. j West End Mission Corner Maple and Webb streets: Sunday school at! 3 p. m. Methodist Episcopal Church The services of this church will bo of a special character. The day will be gin with an early prayer meeting at 6:30 a. ra.; Sunday school, 10 a. m.; preaching at 11 a. m., at the close of which a class of probationers will be received into the church. Junior Lengue, 3 p. m.; at 7 p. m. a general love feast will be held. Dr. G. M. Booth, presiding elder, will preach at 8 p. m., and administer tho sacra ment of the Lord's supper. A gener al invitation is extended to all these services. Robert "Warner, pastor. Church of the Redeemer There will be lay services at the Church of the Redeemer tomorrow at 11 a. m. Presbyterian Church Morning worship at 11 an Independence Day service. Sermon: "A Nation Con scious of God's Purposes." Evening prayer at 8 a brief service of song and prayer with evangelistic sermon. Sunday school at 10 a. m. Christian Sudden Summer Sickness At this season trere Is al ways the danger of sudden at tacks from stomach and bowel troubles. It is best to be pre pared to prevent serious re sults by having always at hand a bottle of our Blackberry Balsam There Is nothing like having a good redy when It Is need ed. For tho quick relief and cure of colic, cramps, cholera morbus, dysentery and ordinary diarrhoea, it Is pleasant and may be taken by young or old. Tour .lonoy back If It falls to give satisfaction. Tallman (8b Co. LEADINC DRUGGISTS A Bank Account Drawing Interest WE RECEIVE DEPOSITS FOR ANY SUM FROM ONE DOL LAR UPWARD8. A PA8S-DOOK WILL BE GIVEN YOU WHEN YOU MAKE THE FIRST DEP08IT. YOU THEN HAVE A BANK ACCOUNT WHICH DRAW8 INTERE8T. YOU CAN ADD TO THI8 ACCOUNT AT YOUR PLEA8URE. Commercial National Bank OF PENDLETON Endeavor Societies: Juniors, at 6 p. ' ra.; Seniors nt 7 p. m. Socinl prayer service ever' Wednesday at o p. m. STEVE LEONARD RETIRES. Has Been Yardmaster In O. R. & N. Yards Here for Three and a Half Years. S. A. Leonard, who has been yard master In the O. R. & N. ynrds nt this place for tho past three and a half years, has resigned his position and will go to British Columbia, pos sibly to Jioose Jaw, to nccopt a posi tion as conductor on tho Canadian Pacific. Mr. Leonnrd has followed tho voca tion of trainman for the pnst 24 years, having come from Raton, N. M., to Oregon, four years ago. He expects to leavo Wednesday, and will possibly bo accompanied by Ralph McLaugh Hn, who has been working as' switch man tinder him for two years. MRS. ALEXANDER ENTERTAINS. No. 201 Water Street the Scene of a Beautiful Function. Mrs. R. Alexander entertnlned nt her residence, No. 201 Water street, yesterday afternoon in honor of her mother, Mrs. Charles Epplnger of Ba ker City. The following were the in- vited guests: Mrs. N. C. LaDow, Mrs. Leona Thompson, Mrs. George Hartman, Mrs. Jane Hartman, Mrs. Lina Stur- gls, Mrs. Susan Welsh, Mrs. Mary Dlsosway, Mrs. C. Matlock, Mrs. A. W. Nye, Mrs. Baum, Mrs. Max Baer, Mrs. Lee Moorhouse, Mrs. William Blakeley, Mrs. Moule, Mrs. Alice Sheridan, Mrs. Kunsle of Umatilla, Mrs. Edward Baumelster of Asotin, Wash.; Mrs. Jessie Sallng. .Mrs. Fol som, Mrs. Aura Raley, Mrs. C. A. Ep plnger, Mrs. Starkweather, Mrs. Lot Hvermore, Mrs. Jane Strahon. May Not Speak at Ukiah. Mrs. T. G. Hailey's Illness may in , terfere with the district attorney co- ! ing to Ukiah to deliver the Fourth of July oration. He will not go unless the condition of his wife should im prove. In such case his manuscript would be sent to Ukiah to be read by sorqobody else. It would disappoint a good many peoplo should be ho un able to make the trip. Tin condition of Mrs. Halloy had Improved some what this morning, and Mr. Hailey was hopeful of being able to make the trip. Fred Hamilton Improving. Fred Hamilton, the O. R. & N. bag gage clerk, who fell from a train at Weatherby last week, sustaining sen ou8 Injuries, Is partly paralyzed from the fall, and whllo he Is still in a critical condition. Is slowly improving, His left eye Is affected and his left arm is entirely paralyzed. Ho Is now at his home in La Grande. Fox Terrier 8hot. A fox terrier owned by Miss Mazie Skiles, who with her mother and brother Is a guest at the Hotel Pen dleton, was shot and killed Thursday night by some person unknown. City Marshal Carney is now looking for the offender. Tho dog was a pot, and the owner Is much grloved over her loss. ! DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, JULY 2, EAGLES' CARNIVAL RUSHING PREPARATIONS FOR WEEK OF JULY 11-16. Some of the Best Attractions Are Free Being Entirely Out of Doors The Fee Attractions Are Good, and Some of Them Extraordinary, Including a 27-Foot Boa Constrictor and the Famous Mechanical Swiss Village. Realizing that the time In which to prepare for their carnival Is brief, the Eagles nro laboring Industriously to have everything In readiness by July 11, the opening day. Charles S. Fox, advance agent of tho Dixie Car nlvnl Company, arrived in Pendleton this morning and was busily engaged both this morning and afternoon, con ferring with J. T. Hlnkle and others prominent In carnival nffalrs relative to making arrangements for tho In Btallatlon of tho various features, so as to huve everything in Bhlpshapo by the opening day. "Wherever our attractions have ap peared wo have secured good press notices," said Jlr. Fox. "There are 10 features of the show we provide, and they arc all good. Free attrac tions will bo given both In tho after noon nt 3 o'clock and in tho evening at S o'clock. They consist of Berger Bros.. In hnntl-to-hnml and head-to-head balancing and feats of strength. At 4 and 9:30 p. m. Dana Thompson will make his sensational high dive from a OG-foot tower Into a tank con talninc but four feet of water, turn ing a soniesault In the air and strlk Imr the water head foremost." The ofllcial program of the carnival furnishes the following features: The electric palace, showing the statue turning to life, an optical Illu sion taken from the myth of Pygmali on and Galatea; Trilby, tho flying wn man, who seemingly defies the laws of gravitation and floats around at pleasure; Jimmy Roberts, tho black face comedian from Kostcr & Rial's New York, and a reproduction of tho eruption of Mt. Pelee. Samson, said to be tho largest boa constrictor on exhibition. The snako Is 27 feet long and weighs 300 pounds. It Is said to have killed two men be fore it was captured. Ornamental glass blowers, who spin more than 200 articles and glvo them awny to visitors as souvenirs of the exhibition; E6au, the Egyptian, who sits in a cage surrounded by venom ous snakes, which he Is said to handle and feed on nt pleasure; the Swiss vil lage, a mechanical production show ing more than 500 automatons in per petual motion; tho laughing palace, tho Ferris wheel, the merry-go-round, Dixie land, a Malay wonder, Luna, a reproduction of the assassination of the late President Mckinley by Czol gosz, the anarchist, and other feat ures. J. H. GWINN RETURNS. Finds Feed Abundant in the John Day Country. J. H. Gwinn, the New York Life man and secretary of the Oregon Woolgrowers Association, roturned last night from a hard trip into tho John Day country. He reports tho cattle in tho pink of condition with tho price picking up from the slump of last fall. Year lings are bringing $14, 2 and 3-year- olds a proportionate price. The grass Is exceedingly good and abundant. Tho range being better than it has been at any time in the last 15 years. Mr. Gwinn' has no praises for the mountain roads from Sumptcr to tho John Day. They are in a very bad condition, the heavy rains or last winter having washed out the soil and left the roadbed filled with iooso rocks. SHIPPING GRASS BEEF. Seven Hundred Animals to the Seat tle Market. Within a fow days Jim Loncrgan. representing the Frye-Bruhn Compa ny, of Seattle, will ship 700 head of grass-fed beet from tho country near j'omeroy and Endlcntt. Ho nassed through Pendleton to that district this morning. "I expect to get all tho cattle shin ped out of thoro by July 6 or 7," said .Mr. lxinergan. "'All the cattle thero are In fine condition now. In nbout 10 days I shall return to Pendleton and will make a number of shipments irom here at that time." TOO SOON FOR DR. EDWARDS. He Did Not Preach at Spokane Three Years Before He Was Born. When tho RnV. Tlr Tnniilhira VA. Wards nicked tin a roranl leaim nf hn Spokane Spokesman-Roviow and from uu urucio aeaung with early Wash ington reminiscence, discovered that ho had entered tho CVinirri7iiMnnnl flold at tho Falls City In 1847, ho was surprised. Dr. Edwards was born in 1850 and went to Spokano in 1886. Pleasant Party at Mrs. Gwlnn's. MrS. J. II- Gwinn noalotn,! htr Mm i -".i..uu nj huh, Clara Brown, cavn n vrv nnnviiin party nt her homo on South Main last ovenlng. Progressive flinch was played and codling refreshments woro Served. Thoso nrmnnl snn Allan Ena U'lten, MIsb Edith Boyce, Miss Alma Halo, Miss Olllo Rigby, Miss xjjuua, .uibu uraco uiivor, ruri Nix dorff, Charles French, Ell Estabrook and Roland Oliver. One Drunk, Three Days. Independence Day will mark the culmination of calamities in tho Ilfo of Tom Clark. Tom got drunk yes terday and CltV Mamllltl Hnrnnv ln,1r. cd him In tho municipal bastlle. Ho was laiton neioro city Recorder Fits Gornld this morning and flno fG, with tho alternative of serving three days In tho calnbooso. TTnvInf Tlrt mnnnv Where to Celebrate. Tim rihlni'tlvo nnliita for Pondloton ' people on the Fourth or JUiy win uc Pilot Rock. Echo. Uklnh. Umatllln reservation and Wnlla Walln. A largo nnmuor will nttcnu me cele bration nt Athena, and a still largor number will go to Walla Walla on ac count of tho unusually low rate to that city ond the extra accommoaaiion iur ulshed In a speclnl train returning from Wnlla Walla to this city on Mon dny evening at 11 o'clock. It Is cstl mntml Hinf nt lnattt thrnn extra conch cs will be attached to the regular morning Spokane train, leaving here nt 0 o clock. New Field Missionary. W. W. P. Holt, professor of sclenco In Whltworth College, Tacoma, and a son of Dr. W. S. Holt, tho general Hold missionary of the Presbyterian church for Oregon, wns In tho city last n cht on routo to Baker county, where ho goes to occupy the position of Eastern Oregon Presbyterian field missionary, for tho summer, In place of Rev. B. F. Harnor. who is now pas tor of tho Presbyterian church nl Milton. .Mr. Holt's hcaduuortors will be at Baker City. Declines to Serve. Frank Rogers has found that on nc count of business reasons ho will bo unable to net ns deputy under Conn ty Clerk Sallng. His decllnntion was handed in yesterday. Mr. sallng ex pects to select n now deputy some time today. H. I). Hall, tho present deputy, will retnln his position for a month, until Mr. Sallng becomes la miliar with the duties of the position Mr. Rogers will romnin with the Kerr-Gifford Company at Athena. Flllnn Their Bonds. Wlllinm Fnlnnm. flip luuvlv pllHtod recorder of conveyances, is the first ofllcial to file his bond for the ensuing term of office. It is. In the amount of $3000, the American Surety Company of New York going ou the bond. Certificates of election and oaths of office were filed today by John W. Klmbreli, who succeeds himself as county surveyor, and B. F. Dennis, elected to servo as Justice of tho peace. Matlock at St. Louis. J. D. Matlock, of Eugene, a brother of Mayor Matlock, of this city, nnd a delegate from Oregon to tho demo crntlc natinnnl convention, wns a vis ltor at tho Oregon building nt the St. Louts fair, yesterday. It was through a mistake that J. D. Matlock was elected delegate to tho convention, Mayor Matlock, of this city, being tho mnn decided upon. Linn county con fused the nnmes and voted for J. D., taking him for tho Pendleton man. New Offices Created. In the change mnde in the O. R. & N. ofllcial circles, J. F. Graham, form erly master mechanic of the system, has been made superintendent of mo tor power, a new office, and J. H. Langloy hnd been mado master me chanic nt Alblna, and D. H. Dressier at Starbuck. No appointment of mas ter mechanic has yet been made at La Grande. Will Loan Street Sprinkler. Pilot Rock wins out. The residents of that lively burg may wear their Sundny-go-to-meotln s on the Fourth without danger of their being damag ed by dust. Mayor Matlock and tho street committee of tho city council have agreed to permit that town the iiso of a street sprinkler on tho Fourth. Will Go to the Mountains. Deputy County Clerk B. B. Hall took his wife and baby to Weston yesterday, whore they will remain a month. Afterward they will spend a month In tho mountains. Mrs. Hall was In April obliged to undergo an operation. Only in the last week has she recovered sufficiently to be ablo to leavo her lied. Baseball Mask Stolen. Some hobo stole a $5 baseball mask from the local team at Umatilla, a fow days ago, and the Umatilla boys are now In search of It. Thoy believe Mo hobo has sold it in Pendleton nnd will attempt to recover tho property if found. Ill With Typhoid. W. S. Perrv. of the Rnrtor fiirnltii store, is ill at his home at 814 West Alia street, with typhoid fevor. m Don't M Worry m 0 If your coflce doesn't V V suit, don't worry buy Golden Gate! It may cost more per 1 pound but think or the I quality. High grade..! 1 grocers sell it. . m I and 2 lb. aroma-tight g gpA J. A. Folder B Co. t H lBortrs of rin Coff... V 1904. 444 Removal Prices uucii im iup nan-pint Glasses tor 35c 15 lbs. Sugar for $1, t0 the jelly with. Owl Tea House PREPARE NOW FOR HOT WEATHER! AND THE GLORIOUS 4th OF JUL The Boston Stoi IS NOT SOLD OUT OF EVERYTHING AS MANY OTHERS BUT CARRIES A COMPLETE STOCK EVERY "AY W YEAR. HOT WEATHER CLOTHING IN VOGUE NOW. BATHING SUITS FOR MEN AND BOYS. GREAT SAVING Men's and Boys' Clothing1 diasnea rn 112.50 Mon 8 Suits ' ?15.00 Men's Suits J $17.60 Mod's Suits tzu.uu raon a etuiis .... . MkerP44' This same rote of reduction applies 10 BOYS' CLOTHING ii bor We wUl give a special discount upon an w Straw Hats at Half Price BAER. & JBMrf, MMtlJ daUy ho went to jail. '