ran yi ,.rt-y" ".' "y ' ":; DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1904. PAGE SIX. TEETH Per set, $5.00; gold crowns, $4.00; silver filling, 60c; ex tracting, 50c. "We are thoroughly equipped with all modern methods and appliances, and guarantee our work to bo of the highest stan dard, and our prices the lowest consistent with flrst-class work. White Bros. Dentists. Association Block. 'Phone Main 1GC1. College Place Health Wafers, fruit crackers, cream sticks, nut butter and salted peanuts. Despain & Clark Positively the best beer made. Any quantity you de sire. Delivered to your home. Always call for Olym pia. A. NOLTE 'Phone Main 181. BAD BREATH "Formoothi I bad treat t ronb I o with sir i tonne ud vied all kind of xnedieio.es. Uy toarn bu )md actually u rreen aa ctui, mr breath bavlnr bad odor. Two week ao a f iind rveonunendtd Caeart aod after tulnr ibezo 1 can wllllorlr asd ebearfollr aar Ibat tfaey bar entirely eared me. 1 tberefore let yon know tbat 1 ball recommend them to any one suffering from eneb troubles." CUi. U. (Ulpan.m KtTfnpoo St...NwYork,N.T Best for r ineoowets THE AWFUL REALITY OP CIVIL WAR CAMOY cnwmc Pleural. FtHUbU, Potonl,TlOoo!. DoOood. Xmr sukeo. w.kn or a rip, lie. Sc. Me. Kmm Mid In balk. Th (analne ubfol lUmpl COC. iinjirscVd to tan ar joar snonr bck. Bteillog Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 596 ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES F. E. Van Dusen &Co. CONTRACTORS OF WORK. BRICK Boiler setting and Are places done in first-class manner. Address Box 455, Pendleton. J LET US SUPPLY YOU WITH j Building j ! Material I T i Dimension lumber of all de scriptions. Sash, Doors, Blinds, Moulding, Building and Tar Paper. BRING YOUR BILL TO US AND GET OUR FIGURE8. Grays Harbor Commercial Co. Opposite W. &. C. R. Depot OLD NBWSI'APEUB TO PUT UNDEU carpets, on ibelre, walls or for wrap pine .purposes. Old newspapers In lame beadle of 100 each at 23 centa bandit at tbe EAST OHEOONIAN office. I'eodle tea, Oregon. The following little story is from the pon of Ambrose Blcrce, In "Can Such Things Bo?": The time, a pleasant Sunday after noon In the early autumn of 1861. The place, a forest's heart In the mountain region of "Western Virginia. Private Grayrock of the Federal army is discovered seated comfortably at the root of a great pine tree, agalnBt which he leans, his legs extended Btralght along the ground, his rifle lying across his thigh, his hands rest ing upon the barrel .of his weapon. The contact of the back of his head with the tree has pushed his cap down over his eyes, almost concealing them. One seeing him would say he slept. Private Grayrock did not sleep; to have done so would have Imperiled the Interests of the United States, for he was a long way outside the Hues, and subject to capture or death at the hands of the enemy. Moreover, he was In a frame of mnld unfavorable to repose. The cause nf his perturbntlon of spirit was this: During the preceding night he hnd served on the picket guard, and had been posted as a sentinel In this very forest. The night was clear, though moon less, but In the gloom of the wood the darkness was deep. Grayrock's post was at a considerable distance from those to right and left, for the pickets had been thrown out a need less distance from the camp, making the line too long for the force detail ed to occupy It. The war was young, nnd military camps entertained the error that when sleeping they were better pro tected by thin lines a long way out toward the enemy, than by thicker ones close in. And surely they need ed as long notice as possible of an enemy's approach, for they were at that time addicted to the practice of undressing, thnn which nothing could be more unsoldierly. On the morning of the memorable Gth of April, at Shiloh, many of Grant's men, when spitted on Confed erate bayonets, were as naked as civilians; but it should be allowed that this was not because of any de fect In their picket line. Their error was of another sort: they had no pickets. This Is perhaps a digression. I should not care to un dertake to Interest the reader In the fate of an army, what we have to con sider Is that of Private Grayrock. For two hours after he had been left at his lonely post that Saturday night, he stood stock still, leaning against the trunk of a large tree, star ing into the darkness in his front and trying to recognize known objects; for he had been posted at the same spot during the day. But all was now different; he saw- nothing in detail, but only groups of things, whose shapes, not observed when there was something more of them to observe, w.ere now unfamiliar. They semed not before to nave been there. A landscape which Is all trees and undergrowth, moreov.er, lacks definition, is confused and with out accentuated 'points upon which at tention can gain a foothold. Add the gloom of a moonless night, and something more than great natur al Intelligence and a city education Is required to preserve one's sense of direction. And that Is how It occurred that Private Grayrock, after vigilantly watching the spaces In his front and then Imprudently executing a circum spection of his whole dimly visible environment (silently walking around his tree to accomplish it), lost his bearings and seriously Impaired his usefulness as a sentinel. Lost at his post, unable to say In what direction to look for an ene my's approach, and in which lay the sleeping camp for whose security he was responsible with his life, con scious, too, of many another awkward feature of the' situation and of con siderations affecting his own safety. Private Grayrock was profoundly disquieted. Nor was he given time to recover his tranquility, for almost at the mo ment that he realized his awkward predicament he heard a stir of leaves and a snap of fallen twigs, and turn ing with a still heart. In the direction whence It came, saw In the gloom the indistinct outline of a human figure. "Halt!" shouted Private Grayrock, peremptory, as In duty bound, back lng up the command with the sharp metallic click of his cocking rifle "who goes there?" There was no answer; at least there was an instant's hesitation, and the answer, if It came, was lost In the report of the sentinel's rifle. In the silence of the night and the forest, the sound was deafening, and hardly had it died away when It was repeated by the pieces of th.o pickets to right and left, a sympathetic fust lade. For two hours every unconverted civilian of them had been evolving enemies from his Imagination, and peopling the woods In his front with them, and Grayrock's shot had started the whole encroaching host Into visi ble existence. Having Bred, all retreated breath less to the reserves all but Gray rock, who did not know In what direc tion to retreat. When, no enemy ap pearing, the roused camp two miles away had undressed and got Itself Into bud qgaln, and the picket line was cautiously re-established, he was discovered bravely holding his ground, and was highly complimented by the officer of the guard as the one soldier of that devoted band who could rightly be considered the moral equivalent of that uncommon unit of value, "a whoop in noil." In the meantime, however, Grayrock had made a closo hut unavailing search for the mortal part of the In truder at whom ho had fired, and whom he had a marksman's intuitive Henso of having hit, for be was one of those born experts who shoot without aim by an Instinctive sense of dlrec-J tlon, and are nearly as dangerous by night as by day. During a full half of his 24 years he had been a terror to the targets of all the shooting galleries in three cities. Unable now to produce his dead game he had the discretion to hold his tongue, nnd was glad to ob serve In his officer and comrades the natural assumption that not having run away he had seen nothing hostile. His "honorable mention" had been earned by not running away, anyhow. Nevertheless. Private Grayrock was farfrom satisfied with the night's ad venture, and when, the next day, he made some fair enough pretext to apply for a pass to go outside the lines, nnd the general commanding promptly granted It in recognition of his bravery the night before, he pass ed out nt the point where that had been displayed. Telling the sentinel then on duty there that he had lost something, which was true enough, he renewed the search for the person whom he supposed himself to have shot, and whom If only wounded he hoped to trail by the blood. He was no more successful by day light than he had been In the dark ness, and after covering a wide area nud boldly penetrating n long dis tance Into "The Confederacy" he gave up the search, somewhat fatigued, seated Himself at the root of the great pine tree, where we have seen him, and indulged his disappointment. It is not to be inferred that Gray rock's was the cruel chagrin of a cruel nature balked of Its bloody deed. In the clear large ' eyes, finely wrought Hps and broad forehead of Hint younjj man, one could read quite another story, and In polut of fact his charac ter was a singularly felicitous com pound of boldness and sensibility, courage and conscience. Private Grayrock, overcome at last by the languor of the afternoon and lulled by the stilly sounds of Insects droning and prosing in certain fra- grant shrubs, so far forgot the Inter ests of the United States as to fall asleep and expose himself to capture. And sleeping he dreamed. He thought himself a boy, living In a far. fair land by the border of a great river, upon which the tall steamboats sped grandly up and down beneath their towering evolutions of black smoke, which announced them long before they had rounded tbe bends and marked their movements when miles out of sight. With him, always at his side as he watched them, was one to whom he gave his heart and soul in love a twin brother. Together they strolled along the banks of the stream; to gether they explored the fields lying farther away from It, and gathered pungent mints and sticks of fragrant sassafras in tbe hills overlooking all beyond which lny the Realm of Con jecture, and from which, looking southward across the great river, they caught glimpses of the Enchant ed Land. Hand In hand and heart In heart they two, the only children of a wid owed mother, walked In paths of light through valleys of peace, seeing new things under a new sun. And through all the golden days floated one unceasing sound the rich, thrilling melody of a mocking bird in a cage by the cottage door. It per vaded and possessed all the spiritual Intervals of the dream, like a musical benediction. The joyous bird was always in song, its infinitely various notes seemed to flow from Its throat, effort less, In bubbles and rills at each heart-beat, like the waters of a puls ing spring. That fresh, clear melody seemed, Indeed, the spirit of the scene, the meaning and interpretation to sense of the mysteries of life and lov.e. But there came a time when the days of the dream grew dark with sorrow In a rain of tears. The good mother was dead, the m.eadowside home by the great river was broken up, and the brothers were parted between two of their kinsmen. William (the dreamer) went to live in a populous city In the Realm of Conjecture, and John, crossing the river into the Euchanted Land, was taken to a distant region whose peo ple In their lives and ways w.ere said to be strange and wicked. To hlra, in the distribution of the dead moth er's estate, had fallen nil that they deemed of value the mocking bird. They could be divided, but it could not, nnd so It was carried away Into the strange country, and fne world of William knew It no more forever. Yet still through all the aftertlme of his loneliness Its song filled all the dream and seemed always sounding In his ear and in his heart. The kins men who had adopted the boys w.ere enemies, holding no communication. For a time letters full of boyish bravado and boastful naratlves of the new and larger experience gro tesque descriptions of their widening lives and the new worlds they had conquered passed between them; but these gradually became less frequent and with William's removal to nn other and greater city, ceased alto gether. But ever through it all ran the song of the mocking bird, and when the dreamer opened his eyes and stared through the vistas of the plno forest the cessation of Its music Drat ap prised him that he was awake. The sun was low and r.ed In the west; the. level rays projected from the trunk of each giant plno a wall of shadow traversing the golden hazo to eastward until light and shade werje blended In undlstingulshablo blue. Privato Grayrock roso to his feet, looked cautiously about hlra, ahoul dored his rifle and set ofT toward camp. Ho had gone perhaps a half mllo, and was passing a thicket laurel, when a bird roso from tho midst of It and perching on tbe branch of a tree above, poured from Its Joyous breast so Inexhaustible floods of song as but on.e of all of God's creatures can ut- J tor In His praise. There was little : In that It was but to open the beak land breathe: yet the man stopped as If struck stopped nnd let fall his ri fle; looking upward nt th.o bird, cov ered his eyes with his hand and wept I like a child. j For the moment ho was. Indeed, a child In spirit and In memory, dwell 'lng again by the gr.eat river over against the Enchanted Land. Then with an effort of the will he pulled himself togothor, picked up his weap on and audibly dnmnlng himself for nn idiot strode on. ) Passing an opening that reached Into the heart of the thicket he look .cd In, and there, supine upon the ! earth. Its arms all abroad, its gray .uniform stained with a single spot of blood upon the breast. Its white face turned sharply upward and back ward, lay the Image of himself; the body" of John Grayrock, dead of a gunshot wound, and still warm. Ho had found his man. As the unfortunate soldier knelt be side that niBBtcrwork of civil war, the shrilling bird upon the bough overhead stilled her sound nnd, flush 1 ed with sunset's crlmsou glory, glid ed silently away through the solemn spaces of the wood. , At roll call that evening in the Federal camp the name Grayrock brought no response, nor ever again thereafter. Tutullla, July IS. s2maitLlUiW! i ! III BM NOVELTIES . 1 f novt.LrES , DEcoPaitk wrm favoxs mSR. SO THE PEOPLOKv WE PROMISE AND GIVE THE iEc?r, - - - - HtntH ni UVtliWHELInlnBLt SUPERB SPECTACSLtt ' tumea, represented Japan: D Soottand and Amertoa. """H ln7sV faff AC It-jWmVz-jr -11. V Tallman & Co. ask the readers of this paper who aro suffering with indigestion to get a , bottle of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. If 'you knpw the value of this remedy as wo know It, you would not suffer another day. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure , is a thorough digestant and tissue- J building tonic as well. It is endorsed 1 personally by hundreds of people t dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart and stomach troubles generally. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you cnt. It Is pleasant, palatable and strength ening. Quaan ol tha la now ; tha only lady somereautt GREAT ALEXIUS LOOPS THE LOOP Dafylno ths lawa el gravitation, and aoorna to moka uaa of tha aolld loop and lh period bleycla. TO: m MLLE. ARLINEa "THE GIF1L IN RED " Introducing Ban Hur and troupa ot Salambo Dona In tha wondarful D'Markla act. THE ST. LEON QUINTETTE Famoua flva (avorllaa ol Franoo Acrobatlquea Extraordinaire. Supreme amnio feature ol the age, without a parallel In the annala of olroua hlatory. PRSSKORN BROTHERS CLASSIC UNICYCLISTS & CYCLISTS NO ONC DARES ATTEMPT TO IMITATE THEM Mississippi Chautauqua. Crystal Springs, Miss., July 16. Arrangements are complete for the opening tomorrow of the annual ses-! slon of the Mississippi Chautauqua assembly. Many visitors are on the grounds and the meeting promises to lie most largoly attended in the his tory of the assembly. An attractive program has been arranged. In addi tion to religious services and ad dresses by noted divines, evangelists, educators and other public men, there j will be a variety of lectures, concerts uuu uuier lunns ui eiueriuwuueui. HERR LITZEN'S FUNNY DUTCH ELEP Cxaoutlnn bizarre feats as amaxtna In their darina conoanilan - . porlormanoe by tho world's hupheet beaete, particularly featuring aUmmilinl Frieda. Abaolutely tha only trained mother and baby Uphnl Inis.-.TT1! sugimoto's mm llandum Cattil "roanaJMJ MLLE. VALLEC1TA WSSSH Savage wild beaats lions, tigers. leoparaa, paninere iigni tor her careaaaa, and become quiet at her command. Piles Upon Top of Piles. Piles upon piles of people havo tho piles, and DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures them. There are many different kinds of piles, but if you get the gen uine original Witch Hazel Salve made by E. C. DeWltt & Co. of Chicago, a cure is certain. H. A. Tlsdale of Summerton, S. C, says: "I had piles 20 years and DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salvo cured mo after everything else failed." Sold by Tallman & Co. League of Press Clubs. Toledo, O., July iu, Toledo and the nearby lake resorts will be the Mecca for newspaper men throughout the country during the coming week. The occasion will be the annual meet ing of the International League of Press Clubs, to be held at the Hotel Victory, Put-In-Bay. About 200 repre sentatives of the leading newspapers of the United States and Canada will be in attendance. The convention comes to Put-In-Bay on the invitation of the Toledo Press Club, this being tb.e first time 'the league has met In the central part of the country. Weak Hearts are caused by indigestion. It you eat a little too much, or If you are sub ject to attacks ot Indigestion, the stomach expands swells, and puffs up against tho heart. This crowds tbe heart and shortens the breath. Rapid heart beats and heart dlseaso is the final result. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat, takes the strain oft tbe heart, cures Indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach and contrib utes nourishment, strength and health to every organ of the body. Sold by Tallman & Co. FAIRYLAND T" CHILDREN A hundred Shetland ponies, monkey theatre of fifty mon keys, and beautiful birds, to gether with FUNKY CLOWNS A BIO BUKCH OF FOOLISH BEAUTIES teak OF UTII6 Rl THE BARTINE TRIO Neok breakers, fllp-flappara, twleters, upside, down people, flyover and baok.traokers, lc- apllHlnp gymnaaiio oomiquea. THE GREAT ELLETT J OF FLYING AERIAL! STS G Black Belle, the Smallest E a hunHMit f.tnr. beautiful woman maonllloenliv oeetumeo In lOua I modele and atatuaryi athletlo men, the peraonltloatlon of bravm end mKa, entertainments oaity aa marvelous aa ma numan y nu mm m .NaT i. ' - nVRU'WI ewi. ' IN THE MENAGERIE Yeur special attention Is called t "King Ed ward," genuine black-ma ned African lion. ine largaai anu wniy v,w w, -- - : oountry. Royal Siberian tiger, Royal Bengal tigress, leopards, panthers, kangaroo , Uamaa, white Siberian oamela, dromedaries, inan alaylng apes, baboons, monkeys, etc eto. INTERNATIONAL LEANKI Pr4lf I Mrial nm urrnniNC.CAKE WHII lpiiMr mJtmm " m muyinp up paiw.ro, mwwiwyi - T-rr? IT TO pPEE 1 'wt MoimmQ at io o'clock CRAMP STREET r PENDLETON, One Day Only Thursday. JULY Admission, Children 25c, Adults auc Oregon Portland New Rural Route. E. C. Clement, of Portland, Inspec tor of rural mall delivery routes, ac companied by Robert Sunderland, went over the proposed Spring Creek route yesterday. One hundred and twenty families will be served by this route. Goldendale Sentinel. I St. Helen's Hall A GIRLS SCHOOL OF THE HIGH EST CLASS corps of teachers, loca tion, building, equipment the best. Send for catalogue. Opens Soptember 15, 1004. Postoffice at Tipton. The postofTlce at the new town of Tipton will be ready for business this morning, the building which R. W. Cecil, the postmaster, arranged for having been completed. The tele phone service will begin at once. Sumpter Reporter. REAL ESTATE $2,250 will buy one of the most con venient 9-room houses In the city. Sewer, bath, etc.; good cellar and barn. 3 lots, corner; a bargain. $4,000 Elegant new 9-room house, juat completed; sewer, bath, toilet; 2 lots; eastern exposure; corner. $2,504 Nice residence and C lots; eastern exposure. Lot me show you three quarter sec tions of the best wheat land. All un der cultivation; extensive Improve ments, plenty of water. Can be bought for a little loss than Its mar ket value. MISS BOYD Successor to E. D. Boyd. Insurance, Real Estate, Loan 111 Court Street Pendleton THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST Bear this in lnd when you need poultry and stock supplies and ask for the International Poultry and Stock Food. Use Kow Kure for your cow trou bles. C. F. Colesworthy 127-129 East Alta 8L Atjent for Lee'e Lice Killer. Shoe Repairing I have moved my shop to the second door cast of the Savings Bank. Re pairing of all kinds done in a work manlike manner at reasonabl rates. As I have been In business here 17 years, I need not speak of the qual ity of my work for It speaks for Itself. My stock of shoes was somewhat damaged by water and the insurance company told mo to sell them for what I could got, so I will sell them for less than wholesale price. CHRIS RANLEY. Anyone wishing eight or 10 teams for harvesting can obtain them by ap plying to tho Newport Construction Company, Echo, Or. L0CK5LI HALL , -,,.!.. hii. beautlfnUr ,,,.vp i.f rme. wlthia I old ocean, is an Ideal pl! Lonkslcy Hall, uner" ship of Mrs. u a. ,nioio renoM gone a luu,i",(" , ti. spring, and in addition oj out rooms that were tlon of tbe house. n - s - J Art tllCfll have been aaoe - and furnish. n --- have been house ana a ,teii age has Ueen put f been engaged flw -0u have charge of the the guests otlrgj, arranged for each Sa'uiw good orcbeatra u J" 1 ntirn summer Altoow J i. open tho entire JJI w in music buu --- lw8 u ley jian, .-..inn it w spend a happy Carriages meet all l Special rates to . Address, for furtber Mrs, L. a. ' - ere Locksley CriSIDE. OREGON- Walters' Flouring Capacity. 0 barrel' Flour exebansea i miii Feed, t etc., always oa nn- 5& rrm