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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1904)
PAQE '! PERSONAL MENTION THE HEN THAT CACKLES LOUDEST DOESN'T LAY THE BIG kGEST EGG. IT IS A VERY DIFFICULT MATTER FOR A READER TO DECIDE "WHICH IS THE RIGHT PLACE TO BUY GOODS," WHERE ALL THE ADVERTISERS MAKE SUCH EXTRAVAGANT CLAIMS.. WITNESS THE'ADS IN THIS PAPER lire tnKiiiB p--." .(all to miv" . ' ,, Mnt more complete um .before. In the ciotuing a are BUUWiufc J1.00 to U.UU; imuia, DAILY EA8T OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, AUGUST 27, 1904. BUT 1 "FL . lebrated P. Cogan lino .. almPS. JNiaue lur nou -i inn isvnrv Dair uuuu 1 Ul I'l'" .i 9 TV jl j ,ee i euiscn s uepi. atore The School Boys' Friend .if i Dm Delta kind. Cicau., h renters at Wltee's, Tints Tlnoaovolt's. .i ..iif itnttv at Martin's. w otnienn ltfltfi lit TtnORGVfllt'8. uue oww"" - - I .1 1. A 1. I rrtnr uiniiirt ul liiih ul nn mi - .,t TTnnnn nlinos nf Tlnna- ... .. A 1.1 A TT-. .i.aIah n nml ti ii air m nlnna 1USL HIWI.CUl XUUhOU U. J -t Mr nrl ntnnn tnn 1 ..Mil T. ..J A nn iiuiiuiiin. inuuut ul uiiiuc. 4 light, Mrs. Cooper, proprl ' wrge hats, tho latest. Just iujacu wiiiurH. hi i linvurs. UHiin vivo. iniii 1 mm iiniti arcaar 1 m n 1 1 1 yet . v. oince. ur iieuL i nA mnm Tnrmnp v pn rr rno pnnr iann ihnqto. An. lo uunn nn ninrrin .w . .......... u i' - 1- OAJr IirlPA IVirti Anoli nit.nli nan nf flfl KT-.l- Tl 1. 1 it ...... be dlspnntllillnil P 1' Rmttli I I Get sunny. U C Rader. The Dolta ico cream is delicious. New fall clothing' at Roosevelt's, 3.50 ladles' Gloria shoes at Roose velt's. New hats, all the latest styles, see them at Teutsch's. Wanted A boy at this office to learn the printing business. New and larger sewer connections are being made for the Hotel Eastern. Get your clothes cleaned and pressed at Joerger's, 12G West Court street. WnBte baskets, letter holders, 3 column Journals, ol'nco and school supplies. Nolf's. For Sale A few choice aero lots In West Pendloton. Apply to S. M. Richardson, Pendleton, Oregon. Elizabeth C. Gulllford and husband to Gertrude Hunt, two lots In Swltz ler's addition to Pendleton, consider ation $3500. Alonzo Gliant forfeited $10 ball In the police court this morning for dis orderly conduct. Jam.cs A. Lloyd re ceived 10 days In Jail for drunken ness, Franeess, nn Indian, received 10 days In Jail for disorderly conduct and for fighting, Abo Stanton, was fined $8. A MASHER FOILED. .. . Watch Repairing : Poes need repalrlug? is time an im- I uont run the risk of having ; lour timepiece ruined. Brlna It to U. Prices reasonable and all I mk guaranteed. HUNZIKER j The Progressive Jeweler. 726 Main Street. 1 Baker City Girl Turns Hose on a Dan dy Gentleman. Masher met maid last night as the latter was using the garden hose on the lawn In one of the resldcnco dis tricts of tho city. It was getting Just u little too dark for the fair sex to bo out without a malo escort. Evi dently so thought the masher, for he broke In with: "Ah, how are you Dolly?" No answ.er. The maid twisted the nozzle down so us to send the stream a little farther out on tho lawn. "Why, Dolly," resumed the masher, "you're willing to take a walk, ain't you? We had a date, you know." More allunc.e. "Oh, well, If you won't come, I'll go to you." And he started. He got within about throe foot of tho object of his devotion when Hang a swift, straight stream of Elk creek struck him In tho face. And then It played up and down his framo. And then the masher fled. He had borne scathing looks, he had stood silence, but water put him out. -Baker City Herald. Born Soldiers. Colonel Grandprey, once French mllltarv attache In Pekimr. ulves somo very Interesting Information re garding the (Jhmeso army in the Re vue de Paris. Ho says that few countrl.es have such excollent ma terial as China for an army, whero the whole population of 420,000,000 consists, so to speak, of one people, displaying the samo racial qualities. The Chinese is long llvod and tena cious of life; he thrives In every ell- mntn In anttn nf tho hpnt or raid. Ho Is extremely thrifty and therefore easily supported. He nas nerves 01 steel; ho can sleep In any position and In any place, and can do with a minimum of sloop. He seldom needs a doctor and bears pain with the greatest stoicism. The Chinese Is very teachable and what h.o has once boeu taught he never forgets. Tho Portland postofflco Is advertis ing the Lewis and Clark fair In an unique way. Its cancellation stamps now print the words, "Lewis and Clark Fair" pn every letter and postal card that passes through the office. LOG CABIN j ICE CREAM I So'Ppen'i famous Ice Grwun can again be obtained t the old ta- I "or!te Log cabin Soda Fountain. J 11 - i K-OEPPENS Tht xS'Store : A. C KOEPPEN & BROTHERS Judge Ayres returned to Hoppnor this morning. Floyd Anderson went to Weston on business this morning. Miss Rosena Epplo left this morn ing for Dayton for a vlsIL H. B. Hill and wifp left this morn ing for Spokane on a visit. Mr, and Mrs. Clarence Pcnland have returned from Lehman Springs. M. A. Ferguson, editor of the Ad ams Advance, is In Pendloton today. Mrs. F. S. Younger returned home from the coast on tho early train to day. Mrs. J. n.. Dorie and her son Earl returned from Bingham Springs yes terday. Mr. and Mrs. Hay, of Spokane, are In Pendleton on their way home from lhnlnu Springs. Mr. and Mrs. William Slusher have returned from a vacation spent at Lehman Springs. J. A. Borlo, president of tho Com mercial Association, is lh Portland on a business visit. Mrs. F. W. Hendley went to Echo this morning to visit with her parents, J. H. Koontz and wife. Mrs. Thomas Boylen and tho child ren have returned from Antelope, whero they spent the summer. Miss Moyme Hays and Mrs. J. C. Nell and Master Richard Nell return ed from ileacliam this morning. F. G. Mitchell left this morning for Portland, and various coast points, for an outing of a week or so. Mrs. S. H. Jordan, of Wallula, Is In town today en route homo from Ka mela, where she has been visiting. D. Reed and wife, who have been the guosts of A. H. Sunderman and wife, left for Eugene this morning. J. R. Dickson returned on the early morning train from S.easide and Toke Point. His family is still on tho coast. Fred Laatz ami wife have returned from their trip through the Palouse and Coeur d'Aleue countries and to Spokane. Dr. A. L. Richardson, of La Grande, arrived this morning, accompanied by a lady patient who will ent,er tho hos' pital here. Mrs. G. A. Hartman, Jr., has return' ed from Astoria, where she went to visit with her mother and witness the regatta. Mrs. J. T. King, of Athena, tho guest of her siBter, Mrs. Michael, for a few days, left for lone on a visit this morning. C. E. McClellan is able to be about after a week or more confinement In the hospital with a slight form of ty phoid fever. Rev. and Mrs. Robert Warner are visiting at Rev. Warner's brothei s, just across the Columbia river from Castle Rock, Or. Miss Edna Thompson has returned from Tacoma, where she has been tho guest of Mrs. Lachlan McLeny for about two months. Miss Gertrude Gallagher Is taking examination today before County School Superintendent Frank K. Welles, for permit to teach. L. M. Hawley left the coast yester day and came as far as Monmouth, where he will visit for n few days, returning home next Tuesday. Miss Nellie Wlllams, of Eugene, is the guest of Mrs. Geary Kimbrell, en route from Spokane, where she has been visiting her brother, an attor ney, J. M. Williams. Mrs. Thomas Boylen and family re turned last evening from a summer outing at Antelope. Mr. Boylen Is still in Crook cunty and will not come home for somo time. .T 17! 'Prnvlc nnil wlfp. rpniilpnta. nf the extreme southwestern part of the county, took the morning train for Spokane, called there by the sever" Illness of Mr. Travis' father. Work Is expected to begin on tho new W. & C. R. depot In ubout a month. It depends upon the recovery of Treasurer Cutler, who Is conva lescing at his home in Wnlla Walla. C. J. Ferguson left last night for Hood River and Portland on business. At Hood River he will negotiate for on Immense quantity of slabs for fuel for the woolen mills for the ensuing season, Mrs. J. T. HInkle has returned from a month's visit with relatives at Lew Iston, Grangeville and Moscow, Idaho, and at Washtucna, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. HInkle will start East on a visit, September C. t Mrs. A. J. Prlvett, who has been the guest of her brother-in-law, J. W. Prlyett aud family, loft her home at Dansvllle, Wash., In the Okanogan country. She Is on her return from an extended visit In Portland and the valley. Ed Money, the Pendleton contractor and builder, passed through Pilot Rock yesterday on his way to the Cunningham castle, wherjo he goes to make some Improvements In the sheds und buildings. Pilot Rock Record. Mrs. M. D. Williams, a San Francis co nurse, who has a large and wide spread clientele, Is In town. She Is well known to the medical fraternity here and Is a frlond and guest of the Cargllls, the well known farmers, and other frl,ends. Mrs. William Haw left for Moro, Sherman county, this morning, whoro she will Join her husband, the well known horse trainer. Tho Haws will not occupy for some tme their now residence on th.a north side, but lease It, and make their headquartors at Moro. Mrs. 0. E. Welster and her friend, Miss Rose Hatfiold, of Portland, loft for Freeman, Wash, this morning, the former's home. Both have been tho guosts of Mrs. Frank Hnnlen and Miss Stolla Baker, of M,eacham, who accompanlod thorn here. All were visiting frlonds In this place. LOOK ELSEWHERE, IF YOU WISH, BEFORE BUYING HERE, BUT BE SURE, ABSOLUTELY SURE, TO LOOK HERE BEFORE YOU CON SIDER BUYING ELSEWHERE. THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE FRANCE'S DISEASED PEOPLE. Ravages Made by Alcoholism and Tuberculosis. A prominent physician In France paints a gloomy picture 01 tne preva lence of certain forms of disease In that country. He writes that alco Imllntn la tiinlrlncr dcnlorable ravage8 while tuberculosis carries off moro than 150,000 victims every year, and saps the strength or &w,uuu in anui (Inn .Ho declares that wher.eas In other clvllzed lands smallpox Is not proya' lout. In Franro there are still many cases, while typhoid fever, dysentery ana otner mamuies are uisiresaingiy frequent. Trnilltlnnia linvn linon wlflnK- nc coptod that the excellence of Gallic cookery lessened tho multituues oi tho sick In our sister republic In com nnrlamt with thnan nf nthar nations It would be Interesting to know whether the British channel and Italy inuo gloomy anu pessimistic views of the future of France. LONGEST CHAIN IN THE WORLD. Lies at the Bottom of the River Elbe. A curious means of moving boats is .employed on tho River Elbe. A chain 290 miles long lies at tho bot tom of the stream, which Is too swift to navigate in the usual way. Tho boats are 180 feet long and provided with 200 horso power Bteam engines which turn a drum fastened on tho deck. The chain comes In over tho bow, passes along on rollers to tho drum, around which it Is wound threo times. The chain is then carried to tho stern wher.e it drops back Into the water. It Is the longest chain in the world. Special Excursions to St. Louis. October 3, 4 and 5 are the remain ing dates upon which tickets will be sold at the reduced rates to tho St. Louis fair. These rates apply over the Denver and Rio Grande and Mis souri Pacific. For the patrons of these roads special excursion cars will be run through from Portland aud St. Louis without change. Se.o the many points of lnterost about tho Mormon capital and tako a ride through Nature's picture gallery. During the closing months travel to the fair will be heavy. If you con template going wrlto W. C. McBride, general agent at Portland for the Den ver & Rio Grande, for particulars of these excursions. Two kinds of goods and trade; a bargain's a bargain and money back. One makes friends, and the other loses 'em. Schilling's Best at your grocer's. New things now on sale at Frederick Nolf & Co. Plain and colored Raffia and Reed. New Plcturo Frames, slzo 10x20, at $2.39 and $2.48. Largo oak frames. Go-carts, $4.45 to $14.50, tho folding style, with handsome silk parasols. Full lino school books and auppllos. Tho Portland Trust Company, of Orogon, which was established 111 1887, hns amplo capital and resources nnd numbers nmong Its stockholders somo of tho wealthiest citizens of Portland, and also a great many East ern capitalists. This compnny has devised a very convenient form of employing funds that may bo torn porarlly Idle, so that tho doposltor ' ' mny get Interest upon them, and still hnvo them available upou a reason able notice. iSV Ii - "Tll Oldest Trust Company In Orogon." Portland Trust Company of Oregon No 109 Third Stroot. 1 Incorporated April 27, 1887. HARVE8T Is here, and monoy Is accumulating In tho hands of farmers, merchants, bankers and business men. Lot us send you our book of ILLUSTRATIONS. In order that you may learn how to socuro a fair rato of interest upon a certificate of deposit, which you can draw by giving a short notice, and thus avoid kcoplng your funds Idle until you aro ready to niako a pormanont Investment. Wo shall bo pleased to answer lottery of inquiry, and glvo full particulars "t our methods. BENJ. I. COHEN, Prosldont. II. L. PITTOCK, VIco-Prosldont, II. LEE PAGET, Socrotnry. J. O. GOLTRA, Assistant Socrotary. BECK, THE PLUMBER Has moved to Cottonwood stroot, botweon Water and Court. He U better prepared than over before to do high-class plumbing at reasona ble rates. Estimates cheerfully given, If you havo work to do In his lino see him before you go elsewhere BECK, the Reliable Plwmfeer BYERS' BEST FLOUR Is made from tho choicest wboat that grows, rjood bread U assured when Dyers' Best Flour la used. Bran, shorts, steam roll ed barley always on hand. - s. U U 1' : PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. 8. BYER8, Prop. AStandard for Quality. Cleanliness and Workmanship ' Hand MadeXlear Havana FiyNN&C0..MakcrsT 'Tis Rich and Delicious Our cold storage meats are alwoys right; always tender, always Juicy. Try our mild cured Hams. They are free from that strong taste. The Schwarz r Greulich Meat Co. 607 MAIN STREET. m m e LEGAL BLANKS Write the East Ore- alogtfe of them. A foil supply always kept in stock.