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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1904)
TWELVE 1 PAGE EIGHT. PAIIiY EAST OltEGOXlAN, rENDLRTON, OIIEGON, SATl'KIUY. SK1TEMIIKK 1". "'" if' m 'I 1 li fe m V I ANXIETY. Effect of Thl Form of Mrntnl nnfl lMiyMcnl UrrnilRempnt Iu n paper read bcrore tlio congress of French alienists nt Grenoble Dr. Gaston Lalanne pointed out that anxiety Is a disturbance which Is ex pressed by the entire being. The ex citing causes are sometimes physical nnd sometimes psychical, and the symptoms manifested are both phys ical and mental. The physical symp toms comprise cciJ feelings anil chilis of the scalp and body, general lassi tude, Incoordination of voluntary movements far more apparent than real emotional coloring of speech, and vertigo, which Is dependent upon vaso motor cerebral disturbances or upon digestive troubles. In the anxious states there are always circulatory troubles, such as accelerated heart beat, Irregularity of the heart's action, heightened arterial tension and cold ness of the extremities. Respiratory disturbances nre also present. The psychical symptoms of anxiety Include various degrees of vague dread nnd nppreheirMveupss. often taking definite forms. In which cast? they nre designated as "phobia" or "oliesslons of fear." weakening the capacity of at ttntion nnd of memory, and a tend ency to ooufuslon of Ideas. Halluci nations of the sense are prone to occur. COMEDIAN SAM VALE. tVhiatler'a Itcflnrd Itrvrnnrc. Ill "Whistler ni I Know Hlni," Mor timer Menpes, the author, has n good deal to say about Whistler the lighter nnd his quickness In resenting an nf front. He Is careful to fnld that Whis tler was always rcllnccl In his methods: Still, he was not nctually brutal. He never treated his cnetules hi a coarse wny. Any man who had offended him Whistler would rap sharply over the shoulders with his cane, nnd then, by the time the sufferer had recovered, the master would be In the next room explaining to every one how he Just felled hlw enemy. Once he caught n man, with whom he was for the mo ment enraged, washing his face. With out a moment's hesitation Whistler dashed the unfortunate head straight Into the basin of water, and while the foe was endeavoring to clear the soap from his eyes to see the cause of this sudden Immersion Whistler was In the smoking room setting the men there in n roar with the account of his adven tures. When I first met Whistler ho was in the act of searching for a man who had dared to criticise his Venetian etchings. "If you want to see some fun. Menpes." he said, "come with me." Fortunately the man had been warned and was nowhere to be found. 8 I !: had i 1 I I tt lip Wan t!n Orlclnill of Mini Writer of lMeUwIoU Ifnnic. The original of Sam Weller was Sam Vale, an F.nglish low comedian, who. In the early part of the last century, was quite popular In the south of Kngland. In the year 1S11. and for a few years after, he made quite a reputation in the musical farce called "The Boarding nouse," written by Iteasley. In this he played the part of Simon Spatter dash, a person who Indulged In odd and whimsical sayings. "Come on. as the old man said to the tight boot;" "I am "down on you. as the extinguisher said to the candle:" "Let every one take .care of himself, as the donkey said when dancing among the chickens." are fair Illustrations of his witticisms j In the course of that play, the resem-' blance between them and some of the j sayings of Sam Weller being very . marked. In private life Vale was a wit, and many good things In his own time were credited to him. A man of excellent temper, he had no enemies, ! and the good humor which pervaded I every saying, together with the droll ery of his manner, gave his witticisms unusual value. His sayings were called Sam Valerisms, and on the appearance of Pickwick In 1S5G the character of Weller was generally recognized as a portraiture of Vale. The comedian died In IStS at the age of fifty-one. Tlir I'nlilc of tlir Four Jlen. "I got off a street ear this morning." said a doctor to me. "and, hetng in no hurry, I began momlliing on the ac tions nnd probable diameter of three men who had alighted Just ahead of me. The first one was even then half way down the block nud was going on with such rapid strides that he had already put a couple of hundred yards between himself and the next man. There." thought I, 'goes a hustler, a man who's hound to succeed in life.' The second man was walking rather slower and Impressed me as one who would do fairly well perhnps in this world. Hut the last fellow was just dawdling along In the most shiftless sort of way. I very quickly set him down for a loafer. ".lust then another Idea came home to me. All three were ahead of me!" Hubert Mclleau Johnston in Success. THE WILLOW TREE. John Pnrke Cuitla Plnnted lir Flrat I One In Till Country. When the south sea bubble in Eng land collapsed one of the speculators j vent to Smyrna to repair his fortune, ne was a friend of Alexander Pope and sent htm a box of figs In which had been placed a twig of a tree. Pope ; planted the twig on his grounds on the i shore of the Thames, not knowing of what tree It was. It grew and was a weeping willow. In 177.". when the I tree was over fifty years old. one of j the young ltrltish officers who came to Boston with the British nrmy brought I a twig from the tree, which he Intend-' ed to plant on his lands after the re-1 belllou had been crushed. John Parke Custis. son of .Mrs. Washington, going I on errands to the British camp under a flag of truce, became acquainted ' with the owner of the willow twig, ' which was draped In oiled llk, and ob tained It from him. which he planted near bin home at Abingdon. Vs., where It became the progenitor of all the t weeping willows in America. A Strnnsrc Accident. Some time ago a man fell dead in a crowded street of San Francisco. The hospital surgeons were astonished to find that he had died of what appeared to be a bullet wound In his temple. A hundred people who witnessed the ac cident were ready to testify that no firearm had been discharged at the time. An examination exposed a small pebble in the man's brain. For a long time the case was a mystery, until an ingenious detective solved It with an explanation which he proved by experi ment. The wheels of a heavy dray had Jammed the pebble against the steel rails of the car track and then dis charged It up Into the nlr with such terrific force that it crashed into the brain of the passerby as if It had been a bullet. Shnkrxpeiirf n nn Actor. About the year 15110 one of the Lon don companies received an addition in the person of a young man who was uot only a skillful and useful actor, but who also possessed the accomplish ment of being able to adapt older plays to the taste of the times, and even proved to have the gift of writing tol erably good plays himself, though older and jealous colleagues might hint nt their not being altogether original. This young man, whose capacities he came of no slight u.-e to the company and the theater, was named William Shakespeare. From "A History of Theatrical Art." Ancmonr Pnctn. Naturalists have duly recorded that that if a i auemouc be divided In halves longitudinally a now animal will in time be reproduced hy each half, as suming the anemone is kept in pure soa water. An old zoologist relates how he watched an anemone which somehow or other had contrived to half swallow one of the valves of an oyster shell. Practically the shell struck in Its giz zard and gradually cut Its way through the soft tissues of the aueiii one until it halved the animal as by a partition. Perfect reproduction of two anemones through the division of one was noted to 1m the result of this accident. Kven a fragment or two of an unemone body left ttta-hed to its rock may in due season reproduce a new body. London News. A Cheerful Llnr. One time the late ameer of Afganis tan asked the English diplomatic agent at his court to give a description amid a circle of Afghan boys of the largest gun in England. The Englishman de scribed the 100 ton gun, and when he had finished the anleer ob-erved to his admiring subject. "I have seen a gun the cartridge of which was as large as the gun which has just been ile.-cribed to you." It would never do for an ameer to he astonished, much less to confess himself beaten. Had .o HllhllieNM to Know. Elderly Aunt Gwendolen, you shock me when you talk of a wedding being "pulled off." You ought to be ashamed to use nrlze flchtlm: shine In sneakim; down ! of so solemn a tiling as n wedding. Young Nleo- You misunderstood me. Aunt Hepzlbah. I said the wedding had been put off. But how did you happen to know that "pulled off" is prize fight ing slang? Chicago Tribune. Dissolution Sale The Firm of Dindinger, Wilson to be Dissolved b Co. BY MiriVAl, CONSENT WE HAVE DECIDED TO DISSOIA 1 OI K I'lllM AND WILL PltOCKKD AT ONCE TO CLOSE OUT - ,..,,iii. i.'vi'iin." 'l'OPIf IV THE llfii i'rt... Tin- rvriiii.; san.imn stopk of footweail it is OI IXTKX rn n uiw inn - """r POSSIBLE TIM K. NOT AN AKT1CLE (KXCE1T OFEEN OI ALITt WHICH SEItVED, BIT EVEISYTIIIXG WILL BE SOLD IN THE, SlIOBTEST POSSIBLE SOLD INDIJB CONTHACT) WILL Hi: itr iti: ! TIME. THE GHIiVrilST AVALANCHE OF BABGAINS THAT E l it STKCCK EASTIIBN OltKGOX HAS NOW II II 1 LNDLETOX. ('IT. SLASHED AND SLAl CllTEHi:!), HAVE 1IKHX l'ltlCEK IX ALL DIUKCTIONS. H.U'11 AND EVKIIV PAIIt OF LADIUS', .MISSES'. CHILDULWS. INFANTS'. MEN'S, BOYS', YOITHS' A X D Lll'I'I.E GKNTS' SHOHS 1IAVF. BF.KX MAItlfED DOWN. TIM' DIXDINGEB. WILSON .V CO. STOCK IS THE LAItGIXI l OKF.GON Ori'SIDF OF POUTLAND. IT IS A Ulfill-CLASS lllil, I'tm .iiiwi imu i. iwii,X thcsi: v.'1-iwi; wii I Vf'i.i-iil.-n IV it MM.- KFfll fl-.l .IMIKATKD SHOES s EDWIN CLAI'P, .IOL i.ivf ivil! iuv. Tin- AlMlKTliovn 1.1YF. Fill! LADIES. AM) Till FUltUIS I, INI' FOB MISSFS AND CHILDItEN LINES ABE BKCOGNIZED AS THE HIGHEST ST.YNDAHD IX l OOTWKAIL Ol lt STOCK IS BIMGHT. FISF.SH AND NEW. BIGHT VI' TO DVTHi IX FACT. SFVFBAL LAUGH PUUCHASES AHI IX TKAXSITTO OIU! STOUF.. Tlli: SIVFGHTFU OF THIS MAGXIF1CF.XT SSO.miU S KICK WILL COMMKXCF. MONDAY, SHITHMHHU J2, AND pilot i:i:d w ithoft ixtfbufitiox oh halt until thf. i:tihi: link is gonk. PltlCUS TALK AND Mi: TALK PHICKS. bkad tiik err phicics below, figfhi: oit -ifst wb vr yof can savu on i:ach paiu. NOW W I M, Men's Shoes CFT IN EDWIN CLAPl- LINK Willow e.ilf. 6.0u. now Patent Corona enif, two styles. JI.no. now Ennmel horsehlde. JG.UO, now Patent Ideal kid, JC.OO, now ' French calf, calf lined, JT.'IO, now Juniper kid. $6.U0, mow Viol kid. four shapes, SK.50. now SThTlSOX SHOF.S CI?!'. S(i.l!." s:.-in so. on si. us SS.IIll Volour enif, JS.Su. now Sl.im Vie!, two styles. J5.00, now Sl.Sn Box calf, waterproof. J6.00. now SS.ln Patent colt, Bloueher, $5.00, now SI.S0 Box calf. Box calf. Box calf. IteKUlar Hcgvjlai liHuular JOE TILT SHOES .MAUKED DOWN. two styles. 55.00. now Volour cnlf and ciilf. J4.00, now Volour and vlcl. JS.S0, now VAitiocs links siughtei:ed. J3.II0 j:.25 box calf and vlcl box calf and vlcl vlcl SI.SII sa.no S3.1S . S2.r,s si. as Men's High-Top Shoes .Stetson's shed water. ubsolutel waterproof. J9.00, now . .S7.7S Tnn calf waterproof shoes. J6.S0. now SS.KS Tan cnlf waterproof shoes, J6.00. now S.V.IS 10-luch top pebble kip, J5.00. now SI.SII ir.-lnch top Puritan cnlf. J5.00. now Sl.Sit ln-lnch top Puritan calf. J4.00, now :t.(in s-lnch lop kangaroo kl). JL0. now Slt.su 10-lneh lop kangaroo kip, J3.25, now S2.ns s-lnoh top chrome calf, J3.30. now sa.oo s-lnch top kmiwrno kip. JS.25, now S2.U0 Men's work shoes. $3.00, now S2.U Men's work shoes, 2."5. now S2.SI1 Men's -.vork siloes, 12.50, now S2.2S Jtt-n's work show. $2.00, now St. Nil Boys' Shoes welt solu, $3.00, now 82.TS . . S2.2S S2.U,-. . . .SI. Nil ' t Patent colt, box culf and Phoenix cnlf Vlcl and box calf. $2.fi0. now Iteglllar $2.28. nil leather, for liegular $2.00, nil leather, for . . . , ItHKUlur $1.75, horsehlde, kangaroo kip and kiingnroo veal Sl.llo satin calf, $1.2fi. now Horsehlde. $1.60, now Kangaroo kip. $1.R0, now Sl.lll Sl,;m si.:ts Box calf. $1.2B, now SI III Satin culf, $1.00. now line Ladies' Shoes CIXKBBATFD AHMSTUONG LINE CIT. Kid. turned sole. French heel. $5 00. worth Patent colt, turned sole. French heel $.r.00. now Pnti.-nt colt, welt sole. Cuban heel. $5. no. now Patent colt, ince nnd button, the Po-Tay last. $5.00. no Patent colt, bloueher welt sole. $5.00. now Patent colt, lace, welt sole. $4.50, now Kid. lace, turn and welt sole, $4.00. now Kid lace, turn nnd welt sole. $3.50, now $ 1.35 si.nr. $1.35 SI. 35 1.35 $1,110 $3.(10 S3. 1 5 OTIIKU MAKKS. Kid, lace, welt sole. $3.00. Kid. light and heavy sole. Kid. light and heavy sole. Kid. Unlit and heavy solu. now $2.50 $2.00. $1 75 now S2.05 82.20 now SI.KU now Si.no Kid. Kid. old ladles' old ladles' comfort, $2.25, coujfort, $1.50. now now . Slippers Our stock Is large nnd well selected, lueed. S2.05 $1.35 Prices materinlK f School Opens Soon -hi Mil .-I lot 1 1 want We linw an cnoriiioii- line of nil ' and children's -. which we Inm cut In price to the crv limit. W to comic in nud m't our prices nn thc-c. Keep imi' co on OFH WINDOW. Sec Hit- unudf rBll bar ahis odcrcd ilnlh . NO. GOODS CHARGED DURING THIS SALE Oindi nger, GOOD SHOES CHEAP Greatest Sale in Pendleton's history commences Monday, Sept. 12 it I 1 II ! f t t 1 i n it I !i f 1 i .8 H H li t il li it 41 41 :: it 4 SoldlrrH .supt-rtttlotift. Among the nuuieroiis buporstltlons of the Cornets there is none stronger tlian the belief Hint tbev will outer hcHven in a better state if they are per sonally clvun at the time they are killed. Continently before un execled lttle tho.v perforin their toilets with scniuu Ious cure, dress tbiaelvs In ciunn .garments ami put on the beat thoy have. This superetltiou is not confine 1 ;to the Cossacks alone, but Is widely proralont in nil branches of the Itus- Ian army. lie Couldn't Tell. The editor of an L'nglish paper re cently received a fine chicken, which he. supposing It to he a token of appre ciation Iron) a ill-criminating reader, took home and enjoyed for dinner. The following day he received this letter: Vmr Editor Yetnlay I Ftnt you a ehickn In order n Mttl a dispute which hai ariaen here Can you tell u what the chicken died of? : 3lu!;lne It SImmt. Holly How did Marie learn to use her .left, hand o gracefully? Dolly Tl vat's the band the ivwn her oncage- ui en t ring on. Tin- tt SIin)otlitr. A woman recently enganetl to the fa ther aeked his on, n little fellow of Kjven years. "How would yon like me for your atepnjotherV" "Kim rate, as far as I'm concerned," he replied. 'You'll have to speak to papa about It. thoUtfh." New Vork Trll.nue. 1 it , i . It t Carpets Cleaned by Steam PLUMBING tie In d-v By We have arranged to open n steam carpo. cleaning shop Pendloton, where wo will he prepared to clean carpotE of nil ftcrintione in the most improved manner. All .work guaranteed. our iirocoag all dirt is removed and carpets are restored to their original brilliancy. Wo want n trial order from you. AH work call ed for and delivered. Prices reasonable. Wilkinson & Edminsten Telephone Main 741, 311 Court Street. i i t t Good plumbing 1 alnjs the cheapest. It 1ms tli- lasting niiali It saves jou repair hills. Always entrust jour work to thoroughi rolhiblo and coniK!tunt plumbers. Our force Is inado up of the hct .Mierlenccd workiiicn. Strict atleiitiou paid to sanitary features of w ork. IilJT US OIVE YOU IUGUHES On jour work. Wo quote right prices and do only the best n Goodman-Thompson Co ork, IIAUDWAUE AM) I'liV.tlDIXG. TcIuiilutiiQ 811, CIS Muln Street. fliarll). President of the Olrle' Club Well, girls, we have $10 in the troawiry. IIow shall we fcpend it? Chorus-Oh. let's get up a charity ball: I'uck. to llMwomlfiK. "Iau't toy nuw drew becoming me?" naked the delighted wife. "Yea," replied the head of the estab lishment, "ami I suppose the hill for It will soon be comiujr to mo."' To accept good advice W to Increase one's own nblllty. Goethe. Uotli I'.ltraftx. Customer-Have you any extract of beef? Walter-Yes, sir. Ilrown or white? Customer Brown or white? i Walter- Yes. sir. Iteef tea or milk 7 . rhlladelphla Press. It urn I postmen in Kngland hereaf ter will handle parcels not exceeding 11 pounds In weight. The wife of nn unsuccessful artist haa a very poor opinion of the public taste. BYERS' BEST FLOUR N mailc from the choicest wheat that grows. Good bread Is iis-,iiitil tlicn lljcr.V licit i'loiir is ucd.. Uran, shorts, steam rolled barley uluajs on hand, ' PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S, IJYEHS, l'roprlctor. MONTERASTELLI BROS. Marble and Granite Wojpks Anyone Intending to secure a monument or hendatonc for relative, or friend will do well to seo us. Largest collection to select from. Lowest prices. MONTERASTELLI BROS. Xew Stone Building, Court Street, next to Domestic Laundry. I H 69 it v 8 1 8