Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1905)
DAILY EAST OltEOOXlAX, PENDLETON, OHEGOX, TUESDAY, MAItCII 21, 105. PAGB THRHK. EIGHT PAGES. f f TtWTTTTtTI IT Iff 1 I'FT FTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTf HOME OF THE "WALKOVER" AND "FLOKSHEIM" SHOES FOR MEN. ALEXANDER'S THE RELIABLE STORE TTTT llll'ITIIIilllll X HOME OF THE "SOItOKIS" AND "DAITON" SHOES FOR LADIES. OUR STOCK OF SPRING GOODS FOR THE VARIOUS DEPARTMENTS IS NOW COMPIJ5TE, AND WE DO NOT MAKE AN EXTRAVAGANT STATEMENT WHEN WE SAY NEVER IN THS HIS TORY OF THIS WELL KNOWN STORE DID WE EXHIBIT SUCH AN ARRAY OF BEAUTIFUL GOODS, 'i TIS A REAL PLEASURE TO US TO SnOW THEM. MANY Alt ETIIE COMPLIMENTS WE HAVE RECEIVED ON OUR NEW GOODS, AND THE PRICES AS WELL AS THE STYLES ARE RIGHT THE OBJECT OF II CHURCH MISSION CQJJg LADIES' GARMENT DEPARTMENT. In addition to our already large stock of shirt wul milts we are Id re ceipt of another shipment of the swell eHt line of suits ever shown In Pendle ton, both In silk mohair and fancy Panama weaves; tine prices range from 937.60 to 910.00 Also a big lot of white Lawn, Persian ..Lawn and Swiss shirt waists. The Une must be seen to fully appreci ate them; prices from 912.00 to 85c Jap silk shirt waists are also in pro fusion; very pretty indeed; come in and see them; prices range from 910.00 to $2.50 A big assortment of silk petticoats just in. Como In black and all the new wanted shades; prices from 910-50 to 97.50 Ladles plain mohair skirts in black, nary and brown; prices run from 912.00 to 92.50 DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENT. 45-inch French novelty suiting, ox ford, tan, nave ; very swell . . $1.50 52-lncli figured mohair In brown. blue and Muck. Elegant for shirt waist suits 91-00 I'Ihui black Sicilian with splendid lus tre, soft silk finish; prices 91-75, 91.50, 91-25 and 65c A big assortment of otlier fancy weaves, all new, up-to-date; prices from 91-00 to 65c WASH) GOODS DEPARTMENT. An Immense stock of white figured mercerized shirt waist suiting; also for slurt waists; 60o to 15c 32-lnch batiste In ail shades; best val ue ever shown at 15c 30-Inch figured lawn and organdies; Just what you are looking for; 50c down to 20c 30-inch cotton mohair, very swell for Inexpensive shirt waist suits ...25c UNDERWEAR AND HOSIERY DEPARTMENT. A big sliipment of ladies', misses' and children's liose Just received In this department. We surpass anything ever shown ; best value we ever ha Ladies' hose as low as 10c Ladies' underwear has arrived and to say it is the best and most complete line Is putting it very mild. Look them over and get prices. Prices as low as 10c DOMESTIC DEPARTMENT. Ginghams, bleached and unbleached; muslin sheeting, etc., etc. This de partment Is also complete. TABLE LINENS. An Immense assortment to select from; bleached and half bleached, ;and red and blue Damask; prices as low as 25c WATCH FOR OUR ANNOUNCEMENT OF OUR NEXT SATURDAY NIGHT EXTRA SPECIAL SALE Your Spring Need in the WE WANT YOUR TRADE ON THE MERITS OF OUR GOODS AND THE COMPLETE ASSORT MENT WE OFFER YOU TO SELECT FROM. BUILDING HARDWARE OF EVERY CONCEIVABLE DESIGN, INCLUDING HINGES, LOCKS, NAILS, ETC, AND Alii NEC ESSARY TIN AND PLUMBING WORK TO COMPLETE YOUR JOB IN FIRST-CLASS SHAPE. MECHANICS' TOOLS LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE STOCK FOR CARPENTERS TO SELECT FROM. GARDEN HOSE OUR STOCK CONTAINS ALL SIZES AND GRADES, AND PRICES TO CORRESPOND. WE CARRY SPRAYERS, PRUNERS, PRUNING SAWS, SHEARS AND KNIVES. IX ADDITION TO THE ABOVi. WE HANDLE BIRD CAGES WHIPS BROOMS WRINGERS BRUSHES RANGES PUMPS PIPE NETTING CONE BARBED WIRE ETC. ETC. ETC IF IN NEED OP ANYTHING IN THE HARDWARE LINE WE WILL BE PLEASED TO HAVE YOU CALL AND SEE US BEFORE BUYING. " W. J. CLARICE I tit COURT STREET. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS BRING CERTAIN AND QUICK RESULTS U yam want help or a situation, want to buy, sail or trade anything, want to rent a farm, hoa room, want to recover soma lost property, your desires can bo satisfied thoroughly by Bring the Oregoalan's slasatfled columns. Count sis words to the Una. No ad taken under II cents. Three Unas, one Insertion Fifteen cents Three Unas, two Insertions, Three lines, six Insertions Five lines, one Insertion. . . Five lines, two Insertions. . Five tines, six Insertions.,, Twenty-five cents ...... .Forty-five cents Twenty-five cents .ThlrtT-flvs cents , ... Seventy-five osnts HlimMlimMHMIIIIIIIHmmIMWMHIIIIMMIIIIMMMHMHHv The Bast Oregoalaa la Bast era Oregon's repra tara paper. It leads and the peoakt i stow it Sf tMr Ubstal pa trans. It to the almttslng SMdaaas sf this section. The following able sermon was preached by Rev. Henry Dixon Jones lit the Church of the Redeemer, Epis copal, Sunday evening, March 19, the second Sunday in Lent: Text: And when He had called His twelve disciples unto Him, He gave them power. Matthew 10:1. Ttlshop Wells, the missionary bishop of the district of Spokane, will preach a short mission In this church on the evenings of Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of this week, and the rector will continue 'the mission on Friday evening. ' The preaching of a mission is no new thing. At various times in the past God has used this method to quicken the higher life in the aouls of men. Noah preached a mission. Jonah preached a mission. John the Baptist preached a mission. Our Lord preached a mission. In the 11th century, Peter the Hermit preached a mission. In the 14th century a mis sion preached by John Wlclif led 10,- 000 to the feet of Christ. The mis sions of Martin Luther, Calvin, Cran- mer and Latimer and Ridley kindled the fires of the Reformation. All his life long John Wesley preached a mission with the world for a parish. What Ms the object of a mission? The object of a mission is to convert the largest number of aouls possible. It Is a special effort directed to this special object. There Is a great deal of work done Incidentally to this but this la the object to be kept stead ily in view, the conversion of sinners. One of the Incidental results is this a deep impression is made on the neighborhood. Curiosity is aroused. Questions are asked about what is going on. The Imagination la excit ed. A great deal of good is done by exciting the imagination of a whole city. Though men may never have had any Intention of altering their lives, they remember for years after ward what they saw In the course of a mission. In a city like our own, where the claims of the church are not understood, where some men think the church Is only .a dry social organization, with many demerits and few merits, to see the church making a vigorous effort to bring the gospel home In a clear and incisive way to individual souls is a good thing. It is impossible for the city to say the Episcopal church Is dead, the Episcopal church is unspirltual, when it sees the church aiming at the spiritual awakening of the soul of the people. To arrest the imagination of this city is a great thing; yet this la not the object of a mission. The object of a mission Is to get hold of men and women and put them In a right relation to God. Another result of a mission Is to deepen the soul of the faithful. Though this Is one of the first re sults of a mission, and God knows we need mightily such a result In this parish, yet the object of a mission Is not to deepen the devotion of the faithful. It Is not to Increase the knowledge of those who already know spiritually the saving elements of the gospel. The object of a mission is to convert souls not yet given up to God. It is to bring souls to an Inward, true, vital knowledge of God, and of His promises a knowledge which seta them right, and puts them in the way of learning, of advancing, and of be coming more and more holy, and all else 'that follows after true conver sion. You understand what this word 'conversion" means? It means that persons who have not lived for God, now henceforth live for Him. It means a setting right, a setting in right direction, in the right attitude of the soul, which was in the wrong direction. There Is an infinite work to be done after such conversion; but the first thing to be done before you can do any good with a soul is to get it in a right attitude towards God Whatever the soul may have believ ed before about the will and meaning of God when a soul Is converted. It accepts the will of God so far as It knows that will. It believes God's promises, it grasps them, and it says, "These promises are for me." It lays hold of the promises of for giveness and Bays, "This forgiveness is for me; this forgivness Is mine, and being mine, from this time forth. mean to live the life of a forgiven man, God helping me." This Is the ctlei t of a mission. To set the wills and consciences of men In a right at titude of filial devotion towards the Eternal Father. The special object oT a mission Is the conversion of in dividual souls. Who are these unconverted souls? First, there are persons within the church whose souls are not In a right relation to God. There are baptized persons, there are attendants at church, there are communicants who are not at ease not at peace with God. They have not taken hold of the gospel of truth. Such souls that are troubled and are not at rest are to be brought Into the peace which our Lord offers to all who truly come to Him. And secondly and let me not be misunderstood although I hold out my hand In Christian fellowship to all who love and believe in our Lord, Jesus Christ "if you love me, give me thine hand" yet one object of a church mission must be to re move the prejudices, the mlsconcep tlons of our church, which lie In the minds of our friends of the denomi nations against that which we believe to be the way of Christ One object of a church mission must needs be to set persons In the right way as regards the doctrines and the practices of the church. : want my Wesleyan brother, my Bap tlst brother, my Calvlnlstlo brother, my Campbelllte brother to better un derstand the claims and the doctrines and the -practices of our beloved church. So that one object of church Mission la to lead these breth ren Into a clearer knowledge of the fulness of the gospel, as the Protes tant Episcopal church teaches the same. And lastly, there Is that vast class of persons who are totally Indiffer ent to religion. They do not give the gospel a thought. They are quite contented to go on in tne slate in which they are. These persons are those for whom especially the mission Is made. It Is to these that our Lord's heart goes out so tenderly: It is to these, the lost sheep, sheep who are quite lost, so lost that they do not even care to find their way back, In utter want of every aid simply waiting for the Good Shepherd to come to them: these are the souls that we are told to go out and try to save. Who are told to go out and try to save? Who are going to stand en the Lord's side this week? Beloved! never In the history of til.' church has a single soul been brought to God except by the person al Influence. The Influence of some other soul. This Is the only power that will be effectual in this mission the power of personal influence. The Influence In families of husbands over wives, wives over husbands, parents and children, sisters and brothers up on one another; the Influence in so cial life of friend over friend, of man over man; the Influence in the larger circle of the world, of class over class, and of Christians over unbelievers. And where may you find this power? The power which shall Inform and make potent this personal Influence? "And when He called His twelve dis ciples unto Him, He gave them pow er." There is no other place to get this power, beloved. Near to Jesus Christ, and the nearer we get to Him, the more power we get. None of us are so near to Jesus Christ that we can not get nearer and the nearer we get to His heart. the more He gives us. He gives us power! He gives us power! what kind of power? He gave His disci ples power against "unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal all man- er of sickness and all manner of dis ease. He gave tnem power to ao good. He will give us power to do good. He will give us power to res cue. He win give us power to save. The Son of Man Is come not to de stroy men's lives, but to save them; the bruised reed He will not break, the smoking flax He will not quench," the little child He will not reject, the creeping, crawling sinner He will not turn aside from. And Jesus Christ will give His disciples power to relieve human burdens, human distresses, and to heal all manner of sickness and all manner of disease. It Is His wish that mankind should be well without headache, or heartache, or broken joint, or poisoned blood, or reeling brain. Beloved, go down on your knees this moment, and remain there all this week, and pray for this power pray for It, pray that you may be made strong, grand, massive, royal in His serrloe. The twelve disciples were sent forth to do work, practical work, they wars sent forth to work. Let us begin our work. Let us begin where we can; if we can not preach, we can give; if we can not give, we can Instruct; If we can not say much, It Is surely given us to express what, God knows, so many of His ministers need what this minister needsthe sympathy of a fellow feeling. BATHING AND HEALTH. BeneSta to Be Derived From CeM Water and Rwbbflas. A cold bath we might as well get at the straight of the thing is not really a matter of cleanliness so much as a matter of getting the skin livened np and the capillaries and veins next to the surface full of blood. Ice cold water or scalding hot water will do that, but tepid water no, no! The skin Is almost exactly the same kind of an excreting organ as tlio lungs. Tlie same products seep through the pores as are carried off In the breath, and the air purifies the blood In the same way. But the great er part of the skin Is smothered up In clothes day and night. What the cold water of tbe bath dissolves is matter well away. And the rubbing dry Is pretty vigorous exercise If you want to know. ,Any rubbing Is bound to push the blood along toward the heart and help the circulation, because there are valves in the veins which prevent the blood from going In any other di rection than toward the heart. What ever loose flakes of outer cuticle are rubbed off we needn't worry About; plenty more where they came from. Tbe extra food the Increased appetite demands will make good that trifling loss. Eugene Wood In Everybody's Magazine. Force of Habit. Miss Antique Why have you always remained single? Olilbneh Simply from force of lialrit. I suppose. You know you know I was horn that way. Philadelphia Record. Education Is needpd not only to hry us to do our work, ft is also needad to help us to enjoy our leisure FEET ORE One Night Treatment with (Tl Soak the feet or hand on retiring in a strong:, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA OINTMENT, the great Skin Cure and purest of emollient, Bandage lightly in old, aoft cotton or linen. For itching, turning, and scaling eczema, rashes, in flammation, and chafing, for red ness, roughness, cracks, and fissures, with brittle, shapeless nails, this treatment b simply wonderful, frequently curing Its one night. CmtMl Anw Cwa. WHhnac at CUTTCUna Soap, c, ImM Mr. Ma of l FiiU. . rw )Oitwt, 0e. Dwoa.: rhirtirt-u, a.., hrji. I Ru 6 h) ha: 1ST Cotambu. in, tmtm Drat Caaa, Oil Sk rHrUsAm " Bw Can trtj Bum." Nasal CATARRH In all its stages. Ely's Cream Balm cleanses, aoothea and heals the diaeaacd m.rnbrane. Kcm-ea catarrh and drives away s cold la the bead quickly. Cream Balm la placed Into the notr.la.epina over the membrane anil la absorbed. Belief la Im mediate and a core fohowa. It la not drying does not produce aneezing. Large Site, 60 ecste at Drop gleta or by mall; Trial Size, 10 centa. ELY BROTHERS, K Warren Street, New York OoaJ bin with our good, clean COAL. Ton can't afford to use the ordinary kind. Tbe waste amounts to much more thaa you would suppose besides, ttre that burns badly Is an ag gravation for which there la but one euro better Coal. We handle the best the kind that will give satisfaction. Henry Kopittke DUTCH HENRY. Office Pendleton Ice A Cold Starara Co., Phene 1781. aaa an 1 1 Can Repair It ; u nauar a amfifKna w a your watch or Jewelry, I cava repair the damage. JAMES M. WILDER t WATCHMAKER, KNGRAYKR, JMWKLKR AND D1A- MOOT) SETTER. 4 aaui Daavakavi. i SAYINGS BANK BUILDING. Walters' Flouring Mills Capacity, 169 barrels a nay. Flour exchanged tor wheat. Flour. Mill Feed, Cbopd Feed, etc., always on hand. NOTICE OF SPECIAL MF.ETIVG Of the Stockholders of Golconda Con solidated Gold Mines Company. Pursuant to a resolution duly adopted by the board of directors et the Oolconda Consolidated field Mines company at a meeting held en Maroh 1, 1101, a special nesting ef the stockholders of said Golconda Consolidated Gold Mines company will be held at the office of the cor poration In Pendleton Savings Bank Building In Pendleton, Umatilla coun ty, Oregon, at the office of the com pany, in Carter A Raley's law of fices, on Saturday the 8th day of April, 1905, at X o'clock p .m.. for the purpose of considering ways and means to arrange for the payment of the existing Indebtedness of the cor poration and to provide money for Its future conduct and operation, and to authorize the Issuance of bonds or other evidences of Indebtedness for any money borrowed for the purpose aforesaid, and to authorise the exe cution of a mortgage upon all the property of the corporation to secure such bonds or other evidence of in debtedness as may be provided for, and to adopt new by-laws In lien et the present by-laws of this corpora tion. The above notice is given and pub lished pursuant to said resolution adopted at the meeting of the boar of directors of said corporation held at Pendleton, Oregon, on March 1, DOS, as aforesaid. Dated this 8th day of March, 1H. T. Q. HAILBT, President Attest: 3. a BaX-'RWITH, Ssaretary.