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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1905)
0000 PS OF MOVED TO COFUR D'ALKXES FROM GRANITE, OREGON. I'livelliug of Monument Over Grave of WimkIiiuim Wells Delegate to .rnnl IahIkc f RrlM'knlw Xo liiaskaiiH Think of Locating line Serious Cane of Typhoid Fever At tending M. E. Church, South, Coll fereiKKS Milton, June 2. Mrs. E. S. Stowe and family of Granite, have arrived on a visit to Mrs. Stowe's parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Wright. The fam ily will (fo to C'oeur d'Alene where Mr. Htowe is employed in the mines. The ceremony of unveiling the mon ument over the grave of Neighbor James Welles will be conducted by the Woodmen of the World Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Alta Evans will leave for Port land to attend the Rebukah grand lodge. J. 15. Toien, brother of Ell Tolen, has 'arrived from Ord, Net., and may decide to locate here. He was accom panied by his son." Harry S. Taylor, the telegraph op erator, was taken to the Sisters' hos pltul at Walla Walla Wednesday. He is quite seriously ill by typhoid fever. Hev. G. H. Glbbs, pastor of the South M. E. church. Is ut Roseburg. ' attending a district conference In the Interest of Columbia college. Mr. William Hilton, formerly pro prietor of the City hotel, Is here to day. Mr. Hilton Is now a farmer near Touchet, Wash. MORROW COUNTY HAPPENINGS, Narration of Events Compiled From the Times. Prewett Cox, who has been a Pen dleton visitor for some time past, re turned Friday last to accept a position as freight agent with the O. R. & N. at Heppner. vnwtnr Crawford has accepted the nnaitlon of assistant cashier of the Hank of Heppner. But in taking thlB position Mr. Crawford Informs the Times that he has no Intention of re- uiTiiimr his uosltlon as county clerk. Tho wool balers at both Heppner ware houses were started up the first of tho week and shipments of wool viii Minn be on the road to the east. Wool Is coming In now qulto rapidly and tho bulers will bo kept constantly minor for several weeks. Since last Friday there has been shipped from tho Heppner stockyards about 100 cars, or four tralnloads of sheep. This makes about 200 car loads that have been shipped from h..ro Aiirlnir the Dast two weeks, and there Is probably as many more to be shipped. ' B. O. Noble, E. C. Ashbaugh and nttn Frtflrierlrh have been elected del egates to the grand lodge from Wil n A BEVERAGE OF TILE HIGHEST QUALITY. PURE, WHOLESOME AX DSATLSFY1XG. RECOMMEXDED BY' JUDGES OF GOOD BEER AXD PHYSICIANS. THE PENDLETON BREWERY ANNOUNCES THAT IT HAS ITS PILSEXER VP TO THE HIGHEST STANDARD POSSIBLE IN BEER- sudsd? Q IPcipflffiffiftDODini ion E!ip IJMsdoi SINCE TAKING CHARGE OF THE PENDLETON BREWERY SCHULTZ & STRICKER HAVE BEEN DEVOTING THEIR ATTENTION TO BRINGING THEIR BEER UP TO THE STANDARD WHICH IT XOOW IS, AXD WILL CONTINUE TO MAKE BUT THIS ONE HIGH GRADE. THE BEER IS NOW PROPERLY RIPENED AND AGED AXD STANDS OUT AS A BEVERAGE AT THE HEAD, FOR ITS RE-VL GOODNESS. IT IS IM POSSIBLE FOR ANY ONE TO PRODUCE A BETTER ARTICLE THAN THE PERFCTED PILSEXER BEER, M VDE BY SCHl'TZ & STRICKER, AND IT WILL ALWAYS BE KEPT UP TO THIS STANDARD. DON'T CONFUSE THIS IMPROVED PILSEXER WITH ANY THAT HAS BEEN MADE HERETOFORE, FOR IT IS ABSOLUTELY' THE HIGHEST DEGREE OF GOODNESS WE ASK ALL LOVERS AXD JUDGES OF BEER TO TRY AXD PASS JUDGMENT UPON' OUR PENDLETON PILSEXER BEER IS XOW OX SALE IN ALL THE LEADING SALOONS. ALWAYS ASK FOR YXD INSIST OX HAVING PENDLETON PILSEXER HER, THE BEER THAT'S ALL GOOD. SOLD IX KEGS AXD BOTTLED mil FAMILY USE. DELIVERED ANYWHERE IX THE CITY. PENDLETON BEER HAS THE ADVANTAGE OF OUT-OF-TOWN PRODUCTS IX THAT IT IS MADF HERE, KEPT T THE SME TEMPERATURE ALL THE TIME AND NOT SUBJECT TO CHANGES WHILE BEING SHIPPED. 'PHONE MAIN 2HHI. THE low Lodge No. 66, I. O. O. F., and Mrs. l. O. Justus, Mrs. J. W. Ras mus and Mrs J. L. Yeager have been elected delegates to the grand assembly by I'lne Tree Rebekah lodge. F. P. Farnsworth returned the lat ter purt of the week from an extens ive trip through Washington, visiting Spokane and other towns of the east ern part of the state. Mr. Farnsworth tells the Times that he has recently bought a band of sheep and expects to buy another, thus entering Into the sheep business even more extensively than heretofore. it. F. Hynd Informs the Times that he bought a clip of 89 fleeces of wool of L. A. Florence the other day for which he paid 20 1-2 cents a pound. Each fleece netted Mr. Florence $2.36 or $210.05 for the 89. This is an other evidence of the advantages of running sheep In small bands. Two of the fleeces, each of which weighed 14 pounds, were sent to the fair as part of Morrow county's wool exhibit. EQUAL SUFFRAGE MEETING. Miss Mary X. Chase Win Speak t M. E. Church Monday Night. Miss Mary N. Chase, a national or ganizer of the Woman's Suffrage as- sc elation, and president of the New Hampshire association, will speak on the subject of Woman's Suffrage, at the Thompson Street M. E. church, on next Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Judge S. A. Lowell will preside at the meeting and will also make a brief address on the subject. Miss Chase Is now In the east end of Umatilla county, where she has been working In the Interest of equal suffrage during the past week. An effort will be made to organize a club In Pendleton and all who are Interested In the subject are cordially invited to attend this meeting. Peti tions asking for the submission of the equal suffrage amendment to the Ore gon constitution will be circulated, and the matter will be voted on again at the coming state election In June, 1906. MILTON WILL VOTE MONDAY. Local Option Election Will Be Held June 5. Baffled once by a technicality that crept Into the records of the local option election held lost November In Milton precinct, the people of that town are determined that nothing shall be left undone to secure them in their wishes on next Monday, when a local option election will be held there. Every precaution has been tuken to comply with the law to the lettor and the people are confident that both North and South Milton precincts will carry "dry" and consequently close up the Frecwater saloons. Great Interest Is being taken In the matter and a full vote will be cast. Admiral Rojestvensky stated in an Interview at Rasebo that ho hoped to to get his fleet clear of Tsu Island and Into the open Japan sea during a fog, but a stiff wind arose and dls closed his position. CITY He Did Not Stop to Think. The amount of energy people some times expend in making a bod mattel worse Is Illustrated by the Btory of s chance encounter In a street car told to the World by a New York man. It was on a Broadway car, and then were few passengers. A man boarded the car and sat down by my side. Hit clothing was muddy and torn, and h bad a handkerchief wrapped round one land. "I guess I am the biggest fool In town," he remarked. I looked Interest ed, and he continued: "Bee that car four blocks ahead 1 Well, I ran a block to overtake It and gave the conductor a dime. He handed me a nickel, which fell from my band to the street I yelled for him to stop the car. He did not do it, and I jump ed off and landed all spraddled out like an old saddle. See my clothes? Well, the Jump did it" I asked the man If be found the nickel. "Ob, yes, I found the nickel, bnt what good did It do met I could not overtake the car from which I bad Jumped, and so I boarded this car and gave the nickel to the conductor. So I skinned my hand, spoiled my clothes and risked my neck just to find that five cent piece and give it to the street railway." " All the Transfers She Bad. As a bevy of laughing girls rose to get off a street car the other day at a point where transfers are given tbey were followed by a demure young wo man who bad been absorbed in a novel. Just before she alighted she asked the conductor for a transfer, and be, think ing all tke girls were of one party, gave ber six, which she took without notic ing and held In ber band as she stood on the corner waiting for her car, the other girls having gone on walking. When the reader got ber car she took a seat and was soon lost again In ber novel. Then the conductor came up, and she held out the slips. He took them, counted them and then looked around with a puszled expression. "Where are the others?" he asked. "Oh," replied the young woman, look ing up n moment from her book, "that s all be gave me." Philadelphia Record. The First Phonograph. The first words reproduced and ut tered by a phonograph are naturally matter of historical Interest When Edison was at work on bis first phono graph many weeks were consumed in experiment It Is said that when the talking machine was first discovered it waa as much a surprise to Its Inventor as to the world. The Wizard waa working' on some telephone receivers and was led to put a piece of tinfoil on a cylinder. It recorded sound, and Ed Isou was convinced that the humaq voice could be recorded and produced. When the time came to make an actual test Edison, with bis mind on mechan ical details, absentnilndedly tested bid contrivance with the familiar phrase, "Mari bad. a UtUe.lamb."The vers or? n sfiur MEWMY was the flrsf record' taken by" tbe ma chine. Strengthening the Nerrci. Self control or nerve force is the great lesson of health and therefore of life Itself. To understand how to re lax is to understand bow to strengthen nerves. Hearty laughter is a source of relaxation, as are also all high thoughts, as those of hope, beauty, trust or love. Relaxation is found in diversion. An occasional outing or holiday is neces sary. As there are conscious and un conscious thoughts, there are conscious and unconscious nerve tensions. Wom en when shopping do not know tbe very tight grip they give their parcels until, on reaching borne, their hands fall re laxed in their laps, and they say tbey are so tlred.IIeultu Culture. The Emerald. An emerald that has no flaw In it is typical of the purest love. Some peo ple say that, as few sucb stones can be found, purest love Is necessarily rare. An emerald was always thought to possess the power of discovering treachery In the shape of alleged friends. The emerald is exceedingly popular In courtships and In marriages. After marriage It is supposed to bring harmony into the household and to further domestic joys In every possi ble way. To lose an emerald Is said to bring business misfortunes and dis aster. A Helpless Woman. "My wife's the most helpless crea ture," growled Cadly; "simply can't do anything without bothering me to belp her." "Yesr "Yes. Only last night I bad to reach up and get a candle off tbe shelf of the pantry for her so she could go down cellar and bring up a scuttle of coal." Philadelphia Press. Dlagaated. Arthur Weren't you awfully fright ened when you saw the burglar In your room? Theodore I was worse than frightened; I was disgusted. He said if I said a word I was a dead man. Absurd, don't you know. A dead man couldn't talk. Boston Transcript Nothing to Flee Prom, Mother So your little playmate is sick. What Is the matter with ber? Little Dot I don't know, but it's some Ihlng with an awful long name, so I guess It's a real respectable sort of disease. May I go to see her? Us Main Duty. Employer (to new oiflce boy) Has I the cashier told you what you are to do this afternoon? " Office Boy Tes, sir; I'm to wake blm when I see you coming. Scngis. A watch taken to the top of Mont Blanc will gain thirty-six seconds in twenty-four hours. Carpets Rader Carpets. ODD "tttfffffftw Build Your Fences to Last EXTRA GOOD CEDAR POSTS, WHICH ARE FREE FROM DEFECTS AND WILL STAND THE WEATHER. COAL TAR, THAT PRESERVES THE POSTS, $8.60 A BAR REL. LET US FIGURE WITH YOU ON BUILDING MATERIAL. OREGON LUMBER YARD ALTA STREET. 1 THE ALTA HOUSE 2 S. C. BITTNER, Proprietor. J Enlarged and refitted. Thirty clean, well-kept rooms with 2 good beds. Cinmodious dining room, where meals are served m family 2 style. All white help. 2 FUIST-CLASS ACCOMMODATIONS AT REASONABLE PRICES. FEED YARD IN CONNECTION. 2 2 STOP AT THE 2 ALTA HOUSE, Cor. Alta and Mill Streets j PONT PUT OFF TOOLONGl 1 The ClosingOutSale ! 2 IS DRAWING TO A CLOSE COME : And see the greatest bargains j j ever given in shoes j Dindinger, Wilson ( Co. 2 Cood Shoes Sacrificed 2 BYERS' BEST FLOUR Is made from the choicest assured when Byers' Best Flour hnrley always on hand. PENDLETON W. S. BYERS, 0000 tt tt tt tt tt tt tt tt tt mmmmmm;,;; OPPOSITE COURT BOUSE. wheat that grows.. Good bread la Is used.. Bran, aborts, steam rolled ROLLER MILLS 1 Proprietor.