Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1905)
fetGHT PAGES. DAILY EAST OREfiONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1905. PAGE THREE. V SHOE DEPARTMENT Cleaning Tin Stork 1 o r w 4 Odd Lots - - - Attractive Prices T LADIES' OXFORDS. 93.50 Oxford $3.0o Oxfords 2.50 Oxfords $2.25 Oxford $2.00 Oxfords $1.7.5 Oxfords $1.50 Oxfords $2.00 $1.95 $.105 $1.55 $1.50 $1.30 $1.10 CHILDREN'S OXFORDS. $2.50 Oxfords $1.75 S2.25 Oxfords $1.60 S2.00 Oxfords $1.50 SI.75 Oxfords $1.30 $1.50 Oxfords $1.10 91. 25 Oxfords $1.00 $1.00 Oxfords H5c H.'ic Oxfords 60c ONE WEEK ONLY. Alexander's DEPARTMENT STORE. ONE WEEK ONLY. I 1 X T KUW IS TUB TIME TO lily Hammocks, Gasoline Stoves Ice Cream Freezers, Refrigerators HAULS HAH R ill ENGINEER PETE TIIEISEN MAKES 1000-MILE TRIP, . R. & N. Engine No. 192 Sent From La Grundo to Spokane to Pull the llurrlrniin SktIuI From Tliut I'lnee to l'oi'tluml Vlu Seattle Iluniinun ii ml I'ui'ty Inspecting Uio System, Alter Which lluri'lniiiii (iocs to thu Orient. BIO LINE TO SELECT FROM. LINE BEFORE BUYING. CALL AND EX AMINE OUR The Taylor Hardware Co. SUCCESSOR TO T. C. TAYLOR. 741 MAIN STREET. HUMANE HARNESS The Harness that sives comfort to homes and adds pleasure to their users. Humane harness U patented. Lasts longer, looks better and costs no mori; than ordinary harness. There Is but one place In ITmatll'a county to get Humane Harness, and that Is. at our factory. Hamely (& Company SUCCESSORS TO 3. V SMITH. 120 COIRT STI.EET. Tlarm-HN Repairing and KaoVliery f v kinds done promptly. Bingham Springs THE POPULAR BLUE MOUNTAIN RESORT Bingham Springs Hotel, beautifully located In the heart of the Blue Mountains. The Umatilla river flows past the hotel, making an Ideal place for the lover of trout fishing. On all sides rise the tree-clad mountains, making Bingham Springs one of tho coolest and most restful resorts In Oregon. The hotel maintains Its own herd of cows, furnishing an abundance of milk and cream for Its guests. Our garden furnishes an abundance of fresh vegetables for the table. We spare no pains to add to the comfort or pleasure of our guests. Our swimming pool Is one of our most popular features. Rates, J3.00 and J2.50 a day. J 15.00 a week for one, or $25.00 for two. Table board. J8.00 a week to campers. Camping privileges $1.50 each per week. This Includos all privi leges of the grounds, Including the use of the swimming pool. Address M. E. FOLEY, Bingham Springs GIBBON P. O., ORGON 1 BYERS best flour Is made from the choicest wheat that craws. Good bread 1 assured when Dyers' Best Flour Is used.. Brn, almrta, steam tolled harley always on hand. i: PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS ! ! W. 8. BYERS, Proprietor. 0tttttt Why Collars Crack When you fold m. vsiin mru . ...m . ..... . . STRETCH, and the INSIDE WRINKLE8; the reason "for this la DOMESTIO LAUNDRY Dampen yonr collar! so that they will not Engineer Pete ThelHen. in charge of O. It. & N. passenger engine No. 192, one of Hie elegant new locomotives just received by the company at La Grande, pussed through Pendleton curly this morning to Spokaire, to haul E. II. llarrlman's special from Spokane to Portland by way of Seat tle. General .Manager O'Brleii, of the O. It. & N in hopes of furnlHhing Mr. llanimuii with the best possible ser vice wlille in the northwest, sent this special engine In charge of one of the oldest engineers on the system to pull the special. Kngiiio 192 was given right of track over everything from Pendleton to Spokane and Is expected to make a phenomenal run to that place to meet the Ilarrlmuu train there today. From Spokane Kngliicer Thelsen will be accompanied by an engineer from the Great Northern who IB fu millar with that road, to insure the absolute safety of the train while passing over the Spokane-Seattle dl vislon. From Seattle to Portland an engineer from the Northern Pacific will accompany Engineer Thelsen to pilot him over that road which Is not familiar to the O. R. & N. engineer. The trio to be made by Mr. Thelsen and his engine will amount to 1000 miles when he returns to La Grande after delivering the special Into the keeping of thu Southern Pacific at Portland. The ilitrrlmau special is made up of five elegant coaches two special tars and three Pullmans and heurs K. H. Harriinan, president of the Hai rlnmn system, and a large party of officials und eastern capitalists, who are on a tour of the Harrlman lines. Mr. Harrlman will sail from either Sar, Francisco or Victoria, 1;. C, for the Orient, next week, after Inspect ing the system through Oregon and California. He will visit Japan, Manchuria., the Philippines and China. In the Interests of the traffic carried by Harrlman steamers from Pacific coant points to the Orient. . TOURING IN RUSSIA. The Difficulties of One Who Cannot Sneak the Langaaa-e. Nljnl Novgorod, where the great Rns slim fair Is held, far on toward the frontier of Asia, I found the most dilll cult proposition in nil Europe from Uie standpoint of the traveler seeking rest and refreshment. I knew only ontt word In Russian, "vodka," and on can pronounce that too often. Nobody seemed to speak anything but Russian. I could not get a cnhinan to take me to a hotel. One Isvoschlc after another would pick inn up, seem to understand and then take mo to a shop, n steam ship pier, a private residence. I was reduced to the Humiliating necessity of nuking pictures of hotels, beds and food of all sorts-mid quite without avail. At last, bethinking myself that the trade of Russia was In German hands. I started out afoot In search of any mercantile lookin" nerson with clime cropped hlond heard and spec tacles. Such a man I found, nnd he directed mo In German to a traktlr. where I hail breakfast with the aid of more crude cartooning. "Coffee" is good Volapuk, and the waiter under stood mo at once, but I had to sketch a number of elliptical figures In my notebook and finally make a spirited drawing of the common or garden lien nerore tie Knew I wanted eggs." For dinner that night I went to n res taurant overhanging tho Volga. It Is TESTS IN FEEDING NORTHERN PACIFIC ISSI'ES IMPORTANT CIRCIXARS. Ninety Steers Kept Coder Full Feed for Five Months Gain 487 Pounds Euch, or Three Pounds per Day During First Thirty Days Many of Them Ixwt Weight and During Crisp, Dry, Cold Weal her Tlicy Gained Four Pounds Per Day Each. Interesting circulars on cattle feed ing have Just been Issued by J. 8. Balrd, general freight agent of the Northern Pacific. For over three years the Northern Pacific has been experimenting in feeding cattle, testing the value of different feed products and experi menting in a general wav ns tn uuions unuer which cattle fatten most rapidly and how the most solid flesh may be secured and also with the question of shrinkage In shipping. At the South St. Paul yards of the Northern Pacific 99 steers were Placed on full feed hint nvmu. They were given Dlentv and timothy hay. After five months they weighed 1557 pounds each, or a " " o ' Bum ul 90 1 pounus per neau, or an one of my most bnflllnj? memories of average gain of three pounds per head I I'll Vol t)lflt U'linil In tnw Mitnf I tnaAn r. .1 KM - , I . , ij Mm .-it. uiuiit: i jjjci uay winic uiiuf r iuu ieeu. Hotel St. George GEORGE DARVEAU, Proprietor. -. An mi mm the sign of drinking and pointed to the river the waiter lowered a bucket out of the window Into the stream and brought It to me filled with rich brown water. New York Mall SHEAR WOMEN LIKE SHEEP. Every Year in Country DNti-tctx of Brittany nnd Normandy, I 'air Ours Purt Willi TlH-lr Hair. Every year, during the summer sea son, fairs are held In the country districts of Brittany and Normandy, to which the peasant women flock to sell their hair. Nearly always they receive goods in payment, and often they are woefully cheated, bartering their tresses for some sh.iuv .il.h..,.u or laces, worth but a fraction of the value of their hair. The hair is cut off by the "shearers" (as they nre called) with little less roughness than would be used In shearing a sheep. In many cases the victims look as if the hair had been gnawed off by rats or removed with a saw. The hair gatherers who go about the country shearing the their wares to the hair dressers nnd wig-makers. Hut in many of the Brittany villages there is at le;it dealer who purchases hair all the year round, usually paying for It In kind; the most payment taking the form, of a shawl or scarf. Human nalr, In the trade market. aoout iu shillings a pound, so that the hair-shearers make n..r,.. profits. THE MUD DAUBER WASP. lie KntomhN I.lvlnc Spiders as Food For Her Vonnir. When summer warmth has awakened the maternal instincts of the Insect world (hp mud dauber wasn ninv he seen gathering mortar at the margin of stream, pool or puddle. Filling her mandibles, which serve as both snnde nnd hod, she hears the load of mud to some rough surface, rock or w.ill or board or beam. She spreads and shapes her mortar until, after many visits to the mud bed, she has built a tubular cell about an inch long and three- eighths of an Inch wide. Then her huntress Instinct awakens and her raids upon Hie spider realm be gin, for within this cylinder the moth er mason will put u single egg. In course of time this will hatch Into n ravenous larva whose natural food Is living spiders, and these the mother proceeds to capture and entomb within her mud daub nursery. On this errand she may be seen hawking over and near cobwebs of various sorts, ventur ing within the meshed and beaded scares that prove fatal ti most Incom ers and sometimes even to herself Tf the occupant, expectant of prey, sallies lortn to seize tue intruder, It finds itself a captive, not a cantor. The wnsn shakes the silken filament from wings and feet, turns upon the spider, seizes and stiugs It. bears It to her cell and thrusts It therein.. II. C. McCook In Harpers Magazine. For the first 20 days there was not Dound of gain In anv of tha int in fact, many of the number diminish ing In weight for the flt-nr 20 Huvs na the full feed wan ton rleh for Ihnm and It required about a month to put mem in proper snape to stand the run reed and the confinement. During hard storms last Januarv the gain was cut to a half a pound per day and on one day. 41 of them did not gain an ounce, but their weight was stationary. During wet weather, when pens were damn and muddy, the gain was less than two Pounds ner dav nnd ritirlnir tho hriHht crisp winter days when the air was clear and the sunshine bright, al though the thermometer was below zero, they gained as much as four pounds each. The steers when killed this week. yielded an average of 63 pounds of SOIIO nePf to mil firman Welch! n- a net weight of beef amounting to 981 per neaa. The exnerlment hns been wntrhpd by cattle feeders and stockmen all along the line of the Northern Pact HC ana IUrtner PYnerimenta nrltl ha made next winter with cattle, sheen ana nogs, the purpose of the experi ments bPin? tn Show tha mnot nnn- nomlcnl feed Stuffs, the mnat anttafan- tory manner of handling beef cattle, mm wie comparative value of feeds. D. C. Corbln Is certain of n crop or Deets on 1800 acres of land leased from the Coeur d'Alene Indi ans. Mpifinifilili: I European plan. Everything flrat claas. Accommodations the best. All modern conveniences. Steam haat throughout Roome en aulte with bath. Large, new (ample rooms. Th Hotel St George la pronounced on Of the most modem und riaaI kn,.i. of Oregon. Telephone and flra alar connections to office In all rooms. Rooms SOc to f 1.50. CORNER MAIX AXD WEBB STi. Block and a Half From Depot. The Golden Rule ...Hotel.. (Formerly the Bicker's.) COURT STREET. I 4 Rl'SSELI, SAGE IS EH;IITV-NINE Enticed Into tho Country to Siend His Birthday. New York. Aug. 4. Hnna,.u .,.. entered upon his ninetieth year today. v-uiiimry 10 mo custom of many ruurs, uncie- itusscll did not spend his anniversary downtown at hi nf. flee. After much Dcrsuaslrm n a resort to something like strategy, Mrs. .-us" mm ine mmiiy physician, Dr. Mann, succeeded curlv In the wir in enticing the veteran financier ot hlB sumcr homo at Lawrcnco Beach and ucspitu his yearnings to he iu. n... "street" It Is probable that he will be kept In tho country during the re mainder of tho heated nnrlnd u-ni. Just an occasional run Into town to see how things are going. During the duv Mr. Sai'i mx,i. fellow directors In OOUlrl onmnonlAn ior me most part, sent him their con gratulations by mall or wire. Mr. Sage, In spite of his advanced A OTA a 11 (1 his appearance of failing strength, continues to take keen Interest In everything that relates to the world of business and finance. Old Man nf the Mountain. The title "Old Man nf the Mountain was first applied to Hassan Ben Sab bal, who founded n formidable dynas ty in Syria A. D. 1()90. ne was the prince or chief of the sect of the Mo hammedans. Having been bnnlstied from his country, he took up his abode in .Mount Lebanon, cathered around Ulin a band of followers, who soon be came the terror alike of Christians Jews and Turks. They paid the most implicit obedience to bis commands nnd believed that If thev sncrlfleml their lives for bis sake they would be rewarded with the highest lovs paradise. For 200 years these "Assas sins," as they called themselves, con 1 1 1 1 M . ., 1 l. - . fftphaa 1 ",c irrrur oi me country. . ! Whenever their chief th "rM xr c th.if " ---- i. of the Mountain," considered himself injured lie dispatched some of his no sasslns sacrotly to murder the aggres sor. This Is the origin of our use of the worn assassin for a secret murderer. of PURE BLOOD INSURES A CLEAR SKIN When Fr7Mtin Ai.ni. Tu. T: i , ...... ...it,, 4 IIIIJJICS, or other skin diseases make their annesr. nee it is a sure sign that the blood is iiiien witn humors and burning acids. These beincr fnrrf.,1 thm,h i. . and glands burn and blister the skin, pn utfc Liupuuus wuicn are usuaiiv accomnanierl with i,it :..,v. : 'i are disfiguring and humiliating. x ear. ago my blood was bad, as evi aenced by akin eruptions on different parts of the body, aud other symptom", jo I concluded lo try S. 8. S.. knowing' it to b. highly spoken of. After uiing a Just bow mucli-mj blood was thor oughly purified and enriched and I w. rnllevcd of all erUDtiona and minib.... tiona of iiupurs blood. I believe 8. S B - . - uiwu mvaioine, nna ' oi surii a medicine ! PSV7 wen u uae ii. iney will lind i pfu' It a Derfect rur as l r. nmva ,n , ; . R.i,, ww. iuKS. u. Jli. HHOKMAkkH Alliance, O., 616 E. Patterson St. Remodeled and refurnished through out Everything neat, clean and ut- to-date. Steam heat and !ectrl lights. Best cuisine. Prompt serlca. R. PARKER, Proprietor. W. HOTEL PENDLETON BOLLOXS & BROWN, Proprietor. The Best Hotel In Pendleton and as good as any. Ilia We Mlcht Have. A famous writer said: "Man in ren. era I, or, as.lt Is expressed, on the aver age, does not live above two and twen ty years, and during these two and twenty years ho Is liable to two and twenty thousand evils, many of which are incurable. Yet even la this ilresd. fill state men will strut and figure ou the stage of life. They make love at the hazard of destruction and Intrigue, carry on war nnd form projects Just as ir uier were tn n in hmn ni aeiigiit ror a thousand ages." The Domestic Laundry LEGAL BL-AlNKS Wf e "- 1 a t . gonlan for a free cat alogoc of them. A fall opp!y always kept tn stock. Gold Dredging In California. The California slata mining h,,o has Issuod a bulletin on the subject of gold dredging in that state, giving In full detnll a hlatorv nf thia mn.n and Important Industry. The bulletin snows that the outmit nf unll tn- , year 1903 from this source alone was H.11&.II9. Of this amount $1.329,. 898 was extracted In Butte county, where some 25 dredges wera In atlon. Three dredges wera working i.uur ruisom. ono in HisKlyou county, one In Trinity and one In Tuba coun ty. In 1905. there are 28 dredges In the Orovllle district, five at Folsom, one In Calaveras, two In Trinity, one In Siskiyou and two In Yuba, a total of 40 dredges. Over 200,000 bushels of blusstem has been contracted at Creston. near Davenport, Wash, at from 63 to 65 cents per bushel, A Need In Schoolmirtm. We Should like tn see a mimtatUn UlOt every Schoolmaster hefnra tha of thirty should for one full vom. of least be banished from the school world ana from the academic life even If for taat year tie bad to work as a navvy sailor or a commercial traveinr t man who, being educated, only knows want 1110 is will never tnka ton nn.. fow a view of the school course. Lon oon Post Wbile PTtpmnl Intfllmanl 1 . .. . ........ ....111 ICBl- Txiri n 1 v it H.tpd .. ... -..r. .-L i r i ji- ic.il cause of the disease, because it does not go iuto the blood. S. S. S., a perfect blood pu rifier, neutralizesthese acids and humors, and by strengthening and toning op the Liver. Kidiit.va n,l ti.. . i channels of bodily waste, disposes of inem instead of allowing them to be forced to the surface through the sum. s. s. S. is the greatest of -11 . ! - t . .. .. , i ionics ior building up the entire system, increasing i, lr"" "nu nflP'ng the d gei ..n. S. S. S. cures all .V! Ji. tl . .. - j- Miacnnca pruUipilV and permanently, lcvig the skin soft oUUU,u. v,ly Dy Keeping theblood rure can we Imrw. tn t..,.. - i . - Book on fekin Diseases anil any medical Mil viiA unn im. ' wu irec oi cuanie. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. PURELY VEGETABLE. Enjoy What Ton Bare, Don't worry about your health. necn in goon condition nu.l ir..t much fresh air as you can. Teople wno are always puttering over them elves aro like mlsera the itnii'i an Joy what they have. Boston Traveler. A nnrd Worker. Bllmson Willie, they tell me you have the reputation of belDg the worst boy In school. Willie Tes, father, and I can tell yon I didn't get It without a struggle. Life. An Englishwoman married to a for elgner takes the nationality of ber hnn-band. Beadstrom a Oreenawald, shoe makersat Teutsch's Department 8tore. T at. RIVERSIDE AVENUE DAIRY ED .MORGAN, PROP. Phone Black 2081. PPRE MILK, Fresh, Pure and Clean. TRY IT. lruiiiiiiy nueiKICtl tO. i. OREGON POHTI,AXD St. Helen's Hall A GIRL'S SCHOOL OF THE HIGHEST CLASS corps of teachers, location, building, equipment the best. Send for catalogue. Term Opaw September 18, 1B05. The Hotel Pendleton nas Just t.cn refitted and refurnished throughout 'Phone and fire alarm connections with all rooms. Baths In suites and single rooms. Ilcud(iiurters for Traveling Mm CoiiiniiHlioua Sample Room. Rates $2.00 and S2.S0 Special rates by week or month. r.xcellent Cuisine. Prompt Dining P.nom Servic. IW mihI Itilllanl Rwiiii t nmiertn.a Only Throe Blmks Vnmt Depot. THE ALT A HOUSE S. C. BITTXER, Proprietor. Enlarged nnd refitted.. Thir ty clean, well-kept rooms with good beds. Commodious dining room, where meals urc served In fam ily style. All white help. First-class accommodations nt reasonable prices. Feed ynril In connection. STOP AT THE Alto House, Cor. Alts and Mill. I THE. PORTLAND OF It)RTLAND, OUROON AniMrli-nn rtl-,. . n - i ' i'er uy aoa tipttare Headquarter, for tourlB!. Bd comale"! :V , a, siw,',l "'m made to famlll . ---' ... n, snow rooroi "n1.?.,r,! erlie.. A BKHlero Turkish hatk maDiiiDDirot In toe hotfl. R. C. MOWERS, Manag.r 8CHEOULE OF PEN DLETON-UKIAH Stage Line Iiallj trip. tH,,wwn reodletuo rkiah, eicj,t 8udu,. 8taK. 1h." dleton at T a. m.. arrlvn it Iklab at P. ai. Return .I.,, ik,,V Va m., arrives at In.,tletn a m " p.Li "s."toa I'ilsb, 3; round trtn, I Penda-toD to Alba. .75i round trip ln.l to0 to Rldg.. ; roand trip, 18 1 It IVndlHtnn tn 111.. i s. m . inn " Otflr. st Brock HcConua' trip, is se trip. II so round trip, C"t Stera