Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1905)
PAGE TWO. DAILY EAST OREGOXIAX. rENDLETON, OREGON. TUESDAY, AUGUST , IMS. EIGHT PAGES. iAAAAAAAAAiiAAAAAAAAAAAAAA J Golden Rule Store ...SHOES... The gathering of the ripened harvest and the maturing of all the products of nature remind us thnt the season Is fast approaching, when parents must give attention to the buying of school shoes. We anticipated this long time ago, so now have on our shelves, ready for your Inspection, the very best school Shoes shown In Pendleton for the money. There has recently been an advance In all grades of Shoes, but by buying early we have them to offer you at the same old price, which has ever been lower than the lowest Note the following prices. These are as represented: Kid lace, single sole, sole leath er counter, the best Shoe ever made for the price. Extra special value. Sixes S to 8 50c Sizes 8 1-2 to 11 75c Sites 11 1-1 to 2 BSC Kid lace, patent tip, extension sole, sole leather counter, will not. rip; we guarantee it to give absolute satisfaction, none like it for the price: Slses S to 8 S8c Sixes g 1-2 to 11 $1.18 Slses 11 1-2 to 2 $1.35 Cadet calf, extension sole, sole leather counter, four rows of stitches; cannot rip; light and soft; best value. Sizes 6 to 8 88c Sizes 8 1-2 to 11 $1.18 Sizes 11 1-2 to 2 $1.18 Sizes 11 1-2 to 2 $1.35 Kangaroo calf, extension sole, very soft and pliable, zigzag stitch, cannot rip; big value. Sizes 5 to 8 88c Sizes 8 1-2 to 11 $1.15 Sizes 11 1-2 to 2 $1.35 Our lines of men's and ladles' Shoes are Just as strong and prices Just as reasonable as that of the school Shoes. GENERAL NEWS. Up to t p. m. August 28 there had been In New Orleans 1765 cases of! yellow fever, of which 160 had proven! fatal. W. F. Franks, a druggist and base- j ball fan at Marquette. Mich., was: killed by a foul tip striking htm on J the head. I The first Insurance company was' established in 1706. It was called thej Amicable, and its headquarters were in London. Strenuous and constant efforts are j necessary to keep the cholera among' the natives at Manila within limits. The deaths are averaging five per day. j John B. Berry, chief engineer of the Union Pacific railway at Omaha, has been appointed member of the: board of consulting engineers of the Panama canal. A correspondent of the New Yorkj Sun says the largest American flag In the world Is on top of the American club house In Mexico City 160 feet! long and 60 or 70 feet wide. The Mongolia has just sailed for the Orient from San Francisco with 12,000 j tons of merchandise, including 1180 j tons of flour and 15,000 bales of cot' ton domestics for Chinese ports. The world's known record for 100 yards sprinting is held by Charlie Parsons of Los Angeles, who covered the distance in 9 4-5 seconds. Par sons Is a druggist by occupation. There are 250 government schools for Indians In the United States, at-! tended by 30.000 pupils. The first appropriation was for 210,000; thai 1904 appropriation was for 13,200,000. William J. Jardlne. wealthy and ' very popular, and heir to an English j baronetcy and vast estates, has dlsap peared in or from San Francisco, leav-' ing no trace of either direction or pur-i pose. ; There is considered very little like lihood of a strike of anthracite coal miners this year. It Is believed a new wage scale to succeed the one about to expire will be amicably agreed upon. At Nevada City, Cat., Miss Bertha Bennett shot and killed her brother-in-law, Robert Wlmberly. A coroner's Jury exonerated her on the grounds that It was necessary to protect her: honor. I William Ely is under arrest at Chi- i cago charged with holding up andj robbing a jewelry store. Three years! ago he was left a fortune of $200,000,1 all of which he has squandered, a large part upon the races. It is planned to have 80,000 mem bers of labor unions In the Labor Day parade in New York city September 4. The housesmiths and brldgemen wlti number E000, the teamsters 10,000, the carpenters 6000 and rockmen and ex cavators 12,000. John Williams, aged 38 years, at St. Louis, seized the trapeze bar of a bal loon just as It left the ground and was carried upward. The aeronaut could do nothing to help him, and at a height of 1200 feet he could hold on no longer, fell and every bone In his body was broken. NORTHWEST NEWS. T. M. Barr has the contract for re rooflng the foundry building at the penitentiary. It will cost $5,600. Frank Dixon, tlmberman, was badly hurt by a falling tree near Eugene. His skull was fractured, and he will die. The State Deaf and Dumb school at Salem will open September 20 with 86 pupils 20 more than attended last year. Woody St. John, accused of burg lary at Cascade Locks, waived prelim inary examination, and is in jail at The Dalles. Near Aberdeen, William Bird's legs were caught between rolling logs and crushed. He died of shock and loss of blood In a short time. The Everett baseball team will on September 20 start on a tour of Wash Ington, Oregon and California.. A schedule of 40 games Is arranged. Con Sullivan, a miner, is imprisoned 200 feet deep In a Butte mine by a cave-In. He is believed to be alive, but the chances are very slight for his rescue. The American board of foreign mis sions of the Congregational church will meet In Seattle September 14 to 18. A special train will be run start ing from Boston. The clear profits of the salmon can neries of Vancouver, B. C, this year are estimated at $1,000,000. It Is the biggest year In the history of the bus' Incss In that locality. Mrs. Grace Newhall Is suing Charles Berry, proprietor of the Rainier Grand hotel at Seattle for $25,000, for alleged breach of promise. Perry claims it is a blackmailing scheme. C. Georglni, a Sonoma, Cat., man, advertised for a wife in the San Fran cisco Chronicle. In three days he re celved 116 replies from women, 80 of whom acknowledged they were wid ows. The coal lands on Graham island, Queen Charlotte group, have been pur chased by a syndicate of Montreal cap itallsts, who will undertake their de velopment on a great scale. They comprise 30,000 acres. Since his statements were last ap proved, W. II. Lucas, of the Pacific National League, Is said to have han died over $10,000, according to the sworn statement of an export account ant, William P. Snow. The 1905 wool crop of Washington amounted to 9,200,000 pounds, divided as follows: Eastern Washington, 4,- 000,000 pounds: Yakima, 4,000,000 pounds; Wenntohec, 1.000.000; Puget Sound, 300,000. The Angora goat wool clip la much larger than any previous year. JUST LISTED. 300 acres of level land, all subject ta In .Ration; 200 acres In flu stand of alfalfa. Can raise all klndrf of veg eluMtt 'n abundance. Good crclrird Weil Improved. 1 t-t toff ice ai town site in same with lallroad ci r.lK E. T. WADE ft BOX. Office In E. O. building, Pendleton, Oregon. 'Phone Black 3111. P. 0. Ba 224. 'Peach Week" for llenUin County. This Is called "peach week" at the Kenton booth of the Lewis and Clark fair. Nearly everything has been cleared out of the way to make room tor the luscious peaches from Ben ton's orchards. Monday, these peaches will be handed out free of charge to all visitors at the booth, In generous quantity, and when the supply Is ex hausted, the booth will be stocked with Ilcntnn prunes, artistically ar ranged by S. E. Trask, who Is in charge of the exhibit. After a few days, the prunes will be given out In paper sacks on which will be printed a good word about Benton and her re sources. ThlB Idea Is believed to be original with Denton county, and that It will be an attractive feature at Benton's corner of (he great fair, there ran be no doubt. Corvallls Times. Fiendish Suffering Is often caused by sores, ulcers and cancers, that eat away your skin. Wm. Bedell, of Flat Rock, Mich., says: "I have used Bucklen'a Arnica Salve, for Ulcers, Bores and Cancers. It Is the test healing dressing I ever found.1 Soothes and heals cuts, burns and scalds. 25c at Tallman It Co.' drug store; guaranteed. RICH Ml E REMARKABLE PAY STREAK IX ARANDONED HOLE. Similiter District Startled by tlio Dls- Oro In oil Abandoned Hole on Iluld Ore In an Auaiulonoil Hole on Hold Mouiituln Tliro Tons of Ore will Ik- ParkctI out to Similiter tills Week. The Blue Mountain American of Sumpter gives the following account of the discovered of a remarkably rich body of gold ore In an abandoned mine near Hald mountain. One of the most remarkable strikes yet recorded In eastern Oregon Is herewith announced in the uncover ing this week of one of the richest, It not the very richest surface pay- shoots opened In this land of gold Remarkable not alone from the quartz, full ten Inches wide, being shotted and sprinkled with free gold and running Into the thousands of dollars wer ton but from the fact that as depth is attained In the "glory hole" the paystreak Is widen ing, as when the representative of the American left there yesterday morning it had increased to almost a foot In width, and the highly inter esting stories connected with Its loca tion and abandonment by the origi nal locutor and subsequent location and abandonment four times by peo ple well known throughout the district. The strike was made In what Ir known as the Nugget group, acquired this year by Dan Dunne, A. M. Bess ler and Chus. Butler, three of the best known underground workers In the district and who are now lifted from wage earners to owners of a property that bids fair to place mag. nlflcent sums to their credit. Fast as the phenomenally rich ore can be extracted it Is sacked by two of them while the third is busily en gaged In cutting a trail to the con necting wagon road Just below the Bald mountain hoist and tomorrow some two or three tons of the rich stuff will be packed over and brought to the Sumpter smelter. Speaking of its richness, Chas. F. Chatten, traveling correspondent of this paper, who has Just returned from the scene of the great strike said: "It is undoubtedly the richest ore yet opened on the surface In the camp and from panning mude right at the "glory hole" It is safe to say that every ton taken from the pay streak will run far above $5,000 per ton and some of the ore will most cer tainly run above $50,000 per ton. The group is situated about eight miles from Sumpter on the east slope of Bald mountain and was originally located in 18y6 und abandoned; re docated the following year, abandon ed again and remained Idle till 1900 located und abandoned again and re malned Idle unnoticed till It was re located anil incorporated in the Com bination Cold Mining company in 1903 under the name of the United 1 til 1 1 Ion group. Internal disension arose among the officials of that organization and not even the assessment work was performed and It was relocated by a well known mining man of Sumpter. who also abandoned It and this year It was relocated by the present own ers who have found the treasure vault. OREGON IX THE LEAD. Three of Six Lending Marksmen at Itlflo Shoot at Sea Girt are Ore gon lann. The military rifle tournament now being held at Sea Girt, N. J Is show Ing the Oregon National Guard up In fine condition. The first day's shoot ing at targets brought out 657 rifle men, representing almost every state and every organization In the regu lar army, Including the officers traln Ing schools at West Point and Annapo lis. The leading six competitors named In the dispatches Include three Ore gon National Guardsmen, a showing of which the state may well he proud, The six named given spoclal men tion are: Sergean Gilbert, Oregon; Dr. Houck of Roseburg, Oregon; Lieutenant Bo wen of Iowa, 46 each. Sergeant Hlrd Iowa; Captain Lee, California, 45 each. Corporal U. S. Rider, of Salem Oregon, and Sergeant Agnstinl, Ha waii, 44 each. Each competitor fires 10 shots each at 200, 300, 500 and 600 yards, slow fire, and a similar number at 200 and 600, rapid fire, and participants in two skirmish runs. MONKY FOR ALASKAN ROAD. Kulin-Ixmb of New York, Hacking tlie Eagle City Line. That Kuhn-Loob & Company, the big New York and London bankers, have been Interested In the construc tion of the proposed railroad from Valdei to Eagle City In Alaska Is the claim made by the local promoters of the enterprise, says the Seattle Star. Until quite recently two rival par ties were engaged in promoting the enterprise, but these have been brought Into harmony and there Is now no serious obstacle In the way of going ahead 4wlth construction work. Colonel A. W. Swantz, who repre sents to lies Interests, has been at V'aldez the greater portion of tho sum mer carrying on preliminary work and John Rosene visited thilt place recent ly In the Interests of the rlvnl cntn punyi A. B. lies of New York, who hus been working on the project for four years, was In Valdez at the time and the three men got together and, It Is reported, pooled their interests. A powerful Influence In bringing the warring Interests together was the fact that both realized that It would he impossible to enlist outside capital in either scheme while there was a contest for the right of way, und a construction war on to decide which company would first occupy it. With this in view the rival companies have been harmonized, to the end that the capital fur the construction of the line Is now assured. Ruby's Remedy for Pinkeye 8 A FE S IMI'LE SURE. I Saves ' Horses Lives Prevents and cures Pink-Eye, Dis temper, Eplxootlo and all Bronchial and Pulmonary troubles in horses). No trouble to give. Results certain. Full Information given to all In ulrers. Said and guaranteed by F. J. DONALDSON Reliable Druggist SPLENDID RUNS FOUND. ItlHxIcslu tlie Site of Fliieat Sliriue Ever Discovered. Kk'hui'd N. Hall, who has given eight years to the study of the an cient monuments In southern Rhode slo, says that none of the hundreds of ruins has been more than parti ally explored, says the Geographical Journal. Many Important ruins have been seen only by casual travelers, and the work of unearthing only a part of the Great Zimbabwe area would be more than the labor of a lifetime. Still, researches have made great progress In the pust few years. There are in Rhodesia no less than 300 distinct ruins und groups of ruins. Only a few of these are entit led to rank as 'ancient." The larger part of them probably do not date back of the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. There is overwhelming evidence at the Great Zimbabwe of the ancient civ ilization und arts possessed by the builders of the earliest periods. The Zimbabwe temple is the finest and most intact example of a nature wor shipping shrine known to the world. Its construction points unmistaka bly to some knowledge of geometry and and astronomy on the part of the builders. It is quite certain thut even the cruder methods of Zimbab we of applying this knowledge, which was common to the ancient Semitic peoples, were imported from the near east and did not originate in south east Africa. The right ascension of the sun, the heliacal rising and the meridian pas sages of stars are believed to have been noted nt Zimbabwe. These an cient builders were also past masters in the science of military defense the walls showing that the builders were military strategists of the high est order. Their gold ornaments, finely de signed and engraved, could not have been the work of uncivilized people, and the hundreds of ancient gold mines show that they were skilled in metallurgy and pick out rich shoots, patches and pockets with marvelous cleverness. It Is estimated that from these widespread mines they extract ed $375,000,000 of gold. Lady Mucculieert, Take Notice! You are requested to meet ut the hall Wednesday afternoon at 2 p. m. By ortler of RECORD KEEPER. THE ALT A HOUSE 8. C. BITTNER, Proprietor. Enlarged and refitted.. Thir ty clean, well-kept rooms with good beds. Commodious dining room, where meals ure served In fam ily style. All white help. First-class accommodations) at reasonable prices. Feed yard In connection STOP AT TILE Alta House, Cor. Alu and Mill. THE PORTLAND OF PORTLAND, ORROON. Amarlcaa plan, $3 per day and upware Headquarters for tourists and cammerrla travelers. Special rates made to ramlllt and single gentlemen. The managemen' will be pleased at all times to show ronnv and give prices. A modern Turkish bet! establishment In the botel. B. C. BOWERS. Manager American Beauty Corsets "Dainty as the Rose" Every woman looks her test in an Ameri can Beauty Corset. They are correct in every detail - style, shape, beauty and workmanship. The value is greater than in any other corset no matter what the price. Their value is evident in every stitch. KALAMAZOO CORSET CO., Exolusive Makers. KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN FOR BALK AND RCCOMMENDID BY GREAT EASTERN DEPARTMENT STORE, B. P. NICHOLAS, PROP. Negligee Shirts are Worn in Summer PRiNCnML'jY VQH COMPORT, BUT IP WORN WITHOUT A COAT, THE WELL DRESSED MEN ARE PARTICULAR TO SEB THAT THEY ARE CLEAN AND FRESH. The Up-Lo-Date Laundry GIVES SPECLAL ATTENTION TO THE LAUNDERING OP MEN'S NEGLIGEE SHIRTS, AND OUR WORK WILL PLEASE THE MOST EXACTING. Pendleton Steam Laundry The Up-to-Date LAUNDRY FISHMAM & PETERS, PROPS. PHONE MAIN 1T9 !A.C.RUBY&CO.! IMPORTERS AND BREEDERS. An Importation of 47 head Just received of Percherona, English Shires, Belgians and Coachers. If you are In the market for any thing in this line we'ean certainly suit you, as we can show you more of thore nice, big, black fellows that will weigh a ton or over, than all the other barns In the Northwest; sell you one cheap, make you better terms, give you a better guarantee than ?an be gotten elsewhere, as we are permanently located with headqaurters here. We ship direct from Europe to this point, therefore we don't have any of those that could not be sold In the East or some of them that have been sold several times and come back, but we have a good lot of fresh joung horses that are all approved by the French gov ernment, and when you buy one from us we give you a guarantee that Is go . here, one that you don't have to go two thousand miles to get section on. Terms to suit all. Your Inspection Invited. 1 Try a sample lot of our ....SLAB WOOD.... you will find that It Is the most economical wood that you can uy. THE PRICE IS STILL $4.50 FOR SAWED WOOD DELIVERED. OREGON LUMBER YARD Tel. Main 8. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS BRING CE11TAIN AND QUICK RESULTS If yon want help or a situation, want to buy, sell or trad anything, want to rent a (arm, house or room, want to recover some lost property, your desires can be satisfied thoroughly by using the Bast Oregonlan'a classified columns. Count six worda to the Una. No ad taken under II cents. Three lines, on Insertion Fifteen cent Three lines, two Insertion Twenty-five cents Three Unas, sli Insertions Forty-fly cent FIT lines, on Insertion Twenty-fly eenta Fir lines, two Insertion Thlrty-flv cents Five line, sis Insertion Beventy-flv cents