DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 0, 1905. TEN PAGES. PAGE TWO. Rough and Ready Boys is well as mamma's boys will find freedom and comfort in Mrs. JANE HOPKINS' BOY PROOF CLOTHES They're strain-proof, pull proof, rip-proof and Jar-proof. Smart in cut, too, and made f soft, yielding fabrics that make the young body feel so good. Call and see these and get prices before you buy. CftC ; Gentlemen, we have Just received a large shipment of the famous "JACK RABBIT" Pants. You will find the Patterns Good and Prices Right. See these. J Golden Rule Store GENERAL NEWS. Forty persons lost their lives on Lake Superior (so far as now known) during the recent storm. Because of the cholera all the fall military maneuvers In Germany and Austria have been abandoned. The Georgia state board of health has Issued a proclamation quaran tining the entire state against all yel low fever Infected ports. Since the foundation of the gov ernment it has paid out $3,320,860, 022 for pensions, of which $3,144, 695,405 has been paid on account of the Civil war. Frederick P. Rindge is dead at Los Angeles. He left $20,000,000 to his widow and three children, bequeathed by a will written on one side of a sheet of note paper. Only 150 delegates are attending the annual convention of United States Spanish war veterans at Mil waukee. Seventy-five ladles of , the auxiliary are attending. The penBlon roll of the .vern- ment reached Its maximum number January last .the number being 1 004.196. During the year ending June 30, 1905, $136,745,295 was expended .on pensions. A condemned building fell at Grand and Mott streets. New York, killing a man and a girl. The building in spection department is under hot fire for allowing the structure to be used . after being condemned. A conference of bishops of the es- - ta Wished (Greek) church has called upon the Russian government for $20,000,000 with which to buy food and clothing for the destitute in the famine stricken provinces. The bribery case against ex-State svnatnr ' lP.r A Smith ot St. Lilf. has been dismissed. This disposes by trial or otherwise of all the legislat ive bribery cases except those against . D. J. Kelly, said to be in Canada. Near Butte John Browne was walk ing and driving his team which was drawing a heavily laden wagon up a hill. A tug broke, the whiffletree flew back with great force striking Brown In the stomach, killing him. The 28th annual convention of the American Society of Dancing Masters is In session In ?'ew York. One of the burning issues before the conven tion In the iwcue of the waltz from the encroachment of the two-step, The iTnlted States Typothetae of America, in session at Niagara Falls, unanimously resolved to fight the eiuht hour day move of the TypO' graphical union, and also favors the nnm shnn for all members who choose to insist upon open shop. The 'county council of Cork, Ire . land, unanimously elected O' Dono van Rossa to a clerical position at a salary of $500 per annum and decided to cable immediately asking him to return to Ireland and take up his riiiiics. i:om:. Is extremely poo nnd is badly wrecked physically. Warren Prlne of Sedalia, Mo., was struck by the pilot of an engine, thrown upon it and carried 28 miles with no other Injuries than a broken leg. He was walking with his back to the oncoming train, which he was certain was coming on the track op on which he was walking. He step ped sideways to the other track and was picked up with the result men tioned. GRAND HONDE COAL. Dovrlonuut Work on Now Fields on Snake River. J. M. Edwards and party left today for the Grand Ronde country, where Mr. Edwards has secured an option on 480 acres of valuable coal land, says a Lewlston dispatch. The coal fields are located about 12 miles from the mouth of the river, nnd have been prospected In numerous places. The country Is served by an excellent wagon road, nnd It Is the purpose of the party to bring several tons of the coal to Lewlston for distribution among the larger consumers here. "We have driven a tunnel 185 feet Into the coal vein," suld Mr. Edwards, "and have lowered a shaft 30 feet tit a point 135 feet from the mouth of the tunnel. From tests that have been made we are confident thnt the conl Is of such a quality as to be desirable for steaming and blacksmlthing pur poses. It Is of a lignite character, and crops out for a width of five miles n Jacent to the Grand Ronde river." A large tract of the coal lands lias also been secured by E. H. Llbby and associates of the Lewlston-Clarkston company, and it Is understood a pre llminary survey for the construction of an electric railroad Into the coal district has been made. SPECIAL EXAMINATION. JUST LISTED 200 acres of level land, all subject 1o In, Ration; 200 acres In flu eland of alfalfa. Can raise all kind of veg- etubht 'n abundance. Good orchard "Weil Improved. 1 uttoffloe a-i. town- site in same with isllroad c.-isslng H. T. WADE SON. Office In E. O. building, Pendleton, nr.mn. 'Phone Black Jill. P. O. Box 324. NORTHWEST NEWS. North Yakima will build a drainage system for the western portion of the town only, that will cost $9800. Frank Pasquale, an Italian, will be hung in the Washington state peniten tiary for the murder of Charles S. Gray of Seattle, at Tacoma, May 20. 1904. The forest fires in all parts of Idaho are persistent, recurrent and destruc tive. Rangers are overworked and nearly helpless. Kendrick, Idaho, has grown so fast that nearly every trace of the disas trous fire of a year ago has been al ready obliterated. Peter Post, a farm laborer, fell off a precipice at Winona, near Colfax, Wash., breaking his back. He lived Just one week, conscious to the last. August 31 there were 477 Inmates of the Insane asylum at Medical Lake. Wash. W. H. Anderson succeeded Dr. Howellx as superintendent August 26. North Yakima now has a paid fire department of which Charles M. Hau ser is chief, and J. J. Miller, E. P. Dawson and J. P. Bowman associates. The Pacific States Telephone com pany has bought for $7000 the Crum packer rural system of Whitman county, which has 300 miles of wire and 240 telephones. In the First National bank at Wal lace, Idaho, Is on deposit $814,420.29; in the State bank of the same place, $505,486.76. Total, $1,319,907.05 In the two Wallace banks. J. O'B. Scobey recently resigned as receiver of the Olympla land office. T. N. Allen, of Olympla. has been recommended by both Washington senators to succeed Scobey. Jack Menefee, a Waha, Idaho, sa loonkeeper, has been convicted of maintaining a disorderly house under the meaning of the law, which In eludes minors being allowed in his sa loon. The body of Andrew -Jackson has been found, badly decomposed. In Fernald lake, In the Coeur d'Alenes, Jackson was formerly a saloonkeeper at Spokane and leaves a family at Cheney. Robert Reese lost his balance while working In a sawmill in Harrison Idaho, und fell backwards against a bandsaw, and was horribly mutilated across the back and shoulders. He will die. Mrs. Elizabeth Troy, of Tekoa, has applied for a divorce from Timothy Troy, one of the best known O. R. & N. conductors. They have been mar ried 36 years. She alleges desertion and non-support. Officers Hall and Teal captured James Reed, a horsethief, asleep in a coulee near Malta, Mont. Afterward Reed attempted to escape, and It was necessary to shoot and kill him to prevent his getting away. A conservatory of music is being built as an annex to the Washington State Agricultural college at Pullman and the faculty for Instruction In mu sic has been enlarged. They expect the largest class In music In the his tory of the Institution. Gus Robbards, a pioneer stock buy er of Garfield, Wash., says, "I am now paying the farmers $3 and $3.25 per head for choice sheep. Hogs are high er now than they have been for two years and I am paying for choice anl mals $6.75 per 100 pounds on foot." DeWltt C. Britt, editor of the Che lan, Wash., Leader, Is authority for the statement that there Is an all-the year-'round glacier 18 miles from Lake Chelan and tributary to It that at this time of the year covers 2000 acres to a depth of from 60 to 250 feet. Its altitude Is 7000. Certlf Icatca Wanted to Tench on Until Regular Examination. Six teachers took a special examlna tlon before County Superintendent Frank K. Welles yesterday. They are teachers who for various reasons were unable to attend the regular examina tion held here a short time ago. The certificates which they will be given are good only until the next regular county examination. However, the examination is considered equally as hard ns the regular one, as It Is made up from the state questions. Those taking the examination today are Miss M. Van Vrnnken, of Milton; Emery A. Hicks, Pendleton; Velma Wilkenson, Athena; Dora M. Darr, Adams; Charles E. Graham, Pendle ton; Stella O'Hara, Weston. CHILDREN'S ATHLETIC MEET. A Feature of Publio Scltoolg at Wash ington, D. C. Washington, Sept. 9. The great athletic meet which the playground commissioners ot this city had arrang ed to take place at the Coliseum, Is a great success. Many hundreds of chil dren, who had received their gymnas tic and athletic training on the city playgrounds during the summer, un der the direction of experienced su perintendents, competed in the dif ferent events nnd the result was high ly gratifying to the commissioners of playgrounds and of Interest to the thousands who witnessed the contest and games. The meet begun yesterday nnd will close this afternoon, when the 98 med als of gold, silver nnd bronre, which had been provided for the occasion by the commissioners, will be awarded to the winners In the dlfferens events. The excellent results of the meet are considered by the commissioners as a powerful argument in favor of extending the pluyground system Several of the commissioners will visit some of the large cities In the west to study their playground system. Largely Attended anil Excellently Maintained. Sea Girt. N. J., Sept. 9. This is the closing day of the great rifle tourna ment under the auspices of the Na tional Rifle association and at 6 o'clock this afternoon It will be declared of ficially ended. The attendance during the two weeks of the tournament has been unprecedentedly large and was well maintained, notwithstanding the unfavorable weather which on some days Interfered with the work of the teams. Today the number of visitors was particularly large and the work of the sharp shooters was watched by thousands with the greatest Interest. The contest for the president's prize was begun yesterday and will be fin ished today. Besides that event there will be skirmish shooting at 800 and 1000 yards. So far the result of the contests have been highly gratifying and the military experts admit that the work of the teams shows remark able progress. Are You Engaged? ' Engaged people should remember. that, after marriage, many quarrels can be avoided, by keeping their di gestlons in good condition with Elec trio Bitters. 8. A. Brown, of Bennetts- vtlle, S. C, says: "For years my wife suffered intensely from dyspepsia, complicated with a torpid liver, until he lost her strength and vigor, and became a mere wreck of her former elf. Then she tried Electrlo Bitters, which helped her at once, and finally made her entirely well. She la now strong and healthy." Tallman & Co., druggists, sell and guarantee them, at 80c a bottle. CLOSING OF RIFLE CONTEST. REV. BROOKS ARRIVED. N the New Pastor of the Southern MetlKHllMt Church. Rev. I. W. Brooks, the new pastor of the Southern Methodist church, has arrived and entered upon his duties at this station. Mr. Brooks is a southerner nnd was assigned to this place from Memphis, Tenn. However, he has previously been stationed In Texas, New Mexico and Indian Terri tory, having been In the ministry for 1? years. He Is unmarried. "From what I have seen of this country I like It very much." said Rev. 'rooks this morning. "I like the ell mate and have been -feeling fine since I reached here. However, I realize thnt the work will be considerably different from what we have in the oklpr settled states." Otto Brlnggold, a Spokane deter tive. 1ms been sentenced to 20 days In jail and to pay a fine of $40 for tarn pering with a witness. DO YOU GET UP WITH A IAMU BACK? Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everylxxly who reads the news papers is sure to know of the wonderful Ruby's Remedy for Pinkeye SAFE SIMPLE SURE. Saves Horses Lives Prevents and cures rink-Eye, Dis temper, EpUootlo and all Bronchial and Pulmonary troubles in horses. No trouble to give. Results certain. Full Information given to all la ulrcrs. Said and guaranteed by F. J. DONALDSON Reliable Druggist tiukwul Tihrtii rtiW.ili m'ii,MiM: " J i rw. -J 1 1 mm How the Sluih Amiws Himself. Flanked by a large retinue and fol lowed some distance by a gendarme or two, the shah enters Into the spirit of Ostend to the fullest extent, smil ing at the children, laughing heartily at the sport In the water, admiring the beauties, nnd nil the while In a good humor that seems to be conta gious. He is fond of a Joke, and will often worry the hawkers by pretend ing to sneer at their wares nnd then buy the whole lot for the sake of see- ng the surprise In their faces, uniy yesterday, as I wired, he cut loose a whole bunch of balloons, tne entire stock In trade of a respectable old lady, whose goods are the delight or little children. The shah watched the liberated colored balls float out to sea; then, as If he had forgotten, turned suddenly on the startled old lady and rewarded her handsomely with gold. Ostend Letter to London Telegraph. Real ErtUito Transfers. Vertie Conrad and S. C. Conrad, to B. Brambridge for the south half of the southwest quarter and the north west quarter of the southwest quarter of section 23, In township 6, north of range 34, E. W. M. Consideration $1200. Harvey Martin to O. T. Douglas, for lot 4, and five feet off the south side of lot 3, In block 12 of Weston. Con slderatlon. $2500. Agnes Payne and Charles A. Payne to J. W. Earl, for lots 7 and 8 In block 268 of reservation addition. Consld eratlon, $600. R. B. Stanfleld and Florence E. Stanfleld to Echo Lumber company, for the east half of lot 1, In block 3, of Echo. Consideration, $425. Bridges Accepted. Yesterday the county commission ers, accompanied by Architect C. E. Troutman, visited the new bridges at Milton and accepted the same from the contractors. The contract for an other bridge In that portion of the county is to be let soon. Will Return to College. E. R. Waffle has resigned his posi tlon as a passenger brakeman on the O. R. & N.j and will return to Port land next week to resume his work in the medical school. Wlieat Iand for Rent. For rent, 720 acres good wheat land near Holdman. Horses and farm ing utensils for sale. For further particulars call on or address F. L. McCrea, Holdman, Or. Automobile for Rule. Olds light touring car for two peo ple. In first-class shape. All Im provements, Including gas head light, Inquire R- L. Stevens, care Ladd A Tllton, bankers, Portland. cures made by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root, the great kid ney, liver and blad- Ms 1 1 is the great tiled nri .-. i. f m. nineteenth century ; Jyll discovered afteryears s,B of scientific research II. by Dr. Kilmer, the ,'.3jf- " eminent kiduev and bladder socialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing lame back, uric acid, catarrh of the bladder and Bright's Disease, which is the worst form of kidnev trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not rec ommended for everything but if you have kidney, liver or maimer ironnie u win ue found' just the remedy yon need. It has been tested in so many ways, in hospital work and in private practice, and lias proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement hus been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book tell ing more ulxmt Swanip-Root.aud how to fi ndotit if vou have kidney or bladder trou ble. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., llinghamton, 0g nftyent ' mid ' dollar size Wtles are Bom at e-tmp-Ro. sold by all good druggists. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Bingliumtou, N. V., on every bottle. Blind Headache "About a year ago," writes Mrs. Matrie Allen, of 1123 Broadway, Augusta, Ga., "I. suffered with blind, sick headaches and backaches, and could, get no relief until 1 tried WINE OF Woman's Relief I immediately commenced to improve, and now 1 teel like a new woman, ana wisn o recommend it to all sick women, for 1 WRITE kn0w" K W1)1 cure tncm' as it aia me. US Cardui is pure, medicinal extract or FREELY vegetable herbs, which relieves and frankly, describing female pains, regulates female, your symptoms, we wiii functions.tones up theorems consider your case and give V. . t r i you free advice (in plain sealed tOa proper State Of health. envelope). Don't hesitate, but Trv it for VOUr trouble. Every druggist sells it 'I know it w Cardui i veget wng fen re will f i and give plain sealed hesitate, but xx write today. AiJress: Ladies' AJ- vfsory Dept., The Chattanooga Medi cine Co, Chattanooga, Tenn. in $1.00 bottles. DYSPEPSIA "HiTlnc Ukea toof wonVrfal "rMrirti" for w uiuutni na dridi entirety eunq or lo m ftc Q Cft.ta.rrb and dynpepilft, I think a word of prala la due to"l',ict,reti"for their wonderful comDoiltloa. I bftTo taken numerous other to-called remedlet bat without avail and I find that Caicarftti re 1 1 era more id a uar than all tha otbara i bar takaa would In a jnmr." Jamaa McUuua, IN Mercer St., Janey City, N. J. Best For ri.- a . i rw uoweis CAN BY CATWjmc Plaunt, PiUUbla, PotoM Tut flood. Do Joo4, Na Ml-Iran VV'.n ., li.in 1 u - In - 1 old In balk. The cenain tablet Umpt'00X I 8terlin( Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. jot ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES OREGON PORTLAND St. Helen's Hall A GIRL'S SCHOOL OP THE HIGHEST CLASS corps ot teachers, location, building. , equipment the bent. Send (or catalogue. Term Opens September 18, 1905, Of 115 canes of yellow fever at Vlcksburg, Miss., but one has proven fatal, and an autopsy was necessary to prove that the deceased surely was a victim of that disease. China Restaurant CHOP SURY AND ALL KINDS OF CHINESE DISHES. ALT A STREET, FIRST DOOR REAR OF TALLMAN'S i ' DRUG STORE. I U. D. Goey, Prop. taassxasGx Slightly Damaged ccc But not Injured In quality. Sheet inunic and Musical Instruments were somewhat damaged In appearance during our hasty removal after the Are In our former headquarters, and while they are virtually good as new they will all be closed out at ONE-HALF PRICE Talking Machines -Mandolins - - - Banjos Violins - - - - . $10.00 and Up ' 1.50 and Up - 2.00 and Up - 1 .00 and Up SHEET MUSIC 10c COPY Sale will continue until stock Is disposed of at the old stand ( Dlndlnger-Wllson Co., 811 Main Street. J. A. Owenhouse WITH GORDOKMilEUNSEY PIANO IIOt'SE. t i BYERS' BEST FLOUR la made from the choicest wlieat that grows. Good bread la assured when Byers' Best Flour Is used.. Bran, shorts, steam rolled barley always on band. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. 8. BYERS, Proprietor. Try a sample lot of our ....SLAB WOOD. .. you will find that it is the most economical wood that you can uy. . , THE PHICE IS STILL 11.60 FOR SAWED WOOD DELIVERED. OREGON LUMBER YARD Tel. Main 8. ;';i,V,.-iW,!p.J:"'-, S. m SM 1 1 1 I H III II ' MONMOUTH STATE NORMAL J?.'S!55.,tB.,l4th year September M. THREE FULL COURSES OF STUDY preparing for county and state cer tificates. Higher courses recognised Ir. Washington and other states. DE ?.wn FORMAL TRAINED I KACHEHS Longer terms, higher wages and better opportunities for promotion award the Normal gradu ate for his enterprise. School direc tors appreciate the superior ability of Monmouth graduates and the demand far exceeds the supply. Special atten tion given to methods, work In grades nnd ungraded srhools. CATALOG UB CONTAINING FULL INFORMATION will be sent on application. Corres pondence Invited. Address . D. RRSSLER, President, or J.. B. T. MUTLER, Secretary. For sale at the East Oregonlan office Large Bandies of newspapers, containing over 100 big papers, cm be bad for He a bundle.