East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, October 21, 1905, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    f'.V
TEN PAGES.
PAt.U SIX.
DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, 6ATTJRDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1905.
I am the Little Seam Dampener that keeps your COLLARS FROM
CRACKING. I came to Pendleton to make FRIENDS and PATRONS
for
ROBINSON'S DOMESTIC LAUNDRY
BL.
kr-
The Laundry That Don't Crack Your Collars
flvpr 10
60 fine
Pianos
Sold
in 8 eeks
in
Pendleton
STRICKEN
KOYALTY WILL REVEL
WHILE PEOPLE STARVE.
Prince and Princess of Wnles Will
Spend at Leant $1,000,000 on a
Pleasure Junket In Indln, But They
Will Avoid Hnjputna Plstriet, Where
1000 People Die Each Week of
Famine Entertainments on Royal
Vessel Will Cost 85000 Ter Day.
At a cost of at least $1,000,000 to
the British taxpayers, the Prince and
Princess of Wales have left England
for India to spend a half year In hav-
I
POOLE'S FAMOUS FEAT.
What the Musical Courier of Sep
tember 16th has to say relative of the
great Ellers Piano House:
"The Ellers firms throughout the
Pacific coast have demonstrated thai
they can dispose of goods without lead
ers; that they can sell as many piano
as all other piano dealers on the coast
combined sell simply as a commer
cial proposition, with the twentieth
century system applied to it, and the
musical and artistic sentiment attract
ed simply through the laws of natural
selection as applied to commerce.
"Here is our line of goads; here art
our prices; here are our terms; this 1?
the method In which we conduct out
, business; here are our references It
you need any. We will make good It
case of deficiency; and we are mer
chants. We offer you from this lini
aa great a selection as you may deem
necessary for the purpose of securing
what you wish."
Ellers Piano House have taken a twi
years' lease of the store at 813 Main
street, where purchases can be mad
as advantageously In Pendleton as in
Portland, San Francisco or Spokane,
Our one- price system is universal
and if your purchase fails in any wa)
to prove exactly as represented, it b
"money back."
Every purchaser a pleased pur
chaser la our aim.
We are about to conclude one of thf
greatest and most successful plam
sales ever conducted in the northwest
many purchasers securing fine Chick
erlng, Weber, Kimball, Hobart M. Ca
ble, Marshall & Wendell, Schumann
Bailey, Milton and other fine makes
and at reduction of from 1100 to 1 7 f
from the regular price. Exceptional!
easy terms during this sale.
Eilers
Piano
House
J. C. GALLAGHER, Mgr.
813 Alain Street
Turn your steps here when you
want good, clean coal. We furnish
our trade with the best that is mined
and we want vour orders. You can't
da better than give us your order.
Henry Kopittke
DUTCH HENRY.
Office, Pendleton Ice Cold Storage
ng a truly good time.
They will combine business with
pleasure by making strenuous efforts
o stimulate the loyalty of millions of
famine-stricken Indians to British
rule.
The Princess of Wales will take with
her more than 100 dresses, and all of
her magnificent jewels, which have
been heavily Insured against loss.
Wants Easy Sailing.
The royal party will cross the ocean
on the battleship Renown. The rea
son Is the proneness of the Princess
of Wales to seasickness. She declined
to spend n month on the water on an
ordinary liner, and so, at great ex
pense, the Renown, which has been
built for steadiness in a rough sea.
ias been fitted up as a huge steel
yacht. In the admiral's quarters of
the vessel upholsterers for the past
three months have padded and quilt
ed the Iron cells Into a series of bou
doirs, reception rooms and sleeping
rooms.
Sleep Next to Armor.
The officers quarters on the war
hip have been commandeered to
make further private rooms for the
royal suite, and the officers, during
the voyage will have to rest content
with accommodations in the gun
houses of the warship's huge rifles.
The rifles have been removed to pro
vide improvised bedrooms and dining
rooms. The result has been to meta
morphose the grim fighting machine
Into a strange effeminate ocean ferry.
In the royal suite will be 123 per
sons cenerals. colonels, nobles and
knights almost without end. Most of
them will have to go to India on or
dlnary steamers.
Through India by Rail.
The royal party will land at Bom
bay on November 9, and will be re
celved in full state by the new vice
roy, Lord Minto, and probably by
Lord and Lady Curzon.
The prince and princess and their
army of attendants will make by rail
way Journey 11,000 miles and will see
every city of prominence In the do
pendency. Two trains will be filled
with members of the party and a third
will carry their baggage.
Splendid Entertainments.
At Calcutta, the capital of India
the royal travelers will make the
greatest efforts at entertainment of
.heir tour. All the hotel room In the
city has been taken. At Delhi 60,000
Indian troops under Lord Kitchener,
will conduct a sham campaign for five
days for the benefit of their royal
highnesses.
Amid Famine.
While the prince and his wife are
In India, they will be the direct cause
of an expenditure of an average of
$5000 a day in entertaining and trav
ellng. While they are thus reveling
in riches, there will be perhaps 6,000,
000 people of India stricken by fam
Ine, for Indications point to this year
being one of the worst in India famine
records. The prince and princess are
being urged to abandon their route
ihrough the Rajputna district, where
tie famine Is expected to record 1000
deaths a week.
la ftpllttlna- Paper Be Went One Bet
ter Than an Enarllak Expert.
Lucius Poole, e brother of William
Poole, the librarian whose name la per
petuated in "Poole's Index," was
known throughout the country for his
rare skill iu restoring and repairing old
documents uud reprints. lie lived for
thirty years In a house at the south
end. llosiou, with three congenial
spiri's, one a collector of Dickeusuua,
the second of Napoleonuua and the
third a collector of first editions.
Poole was a collector, too, of books,
letters and programmes relating to the
stage. He bud a remarkable faculty
for matching old paper and could put
a corner or a patch on a letter or n
playbill so neatly that it could be no
ticed only under a magnifying glass.
Mr. Poole's famous feat of splitting n
magazine page into four leaves or lay
ers was brought about by an English
lulayer, who showed Mr. Poole a page
split in three leaves with the printing
on It unmnrred. The American said
that he could do all that the Englishman
had done, and more, and ufter some
experiments produced a page of the
Century Magazine split In four leaves.
This was taken to London by a book
collector, who had gone ubroad to add
to his library, and after the page had
been the rounds of the clubs there It
was sent to Paris and caused the
Frenchmen to wonder. Portland Advertiser.
THE SUN AND MOON.
1
TAT
sick
NOW IS THE TIME TO CET YOUR SUPPLY
THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE
WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE
Wi
)nalnt Folklore Stories Concerning
These Luminaries.
The most touching of all folklore sto
ries may be found in Charles V. Lum-
mls' "Pueblo Folklore." It is one of
the many myths of the moon and beau
tifully conceived. The sun 1b the All-
father, the moon the Allmother, ana
both shine with equal light in the heav
ens. But the Trues, the superior divin
ities, find that man, the animals, the
flowers, weary of a constant day. They
agree to put out the Allfather's, or
Bun's, eyes. The Allmother, the moou,
offers herself as a sacrifice. "Blind
me," she says, "and leave my hus
band's eyes." The Trues say, "It U
good, woman."
They accept the sacrifice and take
away one of tho Allmother's eyes;
hence the moon Is less brilliant than
the sun. The man finds rest at night,
and the flowers sleep.
In Mrs. Leiber Cohen's translation of
Sacher Musoch's "Jewish Tales" there
is a variant of the sun and moon story
derived from the Talmud. Briefly told,
the sun and moon are equally lumi
nous. It is the moon who wants, to be
more brilliant than the sun. Deity is
angered at her demands. Hor light Is
lessened. "The moon grew pale. Then
God pitied her and gave her the stars
for companions."
1m (inindf Tank House Hunted.
Fire was discovered this morning I
t 8 o clock In the tank house on the
Stover property across the track. The
hose carts were taken out and though
hey reached the spot too late to save !
he building, the residence was saved. I
The fire originated from an attempt
to thaw out the water pipes, the fire
which was started around the pipes
getting beyond control. The damage
will amount to about 1160. La
Grande Observer.
.Tnstrlte nt DonnMnn's
SHEEP TO YAKIMA.
James Wright Ships 8000 Mead From
Walla Walla.
Eight thousand sheep were shipped
from the Walla Walla Storage com
pany's stock yards last night to Yak
ima where they will be pastured for
the winter, says the Walla Walla
Union. The sheep were the property
of J. Wright, of Yakima, who on
Tuesday purchased them from Wil
liam ReHer, of this city.
Two carloads of cattle and two car-
loads of hogs were received here yes
terday for the local demand. These
animals will be dressed and put Into
cold storage until needed. The cattle
and hogs came from the Waltsburg
country and were In prime condition.
Walla Walla valley may have plenty
of livestock shipped In this fall for
winter feeding, when the concession
of tho Northern Pacific railway on
rates goes Into effect. After October
26 the railway company will make a
rate of 75 per cent of the normal tar
iff on stock cattle shipped from any
point west of the mountains to the
valleys east of the mountains. The
shipping of cattle haa been a prac
tice for several years and the rail
road company Intend to encourage it
by making lower rates for this purpose.
Closing
Out,
Sale
at
Cost
Pianos, OrganB, Sewing Ma
chines, all of the best makes.
Such Pianos as the Stelnway,
Emerson, A. B. Chase, Ludwig
and other well known instruments-
The latest improved
White, Domestic, Standard, the
Wheeler & Wilson all must go
Also one Angelus Piano Player,
the finest player on the market
today; on 6 octave Piano for
J 100; just tho thing for begin
ners and small rooms.
REMEMBER
You can't buy a first-class Sew
ing Machine for S15 or $20.
You can't buy a good piano for
1190, but I will give you your
money's worth. For every dol
lar you get 100 cents worth of
good, reliable goods.
Jesse Failing
Store room for rant
Furniture Radcr Furniture.
BYERS' BEST FLOUR
Is made from (lie choicest wheat that grows. Mood bread la
-Mired when Byers' Best Flour Is ased.. Bran, ahorta, steam foiled
li.irlc) nli) hand.
PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS
W. 8. BYERS, Proprietor.
is the Mfflce
The highest priced lot in Pendleton, say $25,000.0(1, wit
once worth an amount so small that a child's savings bank
account could easily have bought It.
Towns huvo srmvn Into cities within u few years and every
one can recall Instance of rapid Increase In tho value of such
properties.
Real estate Is the basis of nil values iiiiiI tut Investment In
It will rome m-nrei- making sure money than anything else.
Every one who buys n lot In I'khili Is investing money that
Is sure to bring good returns and possibly make a fortune.
Energy and linstlo are hacking tho enterprise itnd ample
capital is at hand to build a railroad that will connect Camas
Priiirlo with tho outside world. Tho building preparations
are making ns fust aa time will permit.
Think for a moment! How ninny chances have you let
puss to get In on the ground floor at. a price Unit would have
made you a fortune.
Wo have n bona fide, offer and know that It will make yon
good money.
CHAS. A. HILL, 1 06 E. Alta
. Company. 'Pbona Main 171.