PAGE EIGHT. DAILY EAST PRECOMA. PENDLETON. OREGON. THTsTSBAY. APRIL 11, 1W. BIGHT PAGES. CLEAN UP SALE of odd and single pieces Inventory has disclosed many single pieces and odd lines. which we shall close out quickly as possible. Many of these we have gathered to gether on three tables, for your convenience, and have placed uniform prices of 15c, 25c and 60c on them. Many of these are regularly priced at double what we ask for them. A few of the Items that will go at 15c China Creamers. China Cups and Saucers, China Plates, White Meat Platters, China Spoon Holders, Glass Butter Dish Granite Pans, Tin Dish Pans, etc., etc 25c TABLE Decorated China Salad, fan cy China Cup and Saucer. Glass Berry Bowls, Decorated Vases. Glass Vinegar Bottles Decorat ed Meat Platters, fancy China Plate, Glass Water Pitcher, etc. FOR. 50c j China Celery Trays, set Chi- J na Oatmeal Bowls, set China Bread and Butter Plates, fancy China Salad Bowl, fancy China Bread Plates, Glass Berry sets. J Owl Tea House ! S20 East Court street. Z 'Phone Black S1S1. House Cleaning Aids As house cleaning time is here, don't forget where to buy the necessary articles for clean ing and disinfecting with. We can furnish you with anything in this line at lowest possible prices. Sulphur, formaldehyde, chloride of lime, sulphur torches and candles, carbolic id. turpentine, ammonia, ben zine, whiting, etc. We will put up any of these drugs In any quantity desired. The Place is Tallman & Co. Leading Druggists Victor Talking Machines Edison Phonographs Columbia Graphophones i 15.00 to $100 each. Installment price tl pit week. Zonophone records 40c and 50c. Victor records 85c and 60c. Columbia records 25c and (0c. Edison gold molds 35c. 5000 records In stock. Pally Recitals. J. A. OWENHOUSE Agent Eastern Oregon 813 MAIN STREET. I Vi' m J I The man who Is known to his friends and neighbors as a safe and successful business man does not Invest his money In every scheme that presents Itself with the "promise" of large returns.' He Is satis fled with a reasonable rate of Interest and the absolute security on both principal and Interest, such as this strong bank offers to Its de positors. This course may not appear so attractive as some of the schemes offered, but Is far the safest and most satisfactory In the end. Commercial National Bank Pendleton, Oregon Capital Total Resource ACADEMY HIS FINANCIAL AGENT REV. 1L IV KXIGIIT COMING TO PEXDLETOX ACADEMY. Increasing Bustiicos Makes tlie Em ployment of Financial Agent Neces sary to Relieve the Principal of Some of Uie Outside Duties Rev. Knight an Experienced School Man Who Haa Served Successfully as Financial Agent of the Whltworth College at Taooma. What Is the most Important step In the progress of Pendleton academy has Just been taken by the board of trustees In the employment of Rev. Harvey B. Knight of Tacoma, as fi nancial agent and field secretary of the academy. The work of the academy has In creased until It was absolutely neces sary to take a portion of the finan cial and business duties from the principal, whose time Is entirely oc cupied In teaching and In the direct management of the educational work of the school. The office of field sec retary and .financial agent has there fore been created, and Rev. Knight, who Is a highly successful financial agent, has been employed. A message from Rev. Knight, who Is now in Pueblo, Col., has Just been received by .Rev. W. L. Van Nuys, secretary of the board of trustees, and he Is expected to come to Pendle ton with his family soon, to assume his new duties. Tbe duties of the financial agent will Include soliciting students, rale' Ing funds for the conduct of the school, properly advertising It, se curing scholarships, donations, and In every way contributing to the flnan cial advancement of the Institution. This is one of the very Important positions In the management of all colleges and larger academies, and marks an advance step In the life of Pendleton academy. Whitman col lege and all the large Institutions support regular financial agents and In this way have reached out to out side territory which It is Impossible to reach without bucb an agent. This will place Pendleton academy In posi tion to reach students from the entire Inland empire district and It Is hoped by the board and faculty that It will result In the .construction of a large dormitory to accommodate the In creased attendance another year. Rev. Knight has been financial agent of Whltworth college at Ta coma and also of Parsons college, and Is an experienced school man. He will establish offices In the academy and will take up the work of organ izing for an active campaign or stu dents and financial aid for the next school year Immediately on bis ar rival. ORGANIZED IN 1867. The A. F. A A. M. t Umatilla, About to Be Reorganized. The old Umatilla lodge, A. F, 4 A. M., which Is soon to be reorgan ized at Umatilla, was one of the first. If not the first lodge of that order in eastern Oregon. It was formed In 1867, In the days when Umatilla Landing was a city of 2500 people. For many years It continued to exist, but gradually dwindled with the town until about five years ago the charter was surrendered. When Umatilla lodge was formed, that town was the principal settle ment In the county, and many who are now well known as pioneer resl- COMPBTENT JUDGES, beauty Doctors Endorse Herplclde. Women who make a business of beau tifying other women come pretty near knowing what will bring about the beat results. Here are letters from two, con cerning Herplclde: "I can recommend Newbro's "Herpl clde," as It stopped my hair from falling out; and, as a dressing It has no super icr. ' (Slcned.) Bertha A. Trulllnger. "Complexion Specialist, "C'i Morrison St., Portland, Ore." "A'lfr uilng one bottle of "Herplclde -n;- h ; r has stopped falling out, and my ?- n entirely free from dandruff. ' .i ;,...:-.) Grace Dodge, "Beauty Doctor, :'Z Sixth St, Portland. Ore." T'lfl by leading: drugirlnts. Send 10c. In 'amps for sample to The Herplclde Co., Detroit, Mich. Koeppen Bros., special agents. TESTING YOUR EYES is not merely a cursory examination. We make the test as thorough and accurate by modern scientific meth ods. You might puy an eye specialist One Hundred Dollars and not get any better treatment. Yet we give It to you without charge You have therefore no excuse for neglecting your eyes any longer. Why not come today 7 Winslow Brothers JEWELERS-OPTICIANS. - Postofflce Block. S 50,000.00 S200.000.00 dents were members." Among these are John E. Bean of this city, J. H. Koonta of K'cho, O. F. Thomson of Butter icreek. William Beagle, J. H. Kunxle, E. J. Bushee and Robert Sianfield. sr. The last three named are dead. HON En I WAS WITH G ARIBALDI. Ill Farther Was With the Revolution ary Party In I860. C. Bonettl, proprietor of the Mer chants' Cafe In this city, was with GaridaJdl. the great Italian natrint during the revolutionary campaign of ai me time uonettl was but a youth and living In Palmero on the Island or Sicily. His father was an Influential member of the revolution ary party and took sides with Gari baldi when the later entered h ltv of Parmero In May, I860. Although he was young at the time, Mr. Bonettl remembers the event dis tinctly. Although the patriot army was small and poorly equipped, the sentiment of the people of Palmero waa with it. Also, the government troops liad no heart In their work, and nt the approach of Garibaldi's forces gave up the fight. Later, at the battle of Aspromente, where General Garibaldi was wounded, young Bo nettl also received a wound. Although raised on the Island of oicny, Honetti has never been In Na plas or the district surrounding Vesu vius. According to him, transporta tion was difficult when he was a boy, and as he left the country at the age of 20, he had little opportunity to visit the places on the mainland. FIRE AT DR. LLOYD'S HOME Damage TVs, Slight, Due to Mrs. Lloyd's Presence of Mind. By presence of mind and some hard work, Mrs. T. J. Lloyd extinguished a fire at her home, 723 Cosbie street, this morning, and doubtless prevented the house from being burned down. The blaze apparently started through the wall Daner belns: limits fmm ih. stove pipe, though Mrs. Lloyd says mere was only a normal fire In the stove. On discovering the flames Mrs. Lloyd began fighting them, and when nose compnay No. 4 arrived Bhe had the blaze practically put out. No damage was done except to the wall ana celling of the one room. Wh'le struggling with the fire Mrs. Lloyd was uninjured, but was nearly choked by the smoke. At the time of the fire Dr. Lloyd as away from home, having left at o'clock this morning. PROGRAM FOR BANQUET. Annual Event at Pendleton Academy Tomorrow Evening Will Be Inter esting. The annual banquet of Pendleton academy will be held at the academy tomorrow evening and ai delightful program has been arranged by teach ers and students. Those who will respond to toasts are as follows: For the officers of the academy boards. Colonel James H. Raley. president board of trustees, Rev. W. L. Van Nuys, secretary, and Cecil R. Wade, treasurer; for the teachers, Miss Bess M. Craig; for the preparatory department, Roy Row land; for the special students. Miss Minnie Baker; for the first year stu dents, Miss Bessie Porter; for the seo ond year students, Edmund Milne for the third year students, Margaret Johnson; for the fourth year stu dents. Max Hopper. An elegant spread has been pre pared and a most delightful evening Is anticipated. KILLED IX COLLISIOX. """ J. F. Iilly, of La Grande. Met Death Near Durkce on O. R. & X. J. F. Lilly, a pile driver engineer of La Grande, was killed In a collision between freight train No. 65 and a work train In the Burnt river canyon near Durkee on the O. R. N. last evening. A caboose and four work train cars were demolished and Elmer Earl, of Portland, was seriously, If not fatally hurt. He was taken to St. Vincent tl hospital In Portland last night on No. 5. Brakemen Evcrsole and Carpenter, of the work train, narrowly escaped Instant death by Jumping from the ca boose as It was struck by the en gine. Fondinw Got Seed Contract. S. H. FcVshaw, the well known seed man of this city, has Just secured the contract for furnishing the govern ment garden seed and seed potatoes for the Umatilla reservation farm this season. Mr. Forshaw has furnished this seed for a number of years until last year, when the Portland Seed company underbid him and furnished the seed. Most of the seed has been sent to the agency, where gardening and farming are now In progress. Attend Funeral of Lec Cerlclng. Sheriff T. D. Taylor went to Athe na this morning to attend the funeral of Lee Gerking, his 10-year-old cousin, who died yesterday. How to Walla Walla. Warren Chandler, of Imbler, Union county, passed through the city over the O. R. & N. today with two car loads of fat hogs, to Walla Walla. Notice to Elks. Pendleton lodge No. 288, B. P. O. E., will meet this evening at 7:30 sharp. All members requested to be present. Typhoid Case Improving. The little son of F. H. Parr, who has been seriously 111 with typhoid, Is now greatly Improved. Horsm to Alberta. H. O'Neill shipped out a carload of horses to High River, Alberta, last evening, over the O. R. N. TO GRAFT THE STATE BILL TO PAY 824,000 FOR OLD BARLOW ROAD. Title of the Bill Is Misleading and Uie Pcupla Should Vote It Down BUI Requires State to Pay 824,000 for Old Road Across the Cascadra Road Not Needed and Would Re lVrpetusd Coat to the State. One of tbe most brazen attempts at graft ever undertaken In Oregon Is the. effort to foist upon the state the purchase of the Barlow road for $24,000, says the Salem Journal. Under the pretense that the road Is valuable and that the chief purpose Is to abolish tolls, a bill has been pro posed by initiative to compel the state to buy the road at the figure named. The petitions for the submission of the proposal were secured by em ploying men to procure signatures, and this having been accomplished the measure will be voted upon In June. The bill will have a very attractive title on the ballot, and for that reason it Is thought the measure will receive many affirmative -votes from the peo pie who do not under stand Its real purpose. How Propoattiim is Headed. "For a law to abolish tolls on the Mount Hood and Barlow road and providing for Its ownership by the state," la the way the promoter of the enterprise present the question before the people. In the title on the ballot no men tlon Is made of the appropriation of $24,000 to be paid to the owners of the road. A man who has been over the road says that this would be prac tlcally a gift to the owners of the road and ever thereafter the state wouU be called upon for annual appropria tions for maintenance and Improve ment. For that reason he urges that the subject shall be freely discussed so that It may be understood before election day and the people may vote Intelligently. It will be noticed that the bill pro vides that the secretary of state is dl reeled to purchase the road at "not to exceed" $24,000, but further down In the bill It la evident that the sec retary has no authority to purchase for a less sum, for the bill makes It his duty to Issue a warrant In favor of the owners for $24,000, without any negotiations whatever. IIETTEH LAWS NEEDED. Elwood Mende Says Oregon Is Lack Ing In Irrigation Codes. "The fundamental question with Oregon Is the working out of a system of laws that will provide for the ad Justment of water lights so that each Irrigator will know he has a valid title to what he uses, and for the dlstrlb utlon of water equitably among us ers," said Elwood Meade, chief of the United States department of Irrlga tlon, of Washington, D. C, who Is at the Portland hotel, to a Portland pa per. Mr. Mead la here in connection with the petition of the Portland board of trade for a government In vestigation of the feasibility of Irrl gatlon in the Willamette valley, and also to consult with O. R. & N. of ficials regarding experiments in the culture of alfalfa In the Willamette valley this summer. "The adoption of laws governing Irrigation In the arid districts of Oregon," said Mr. Mead. "Is of para mount Importance to the develop ment of the state resources. To do that you must have first settled exist Ing rights to determine what belongs to riparian owners and what can be used on lands not riparian. "State Engineer Lewis Is going about It In the right way. and ought to have the support of every one, but he Is hampered because the present law does not go far enough. It Is not enough to provide for the settlement of rights already In existence; what Oregon needs Is a law to provide for future rights. "To do that every person desiring to appropriate water ought to be re- FACTS IN NATURE. Kot Only Do We Oet Inspiration Nature, But Health aa Welt For people who are run-down and nerv ous, wno suner irom inuigetmon or ay pepsia, headache, biliousness, or torpid liver, coaled tongue with bitter taste iu the morning and poor appetite, it be comes necessary to turn to some tonic or strengthener which will assist Nature and help them to get on their feet and put the body Into iu proper condition. It Is brcoTilnff more and more apparent that Nnmre's most valuable health - giving agents are to be found in forest plants an'i roots. Nearly forty years ago, Dr. R.V. Pierce, now consulting nhvslcian to the Invalids' Hotel and Murirical Institute, at Iliiffalo. N. Y., discovered that by scientifically extracting and combining certain medlel mil principles from native roots, taken from our American forests, he could pro duce a medicine which was mnrvelously efliclent in curing cases of blood disorder unil liver and stomach trouble as well as many other chronic, or lingering ail ments. This concentrated extract of Nature's vitality be named "Golden Med' leal Discovery.' It ourllies the blood bv putting the stomach and liver Into healthy condition, thereby helping the digestion and assimilation oi iooa wnicn feeds the blood. Thereby It cures weak stomach, indigestion, torpia liver, or on lousness, and kindred derangements. If vou have coated tongue, with bltte: or bad taste in the morning, frequent headaches, feel weak, easily tired, stitches or pain In side, back gives out easily and achns, belching of gas, constipation, or Irregular bowels, feel flashes of heat al ternating with chilly sensations or kin dred symptoms, they point to derange ment 01 your stomacu, liver anu Kiuiieys, which the 'Golden Medical Discovery" will correct morn speedily and perma nently than any other known agent. Con tains no alcohol or hablt-formlng drugs, All It Ingredient printed In plain Eng lish on wrapper. The sole motive for substitution Is to permit the dealer to make a little more profit He gains; yon lose. Accept no sub- tlfcnhn fnr "(inWIan MArllr&l HIowai-v " Constipation cause and aggravate many serious disease. It If thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellet. On a laxative; two or three are cathartic. quired to get a permit from the state engineer, who should be authorized to refuse permits where filings are made for speculative purposes." Spring Hut Social. The Baptist Young Peoples' union will trp to be up-to-date In the giv ing of a spring hat social. The men are to do all the trimming. Ladies are cordinlly inv't-.d to bring all the trimming. Ludles are cordially in vited to bring nil the trimmings that can possibly be gathered together, as there will be some brand new Ideas In hats evolved. The social will be held In Hendricks' hall, Friday, April 20. Bring any old untiimmed hat that your grandmother wore. Re freshments will bo on sale. Remem ber the date, primary election day, April 20. Moody-Ilarae. Albert Moodv. of McKhv Crt and Miss May Barnes, of Cabbage Mill, were married last evening at the French restaurant parlors by Rev. Robert Dlven. They will reside on Mr. Moody's farm on McKay creek. Biggest lace curtain bargains $3.(0 and 13.75 ruffled net inH v-nt. tlngham curtains at $2.75 pair. THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE, Where It pays to trade. PROF. FRANK R. BRIDGES OF CHICAGO, who "s directing a chorus class this week, will give a rehearsal next Saturday night In the Christian church, beginning at 8 p. m. Follow ing this the Bridges quartet will give a concert. Mixed quartets, male quar tet, elocution, guitar and mandolin duets and Impersonations. This will be one of the best concerts ever given In Pendleton. Admission 25c. To the Brides and Grooms of June It's a great mistake to wait until the last minute before select ing your furniture, draperies, rugs and carpets. While we have a wonderfully large assemblage of all the articles that have a part In making the home attractive, we would Impress upon your minds the advantage of early buying. Today we probably have the very Buffet, Brass Bed, Library Table, Chiffonier, Davenport, or Rug that you admire above all. Others are looking and buying and others may take what you wouldn't miss for the world. So come at your earliest convenience and pick from the gems of our stock. We'll reserve whatever you may fancy, for future delivery. And then agnin, It's so much more satisfactory to buy leisurely than hurriedly. We'll suggest many pretty Ideas that you would never think of. Furnishing homes is our study, you know. BAKER & FOLSOM FURNITURE AND CARPETS OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. Money to Loan on Monthly Installments Long Time Loans Real Estate in Any Part of the City for Sale Frank B. Clopton & Co. 112 East Court Street Beforeflnvesting Your Money It will pay you to come to ONTARIO, the COMING CITY of EASTERN OREGON and look over the ALFALFA LANDS which fin na too large returns on your money. We b ve several hundred acre of U-e best Irrigated Alfalfa even to twelve ton per acre. IW r mm n n . . BUKBKluut. & wttvLL, ununo, Oregon. i We are Selling I Spring Clothing at Greatly Reduced Prices BostonStore I The Mans Costume Store 10 50 20 DOLLARS Why not wear your Jewelery? Haven't you a piece of jewelery laid away some where because it needs repairing? If so get it out and bring it in and have me repair it for you. 1 You may as well be wearing it. Royal M. Sawtelle JEWELER. Must We Wash? We may live without poetry, music and art; Wb may live without conscience, may love without heart; We may live without lovers, live without hope; But civilised women cannot live without soap. We may live without books, what Is knowledge but sor row; We may live without beauty. It fades on the morrow; We may live without law suits. Indictments are quashing; But where Is the one who can live without washing. 8END TOURS TO THE Pendleton Steam Laundry FISHMAN PETERS. W.D.FLETCHER THE PIONEER WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, 05 Court Street. Jewelry made to order. Wedding rings a specialty All work guaran teed. Land In the wee, which yield from runner parueolan write Sim J . '