Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1906)
EIGHT PAGES.- PACE TWO. RETAILS OP RAND HOLLOW FIRE. DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON, SATITOIDAV. AVRIXk ti, HR 5 'fHi Plain Mowers Bali-Bearing - MAKES THE GRASS FLY Our 4-blade ball-bearing Peerless Lawn Mowers are the cream- of the market when it comes to these main factors. Durability, Light Running Easily Adjustable . $4.00 to $5.00 . $6.00 to $12.00 "Easy Grass Catcher" saves time and trouble, can be removed from mower and emptied in minutes time. Made of a good quality of duck with metal bottoms. Goodman, Thompson Co. HARDWARE See our Window Display of Fishing Tackle GENERAL NEWS. Next Week's Attractions J Christopher Barthelmage, the well known' drum major of the American army, was killed at Fort Keough. Monti, by the cavfng ot a bank during sewer construction. Three boys Henry rainanus, r rn. , Ryan and Herbert Grendle, aged from j ii ii v.in in Chlcaeo. had their six hands practically blown In shreds , tomorrow night, Sunday. .. .w. .i.i nt n nvnamite cart-1 Eckhird't Ideals will ot vy c.i'ivdiwii ' ridge. There Is a $10,000 insurance policy in the name of Mildred Coles, the Valencia victim whose body was ex humed on April 12. and identified by Mrs. Clausen, of Minnesota nave tr.e noay snipi-ru ... , ta(luu at prlceg hlgher than ,g cu8. The government or ew eaiana has put the coal trust "on the hog" Eckhard't Ideals Coming. At the Prazer theater, beginning the popular open their six nights engagement by presenting the four-act, sensational comedy drama, "A Fight for Honor," which made a hit throughout California and the northwest. A high standard In efflc- ..... ui : lency is maintained In this production who will I , . Origin of Fire Which Caused a Icth la Not Known. Tho Heppner Times gives the fol lowing account of the Sand Hollow fire, which occurred last week and caused the death, ot a child and loss of property: The death of the little son of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Barrett during the burning of the woodshed and farm house on Sand Hollow last Saturday afternoon, was a sad affair. The par ticulars in regard to the accidental fire are substantially as follows: . The fire originated In the woodshed which stood nenr tho house,' while Mrs. Barrett was cooking supper, and the first jntlmatjon she had of the fire was when she heard her little 5-year-old girl at the door screaming, and on looking out she saw the woodshed a mass of flames. Mrs. Barrett's first thought was to look after the safety of the children, but the 3-year-old boy could nowhere be found until af ter the fire had consumed the shed and residence, when the charred bones of the boy were found near the coal box. Mrs. Bnrrett's face was also slightly 'burned. The house and shed with their contents were a total loss, nothing being saved except the cloth ing the family wore. The origin of the fire Is supposed to have been from the children lighting a fire In the woodshed. When the news came to town over the "phone Pr. Klstner, R. F. Hynd George Consor and Frank Roberts at once left for the scene of the fire, but could do nothing. - They brought the remains to town the same evening and they were burled Sunday after noon In the Masonic cemetery. Mrs. Barrett Is now at the home of her brother R. F. Hynd In this city, and Is still very low from the shock. No one was at the farm house at the time of the fire, but Mrs. Barrett and her three children. Mr. Barrett was at the sheep camp about two miles away, and the hired man was fencing about a mile from the house, but arrived too late to save anything. L C I HAGENBARTU 6AV& IT D . , , 40,000,000 POUNDS "OUT.' Agricultural Department Estimates. Sheep Losses During Part Winerr at 7,000,000 Wool Prices Will lie From 21 to 25 Cents, Mr. ITngen- .liarth Thinks Advlsm-Slicennien tut HoM anil Stand Together;.- ' tomary with repertoire companies. Amnnc the clever oeonle of the In the way that appeals most strongly I company are Oliver J. Eckhardt, W. to that state socialistic commonweaitn, ; p Richardson, Herbert Foster, Harry by establishing agencies for the re- Babb. Donald Blanchard, Georgia A. tall distribution of state minea coai. N!rno,g isnbelle R. Perry. Blanche The steamer Minnesota passed Ta- Martin. Ella Morton and Irene tocsh lrland. the entrance of the Humphrey. strait at 3-30 o'clock, making the Tn speaking of the plays presented run from Yokohama In 13 days and 14 ., by this company, the Baker City Her hnnro which Is a record trip. She aid sayse: "It Is a dollar show nt DRUNKEN .TVRORS WANTED. Case Safe I popu'ar prices." Boise, Idaho, News says: "The Ideals are fully as good as many of the so-called city productions at higher prices." '' . Owing to a delay In shipment of pa- brought a large passenger list and a i full cargo of silks, teas and the usual : oriental freight. I Apri! 1J. 2000 bricklayers went on . strike In Stv Louts, stopping work on j a n k.,illni On. result of the Per-, sistnt policy' of the builders to break Per. the company has beeen unable "... :. hv rtlseharirtns: union to make an extensive display of showy men wherever It has been possible to rper do so and replace them with non union men. A union, coffin factory, together with the directing of funerals of union men nt $50 apiece, may he the next step of'the Chicago Federation of La bor. A movement for such a factory was launched some time ago to put a labor rival oi n. , fav01.te plflVi -oie Olson." . taker trust In the field. Several prop-, tore the gwede haye been ositions for the erection oi a imii were considered by the executive board. One provided for building a factory to cost 150.000 In a suburb. on billboards. Nevertheless, . j their productions are well worth see ing and at the low prices of admission they should have a large attendance at each performance. Prices 15, 25 and 35. cents. Attorneys in Portland Murder Bar Temperate Men. All men who never take a drink are excused by the defendant's attor ney from jury service In the case of the state against George Blodgett, while all ' those who have ever been connected with a saloon are excused by the district attorney, says the Or egon Dally Journal. Blodgett Is charged with the murder of Mrs. Alice Minthorn, who was known as Mulligan and also as Gordon In the Van Noy hotel, March 23. In a rear seat In the court room sits Mrs. Blodgett, whom the prisoner deserted a year ago to run away with the woman he Is alleged to have shot because she refused to lake a drink with him. Mrs. Blodgett declares that she will stay by her husband until death separates them; she says, she will stay In Portland all summer if he is kept here so long, and she Is prepnred for any verdict that mas- be returned by the jury. It Is estimated by Frank J. Hngen- barth, prcl lout of theNfttlonnl Live stock association, and one of the di rectors of the Wbod: Livestock com. pany of Salt Lake City, that the short age In the 1906 wool clip In the Unit ed States will be 40,000.000 pounds. He bases his estimate on the state ment xpf the agricultural department which places the eiitlre losses of sheep and the short supply of wool fn the great wool producing countries of the world that western wool will be sold this season at from 21 to 25 cents per pound and advises sheepmen to hold out for these prices. ' There Is an actual shortage of wool and the market starts out In London with a stiff advance In prices, and he Is confident that western woolgrowers can reap some of the benefits of the high prices of wool if they do not sell early and become alarmed at the re ports from commission men and scat tering buyers who hammer down the markets at every opportunity. The past winter has been the most severe on sheep of" any winter since 1880, occordlng to Mr. Hagenbnrth. and while the losses were confined principally to the western ranges, yet some losses have been suffered In the eastern states, even where every sheep on the ranches Is kqpt In shelter. He says that the sheep Industry Is becoming so profitable In the eastern and central states that farmers are turning their corn land Into hay land, sowing millet, clover, vetch and other hay crops and are turning their at tention to sheep rntsing on an extens ive scale. The west Is the natural sheep coun try of the United States and he be lieves that by proper methods of handling sheep, careful breeding and skilful management, that even with restricted ranges and reduced flocks, the Income from western herds will continue to increase because of the improved quality of the herds and the better prices for wool and mutton whTrh co-operation among western sheepmen will maintain in the west. Every short length' , irii Wash Goods twelve yards and! under; must go at just One-Half. Price.. Great Values Come early and : get first choice: Sale begins- Monday. April 16th, closes Saturday, , April 21st. I ALEXANDER'S i Where You Get, Good Values ....SANITARY BARBER SHOP.... THE EAGLE DATH 8HAnNO.PAlU.ORS, 618 MAIN. STREET. THREE DOORS NORTH OF HOTEL ST. GEORGE. Our Parlors are newL. equipped tlkrotighout with the most mod ern saiiito.y fixtures and apparatus. Everything new and. the best In the market. Only Uie highest skilled workmen employed and every, sanitary, precaution known is taken. Porcelain" bath tubs with pinny of hot and cold water! First-eluKS service throughout. v Eagle Bath Shaving Parlors NEAR HOTEL ST. GEORGE. J. H. ESTES. PROPRIETOR. t t NORTH WEST NEWS. i IRRIGATION .-Fairbanks-Morse i v Gasoline Engines James Welch, or Walsh, a laboring man, aged 30, committed suicide at Billings. Mont., by shooting himself In , the back of the head with a pistol. He came recently from Buffalo, Wyo., and hnd been drinking heavily. I One drop of gasoline,. nine times more air makes the power. Expense stops when engine is shut: down, J SPRAYING PUMPING SAWING GRINDING 2 to 50 horse-powe. All sires in stock J Write (or Catalogue and Prices : : Fairbanks, Morse &.Co.-tScS "Ole Olson.1' April 21. There Is much that is novel In the performance of Ben Hendricks In his Hereto fore the Swedes have been depleted in the same manner as that brand of i stage Irishman so often seen in knee ' breeches and green whiskers, but In "Ole Olson" Mr. Hendricks reveals j the other side of those quaint, hardy j Norsmen and lays bare the nobleness "" I of their character. It Is really the Grass island. Cray's Harbor, here- j best work that Mr- Hendricks has ever tofore held by the government for pos- done and the genuine enthusiasm of sible military purposes, will be sur- ns aait0rs prove he Is a success. He veyed and platted and opened to entry wl; lhs wa!on make a feature of his under the general land laws. ' Sng!ng and has six new songs to de- William Bennett was Instantly kill- l'ght his hearers. The tour under the ed on Row river, near Cottage Grove, management of Mr. William Gray, v... . ,,nin. r He was 32 years embraces the entire California circuit of age and recently from the east, and the receipts have so far Justified Hotel Pcnillcton Arrivals. F. A. Littooy, Seattle; Thomas B. Adams, Portland; S. Jones. Little Falls, X. Y.: L. Scullan, Little Falls, X. Y.; L. Puaeey. X. L.; E. V. Hor neyer, Seattle; E. J. Dounging. San Francisco; R. W. Foster, New York; C. Y. Hickok, Portland; Aptalomo Gray, Fort Walla Walla; H. C. May- son, Walla Walla; George Stevens, Spokane; E. E. True, Spokane; R, Brandon, Spokane; G. A. Bushec Portland; W. A. Bnhart. Portland: G. S. Youngman, Portland; T. B. Klllin, Portland: X. B. Kraur-e. Seattle; Wil liam Custer, Chicago; M. H. Hnuser, Pomeroy. C. L. Mead. Portland; W. R. Glendening, Portland. The tre was being tel.ed oy cutters. ( " "l '"v ' ""V ' ,'T, pills cleanse the liver, stomach and Living indoors so much during the winter nidnths creates a sort of stuffy, want-of-ozone condition In the blood and system generally. Clean ud and Bet ready for spring. Take few Early Risers. These famous little Tn tea. Schillings Dest is by no m:;is the costliest tea; u a a r.nutrr of taste l;i;:cs, the one you like bast is your t;;:i. Vo.ir rrucur's; moncyback. IP YOU Bl'lLD use good materials. They Willi ost no more und last twloe as long. Let I us know of your wants nnd' -e will Of the fine'.fiuote figures on the best the saarket affords in the line of CementM, lime, sand, tile, bricks, etrh. And nil building materials of govdi quality. NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. Pendleton. Ore., March 1, 1906. Xotice Is hereby given ta the stock holders of the Pendleton Wool Scour ing & Packing Co.. that a meeting will be held Tuesday, Mny 1st, 106, at H,c office of the company In Pendleton. Oregon, at 4 p. m. E. Y. JCDD, President. F. B. CLOPTOX, Secretary. Oregon Lumber Yard NEAR COPRT HOITS-. 'Phone Main 8. Peiuiletuu. Oregon. bowels and give the blood a chance to purify Itself. They relieve headache, sola cy xau- man & Co Andrew Jackson, charged with kill- inr hla brother-in-law. Warren Mat- .... ,,. t.,, thews, sleeps most of the time and Is ,3 n0 worge than the terrble case of j sallow complexion, etc. surly to ffllow prisoners In the Baker, pMe that affii-ted me 10 years. Then . .. i V, l a . . . .t ...... i was auviseu to apply uucKien s Ar nica Salve, and less than a box per manently cured me, writes L. S. Na- ' pier of Rugles, Ky. Heals all wounds, burns and s res like magic. 25c at Tallman & Co., and the Pendleton I Drug Co., druggists. nnimtr lull. He acts as though In a .stupor, and has refused to eat any thing. A building fund has been started, since the recent fire, by the Portland Commercial club. It has already reached $10,100 In subscriptions. W. M. Ladd. of the firm of Ladd & Til ton, subscribed $5000, and Theodore B. Wolcox $5000. Jacob Mullen, an old prospector. was found dead In a passageway con NEW CIirilCH COMPLETE. Milton Will Pnlicate $5000 ISiillduig Tomorrow Morning. Milton Anrll 14. Thp new rhnrch tlguous to the Stockman's Exchange crecte(j by the M. E. church, South, saloon In Baker City. He was 64 ,n th,, cVi )B now cnmpMn and the years of age, and had lived In eastern (,trt.t conference of the Pendleton Oregon 40 years, and was single. Ver- distr-lot is being held in the new diet, heart disease. building. u..im i. rrnr that a lW-hour On Sunday morning the dedicatory limit was placed upon the attorneys for the defendant by the Spokane court In argument of the case of James Mayo, convicted of killing Wil liam Crane and sentenced for murder m the second degree, the supreme court of Washington has ordered that Mayo be given a new trial. FOR APRIL We have a longer list of better bar gains than ever, including wheat land-, stork ranches and city proper ty. Any kind of a business proposition you want. Samples: 160 acres at $4 per acre; will raise wheat or corn; 60 acres broken. One mile from rail road. Half section In wheat Will raise 12,000 bushels this year. $37. DO per acre. E.T. Wade & Son P. O. Box, 324. L O. Building 'Phone Black 3111 rcntlleton, Ore. services will be held and in the eve ning a union meeting of all the churches of the city will be held In the new church. The building cost $5000 and Is commodious and well ai ranged. It Is located In a central part of the city and occupies two full lots. The main auditorium is 30x60 feet, with a Sun day school room 20x20 In the front, and large class room on each side. All the ministers In the Pendleton district are present at the district con ference which Is being conducted by Rev. H. H. Shanglc, presiding elder A large number of lay delegates are also present and the meeting Is highly successful and the church reports all show healthy growth and excellent conditions, y The most rational remedy for coughs and colds Is Kennedy's Laxa tive Honey and Tar. It acts on the bowels as a mild cathartic expels all cold from tho system. Cuts all phlegm out of the throat, relieves coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, etc. An Ideal remedy for children equally Kood for adults. Sold by Tallman A Co. Lunch and Kaiser at Fergy's. PRAISES I'M ATI LLA COl'XTY. NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. Pendleton. Ore., March 1, 1006. Xotice is hi'rehy given to the stock-; holders of the Pendleton Woolen Mills I that a meeting will he held Tuesday, May 1, 1906, at the office of the com-1 pany in Pendleton. Oregon, nt 4 p. m. i E. Y. JUDD. I President. C. H, CARTER. ! Secretary. 1 IP YOl " AIM: CONCERNED about the laundering of your wusha blcs anxious to huve only first-class work done It's nil Inexpensive ex periment to sen I a few ortlcl- here and see how we do things. As a mat ter of fart It's almost certain that you wlll.be pica; ed In every respect cltnuilinet.s of washing, care In starch liiK ami Ironlni;. promptness of de livery and ino,l st ( harping. ROBINSON'S DOMESTIC LAUNDRY Grunt County News SuyH AilvortlMng Pays. The Grant County News says of the work of the Umatilla County Devel opment league: Umatilla's advertising of her many resources, real and rancirui, win bring rich returns in new Immigration and capital. The plan Is nothing and the act Is everything. It Is Important only that articles be brought to the notice of Investors, so that the pros pective customers really take note of them. Wide-awake business men who practice this principle In successfully advertising their private business seem often to doubt Its efficiency as applied to public affairs. Hence the failure of Grant county to stand in on any of the state's organizations. When you are at the rear of counties of a rear state, It's goln' away back some. Nothing will relieve ; Indigestion that Is not a thorough dlgestant. ko dol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat, and allows the stomach to rest recuperate grow strong again. A few doses of Kodol after meals will soon restore the stomach and dlges. tlve organs to a full performance of their functions naturally. Sold by Tallman & Co. Ono Pare to Walla Walla anil Return On the occasion of the ball game between Athena "Yellow Kids" and Walla Walla team at Walla Walla on Sunday, April 15, the O. R. & N. Co. will sell round trip tickets for one fare, or $1.40. going on No. 8 at 9 o'clock Sunday morning, and return ing on special leaving Walla Walla at 7 o'clock Sunday evening, E. C. Smith, agent, Pendleton, Ore. " BIG EASTER S A LI , Found, at Fergy's, Kaiser's dog. Easter Comes Next Sunday And every woman likes to have something a "little extra" for wear on that day. This Is es pecially true of good dressers, and we ha e done our best to get good, tasty garments In all departments, to moet this demand for some thing nice for "Easter" wear. Suits and Skirts Never have we shown such neat, nobby styles, in ail the popular shades, as our stock now presents to the discriminating shopper. All tho late shades, in the popular materials, made up In the late styles; Just In by express from New York's best houses, are now on dis play here, and you will be pleasantly surprised to1 learn that you can dress better than over before and not pay too much for your suit, If ' you buy It at Ue FAIR Suits from $10 up to $30 and All Beauties Too Skirts from $3.30 up to $12.50 the Newest Out Millinery Millinery A big Shipment of ladles' and misses' Hnts Just In by express. Don't wait too long before buying the "Easter Bonnet," but come enrly this week, while the assortment Is good. We can suit most any taste now, and every purse can find a price that just suits. Waists latest iirlces A beautiful collection ot fashion's styles of Waists In white and colors. All from 50c UP tO $6.50 THIS EASTER SALE s to be one of genulno pleasure to every woman who desires to find something to 'wear on Eoster. Not only tho beautiful display of nice wearables, but the ex tremely low prices will meet your approval. Sfte FAIR DEPARTMENT STORE P E, N D L- E- T O N '. OREGON V