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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1906)
PAGE EIGKi'. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON OREGON, TVSKDAY, MAY 23, 1908. EIGHT PAGES. j "AERJAL" j ! Tea is pure . and recommended by physicians to be the finest In health-giving properties. AERIAL TEA is J ared (or our use by a special process, having no copper or lead used In Its preparation as X spider-leg, gunpowder and package teas. Besides, AERIAL TEA Is cured by machinery and Dot handled by filthy natives Just the natural leaf. AERIAL TEA Is highland grown In the i . prKiuig air ot me nius, wnere the best tea estates in the world are noted. JkERIAT. TEA In 1 sold only by the Empire Tea j company, and la not found In grocery stores. Its flavor Is J sweet and mellow. Its purity J a deserves a trial from you. J AERIAL TEA costs 60c, 70c and $1.00 per pound. Try our ICED TEA BLEND some hot day. We are expert- J enced in the art of blending. Tell us your troubles by 'phone J and we will suit you to a "T". ' Valuable and useful presents with each purchase of our Teas, Coffeea, Extracts and Spices. Empire Tea & Crockery av - Company Q. M. VINTON, Mgr. Successor to Owl Tea House. 220 E. Court Si. Telephone Black S131. MCSICALE AT HIGII SCHOOL. Will Be Given Monday Night by Stn dents and Friends. On next Monday evening a musical recital will be given In the high school assembly room for the purpose of raising funds with which to entertain the visiting students who will be here for the field meet on Decoration Day. Among the numbers on the pro gram will be selections by the high school glee club, the boys' and girls' chorus, and vocal selections by sev eral popular young singers of the city. Also, some Instrumental selec tions will be given. An admission of 10 cents will be charged, the proceeds being used to give a reception to the visiting students after the contest Fforse Hurt by Runaway. As a result of the runaway In which he engaged a week ago Sun day, the fine black driving horse be longing to Dr. D. J. McFaul has been badly lamed. The injury was caused by the animal falling while making a turn In the street Don't Have Bad Blood Blood that Is weak In life-giving principles and full of poisonous waste matter, not only falls to supply the vital organs with l.ourlshment, but It causes pimples, bolls, eczema, tumors, abscesses and other disagreeable skin diseases. Our F. &S. Sarsaparilla Will quickly eliminate all impurities from the blood and make it rich, red and strong in muscle, bone, tissue and nerve strengthening properties. For sale by Tallman & Co. LeadirtgDroggists t 1 AN EARLY START And a definite plan goes far toward assuring success to the young person starting out in life. There la no need to b niggardly of penurious in your efforts to economize and save, neither should one be prodigal In his expenditures. The sensible and easiest method of creating a fund for your futu-e need would be to open a savings ac count with our Bank; deposit whatever amount you can each weak or month. Stick to it and In time your success will be assured. Legln today; you will never regret It INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. COMMERICAL NATIONAL BANK PENDLETON, OREGON Capital 5 M.0M.0 Total Resowroea taM.eoO.M THE TRACK MEET TRY-OUT SATURDAY FOR DECORATION DAY MEET. Fifth MUe Track at Matlock Grounds Is In Fair Shape Seniors and Soph omores Will Contest the Juniors and Fretaimen on Saturday Gold and Silver Medals Will o Awarded The Pendleton High School Has Some Excellent Material. Among the high school students the local field and track meet which will be held Saturday is the absorbing topic. As the meet will be a try-out for the one which is to be held with Baker City and La Qrande high schools on Decoration Day, the show ing made will have an Important bearing on the chances of the local team in the annual contest. The fifth of a mile track at the Mat lock grounds has now been put In fair shape for use. After being graded and the rocks thrown out one of the road rollers was run over the track to pack the same. In the meet Saturday the seniors and sophomores will contest against the Juniors and freshmen, and the two teams are said to be closely matched. Gold and sliver medals will be given to the first and second place takers. For the 100-yard dash Bollerman, Turner and Pierce are making good showings. In the high jump Jay has gone five feet six inches, while In the broad Jump R. Bollerman has gone over 19 feet Jay and Leezer are try ing for the pole vault, while In the weights Scott Means, Turner. Reeves and Storle are showing up well. In the runs the contestants will be Pierce, Leezer, Stricklln. Dickson, Hill and Cresswell. Stricklln Is es pecially promising as a quarter and half-mile man. In the hurdles Jay. Leezer, Dickson and Hill are sure of places, and there will be a good relay race. Since Royal Sawtelle has offered a silver loving cup for the winning team In the Inter-high school contest, the local boys are anxious to keep the same here la possible. Also, there is much rivalry among the eighth grade pupils over the small cup which Mr. Sawtelle has offered the winner of their contest. ODD FELLOWS TO MEET. State Grand Lodge Will Convene in Portland Wednesday Morning. Eight delegates from Pendleton's two lodges of Odd Fellows left this morning for Portland to attend the sessions of tho grand lodge of Oregon which will begin tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock. Those going from Integrity lodge. No. 92 are W? H. McCormmach, Ed Morgan. Cliff Bellinger, Arthur Gib son and A. M. Erb. Those from Eureka lodge No. 32 are John H. Lawrey, John H. Williams and Louis A. Eddlngs. The delegates to the grand lodge of Rebekahs which met this morning were Mrs. W. H. McCormmach, Mrs. W. H. Folirom and Miss Nina Coon, who left here Saturday morning for Portland. l CAPITALISTS ARE COMING. Northwestern Gas & Electric Stock holder In Walla Walla. The Walla Walla Bulletin, speaking of the visit to Walla Walla of the stockholders of the Northwestern Gas ft Electric company, which owns the Pendleton gas plant, and supplies the city with electric light, says: A number of the eastern stockhold HAIR TELLS CHARACTER. Color at Hair Bald to Indicate a Per soa's Temperament. Many people believe that blonde, or light hair denotes affection and dark hair constancy. A person without hair is not devoid of character; far from it The disposition of tba average bald- headed man is to show such solicitude for the welfare of others, that he neg lects himself. A germ causes baldness, Prof. Sabouraud. of Paris, France, in- nocculated a rabbit with Dandruff germs, causing It to become totally bald in five weeks' time. To rid the scalp of these dangerous rerms It is necessary to apply eworo a Horplciae. "Destroy the cause you remove the etrect. Bold 'by leading druggists. Send 10c In stamps lor sample to Tbe Herplclde Co, Detroit. Mich. Koeppen Bros., special agents. When Cupid comes he usually an nounces his presence with a ring. We have a good stock of solitaire diamond and cluster rings, and also of plain gold wedding rings. We know our rings are Just what we say they are and O 'r prices are al ways marked in plain figures. Let us show you our assortment Winslow Brothers JEWELERS-OPTTiiANS. Poatofflce Block. ers of the Northwestern Gas & Elec tric company are in the city today inspecting the ' company's property here. Among the number are W. J. Morris, W. W. Montgomery, S. D. Slnklcr and G. L. Moyer, all of Phil adelphia. They are accompanied by President I. W. Anderson and are be ing driven about the city In automo biles. It Is the first visit to the west for some of the party and they express themselves as greatly pleased with the country and the prospects for bus iness. The stockholders In the Northwest ern Gas ft Electric company are stockholders In the light and gas com panies that supply Spokane, North Yakima. Boise, Baker City, Pendleton, Salem, Eugene, and are on a tour of inspection of the properties of the company at all of these places. It is one of the largest companies operating on the coast and the lm provements made In Walla Walla alone during the last two years will aggregate nearly half a million dol lars. At the present time work Is progressing on the street car system for this city and as soon as it is com pleted, will be extended to connect with Milton and Freewater, Ore. The principal object of the Phila delphia party In the city today Is to look over the field of the street car system. They express themselves as much pleased with the outlook and It is likely renewed activity will be man ifested as a result of their trip. MAY CHANGE DATES. May Cancel Condon and the Third - Date at Heppner. At the reauest of the woolhuvar it is very probable that the sales day scheduled for Condon will be cancelled and the sale slated for Heppner on June 22 changed to Elgin. At a meeting of the Umatilla county growers held last nlrht tho remioot was presented by a representative of the buyers, and the local association agreed to present the matter to the of ficials of the state organization. H. C. Rooper, secretary of the state asso ciation, is now here, and the matter has been turned over to him. As there will be but n. mntl lnt nf wool at Condon, the buyer nrpfor ni to have a sales dav there this The request for the sales day at Elgin was made at the request of the grow- esr or that section, who desired an earlier date than the one assigned them July 13. The date which l tn be given up by Heppner will be the tnira sale there, and should such a sale be necessary at all It can be ar ranged when the second sale Is held, one June 7. TRAIN LOAD OF SHEEP SHIPPED. Other Large Shipments Will Follow In Near Future. This morning a tralnlnail of aheon were shipped from Pendleton over the Northern Pacific lines to Chicago, and two similar shipments nin he made within a few days. The tralnload sent nut thi Ing contained sheep purchased by Pope & Howard and they are des tined for the Chicago market. There were 15 cars In the train. Tnmnrmnt another band will he ninneri tnr tho same people, and shipment made the next aay. On Thursday a band of Rheen win be dipped for William Fov. tho wi. consln buyer, and the lot will be Bhlp- pea out over the W. ft C. R. Friday. OFF TO ATHENA. Baptists Delegates Leave This Morn- ing for the County Association Meet ing. Superintendent Frank K. Welles and his father, John Welles, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Penland, Rev. and Mrs. O. L. Hall, Miss Flora Quick and Rev. Robert Wadsworth, of Pasadena, Cal left this morning for Athena to attend the Baptist county convention, which meets there today and tomorrow. A good meeting Is anticipated as a largo delegation from different parts of the county will be present, during the session. The Umatilla county as sociation formerly Included a larger territory but now Includes only this county. Athena has made every pre paration to accommodate the visiting delegates. JOBBING HOUSE HAS RESUMED. llil Brothers, on Market Street San Francisco. That tho jobbing houses, of San Francisco are now preparing to re sume business after the fire Is indl cated by letters recently received by them from Pendleton merchants. Yes terday the Peoples Warehouse receiv ed notice that TJhl Bros, were once more doing business at their former location on Market street, their re turn to business being announced In the following verse: "One of the first to burn, The first to return, Our confidence In San Francisco Is k unshaken." The Bottom Fell Out Whnt might have been a very serl ous accident occurred this forenoon when the glass bottom of the electric sign In front of the Columbia saloon dropped to the sidewalk. But a sec ond before a lady passed under the sign, and had the accident occurred then she would have been badly In Jured by the heavy glass. A workman was engaged In repairing the sign at the time. Patrick Wright Dead. Patrick Wria-ht. of Wnlln Wnlln a son of Engineer Jack Wright, of the Pendleton-Spokane branch of the O, R. ft N., died in the Walla Walla hos pital yesterday and was burled today In the Walla Walla cemetery. En gineer Wright has been off his run for several days attending his son, who has been 111 for some time. Son Was Born, OPPOSED TO THE FKOPLE, Rich Women of Portland Oppose Equal Suffrage. Portland. Mav 22. (Tn th Mim. A letter has been sent out by three ricn society women of Portland, mak ing the rather wild prophecy that, if 'iui suiirage amendment should carry, It "would discourage the con struction of new lines of railway." The very next day the papers an nounced that three new lines of rail way were being constructed in Idaho, (where women vote), and that there "an era of railroad building unprece dented In that part of the country, has begun." It Is generally believed that the Southern Pacific railroad Is fighting the equal suffrage amendment that it is behind the little group of imiiiunuires wives who call them selves the Oregon Association Opposed to the Extension of Suffrage tn w. men. The great corporations dislike equa! urrrage for the same reason that they dislike the lnftinti referendum because It fs easier for corporate wealth to control leiH lature than to control the popular vote, and easier for it to control the vote of half the people than It would be to control the vote of the whole people, men and women put together. The corporations object to anything nun win give more power to the peo ple. The people favor ennnl ,,rtra for tho same reason. I believe the men or Oregon will prove It by voting iur ine amenament on June 4. BESSIK E. PETTINGER. GRIN SACKS HIGH. Big Bend Fanners Complaining of I orbltant Prices. Farmers generally Br Mmnlolnln. bitterly about the exorbitant prices at wnicn tne season opens for grain sacks throughout this section, says n Harrington, Wash., dispatch. Eight cents eacn in large quantities has been the highest price charged for sacks In this section for a number nf vonra anil even this the 'farmers thought very high, but this year the market opens at 10 cents tier sack hv tho hnio tho highest price ever known since the Big Bend has been a wheat-producing country. This may not sound so big to the average small rancher, but when one stops to consider that many of the ranchers of the Herrlnrton wheat holt will have to buy from 30,000 to 40,000 sacks this season In order to handle their crop and expeditiously save the same, it win e seen that the sack question is quite a serious Item of ex pense. All Kinds of Music. A large crowd was attracted to J A. Owenhouse's mitsl ntnro thi ternoon by all kinds bf music playing ui one time. Aoout a dozen phono graphs and graphophones, several piuiiuius ana otner automatic Instru ments were nlflvlnv Hirta,.n, .. .. the same time and the result was gro tesque in the extreme. The police of Portland have ar rested a woman giving the name of Nellie Davis. 8he Is accused of four burglaries lately perpetrated In that place, and Is said to have also oper ated in Seattle. 0PBH POBLimiTT TUB BBST GUJMXiTT OF MBRIT. When the maker of a medicine, sold through druggists for family use, takes his patients fully into his confidence by frankly and fearlessly publishing broad cast as well as on Its bottle wrappers, a full list of all Its ingredients in pUiln .English, this action on his part is the best possible evidence that he Is not afraid to have the search light of inves tigation turned full upon his formula and that It will bear the fullest scrutiny and the most thorough investigation. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for the cure of the weaknesses, periodical pains and functional derangements of the or gans distinctly feminine. Is the only medi cine put up for sale through druggists for woman's dpeclal use, the maker of which l not afraid to take his patients into his full confidence by such open and honest publicity. A glance at the published Ingredients on each bottle wrapper, will show that it Is made wholly from native. Amor lean, medicinal roots, that it contains no poi sonous or habit-forming drugs, no nar cotics and no alcohol pure, triple-refined f;lycerine, of proper strength being used nstead nf the commonly employed alco hol, both for extracting and preserving the active medicinal properties found In the roots of the American forest plants employed. It la the only medicine for women's peculiar diseases, sold by drug gists, that does not contain a large per centage of alcohol, which Is In the long run so harmful to woman's delicate, nerv ous system. Now, glycerine is perfectly harmless, and servos a valuable purpose by possessing intrinsic value all its own, and besides It enhances the curatlvs effect of the other Ingredients entering Into the "Favorite Prescription." Some of the ablest medical writers and teachers endorse these views and praise all the several ingredients of which "Fa vorite Prescription" is composed rec ommending them for the cure of the very same diseases for which this world famed medicine is advised. No other medicine for women has any such pro feUmnl endorsement worth more than any number of ordinary testimonials. If Interested, send name and address to Dr. B. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for his little book of extracts from the works of eminent medical writers and teachers, endorsing the several Ingredients and tolling lust what Dr. Pierce's medicines are made of. It's fret for the asking. Summer Underwear Novelties Coat Shirts and Knee Drawers are the real thing for warm weather; made of India Crepe and Reff ; price $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 , PER SUIT Boston FOR Don't Fail to be in Pendleton Decoration Day QUAKE CUTS EARNINGS. Union Pacific Feels Result of San Francisco's Disaster. The earnings of the Union Pacific, officials of the road say, for the past two weeks have shown considerable effect from the destruction of San Francisco and from the large amount of free transportation given by the Harriman lines. Tet It Is believed that the freight traffic will Increase to such an extent when heavy ship ments of building material to San Francisco begin that the deficiencies will be made up. Nearly all the docks and terminals of the Harriman lines at Oakland are In safe condition, and E. H. Harriman has announced that he will do all in his power to hold all possible trade at the Golden Gate. This will help up build San Francisco. The Union Pacific's gross earnings for March are In excess of $6,000,000, but are not so favorable as expected. The Increase of the net earnings of the Union Pacific for the first nine months of the present fiscal year is 13,600,000, which is equal to about 1 per cent on the present outstand ing common stock of the company. Tho increase in gross and net earn ings for the nine months are the larg est that the company has had In years. The gross Increased 13.8 per cent, compared to 6.3 per cent last year, and the net Increased 17.1 per cent, compared to 9.4 per cent last year. Fine Range at Guantanamo. Washington, May 22. Reports re Hose! Lavn-movers! We have a full line of Lawn Mowers from $5.00 to $13.00. We also have a full line of Goodyear Rubber Co's garden Hose. 1-2 in. 10c to 12'3c 3-4 in- 1210 10 256 : i- 3 line before buying The Taylor Hardware Co. 741 Main Street A Lesson in Laundry Work we give to our help, and teach them the necessity of care in the launder ing of f.ne linen, thai goes a great way In preserving the fabrics sent here for renovation. Anything com ing from . tha Domestlo laundry will always" be found In perfect condition anaVbeautiful In both color and fin ish. Domestic Steam Laundry - - - - . - - ar Manufacturers J. F. ROBINSON, Prop. Combination Suits are also very popular. We carry a good assortment of them. $1.50, $2, $2.50 and $3.00 PER LINEN MESH Store MEN ceived of the email arms target prac tice at the naval station at Quintan-, amo Indicate that the navy possesses admirable facilities for such work. There are means of conducting prac tice with field pieces and boat guns. No matter how large the fleet visiting at Guantanamo, all the boat gun could be fired In practice at one timer Practice with revolvers can be con ducted at the same time while other work Is going on. There Is a line of 110 targets at various distances and unsurpassed means of taking care of a large body of men and 'keeping up the records of work. This effective ness Is in strong contrast to any of the ranges in the United States. A Little Dirt No matter how small is not needed in a watch and can do much damage in a short time. If it has not been cleaned in 18 months it needs it now. Bring it in and have me put it in shape. Royal M. Sawtelle Jeweler of Contentment. PHONE MAIN 60. Iff!! I lip j Born, to Mr. and Mrs. John Brig- ham, of Mission, ion.