' MW..v.. TEN PAGES. pact nn DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 190T.. urn FE.AZER THEATBSE II AND 110 RAILROAD HI FOR SALE 92750 Modem house, 7 room. 1 iota, on Logan street on Installment plan, deterred payments t I per cent 92500 Modern house, 7 rooms, eO fool lot, 814 East Alta street: on Installment plan, deferred payments at 6 per cent Inter est $700 Small cottage, corner of Mark and Blaine street, on Install ment plan, deferred payments C per cent Interest $050 Rooming house on South Main, 12 fully furnished rooms, kitchen and dining room furniture, long lease on on building. $ -COO -Modern cottage of S rooms close in on West Court street Easy payments. 1 500 Seven blocks from Main street on West Court, a modern 5 roomert cottage. Easy pay ments. $'.2000 Modern 6-roomed cottage; S lotH, north side, easy pay ments. $11 (0 Modern 6-room cottage, I lots, 9 blocks from Main ttreet on W. R. R. Install ment plan. $i:ir0 Modern 8-room cottage, toilet, bath, connected with sewer, Jane street between Alta and Court Installment plan. 11200 Modern 5-ronm cottage, toilet bath, connected with sewer, Main street, between Webb and Railroad streets. ' Install ment plan. 5 It was just 80 years ago today that group oi Baltimore's foremost cu- sens met at the residence of Philip B. Thomas for the Dumose of devising means which would enable commer cial Intercourse between Baltimore and the Ohio river, and thus overcome the commercial advantages her neigh boring cities, Philadelphia and New York, enjoyed by reason of canals. The Baltimore A Ohio is the oldest steam railroad In America. The first stone of Its roadbed was laid In this city on the Fourth of July, 1828, with elaborate ceremony. Ove its origin al length of nine miles mules dragged Its cars. Then Peter Cooper, a man ufacturer of New York, brought to Baltimore a steam engine a curious concern, something like a boiler with stovepipe In It In 1831. And Coop er's engine broke down and the horse express beat It Then came the grass hopper engines the embryonic germs of the tremendous locomotives of to ny. So, historically, the Baltimore A Ohio Is extremely Interesting. The road grew. It was the first to cross the Allegheny mountains and tap the great . west It grew, and thanks to the energy, the executive capacity, the untiring labor of John W. Garrett, It thrived In time. Under the management of John W. Garrett the road arose to a prosper ity that even he had not dreamed of. The company's Btock paid 10 per cent dividends. If a dying man had money In the Baltimore A Ohio he died cun tent, for he knew his widow was pro vided for. John W. Garrett died In 1884 and his son, Robert Garrett, succeoded him as president of the Bnltlmoro A Ohio. One of the moat Interesting chapters In the history of the road occurred when Robert Garrett opened the "bottle of champagne that coat millions." At that time there was one railroad between Philadelphia and Baltimore. Insurance anil Real Estate, Room 12, J mid llldg.. Pendleton, Oregon. THE TRUE STORY OF HOMER DftVENPORT A Word About PIANOS I jok over the Hit of the well known I liinos handled by the GREAT IIOT.'SE of S'lEHMAN, CI.AY A CO mil see how many other pianos made In the Unite. I .Slates are cheap at any price. Head the ll.-t carefully: Steln- wny, Knal e, A..B. Chase, Hardman, Everett, Emerson, Ludwlg, Estey, Vose, Packard, Fischer, Klngsbery, Haller, Sloe and a large number of others, and when It Is known that these little houses cannot buy these pianos at any price and that they are snid all over the United States at ONE PRICE, freight added, you will know you can't make a mistake In selecting one handled by the b.ouse of Sherman ClRy A Co., buying, as they do, three times as many Instruments as all the other houses on the coast combined, they get the lowest price that a good piano can be. made for. Sherman, Clay A Co., the one price houses Special sale this month only, JESSE FAILING, Pendleton, Oregon. Real Estate Snaps Three, great bargains In real estate Fine,' 8-room house on two nice level lots on corner, on the prettiest street in Hood River. Price 82000, worth 82E00. 80 acres of fine wheat land In Sher man county, Oregon; high state of cultivation. Two nice level lots In the town of Emmit. The town property is worth 8600. The SO acres Is worth $2400. Our price for 30 days Is 82200; $800 cash, balance $200 a year and Interest at 8 per cent E7 acres fine Irrlgatde land, two miles west of Irrlgon, all cleared, rab bit fenced and watered. Price $5000l A money maker. ADDRESS LOCK BOX 408, Pendleton, Ore. 60 . YEARS EXPERIENCE a i t n i a ii si. m 11 Trade Marks .si.iiiU Am - v vurtnixn mw Anyone -ending fttiketfhand dMorlMton ntvj qillCIlT IWlTVl uilll win fn tiiYwitlon im probablr Pfimugjjh-lNmt tlnuintrletlToniifltieiitlal. HANDBOOK on t'aumtj i lent frA. Olrirat won oy f or wurtnfpint, I'Atent taken tlimufh Moon ACo.roI uj.iaAili litimifc nhaivsV In Lhsl Scientific American. A hn1iomlr IHoiitratM WMtlr. I-antaaS stl milatleii f any iolaiHIOo Journal. Trma.lS a. Tars four iminlbl, SL Bomb; all rtwMeal Pn ssiBrosoush Npw Ynalr Mill u ,V1I iiyi.ji.-ii ration uraos, o r si wmdiosioo. Robert Oarrett wanted it for the Bal timore A Ohio. Thomas A. Scott wanted It for the Pennsylvania rail road. That railroad was the Phila delphia, Wilmington A Baltimore. .TiiRt nt that time It was naturally the most desirable thing In the world for the B. A O., and llkewiso ror tne Pennsylvania. Robert Oarrett set about to ac quire the property. He learned that several of the largest owners of stock lived Irt Boston. With their stock In his possession he could easily get control of the majority. Bo ne went to Boston, where his negotiations were ' eminently successful. Already In his mind's eye he saw tne B. & O. trains rolling Into Philadelphia. But Robert Garrett was never a self-contained man. He drank deep. Arrived at New i one ne wem to a dinner Darty. Some corporation law yers were among those present. At that dinner party tne Dome or cnam pagne that cost millions was opened. Rnhnri Oarrett drank It. Flushed, he could not keep his triumphant secret But one man. whose legs were unaer the mnhnsnnv. did not drink. He ex cused himself about 10 p. m. and left the table. Before daylight no was in Philadelphia and at the house of Thnmiia A. Scott. Dresldent of the Pennsylvania. The next morning emissaries of the Pennsylvania were hurrying to Boston and other points to get hold of the P.. W. A B. stock. By 2 o'clock the next day tne papers ,..., ui,rne ii non ooft in cash uald over, and the Pennsylvania had con . , . v. ni. n i. .1 ..1 Vi I n Wilmlnn-tnn 1 1 U I Ul 111 W 1 1 1 ......-. -. o & Baltimore, when Robert Garrett awoke on what he firmly believed was to be the morning of his triumph the newspa pers were full of the deal between the Pennsylvania and the P., W. A B. Robert Garrett then determined that v.. nnltlmnra Jlr Ohio would build ItS own line Into Philadelphia. This It finally did. Homer Daven&ort. whose cartoons It. various New "Yoik papers have pliyed a telling part In some of the presidential andi local political cam nrivns. and which between times have illuminated subjects of passing Interest with remarkable pertinency, is riftsortnea as one ot tne reai nota ble of the New York newspaper w.irM. Prerlorlrk Tlenn. who writes of him in the Editor and Publisher, (New York) tell us that when Daven port came to the city "he brought with him a largo heart, a big head ana a sharp pencil." "He came a lover of dumb beasts .and a hater of human weakness and h uman vice." What he hax dune is realized In part by most readers of the New York nrew. hot the nreeent writer tells. In addition to what he has done, some thing of the wort of man he Is and low from the cradle, almost, he has been "predestined" for success In tne ork which h- has chosen. Can n lit in 1 he whirl of overfeellng against the af rgrandizement of power. Paveuport Ins tlnctively turned his at tention to the amelioration of the condition of tine weaker under-brother nd Willi the only wenpon at hand his pencil began a battle royal mainst whut' he considered right, Jus tice, truth, rt al manhood. The pencil, guided by the head, has dune Its deoMlly woik, and the world at large knows him only for his clever cruolty to those In high office. To hid intimates has been given the pleasure of teeing the kindlier side the big hcurt of the man that envel ops tho cruelly of the caricaturist. Davanport Is a natural-born cartoon inker. His part In the world's work n nrartentined. foreordained. He Is an Ina-irniitlorr of a Michelangelo, with talents turned! aside to the specific use of satire. A true student ot na ture, hisjilay on his father's farm was his .'.ovlng care of tho young animals about the place, his chief occupation was- drawing, drawing not only the things that he saw about him, but the fancies of Ills brain, and these he drei.v on the blackboard, on the floor, on ,uny sheet ot paper that came to haiud. In the days that Thomas Naat was In his glory, Homer Davenport's moth- u out tn hea.r him lecture. The fore fulness of the man and his pe- eulls rlv attuned nersonaltty to his chosen vork so captivated her that she longed for some one of her own fiesn and, blnod to follow in his. footsteps. She desired a son to be a secona Naat, She searched . the bookshops tn lier country home, went to larger places for additional material, sought high and low for traces of this, her hero.. Aa nttker mothers longed for a warrior, a. atntainnll. a DrteBt. for her son this woman prayed for n cartoon ist, a caricaturist, a sketcner or men s foibles. She had given her husband three children. Only one, a girl, had lived bej'ond early youth. But this newly-born waa to be a giant in stature as in Intellect and Din Imiunatrihla came to DOSS. This son thrived and passed safely thrmnrh hl uienond summer. His earliest recolleatlon was as a child of 3. He was too weak to play with other children at id spent his time lying on the floor ilrn. wins, drawing, draw ing. Incessantly drawing, with a soft pencil or a bit of charcoal, on tne hoard iinnti whirh ho lav scrawled. His father had alnted the floor of his room a dead 'hlte, and as soon as hi nlctilrea rnver d the snace around him, the whitened boards were mop ped off and the a raftsman given an other nnnvat His mother's dyi ing wish was that Homer should nr" er go to school and her desire was made a religion On one occasion, fm a mlsaulded mo men), the little shay was sent to the viiinne iirimarv. The teacher allow- .i Kim iha minimal nrlvilege of going to the blackboard whenever he was tired, and there rest his nerves wun tho uao of the cravon. but the abnor mally nervous temperament of the child soon felt the eyes of the others upon him, and he returned home a ! wreck. ICE FROM THE GLACIERS. Novel Industry Growing Up In Svrit- xcrlund. The introduction of electric rail- Alnlne districts has been tilt means of establishing a new and somewhat strange Industry namely, Ihe quarrying of glacier ice for dis tribution in large cities. It would appear that certain of the Rwi communes have been able to grant concessions of their glaciers for this purpose, and considerable sums have been expended In constructing Ice slides or V-snapea trougns, in which the bldcks of Ice, often of latge hlnated out of the glacier are transported to the vicinity oi me sui- tiona for conveyance. In careiuiiy re frigerated vans, to Lyon and other inrire cities remole from the Alps. The method of blasting with black nnwder so as to avoid the discolora tion and soiling of the Ice, and the engineering ability displayed In erect ir the ulldea and in urovldlng suf ficient friction by means of curves to avoid excessive speed In the down-o.-nrl Inurnev of the Ice blocks, are spoken of by the London Times aa examples of considerable ingenuity anil aklll. Glacier ice. which is perfectly pure ond transparent, and which has many dualities which are greatly appreci ated by consumers, commands a high er value than that of the usual kind obtained from the surface of frozen ponds or Inkes. A singular feature In connection with the preparation of the ice for the market is that It has been found necessary to store It for some days In special warehouses, formed of a double thickness of botird inir with a stratum of sawdust lnter- nnaed. In order to remove a coating of frost or non-transparent Ice whlcn tends to form on the surface of each block as It leaves the glacier. To llrldico Snako River. A dlsnntch from Salem says: A state appropriation of $26,000 Is asked for by a bill Introduced in the house bv King of Malheur for tne pnnRtriictinn of & bridee across the I Snake river at Ontario. The appro nrintinn u made contlnirent UDOn the appropriation of a like sum on the nnri nf Malheur county, rne diu also provides for the appointment of . . . i' 1 na lm a rnmmiHKKin ld uo a iuitii ao ..u board of Snake river bridge commis sioners, and this body ts to nave charge nf the construction of the bridge and the expenditure of the money appropriated by tne state ana raised by the county. Tin the rlarht tlilns If vou have Na tal Catarrh. Get Ely's Cream Balm at nnoe. Don't touch the catarrh pow ders and snuffs, for thy contain coa- ctne. Ely s Cream Balm releases tn secretions thnt Inflame the nasal oaa- Hmn ind the threat, whereas com mon "remedies" made with mercury merely drive them out and leave you no better than you were, in a word, Ely's Cream Balm ts a real cure, not a delusion. All druggists, 50c, or mailed by Ely Bros., 58 Warren street. New York. At Leavenworth, Wash., the weight nr airw and Ice cnllnnsrd the roof ot the Great Northern Ice house the largest Ice house In the state. A Jap anese laborer In the building was killed. . Monday & Tuesday Nights, Feb. 1 8-19 "THE PIXIES" By W. A. MILNE, Author of "AUadin" etc. Given by Home Talent Rehearsed by Author 250 Young Ladies and Children in the Cast 250 ALL IX GROTESQUE AXD BEAUTTFTL COSTUMING, REPRESENTING PIXI1IS, GOBLINS, BROWNIES, MONKEYS, INSECTS, PICKANINNIES, FAIRUES, FlyOWElt GIRLS, IJUTTERFIJES, PAGES, AMAZON GUARDS, JAPANESE MAIDENS, YANKEE IK'ODLE GIRLS, ETC, UNDER AUSPICES OF PENDLETON CITY SCHOOLS. TWO HOURS OF FUN ANI FROLIC IN FAIRYLAND, WHERE ALL IS GAUZ AND GLIT TER, MUSIC, LOVE AND FLOWERS. Prices 35c, 50c and 75c SALE OF SEATS OPENS AT PENDLETON DRUG CO. ON SATURDAY, FEB. 16. Wine F r Sal LL IMPROVED LAND, and will be sold at a bargain if taken at once. Personal reasons for selling. Two or three crops will pay for the land. For terms and other information, ADDRESS Pendleton, Oregon