V" ----- -.ar'' uisunmmi. IN PAGE TWO. DAILY EAST OnEGOXIAy, FENDLETOV, OIIEGOX, flf tHSTAV, FEnitfARY 21, 1901 10 ITT PAGES. REBISTEROUSTED M. J. XOLAJf OUT OF THE DALLES LAX!) OFFICE. EXTRA SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR Could Not Sustain Charge of Friiiul Jlado Against Itccctvcr Miss Aimn Lung and Was Summarily Dismiss e1 IIIh illsmlssnl foinon as a Pun Islimcnt for Ills DI-loyaKy to ."1U.. tlonal Lenders, It Is Alleged. FRIDAY AND SATU RDAY 10 (Won short flamu'lotto 1imonn$, resrulnr values up to $l..-0, CTeat bargains at, each. . 75c 0 dozen me-recrizoil sattoen rndor?kirts, evelet ombroidorod ruffle, ropilar !?3.50 ' values, irreat sixx'ial at each $2.75 24 high class tailored Suits, in hip length jack ets, checks and brown mixed, regular $25.00 suits, great special bargain at $14.00 Men and Women's Shoes $3.85 Odd lots of our $4.00, $5.00 and $5.50 "Per fection'' make. The highest grade of workmanship and ma terial are put in these shoos, the styles are ex clusive, they are made to our specifications, thus insuring more comfort and wear than the ordinary shoe. They are all this season's latest fashions, buttons and lace, patent colt, vici and gun metal leathers, hand welted, soles high grade, $5 and $5.50 shoes. 20 dozen pair of Nottingham Lace Curtains in white and com. 54 inches wide and 3 1-2 yards long, regular $2.50 values, at, per pair $3.85 $1.65 12 pieces plain colored Chambreys, 30 inches wide, regular 12Je gade, at per yard 9c 2 pieces bleached. Table Linen, 68 and 72 inches wide, 3 pieces heavy mercerized Dam asks, regular 75c values, great special at per vard 45c Friday and Saturday We will sell any hat in the house at a 20 per cent reduction, which means : $2.00 Hats for $1.60 $2.50 nats for $2.00 $3.00 Hats for $2.40 $3.50 Hats for $2.80 $5.00 Hats for $4.00 Any Fancy Vest in the House HALF PRICE, Friday and Saturday. 72 DCS. Cotton Challies at $1-50 Underwear, Derby r- 1 Ribbed, Brown Good Weight 75c, 5c yd HALF PRICE. , All Remnants Calicoes and . . . Ginghams at HALF PRICE "f'8 B ! . GROCERIES ' Don't forget our special suit and overcoat Two Days Only , -j"-- Friday and Saturday I CaawW lK,nnU fancy Mocha and Java Coffee !).C . ,, i 1 pound fancv Snider Lejj Tea 4C Our ifl.j overcoats will be i . i o , . 1 gallon fine Olive Oil $1.M) SQ DO gallon Columbia Pancake Syrup ..... oOC . J gallon Columbia Pancake Syrup .... 30c Friday and Saturday. Walter's White Satin Flour 9.C This is the best price bargain you'll get this High grade groceries, fancy teas and coffees, season, so don't pass it by. Price and quality just right This Store will close at noon tomorrow, Washington's Birthday. The Peoples Warehouse Another chapter In the factional warfare 111 the republican party In Oregon Is brought to a close by the sunimnry dismissal of M. J. Xolnn, register of the lanil office at The Dalles by order of the president. The story goes hack for a number of yenrs to the time when Nolnn was a willing tool of his faction and as pired, In return, to secure a fat place in the government service. He was finally rewarded by being made reg ister of the land office at his home town, The Dalles. Then the enemies of M. A. Moolfy. who had secured the appointment of Nolan, began to lay plans to nliennte the register and his benefactor and it Is alleged trumped up evidence to show Xolnn that the receiver of the office. Miss Anna Lang, n close friend of Mr. Moody, was giving out secret Information "concerning lnnd with drawals, by which her friend were benef'tlng. Nolan sent such charges to Washington and offered his resig nation. Ills resignation was refused nnd he is given a severe chnstlsement by being dismissed. A dispatch from The Dalles says: Receiver Anne M. Lang, of the tn cal land' office Is tonight In receipt of a telegram from the commissioner of the general land office, advising her that the president has removed Register Nolan, nnd that he has Been instructed to turn over to the receiver all government property In his posses sion. According to the commission er's directions, the land office will transact no business, but will be open for the Information of Jhe public pending further Instructions. Beyond the Information contained In the commissioner's telegram. Miss Lang declines to discuss the matter further tonight. Mr. Nolan has been out of town since .Saturday, and the lnnd office force knows nothing of his whereabouts. A Washington dispatch says of the causes of Mr. Nolan's dismissal: Mr. Nolan's dismissal follows an In vestigation of The Dnlles land office under the personal direction of Sec retary Hitchcock, and. while the sec retary could not be seen tonight. It Is understood thnt the Investigation showed that Mr. Nolan's charges against M. A. Moody, Miss Lang and others were not substantiated, and thnt his failure to make good was considered sufficient ground for his removal. It was at the suggestion of ex-Representative Moody that the acceptance of Mr. Nolan's resignation was with drawn two months ago, Mr. Moody having Intimated to Mr. Hitchcock that Mr. Nolan should not be allowed to resign, but should be dismissed. Mr. Moody hail previously been advis ed of the nature of the charges made Against him by Mr. Nolan In his letter of resignation, nnd had declared that these charges could not be proven. It wns Intended thnt Mr. Nolan be punished for taking his radical course, and the only punishment open was to order his dismissal. As far as can be learrled, Mr. Nolan Is not dismissed WHITE GOODS AT SPECIAL PRICES This week will be one of special bargaina in the following lines of White Goods, Table Linens and Napkins 10 per cent off regular price. Several specially good values at our regular pries of 78o yard, will go this week at 65c yd. r.50 table linen this week for $1.35 yd. Napkins of all kinds will bo for 10 per cent less. Lace Curtains from the, cheapest to the nicest will go for 10 per cent less than regular price. , All 15.00 curtains you may buy this week at $4.50 pr. All M.00 curtains will go until Saturday night at $3.60 pr. Cheaper curtains at same reduction. This Saving is Worth While. The Fair Dep't. Store Pennleton, Oregon for corruption, though his adminis tration of the office Is believed to have been severely condemned. tint) Reward, fion. The readers of tbls paper will be pleased to learn tbat there Is t least one drttiled disease that Klence baa been able to cure In all Its stages, aod tbat la Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure la the only poaltlTe cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dlaease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken luternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous eurfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and airing the patient strength by building up the constitution snd aaslat log nature Id doing Its work. The proprie tor bare so much faltb In Ita curatlre powers tbat they offer One Hundred Dol lars for any case that It falls to cure. Bend for list of- teatlmonlala. Address F. J. CHENEY 4 CO.. Toledo, O. Hold by all drturglata, 75c. Take Hall's Family I'llla for constipation. Return Limit to California Excursion Tickets Extended. The regular return limit of the win ter excursion tickets to. California has been extended to six months and the price of tickets advanced 15. Tor In formation Inquire of E. C. Smith agent O. Ft. & N.. Pendleton. MONTANA I OII A COMMISSION. All headaches go When you grow wiser And learn to use An '"Early Riser." DeWltt's Little Early Risers, safe, sure pills. Tnllman 4 Co. RluM Cnllronil roininboloii Hill la Passed. ! A sncolnl from Helena. Mont., ftnvs- After a most memorable struggle, not unlike thai in the house, where the republirar.s, through sheer force of strength, had ruthlessly overrid il"ii the democrats, voting down amendment after amendment and squelching all sorts of dilltory tac tics, the senate today passed the Shaw-Tudor railroad commission bill, saM to be one cf the broadest and mini far-reaching measures of Its kind to be found In the United States. The senate adopted an amend .nt authorizing the Issuance of passes, but In no other Important particular was It amended. The house will concur In these and the bill will go to the governor this week. There Is a question whether he will veto It or not, although during the campaign he protested vigorously against the naming of railroad com missioners by the legislature. All his other objections have been accepted. The vote was 2 to 1, one republi can voting against It. AiK'ilon Sale All personal property now on the Frank It. Clopton ranch. Including ! farm and dairy Implements, horses and cattle, will be sold nt public auc tion at the Alta House at 1 p. m., Sat urday, March S. Estrnycd. Petwecn Cold Springs nnd reserva tion, two bay horses Weighing about linn pounds each, nnd branded T con rected J. It., and one bay horse with white face and cock-ankle, weighing ..I..... .AAA .1- VII 1 . I Bin'ui jmuntiBt unrrai reward : offered for return to t'matllla Meat ' Market. The Boise liank of Commerce has doubled Its capital stock from $250,000 to r.00.000, and raised Its surplus to S12S.000. Piles of people have Plies. Why suffer frcm piles when you can use PeWitt's Carbollzed Witch Hazel P.ilvc and get relief? Nothing else so goo.l. Htware of Imitations. See ibat the name Is stamped on each box. Sol 1 by Tallman Co. Save Your Coupons. Where itJPays to Trade. NORTHWEST NEWS. There Is a movement on foot to hold a horse show In Baker City dur ing April. Mrs. Robert Haskins, a pioneer of Joseph, Wallowa county, died In a I'ojtland hospital following an opera tion for removal of a tumor from the liver, The Radium Electric Light & Power company was granted a fran chise to enter Baker City, and Is to furnish JS00 bonds as a guarantee tbat it will have Its line strung In the city Inside of six months from Feb ruary 15. Three families were released from smallpox quarantine at P.olse on Feb tuary 19. The same day John Rear don, cf the Capital Liquor company. end K. W. McColm, a lumberman, were taken to the penthouse with the same dUease. Joe Metkel, a pioneer miner of eastern Oregon, has returned to Ba ker City from Tonopah. He brings personal testimony that more people In the Nevada gold fields die of pneu monia than of all other ailments. It Is that region's characteristic scourge. Conservative men say the recent flood losees In Cllllsm county can be put down about as follows: To the O. R. N., at least 120,000; county wagon roads. IE000; property In city of Arlington, 12000; to stock lost by tarving and floods. $25,000, making a total of $52,000. The destruction of deer in the Clearwater district, Idaho, by cou gars, Is something extraordinary. The slaughter Is due principally to the fact that food Is scarce, and the con dition of the snow affords the cougar the opportunity he seeks to kill the ktrge gnrne. There Is now setting In a heavy ex port movement of wheat from tho t'nlted States, due principally to the failure of crops and the famine In Russia, which In nominally a grain exporting country. Last week there were bought for export to Europe 2, 000,000 bushels of wheat That fig ure will be exceeded In the current week. The body of Martin Botcher, who has been missing since December 31, was found In the Wlllnpa river, Wash., i 100" feet upstream from where he attempted to cross the river . In a skiff on the date mentioned. Sixty dollnrs In gold was In his clothes, and there was not the slightest evi dence r.f violence, and all theories of foul play have been abandoned. Tet the body was 1000 feet upstream from tho crossing. At Pullman, Wash., Rev. W. E. Powell, former pastor of the Baptist church, has brought suit against a member of his congregation for com missions due him on alleged sale of promoter's stock In a mining com pony. The amount claimed Is $230 for the sale of 11,600 shares of Do minion Consolidated Copper company stock at a commission, of $20 per 1000 shares. The suit Is brought against Isaac M. Ely and Hattle Ely, his wife. At Forest Grove, Ore., J. B. Scott, 9 god 70 years, a resident of that place for the past 10 years, committed sui cide this morning by shooting him self through the chest near the heart with a snunket, dying in about half an hour from Internal hemorrhage He leaves a large property. Ho came from Fort Dodge, Iowa, where he was a banker. REAL ESTATE I have wheat lands with good or chards and plenty of water. I have stock ranches for both sum mer and winter quarters. I hive e proposition that I will guarantee a profit In If taken at once. Anyone with a little money and a lit tle nerve to back It can clean up about $5000 in nbout alx months. I have son,e of the best property In the rlty listed with me for sale. I have a hotel with 12 rooms, two lots 60x100, doing a rushing business-. Price too small to mention. I have ubttrban property Improv ed and unimproved. I have a few good business chances. In fact, I have anything you want either real estate or livestock. Come In and tell me what too want If I haven't tot It I will set it for yon. E. T. WADE Phone blacbk till. Office B. O. Building. -CookvitM Qf- .NORTHWCSTERNKjASA electr IC CO . will be able to furnish gas for cooking by April 1st, as cheap, if not cheaper than what you would pay for wood or coal. Besides there's Less Dirt and Less Trouble. WE will soon receive a shipment of Gas Ranges, ranging in price from $17.50 to $35.00 and cordially invite all to call and inspect them upon their arrival. Gas for Heating and cooking cost $2.00, 'per 1000 Average cost per month, about $3.00 lill 11 It fulfill! REMEMBER ! We lay pipe from main to curb free I and are in a position to do all piping and furnish all fittings. fid