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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1907)
PAGE TWO, DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1907. EIGHT PAGES. I FARM INSURANCE WASHINGTON FARMERS FORM MUTUAL COMPANY. Company Will Do Confined Strictly to Count lea Will Inmiro Grain Grow ing, In Stacks, In Korku and In Ware houses at Ono-IIalf the Price Charged by tlio Oltl Line Companies. jWALLj iPAPERl Authorative Styles in Fashionable Easter Millinery and Ready-to-Wear Garments Matchless assortments of the very best styles of High Grade Garments, manufactured by the! very best tailors of the country, guaranteed to fit and hang properly. The superb showing of Swell Eastern Hats, surpass in variety of styles and choiceness of patterns, a visit at this time to our Mil linery Parlors, convinces you of this store's absolute leadership in High art Millinery. The illustrations represent two swell New Suits just received in the Ready-to-Wear Department. Ladies' new spring sult In the latest Eton Jacket-fltyle, of finest qual ity chiffon Panama. In tan and brown checks with best taffeta lining, elbow sleeves and trimmed In the newest buttons and braid effects, skirts very full plaited and front panels; one of the swellest suits shown this season, each $35.00 Ladies' tailored suit In brown, navy blue and black broadcloth and Pana ma Eton with attached girdle, satin lining, full plaited skirt In panel ef fects and with silk braid trimming to match. The most up-to-date and stylish suits made, for, each $28.50 New shadow checked taffeta silks, 27 Inches wide $1.25 Checked wash taffetas, 19 inches wide, 8."o Printed Jap silks, 25 inches wide 50c April Delineator Now Here Umatilla farmers will be Interested In a mutual farm Insurance company belnjr formed by farmers In eastern Washington. A dispatch from Pull man says of the subject: The sub-committee appointed by President E. A. Bryan, of the Wash ington state college who was author ized to do so by the Wheatgrowers1 association of Washington, has out lined a plan for a farmers' mutual In surance company, says a Pullman dis patch. In substance tho commlttco report will be as follows: The company shall be limited to each county, and the maximum Insur ance shall be $1000 on each quarter section of land. The minimum assess ment will not be lower than one-half old line company rates; payments of the assessment shnll be required In advance. The surplus, should any ac crue, Ib to be carried over through tho years when losses ore slight, and I applied to policies when the losses ex ceed the assessment. The policies are to cover losses of I irroln sacks when on the land, grow Ine. In the stacks, or In granaries In I the field. This excludes anything I when In the warehouse. Risks will be I classified according to exposure; that I Is, proximity to non-Insured grain, and to railroads. The policy fee. In addi tion to the prescribed assessment, will I be $1. Class A., which will be con- sldered the basis In making rates, , consists of grain not exposed on any side. I All policies will hold good for 90 S days, and are to be dated from July 15, of each year. When any county I carries $750,000 or more Insurance, It 1 will constitute a district by Itself, rcg- 1 ulatlng the basis for determining the : loss suffered within that particular county. Following the acceptance of this re port by the committee of which Pres ident Bryan Is chairman, the necessary steps will be taken to secure a char ter from the state Insurance board. By mutually Insuring their grain, the farmers of both eastern and west ern Washington believe that the heavy payments exacted by national Insur ance companies can be very ninterlally decreased. New designs now In for spring business mnke your selections and have your work done early, It will cost you less. Largest stock and greatest va riety In patterns we have ever shown. Many new novelties for th,e dining room, library and den. Come to the store, make your selections and we send our men to do the rest PENDLETON PAINT STORE E. J. MURPHY, Prop. 'Phone Black 3181. 121 E. Court St. WEAK KIDNEVS MAKE WEAK BODIES. i iNp Half (lie Cora. Ills of Pendleton SOLE Af.ENTS FOR BUTTEIHCK PATTERNS AND ROYAL WORCESTER CORSETS. rVHE AND WHOLESOME GROCERIES, STAPLE AND FANCY AT A NOTICEABLE SAVING. 15 DOZEN PAIR OF NEW NOTTINGHAM LACK SPLENDID $3.00 VALUES, ALL WEEK AT CURTAIN'S, $2.15 2500 YARDS- OF FINE CORSET COVERS, EXCELLENT 50c VALVES, ALL W EEK .AT EMBROIDERED, 2!c line Wareh use Th.icker Lice and Speed and Elijah Py, brothers, and John Kllsmoro, were crossing thu Kentucky river In p nnvl'imt 20 mll-s below Sanlnt, Kv . Hft'-r a dance, .-t i . 1 were inure or drunk. Thi y iirtrr.'led anil fought, using knives and pistols. The thnv fl.'st named were dead early In tho game. KINm-ro reached the vhcre with th- hmt an'! three dad com.a::ions mil lived long crouch to Cents, tell the story of the firht, living it1 nut an hour Inter. Kilney Disease C:i mon Actio ai rl Pl-OJllC. As one weak link weakens a chain. so weak kidneys weaken the whole body and hasten the final breaking down. Overwork, strains, colds and other causes injure the kidneys and when their activity Is lessened the whole body suffers from the excess of urlo poison circulated In the blood. Aches and pains and languor and urinary ills come, nnd there Is an ever Inrroarlnir tendency towards diabetes and fatal Bight's disease. There ti no real help for the sufferer except kidney help. Poan's Kidney Pills act directly on the kidneys and cure every kidney 111. Pendleton cures are the proof. F. A. Morris, retired, who lives on Park avenue, and Is well known to Pendleton people, savs: "I waf troubled with my kidneys off and on for three years. In early days, I had worked In a shirt factory In Rock f r 1 . HI., standing all day at a bench ami later on I became a motorman on an elo( trie car. That, too, kept me on my feet all day and aggravated my complaint, If It did not start It. It annoyed me through the day more than at any other time. I finally got a box cf Duan's Kidney Pills at the Pen lleton Drug Co.'s store and used them. They cured me. I have not bad even the slightest attack of back-a- he fnr five years, nor have 1 used any pills since I stopped thu treat ment last Ci tober." . For sl by nil le .:..!. T'ri'-e r0 F'iMi-r-Mdburn Co.. New York, sute .'mcnti: for the t'nlte-1 States. Itt'memlier ;he name Poan's and take no otner. Save Your Coupons. Where it Pays to Trade. Little globules r.f sunshine 'hat drlv the clouds away. DoWltt's Little Early Risers will sntter the irlnom of sick-headache nnd bilious ness. They do not gripe or sicken. Ree'-.mmendcd and sob! here by Tallman ft Co. A pupil in a school near Chatham Pqunr", New York city, thus defined the word spine: "A spine Is a long, limber bon-; your bead sets on one end, nnd you set on the other." l.ip- plncotfs. ; i GENERAL NEWS. The Lotus club, a New York city soeial organization membercd exclu sively from the multi-millionaire class, will during the coming sum mer move Into a club house costing when furnished, $1,010,000. Robbers attacked a government van laden with revenues, at Kutais Pass, Russian Caucasus. Three of the guard. Including the treasurer, weie killed by bombs. The robbers all escaped unhurt, with $47,fiOO. Advices received from Chlluahua, Mexico, at El Paso, state that 35 per sons men, women and children were killed at San Andoes, JO leagues from there by the accidental explosion of a large quantity of dy namite. W. W. Rose of Kansas City., Kas., who was twice elected mayor and twice removed from the office by the supreme court and fined $1,000. fnr contempt of court, Is trying for the office a third time, having Just received the democratic nomination for the place. He evidently believes the third time Is the charm. A mass meeting In 8t. Mark's Epis copal church, Chicago, under the aus pices of the Actors' Church union, unanimously passed a resolution to the effect that there should be no cndiy theaters. The preamble For Sale 750 acres In one body, well watered, 1200 fruit trees, good Improvements, fine soil, three good homes. Will sell on easy terms. Price $2,000. 800 acres, 250 of same bottom land subject to Irrigation. This Is the largest tract of bottom land In one body In this part of the county. Over 100 acres In cultivation. Some al falfa set. 2500 cords of wood on the land. Hill land 60 per cent tillable. Price, $10,000. Terms. T have small tracts all sixes and prices. Also several good business chances. E. T. WADE Phons black $11L Office E. O. Building. states that as the profession Is now j treated an actor know: no such thing as a day of rest unless out of em ployment altogether. It Is Interesting to note In connec tion with the death of H. Boivyer McDonald, for a number of years chief cleik nnd parliamentarian of the "cited States senate, that the po sition he occupied had been filled previously by his father and his g.-andfather. All three had likewise f'Slel the position of Journal clerk In the senate. The Ca.lforr.la senate and assem bly have passed a bill prohibiting fra ternities or secret societies In Jhe public schools. The bill will receive the governor's signature. Education al authorities In that state claim that the school fraternities are a pest, pure and simple subservive of dis cipline and opposed to a high stand ard of scholarship F. T. Kuranaga, one of the rich est Japanese In California and promi nently connected in Japan, was ar rested on California street, San Fran cisco, and locked up on the charge of obtaining $21,800 under false pre tenses. Five banks claim they were victimized by Kuranaga, as follows: American National bank, $10,000; Japanese Bank of America, $4000; Japanese Bank of San Francisco, $4, 000; Yokohama Specie bank, $3000; Klmmon Gynko, $800. West Virginia Is among the states that have fallen Into line with an antl-lobbying bill. The measure In troduced In the legislature of that stale provides that firms and corpor ations having agents working for or against legislation must file with the secretary of state previously to the session the name of such agent and legislation affected with a fee of $10. Penalties are provided for failure to do so. STATE OP OHIO, ) CITY OF TOI.BDO )ss. LUCAS COUNTY. ) Frank J. Cheney maVes oath that be Is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney ft Co . doing business Id the City of Toledo, County and Btate aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the aura of ONB HUNDKKD IXJLLAKH for each and every case of Ca tarrh that cannot be cared by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK 3. CriBNF.Y. Hworn to before me and anbacrlbed In my presence, this Oth day of December, A. D. 18H. A. W. GLEABON, (Heal. Notary Public. Halls Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and arts directly on the blood and mnrona iirfarn of the ay item. Bend for testi monials free. . F. 1. CHENEY ft CO., Toledo, 0. Sold br all drupglats, Toe Take flail's Family Pills for constipation. - NORTHWEST NEWS. A. Falrview, Wash., the 2-year-old haby daughter of Sid Nohle was badly burned by her clothes catch ing fire from a bcnflre. She will probably recover. During the year ended March 1 there were 240 arrests made In Elgin, Wallowa county: 39 prisoners were worked on the streets; $05 dog tax was collected, and $1295 collected from fines. William A. Galtress, a miner In the Bunker Hill and Sullivan mine at Wnrdner, Idaho, had both legs brok en and was fearfully bruised by a heavv boulder falling upon him while mucking out after a blast Walter I.anham, a rancher living 12 miles from Odessa, Wash., while drunk, fell off his wagon on the way home. The wheels passed over him, crushing his side and driving a rib Into a lung. He died a few hours later. The O. R. & N. construction crew Is working on the road between Kah lotus and Connell. One washout near Sulphur lake Is 100 feet wide and 30 feet deep. It will be about 30 days before trains will be run clear through from Kahlotus to Connell. Mrs. Annie Kern, an Irish woman aged 35 years, has been sent to an asylum from Spokane. Among her hallucinations Is that she has been given the flesh of her dead husband to eat; also that a Chinaman Is to make her a present of a 3-months-old baby. There arc nine cases cf smallpox iiunrantlned at Wallace, Idaho, and Dr. Qulgley, the city henlth physi cian, Is frank enough to express the opinion Hint there will be more. The schools hive not been dismissed but nil the school houses were thrrough lv fumigated on Saturday and Sun day. The price of butchers stock around Washtucnn, Wash., Is soaring. Most ranchers who raise cattle for sale are holding out for 5 cents, and the In dications are that butchers will be paying that price before grass fed beef comes on the market. W. A. Olldersleeve & Co. bought In the Pomeroy country a carload of fnt hogs at 7 cents, a carload of fine grain fed cattle at 2 1-2 cents and a car'oad of steers for b cents. 1 51 8 STA mil A SUMMER AND THE HOT WEATHER WILL HE HERE BEFORE YOU ARE AWARE OF IT, AND IF YOUR KITCHEN IS NOT ALREADY EQUIPPED WIT II A GAS RANGE, HY ALL MEANS DON'T DELAY IT MUCH LONGER. OUR ORDERS ARE NOW COMING IN VERY RAPIDLY. GET 1 YOI H APPLICATION FOR GAS. DO IT NOW GAS IS BY FAR THE MOST ECONOMICAL FUEL ON THE MARKET. THE GREATEST ARGUMENT IV ITS FAVOR IS TTIAT YOU CAN HAVE THE HEAT WHEN, WHERE AND AS LONG AS YOU WANT IT. NO HOT ROOMS IN THE SUMMER TIME. THEN THERE IS NO DIRTY WOOD OR COAL TO BE CARTED AROUND AND CLEANED UP AFTERWARD. GAS IS PIPED RIGHT INTO YOUH STOVE. A TURN OF A VALVE ANT A SCRATCH OF A MATCH TKLLS THE WIIOI E STORY OF GAS COOKING. Gas for Heating and cooking cost $2.00 per 1000 Average'cost per month, about $3.00 ft U REMEMBER I We lay pipe from main to curb free I and are in a position to do all piping and furnish all fittings.