DAILY EAST OKEtiOMAX, PENDLETON, OREGON, Till USD AY. AI'ltIL 11, 1907. EIGHT PAGES. NEW LOT OF SKIRTS We received a fine lot of new dress skirts last Saturday and offer the fin est line of skirts now. to be found in Pendleton. Black dress skirts 3.50,13.75, 4.50, 5, 6, up to $15 Every one a fine value at the price asked. Dress skirts of novelty plaids and checks $3.50 up to $15 and they fit as If made for you. SPECIAL We have ordered and Just gotten In a lot of skirts made espec ially for small women. They will fit a short, slender figure without being "made over." Prices run from $3.50 up to $9.00 . and are wonderful values. We have an experienced dressmaker in our suit and skirt de partment, who will fit every skirt to the entire satisfaction of our customer. The Fair Dep't Storo Pendleton, Oregon. SCOTCH TERMS. BRIEF RECORD OF COUNTY EVENTS Special NOTES 0 F UMATILLA HOTEL WILL BE BUILT BY MAX FROM PEXDLETON. Pound & Sons Have Received a Burg lar and Fire-Proof Safe North Bank Tunnel Xears Completion Slight Collision Sends an Engine to the Alblna Hospital O. R, & X. Pumping Plant Broken Dislocated His Shoulder Closing Game of Basketball. Umatilla, Ore.. April 10. Hiram Stephens is visiting his brothers, Omer and A. B. Stephens, jr., the past few days. J. C. Scott, of the Jones Scott com pany, of Walla Walla, was In town yesterday. J. C. Fox, an Insurance man frrm Spokane, was in town Monday. A new sign adorns the front of the sheds at Swltzler's lumber yard. J. H. Pound & Sons have Just re ceived a new fire-proof safe. It Is rumored that a new hotel is soon to be built here by a business man of Pendleton. The north bank tunnel will be ojm pleted In about three we?ks. George W. Kelley has sold his place here In town to J. E. Hatler and will soon leave for Troutdils, where he has farm property. Miss Pearl Carllsh of Arlington, was In town Tuesday. She Is a candidate In the Telegram contest for James town exposition. A slight collision occurred at the roundhouse last night. A hostler helper running a large compound en elne into the switch engine No, it. No. 2 4 will have to go to the Alblna shops for repnlri. The O. R. & X. pumping plant Is bruken down and the town Is tem porarily out of water. Engines are belnsr taken to Echo and Coyote for water. Mrs. Joseph McCulloch's father, Mr. McMann, accidentally slipped and fell Monday rnd suffered a dislocation of his light shoulder. He was taken to Pendleton and is resting easy now. The. Heppner high school basketball team played the U. A. A. C. team In Medus hall last Saturday night and were defeated 13 to 10. It was a g.iod fast game and was enjoyed by ail present. This will finish the sea son here. We hope to have a good team ready for the next season, when we will undoubtedly have a new and larger place to play. are running the new county roads over the government lands. These roads will later have trees planted along 'them, and will be made very beautiful. The visit of the Portland business men is being looked forward to by the people of Hermiston, though it will be short. Nothing will be left undone to show them the worth of the future of this end of Umatilla county. The meetings are still being well attended in the Chapel car. Mrs. Hermiston, wife of the Rev. Mr. Her miston, will go to Pendleton Sunday, where she will speak In the Baptist church at that place. The foundation for the Hermiston Mercantile company's building Is rapidly nearlng completion, and it will not be long before the building will be put up. Work is now progressing rapidly on all parts of the Umatilla project since the weather Is so favorable Tho buildings which are In course of construction will soon be completed, and more new ones are being plan ned. The different contractors who had work to do on different parts of the i.'mutllla project expect to complete their work within the contract time, which is May 1 for some of them. SOME NEWS FROM MILTON. A Curd. This Is to certify that all druggists are fiJthori7ed to refund your money If Foley's Honey and Tar falls to cure your cough or cold. It stops the conu'h. heals the lungs and prevents serious results from a cold. Cures la S'lppe coughs, and prevents pneu nionia and consumption. Contains ro opiates. The genuine Is In a yel low , parkage. Refuse substitutes. Kneppen's Drug Store. HERMISTON NOTES. Weather Hum Been Favorable for Reclunuilion Work. Hcrmlstun, April 11. Tonight the Hotel Williams at this place will be opened with a grand ball, for which Johnson's orchestra at Pendleton v lll furnish the music, and the Her miston cafe will furnish supper. The dancing will be In the third story of the hotel, in a room 70 feet long and 30 feet wide, with an excellent floor. A large crowd of people Is expected to attend from different parts of the county. The present good weather will be great help to the contractors who Home Missionary Society M. E. Church Meets April 12. Milton, April 11. Dr W. E. Vawn, preached to a large and up preciatlve audience Monday evening :'.t the M. E. church, south. He is editor of tho Pacific Methodist Ad vocate, nnd his visit was considered a treat. He left yesterday for his home In California. Miss Nettle Cannon, of Walla Wal-K-., v.-rts In the city the first of the week the guest of Miss Jennie Dykes, " " The ladles of the Home Mission ary society of the M. E. church will give a lutlch social at the home of Mrs. J. L. Frazler on Friday, the 12th, from 2 to 7 p. m. STATE Or OHIO, ) CITY OP TOI.CDO )SS. IX'CAH COUNTY. Prank J. Cbcner makes oath tbat be If Heritor nartner of the firm of F. J. CheneT 4 Co., doing bnalneaa In the City of Toledo, I'otinty and Btate aforesaid, and that said firm will par the sum of ONH HU.MlUKU DOLLARS for each and ever? case of Ca tarrh that cannot be rured by the use of Hull's Catarrh Cure. FRANK i. CHKNEY. Kft-nrn to before ma and snbacrlbed ID Dif prnnence, thla 8th day of December, A. D. IBH'I. A. W. UbKABUfl, I Heal. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Core Is taton InternaUr, and acts directly on the blood and mucons vtirrirea or toe ayaiem. Ben a ior lesii' monlala fret. V. 1. fTIF.NBV k CO.. Toledo, O. Hold br all drnralita. TSe. ' TUB Hall's Kurollr I'll In for constipation. Rt'SHINf WORK AROUND ADAMS Dumper Wheat Crop Expected Son Born to the Scaney's. Adams, April 11. Farmers are putting in good time in the fields since the rains have gone. They were somewhat behind with their prlng work. Everything looks bright In this part of the county for a bumper wheat rrop. Iiorn, to Mr. and Mrs. Jim. Seaney, April 5, n 12-pcund boy. The New Pure Food nnd Drug Law. We are pleased to announce that Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs. onlfi and lung troubles Is not affect ed bv the Pure Food and Drug law n I contnlns no opiates or other harmful drugs, nnd we rerommend It us a safe remedy for children nnd ndults. Koeppen' Drug Store. The Word "Clan" and the Relation ef Clansmen and Chief. Everybody kuows that the word "mac" (pronounced lu Guellc machk) menus son, so that, for example, Mac Douald literally means the bod. of Don ald. But It Is not generally known that when a woman Is spoken of the blgblanders substitute for "mac" the feminine "nlch," which means daugh ter; tbat tbe vocative of "mac" is vlchk" (we spell phonetically), which always replaces mac when a person is addressed, and that the nominative plural Is mlchk (sons) or claun (chil dren). Sir Walter Scott's ignorance of Gaelic frequently led him into error upon these points, both In bis poetry and In his novels. The meaulng of the Gaelic word clan, as just stated, is children, and the obe dience which clansmen owed to their chief was considered by them rather at the affectionate obedience due by children to a father than as that due by subjects to a ruler. They believed themselves to be all blood relations descended from a common ancestor, of which their chief was the living repre sentative. The clansman who hesitat ed to save his chiefs life at the ex pense of his own was regarded as a coward who fled from his father's side in the hour of peril. On the other hand, the chief wag expected at all times to acknowledge the meanest of bis clan as his relation and to shake hands with him wherever they might happen to meet Subordinate to tbe chief and generally related to biin were the chieftains and tacksmen. London Standard. At Sherwood, Ore., Carl Stowaser, was pouring babbitt metal Into a mold when it exploded and Stowaser was badly burned abou: the face, neck and head by the hot metal. One eye was badly injured. DIET AND HEALTH. Us Foods That Will Give the 8ysttm the Oil It Demands. Every person requires a certain amount of oil in bis food in order to be healthy. Our ancestors lived to a large extent on olives, filberts, chestnuts and other nuts containing oil. The present generation uses too little oil in Its diet This can be taken in the shape of the pure expressed olive oil, as an emulsified salad dressing or by eating nuts, olives, etc. It may be a matter of choice how the system gets Its oil, but a certain amount is essen tial to the enjoyment of good health. The good results of the habitual use of the above articles in the diet are soon shown, especially wben persons are In clined to colicky indigestion and con stipation. Doctors will do well to in struct their patients to use pure olive oil in moderate doses, also as dressing for salads. Various kinds of nuts have a high dietetic value because of the oils which they contain and can be nsed to advantage. Wben patients in cline to consumption, pare cod liver oil ranks at the head of oily sub stances,, but the lesser oils also can be taken In moderation. Nature furnishes many cures for tbe successful treatment of diseases If we will but study her methods Instead of following fads. Tbe result will be a greater progress In building np resist ance and Immunity from disease. Washington Star. The Bank Clark. It is the duty of the clerk to be seal oos. The low spirited has no place In a bank. Neither has the frivolous. The man who works for a bank is re spected in his community because it Is known that the character of his work Is important and particular. lie must not only be direct and speedy In what he does, he must not only be faithful and constant In all that he does, but he must go a step further and do wbat he does with a will, and a good will at that Zeal requires interest and en thusiasm. One of tbe troubles with tbe bank clerk is that bis senses and his buoyancy are apt to bo dulled by the endless repetition of details. There is no way to shirk It No bauk clerk can go home at night with his work unfinished. C. W. Stevenson In Bank ers' Monthly. An Honest Quaker. A sheriff was once asked to execute a writ against a Quaker. On arriving at bis house he saw tbe Quaker's wife, who In reply to the Inquiry whether her husband was at borne said he was, at the same time requesting biin to be seated, aud her husband would speedi ly see him. The officer waited pa tiently for Bome time, when, the fair Quakeress coming Into the room, he reminded ber of ber promise that he might see ber husband. "Say, friend. I promised that he would see thee. He has seen tliee. Ho did not like thy looks. Therefore he avoided thee and hath departed from the bouse by an other path." Wheat Laid 1 Jor Sal Money In Words. Mrs. Humphry Ward got for "Hel beck of Bannlsdale" the name's enough $78,000. Barrle got for "The Little Minister," book and play, $250, 000. Hall Calne got for tbe book and play of "The Christian" $160,000. Mrs. Grant was paid for ber bnsband's auto biography $350,000. Nnnsen got $50, 000 for bis "Farthest North." Sir Wal ter Scott got $00,000 for his "Life of Napoleon." Ruskln, for "Modern Paint ers," got $50,000. Kansas City Times. Almost a Threat. Police Inspector naven't I often in structed you that you are not to allow the public to pick tbe flowers In this park? Park Keeper Yes, that is my wife, who used to be yonr cook. Per haps you will try to make ber stop, Meggendorfer Blatter. A Domtstle Distinction. "Tbey say that your wife wears the pants," commented the tactless friend. "She does not," responded young Mr. Enpeck with some spirit "She merely selects 'em." Louurvills Oourler-Jotfr- ML All the news all the time In ths East Oregon Ian. ALL IMPROVED LAND, and will be sold at a bargain if taken at once. Personal reasons for selling. Twojjjor three crops will payfbr the land. For terms and other information, PiaWBHItf u.wc l'K'';i SW4rstjrfT fettttZi.a , Jfc ADDRESS jS'East regonian. Pendleton, Oregon Will Advertise Oregon. Extended stories In the large and Influential eastern publications have always been considered the best pub licity the state could possibly re ceive, and the fact that Rinaldo M. Hall, formerly advertising manager of the Harrlman lines, has succeedled in Inducing each of the several big publications he represents on the toast to accept 10,000 words on Ore gon this year will be good news to tho state at large, says the Portland Orcgonlnn. During Mr. Hall's serv ice with the railroad he formed a very extensive acquaintance with eastern publications, and their knowl edge of his ability as a descriptive writer opened the gateway for the splendid work he will do for the state and the coast. These stories will cover every Industry In Oregon and will do much toward Inducing new settlers and investors to thla section. J.A phi r.FR &C LA itifk L Folger's Golden Gate Coffee At Breakfast Invigorating At Lunch .Refreshing At Dinner Satisfying J. A. FOLGER & CO. San Francisco I Several Routes to the East Afforded by Rock Island Lines: - f . Through San Francisco, Lot Angela, Southern California and EI Paso. 2. Through San Francisco, Central California Colorado and Denver or Colorado Springs. 3. Through Oregon, Idaho and Colorado. 4. Through 'Washington, Montana, the Dakota!, and St. Paul-Minneapolis. 5. Through Washington, Canada and St Paul Minneapolis. A very good plan b to go one way and return toother tee twice as much country and enjoy the trip twice as much. It will be a pleasure to give you full details. Central Aftnt. Rock Itltnd-Prltco Lints. 140 Third St., PORTLAND, ORB. WOOD COAL Good, clean and combustible The kind that produoes heat and not dirt. Priced right and dalivered promptly. Dutch Henry Office. Pendleton Ice & Cold Storage Company. 'Phone M iln 178. Also at Henneman's cigar store, op posite Great Eastern store. 'Phona main 4. The French RESTAURANT Pendleton's most pop ular Dining Room. Best 25 cent meal in the city. Thoroughly renovated and all new dishes. Orville Coffman Proprietor Columbia Bar and Rooming House MRS. F. X. SCHEMPP, Proprietress Fine Wines, Liquors, and Cigars. Newly furnished and np-to-date booming House In connection. SH MAIN STREET!.