PAGE BIX. DAILY EAST OKKGOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TTESDAY, JUNE 4, 1901. EIGHT PAGES. E COOPER'S SVCCESS IX ST. LOV1S PHENOMENAL Internal Parasites Are Undoubtedly 'Responsible for Much Ill-Health Hundred Who Have Taken His Preparations Arc Relieved of One of These Monsters. St. Louis. June S. The remarkable results that are being accomplished In St. Louis by L. T. Cooper have be come a topic of universal Interest during the past week. Reports that preceded his visit to this city told of Mr. Cooper's great success In the east. But the man and his medicine did not attract wide spread attention until the beginning of his second week here. Then, the Interest In him became very notice able and has steadily gathered head way until his preparations are now being sold In enormous quantities and his headquarters Is a most Interest ing place in which to spend a half hour. People are coming from all parts of the city to see him. The young man and his assistants are surround ed by swarms of humanity from early until late some Jo tell what has been accomplished for them by the Coop er medicines; others to buy the reme dies. Perhaps nothing has done more to arouse this Interest than Mr. Cooper's statement concerning Internal para sites, or tapeworms, as they are com monly called. At the commencement of his visit to this city, he claimed that these creatures were responsible for much of the Ill-health of this generation; he claimed that a large n.pwnins of all chronic stomach trouble was caused by them; he stated that his "New Discovery" med icine would prove this theory to be correct, as it would remove hundreds of tapeworms before he left the city. These statements seem to have been completely verified. During the past two weeks hundreds of people have been taking the Cooper preparation for fome form of stomach trouble and have been relieved of one of these parasites. In consequence. Cooper and his theories have been growing Into greater prominence each day. Mr. Cooper's statement that a gen eral lassitude was the surest Indica tion of this trouble seems to be cor rect. Statements by people who have had this experience seem to be very much alike. All saying that a feeling of extreme weariness and a lack of energy which- they attributed to stomach trouble, had afflicted them. A statement of this character, which la almost identical with all those given by people who have had the same experience Is as follows: Mrs. B. Prengel. living at 4040 St. Ferdinand street, who was relieved of one of these parasites by the Cooper preparation, when seen by a reporter, said: "I have been In poor health for six years. I was In a general rundown condition; and I attributed this to stomach trouble, as I had a very Ir regular appetite, and would have a bloating sensation after meals. My chief trouble was that I felt tired all the time. Even In the morning after a night's sleep. I -would wake up feeling no more refreshed than when I went to bed. I had dizzy spells and would see spots before my eyes and the leapt exertion would tire me. It was an effort to attend to my dutlps and even my mind seemed dull and slugeish. "My eyesight has been getting poorer lately and I noticed that my memory was not as good as It used to be. If I stood for any length of time I would have a dull pain In the lower part of my back and If I as cended the stairs quickly my heart beat very rapidly. I tried every sort of preparation. hoping to throw off this dull feeling. I heard so much about" this man Cooper, that I decided to try his preparation. I bought two bottles of New Discovery. I took only a few doses of the preparation and a tape worm left my system. It was about fifty feet long, as near as I could Judge. Now I know what has been the matter with me all these years and I am sure I will be all right again." ' ' i . The success of these new prepara tlons In St. Louis Is confined largely to cases of stomach .trouble, but the medicine seems to be remarkably successful In cases of rheumatism. Mr. Cooper ascribes this to the fact that stomach trouble is Indirectly re sponsible for many diseases rheuma tlsm being among them. ' Stansbery & Milne Transfer Co. . ALL KINDS OF HEAVY DRAYING PROMPTLY DONE. FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVING A SPECIALTY. , , HOTEL BAGGAGE SPEED ILY AND CAREFULLY HAN DLED. '.,. PHONE MAIN 5. RES. RED 2672 OFFICE NEAR DEPOT. HOTEL PORTLAND PORTLAND. ORBOON. American plan, II par day and up ward. . Headquarters for tourist and , commercial travelers, Special ratas made to families and elnrl gentle men. Ths management will be pleaav 4 at all time to show roam and It prise. A modern Turkish bat establishment In the hotel. ,.. H. a BOWERO. IUsh whig FGRTUN BRIEF RECORD OF COUNTY EVENTS ECHO NEWS NOTES HENRIETTA MILLS SOLD TO UMATILLA RANCH COMPANY Company Will Operate the Mills Full Capacity and Put In an Electric Light Company Echo Eagles Have Disbanded First-Class Crop of Al falfa la Being Cut Special School Election Will be Held June 17 Wool Still Coming. Echo, June 4. The Umatilla Ranch company has arranged with J. H. Koontz for the purchase of the Henrietta mills, at this place, and they are now being overhauled, and the old flume Is being repaired. The capacity of the mill will be greatly Increased, and It will be In fine shape fhr the fall crop of grain from the Echo country. The opening of this mill means much to the Echo peo pie. It is understood that the ca pacity will be 500 barrels per day. An electric light plant for Echo will also be In stalled by this company. Miss Delia King left Sunday for Portland, from whence she will leave for. her home In Michigan to spend her summer vacation. She will re turn to teach school here next fall. Andrew Harms, formerly of this place, has returned from California, where he had been for some months. Fred George, of the George-Miller store, went to Portland Sunday to re main a few days. Rev. Blodgett and wife went to The Dalles last Friday to visit with friends for several days. Some alfalfa hay Is now being cut In the vicinity of Echo, and it Is re ported that all the growers will be gin cutting next week. The crop is first-class, and excellent crops are expected. Miss Emma M. Unthank of Ta coma, was here last week looking af ter her land Interests. She has about 80 acres of land in alfalfa. Oliver P. Morton, attorney for the reclamation service. Is in Washington, where he Is Iboklng after the legal nart of the Okanogan project. He will be away about four weeks. J. F. McNaught was up from Her- mlston yesterday on a brief business trip. A large number of Echo people attended the Floto show In Pendleton Saturday, and report It one of the best little shows they had ever seen, Very few cattle and sheep are being shipped at the present time. Grand Master Williamson lectured to the Echo Masons at the Masonic hall last Wednesday evening. J. H. Kyle and others, who have land under the Furnish project, re port things going on nicely. Mrs. Echo Miller returned yester day from Pendleton, where she has been for a few days. She expects to leave for Portland In a few days. Wool Still Coming. Considerable wool Is still coming Into the Echo warehouses. There has been delivered at this time over 680, 000 pounds, and It Is estimated that nearly 1.360,800 pounds will be ship ped from here this year. The fol lowing private sales have been an nounced up to this time: The Cunningham Sheep & Land company. 67,047 pounds sold a private sale. M. Corrlgal, 26,390 pounds sold for 15 V cents. Joseph Cunha, 69,207 pound sold for 19 V4 cents. Gus Lafountain, 23,603 pound sold at private sale. Antone Vey, 151.929 pounds sold for 16 3-4 cents. R. F. Stanfleld, 129,711 pound: sold for 17 cents. Harry Rogers. . 5255 pounds sold for 16 3-4 cents. T. D. Matthews. 11,001 pound sold at private sale. J. T. Hosklns, 14,037 pounds sold at private sale. M. S. Corrlgal, 25,800 pounds sold at private sale. T. D. Matthews. 35,000 pounds sold at private sale.' EolK Eagles DI4hnnd. The Echo lodge of Eagles has dls banded and the charter has been sur rendered. While the cause has not been made public it is understood that It was caused through some dis agreement among the members Speoiul SolHXil Election. ' June 17 there will be a special school election held In Echo, for the purpose of electing one director for three years, and to decide oh the question of adding the tenth grade to the school. All the teachers have been re-elected for the next school term. P aware of Ointment for Catarrh That Contain Mercury. as mercury will sorely destroy tht mm of smell and completely Derange the whole system when entering It throogh the raw anrfsMa. Boch articles should sever used except oa prescriptions from reputable physicians, as taa oamafe uey win oo fnfoi4 to the rood Ton can ooaafblr de rive from them. Ball's catarrh Care, mannfactared by T. J. Cheney k Co, Tote do, O., contains no mercury, and Is takes Internally, acting directly opon the Moos and ajacoaa aur races or toe system, i burin Belt's Catarrh Car he sere To get the gennlne. It Is taken tatereally aa made In Toledo, onto, vf w. I. CBeney Cil TWtfimmilale free. oM by dronwts. Price T6e per bottle Take lian a ramiiy nil rer eonanpaui At Lake Hauser, Montana, Charles Bothwell had charge of the Helena Power Transmission company' plant, JHe wa an expert sent out by the Westing-house company, from Niaga ra, N. Y. June I he went Inside the transformer chamber for som pur pose, came In contact with a live wire and wa Instantly killed. Special HISTON NOTES WORK WILL BEGIN SOON ON THE BAPTIST CHURCH. Hermlston Bank and Trust Company Will Begin to Do Business This Week Hay Cutting Has Begun, and the Crop Is Fine Work Is Be ing Rushed ou Every Purt of the ReciamatltHi Project Weather Is Propitious for Building, and Real Estate Deals. Hermlston, June 4. A number of Hermlston people are In Pendleton on account of presenting the matter of Incorporating the town to the county court. Miss Ora Pogue of Pendleton, Is vls'tlng here for a few days. The buildings which are under course of construction are looming up rapidly. The present fine weather making things lively in all direc tlons. Several new people have been In lately looking over the lands with view to investment. Patrick Nestor, the well known Hermlston liveryman, has been a re cent visitor to his' old home In Baker City. Different parties who are putting In new fruit trees and cultivating land are meeting with success. Some al falfa Is already being cut, and haying will be on In full blast. Next week alfalfa cutting will be well under way. It Is understood that rhe Baptist church will shortly be In course of construction ,ns the required arrange ments have been made to have it com pleted by early fall. Meetings con tlnue to be held In the chapel car. Mrs. E. P. Dodd has been visiting Pendleton relatives for a few days. The Maxwell company Is cutting their first crop of alfalfa. Last year the company had four cuttings from much of their alfalfa. Work on all parts of the big dam Is going on nicely at this time, and the contractors and all concerned are well pleased with the way things are mov ing, the weather and all being first class for the work. The same reports come from the different parts of the ditch work. The workers on the ditches and headgate around keno are making excellent headway. The new bank of the Hermlston Bank & Trust company will open its doors this week, the cashier, J. . Ried. having' arrived here from Sprague, Wash., for that purpose, ii opens In the Syndicate blocK, ana ner- mlston will now have two live Danns. NEWS FROM NOUN. .lames A. Hnwks Employed to Tcaen Third Term of Sclmol. Nolin, June 4. Nolin Is a very busy place at the present writing. Haying la In full blast and tno crop good. Providence smiled on us mis year and left us plenty of fruits and vege tables of all kinds. Messrs. Deeks & Deeks are putting in concrete piers for a 160 foot dou ble span steel bridge and the noise from their five engines makes us think we are in a noisy town. Then was a picnic and ball game at Yoakum last Sunday which was an enjoyable affair. People came from far and near with well-filled boskets and with any amount of vi ands. After dinner the ball game was played between the Hill farmers and the River farmers, with a score of 11 to 18 In favor of the river boys, while the game .was called off at the first half of the ninth Inning. Measles are raging over our com munity, but no rerlous cases have de veloped so far. James A. Hawks, who has taught us two successful schools, has been re-employed to teach next, term of nine months with a raise of from $62.60 last term to.65 for the next and the grade to be raised from the eighth to the ninth. Dairy T" G. H ALLEY Warm Weather Weara Now is the time ror a cool place, a cool drink, ( or cool ciotnmg, any thing to keep cool. That's why we are making a special showing of cool wearing apparel this week. Men's lace hose, 25c, 35c and 50c ( Moil's soft dress shirts, 75c, $1.00, $1.50 and up to $2.50. j We can sell you cool wearing apparel at prices that won't make you "Hot." The Fair Dep't. Store, Eighth Grade III Grant County. Seventeen' graduates from north ern Grant for the year 1907 against 13 for the big schools of the south half of the county tell a tale which Is to th; credit of northern Grant From facts gathered from the Jan uary examinations and presented to to the county superintendent we learn that the largest number of graduates In northern Grant are cred ited to Miss Cecyl Holloway and that her pupils attained the highest aver ages while none of her pupils failed. The highest standing was made by Paul Rucknum of the Canyon City tchool, receiving six one hundreds and an average of 97 1-3. Monu ment Enterprise. If you will make Inquiry it will be a revelation to you how many suc cumb to kidney or bladder troubles In one form or another. If the patient is not beyond medical aid, Foley's Kid ney Cure will cure. It never disap points. Koeppens' Drug Store. Wallace Saloons Closed Sunday. In view of the arrests made yester day for violation of the Sunday rest NATURE PROVIDES FOR SICK WOMEN more potent remedy in the root and herb of the field than wa ever produced from drugs. In the good old-fashioned day of oar grandmother few drugs were used In medicine and Lydia E. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., In ber study of root and herb and their power over disease discovered and gave to the women of the world a remedy for their peculiar ill more potent and efficacious than any combination of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkhatn's 1 an honest, tried and true remedy of unquestionable therapeutlo value. During it record of more than thirty year, it long list of actual cure of those serious 111 peculiar so women, entitle Lydia B. Pinkham Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded person and every thinking woman. When women are troubled with Irregular or painful functions, weakness, displacement, ulceration or inflammation, baokaohe , flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they should remember there la on tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pink ham' Vegetable Compound. No other remedy in the country ha uoh a record of cures of female ilia, and thousands of women residing In every part of the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtus of Lydia E. Pink ham' Vegetable compound and what it ha done for them. Mrs. Pinkham Invite all sick women to write her for advice. She ha guided thousand to health. For twenty-five years she has been advising sick women free of charge. She is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pink ham and a her assistant for year before her decease advised under her immediate direction. Address, Lynn, Mass. i ' and Farms For Sale Owing to my removal to Portland to reside per manently, 1 have discontinued the Alfalfarm Dairy business, and hnve for sale my herd of dairy cows consisting of about fifty grade Jersey and short-homs, and-will also sell either or both of my, farms, one a quarter section of fine wheat land, one and ahalf miles South of Athena, in Umatilla County, and the other, over nine hundred acres of grain, alfalfa and ' grazing land, on the Walla Walla branch of the O. R. & N4 Ry., six miles Northeast of Pendleton, with the equipment of the latter. For particulars adress me at 400, Chamber of Commerce, Portland, Oregon. when the average person is looking LADIES' FURNISHINGS, ETC. Lace weave drawers, 25c, 85c, soc and 69a pair. Sleeveless vests, Be, 100, 13c, 15a, 25 c, 35a and SOo each. Muslin drawers, 25c, 85c, BOc, 7 Bo, $1.00, $1.25, up to $1.50. Muslin underskirts, 50c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 up to $6.00. Corset covers, 10c, 25c, 85c, BOc, 7 Be, $1.00, $1.50. Ladles' lace hose, 25c, 35c, 50c and 7 5c. Ladles' lawn waists, 75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $2.00, and up. Men's balbrlggan underwear, 25c, 35c, 50c and 75o . law, all the saloons In this city re mained firmly closed today, and not even a glass of "nut brown October" Is being handed out the back door, as far as any of the local police can ascertain. It Is reported that the Can yon towns are also corked and the citizens who Journeyed to these places last Sunday for the purpose of "wet ting tlielr whistles," are staying qui etly at home today. Wallace Tri bune. A man who Is in perfect health, so he can do an honest day' work when necessary, has much for which he should be thankful. Mr. L. C. Rodg ers, of Branchton, Pa., writes that he was not only unable to work, but he couldn't stoop over to tie his own shoes. Six bottles of Foley's KIdnek Cure made a new man of him. He says. "Success to Foley's Kidney Cure." Koeppen's Drug Store. The business section of Black Dia mond, Wash., burned. Loss, $60,000, Including 125,000 damage to the Pa cific Coast company's general store. Black Diamond Is a new town, in a coal district on the sound. Vegetable Compound hies Everrifeyour hcid feds As if it was in a vice ll' better to keep your headache lhaa Uae s dangerous remedy. To cure it with tome danger ou, powder bring, erter effects which art lai wane. Metry headache cure, kill the pain by tome powerful drug which if wed too often hrully enslave, and brealu down the trrtem. That's why yoa thou Id be very careful what you lake to cure a headache. - . HEADACHE WAFERS Are ample and positive cure lor bead ache, absolutely harmless, especially suited to women. Guaranteed to be hea from Antrprrin, Opium, Morphine or Chloral. U these wafer, do not give absolute aatis laction, bring back the empty package and we will return your money, la two an f-g, 10c aod 25c THE FEXDLETOX DHTJQ CO. "TUB MARK OF QCATJTT." Do you have "blue Mondays" at your home? We have an an. tldote; send your family wash ing to the Troy Laundry and have it done for ' Seven cents a pound Table Una and bed linen Ironed wearing apparel washed and starched ready to iron. This is not only the best, most satisfac tory method, but the cheapest for dependable work. Troy Laundry, NOUN SON, Prop. 'Phone Main 179. The French RESTAURANT Pendleton's most pop ular Dining Room. Best 25 cent meal in the city. Thoroughly renovated and all new dishes. Orville G)ffman i Proprietor