PAGE EIGHT. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1907. EIGHT PAGES. " The presents to the bride wpere numerous and beautiful" Ten to on they cam from a jewelry atore. For where els could beautiful presents he had? If you've a friend to remember a birthday anniversary or that jolllest of all occasions a wedding-, her Is the stora that stands for all that you could possibly imagine In the way of suitable presents. The prices will accommodate a millionaire, or the average sized pocketbook. ( And be sure to keep this In mind this Is preeminently the store for present. Winslow Bros. Jewelers 817 Main Street COLDS The very hour a cold starts Is the time to check It Don't wait it may become deep-seated and the cure will be harder then. Every hour lost at the start may add days to your suf fering. Take F & S Cold Capsules Used In time they save all that might follow sickness, worry, ex penses. They never fall. Tallman & Co. Leading Druggists. INSURANCE Livermore & Bickers1 Room 12, Judd Bldg. Pendleton - - - Oregon 5 Club Saloon T. W. MCRRELL, Proprietor. Cor. Court and Cottonwood, PENDLETON, - OREGON. ORIGINALITY Is the Mark of Genius There is that attractiveness of form, excellence of taste and originality of design found in our HATS that mark them as the creation of designers who are artists in their line. CARRIER MILLINERY The Home of the Stylish Hat" YOUR INCOME may stop at any time, but your expenses will keep right on. Better build up a bank account and be on the safe side. Start a savings account w'th this bank now and we will pay you four per cent Interest on your deposits, and return your money to you when you require It. Commercial National Bank Capital $50,000.00 ' Rescource. $350,000.00 SPEAKERS FOR THE FUR 6fbcll ixvTr.vno.vs "FOR EDUCATIONAL DAY" Congressman Willis B. lUwlcy, D. P. Mulkey of Ashland Normal, Mrs. Millie E. Trumbull or Portland, Judge William Smith of Dakar City and Mrs.- Eva Emery Dye, Invited to Deljver Address) on Education al Topic on "Education Day," Sep tember 27, at District. Fait If "Educational Day" at the dis trict fair, September 27, Is not an unqualified success It will not be the, fault of the able and active com mittee which has the program in charge. The committee met last evening and decided to Invite, In ad dition to the state officials already In-vlted by the fair commission, a number of prominent educators and educational leaders and thinkers of the state. Special Invitations have been sent out today to a list of five leading ed ucational workers of the state as fol lows: Congressman Willis H. Haw lay of the first congressional district, who was formerly president of Wil lamette university and who Is an ac tive and progressive educator; B. F. Mulkey, president of Ashland normal school, one of the leading teachers and educational workers of southern Oregon; Mrs. Millie E. Trumbull of Portland, a prominent educator and Juvenile reformer; Judge William Smith of Baker city, formerly princi pal of Lelghton academy of Cove and one of the best speakers and thinkers in eastern Oregon and Mrs. Eva Em ery Dye, Oregon's favorite and lead ing woman author, and educator, au thor of "McLoughlln and Old Ore gon," "The Conquest," McDonald of Oregon" and other popular western histories and romances. All of these people are prominent in their spheres of work and the com mittee has exercised excellent judg ment In sending its special Invitation, with a view to securing a variety of literary ability and educational ac tivity for its special day at the fair. These speakers should attract a large attendance on that day, which will be made one of the leading days of the fair. Aside from the promi nent speakers there will be parades and free admission of all the school children of the city and also of the reservation schools. Coming for Irrigation Day. This morning Secretary Fltz Ger ald of the fair commission, received word from C. W. Mallett of Ontario, stating that he will attend the fair on Irrigation day If possible for him to be here. Mr. Mallett is one of the leaders in the Irrigation work now under way In Malheur county and he. has Just returned from attending the national Irrigation' congress at Sac ramento. SCIENCE PREVENTS BALDNESS. rhe Fatal Germ aad It. Remedy Now Fact, of Science. It Is the rarest thing in the world for a man to be necessarily bald. No man whose hair Is not dead at the roots, need be bald If he will use Newbro's Herpl- clde, the new scalp antiseptic. Herpl clde destroys the germ that cuts the halt off at the root; and cleans the scalp ot dandruff and leaves It In a perfectly healthy condition. Mr. Mannett, In the Maryland Block. Butte, Mont, was en tirely bald. In less than a month Herpl clde bad removed the enemies of hair growth, and nature did Its work by cov erlng his head with thick hair an Inch leng, and in six weeks he had a normal ult of hair. Bold by leading druggists. Send 10c. In stamps for sample to The Herplclde Co.. Detroit. Mich. Two sizes 60 cents and $1.00. A. C. Koeppen & Brb. K. OF P. ENTERTAINMENT. Newton Beers, Dramatic Impersona tor, Coming Here Soon. Newton Beers, famous impersona tor, will be In this city and will give an evening's entertainment under the auspices of Damon lodge No. 4, Knights of Pythias. He will characterize in monologue Banlm's Immortal fraternal drama, "Damon and Pythias." ( Arrangements for the presentation of the entertain ment were made here Inst evening be tween the members of the lodge and Frank Lee Miles, business manager for Mr. Beers. As a dramatic entertainer Newton Beers Is declared to be a master of the art and If half the testimonials ten dered him by famous men .are to be relied upon, his recital will be some thing that should not be missed. As the theater will not be open one of the local churches will be secured for the entertainment. May Locate in Pendleton. Dr. J. C. M. Luttenberger of St. Louis, Is In the city for a few days a guest of Rev. Lee Ferguson of the First Christian church, and may de cide to locate here permanently. Dr. Luttenberger Is- one of the leading physicians of St. Louis, having prac ticed his profession there for many years, but Is desirous of coming to the west. He has long resided In the fa mous 28th ward of St. Louis, which turned the election for governor to Joseph Folk. He Is a prominent mem ber of the Masonic fraternity and Is a cordial and capable gentleman and is pleased with the appearance of this city. ' Seeks Wallowa, Connty Traffic Geo. D. O'Connor, traveling freight agent for the Northern Paclflo with headquarters at Walla Walla, was In the city today looking about for shipments that could be sent over his road, says the Baker City Herald. Mr. O'Connor and Judge Curry, who will act as his legal advisor, will leave tonight for Wallowa county when they will Interview the ranchers In an endeavor to have them ship their grain over the Northern Pacific. Will Finish Medical Course. Eldred B. Waffle, who has been the gueBt of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Waffle, during the summer va cation, left last night for Portland where he will enter Portland Medi cal college to finish his course this year. He will graduate from that Institution next spring and expects to enter St. Vincent's hospital as house physician after graduation. He has been In the college for the past four year. Illnkle and Hill at Mt. Vernon. A card from Dave Hill says that .himself and J. T. Htnkle of this city have been visiting Washington's old home at Mt. Vernon the past few days. They expect to return to Pen dleton soon. Hlnkle was defeated for re-election as grand chaplain "of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, which po sition he has held for two yeara The grand aerie session has Just closed at Jamestown. Bought Eight Hearse Horses. C. B. Mellnger an undertaker of Tacoma, who has been In this vicin ity for the past 10 days, shipped out eight head of well mated, well brok en driving horse last evening over the Northern Pacific. The horses will be used on hearses In Tacoma and were valued at about $400 per span. They were purchased from different people In Umatilla county and were a fine lot of animals. BU1mp Scadiling Tells of Oregon. Bishop Charles Scaddlng - of the Episcopal diocese of Oregon, who Is now visiting In the 'east, preached at Grace church, Chicago, on September 8 on the subject, "Opportunities In Oregon." There was a large attends ance and the graphic Information about Oregon was highly appreciated. The lecture was accompanied by, stercoptican views of Oregon scenes and was a living advertisement of Oregon resources. Friend of Dr. C. J. Smith. J. D. Miller of Tacoma, an old-time friend and schoolmate of Dr. C. J. Smith, has been visiting with the lat ter today while en route to La Grande. The two men lived as neighbors dur ing their boyhood days In Ohio. Mr. Miller left the Buckeye state to locate In Tacoma a short time before Dr. Smith came to Pendleton. Ho Is flow a member of the firm of J. B. Stevens & Co., dealers In grain and hay. Article on linker City. In the September number of Sun- set mngazlhe Is an excellent article accompanied with a number of pho tographs of Baker City and some of Its leading resources. The article ac companies a large advertising con tract which the Baker City Commer clal club carries with the magazine and gives that section some excellent publicity. Represents Home Maker Magazine, C. L. Granger of Chicago Is in the city this week In the Interest of the Home Maker, a monthly publication devoted to the development of the west. He Is writing descriptive arti cles of Important Industries and places In tho west and Is giving this section of the country some excellent adver Using. Will Live In Portland. Mrs. Hnttle T. Htanfleld, who has been here for a few days from Port land, where she has spent the sum mcr, will return to the metropolis In a few days to reside permanently. Her honlth Is much better there, In the low altitude, and she will make arrangements to live there hereafter Returned from California. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. .Barrett of Athena, who attended the Irrigation congress at Sacramento, have return ed homo after a delightful visit In San Francisco and other California points, after the congress closed. Your Benjamin suit Is her. Bond Bros. IS NO EPIDE MENINGITIS PREVALENT HERE NOT INFECTIOUS. Local Situation Need Cause No Alarm Two Widely Different Forms of the Disease Discussed by Local Phy sician Milder and Leas Dangerous Form Has Been Present Here. That Pendleton Is In no danger ot an epidemic of meningitis is declared by physicians of the city. According to Dr. W. O. Cole the three local cases from which deaths but recently occur red were all cases of tubercular men ingitis which is a form that Is not re garded as epidemic. There is a wide difference between the two forms. The principal points of variance are that the regular men IngltiB comes quickly, the patient breaks out, thus causing the disease to be often known as spotted fever, while the tubercular form Is a lln. gerlng ailment and the patient does not break out. Upon the subject of the regular cerebo-splnal meningitis Dr. Daniel E. Hughes In his medical work says: "The common form begins abrupt ly with a chill, excruciating headache, persistent nausea, vomiting, vertigo and an overwhelming sense of weak ness. Within a few hours the mus cles of the back become rigid and re tract with decided pain upon moving the head. There is great restlessness and the surface of the body becomes highly sensitive, cramps In the mus cles ot the legs and elsewhere and spasmodic twltchlngs of the Hps and eyelids come and go, finally convul sions or delirium occur. From the first day to the fifth an eruption of petechlae or purpura occurs in the majority of cases and also an hepetlc eruption appears. The disease reaches Its height In from three to eight days. "Tubercular meningitis is not ep idemic, has no characteristic erup tion. Is preceded by long prodrones and runs a tedious course. It is usu ally a secondary disease." That the two recent cases of men ingitis were plainly tubercular menin gitis Is stated by Dr. Cole. In both cases the trouble followed attacks of the measles and the Illness was lin gering. . Last spring much alarm was caused In different portions of western Ore- ! gon and Washington over the preva lence of an epidemic of meningitis nd the recent deaths here have caus ed some uneasiness. But as the trou ble Is declared not Infectious there Is pparently no need for alarm. SKETCH OF STEPTOE FIGHT. Idaho Pioneer Reviews tho Famous Indian Fight. The Lewlston Tribune publishes the following Interesting article on the Stcptoe Indian fight and other his torical subjects of the Inland empire: Julletta, Sept. 18. (To the Trib une.) Being an old-timer, I want to correct something I saw in the Morn ing Tribune of September 6, under the head of the "Great Pageant the Survivors of the Steptoe Butte Mas sacre." I am one of the survivors, and will state there was no massacre. It was a battle and we killed and wounded a great many more of the ndlans than they did of us, and fur thermore we were not near the said butte. In proceeding on our expedition north our trail led us about four miles east of the butte and on our retreat from the battle ground we passed the butte about the same dis tance west. It was called Pyramid Butte before the Steptoe battle and the name was changed after. In regard to the first steamer to reach Lewlston, It was the colonel Wright and not the Okanokan. The letter boat did not ascend the snnxe river till 1862. The Colonel Wright wns the first steamer built above The Dalles, and on the evening of the third day of Mav. 1861. entered the mouth or the Clearwater and proceeded as far as the Nez Perce agency at the mouth of the Lapwol, where she tied ud for the night. The next day. May 4, Mr. A. J. Cain, the agent; John Sllcott, myself and several others went aboard and started up the river. Our late towns man. S. S. Slater, was one of tne pas sengers, and had a quantity of goods aboard for the mines, we touna the rapid so strong above the Big Eddy that we had to put out a cbdib and It parted and we drifted down Into the eddy. Captain Len White was In com mand of the steamer, and our veter an steamboat captain, E. W. Baugh man. was mate. Captain White con cluded to go back, so we went down to the mouth of the Bedrock creea and discharged the freight, which consisted of Blater's goods. Our late townsman, Lot Wlggln, was with 81a- tpi. as clerk. There was no town started until the Wright's second trip This Is a matter of history and we want It correct. Tours, THOS. BEALL. WOOD FAMINE IN GRANT.' Difficulty of Securing Timber From Reserve Is Annoying. There Is every Indication that there will be a wood famine In the towns of northern Grant, situated, as wo are, in th timber and the national roresi, s.iv the Monument Enterprise. There Is particular danger to the residents of Long creek wno can noi mwu an ax, because there is no wood for sale nor any one to cut It. Thore has been several Inquiries the past week concerning the method of proceedure to obtain tne rigni 10 cm fire wood 'from the national forest. There Is considerable amount of red tape to be spun before this privilege can be secured. if the government Is as 'slow In at tnmiino- n the settler's application for fire wood as It Is In attending to his other application and If the people all wait until the cold weather to make application there Is danger that Ladies' and ROOSEVELT'S BOSTON STORE Where you Trade to Save some may freeze and a great many pay a fine. In order that a settler may secure the right to cut timber In the national forest we are told, application must be made to the forest guard of that part of the forest In which you are located. The guard then visits the timber and marks the trees you can cut. But the guard can't be everywhere at once and If he finds timber cut without a permit It becomes his duty to report the fact. The forest guards are Leo Neal of Monument, Albert Halstead of Fox, and R. F. Smith of Susanvllle. GASOLINE REQUIRED BY AUTOS. Expert Shows That Cost I 13 Cent Per 100 Miles for Each Passenger. An automobile expert says of the amount of gasoline used by machines: The gasoline consumption afforded great Interest, one car running as low as 9 2-3 mile per gallon, while an other ran as high as 32 miles per gallon. Forty per cent of the nunv ber have claimed to get over 20 miles per gallon, while the average of all Is a trifle over 18 1-3 miles per gal lon. The cost of repair. This amount ranges from practically nothing In some cases to seceral hundreds of dol lars In others. The total amount of repairs, not Including tires for the 161 cars was $6881.29, or an average for each car of $42.74. For the average length of time the cars have been used (1 year and 7 month 20s days), it means an average cost of $2.17 per month, or less than 61 cents per week. Another way to compute tho cost would be to total the distance travel ed, taking 161 cars totaling 1,555,427 miles, and with the total cost for re pairs of $6,881.29, It means that the cost of the upkeep averages .004936 cents per 100 miles that Is traveled. That certainly Is cheaper than walk ing. In considering these points, do not overlook the number of passengers carried. Some runabouts, carrying one or two passengers, and sometimes three passengers, while others were four-passenger car carrying five or six passengers. Tne average as shown by affidavits was nearly 3 4 persons, so It would make this ex pense less than 13 cents per 100 miles for each passenger. RECEPTION TO REV. WARNER. Farewell Function for Departing Methodist Minister on Wednesday Evening. A reception will be tendered Rev. Robert Warner and family In the basement of the M. B. church on Wednesday evening, September 18. This will be the farewell greeting r4 Rev. Warner and family who will leave for Walla Walla on Thursday or Friday of this week to reside per-. manently, where Rev. Warner will be pastor of Wilbur Memorial church. . The reception Is planned to be a most pleasant affair and friends are cordially Invited to attend. ' It will begin at 8 o'clock and will be held In the soclaj room of the new church In the basement of the building, Office With WIU M. Peterson. D. W. Bailey, the attorney, ha re turned to the city from Portland, where he passed the greater portion of the summer. His library Is now In the office of Attorney Will M. Peterson in the Smith-Crawford building and Mr. Bailey will have his office with Mr. Peterson, though they have formed no partnership. Full-Blooded White Leghorn Roosters FOR SALE From the fnmon PETALTJMA, CALIF., STOCK. JTlce very reasonable. ANTON NOLTE PENDLETON, OREGON. Gentlemen's SHOES In every leather and style that is up-to-date We can fit your feet, because we carry shoes, and in every sixe from A to EE. Now is the time, to SELECT TOUR SEWINO MACHINE for the fall sew ing. Don't buy these cheap machines from the department stores. Is It not strange that while they advertise to sell first class machines for $20, $25 and use hundreds of machines In their own. stores, you will never find them using these cheap machine? It I either a White, Singer, Standard or Wheeler & Wilson. But If you must have a cheap machine, we have then for $18, $20, 25. JESSE FAILING Main street, near the bridge. Distinguished Arrivals The arrival of our Fall and winter line of L. Adler Bros. Clothes are indeed distinguished arrivals. Here the young man will find clothes that are different from the ordin ary clothes shown by other stores. If the best clothes In America appeals to you, inspect our line of Adler produc tions. ' : $20 to $40 Others $10 UP Hen's Shop MaxBaer $3.80 I f Cwil.hl, 1 I mi. br , J I I.. ADLEK, J