East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, July 01, 1908, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    FREEWATERM1LT0N
FAMOl'S HORSE PIES
LARGE riUCE REFUSED.
Frwwater Roy Arrested In Walla
Walla for Scaling Watch In Lewis
lent reaches Arc Ripe In This Sec
tion of Country Many FLslilng Par.
lie.
Freewater, July 1. Dandy Frisco,
a well known young racing stal
lion of the northwest. Just died here
of gastric Intestinal catarrh. The horse
was owned by A. F. Morris of this
place, and he held a record of 2:11 1-4
and Is well known all over the north
west, having been entered In races last
season in Taeoma, North Yakima,
Lewlston, Spokane and Walla Walla.
Dandy Frisco was sired by Frisco,
1:12, dam Belle, by son of Antelope.
There was no Insurance on the horse
and the owner refused 13500 for him a
few days ago.
Harry- Morse, formerly of Free
water, but more recently of Lewis
ton, Idaho, was arrested Monday on
Information from the chief of police
of Lewlston, on the charge of stealing
a lady's watch. He was arrested in
Walla Walla, and had pawned the
watch In a second-hand store for J 2.
Ponchos Ripe.
Selgel Eaton, a rancher living at
Freewater, exhibited a large ripe peach
here the first of the week, which he
had grown in his orchard. This is the
first peach of the season. There will
be a good crop of peaches this season.
There have been a number of fish
ing parties in the mountains during
the past week, and they l.ave all re.
turned with a cood catch of fine trout
A tiartv of four returned the other
evening after being out two days with
800 trout.
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Bickncll and son
Donald have arrived from Portland,
" where they have been for some days.
Milton Notes.
Milton, July 1. Aaron Miller &
Sons, the nurserymen at this place,,
who have heretofore been In partner
ship In the nursery business, have in
corporated, and the name of the com
pany will be "The Milton Nursery
" company." All the private lands of
the Miller sons and the lands of
Aaron Miller In this vicinity have
been sold to the company, consisting
of some choice fruit lands. The lands
In the sales brought in about $15,000.
The company will add materially to
the Improvement of the nursery In
many ways, and will make it one of
the first class concern of the kind In
the northwest. The company will
now own several hundred acres of
choice fruit land which will be used
for the nursery.
The Milton Opera house property
has been sold by the opera house
company to Alex Still. It contains
two lots and was sold for 2600.
The strawberry season In this sec
tion of the county Is about over, and
the cherries are now at their height,
though many have not been shipped
up to this time on account of a scar
city of cars. There Is ' an excellent
yield of berries.
The past few days have been very
warm at Milton and vicinity and many
of the people are beginning to go to
the mountains for an outing.
MAYFLOWER TEAPOTS.
A Warning That May Prove of Value
to Relle Hunter.
It may be trusted that no lineal de
cendent of the pilgrims, would and
no other person foolishly shonld ever
claim to hare or to have seen a teapot
that had come over on the Mayflower..
Whatever other articles In whatever
number may be treasured as parts of
the sacred cargo that was landed at
Plymouth rock In 1620, relic hunters
may rest In the assurance that no rival
owns a teapot of Mayflower descent
The explanation Is simple. When the
Mayflower sailed for America an ounce
of tea was rare enough to have made
up a fitting gTlt for royalty. Yet forty
years later the wealthy and fashion
able people of England were fairly fa
miliar with tea which the East India
company had first brought Into the
country, and four years later It was
on sale In the coffee houses, at which
time a pound might be purchased for
the moderate sum of 60 shillings.
Only twenty-five years later tea was
on sale In Boston, and soon after there
were two tea houses besides those kept
by Daniel Vernon and Benjamin Har
ris. In the first decade of the eight
eenth century it could be bought from
Zabdlll Bolton at his apothecary shop.
Today the coffee houses of a hundred
years ago In London are In reality tea
houses. In England were made the
first teapots of pottery. Later the
most delicate creations In porcelain ap
peared, but as tea became popular the
art of the teapot maker was less ex
clusively refined. Boston Globe.
Thinks It Saved His life.
Wester M. Nelson, of Naples, Me.,
says In a recent letter: "I have used
Dr. King's New Discovery many years
for coughs and colds, and I think
it saved my life. I have found It a
reliable remedy for throat and lung
complaints, and would no more be
without a bottle than I would be with
out food." For nearly 40 years New
Discovery has stood at the head Of
throat and lung remedies. As a pre
ventive of pneumonia, and healer of
weak lungs. It has no equal Sold
under guarantee at Tallman & Co.'s
drug store. 60c and $1. Trial bottle
free.
ENGAGED AT NORMAL.
Weton People Going to Mountains In
Great Number.
Weston, July 1. Professor Wynn,
who made a fine record as superinten
dent of the Weston public schools a
few years ago, has been engaged as
head master of the Normal- training
department for the next normal term.
The many friends of Prof. Wynn are
glad to hear of thK and will welcflme
him back to Weston.
Hay Simpson, who has been In ill
health for some time, has gone to
Moscow, where he will visit relatives
for a time.
A number of the Weston people
were at Athena Saturday to take In
the horse show at that place.
A sure cure, one you can depend
upon. Hickory Bark Cough Remery.
A sure cure, nd It's pure! Use It for
all lung trouble, coughs, colds, hoarse
ness and sore throat For vale by
any druggist and first class dealers
everywhere. Pendleton Drug Co.
Just Received
Nice line of Men'
Tan and Patent leath
er Shoes at the old
Shoemaker's on Court
Street
A. EKLUND
DARING BELL RINGERS.
Pranks of the Athletio Young Span
iards of 8vilU.
There is a curious custom among the
young Spaniards of the city of Seville.
On certain fete days, related a tourist,
the young men of the place have per
mission to ring the bells in the clock
tnwora of the cathedral. They have an
ingenious and original way of ringing
them. While the regular bell rtngers
ronofi these amateurs climb up on to
the bells, throw them forward with all
their force and ride upon the bells In
their furious swinging to and fro. We
may Imagine what an upronr Is pro
duced when all the bells of a cathedral
are being treated in this manner. Any
man who is able may exercise bis skill,
and the duration of the ringing de
pends upon the caprice or the strength
and patience of the ringers.
The spectacle is very strange of the
great bells swinging, with one, two or
more bold ringers hanging from them
in any attitude which seems to them
best adapted to pushing out the most
noise. In the Giralda, at Seville, the
first time I witnessed this, the clamor
was frightful. When I looked up 1
thought at first some unfortunate was
entangled In the bell rope, but I soon
found It was a matter of sport. An
other ringer appeared suspended in the
air, holding the bell by the ears or the
rim or the wooden framework and fol
lowing It in all its movements, some
times feet, sometimes headdownward.
Such are the daring bell ringers of Se
ville.
The Egyptian Mummy.
EirrDtoIoclsts have-discovered that
among the artelent Egyptians the Invi
olate preservation of the body was
deemed absolutely essential to the cor
poreal resurrection of the dead. Ac
cording to the teaching of the Lgypuan
priests, the living man consisted of a
hodv. a soul, an Intelligence and An ap
pearance called "Ka." Death separat
ed these four parts, which must ulti
mately be reunited for all eternity.
Between death on earth and life ever
lasting there Intervened a period of
several thousand years, during which
season the soul performed a painful
probationary pilgrimage through the
underwork! The body in order tnat h
should await Intact the return of the
soul must meanwhile be guarded from
all corruption; hence the custom of
embalming.
Man and His Tailor.
A man can be measured to the best
advantage, tailors say, away from a
glass. Standing before a mirror he is
almost certain to throw out his chest,
If he does not habitually carry It so,
and take an attitude that he would
like to have rather than the one he
conmonly holds, whereas the tailor
wants him. as the portrait painter
wants his subject, in his natural pose
and manner. With the man In that at
titude the tailor can bring his art to
bear, if that Is required, In the over
coming of any physical defect and pro
duce clothes that will give the best at
tainable effect upon the figure as tney
will be actually worn. New York Sun.
Buckingham's Pranks.
After the defeat and flight of Charles
t the, dnrmlevil Duke of Buckingham
disguised himself as a mountebank,
set up a stage in the heart or ionaon
anA tnr Ava lauirhed in the faces of
the stern Puritans, who were thirsting
for his life. One day when his own
sister, the beautiful Duchess of Rich
mond, was passing the Jocular duke
set the mob on to drag her from her
carriage. They forced her to witness
the pranks of her brother, whom she
recognized, but could not betray.
More Important
Teas Bess doesn't seem so quick to
deny ber age as she used to be. Jess
No. She's got very stout lately. Tesa
What has that to do with it? Jest
It takes all her time now to deny her
weight Phnadeipnia trees.
The "tWlne.
Cholmondeley-You and your sister
are twins, are you not? Marjorlbanka
We were when we were children.
Now, however, she is five yean young
er than U-London Tlt-Bita,
If you see it in the Bast Oregonlan,
It's so. ,
SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR. THE
T, OREGON
AND GET THREE MAGAZINES FREE.
EAS
J.:
All Three of These National Magazines Given
AbsolutelyFree with the Semi-Weekly or Daily East Oregonian.
Read the following offers, make your choice and send in your
name at once, as these offers are good for a limited time only.
Offer No. 1.
Daily East Oregonian, by mail, 6 months $2.50
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$4.50
All for $2.50, Paid in Advance.
Offer No. 2.
Semi-Weekly East Oregonian, 1 year
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The Mother's Magazine, monthly, 1 year
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$1.50
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All for $1.50, Paid in Advance.
TAFT LEAVES CABINET.
Successor Is Confederate - Veteran
and a Democrat.
riv th terms of his resignation,
nrpsented to President Roosevelt on
June 18, William H. Taft Tuesday re-
tirofi from the cabinet and Is succeed
ed as secretary of war, by Luke E.
Wright of Tennessee. Mr. Taft. will
immediately begin the organization- or
hi rnmnalen forces, and will meet
tomorrow with the subcommittee of
the republican national committee to
decide upon a chairman.
rtpnresentatlve Sherman, candidate
for vice president, will also take part
in the conference. Several men are
being considered for the chairman
ship, and it is thought that a definite
decision will be reached as a result
of the meeting.
Luke Wrlirht. the new secretary or
n-Ar. Im b. confederate veteran and
democratic In his political views. His
selection Is looked upon as a ciever
niece of diplomacy which may result
In gaining many Taft votes In the
south.
Leaving the service of the wrecked
confederacy at 21, Wright secured a
legal education and began the prac
tice of law In Memphis. In 1870 he
was elected to his first important po
litical Office, that of attorney-general
for Shelby county, in which Memphis
la located. A chairman of the citi
zen's committee during the yellow
fever Dlauue In Memphis in 1878,
Wright performed an heroic task.
Since then his career has been sucn
an to admirably fit him for the high
oflfce to which he has been called by
President Roosevelt. As a memDer or
the Philippine commission, later vice
governor of Uncle Sam's islands In the
far east, and afterward ambasador
to Japan, he made a record for fidel
ity and ability that gave him an In
ternational reputation.
Few men are more popular In the
army than Luke Wright, and, despite
the fact that he was a" confederate,
his appointment has been universally
commended by the leaders of the
Grand Army of the Reputfilc and by
Union veterans generally.
Bncklen's Arnica Salve Wins.
Tom Moore, of Rural Route 1,
Cochran, Ga., writes: "I had, a bad
re come on the Instep of my foot
and could find nothing that would
heal it until I tried Bucklen'a Arnica
Salve. Less than half of a t cent
box won the day for me by affecting
a perfect cure." Sold under guaran
tee at Tallman & Co.'s drug store.
WHY SO WEAK?
Kidney Troubles May Be Sapping
Your Life Away Pendleton People
Have Learned This Fact.
When a healthy man or woman be
gins to run down without apparent
cause, becomes weak, languid, de
pressed, suffers backache, headache,
dizzy spells and urinary disorders,
look to the kidneys for the cause of
It all. Keep the kidneys well and they
will keep you well. Doan's Kidney
Pills cure sick kidneys and keep them
well. Here is .Pendleton testimony
to prove It
Mrs. E. J. Melners, living at 501
Lewis street, Pendleton, Ore., says:
"I have the utmost confidence in
Doan's Kidney Pills as they proved of
far greater value to me than any
remedy I previously used I was
troubled for years with attacks of
kidney complain, accompanied by a
severe case of backache, and when
ever I caught cold, or during any
sudden change of the weather, my
kidneys became affected and my suf
fering was Intensified Since learning
of Doan's Kidney Pills I have not
cause to worry about kidney trouble,
as it only required a few doses of this
remedy to quickly check any return.
I keep Doan's Kidney" Pills In the
Jiouse at all times, procuring them at
the Pendleton Drug co. ana am giaa
to recommend them to other suffer
ers."
For sale by all dealers. Price, 60
ppnt Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name Doan's and
take no other.
Book of Oregon Poems Out.
"The Song of the Oregon Pine," a
little book of original verse by Bert
Huffman Is now out and Is on sale at
the Frailer book store. Price 60
cents. Printed on fine paper and
highly Illustrated. 9
DeWItt's Kidney and Bladder Pills
are prompt and thorough and will In
a very short time strengthen the
weakened kidneys. Sold by Tallman
Co.
Liquors at Cost.
My entire line of wines, liquors and
cigars must be disposed of by July
1. To do so, everything will be sold
at actual cost, nothing reserved. Now
Is the time to secure absolutely pure
goods cheap. The Mint, J. P. Med
ernach, pro;,
A Cough Remedy that Cure.
Hickory Bark Cough Remedy,
made by the Hickory Bark Cough
Remedy company, of Salem, Ore.,
guaranteed to cure your cough, or
money refunded. Guaranteed to make
a friend of you. For sale by all drug
gists and first class dealers every
where. Pendleton Dru Co.
WE RECOMMEND SEXINE TILLS.
It makes no difference what Is the
cause of one's weakness. If It be a
tonic that Is needed, Sexlne Pills
will do more than any other tonic.
They are the one tonic that strikes
at the bottom of all weakness, the
nerve centers. They send new vital
ity bounding through the body, pro
ducing a glow and tingle that revive
the languid energies of youth. Sex
lne Pills begin by bringing quiet re
pose to fluttering nerves and induc
ing restful sleep. Price-$1 a box. six
boxes 16, with full guarantee. Ad
dress or call the Pendleton Drug
Co. This Is. the store that sells all
the principal remedies and does not
substitute.
GOING EAST
Northern Pacific Railway
makes
LOW ROUND TRIP FARES
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK
Is directly reached from Livingston, Montana, at low fare In
cluding all expenses of trip, and stopover for this trip can be
secured on any kind or class of ticket regardless of limit of
ticket
For full Information as to fares, train service, berth reserva
tions, etc, call on or write
S. a CALDERIIEAD, , W. ADAMS,
General Agent Walla Walla, Wash. . Agent Pendleton, Oro.
A. B. CHARLTON',
.Assistant General Passenger Agent,
256 Morrison St, Portland, Oregon.-
Pendleton's
Passenger Time Card
Arriving Pendleton O. R. & N. kLeaving Pendleton
Portland Passenger . .
4:10 p. m.
Chicago-Portland Special
4:40 p. m.
Portland-Chicago Ejcpress
'. 2:55 a. m.
Portland Passenger ....
.f 8:00 a. m.
Chicago-Portland Special
12:25 p. m.
Portland-Crjicago Express
1 :05 a. m.
O. R. & N. WASHINGTON DIVISION
Spokane Passenger ....
4:30 p. m
Walla Walla Passenger
10 :50 a. m,
NORTHERN PACIFIC
Spokane Passenger ....
12 :30 p. m.
Walla Walla Passenger'
1 4:50 p. m.
Pasco Passenger
11 :30 a. m. and 2 :00 p. m.
Pasco Passenger. 4:30 p. m.
UMATILLA CENTRAL
Pilot Rock Passenger . . .
3:15 p. m.
Pilot Rock Passenger . . .
. . 8 :45 a. m.