DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, IMS. EIGHT PAGES. PAGE EIGHT. For Summer's Menu During the hot weather you-can se lect nothing more appropriate or appetizing than Pork and Beans But you should select your pork and beans with care. We'd like to call your attention to Siuder's Pork and Beans, inspected by Federal inspectors, they can not help but be good. Standard Grocery Co. Court St., Opp. Golden Rule Phone Main 96 NOT WANTED HERE. DAUGHTER OF PIONEERS, MR. AND MRS. J. H. KOONT2. Town of Echo Was Named for Mrs. Miller SO Years Ago Was a Native of Umatilla But Had Lived All Her Life at Echo Death Wan Sudden and Is Thought to Have Recti Pu to Accident. Mrs. Echo Koontx Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Koontz of Echo, and after whom the town of Echo was named, died at her parents' home jfsterday afternoon. Death was sud den and the exact cause Is not known, but Is believed by the family to have been due to the accidental drinking of wood alcohol At the time of her death the deceas ed was 32 years of age. Phe was born at Umatilla and soon after her birth her parents moved to where Echo now stands. She pawed practically all of her life In that vicinity and was married to Charles H. Miller, the Echo merchant, who Is still connected with the firm of George & Miller of Echo. The parents of the deceased are among the oldest pioneers of th county and are widely esteemed. Two years ago Mr. Koontz made a $5000 gift to the Pendleton academy and with the money Koontz Hall, the present girls' dormitory, was purchas ed. ' Aside from her father and mother the deceased leaves a 4-year-old child and two sisters, Mrs. F. W. Hendley of this city, and Mrs. Aleaxnder Mal colm, of Echo. The funeral occurred at Echo at 2 o'clock this afternoon. Pedelty Arrested In Portland, TlKugh to Re a Horscthlcf. Pedelty, the man arrested In Port- j lr.nd not long ago for attempted mur ! der. Is not wanted here. At least the J sheriff's office is not looking for any one answering his description. At the I time Pedelty was arrested in Portland I It was said he had told the man he was traveling with that he was wanted i here upon a horsestealing charge. J But according to Sheriff Taylor, he I Is not after anyone answering Pedel ! ty's description and he Is inclined to believe the charge against the man Is from some other eastern Oregon coun. ty. Seattle parents gave their consent recently to the marriage of their daughter, aged 13, to a man aged 21. Edward Emll Is the groom and Rosie Aranson the baby bride. COLDS The very hour a cold starts U the time to check tt. Pon' 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 nevr fail. Tallman & Co. Leading Druggists. Pendleton Visitors. A party of Umatilla county people who have been on a camping tour In the Blue mountains stopped for a while In La Grande yesterday, says the La Grande Star. They have been on a long trip, which included Leh man Springs, the Desolation lake country, Sumpter, Baker City and thencd to La Grande. From this point they go back to Lehman Springs and from thence to Pendle ton. The party Included: Edna Storey, Gertrude Jordan, Edith and Nona Johnson, Gertrude McCorm mach, Mr. and Mrs. M. Shutrum, Date Barnhart and Miss Bertha Yeend of Walla Walla. Fire at Fund Ilome. A small fire occurred last evening a; the W. J. Furnish residence on Water street, but did little damage. The blaze was started In the kitchen by an electric flatlron. An alarm was turned in and the central companies went to the scene, but In the mean time the fire had been extinguished by people In the house. Kelsay Coming Tomorrow. Word was received here today by J. T. Brown that Frank C. Kelsay, the engineer, will reach here tomorrow morning. He Is coming to confer with the water board regarding the survey for a gravity water system. On Grouse Hunting Trip. Charles J. Ferguson and Al De spair! left this afternoon by team for the mountains hear Meacham to hunt groufe for a week. Turn flattery wrong side' out and you have slander. TEA You can have it food i' you want to. Or bad if you don't take care. Tour rroctf returni roar moMT M jn 4ob' Kk SchilllnfV.t: w par him City Property for Sale Building lots from 00 "J Five-room dwelling, one lot 1 Two lots and dwelling, chicken fencing and house. 1800.00 . Seven-room dwelling and two lots $2000.00 Five room dwelling, barn and four lota $1500.00 A home In any -part of the city. FRANK B. CLOPTON & CO. 1 12 . Court. St..PenlIeton, Ore. A MUTUAL AFFAIR It Is not a selfish end we urge by continually pointing you to the advantage of saving It is a mutual advantage. Tou need us and we need you. We render a service that Nothing else can give and pay you four per cent to boot, and pay you Interest twice a year. There is no better or safer place for your Idle money, either small or large amounts, than in our Savings De partment Commercial National Bank United States Depository OREGON LIGHTHO.USE MAY TUMBLE INTO SEA. Sometime the ground under it will crumble arid the lighthouse at Cape Foulweather will sink into the sea, says an item from Newport. Beneath the structure from the west a great cave is being driven by the wash of the waves and tides into the point of land on which the light house stands. It has already pene trated far Into the narrow neck tnat Juts Into the sea. Each year the action of water wears away more and more of the rocks until It has already become a cave of large extent. It Is coached only in the summer season and then with ex treme difficulty. It is a dark cavern ous place for exploration of which tha visitor to this secret of the sea must carry a lantern. As the Interior Is penetrated the air becomes thick, heavy and difficult to breathe, so that but few, if any who have visited the cavern have penetrat ed to its remotest recesses. The storms of winter that beat violently upon this narrow neck of land drive the water Into this cavern with the force and velocity of a catapult. Sometimes the force of the wind sweeping over the cape is so terrible that the Hghtkeepers in passing from house to house are forced to crawl on the ground. The light in the tower Is 80 feet above the ground but the spray from the ocean in violent storms, beats against the glass that protects th light. The tower is sometimes so shaken In, this war of the elements that water kept in buckets at the top of the tower is so agitated that It dashes In small quantities over the rim of the buckets. The walls at the base are eight feet thick. Eighty feet above, by a grad ual process these walls are reduced to a thickness of 14 inches. They are of solid brick masonry, and when the potentiality of the wind and waves is such that this formidable structure ia rocked almost like a reed In the wind time Is telling heavily in th cavern below. Whether it will be a century or but a few decades, whether It will be In a generation or a long, long tlm down the future, sometime the sea will claim its own and the narrow point where Foulweather lights now stands will disappear. Such is tho statement of an Inhabitant who has lived many years within a mile of the light, and who has- mdre than once visited the cavern. WATER IS NOT CLEAR. Uie Work on Ivce Wall Disturbs City's Water Supply. If the people of Pendleton were called upon to vote for or agninst a gravity water system at this time there would be no doubt of the out come. The Improvement would car ry by a landslide majority. For the past two 'days the city wa ter has been unusually riley and complaints are being freely made. According to J. T. Brown, chairman of the water commission, the dirt Is due to the work that is being done on the wing wall to the levee above the water works. This being the -case It would seem there Is no remedy for the condition, as it will require several weeks to complte the extension of the wall. In the meantime .water consumers will .simply have to make the best of the situation. m BiiHtn IS FOUND HERE WASHINGTON MAN TAKES RELATIVE HOME. (corgo Bowers of Dnvoiiiortf Find His ltrotlier Will in Poverty and Seriously III In This City Story Rends Like notion But Is a Gen uino Incident of Llfo In tho Went. Rudiing Track o GrnnKCvlll.c Dr. W.. F. Galbralth, who returned yesterday from a trip to Vollmer and Nezperce, states thut the work nt the east approach to the Lawyer Canyon bridge was completed Saturday, that an engine crossed the structure Sun day and that yenterday the first car load of steel for the extension to Grangeville was ' taken over the bridge, says the Lewlston Tribune. It was understood that the actual lay ing of track would commence today, as preparations for this work have been receiving attention for the past two weeks. With tlx equipment all assembled it Is understood the company plans to take the track to Orangevllle in rpcord time. To reach Steunenberg would require only three or four days' wnrlf if there was no delay in the track laying operations. Auatrnlla Ready for Fleet. Sydney, Australia, Aug. 19. The fleet Is in wireless communication with Sydney today and will arrive to morrow morning.. Messages of wel come were sent by wireless by the mayor and governor general to Ad miral Sperry. Elaborate preparations have been made for the reception. That he Is his brother's keeper Is believed by George Bowers of Dav enport, Wash., who was here yester. day upon a pathetic mission. Ho came here to find a brother whom he had not seen for 25 years and he found him sick and In poverty. To day the unfortunate brother is being taken to Davenport, where he will be given every , possible attention and kindness. The scene that was enacted here yesterday when the two brothers met was one that is more often read about In fiction than witnessed in real life. It was a pathetic meeting and the feel ings of the two brothers may well be Imagined when the facts in the case are known. Twenty-five years ago the Bowers brothers were living on a farm In Lane county, Oregon, and when Geo. Bowers left the home ranch to take up life for himself his brother Will, was a hearty, robust youngster sev eral years younger than himself. Yesterday was the first time the two brothers had met since that day a quarter or a century ago. wnen George Bowers found hLs brother yes terday he found him an old man, gray haired and In utter despair. He was sick and waiting only for grim death to take him out of" his misery. "You can't Imagine how I felt when I saw my brotner, said the elder Bowers last evening. "I re membered him as he was when I left home, a happy, healthy boy, and it was a terrible shock for me to find him in the condition he was." William Bo'wers, the Pendleton 1 rother, has been in this vicinity for a numner or years, lie iormcny nau a ranch or some Kina in spring noi- low, but sold It. Since then he has been living in town and of late has bten In 111 health. His wife is dead and his only comfort during his trou ble was that received from his two children. Some time ago the little boy wrote his uncle at Davenport telling mm that his father was 111. The letter caused the Davenport man to com. t the rescue. But when he reached here he found much difficulty In lo cating his brother for no one seemed to know him. Sheriff Taylor and others familiar with the people of the city freely gave their services, but no cne could be found wh.o knew th man that was sought. Yesterday th anxious brother found a man In a cigar store who knew of his brother and told him where he could found. In an old shack In the west nd ot town the stricken brother was found In poverty "and misery. When found he was down and out as far as the world Is concerned and was anxious only to die. In the life battle he had fought he had lost and he was ready to quit But with the arrival of his brother with his heart still filled with boyish love for him the outlook became dif ferent. According to the older Bowers his brother Is already better and he be lieves that with the assistance and at tention he will give him he will soon be on his feet again. They left for Davenport on the 12:30 train today, Just a "Little Bimch" of our swell ...rALL...SUlTS. . Now on display in window. We have them coming on every train. For style, see us. Roosevelt's Boston Store Where You Trade to Save. Uffl 1 I IS test secured some time ago by Mr Adams showed the wheat to return a high as 32 per cent gluten, Excitement over the- new wheat continues throughout the country and the Northern Pacific agent at Jullaetta Is receiving as high as 1$ and 20 inquiries by telegraph dally relative to the new discovery and for CEREALTi verification of the reports publish ed. Some men have come from points LEW1STON PAPER TEIXS OF NEW Alaska Variety Will Show Three as far distant as Minnesota to per be Killed by a Blast. While blasting stumps On a right of way for a logging road for the Potlatch Lumber company, east of Palouse, Wash., Charles Peterson, a Swede, was instantly killed by a sec tion of a stump which struck him Manual Training at Raker. The Baker City public schools have the ImDortance of manual o - - t training in connection with the regu lnr school curriculum. The directors have seen where the best education Is that received by training the mind and hand simultaneously, in speax ng of the highly compllmentable ton taken by tnai city, tne caer Herald says: The first city in Oregon outside of Portland, to Install a manual tralnln department in the public schools, is Baker City. The board of education of this city has contracted with Prof J. N. McNeal of Meuominoe, Wis., t take up the manual training depart ment in the Baker schools and his ar rival is now dally expected. Know a Bettor Way. "Do you know that matches cost ?" erowled the bartender at the little man who was helping him self. "Do you mean to say you pay for matches?" asked the little man hninina himself to another handful "I am surprised at your lack of bus! ness ability. Why don't you get them the same way that I do?" Times the Yield of Ordinary Wheat Says a Jullaetta Fanner Only 40 Pounds Sown lo tho Acre Many Telegraphic Ordefs for Seed. sonally Inspect the fields. For Rent Store room on Main street In the East Oregontan building. Apply at this office. Fred McConnell, who was in the ity yesterday from Jullaetta, re ports that the harvesting of the A ri ms crop of new Alaska wheat is now progress, says the Lewiston Tri bune. ! "I am firmly convinced." he Said, that this wheat under similar con ditions to those governing the plant- ng and cultivation of any other va riety will show the treble yield of such other variety. The threshing of a mall patch of tM wheat has now been completed. It returned an av erage of 85 bushels an acre, while the crop looked as though it would not yield 10 bushels "Only 40 pounds , of seed was used to the acre. All tne iuu acres, m scattering tracts, have now been cut and will be threshed without delay. There Is no doubt in my mina some of this wheat will show returns of 100 bushels to the acre." Mr. McConnel states that there Is remarkable demand for the seed. On Saturday, Mr. Adams, the owner, shipped out abuot 20 bushels to fill orders in various parts of the coun try. He realizes $20 a bushel for the seed, and will only sell a bushel on a single order. He plans to make an other shipment tomorrow. The largest single tract sown this year by Mr. Adams was on the bam Bigham place on American Ridge. The stand there was remarkably fine and the yield will be an Immense one. Should Mr. Adams sell his entire crop at present prices, he will net a big fortune this year. He has adopt ed a plan of selling only In small quantities for the double purpose that the new grain can thus be Introduced In practically all sections of Jhe Uni ted states next season, while by this method he will also 'control the seed market. for a year or so. The wheat will hortly receive a 111 test at the Johnson mill in Jul laetta. Mr. McConnell states tnais Ten Good Reasons Why You Should Stop at "The Cornelius" The Best in Portland. Situated In the center of the shopping district One block from the clanging street cars. . Not so expensive as some other hotels , 8lxty rooms with private bath. Long distance and local tele phones in every room. Writing desk In every room. Carpeted throughout In the best velvet carpets. The rooms are furnished In solid mahogany. Every room contains a heavy solid Simmons brass bed on which Is a 40 or 60-pound hair mattress. The furnishings and general ap pearance of the public rooms must be seen to be appreciated. THE CORNELIUS, Park and Alder streets, Portland's newest and most modern equipped hotel, solicits your patronage and assures you good service and courteous treatment An exceptional hotel for Eastern Oregon families who jome to Portland shopping and sight-seeing. When next in Portland give us a chance to make you look pleas THE CORNELIUS meets all trains. Europlan. Free 'Bus N. K. CLARKE, Mgr. C W. Cornelius, Proprietor GEO. KURRLE FRANK TULLI9 PEKDLETON CASH MARKET, Formerly Umatilla Meat Co. Fresh Meals and Poultry. Thorn Main 101. Quick Delivery. 111 ' Every Stetson bears the Stetson name We don't 'have to stand and argue to induce a man to select a Stetson Hat usually knows all about it before he comes in, and all we need to do is to have the style he wants, and you can de pend upon it, we are ready: We hsve the Stetson Soft and Derby Hsti in all the latest styles C3on'S SilOp EM iaor