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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1909)
EIGIIT PACES. DAILY EAST ORBJOMAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. MONDAY, APB.IL 26, 1900. PAGE THREE. Mr, Pendleton Merchant ! u,viu0 ana V WveV&va o Make Pendleton the Commercial Distributing Point of the Great Central Oregon Country, It is possible to accomplish this and at the same time net a large income to those who are active in bringing it about. Tho inter-state telephone company liarf in operation 221 miles of poles and wires owned by the company, together with 81 miles of leased line operating 192 phones Outeido of Pendleton. The terminals are through the Pacific telephone companies exchange in Pendleton connccti'i g this city with Pilot Pock, Ukiah, Lehman Springs, Putter Creek extending up McKay creek 25 miles, up Stewart creek 18 miles, up Pear creek 8 miles, up .Tuck canytn 8 miles. In addition to the aWe there are 31 miles of a branch lino leading off from the main line. Our entire equipment is the latest and best to be had and our phone service is credited as ln-ing equal to any in the state. The company has the above lines actually in operation representing an investment of $18,000 and not only is it a paying investment but the demand for new phones is greater than the possibility at present to furnish the phones. Wo are receiving CONSTANT INQUIRIES and APPLICATIONS from Itidgc, Dale the famous Pitter .Springs clear down to Canvon City, Lang Creek and Snsanvillo in Grant county for phonies, and have decided to EXTEND THE LINES OF THE INTER STATE TELEPHONE COMPANYTO THESE POINTS. In order to accomplish this it has lecn decided to raise $10,000 for extensions, of which amount, $7,000 is to le spent this year. Here is where we need the co-operation of you Mr. Pendleton Merchant and you Mr. Safe Investor. To raise this $10,000 the company has authorized an issue of $10,000 gold bonds bearing 7 per cent, interest and payable semi-annual with a reservation to retire the issue at the expiration of three years. The bonds are to be a ten year issue and will be secured by a trust deed covering the present well developed property and all the property or equipment that may be acquired by the extention made possible by the bond issue. Mil. PENDLETON MERCHANT This shoul ' appeal to you lecauso Pendleton is the leading and topographically the logical trading eentc tern Umatilla county and northern Grant county. This country is being settled up rapidly. There is new business springing up every day BY enter for this vast area in THE AID OF THE. scutl TELEPHONES YOU MAY RECEIVE AND FILL THEIR ORDERS. ALL NEW BUSINESS TO YOU. MR. SAFE INVESTOR yon should be interested in this project because it. is an ABSOLUTE SAFE INVESTMENT. The telephone is no experiment but a practical necessity. This is no wild-cat scheme or undertaking in which the Umd holders take the least risk. THE INTER-STATE TELEPHONE COMPANY IS ESTABLISHED and PAYING A 1LVNDSOME RATE OF INTEREST ON THE AMOUNT INVESTED. Tho territory beyond us has assured their support and APPIJED FOR PHONES if wo will only extend our lines to tlieml Tho bonds we are wiling are a gilt edged investment for you. The people of Grant county have meager facilities for communication with the outside world. PENDLETON AND PILOT ROCK VRE THE NATURAL RAILROAD SHIPPING POINTS FOR THE NORTHERN PORTION OF GRANT COUNTY, BUT AT PRESENT THERE IS NO TELEPHONE LINE CONNECTING THEM. LOOK WHAT THIS MEANS TO PENDLETON IF WE DIVERT THE TRADE OF THAT VAST REGION TOWARD HERE. It is ; known fact that first comes tho telephone and then the railway. There is a great fntnre in store for southern Umatilla and northern Grant county, rich in its agricultural grazing and timber lands and Pendleton will be the chief .city to reap the k'nefit of this development The Iuter-srate Telephone Company at present has a net work of wires over central Umatilla county, its exclusive field. Is it not easy to see thelriglit future ltefore this company. These communities have developed faster than the facilities of communication have presented themselves. THE DEMAND IS FOR IMMEDIATE ACTION AND THE APPEAL SHOULD NOT GO UNHEEDED. Wo will be pleased to explain our projjosition thoroughly to anyone interested, to show our stability financially and give you an insight in the present successful work ings of the Inter-state Telephone Company. T, For Further Information, Inquire of E. McGMTIE, IU)tf3&fc anil TaTKll Hotel Bowman, Pendleton, Oregon. Phone Main 62. gr. OF INTEREST TO WOMEN She Is 8(111 a Mystery. Sho declares )ier heart Is a wide-open book; And I fancy therein I should like to look.. But her changeable mind Flaps tho pages about And what's written there I can not find out. Vwful Tea Iran. Tea leaves have many uses and should not be carelessly thrown away. Drain them and they are useful to strew over a carpet or floor to keep the duHt from rllng while sweeping a room. They ore good to clean glass water bottles; It Is also good to leave t-) remove the disagreeable odor. Oldest Maid Says 'Don't Marry.' Lynn, Mass. "If you want to Jive long and die happy, don't get married Take this advice from me, the oldest maid In the country. Aunt Thoebe Wade, celebrating her 102d birthday, gave this advice to a group of school teachers who called. Explaining why she had never mar ried Bhe said that when her mothet died she promised her that she would look after her father always. "When he died I was rather a back numbei, you see," she remarked. A Ijiuirh Fest For Grown-Unft, An evening of laughter Is a good thing. It clears away the cobwebs left by work In office or at homo and straightens out features rendered set and congested by too much serious thought. A good way to have such an evening Is to give a children's party Send out Invitations written on note paper with a colored picture In one corner of each. Have them read In something like the following manner: "Miss Bessie Brown and Master Blllle Brown will give a party on Tues day, August 9, 1909, at 8 o'clock sharp and they would like very much to have Miss Salllo Sardy and Master Sammle Sardy come. (Kindly dress as you dressed when you were a couple of kids.) Cnro of the Eyebrows. The eyebrows should receive as careful and as frequent attention as the hair. With a bit of cold cream, or better still, vaseline, on the tips of the fingers gently rub the eyebrows to remove any possible, specks of dand ruff, for they are often subject to this annoyance. Now wash them with a mixture of alcohol and water and lastly brush them. A little brush for the exclusive use of the eyebrows should be on every dressing table. Sols His Girl on Fire. Wheeling, W. Va. Said to have been disappointed In his suit for mar riage, Joseph White, 28 years old Is alleged to have gono to the room of Mngdalena Fortuna, IS years old of Pittsburg, today and attempted to burn the girl to death ofter pouring gasoline over her clothes, was seriously burned. White was arrested. The girl Finds $5 in Puckngv of Moid. Dayton. While preparing break fast this morning Mrs. L. M. Parke found a $5 gold piece In a package of meal purchased at a local grocery store. Mrs. Parke had been using meal from tho package for several days. This morning , while making mush, she felt some heavy article shake In the box, and having read of persons finding anonymous notes 'Investigation with a tablespoon. Finding nothing she poured the meal Into a dish ami a bright 15 gold piece fell from the package. How the gold piece came to be In the package of meal Is a mys- trry. Want 10,000 For 8tolon Ke. Ella Tltlehaum, a young girl aged 12 years, by her father, Nathan Tit lehaum, filed a damage suit In the superior court, yesterday against Nas- sff, alias Nahal, George and Michael George, asking $10,000 for being hug' ged and klwwfl ty -tho .former against her will. The girl status that she went to the store of ;the Georges to buy a pair of gloves, and that as she entered the front door Nassff George caught her by the waist and hugged and kissed her Bwral times. The girl further says that Michael George stood by and laughed and encourag. ed his brother, and ttiat there were fifteen or eighteen men Jba the store, Oatmeal Broad. sobk one cup roiled oats in one pint of hot water an hour, add one half cup of molasses, little salt, table half yeast cake In one half cup ot warm water, stir It Into the mixture when cool enough, add one large quart of wheat flour. Let rise Jlke while bread over night, or If wanted for rolls for tea mix up In morning. Crisp Fried Oysters. Take two eggs and beat to a froth: add one pint of milk and season wlto one tablespoon of salt; then take the oysters from their own liquor and put them In cracker dust and put them In egg batter; then put thorn In bread crumbs; fry them in deep, hot fat. Johnny Cake. One and a cups Indian meal, one cup of flour, half cup of molasses, one teaspoon soda, sweet milk to mix thin, pour In well greased pan. Bake until brown. Gives Salary to Charity. Commissioner Ttudolp Blankonhurg of Philadelphia celebrated the New Year by presentlns his threo years" salary of $15,000 In equal parts, to the teachers' annuity fund and the police and firemen's pension funds. Mr. Blankenburg Is not only a fearless municipal reformer, but a strong ad vocate of woman suffrage. Mrs. Blan kenburg was president for years of the Pennsylvania W. S. A., and their beau tiful home has long been headquarters in Pennsylvania for lecturers in behalf of equal suffrage and many tlior good j causes. A New llain Dish. Mix one large tablespoon of rurr.int ji-lly with one cup of cold broiled hi' in previously chop-ed. Tlirn imisn to a i-month paste am". nn--l w.nn one tablespoon of softened butter and one saltspoon of paprika. Spread the mixture on rounds of toaster bread and sprinkle with chopped stuffed olives and hard boiled eggs. Argument for Women stif targe. A suffragette lecturer recently brought down the house with the fol lowing argument: "I have no vote, but my groom has. I have a great respect for that man In the stables, but I am sure that If I should go to him an?! say 'John, will you exercise the franchise? he would reply, 'Please, mum, which horse Is that? Irimo Jelly From Prunes. A very delicious desert is made with prunes as a foundation. Steam tho prunes until they are soft. Then take out the stones and fill them Into a-wet mold. Turn over them a Jelly made oi a cupful of sherry a tablespnonfnl of lemon Juice, the Juice of two oranges and half an ounce of gelatine soaked In half a cupful of cold water and dis solved In half a cupful of boiling wat er. Serve with whipped cream. Arrowroot Milk. Mix two or three tablespoonfuls of arrowroot with half a pint of cold water; stir It well to clean; let It stand for a few minutes, and pour off the water. Stir in some pounded sugar; boll a Pint of milk and pour It gradu ally upon the arrowroot. Stirring well at the time, let It come to a boll. Or water may be used Instead of milk with the addition of a few drops of lemon essence and a Httlo nutmeg. I I ii K? V V U U I 7 , ----- 1 ! -l7r ;;rT nP ill! '' r ia-" ;.- ip i fear it- ,'.r w . .. .. . ft Trained I ions to Be seen With the Parker Carnival Co. This Week. XOTES OF IXTFKKST TO THE SHF.EPMAX Baked Hominy. Mixed Into hot boiled hominy either large or small grained, a little cream and three beaten eggs and two table- sppoonfuls of sugar. Bake In individ ual ramequlns, and when the custard Is set sprinkle over the top of each some crumbled pop corn sprinklco with melted butter and a little sugar. Return to the oven to brown slightly Eat with sweetened cream, or honey, or.maplo syrup. Corn Muffins with Sour Milk. Sift together a cup of corn meal, a cup of graham flour and a tablespoon- ful of salt, a teaspoonful of buttet and two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Mix to a batter with one cup each of sour milk and cream. Tf nne has no sour cream use a cup -with recited butter. Hake In hot, and substitute the other fourth of one cup with melted butter. Bake In hot well-greased muffin tins. For Sale Alfalfa and fruit farm, 12 miles west of Pendleton. Enquire at the Standard Grocery for Information. For seven month. ending Januarv, the Imports of wool into the United States were 102.623.983 pounds, of which practically one-half were class three or carpet wools, and something over 40,000,000 pounds of clothing wool, and a little over 10,500,000 pounds of combing wool. The flockmasters who run sheep in the Boise national forest of Idaho and have decided to get into harmonious Southern Pacific for hauling on the heavy grades of the Sierra Nevada mountains. The engine In reality Is two loco motives and is two and two tenths times more powerful than any other locomotive at present In the com pany's service. With its tender, this locomotive, In working order, will weigh about 300 tons. With a sister machine about com pleted, this monster locomotive Is for the Southern Pacific. Tho two lo- THE PENDLETON DRUG CO. Real Drugs-Real Druggists $1.00 $1.00 LOW $1.00 FARES Between THE DALLES and PORTLAND Leaving The Dalles, dally at 3 p. m. (Except Thursday). Arriving !n Portland 9:15 p. m., on fast Str. BAILEY GATZERT. DALLES CITY leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m., Monday, Wed. and Friday. Passengers on O. R. & N. train Xo.'s 3, 6, 7, can make connections as Above. Daily boat from Portland 7 a. m. W. L. CRICHTON, Agent, The Dalles. s. f. Mcdonald, supt. flissasscsxai relations with the forestry service for jcomotlves, one hauling and the other mutual cooperation, have done the wise thing, and will find Jordan a much smoother road to travel from this time forward. If you can't have all you want by fighting an unequal battle, and you can get the next best thing to it by cooperation and the conciliation, that, is, by all means, the thing to do. The number of sheep exported from the United States during the eight months ending February was 50,069. Of this sumber about 32,000 were shipped from the Puget Sound port, over 9000 from Boston and Charles tow n and over 5000 from Baltimore. As compared with the number ship ped during the same period the pre vious year a decrease of some 5000 head is noted. In the language of tho Tankee our sheep export trade compared with other days has "gone to pot." Sheep Breeder. KIXO OF IiOCOMOTIVES. largest Locomotive Ever Construct ed to lo Used In Sierra Xcvndas. Chicago. The largest locomotive ever constructed Is on Its way today from the Baldwin locomotive works M this city, and after a few days' ex hibition at the yards of the North western road, will be sent to the Sacramento-Reno division of the pushing, will be used together in moving trains from Rosevllle, Cal., up the steep west slope grades to the summit of the Sierra mountain range, a distance of 87 miles. Each will do the work of two of the largest loco motives now in use. Of the Artlculnted Type. These machines are of the Mallet articulated type. The locomotive Is called "articulated" because the frame Is Jointed at mid-length, and the for ward wheels thus constitute a truck, which swings about the fulcrum pin when the locomotive is rounding a curve. Thus, although tho total wheel base is long, 66 feet, the rigid wheel base Is comparatively short. Each group of driving wheels Is operated by a separate pair of cylinders and these are arranged on the compound system . Read This. J. L. Vaughn, 122 W. Court street, phone Main 139, local agent for the Pacific Electric Iron, states there will be an advertisement In Colliers Weekly April 10 anj in the Satur day Evlning Port April 24, describ ing the good qualities of the Pacific Hot Point iron. A warm theatre with new and live ly pictures the Pastime. ED STRAHON AC.EXT STANDARD OIL CO. Express and delivery prompt ly attended to. Leave orders at Pendleton Drug Co. Phone 20. TO AILLXO WOMEN. A Little Sound Advice Will Help Many a Sufferer In Pendleton. No woman can be healthy and well If the kidneys are sick. Poisons that pass off In the urine when the kid neys are well are retained in the body when the kidneys are sick. Kid neys and bladder get Inflamed and swollen, crowding the delicate female oans nearby and sometimes dis placing them. This is the true cause of many bearing-down pains, lame ness, backache, aideache, etc Urto poisoning also causes headaches dizzy spells, languor, nervousness and rheumatic pain. When suffering so, try Doan's Kid ney Pills, the remedy that cures sick kidneys. You will get better as the kidneys get better, and health will return when the kidneys are well. Let a fellow-sufferer tell you about Doan's Kidney Pills. Mrs. J. T. Galloway, C. ct.. Elgin. Ore., says: "Judging from the bene fit I derived from Doan's Kldnev Pills. I can recommend them as a. reliable remedy for the kidneys. I used them principally for a severe pain across my back, which had an noyed me for some time. The results that followed the use of the first box were so beneficial that I continued taking them and my back has given me but little trouble since." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-MIlburn Co., Buffalo, New York .sole agents. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. Daily East Orcgonlnn by carrier. only 15 cents per week.