EIGHT PAGES. DAILY AAflrr ORBGONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1910. pass imc First Great Showing of ow complete line of Ladies, Misses and Childrens Suite Coats aid Skirts FOR FALL PERSONAL MENTION Ladies Suits from $15.00 to $35.00 Misses Suits from $ 1 5.00 to $20.00 Childrens Suits $630 to $ 1 5.00 Ladies Coats from $5.00 to $35.00 Misses Coats from $3.50 to $25.00 Childrens Coats $1.50 to $1 2.50 We are showing without a doubt the largest and best selected stock of Ready-to-wear garments ever dis played in Pendleton. Come and see for Yourselves F. E. Livengood Co. The Ladies' and Children's Store. LOCALS Paatim pictures pImm IL Read th "Want ada today T Try Mark Patton Military barter. Phone Main 1 for United Orchestra. , Snyder chimneysweep Tel. Red 1811 Saw dust for sale at the Oregon Lumber Yard. Automobile for hire, day or nlfht fhone Main 74. , Good Spaulding; hack nearly new, only $76. Phone Main E. Wanted Woman to do washing. Telephone Rd SZ'.t. For rent Good house and barn. Address P. O. Box 406. Wanted Waitress at Southern Cafe. 206 E. AUa street. For Sale Piano and fiouseholJ fur aiture. Phone Red till. Dr. L. K Blakeslee has returned from Union county, and has resumed practice. More moving pictures hown than any other theater In the -tty the Pastime. For good, dry slab wood, call at or phone your order to the Oregon Lumber Tard. Good 7 year old horse, weight 1150 pounds, work single or double. Price $126. Phone Main 5. Loat On Main street, green Japan ese opal ring set In dull - gold. Re ward. Phone Mrs. Nisaon, Main 602. Try one of those caieful. sanitary shaves at Mark Patton's barber shop. Old Prlvett stand. Phone Main 427. Sharon & Eddlngs sell galvanised Iron bath tubs. Light and easy to move around. Just the thing for farmers. Ladles wishing sewing done at their own homes or otherwise may phone Black S786. Terms $2.00 per day. Mrs. J. I Dennla. Lost Sorrel mare, bald faced, branded "L" on left stirie; weight about 1000 pounds. White spot on left front knee. Return to Oregon Feed Tard for suitable reward. Wanted Middle aged competent woman to do cooking and general housework. Write or phone J. H. KoonU. Echo, Oregon. Sharon A Eddlngs have Just recelv ed a car load of sewer pipe and are prepared to make shipments to all small towns near Pendleton. Party In financial distress has plac ed with us for sale a beautiful Ho- bart M. Cable piano, cost $450. No reasonable offer refused. Elllers Mu sic House, 812, Main street, Pendle ton's home store. HACK TO XATTRE WITH A VEXGEAN'CE It U reported on good authority that there Is a company of Eugene's prom Inent ladles who are spending the summer vacation In a somewhat se cluded place, where they are putting Into practice their "back to nature" fad for health's sake with a veng eance. They have not worn their shoes or stockings since they first struck their rendezvous and their feet have become so calloused and scaly that they now tramp It barefooted all around camp without flinching for sharp stones and ordinary Driers. One of the Indies carried barrels of sand from a bank In a sack on her shoul ders and completely covered the floor of their domicile and the nearby Kround so as to make It easy on their feet. They arc getting their health. however, and as as tough and wiry as they were In their girlhood days, and their feet will be free from corns and bunions for the next year and their health better for It. While It may not seem Just the thing among the ladies, we have no doubt It would do much to restore health If It were practised more generally. Eugene Register. Frank Martin of Adams, la a Pen dleton visitor today. Sam Alley of Helix, la a Pendle ton business visitor today. M. C. Norman of Echo, Is transact Ing business in Pendleton. C. B. Pickens of La Grande Is a Pendleton business visitor. Sam Lb Neall of Nyssa, Oregon, is a Pendleton business visitor. Joe Baaler la here from Portland to look after ' property interests. William C. Cuslck of Union, is In the city to care for business interests, ing for southern Idaho, where they will spend a few weeks on their ranch. Hiss Helen Raymond returned this morning from a visit with relatives In Helix. City Recorder F. C. McKenzie of Hermlston, came up from that place last evening. J. S. Norvell, the Helix hardware merchant, is a Pendleton business visitor today. Frank Griggs of the Grltman Brothers cigar store, left this af ternoon for Pasco. Miss Jessie Folsom of Kennewlck, Washington, is the guest of Miss Elizabeth Sawtelle. Deputy Sheriff Joe Blakley went to Kamela this morning to serve some papers In a civil suit. x Lydia Albough of Pilot Rock, came In yesterday afternoon and spent the night In Pendleton. L. B. Wells a painter, returned to Echo this morning after transacting business In Pendleton. Joe Sheard of Athena came down from that place this morning to transact business here. Mrs. Robert Stanfleld and little daughter came up this morning from their home at Stairfleld. L. B. Reeder returned to Portland yesterday after having attended the funeral of Wayne Maloney. A. C. Crawford, a prominent real estate merchant of Hermlston, Is spending the day In Pendleton. Oliver Knotts, the Pilot Rock sheepman, came In from his ranch on Upper Birch creek, last evening. A. K. Wllkins, a Northern Pacific conductor, accompanied by his wife. passed through Pendleton this morn- Miss Paralee Halley has returned from Portland, where she had been spending the summer with relatives. Mrs. H. H. McReynolds and dau ghter, Miss Elsie McReynolds, came In from Pilot Rock yesterday afternoon. Bert Wilson, special claim agent for the O. R. & N., came in this morn ing from a business visit to Cayuse station. Joe Parkes and daughter. Miss Phyllis Parkes, left this morning for the Parkes summer- homo at Mea-cham. J. T. Mayo, superintendent of bridges and building for the O. R. A N. is in the city today In an official capacity. Lester Hamley. Earl Coutts and George Gilson returned this morning from a brief outing on the Upper Umatilla. M. L. Morris, the Helix merchant and Frank Albee. also of Helix, drove In from that town this morning In an automobile. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Manning and child have returned from Lehman springs where they have been spend Ing the summer. J. F. Colve, formerly music store salesman In Pendleton but dealing In Alberta lands. Is down from that country on a brief business trip. A. D. Rothrock of Walla Walla, came over from the Garden city this morning to spend the day In Pendle ton, looking after business interests, Mrs. N. A. Miller of Athena la spending the day in Pendleton, hav ing come down this morning from that place this morning to transact business here. . made in the Behrlng river and Mata nuska coal fields, but the best In formation available indicates that these lands will yield between 10,000 and 100,000 tons to the acre. This means that some of the lands will yield only 10,000 tons of coal to the acre; others may yteld as much as 100,000 tons. Multiplying this acre tonnage by half a cent (the esti mated value of the coal in the ground) indicates that these lands are worth from $50 to $500 an acre. Such values are far above the aver age of the bituminous coal lands In the United States." POINTS OUT INCREASE IX SCHOOL INDEBTEDNESS Olympla, Wash. Pointing out the alarming Increase In school district Indebtedness, and urging a general effort to remove the growing Incu bus, State Superintendent Henry B. Dewey has addressed a circular let ter to the county superintendents, giv ing the figures of school indebtedness throughout the state for each child of school age. This has Increased from $3.54 In 1890 to $33.88 In 1909, Superintendent Dewey makes the surprising statement that the districts of the state are paying out more money on the Interests of indebted ness than the total Interests coming In from the investment of the perma nent school fund. The text of the letter follows: "At present 7 per cent of all the ex penditures for school purposes are for payment of interest. So far as the schools are concerned, this mon ey Is wasted. The net Indebtedness (deducting cash on hand) per child of school age increased from $3.54 In 1890 to $33.86 in 1909; between 1905 and 1909 the net indebtedness per child of school age Increased $4.67. " "Many districts are paying 8 per cent on warrants. In many cases this rate could be reduced to 6 per cent and the warrants be floated without discount. "In districts having outstanding bonds, urge the county commission ers to establish a sinking fund, if pos- ible, under the provisions of the code of public instructions. Then keep the sinking fund Invested in school warrants. "Note carefully the expenditures for Incidental expenses of the dist ricts. In 1909 the Items included under this head (fuel, Interest, re pairs, free text books, libraries, etc.) required 32.3 per cent of the total ex penditures for school purposes. "I wish to call your attention chiefly to the levy for the current year. A large number of districts have outstanding warrants. Unless there is some reason for not doing so, it seems to me that these districts should Include in heir report to the county commissioners an estimate for payment of outstanding warrants." Big Operations on Seward Peninsula, Alaska, are Alter Rich Prize. Placer mining on Seward Peninsu la will receive an impetus this year by the Installation of a number of new dredges. There Is an abundance of gold In Seward Peninsula. The serious question has been how to mine it at a profit. Most of the placer gold in this part of Alaska Is In what Is known as unconcentrated gravel. There ase vast gravel deposits in the various parts of the peninsula. All of them are auriferous. The placer gold deposits of Seward Peninsula have been variously estimated from $250,000,000 to $500,000,000. About $55,000,000 has been mined and the larger part of this has been taken from concentrated placers. Some of them are unusually rich, but the greater part of the placer gold Is In low-grade gravels, which must be mined by dredging. Alaska-Yukon Magazine. A Question of Comfort. "Now, doctor," complained a bib ulous patient, "my great trouble Is elephants pink ones. Not that 1 object to elephants, you understand. I like them but they ao crtwd one so." From Success Magazine. OF THOSE GERM PROOF FULPER. FILTERS WE NOW HAVE A SUPPLY They, a little ice, water from your hydrant and you have mountain water in your home. Just as pure, just as good and entirely free fT nrt J ' from contagion. PRICE . OlIU Up K OEPPEN' S The Drag Store That Serves You Best ALASKA COAL WORTH HALF CT. Alfred H. Brooks, of the Geological Survey Gives Low Estimate of Present Value. An advanced summary of an Im nortant article on Alaska coal by Al frerf H. Brooks, of the Geological Survey, Is published in this month's Alaska-Yukon Magazine. Regarding the value of the coal Mr. Brooks has this to say. "Those unfamiliar, with coal mln inn find it hard to understand why the value of a ton of coal In the ground should be so very small a frac tlon of Its market price to the con sumer. They lose sigiu or me lacis that the coal In the ground Is the raw material which the miner by his labor manufactures and the railway company transports, and that, as i rule, before the coal reaches the con sumer several different individuals or corporations must have made profit out of It. "The writer has roughly estimated the accessible coal of the Bering and Matanuska fields as having a value of half a cent a ton In the ground Exception has been taken to this val uation, but chiefly on the part of those who have given little consideration to the matter and who think of the value of the coal In terms of its re tail price to the consumer. To these persons a valuation of naif a cent appears another way of expressing the thought that these lands have no value at all. This Is, however, far from being the case, for half a cent a ton Is higher than the value of most of the eastern coal lands, In spite of the fact that they are close to the centers of population .and hence to market. In fact, In some o the well-developed eastern fields good bituminous coal has recently sold for as low as one-thirteenth of a cent ton in the ground. "If this ton value is transposed to a basis of so much per acre, it will admit more readily of comparisons, DREDGIXG FOR HALF BILLIOX. Xight Riders Raid Woman. Glascow, Ky. News has reached here that "night riders" visited the home of Mrs. Mary Buchanan of Gresnam, In Green county, and de molished a mill owned by her, cuttlpg belts, breaking pumps and In various ways damaging the property. Later In the night the party. It Is said, made an assault upon the home, knocking In doors and breaking win dows. Mrs. Buchanan and little son frightened them away by firing on them. Do you take the East Oregonianl 1 For Sale I the Dan Doherty Farm 3 miles south of Pendleton; 320 acres wheat land and crop. Good house and barn, lots of water, all for $10,500, half cash. 3(10 acres wheat land six miles from Pendleton, $13000. Terms. Small grocery and second hand business Including the building all for $1000. The business la averaging 850 per day. Must bo sold at once on account of sickness. Address, Dan Kemler 210 V. Blnrf St. Pendleton, Oregon IN Silk, Serpentine Crepe and Jap Crepes THE BEST SELECTION COME AND SEE Wohlenberg Dep't. Store Better Goods for Less Money Forty-Ninth Annual Oregon State Fair Will Be Held at Salem, Sept. 12 to 17 $35,000.00 in Premiums and Purses Grand Livestock, Agricultural end Horticultural Exhibits. Splendid Races, Band Concerts, Free Attractions and Fireworks. REDUCED RATES ON ALL RAILROADS For further information address FRANK MEREDITH - SECRETARY $3,000 In Prizes Cowboys and Expert Riders Can win $3,000 in Prizes at the California State Fair and Fiesta of the Dawn of Gold Sacramento, Sept, 3 lo 10 Inclusive. Bucking Horse and Steer Roping Contests and Wild Horse Races Open to All. Pony Races and Re lay Races for Men and Women. Big Purses. Square Deal HEATING STOVES ARE IN SEASON NOW "THE RADIUM" is a good one. It is a combination coal or wood Heater, and gives the Scme satisfaction with either fuel. This stove is well made and the Best of Material used, It has some very good features not found in any other stove and is a great fuel saver WE HAVE DIFFERENT MAKES AT DIFFERENT PRICES The Taylor Hardware Co. Boost for Pendleton, "The Round Up" and "The District Fair" September 26 to October I st Inclusive Few tonnage estimates have been