o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o At.-.. wye Lro COUGHS, COLDS, WHOOPING COUGH AND ALL DISEASES OF THROAT, CHEST AND LUNGS r a mo us tor Forty Years of Ijtnvis u favorite, j I'urlH, April 29. Wlll.o Lewis an.l Yotinp I .miirh rev hi.lh A m.,t.!nn mi ....! matched for twenty rounds tonight nt : North Yakima, Wash. Three hun the Cirque do I'arls. Lewis l a fa- ; lr ! Yitklma Indians are assembled vnrlte, aH It Ih believed that his ringj.-U Wapato to hold the annual cere gencralshlp makes him more than ajnionlai of welcoming Cue spr.ng. After match for the rushing and hnrd-hlt- j the fushlon followed years before the tins Phlladelphlan. j white people came into the vallev. Now for Good Ycoi will fin.i at our fountain the very 1'iHt that can be made from puro fruit Juices. Everything first class and up-to-date. Delicious Candy nt 20c per pound. T. J. lM)NAMlSON, Kcllablc Druggist!. ! oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooobo PcfffltH Is No Far For Respect to Your Dear One Departed Have Their Grave and Lot Decorated, by a permanent reinforced concrete . wall around their resting place. By seeing some of my work it will satisfy you and convince you to have your lot improved. For good reasonable prices and good work call Red 2627, East Bluff St. or at the East Oregonian Office FRANK DUPRAT oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo Concrete Blocks-Concrete Work The Most Modern and Most Substantial Building Material-More Comfortable, and Cheaper in the end Save Yourself Money Concrete Blocks forced concrete tiiid ro-in-uro cheaper nnd far more satisfactory. Make prettier work when finibhed nnd give the great cat comfort in cither hot or cold weather. Estimates Furnished on Phono Black 378C. Contractor nnd '""To. fTWrnnrt.-frnH.-, i- -i . . ....... DRUGSTORE IT'S GOING TO BUY DOS. BSOOVERY I THE CURE THAT'S SURE I roR Cures. SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY SkOEFFENS DRUG STORK. YAKIMA INDIANS . TO W ICIX OMK SPRING Soda D. A. MAY Builder of all kinds of Concrete KDN.GfS NEW Price 50c and $1.00 they invited the salmon to swim up the stream, the wapato to spring up abundantly in the soil, and the berry bu.shes to carry largo crops. The invocation was followed by a feast in which toasts were drunk in pure water. The food was prepared at fires built on the ground, and In all ways the ceremonies of the day adhered strictly to customs practiced in the early days of the tribe, and were yery Impressive, As guests of honor, Hon. A. J. Splawn, Former Indian Agent Jay Lynch, S. E. FarrlB and L. V, Mc Whorter were present and report that ipeechei of the Indian orators were full of good things, They made it clear that they are not opposed to progress or the de velopment of the reservation resour- ces. J Thev are even anxious for the com- L pletlon of the Wapato Irrigation proj-f , ...u. ,. , I i, i -ii'uj.uii; niini 11 win iiieHn lor them In the way of Improved farm ing facilities. They do not, however, want im provement thrust upon them simply because they will be of advantage to the white settlers. They suggested at a recent council a way of financing the Wapato project, by the sale of timber and tribal lands. They said in their speeches that while the old times meant much to them, they are not stupid enough to realize that the ways of civilization are bound to benefit them. o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Pay o o o o 0 Give Yourself Satisfaction See my many hcautiful de signs for Basements, House Foundations, Walls, Fences. Curhing, Building Trim mings nnd Cemetery Fences. They grow stronger with age. Application Pend leton, Oregon. Work. fH ADAMS HAPPENINGS (Special Correspondence.) Adams, Ore., April 28. Fred Blake, wheat shipper of the Interior Warehouse company at Pendleton, and W. J. Carey of Pendleton, came up Thursday morning to load and ship a carload of wheat at Adams and to Havana Fiday to ship a carload there. O. II. Lewis was a Pendleton busi ness visitor Monday and Wednesday. Mrs. Simonton and daughter Cella returned to their home In Adams Tuesday after visiting friends In Pilot Rock for the past two days. Mrs. F. O. Farley, and baby left Tuesday for Portland to Join her hus band, where will make their future home. Mrs. John Giess and daughter. Miss Winifred, were Pendleton visitors Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Rogers and chil dren left Friday for Walla Walla, where they will remain the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Sauge for a few days to attend the aviation. iJr. McKenny of Helixz was called tti Adams Wednesday to see E. Mc Collins' babyw ho had a bad spell of la grippe. The last report is Its con dition was somewhat Improved. W. H. Ferguson and wife, former residents of Adams, are visiting In the city of Adams today. Mr. and Mrs. John King are visit ing friends and relatives In Salem this week. Ora and Wade Holdman of Cold .Springs, are visiting relatives In Ad ams th's week. Fred Blake of Pendleton was In Adams Tuesday. Dr. McKenny was called to Adams Monday to see Boy Devaln, who has a bad spell of la urippe. He Is some what Improved today. , Mrs. Clara Nelson of Clodlus, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. E. Q. Marquis this week. Mr. Nelson of Milton, was the guest of E. G. Marquis Monday. J. T. Lleuallen and daughter Stella and Winifred Gleet and Mrs. J. Winn left for Walla Wall Friday morning in Mr. Lleuallen' auto to attend the big aviation meet in the Garden City. Mr. and Mri. J. Adami went 10 Walla Walla to attend the aviation meet, Tne councllmen of the city of Ad ams are building a house some 20x 40 feet over their gasoline engine this week. Ike Christopher was a Pendleton visitor Friday. Mrs. McBean visited In the city of Pendleton Friday. The Adams public school went to the Kribs grove Friday afternoon for a days outing and enjoyed the day's outing very much. BOXES ORDERED REMOVED ITtOM DALLAS RESTAURANTS Dallas, Or., April 29. The city council has passed an ordinance com pelling the removal of private booths from restaurants in this city. he reason for such action was the prac tice of taking liquor into these box es that was being Indulged In quite freely. Persons not able to purchase liquor at the saloons could get some one to take It to these restaurants for them, and thus get around the pro visions of the most stringent regula tion -of saloon ordinance In force In this city. Dallas was one of the first cities In the state to pass a model saloon ordinance. The promoters of that ordinance are seeing that It is en forced. Since the city has been "wet" there have been but very few arrests for drunkenness and most of them were out of town persons. ' The Magnetio Poles. The magnetic poles are not station ary. The northern one is slowly mov ing westward along the seventieth parallel and in the course of three or four hundred years will probably have encircled the geographic north pole and returned to about its present loca tion. Of course the southern magnetic pole follows a corresponding course about the geographic south pole. In such cities in the United States as Omaha, Sioux City, Topeka, Galveston, etc., the compass needle would point about in the direction of tlS north star and the north polo thnt Com mander Tenry reached. This geo graphic pole is about 1.500 miles north of the magnetic pole, toward which the needles of nil compasses point St Nicholas. Earliest Use of Mineral Ink. In ancient times India Ink, mnde from lampblack nnd glue, was used for writing on papyri, but inspection of the earliest vellum or parchment MSS. shows that iron gall inks were Introduced not later than the ninth century. The reason for the change was that although a carbon ink is more permanent, it has no penetrating power and can be sponged from the vellum, whereas the iron ink bites in to the fibers and resists the destruc tive action of both air nnd light. Age and Youth. W. D. Howells said of old age at one of bis Sunday afternoons: "Age Is tnodester than youth. I've often noticed that when I tell a moth er that her daughter is the Image of whnt she was herself at nineteen the mother Is delighted, but the daughter looks startled." Turn to the Light If there is anywhere on your horl sort a spot of light, fix your eyes upon It and turn your thoughts away from the clouds which may cover the rest of the sky. Election In Portugal. Lisbon, April 29. General elec tions in Portugal under the republi can regime, originally set for tomor row, have again been postponed, this time to May 14. SHAVING IS NOT FATAL Barbers Nowadays Do Not Ue Ham mers and Cold Chisels. In reply to a correspondent who says he yearns to have his flowing beard removed and yet lacks the Spartan firmness of the early martyrs to face the ordeal and makes a pathetic ap peal for advice the alfalfa editor of the Emporia Gazette unfeelingly re marks: "The alfalfa editor can offer no ad vice or encouragement to such a trem bling soul. It seems probable that he has worn his whiskers for many years. It Is likely that he hasn't purchased a shave for a quarter of a century and therefore is ignorant of the Improve ments in the art tonsorial which have been achieved in recent years. It is no longer like going through a slaugh ter house to on open grave to be shav ed by an expert barber. In fact, that operation has been so shorn of its ter rors that many eminent citizens con sider it a pleasure to visit the barber. It is no longer necessary to strap a patient down in- the chair before shav ing him; neither is it necessary to ad minister anaesthetics to his whiskers. "The man whose only reason for wearing whiskers Is the fact that he fears the barber shop will gain little sympathy. If he tries to explain that he cannot shave himself without suf fering the agonies of the all fired he will gain less. Such excuses might have hod some force long ago. when barbers used hammers nnd cold chis els, but science has made glnnt strides In recent years, and the country Is full of painless barbers, and a clean shave costs no anguish or inconvenience." MICROSCOPIC MESSAGES. How a Single Pigeon Might Carry a Whole Library. For more than 2,000 yeurs currier pigeons have been used to carry mes sages when no other means sufficed, and during the siege of 1'uris, when 303 birds were sent out from the doom ed city, one of the birds performed the almost Incredible feat of carrying to the outside world on one trip no less than 40.000 messages averaging twenty word each. This waa 800,000 words, or the equivalent of five or Blx averago novl!. This marral was accomplished by means of microscopic photography, the messages being first printed with ordi nary type and then photographed and rephotographed until they had been reduced several hundred diameters. The final photographs were taken on films or pellicles of collodion, euch of Which, about two inches square, con tained 50,000 words. A dozen of these films, rolled up in a quill, weighed but one twenty-eighth of an ounce. The messages could, of course, be read with n microscope without the neces sity of rephotographlng and enlarging. Under favorable conditions and for comparatively short distances pigeons have carried as much as three-quar ters of an ounce. Using the photo re duction method, it would therefore be possible for a single bird to carry messages equal In words to no fewer than 120 ordinary volumes. Harper's Weekly. Whistler' White Lock. As long as the name of James Mc Neill Whistler lives among those who eaw him it will recall the famous white lock which stood out so conspicuously from the mass of his black hair. It was, as he used to say himself, "well placed" and was always treated from the harmonous point of view to de velop its greatest effect in his appear ance. One day when Dorothy Menpes, daughter of the well knowu English artist Mortimer Menpes. was a baby and was asleep on her pillow Whistler went to see her. A white feather had by- chance settled on her head and lay in a spot exactly corresponding with the white lock on his own head. "That child Is golns to develop Into something great" he exclaimed, "for, see, she begins with a feather, Just like me!" Gypsy Queens. On occasions America treats Its gypsy monarchs with full regal pomp. Matilda Stanley was accorded an al most royal funeral in 1ST8 at Dayton, O., where, ten years later, another queen was crowned with all proper ceremonial. In England, too, gypsy queens have received nil due honor. Esther Faa Blythe, who died in 18S3. had many members of the aristocracy on her visiting list, and she. too, had a regular coronation. But, on the whole, the gypsy has not had a very good time in England. An act of 1592, for example, made It a felony without benefit of clergy to be merely seen for a month In the society of gypsies, while for actually being a gypsy no punishment was too severe. London Standard. A Premium on Marriige. In Belgium they place a premium on marriage by allowing a married man two Totes at an election as against the single man's one. In Madagascar one must be a father or pay for the default. If a man Is unmarried or childless at the age of twenty-five he must contribute annually $3.75 to the support of the state, and each woman who has remained single or is child less at twenty-four Is taxed $ 1.80 per year. A "Friendly Match." I speak of a "friendly match," not at all forgetting that dictum of the Id Scot to whom his opponent, break ing somo trivial rule, said, "I suppose you won't claim that In a friendly match r "Friendly match r was the reply. "There's no such thing at golf!" Iiondon Telegraph. Much is done in the name of friend ship: so are many. Exchange. East Oregonian by carrier, (So per month. uca cart STACY ADAMS and ROYAL BIAIESHOES at A. EKLUND'S HOHBAGH'S HAKKRV, ICE CREAM nnd CANDY PARLORS Finest sodas, candies and baked goods in the city a call at our parlors will prove it. Special party orders will receive our prompt attention. PHONE, MAIN 80 Owe home-made candies are on sale Ht the Main street Bakery. D ASIIfE T I 1 AIRE Cass Matlock, Prop. BEST PICTURES MORE PICTURES LATEST PICTURES !! e ana mtutrated songs the city. in Shows afternoon and ere- -I nings. Refined and en tertaining for the entire family. Next to French Restaurant Entire change three times ach week. Be sore and we the next change. Adults 10c. Children tinder 10 years, Be. THE QUESTION' IS RAISED how can we afford to do such good plumbing at such moderate rates. The answer Is easy. We make some mon ey on nearly every Job. Sometimes we get stuck. But the more Jobs we get the more money we expect to make. COOL PLUMBING GETS WORK the second time. So we compete with poor plumbing prices, knowing that the first Job you give us will make you our steady customer. For a good healthy lawn, use our guaranteed garden hose. BEDDOW & MILLER Pendleton's Exclusive Plumbers. Court and Qarden Sts. Phone Black SSEI