EIGHT PACKS Only Three More DAYS I I 1 I 1 nUJ Will buy your choice of over 60 Dresses worth up to $ 1 2.50 Better Hurry F.E. LlVNGOOD,CO. T1IU LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S STORE. PERSONAL MENTION I LOCALS I See Lane & Son for signs. Pastime pictures please all. Dutch Henry for coal. Main 171. Wall paper, paints, etc. Lane A Son. Wanted Two waitresses at Hotel Tendleton. Private board and lodging at 205 W. Webb. Phone Black 34 31. Fresh cow wanted. Phone Main 137 or address P. O. Pox 487. .Springs coal cither lump or nut It burns clean and goes further. For rent Alexander residence on I Water street. Inquire R. Alexander. Phone Platzoerter tor fresh meat and lard. Main 44S. Everybody goes to the Orpheum to e ttie best and the clearest pictures. Fur .-ale, AugUBt 25 Twenty-five young pigs. C. 1'. Bowman, Echo, Ore. For rent Modern six room house. Inquire 513 Frnnklin street, or phone tied 2552. Buy your chickens for Sunday's dinner at the Central Meat Market. Phone Main SI. Everything that's good to eat, In meats and groceries at the Cash Market, phone Main 101. special rates to horses Doarded by the week or month at the Commercial Rarn, 820 Aura Btreet. Phone Main 13 Experienced woman wants peti tion a cook with harvesting crew. Address 701 Thompson street, Pen dleton. If you want to hiu-.v, call Penlu.. Eros., Transfer, phnne 3391. Large drny moves you quick. Trash hauled once a week. 647 Main street. Meat: Meat! Meat! If it's on the market, It's here. Farmers' Meat Co., Conrad Platz'cder, manager, 224 E. Court street, phon Ma.n 4 45. Oldest volunteer corps lu the world U the Honorublc Artijlery company of London which dates from 1537, during the reign nf Henry VIII. Passengers to Portland cun save money and at the same time have an enjoyable river rldu by taking boat from The Dalles. Ktr. Bailey Gatiert leaves dally, xcept Friday nnd Sun day at 1:30 p. in., arrives In Port hind 9:30. Fare $1.00. A Oirtl of Thanks. Kind friends and neighbors. I kindly thank you all for the kindness that was received at the sad hour of our darling mother's death. AGXESS MORRIETETTE. To the Public. W. I. Gadwa. the well known har ness muker of this city, has accepted a position with E. L. Power and will have charge of the harness depart ment All work will receive prompt attention and satisfaction guaranteed. Wanted. Team and light wagon or heavy hack, suitable for mountain trip, Au gust 1. Inquire this office. SKvlal fur Saturday. For Saturday onlq 10 lbs. of leaf lard f..r $1.10 and 5 lbs. for 65c. at the Rayburn market. LUCK OF A HORSESHOE. l-jKiipo l'Yom New York. shoo hanging the home of iIiiiim, Jr.. at to !ntli Attributed l'.inblein. -There is a big horse over the doorway in 4 -year-old James Mul- 500 West Twenty-Sixth C. C. Loney of Walla Walla Is reg istered at the Pendleton. . Mrs. F. Welshows of Condon, ar rived In Pendleton yesterday. F. S. MeMahon of Walla Walla, Is a Pendleton business visitor. A. V. S.vift of Baker Is in the city a guest-of the Hotel St. George. Dr. Wutts, one of tho heirs to the famous Young estate, is In the city. J. V. Crawford of Heppner, was over from the Morrow county seat. II. J. Longley of Hermiston made Pendleton a business visit yesterday L. H. Russell of La Grande Is among the outside visitors In the city. J. F. Vernon of Milton was among tho out-of-town visitors In the city last evening. .T.n-lf Weinman. nroDrlctor of the Eagle BHths, returned today from a sojourn at Hot Lake. Denutv District Attorney W. C. E Prultt went to Athena this afternoon on a business visit. W. L. Thompson, president of the American National hank, is transact ing business in Portland. A Zenske returned from a visit to his ranch near Helix on the Northern Pacific train this morning. W. L. Thompson president of the Amerlean Nat onal banK. nas return ed from a business trip to Portlaid. ltalnh S. Robinson aHd J. S. Wy- mores, of Echo, came up from their home town yesterday and spent me night In the city. Miss Gwendolln Weaver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Weaver, came uo from Portland this morning ror a visit with friends. A. A. Mclntyre of Baker, s among the guests at the Bowman. C. W. Avery of Weston, is a fen dleton visitor today. rra irrank Haves left In the early train yesterday morning for Hood River, where she will visit wun friends for a couple of weeks. Miss Hazel Lynch came In from her homn at Pilot Rock yesterday Leonard Miller of Hermiston, was among the visitors from the west end of the county yesterday. Robert Jamieson of Walla Walla, l.i over from the Garden City today. Pat Connell of Pilot Rock, came in fr in that town yesterday afternoon and spent the night here. Charles Gray and wife arrived in Pendleton on the Northern Pacific train this morning after a visit in Spokane and a tour or Yellowstone Park. Thev will visit here until to morrow with Mr. Gray's brother and sister, Harry Gray, and Mrs. George Hatman, when they will return to their home in Portland. Petiillelon'a l ast RxiUTHH. .For light or heavy transferring of ill kinds, phone George Stanglcr at i;rltman Bros., Mnln 611. Furnltur and pianos moved promptly and oarr fuilv to any part or tna an. Patton'a Barber Mba, The Round-up Barber Pole. Op posite Alexander's store. Plenty of hot water, clean towels, and the place whre they don't shavo Chinamen, In dians or Japs. Five barbers working all the time. No long waits In this hop. Try j Rose Cream for Sun Burr. ant Tan If you wish to b FREE of those blemish 25c KOEPPENS : The Drug Store That Serves Tou Beat. street. When the little fellow fell off the fire escape at the second story landing one morning and was found not to have suffered any injury, his mother attributed young James' good fortune to this fact alone. It was not the first time young Muliloon had fallen from a fire es- cii.e. His first tumbling evplolt was a year ago. when his parents lived in West Twenty-Seventh street. Jlm- niie, as ho is railed, plunged three stories that time. It so happened that the clothes lines beneath the fire escape were filled nnd Jimmle bi'Uneed from one line to another without any seriaus results. Two Greek section hands wnded into a hole In Cow creek and met death by drowning. Head the East Oregonlan. ' a a. VU& Wfll A AN WHEAT AT ECHO TESTS OUT WELL (Special Correspondence.) Echo, Ore., July 21. The thrifty farmers. Young and Dellwo, have be gun hauling their grain to the ware house. Jt tests 68 strong. C. J. Gulliford has begun cutting his second crop of alfalfa. The weather Is Ideal and a few days work will put it In the stack. Miss Ruth Stnpish of Walla Walla, Is visiting at the beautiful home of J. D. Watson in West Lawn. Mr. Jordan has charge of the Ar lington Rooming house during the absence of the proprietor, S. W. Keeler. A Jolly crowd of youngsters with well filled lunch baskets, are today enjoying their annual picnic, given them by the members of the Presby terian Chapel Sunday school. They are accompanied by their parents and are having a very pleasant day's outing on the banks of the Umatilla in the Spike Grove near town. The extreme hot weather has abat ed some, due to a cool breeze which is blowing from the west. The change Is very much appreciated by sweltering Echgltes who have not fled to the mountains. Mr. Allan Thompson is working in the bank during the absence of Cash ier R. B. Stanfield. Mrs. W. H. Gillette of Walla Wal la, arrived yesterday for a short vis it at the home of her father, T. D. Matthews on Butter Creek. Otis McCarty of Butter Creek was an Echo visitor yesterday. He came in his new auto which he purchased recently. John McCarty of Turlock, Califor nia, is visiting at the home of his brother Otis. Joe Bailey is acting as foreman of the Furnish Camp during the absence of Foreman Johnson. Mrs. J. F. McLaughlin visited friends in Stanfield yesterday, re turning on the afternoon local. Ralph Davis, of the local O.-W. R. & N. depot force made a business trip tos Pendleton yesterday returning on the midnight train. Preston Hammer departed this morning for his home in Ccrvallis af ter a brief sojourn here. Mr. Ham mer is a nephew of E. K. Hammer. Alex Malcolm was a motor pas senger for Pendleton this morning. Disi;rsTr:n attoist gives HIS CAR TO A BOY Hot ecials lAt-vs IMtiiiH-o When Machine Turns Turtle ami I'nlonds Pesky Thing. Chicago, 111. Cecil Hancock, 12 years old, who lives on his father's farjn iit Jasper county, Indiana, was presented with a $2,000 touring car yesterday by an exasperated New York transcontinental auto tourist, who met with an accident near the Hancock farm. The Uurist refused to give his name, but the auto li cense was number !C05 N. Y. While descending a hid near the farm the New Yorker, who was en mute to Chicago, and was the sole oc cupant of the car. lost control of the machine when the steering knuckle Iroko and the car landed in a ditch, hidiim side up. Young Hancock helped the irate owner out of the wreck nnd the air immediately be en me blue with oaths. "I will give the ear nway for any thing to get rid of it," said the New Yorker. ';v it to iin." r-ald the boy. "Take tho d nuisance and wel come," replied the owner. He then hired the hoy to drive him to the nearest railroad station where he could get a train for Chicago. Hancock sold the car to rin auto deal er for a good price, and will Invest tho proceeds in a college education. NKWSPAPI'.K RKPORTF.R KNOCKS OVT V FOOT-PAP By Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound Ottumwa, Iowa. "For years I wu.t almost a constant sufferer from feinalo :. -ntroui.su iu nil u. h?? Iilromifiil lorn1' tSlj!iA lull. wit iinT ivtiia nil over my body, Bick RTfpJf : headache, spinal T Sl weakness, dizziness. depression, and evervthincr that was iinvild. I tried many '.I-.". ;r; j:. r. t V '('vi':; Mparts of the I iiite-.l l VV yAtt,le. cdnpou...i' h.: uohu mor. ior me than all ui.; mk ? I feel i ' liv, tVtty t. Ml you the-- lac- !y heart U ff.ll of Knititih!? t . yoitv;,. my cr ilrs. 11.vi;hh:t ',. V. ' r.:i ?. Hansom fc-tr."j Ottu-i.'.'.-jlott-a. Oonnulek T'ius Arivlco. Xo woman rhoml t.'.' lit to a sikr! ral-oporati -i. vhLh nr? mean death, tmUl r," eha. Ven Lydia K. I'inkham's Vcgeta' 'o ; 'cmp- uu" a fair trial. This fa menu medicine, mado only from roots and herbs, liaa for thirty years proved to bo tho most valuable tonic and inviporator of the female organism. Women roMdinsr in ahiio every city and t.,wn ia th-j I'niic.1 Ftates bear willing testimony to tho wonderful virtue ot lAdia E. 1'iak ham's Vegetable Ccmpor.nd. Mrs. Pltihliar.1. t.t T.VTtn, Mass., Invites nil f :; . t write licr for al v i o. ! i -. ;i 1 1 i oc is free, confidential nu i.l'.vajs helpful. When llold-ii Refills to Appreciate' SerllKs' Hurry. Is I'llitl. Chicago, ill. Detectives from the Fiftieth Mrect station are searching the South side for an unidentified man who attempted to annoy a newspapvr reporter nt East Forty Fourlh and outh Dearborn streets with a magazine revolver. Dwight L,. Iioughhorough, 1152 East Sixty Second street, who Is in the employ of a morning paper was out early yesterday morning In quest of news when a man suddenly appeared be fore him and shoved a revolver In his face. Loughborough, who was in great haste to "cover" his assignment, did not have time to stop and dally with a hold-up man, and frankly told the man so at the time, but he kept per sistently flourishing the gun ns if he might shoot if goaded to the point of desperation. Thereupon the re porter shot out n good right punch, straight from the shoulder, that caught :he robber full in the face and down ho went Tioughborough then hurried on be fore the man had recovered suffici ently to give chase, and notified the police at the Fiftieth street station. "I may be from the long grass country," he told tho sergeant, 'Siut, believe me, none of these city bad men has unythlng on me when it comes to n show down. Resides, those stlck-up men" are a great an noyance when wo-ve got to get a story In the office In time to catch the last edition." No arrests have been made as yet, but tho plain clothes men are on the lookout for a man with the marks of four lar ro knuckles on his fnce. A STI DY OF PESTS Til RKATEXIXG STRAWBERRIES Reai tho want r.di. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vallis, Ore. N. F. Wilson of the en tomology department at the Oregon Agricultural College, accompanied by F. D. Bailey of the department of plant pathology, made a special trip to Portland nnd North Plains to study conditions in the strawberry beds of that vicinity, where it was reported that the root weevils were at work and were threatening the industry, together with plant diseases which had also attacked the vines. They report quite an amount of dam age from the pests there. Another report of considerable damage tetnsr done to tomato plants near Independence, called Mr. Wilson there in Inrcuf titnto nlont H,-io nnCo ........ ..... . . . . t,.. itijii n Thursday, July 14. Upon his return he will meet Mr. Bailey, A. J. Stover, O. F. Mosinette, student assistants. and E. S. Scott, a University of Illi nois man here for the summer, Joining them in a trip to Mary's Peak for the collection of plants an.l insects for the college museum and labora tories. Ten Round Draw. Albany, N. Y., July 21. Matt Wells Piutish lightweight champion and Fiahting Pick Hyland of California, fought a hard ten round nn-declslon bout here last night. Oovcrnm-n' r ports f'-'n "Portland mv that t!::-- h-t spell s the hottest "lice 18SS. MRRARY NOTES. Iist of new books added to the li brary this week. These books will be ready for circulation Saturday. Adult rtiKiks Cln-is Rok. Bhigham Geographic Influence:; in A merei"2 History, Bryant IIoW to Tel! Stories to the Children. Clement Handbook of Modern Ja pan. Moran English government. Page Robert E. I.ee, the South erner. Vantlne Every Living Creature Fiction. Austen Pride and Prejudice. v Grundy Hazel of Heatherland. HEADQUARTERS FOR Toilet Goods We are Sole Manufacturers and Distributors of th Celebrated TOILET CREAM COLO CKEAM 'tooth row p En and MT. HOOD CREAM. Tal!mai & Co. Leading Drurrjrists of East- em Oregon. Ladies 1 2 1 -2c Sleeveless Vests 8c Ladies 1 5c Sleeveless Vests for 10c Ladies 20c Sleeveless Vests for 15c $ 1 .00 Kabo Corsets at, each . 79c $1.25 and $1.50 White Lawn Waists for .... 65c Ladies $2 Union Suits for . $1.35 12 1-2 Lawns for 9c 1 5c Lawns for . . . 11c 20c Lawns for . . . 14c All $3 Oxfords for . . $2.25 All $3.50 Oxfords for . $3.00 Childrens Oxfords All Reduced Wohlenberg Dep't. Store Better Goods for Less Money Keary A York and a Cancaster Rose. Richmond Round the Corner in Gay Street. Civic Club Collection Fiction. Jerome Passing of the Third Floor Back. Johnston The Long Roll. Kester Prodigal Judge. Wilson The Land Clalmers. Wright The Uncrowned King. Children's Rwiks Class Hooka. Adams Harper's Electricity Book for Boys. Beard Little Folks Handy Book Brooks Stories of the Red Chil dren. Bryce Child Lore Dramatic Reader. Baldwin Old Greek Stories. Clarke Story of Ulysses. Collins Model Aeroplanes. Cragin Old Testament Stories. Fairbanks Western United States. Hill Fighting a Fire. Home Stories of Great Artists. Noel Buz. Xeison Practical boat building for amateurs. Ralston When Mother .Lets .Us Sew. Scudder Children's Book. Stewart Tell Me a True Story. Stack Wild Flowers Every Child Should Know. Fiction. Altsheler Riflemen of the Ohio. Barbour Double Play. Fuller Across the Campus. Gordon Black Partridge. Gordon Osceola: Chief of the Seminoles. Irving Rip Van Winkle and the Legend of Sleepy Hollow. Johnston Little Colonel's House Party. Johnston Little Colonel at Board ing School. Rhodes Children on the Top Floor. TrE OFFICE A. SCHNEITER, Prop. PENDLETON. ORE. Farr)ily Liquor Store Phone Me in 299 7 1 1 Main Street $3 8 torPRK..-l:.wawa":' .c;"8Sis-saH'r-nsa! i PENDLETON'S POPULAR PICTURE PARLORS HP I 1 i n COSY Where the entire family can enjoy a high-class motion pic ture show with comfort. FUX, PATHOS, SCENIC. THRILLING ALL PROPERLY MIXED. Open Afternoon & Eve. Changes Sun., Mon., Wed., FrL Next Door to St. George Hotel. Admission 5 and 10 Orpheum Theatre 3. P. MEDBVUTACH, Vrrprietw h;gh-ci.ass up-to-datemotion pictures For Men, Women and Children PROGRAM IN TOl'AY S PAPITR. Program Charge on Buafey'a, Tveadar'a and FrtdAj'a. 0 f&S Grande Ronde Apple Orchards on the INSTALLMENT plan. Talk with the Pendleton people who have visited these tracts. U. uu i 9. uiDDcnn ni'juroc Q At the office of MARK MOORHOUSE CO.