EIGHT PACES. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OKEGON, MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 10! 1. PAGE SEVEN. STANFIELD STUDENTS ENJOY A PARTY CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR HOLDS III SIN ESS SESSION AV. C. T. V. Convention Attended by Many FlocknuiMiy Return Homo Willi nrldo lyiuly Makes Crosa Country Trip Horseback. (Special Correipondence.) Stanfleld, Ore., Oct. 23. The high school student had a very enjoyable party In the school room in the Web ster building laH evening. Various game were Indulged in during the evening and delicious refreshments were served. The Christian Endeavor society of the Presbyterian clturch held a busl neFs meeting and Bueial Wednesday evening at the residence of Mrs. J. E Faucett. there being an attendance of twenty-five. The reports of the different committees Indicated that the young people are doing good work. Several of our people attended the W. C, T. I', county convention at Echo Thursday and Friday. The Women's Study club hold Its semi-monthly meeting at the resi dence of Mrs. J. F. Ha Kan Thur-day afternoon. Miss Albon read a paper on "The Early History of the New England Colonies" and Mrs. Appleby presented a paper taking the subject of "the political parties of the Unit ed states; Their History." Geo. C. Cue and his bride arrived from Portland Thursday evening and will make this their permanent home. Mrs. White, wife of the O -W., It. & N. station agent at Cascade Locks, passed through Stanfleld Thursday on horseback en route to Meacham and other eastern Oregon towns. Frank Sloan has returned from an extended trip of several months to eastern states in connection with the colonization of irrigated lands in this vicinity. Mr. Sloan shys Oregon Is good enough for him and he has no desire to take up his abode In any one of the middle western nor easter states visited by lilm. Prof. F. I). Carruth, principal .,f the Stanfleld public schools, went to Pendleton last eveninir where he will meet his brother. Dr Howard Car ruth, who has f ir ome time been located in the Klamath country. H. X. Stanfiold, the well known sheepman and banker, returned from i oruanu tills morning and went to! Pendleton from here. W. P. Ward, who was formerly lo cated lu re in chiyge of ttie surveying work on the project, is visiting frends in Stanficld fop a few days. Next week he will leave fur Tennessee, where he liii a contract to survey a la rise tract of land. I. H Wel'y and family went to Hood River yesterday where Mr. Wel ly has a position which will keep him bti-y th"ie for a short time. Mrs. Ewart went to Pendleton this mornmg to Join Mr. Ewart who is employed there. E. N. Wheekr returned this morn ing from a business trip to Portland. Miss Minnie E. Raker Is spending the day with her mother In Echo. Clyde Stewart of North Yoakum, has been visiting his sister, Mrs. M. C. P.aragar th... past week. W. T. Reeves Is transacting business at the county seat today. Mrs. Ilea vert was a motor passen ger to Pondleton this morning X. E. Lee, who has been with the Stanfiold Mercantil... company tho past few month-', is moving to Echo with his family. WOM N DIES OF FRIGHT. Mrs. A. II. Laiifcnr of Redwood City Siiivumlw to shock of Scare. Redwood City. Calif. Mrs. Arthur II. Lnnfcur, wife of a prominent bus iness man of this city, is dead as the result of fright. She had Just retired for the night when she Imagined that burglars were entering the house, she called to her husband, who was In an adjoining room, and told him that thugs were attempting to break down the rear door. He made an Investigation and as certained that his wife's fears were unfounded, but upon returning to her rt.om found her dead. Fright and a weak heart caused the tragedy. Mrs. Ijinfer was 4 4 years of age, and a native of Ireland. OLD-TIME REMEDY DARKENS THE HAIR From time immemorial, sage and sulphur have been used for the hair and si-alp. Almost everyone knows of tho value of such a combination for darkening the hair, for curing dandruff and falling hair and for making the hair grow. In olden times the only way to get a hair tonic of this sort was to brow it In the home fireplace, a method which was troublesome and not always sat is factory. Nowadays almost every up-to-date druggist can supply his patrons with a ready-to-use product, skillfully compounded 'n perfectly equipped laboratories. The Wyeth Chemical company of New York put up an Ideal remedy of this sort, call ed Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, and authorize druggists to sell it under guarantee that the money will be refunded If It falls to do exact ly as represented. If you have, dandruff, or If your hair Is turning gray or coming out, don't delay, but get a bottle of this remedy to-day, and see what a few days' trentment will do for you. This preparation Is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle and Is recommended and sold by special 'agent, Pendleton Drug Co. WANTS I0RF PAY FOR GOVT'S IN PAYMASTER PAYS TRIRLTE TO FEDERAL EMPLOYES Incr.-aso in Sulnrlo Made Necewuiry by Advances in Cort of Living ami to Maintain Standard of Efficiency, Sujh Official. Washington, Oct. 23. Tribute to the government employe Is written in the annual report of Paymaster-General Charles II. Whipple of the army, in a plea for an Increase in salary and a system of retirement when the em ploye reaches the age of Incapacity. Referring to the statjstlcal Increase of 50 per cent in the cost of living during the last 15 years without a corresponding rise in pay, General Whipple says the Increase is asked, not as a reward for past services, "but as an actual necessity." To attain and maintain an effi ciency Impossible under the present law, General Whipple recommends that at least 50 persons in the pay master's department be made per manent details. This could be ob talned. he says, by making the majors and higher grades permanent. He also recommends that the period of detail to the" grades of major, lieu tenant-colonel and "olonel be ex tended from four to six years, as un der the nresent order it is not until an officer's four years' detail is draw Inir to an end that he has attained the highest nolnt of usefulness. This is because of the thorough knowledge he must have of the peculiar laws, d'scu sions and regulations govern ing toe disbursement and accounting of government funds. The mobilization of the army last summtr along the Mexican border, says General Whipple, demonstrated the ability to pay promptly consider able bodies of troops under conditions simulating war. PLAN HARLAN TEMPLE. Prc.ltriain Iroos $1,000,000 Structure to lie Evicted in Wash ington. Washington. Uarlan Temple, to be erected by Presbyterians from all over the United States and to cost $1,000 000, is proposed as a memo rial to the late justice of the supreme court of the United States, who was buried this week. The plan for a meeting place at Washington for the governing body of that church had been long a pet project of Justice Har lan. It now comes forward with re newed support, coupled with the sug gestion that It be named for him and be his memorial. Royor.d the suggestion of names for the vacant place, no step ha been taken toward filling it. No word has come from President Taft nor is one expected until the opening of con gress. The courts in Washington paid tri bute to Justice Harlan's memory. The supreme court, the court of com merce, the court of claims and the various brandies of the supreme court of tho District of Columbia adjourn ed immediately and the court of cus toms, appeals also was not In session during his funeral I tlie World Growing Retter. Many things go to prove that it is. Tlie way thousands are trying to help others is proof. Among them Is Mrs. W. W. Gould, of Pittsfleld, N. H. Finding pood health by taking Elec tric H 'Iters, she now advises other sufferers, everywhere, to take them. For years I suffered with stomach and kidney trouble," she writes. "Every medicine I used -failed till I took' Electric Bitters. Put th.s greut remedy helped mo wonderfully. They'll help any woman. They're the best tonic and finust liver and kidney remedy that's made. Try them. Tou will see. 60c at Koeppens. It's Equal Don t Exist. No one has ever made a salve, ointment or balm to compare with Hucklen's Arnica Salve It's the one perfect healer of cuts, corns, burns, bruises, sores, scalds, bo. Is, ulcers, eczema, Salt Rheum. For sore eyes, cold sores, chapped hands or spruina it's supreme. Unrivaled for piles. Try it. Only 25e at Koeppens. HAREM SKIRT IS FATAL TO A RLASE CAR HORSE l iters Groan at Sight and Falls Dead in Street in Wa-liliurtoii Police Reserve Called Out to Rescue Wo man from Crowd. Washington. A woman wearing a harem skirt precipitated a near riot In the downtown section, brought the police reserves on the run and caused the death of a cab horse that was seized with equine hysterics. The woman alighted from an Alex andria car near the postoffice; where a crowd of men and boys, shouting "tear it off lier," started an nttack. Lieutenant Sprinkle of the first pre cinct station hurried the woman into a cab and the drivev whipped up his horse. The jeering crowd started In pursuit. After traveling o few blocks the horse sulked. The frightened woman Jumped from the sab and sought to Inspire some energy Into the animal. Taking one look at the cause of all the trouble, the horse let out a groan of protest and dropped dead. At this point the reserves arrived nnd drove away the crowd. The wo man was taken to tho police station, where she gave tho name of Mary Porter "I had this skirt made In Chicago," she told the police., Later she was released. Tho Jehu is pondering who to sue for damages. Neuralgia of the fact, shoulder, hands or feet requires a powerful lemedy that will penetrate the flesh. Ballard's Snow Liniment possesses that power. Rubbed In where the pain Is felt Is all that Is necessary to relieve suffering and restore normal conditions. Price 25c, 60c and $1.00 per bottle. Sold by A. C. Kocppen & Bro. G. 0. P. MUST FACE RIGGER IJl'GAHEAR THAN THE TAR1PV After Shoutim; in 1)ctImi:oii ut Demo crats; Who Started Investigations, Republicans Now Realize Excep tional Difficulties. (By Clyde H. Travenner ) Washington, D. C, Oct. 23. Tariff Isn't the only thing the republicans are afraid of in the coming campaign There is another item that is giving them worry. They are wondering how they can answer the charges of corrnptlon, incompetency and mal ad ministration that have been brought out and proven by the various demo crat'c investigating committees. Republican leaders realize that this problem !s going to pre.-ent excep tional difficulties by reason of the fact that when the Democrats started to investigate those same republicans shouted In derision, declaring there was nothing to lnve.tigate; that un der republican rule the a-ffairs of the government had been conducted in the onlv perfect mannc. and that the, whole purpose of the democrats was . ness stand ,'in the Supreme Court, to make political thunder. (where his suit for $59,000 heart balm That there was really need of some.1'' bel"B "eard by a Jury. Investigating in and around Washing- Miss Smith, who is wealthy, and ton was amply proven before the in-, " "" james a. .snmn, was quirks !n U the re ults of republican president of the stock exchange, was rule had fairly started, and despite divorced from Homer Cummlngs, all the revelations of extravagance twice mayor of Stamford, Conn., anil mal administration that have . "Ruzzlelamb" Griswold was a bank come to light, many of the invest!- j clerk, and is now a chorus man In a gating committees are Just getting musical comedy. He says she prom ready to go to work So far they have ised to marry him and then refused only scratched the surface. . The Moss committee brought to light the shameful manner in which the plotters in the pure food bureau had stripped Dr. Wiley of all power, ' and made a farce of the law designed ' to protect the public from the greed . of unscrupulous food dopers. The Stanley committee learned that the steel trust for years paid tre- j meiidous profits on a capitalization ; represented largely by water and thin air, nnd that the tru t gobbled up the Tennessee Coal and irm company, its chief rival, with the aid :niilm nivance of a -republican admni-tra-tion, ostensibly t .i prevent a pan e, but actually to stifle its tain competitor. It was further brought out that men wece aet'ng a-i e- unsel for the steel tru t while receiving money from the government as "trust buster-1." The probe of the tate department revealed that money was expended for one thing and charged to another, while the committee on expenditures in the navy department discovered that more than three million dollars worth of supplies were taken from the Washington navy yard without an accounting, nnd that the bookkeeping system In use there is absolutely rid-i ' " lv ""' "- ' oi uuru leulous " Nelson, the great British admiral at These are but a few of the many.1"6 Annapolis naoal academy in 1907. illustrations that could be g ven to! M-ss Coimns says that she prevent show the value of honest invest ga-1 1 1 Mls- R""vc-lt and Mi l Bryce tiens j f,om actually unveiling the -statue, Wlckcivliuiii Again ' "nd thl; b' " loin8 excited -Mr. "I am surprised." says ' Attorney : i:""M've,t's v rath General Wlckersham. "that ihe bus!- n 'ss men of this country have not taken more advantage nf that section of the law which permits the collec- t'on of three fold damatres when thevi have been injured by a trust. That I 'ad,,s thi,t P-'seveR was behind section is a powerful lever, and would! ,!,e ,tl"U',l of the brewers, who deny make those who are illegally organ- I evrr l,:li(I l:er any sum of mon- ized have more respect for the law"je-v- Likewise, the people are surprised that Mr. Wickershnm, as .vtorneyj A veteran of the civ'l war, having does not take advantage of the law I received from the government a new which makes it possible to send guilty j cork leg in place of the one lost in trut magnates to jail. They believe j l i ttle, perpetrated thi- witticism in it would be an oven more "powerful I h s letter of thanks: lever." A Starving Industry. The woolen trust is the most insist ent of all the trusts for a high tariff. This trust still (alls it e'f an 'Infant industry." and Its agents told the ways and means committee that the trust would starve to death if the tar iff were taken from wool. At Boston, on October lfi. William Wood, pro Idem of the woolen trust, was a witness in a suit filed against him hv .i man whom !u hi.l L- niil.-i1 down and run over. The judge ask ,'d Wood how owned many -sutomobiles "I don't know." Wood replied. "How many chauffeurs do you cm ploy," asked the court. "I never tried to keep track of them," the wool magnate replied. Imagine a man so rich that he can't keep track of the number otautomo biles lie owns! Then reflect on how many of the workingmen who are forced to purchase Mr. Wood's pro-j tected products are unable to keep' track of the number of woolen suits they or their children own. i Protection lcls I Vrclgners. The Stanley steel investigating committee has niada public tho ex port prices of steel trust products. This is a very important piece of news Inasmuch as it shows great differences in prices In favor of foreigners, and therefore, probably will result in a great reduction, if not the removal, of the tariff on steel. The figures show that the trust charges American consumers $32.97 per gross ton for steel plates, while supplying the Identical article to for eigners for $29.0-1. The unprotected foreigner thus receives an advantage of $3 96 over the protected American consumer. The advantage given the foreigner In steel rails is $3.84 per ton; in tin plate, $12.54, and in -structural steel, $4.50. Query: If the steel trust sells Its products cheaper to foreign than to home consumers, who is the actual beneficiary of the .Vmeriean protec tive system? The foreigner or tha home consumer? Morgan Crowd Wanted Hughes. In a recent speech in New York, O. W. Perkins, former partner of J. P. Morgan, said that Governor Hughes was put forward in 1908 by Wall street to represent the republi can party's position on the trust question, ami that Governor Hughes in a speech at Youngstown, O., con struod the republican promise to amend the anti-trust law as follows: "In our progress v. e , must avoid false steps. Ours mu t be the rule of reason," etc. Congress refused to legalize "rea sonable" or any other kind of trusts, a i Governor Hughes was put on the supreme bench and helped twist the law to make it conform to the trust idea of what the republican promise meant. Add to Mr. Perkins' significant re mat k, the further fact that Hughes bitterly opposed an income tax, and his qualifications as a Taft choice for tlie KUpreme bench become readily apparent. Soft for Reef Trust. Ed C. Lasater. president of t he Texas Cattle lia wers' association, says that 300 per cent profits disap pear oinewhere between the pro ducers and consumers of beef; that prices paid producers are decreasing, while prices extorted from consum ers are going up. He proposes to find out who gets the-e fat profits. No confidence Is violated in the statement that suspects the beef ti ust. JILTED; WANTS TO GET $50,000. Chorus Man Sues Wealthy Girl I'or Li-caking Engagement to Him, Xeiy York. Testifying that " Miss Helen Woodruff Smith kissed his eyes as a token of affection and that "I. K." in her letters was a code signal for "kiss eyes," Russell G. Griswold "pent a reminiscent hour on the wit- to do so. "When she first met me she used to love to kiss my eyes," explained the plaintiff, who is blond and 28 years old. use 'I. K. "Afterward we decided to in letters as a code word, meaning 'kiss eyes.' She meant she was kissing my eyes again. "Thine, fondly and foolishly, yours jn the great eternal heaven, Helen," Js the ending of one letter read in court. woman m.Arf;s roosevelt. Phoebe Coii.'iis Says lie Ha Allow ance Stopped tn Spite Her, Washington. Mits Phoebe Couz ilis, lecturer, uifrape'.te and law yer, whose povi rty recently ha excit ed attention, places the responsibil ity for her "wrongs" upon the "vin dictive disposition" of Theodore Roosevelt. She says that she aroused h;s anlmo-i y in the latter days of his second a 1 min'sts ation by a letter to Mrs. Roosevelt anent the intentions of the president's wife to join with Mrs. .lames I'.ryce. wife of the British am bassador, in making an American 111 ',un"'- J;,"s' "lss couzins says. her allowance was cut off by the I'nited Sta'es Brewers' as-ociaiion. of which Adolphu Ruseh of St. Louis, a t'i';end oX her failier is head and front, " "T is sweet for what I have pincott's. to be done." re-membered October Lip- NO I0RE MISERY IH THE STOMACH ' MI;1 :sl IO. GAS. HEART. 151 UN OR DYSPEPSIA VANISH Five Minutes After Taking a Little Dlapep'-lii Your Stomach Will Feel Fine Attain ljit Your Favorite Foods Without I 'car of Distress. If what you ate is souring on your stomach or lies like a lump of lead, refusing to digest or you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food, or have a feeling of dizziness, heartburn. fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and stomach headache this is indi gestion. A full case of Tape's Diapepsin costs only 50 cents and will thor oughly cure your out of order stom ach, and leave sufficient about the house in case some one else in the family may suffer from stomach trouble or indigestion. sk your pharmacist to show you the formula plainly printed on these r .i ...,. , . l : 1 1 i 50 cent cases, then you will under stand why dyspeptic trouble of all kinds must go. and why Diapepsin al ways relieves sour, out of order stom achs or indigestion in five minutes, Diapepsin is harmless and tastes like candy, though each dose contains power sufficient Vo digest and pre pare for assimilation into the blood all the food you may eat; besides, it makes you co to tho table with a heal thy appetite; but. what will please you most is that you will feel that your stomach and intestines are clean and fresh, nnd you will not need to restort to laxatives r: liver pills for biliousness or constipation. This city will have many Diapepsin rauks, as some people will call them, but you will be cranky about this splendid stomach preparation, to. if you ever try a little for indigestion or gastritis or any other stomach mis ery. Get some Rape's Diapepsin now, this minute, and forever rid yourself of stomach trouble and Indigestion. II Want WANTED. WANTED SALESMEN for exclusive territory. Big opportunities. No experience necessary Complete linj Yakima Valley grown fruit, shade and ornamental stock. Cash week ly. Outfit free. Toppenlsh Nurs ery Company, Toppenlsh, Wash. WANTED Lace curtains to laundry. Work done with especial care. Phone Red 2521. SUBSCRIBERS TO MAGAZINES, IF you want to subscribe to maganlzes or newspapers In the United States r Europe, remit by postal note, check, or send to the EAST ORE GONIAX the net publisher's price of the publication you desire, and we will have It sent you. It will save you both trouble and risk. If you are a subscriber to the EAST OREGONIAN, In remitting you can deduct ten per cent from the pub lisher's price. Address, EAST OREGONIAN PUB. CO , Pendleton, Oregon. INSURANCE AND LAND BUSINESS HARTMAN ABSTRACT CO., MAKES reliable abstracts of title to all lands In Umatilla county. Loans on city an farm property. Buys and sells all kinds of real estate. Does a general brokerage business. Pays taxes and makes investments for non residents. Write fire, life and acci dent insurance. References, . any bank in Pendleton. . JAMES JOHNS, Pres. C. H. MARSH. Sec. BENTLEY & LEFFIXGWELL, REAL estate, fire, life and accident Insur ance agents. New location, 815 Main street. Phone Main 404. LIVERY AND FEED STABLE. CITY LIVERY STABLE, THOMPSON street, Carney & Bradley, Props. Livery, feed and sale stable. Good tigs at all times. Cab line in connec tion. "Phone main 70. M ISCELLAN EOCS. LEGAL BLANKS OF EVERY DE- scriotion for county court, circuit i court, justice court, real estate, etc., for sale at East Oregonian office. mi . TTT7 the u...... ., , vacant territory yet in every state j ps' rh Mal" west of the Mississippi, Cash week- c -v LsSEV, M D V GR DU ly. Capital City Nursery Co., Sa-, . , McKmlu yeterinarv College lem, Ore. ENGRAVED CARDS, INVITATIONS wedding announcements, embossed piivate and business stationery, etc. Very latest styles. Call at East Ore - gonian office and see samples. . - - FRATERNAL ORDERS. PENDLETON LODGE No. 52iT4,f, , . -.r . . J-VMC.S A. A. r. UIIU .-V. jAl.t IHV first and third Mondays of each month. All visiting brethren are Invited. DAMON LODGE NO. K. of P., meets every Mon- day evening in I. O. O. F. hall. Visiting brothers cor - diallv Invited to attend. J W. Malonev, C. K. R. S. C; R. W. Fletcher, ARCHITECTS, CONTRACTORS, ETC : D. A. MAY. CONTRACTOR AND Builder. Estimates furnished on all'rjefpain building, kinds of masonry, cement walks, j : stone walls, etc. Phone black 37S8 or Oregonian office. ROWLAND & REINEMAX, ENGI neers Land surveying, water meas- urements;relnforced concrete work; tcr. Ore. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. JOHN S. BAKER, FUNERAL DI- rector and licensed embalmer. Opposite postoffice. Funeral parlor, Two funeral cars. Calls responded to day or night. Phone main 75. AUCTIONEER. COL F. G. LUCAS. LIVESTOCK Auctioneer, Athena, Oregon. Ref erence First National Bank of Athena and Farmers Bank of Weston. Farm sales a specialty, SECOND-HAND DEALERS. NEV 'V. STROBLE, DEALER IN and second-hand goods. Cash paid for nil second-hand goods bought. 1 PI. nn. 1 .. l Trt .1trt , I. , . .. Cheapest place in Pendleton to buyi household goods. Call and get his prices. 210 E. Court street. Phone; Black 3171. RESTAURANTS. CHINA RESTAURANT. NOODLES I and chop suey. Ung D. Goey, prop. At the old stand, Alta street In rear , of Tollman Drug Co. East Oregonian by carrier. 65c per month. CHOP SUEY HOUSE. SUNG HOEY Low, Prop. Phone Main 667. 622 Cottonwood street. Our specialties: Noodles and Chop Suey. Tray or ders promptly delivered. Auto Wreck Kills I.aidlaw. Waitsburg, Wash. J. D. Laidlaw, one of the prom'nenT men of this community, was so badly injured in an automobile accident one and a half miles below Prescott, that he died about five minutes after he waa brought borne three hours later. A(.S. WANTED Continued. HAIR DRESSING AND SHAMPOO ing, switches, topees, wigs and puffs, made to order. A nice 11b for sale. Madam Kennedy, 607 X. Court street. Phone, Red 3752. LEGAL. BLANKS of every descrip tion for country court, circuit soui Justice court, real estate, etc., rtw Sale at East Oregonian office. FOR RENT. FOR RENT Unfurnished housekeep. Ing rooms in East Oregonian bully ing. Steam heat, gas range 1 kitchen, electric lights, hot and cold water and bath. Recently, renovated. Enquire at E. O. office. UNFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPIN3. rooms in East Oregonian building. Steam heat, gas range In kltcherx, electric lights, hot and cold water and bath. Recently renovated. Est qutre at E. O. : & PHYSICIANS. H. S. GARFIELD, M D., HOMEO pathic physician and surgeon. Of--fice Judd block. Telephone: Office, black 3411; residence, red 2633. DR. LYNN K. BLAKESLEE, CHRO nic and nervous diseases, and dis eases of women. X-ray and Electro theraputic8. Judd building, corner Main and Court streets. Office 'phon Main 72; residence 'phone, Main 554. SUGGESTIVE THERAPEUTICS. DR. Brundage is a graduate of the Weltmer Methods of Suggestive Therapeutics. Every known dis ease cured without drugs or sur gery. Examination and first treat ment Free. Temple Bldg, Room 8 and 9. Hours. 8 a. m to 9 p. m. DENTISTS. DR. THOMAS VAUGHAX, DENTIST. Office In Judd building. Phone, Main 73. VETERINARY SURGEONS. i DR n c m'XABB. LOCAL STATB Stock Inspector. Office at Koep Phone Main 415. f'en's Drug Store Residence, 915 East Court street. ! of Chicago. Office phone Main 8t. Res. 516 Bush St., phone Main 27. : j ATTORNEYS. ; RALEY & RALEY, ATTORNEYS AT ! law. Office In Amertnnn VntlnnaA ! Bank Building. FEE, ATTORNEY AT law. Office In Despaln building. R. J. SLATER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in Despain building. i CARTER & SMYTHE, ATT0RXEY3 j at lay- Office In rear of Americas , : National Bank building. JAMES B. PERRY, ATTORNEY AT law. Office over Taylor Hardware Company. ! LOWELL & WINTER. ATTOHVETH l Ami eonsntlor nt law nfflr, In GEORGE W. COUTTS, ATTORNEY at law, estates settled, wills, deeds, mortgages and contracts drawn. Col lections made. Room 17, Schmidt : . , . ' PETERSON & WILSON, ATTOR . 1 neys at law; rooms 3 and 4 Smith i Crawford building. , FREDERICK STE1WER, ATTORNEY at law. Office in Smith-Crawford j building. . DOUGLAS W. BAILEY ATTORNEY j at law. Will practice In all state . !and federal courts. Rooms 1, 2. S, and 4, over Taylor Hardware Co. . JOHNSON & SKRABLE, no"s flt ""v- Office In building. ATTOR Despaln. Unfurnished housekeeping rooms ,lti East Oregonian building. Steam ti.!i t pn. rnntra In Ultr-hAti nlantrl uKhts. hot and cold water and bath. -. - . , r- - -- r- v- --- ..., - : Recentiy renovated. Enquire at E. O L Pi fur iinn:-jrs linttun or til rAtiuu of Diuconi njeintri: . p....,u. n i , rMlEVMSCMMiCUCO. tnt or potr.noui. " " . ClKCHHATl.O.pT Sold by DraiflitA Directory sda-,fciijiv.'-tAAvdtI --( UuniM U IS1 or wnt In plftiL rH.r, tT ivreni, pn.pmd, for 1.00. t. bottle r, 75. Clxvulftf tout vu rid?t