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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 4, 1910)
V PA OK EIGHT. ' DAILY EAST OREOONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON, FKIDAT, FEBRUARY 4, 1910. EIGHT PAGES. inventory on For 1 0 days we will offer per cent, off no UVINO MADE CHEAPER FOX TOU MT THIS- ING AT THE Standard Grocery Co. 2 1 4-2 1 6 East Court St. Leading'Grocers. MANY NEW. BOOKS MOST OF SHIPMENT works ox fictcon I-atost Acquisitions Will be on Dis play This Afternoon and Ready for Circulation Tomorrow List of New Ones. Another shipment of new books has been received at the public library and they are now on display. There are 61 volumes in the shipment, 50 of fiction, one of essays and ten for children. The book? will be on display this afternoon and tomorrow afternoon and will be ready for circulation to morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. Tin' following is the list of books with the name of the author preceed ing each : Allen Reign of Law. Peach Spoilers. Burnham Quest Flower. Chester Making of Bobby Eurnit. Vnnor Foreigner. Crawford Stradella. Crawford White Sisters. Cutting Little Stories of Married Life. De La Pasture Lonely Lady of Orosvenor Square. Dillon Rose of Old f-"t. Louis. Doyle Hound of the Bnskervilles. Eggl.ston Irene of the Mountains. Fox Knight of the Cumberland. Fox Trail of the Lonesome Pine. 2d copy. Freeman Portion of Labor. French Rjuvination of Aunt Mary. Glasgow Voice of the Peoplt Garland Captain of the Gray Horse Troop. Garland Moccasin Ranch. Green Mayor's Wife. Green.' Cape Cod Folks. Hall Land of Ixng Ago. Kingsley Glass House. . London Sea-Wolf. Lynde Empire Builders. MacGowan Wiving of Lance Ckaverage. Major Gentle Knight of Old Brandenburg. Mason Running Water. Merriman Vultures. Merwin Road Builders. Parker Pierre and His People. Post Title Market. Reed Master's Violin. Reed Spinner kn the Sun. Reed Spinster Book. Rinehart When a Man Marries. Rives Hearts Courageous. Smith At Close Range. Smith Forty Minutes Late. Tarkigton Beasley's Christmas Party. Thurston The Circle. Thurston The Gambler. , Ward Lady Rose's Daughter. Warren Peter Peter. White Arizona Knights. Whiter Claim Jumpers. Vv'iggin Cathedral Courtship. Williamson The Chaperon. Zangsweli Children of the Ghetto. Seawell Children of Destiny. Van Dyke Little Rivers. Essays. Juvenile. Altsheler Free Rangers. Barbour Wetherby's Inning. Bannerman Little Black Sambo. Curtis Grandpa's Little Girls. DuEois Lass of thellver Sword. Ewlng Jackanx.pes. j ... CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. Tti8 Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Just Received Complete Line of Heinz Goods Hew, Fresh and Delicious SWEET, SOTO. AND DILI PICKLES AND CHOW-CnOW IN BCLK. ALL KINDS OP PICKLES. PRESERVES, RELISHES, SAUCES AND VLNEGAR IN BOTTLES. Phone in your orders to Main 37 Ingrams Grocery Saie Groceries everything in our store at I Martin Letitla. I Tomllnson Young Rangers. j Whitney Faith Gitney's Girlhood. Wiggin Penelope'8 Progress. Children's Hour. i Mrs. Mary Lane will tell the storv to the children during the story hour tomorrow afternoon at the library. This department of the library is be coming so popular thnt the smif 1 room which has heretofore been used for that purpose is no longer huequate to hold the crowd of youngsters. The hour commences at 10 o'clock. WALLA WALLA STILL HAS HF.R GRAVEYARD TROCHLEAS Walla Walla. Wash.. Feb. 3. The passing by the city council of an or dinance that authorizes the mayor and city clerk to enter into contract for the purchase' of land to enlarge the cemetery did not settle the matter as had been hoped by those interest ed in the matter, and today injunc tion proceedings are threatened to stop the purchase of the land. The trouble has brewed .among property owners whose land will then adjoin tlie cemetery, and who do not relish living next to a graveyard. The city is hard pressed for burial space, and there is room for but few graves to be dug in the oid tract, which has served since the town was first started. Realizing that a pur-, chase must be made to enlarge the burying ground, the city made a deal with Mrs. Henrietta. Stone, who agreed to sell .IS acres adjoining the pres ent plot for tSOO an acre. This suit ed the city, but th se residents who live adjoining the Stone traet vigor ously protested. They entered peti tions before the council. but these were ttr neii Ylown. Now they threat en ro start injunction proceedings.. LONG COURT TERM PROVES EXPENSIVE Umatilla county's expenses for the first month of the year 1910 amount ed to $6,.u5.47. Of this sum $4000 was due to the long term of court. The total amount of money paid out dllrin(T tha month hv tho (.nilntt- u-oe I IT lei Sr v.... .... n n "? n o t.t i,-ioo.-ti, it u l a fjii.io ui Litis ex pense was incurred In the trial of the Erhart case from Morrow county, that amount of money will be paid back. This case was the most expensive of any tried at this term of court and next to that was the Arnold murder trial. While the trial of the Erhart case in this county made it expensive for Morrow county to bring her witnesses here, it probably did not cost any more than had it been tried in Hepp ner. This was due to the fact that every resident of Morrow county knew of the particulars of the case, knew the previous reputation of the man on trial and it would have been next to impossible to have secured a jury to try the man there. It was for this season that, when the attorney for the defendant requested a chmngn of ven us to Umatilla county, the move was ..ot resisted. .Mine Workers Can't .gr.f. Toledo. Feb. 4. Representatives of the United Mine Workers of America and of the mine workers of the mid dle and eastern states spent most of the day In an argument upon whether the question at issue In Illinois should be settled by them without Illinois operators being represented. Owing to a difference of opinion between the workers and employers little progress has been made in the actual business of the conference for the adjudica tion of differences. sa B. Thomson, chairman of the republican county central committee, returned to his home near Echo this morning, after transacting business in Pendleton. PERSONAL MENTION W. H. Lyday came down yesterday from his home at Gurdane. Fred Snyder came down from Wal l.i Walla yesterday afternoon. K. V. ChenoweUi of Barnhart, is a Pendleton business visitor today. Frank Hilbert returned yesterday from a business visit to the Garden City. Mrs. Clarke Nelson has returned from a visit of several days In Port land. George Clay, the Vansycle farmer, has been in town today upon a busi ness trip. Dr. W. G. Cole left for the west end of the county this morning on a pro fessional trip. Hiestand Moore of Echo, is among the Pendleton visitors from the west end of the county. W. R. Taylor and wife came down From Athena this morning and are spending tho day here. Mrs. R. W. Goodman and Mrs. L. MoClellan of North Yakima, are reg istered at the Hotel Bowman, home at Echo for the transaction of home at Echo for thetransactlon of business at the county seat. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. MaoWhorter and son, came in yesterday afternoon from their home In Pilot Rock. Walter and Ralph Wagner of Pilot Rock, were in the city yesterday af ternoon, returning home today. Roy Kirkley, the traveling man, was an incoming passenger , on last evening's train from Walla Walla. Theodore Howard, the architect, returned last evening from a business visit of a few days in Walia Walla. William Slusher left this morning for his sheep ranch at Xolin. He says they will begin lambing next month. Harry Rurford, a well-known, young man of Walla Walla, passed through T'?idi"tou last evening on his way east. .1. W. Fox. the well known Walla Walla real estate man, is over from that city today or the transaction of business. . M. L. Hawkins, the Helix merch ant, came in from that place this forenoon and is transacting business here today. Attorney It It. Johnson went to Hermiston this morning to transact legal business, expecting to return this evening. K. .1. Drown, traveling represetita :Te for the Pacific Coast Paper com p 'ny. is iii the city today on business or 'ais company. I'r. Jl. S. K. in. president of the In land Lumber company, went to Stan-fi- Id on the morning train to look af ter his business interests there. I PRESIDENT LEWIS SAYS ! TROUBLE NOT EXPECTED Toledo. Feb. 3. Hope of amicable adjustment was expressed by. Thomas L. Lewis, president of the miners, when acting as temporary chairman of the joint wage scale conference of the operators and miners of Ohio, In diana and Pennsylvania district, wh'ch opened today. John II. Jones, president of the Pittsburg-Buffalo Coal company, and one of the principal operators pres ent, expressed a belief that a peace able agreement would be reached. After a disposition of preliminary business, the conference adjourned until tomorrow morn ng, to await the report of the credentials committee, which deadlocked on admitting 111 i nois miners in the absence of Illinois operators. President Lewis said that, when miners and operators get "together to uplift the industry, there wlil be less risk to Investment and more safety for the workmen. He said that a de mand should be made of the railroads that they pay mine owners more mon ey for coal they consume, that the latter might spend more money for the protection of their employes. HOSPITAL FAILS INTO A YAWNING ABYSS Vienna, Austria. A terrible acci dent Is repbrtcd from the mining vil lake of Raibl, in the Carso mountains, lliyria. Owing apparently to tho working of an underground stream an :! s n!''eri'v opened in the village and swallowed up a hospital estab lished for the m ners. The doctor in charge of the hospital his wife, child and five attendants were precipitated into the chasm, which was at once filled with a swirl ing flood of water and mud. At tempts at resrue would have been hopeless and the eight unfortunates uuickly succumbed. PRESIDENT SCHURMAN ON HIGH COST OF LIVING Waleitown, N. Y. As an explana tion of increasing cost of living, Pres ident J. G. Schurman of Cornell Uni versity declared before the New York j state grange here that the consump- j lion of farm products Is outrunning their production. President Schur man said: "Tho population of the country Is increasing. The consumption of farm products Is outrunning their produc tion and, as our unoccupied lands are exhausted, it Is costing more to pro duce articles of food than formerly. "Look, for example, at beef. Cat tle formerly were produced In vast numbers and at a comparatively small cost, on great ranches. These ranch es, however, have been taken up by homesteaders. Ranching Is, therefore rapidly becoming a thing of the past. More and more, in the future, cattle will be supplied to the market from smail herds owned by farmers. And meanwhile, we stand between the era of ranching, which Is passing away and the era of stock raising on farms, which is not adequately developed to meet the needs of our increasing pop luatlon." Mr. Schurmann then presented tta- tlstles showing the decline In the num ber of cattle and sw.ne In this coun try In 1909. , Ho asked: ."Is It surprising that tho price of beef cattle, on the farm has Increased In. these months 11 per ment or the price of hogs 40 per cent?" LORD. IIODXKV GETS PEXSIOX OF $10,000 Loudon. There are many peers who are receiving pens'ons granted by special acts of parl'ament to the predecessors for great naval or mili tary service, and the latest to succeed to a hereditary pension of this kind Is Lord Rodney, a youth of 18, whose father died recently at a comparative ly early age. The pension, which takes the form of an annuity of $10 000, was granted In tile reign of George III to the great naval commander, Admiral George Rodney, for the services ho rendered to his country by defeating the French fleet commanded by the Comte de Grasse in 1782. Tho act of parliament made it clear thnt It was to be paid to every male heir until tho Rodneys became extinct, so that it may go on for many years to come. It has already been paid for a hun dred and twenty-seven years. Other peers who enjoy pensions of $10,000 for services rendered by their predecessors are Lord Rag an, Lord Seaton, Viscount Gough and Lord Napier of Magdala. Viscount Hard ings draws a pension of $15,000, but all these pensions will cease on the death of the present holders. DY1XG STATEMENT IS OXE OF BUTCH 1 TRY Waterbury. Con. In the trial of Sophie Kritchman for the murder of Bronlslow Kulvinskas, the court ad mitted as evidence the dying declar ation of the murdered man. The statement follows: "On Friday, September 17. Sophie Kritchman, at whose mother's home I boarded, asked me to take a walk with her In the country. When we arrived at the spot In tho woods she told me to lav down, and she said: 'X will cover your face with a hand kerchief and go and sec who Is com ing." A minute later she said: 'Damn you. i am going to kill you.' Then she s': i; me five times. At S o'clock Friday afternoon she came back and cut my throat. "On Saturdii. ' came back and threw a stone at me. Then Joe Mitchell shot me in the head. Bron lslow Kulvinskas." I Mitchell is sai 1 to be the girl's ac l complice. ISRXZll. GETS WARSHIP. j Ii-t-alnouglit Built in England llan.l : ed Over to the Republic. j London. The largest and tuot j ib avily armed battlesh'p in comm's ' on in th,. woii. I. the Miles Geraes, has been handed over on the Tyne by j M-ssrs. Armstrong. Whitworth & Co.. ! to the Brazilian navy, for whom she : lias been built. I The Minas Geraes is a battleship of the most up to date Dreadnought type j ami displaces lfl.SOO toils Her speed is 21 1-4 kn ts. and her main I armament consists of twelve 12-inch guns, with twenty-two 4.7 and eight smaller guns as secondary armament. Her length over all is 543 feet, and her beam 83 feet. Compared with the British Dreadnought Superb, al so built at Eiswick, her displacement Is nearly a thousand tons greater, and she has two more 12-Inch 'gung ar ranged to fire four more guns to the broadside, while her secondary ar mament is very much greater. PRINCESS TO COMPROMISE. Considers Offer of Prince Riispoli to Rny Itnck Ncm Cnstlc. Rome. Princess Enrico Ruspoll (nee Berry of Oakhill, Ga.) has re ferred to her lawyers the offer made by her brother-in-law, Prince Um berto Kuspoil. that she take the whole or part of the sum paid by her hus. band for the castle of Nemi as mon ey borrowed from her. Meanwhile the step thus taken by Prince Umberto Ruspoll Is not re garded as a favorable indication of his case, the deduction being made that if he felt sure of being In the right he would certainly not be dis posed to make such an offer. What the prince offers Is the original cost of the estate about $40,000 while the princess spent on it about $100 000 In Improvements which more than quadrupled the vaiue of the property. Mr. Berry, Princess Enrico's broth er, has arrived In Rome and Is help ing his sister in every way possible. ALBANY MAN HINDS AURORA ItOREALIS REPLICA ON ROCK Albany, Ore. J. G. Crawford of th's city, has found a quartz bearing rock In which Is Imbedded a petrified veg etable growth displaying a perfect repbea of tho aurora borealls. No quartzite algae like this has ever before been found. The polish ed sto'e .censures nbout two and one half Inches long and is thought by many to be of rare value. Roosevelt may become so habituat ed to shooting elephants that he can't refrain from firing some shots at the fi. o. P. on his return. Comets may come and go, but we can always depend on Miss Venus. Any de rangement of the stomach CELEBRATED'iffects t h e "S STOMACH U' whole system BITTERS' o f digestion nd assimila tion. There fore keep the t o m a e Ii healthy with It he Bitters and thus pre vent Indigestion A The XFOEUD FOR THE LADIES Busy Boston Store HOPPE WINS ANOTHER FROM MORNTNGSTAU Pittsburg. Feb. 4. Willie Hoppe ran up a second block of BOO points last n'ght In his 1S00 point champion ship 18 2 balk line billiard match with Ora, Mornlngstar, but the latter was close on his heels with 4 96. The to tal score how stands: Hoppe. 1000; Mornlngstar 807. The contest was one of the sharp est and most brllllnnt ever seen In this city. Hoppe ran out his 500 In 19 innings for an average of 26 6-19, while Mornlngstar's 495 was made In IS innings with an average of 27 !-lX. Mornlngstar caught the gal lery with a marvelous masse which was nob morixspeetarulnr than n bril 1 ait two la'! masse turned ,,ut by Hoppe. In the first half of the 14th inning Hoppe t "Ulo I I'f and followed this with rM. which put h'm out in front. Morn'tigstar cam., back In the fif teenth with S3 and had a f ne c hance to run out his string n his 17th turn. However, he missed an easy shot af ter K-ftini? away with a number of hard caroms. Hoppe made only one I ' lnt : m the Kith to th- ISth In n'ngs. inclusive, but ran off hs re quired 53 in the 19th, and the balls I were left in fine position for the start tomorrow n'ght. The score: Hoppe 4.-,, 2, 4. 3. 0.0, 15. 15. IB, 111. 4. 10. 1. 99, 91. 1. 0, 0, 53500; average 20 fi-19: high runs 111. 99, 91 Morning.-tar 113. 2ft. 25. 7, 0, 3, 22. 27. 2. 6S. 0. 7. S3. 4. 4", 0 4'jr.; average high rims 113, 83, 6S. WIMOM liOXER PUTS ' IT OVER DANNY WEBSTER Portland. re.. Feb. 4, Frankle Conley of Kenosha. Wis., had all the better of a 10-round "no decision" boxing contest here last night. It was Conley's first appearance on the Pits1 COPVHIOMT. v-'WStsEJ.-"1 HERE'S A PROPOSITION FOR A GOOD HOME tinol cash er $560 cash and 'h or 3d0 cash and 100 monthly payments of $140 each, or 1360 -a nni 120 monthly payments of $13.21 ecb. MARK MOORHOUSE CO. Tel. Main 83. Books! Books! AH the Latest and Most Popular We Keep MAGAZINES, PERIODICALS. SCHOOL BOOKS, COOK BOOKS, SHEET MUSIC, TALKING MACHINES niul RECORDS, OFFICE SUPPLIES OF ALL. KINDS NELSON'S New Pacific coast and he proved a great surprise to the immense crowd whlcfc witnessed the contest. As a defcnsly and brighter Conley Is a marvel, and only Webster's superior footwork and ability to duck saved him from a pos sible knockout. In but two round the first and sixth, did the Los An geles fighter have an even break wftk his opponent. Conley's blocking wu a revelation. In the second round Conley landed a terrific left uppercut to Webster's mouth, knocking ut a. tooth, and in the third he put Web ster to the mat with a terrific right over the heart. In tho sixth Webster made his best showing, sending In a number of good lefts to the head and rights to the body, but he was un able to do any serious damage, tha Kenosha boy com'ng back with a se ries of hard body blows toward the end of the round. Conley has challenged Monto At t.dl for a long distance fight before s inie of the California clubs and majr lie matched for another and longer fight with his opponent of ton ght I'.n O'Brien of Portland knocked out Charles R iyl of Oakland In th third round of a six round contest. A bet on the outcome of the Her mann trial would be rather safe. ;.. !..t ,.V- L-w. 8 ..... .. t ;."asiawj,7 V ALFALFA Fancy Graded Oir-lol Qunntltic BL.M.OCK FRUIT CO., Phone 4SS. Walla Walla, Wn. Daring the "Fireside Season ft you feel the need of heavier clothlag yet hesitate to purchase Win tor weight. Not necessary send lajrt Spring's suit here for renovation cleaning and pressing and we'll pat it In shape to wear and please yoor eyes however critical you may be. Pendleton Dye Works 206 V4 E. Alta St. Phone Maine It ON EASY PAYMENTS. 86 monthly payments of $13.21 120 K. Court Stories by the best authors The Big Sellers of Today $1.50 Each. Reprints 75c PHONE Main 513 Stomach Ilia, j