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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1910)
OCT ' t PAGE EIGHT. DAILY EAST OREGONIAJO PENDLETON, OREGON, TtlESrjAV, MARCH 8, 1910. EIGHT PAGES. Are Yon Living Too High? If jM let us supply you with yourtable necessities.' We will give you just asrgood, if not better, than you are now getting, but you'll find our price much lower . Live the same but pay less, at the Standard Grocery Co. 214-216 East Court St. Leading'Grocers. LAMBING SEASON YOU CAN NOW SEND IS INjULL SWING LETTERSjY WIRE SCTHBER OF SHEEP TEIJEGRAPH COMPANY INCREASING RAPIDLY . ADOPTS NEW PLAN Conditions In County Very Favorable in Order to Keep Wires Busy at Night for Successful Season Ewes Come Through Winter In Good Shape, The lambing season is now well started In Umatilla county and the number of sheep in the county is be lny dally Increased by the hundreds. A few days more and the season will be at its height. According to the sheepmen in the city today the -conditions are most favorable for a successful season and all are looking for a large percentage of increase. The most of them are counting on at least 90 per cent while others expect more. Among those who are lambing at present are the J. E. Smith company, and William Slusher of Barnhart and Nolin; Joseph Cuhna of Echo: Robert Stanfield of Butter creek, the Cun ningham Sheep ft Land company of Pilot Rock, and Dan P. Smythe at Arlington. Reports from the lambing camps of each of these are very sat isfactory. It seems that despite the hard win ter that the ewes came through In the best condition. The lambs are therefore well formed and healthy and since the snow disappeared with the pnmmpiirpnipnt nf the lamblns season the mothers are able to get plenty of grass and furnish a good milk supply DR. E. HILL GOES TO WATTSBCRG TO LIVE Dr. E. Hill, who for some time has been located at Pendleton, Oregon, passed through Walla Walla this week on his way to Waltsburg, where he expects to locate. Dr. Hill was one of the star football players on the Washburn College team at Topeka, Kansas, and it Is possible that the Waltsburg boys will be able to Induce him to coach their eleven this com ing season. Walla Walla Bulletin. For once, at leant in Its life Phila delphia Isn't quiet. YOU CAN CURE THAT BACKACHE. Pill along the hack, dlsalneea, headacb ni geaeral languor. Get a package of Mother erar's AUSTRALIAN-LEAF, tke sleasaat root aal barb care for all Kidney, Bladder and Urinary troubles. Wbea too c'feel ran down, tlrad. weak and without energy nee this remarkable combination of aatara'a herbs aad roots. As a regulator It baa no equal. Mother Gray's Aostrallan. Leaf Is sold by Druggists or eent by mall for 5c. sample sent FnKl. Address The Mother Gray Co., Le Roy, N. Y. PERSONAL MENTION TETRAZZINA COLLAPSES AFTER MAD SCENE Decides to Allow Fifty Word Letter to be Sent at Same Rate of Present 10 Word Message. The telegram letter service of the Western Union Is now In effect and available for use by resident of Pen dleton, according to instructions Just received by Local Manager George Gillette. According to this lnovatlon a fiftv word letter will be handled at night under the same rates and con ditlons that a ten word message Is now handled by day rates. The purpose of this plan Is to se-1 cure business for the Idle wires of the company at night At present the wires are practically unused after midnight and It Is necessary for the company to keep Jts men on duty without having enough to keep them busy. The new plan provides that the letters may be filed any time dur ing the day or evening but they will not be sent until the day work Is all off the fires. Then they will be de livered the next morning by messen ger or mall. The rules specify that the "night letters" must be written on forms pro vided for that purpose, that they must be written In plain English and not In code or any foreign language. The rate charged will be the same for a 50-word or less, letter as for a ten word message by day rate and for each additional ten words after tht fifty Is reached, a charge of one-fifth this rate will be charged. For instance between points where the rate Is 25 cents for ten words, the rate for the 50-word "night letter" will be 25 cents and for 60 words, It would be 30 cents. I KK TEUTSCH IS WITH WORKINGMEN'S CLOTHING CO. Lee Teutseh has associated himself with the Worklngmen's Clothing Co., of this city, and will be pleased to meet all his old friends at his new location. Having had years of ex perience In the mercantile field, he will undoubtedly prove a valuable help to Mr. Moses in the clothing and men's furnishings business conducted by him. , Mr. Teutseh has been with the O. R. & N. company for the past six months, at present holding the position of warehouse foreman, and expects to take up his new duties the last of this week. F. W. Statts of Echo, Is a Pendle ton business visitor. Mr. and Mrs. John Rust left this morning for Portland. s H. B. Burroughs of Stanfield, Is transacting business in Pendleton. Mrs. John H. French and son, Guy French, have been here today from Nye. E. L. Routh of Freowater, was a guest of the Hotel St. George last eve ning. ' . , H. , H. Trowbridge of Is.ee, Oregon, is looking after business Interests here. H. Bendix of the Eiler piano house, came In this morning from Walla Walla. J. M. Wise of the Wise piano house In Boise, is transacting business in Pendleton. Asa B. Thomson is In the city to day from his home In the west end of the .county. G. E. Townsend, the Condon hide and wool buyer, Is In the city today on business. John Harris of Weston, has return ed home after transacting business in Pendleton. O. D. Teel, the Echo irrlgatlonlst. returned to the west end of the coun ty this morning. D. D. Chamberlain t)f Athena pass ed through the city last evening en- route to Hot Lake. William Durr of Weston, returned home last evening after spending the day In Pendleton. E. B. Wood, special detective for the O. R. & N., Is In the city today in an official capacity. Postmaster H. G. Casteel of Pilot Rock, spent last night in the city, ac companied by Mrs. Casteel. Miss Ida Barnes of Weston, was the guest of Pendleton friends yesterday returning home last evening. W. P. Temple, the well-known grower of wheat, was a westbound passenger on the morning local. R. H. MacWorter, manager of the Interstate telephone company has been transacting business here today. Winn Stewart left this morning for the western part of the state after a brief business visit to Pendleton. L. ' C. Scharph, of the Pilot Rock lumber company, has been among those in town today from the Rock Mrs. E. Crowner of 615 . Willow street, who has been ill for some time, Is reported to be very low and not ex pected to live. Mrs. J. T. Brown, wife of Pendle ton's postmaster, has returned home from Portland where she had been for several weeks. E. W. Cross, the well-known brake man on the Umatilla Central, Is laid up at his home In this city with an attack of la grippe. Editor John P. McManus of the Pi lot Rock Record, returned home this morning after transacting business In Pendleton over night Mrs. D. C. McNabb went to Pilot Rock this morning where she will be the guest of Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Lieu alien for a few days. Gordon Menzies, the popular con ductor on the Pendleton-Walla Walla run of the O. R. & N., resumed his run again this morning after a layoff of a few weeks on account of Illness. Ben Harshberger and wife of San Bernardino, California, arrived In Pendleton last evening for a visit at the home of Mrs. Harshberger's aunt, Mrs. D. H. Hall of 315 West High street. C. E. Baker of Hermiston, spent last night In Pendleton, having arrived from Iowa, where he has been for a few weeks. Mrs. Baker will remain a month or two longer as the guest of relatives. (CNSHINE BLOOD PURIFIER p IV J Pll Be8t BIOOd Pnrfrler "nd AllcT- VSfc4i Csoful in all Impoverished conditions Lf V'J of the blood and as a general fejFPSsl 5y m jtzjJ tome. . Wv" "'T- Contain" Re1 Clover, Stilllngla, Ber- j "V ) ffiitK'ilfS berls Aqulfolium, Burdock Root 8 ) fj :-f'3tlB' Cascara Amarg , Prickley Ash J Bark, Poke Root and Iodide Potas- 0 jj nf ' Ask Your Doctor If This Is Not Good. CaiS- r. 3. DONALDSON, J"3) G Reliable Druggist ' New York, March 8. Madame Tet- razxlnu is confined to her room to day following a collapse last night just after she had finished the mad scene in "Lucia Di Lammermoor," at the Manhattan opera house. As the curtain dropped for the. last time the singer became hysterical, She had been ill for several days, and went on the stage against the doctor's orders. HUNDRED POLICEMEN GUARD CARUSO FROM BLACK HAND New York,. March 8. Nearly a hundred policemen guarded Caruso last night at the academy of music in Brooklyn. The police are taking extraordinary precautions to prevent Injury to the singer as a result of threats by black hand. . Caruso con tinues to defy the would-be black mailers. The police fear an outrage that would lead to an International entanglement PREACHER'S EVE BLACKED BY LAYMAN WITH PUNCH North Yakima- If Archdeacon Maurice J. Bywater of the Episcopal church appears before the congrega tion Sunday morning the somber cloth of the clergy will be augmented by a decoration under the eye, which In less dignified circles would be known as a "shanty." The Swiss sunset was painted be neath the good man's optic by Wil liam H. Hassell, a vestryman of St. Michael's, and a lay reader of some local repute. The trouble arose when the church man militant attached a shorter and uglier tribute to the vestryman's name. However, he displayed less adaptabil ity for fisticuffs than for the warfare which he has waged on evil from the pulpit and tool, the first count In the first round. The dispute seems to have been one over the back fence, resulting from a difference of opinion regarding prop erty lines between their neighboring homes. The archdeacon had Hassel arrest ed by the North Yakima police, but the latter secured his release on the ground that the row had occurred outside the city limits. Now Hassell has concluded that he bas suffered more damage from his blackened name than his neighbor of the cloth has from his discolored eye and threatens to call Archdeacon Bywater to account for humllitatlng him with arrest. YOCNG KNOX CANNOT WED. LID IS ON AT MILTON. So See Our Window-New Line of Heinz Goods New, Fresh and Delicious SWEET, SOUR AND DILL. PICKLES AND CHOW-CHOW IN BULK. ALL KINDS OF PICKLES, PRESERVES, RELISHES, SAUCES AND VINEGAR IN BOTTLES. Phone in your orders to Main 37 Ingrams Grocery "Bluo Laws" Enforced Sunday .That Everything Is Closed. Milton, Ore., March 7. Continued flagrant violation of the Sunday clos ing laws has resulted In a tight lid being put on Sunday trade. Last Sunday every confectionery and ci gar store In Milton and Freewater was closed. Drug stores were open, but sold little but drugs and medi cines. Consequently there were more people on the streets than uftial. Walla Wallans who came over and saw the crowds on the streets almost Invariably decided that Milton must be growing in Importance and busi ness activity. But when a question relative to getting a smoke was asked of a Miltonlte, the air was usually a bright blue for some seconds after ward. The general opinion seems to be that the lid won't stay down, and that ice cream and kindred sweets can soon be purchased as freely as here tofore. The storekeepers forced to close are threatening dire vengeance on the parties responsible for the action, and say they guess "it will turn out all right" in the end. Enjoyable Banquet Held. Milton, Ore., March 7. The Mod ern Woodmen of America and the Royal Neighbors had a grand meeting and banquet Saturday night A spe cial car came over from Walla Walla and waited till 11:16 to carry back the crowd from here. Believe Conspiracy Exists. San Francisco, Mar. 8. At the close yesterday of the investigation of the so-called fish combine, Sena tor Wolfe, chairman of the legislative Investigation committee, announced that the investigators were satisfied that a combination in restraint of trade exists and that sufficient evi dence has been gathered to Justify the attorney general of the state or tne district attorney of San Francisco to proceed against the members of the alleged trust under the anti-trust laws of California. , Secretary of State's Son Roams Land Seeking Marriage License Plattsburg, N. Y., March 8. After vainly trying for two days to obtain a marriage license and get soemone to perform the ceremony, Mlss May Boiler of Providence, R. I., and Phi lander C. Knox. Jr.. son of Secretary of State Knox, who ran away from the Rhode Island capital Friday, today passed through this city on their way . back to Providence. With the couple as guide and ad viser was James E. Gillen, a close friend of young; Knox, who ac companied the couple-when they left Providence. Mr. Gillen was a mem ber of Harvard, class of 1912, but left college in June of last year to accept a position In a woolen factory In Prov idence. There he met young Knox who Is under age, and a student In Morris Heights school, where he Is preparing to enter college this fall. The young couple went first to Montreal, and then tried various New York cities, but met failure every where because of youth. They may be successful in Connecticut or Vermont. CUT RATE S HOE SALE BOSTON STORE N. B.-We are holding a cut rate shoe sale at the very beginning of the spring season, we find we have been carrying too much stock for the coming demands, so to lower the volume we lower the prices. This Sale Continues all This Week LEDFORD CONTINUES TO HOLD INTERESTED CROWD (Contributed.) Evangelist Ledford took for his text a whole chapter at the Baptist church last night. He gave, an ex pository sermon from I John, first chapter, making this very important passabe of scripture plain and help, ful. He showed from it what God is willing to do for the Christian man or woman. Every man has sinned, God flrglves him sins when he con wesses them to him. To say that one is a Christian when ones work is m sin, is to make God a liar and to deny with the life the words of the "lips. The Interest continues unabated. The morning meeting at ten today God forgives his sins when he con 8d chapter, was the lesson. After reading It Evangelist Ledford said: "God provides a tailor-made suit for every Christian. He commands him to put It on. Read verse 10. But before putting on that suit God gives one must put off all the old suit ef the simple life. ' Read verses It to 16. It won't fit if it is Just slipped on over the unclean life." Meetings tonight at 7:30 and to morrow at 10 o'clock. You are in vited to come and get some of the good of these services. Artisans Notice. as the electing of a delegate to the supreme assembly is of great Import ance all members or Alpha assembly are requested to make a special ef fort to be present this evening. Re freshments will be served. H. O. THOMPSON. M. A. L. F. LAMPKIN, Sec, Eight years ago a school teacher, who by strict economy had saved 841, went Into the cattle business In Lake county, and the other day he turned off 133,000 worth of cattle and has 500 head left If he had also branch ed out and raised hogs. he might have been a millionaire. A Clean' Man POUR MOLTEN LEAD INTO THROAT OF BLASPHEMER Constantinople. A story comes from Aslldje, Novi-Bazar, concerning the lynching of a blasphemer by an Infuriated mob of Mohammedans. The victim was a laborer, Suleman Houn-tltch-Sarallli, and it appears that in the course of drunken vaporlngs he gave utterance to certain blasphe mous remarks, which roused the list ening crowd to frenzy. The man was dragged Into the yard of an adjacent house, and held down while a quantity of lead was melted. He was then ordered to open his mouth and, as he refused' and kept It tightly closed, his Hps were forced apart and his teeth broken, after which the molten lead was poured down his throat. The-dying wretch was afterwards stripped and horribly mutilated, his ears, nose and hands being cut off. It is suspected that It la easier to keep Lent this year in one respect than usual. The Economy of Time is a. most important factor that all must consider, and the most helpful of all time savers Is a good, reliable watch, one that can be depended up on under all conditions. Our line of watches is very complete. We have them at all prices, and In every style, from the plainest to the most elabor ate, t Watch and jewelry repairing a specialty. We guarantee our work. With Wm. E. Haniicom Leading Jeweler Outside cleanliness is lea thio ball the battle. A rssa may so nib himself a dozen time a day, and still ba andean. Good health means cleanliness not only outside, bat intide. It meant '. s clean atomach, clean bowels, elean blood, s clean liver, aad aw, oleon, healthy tissue. The man who it clean in this way will look it and act it. Ha will work with energy and think tlcan, clear, healthy thonghtt. He will never be troubled with liver, lung, stomach or blood disorder. Dyspepsia and indigestion originate in unclean stoos echt. Blood diseases are iound where there it andean blood. Consumption and bronchitis mean unclean lungs. , , Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery w prevents these diseases. It make a man's intide claaa and healthy. It cleans tha digestive organ, make pars, elean blood, aad clean, healthy flesh. It restore tone to the nervosa system , and curea nervous tibanttiea eel roitratioa. It contains no alcohol or bahit-iorminf draft Constipation it the most andean nncleanlinea. Dr Pieroe't Pleasant Pel lets ears it. They never gripe. Easy to take at candy Byers' Best Flour Is made from the choicest wheat that grows. Good bread is assured when BYERS' BEST FLOUR is used. Bran, Shorts, Steam Rolled Barley always on hand. . ' V --4fa Pendleton Roller Mills Pendleton, Oregon Find Out. For Yourself If you have any doubts about tha superiority of our process of dyeing or cleaning by testing it on an old suit of clothes, a delicate evening gown or waist, or anything that has become soiled or faded In the wearing. We always give genuine satisfaction la the beauty and thoroughness of oar work, and in the moderateness of onr charges. Pendleton Dye Works 101 H S- Alt St. Phone Mains lit SEEDS! SEEDS! We have just received a . shipment of Garden seed in Bulk. Now is the time to start your gardens and of course the economical way to buy your seeds is in the bulk. We have leeds of every kind. The vaiities are especialey ' adapted to this climate. NELSON'S The Handy Store PHONE Main 513 719 Main Street