Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 9, 1910)
EIGHT PAGES. DAILY ORKGON1AN, NKDLRON, OKBOON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER , 110. pacx rrvx. $ 1 5 Will Buy Tomorrow Your Choice of Twenty SiSEs Dresses Made of guaranteed Taffetta Silk, nicely trimmed and 1 made real full, Sold everywhere for $22.50 300 Tailored Suits now Ready for you, $15 to $30 F. E. Livengood Co. The Ladies' and Children's Store. Talk about Itl Com! Bring your friends, to Tbe Round-Up" and Third District Fair. Sept. 2 to Oct. 1. For Sale 180 a roe wheat farm, 4 m!lc from Pendleton. Small house and good barn, 2 good springs of water and crop all for $seoo, without the crop for J 1800. Tills farm must be aold at once on account of sickness. ISO acre dairy ranch 20 miles from town and three miles from store and post office. Good 4 room house, barn and chicken houses. Splendid orchard, about 2S acres alfalfa, bottom land. TlUs la one of the best dairy ranches for the money n Uma tilla county. ISO acre wheat farm S miles from town, good buildings and lots of water, all for SSOOO. Anyone wishing for a good borne dose to Pendleton this place oan't be beat in the state of Oregon for the price. Good rea son for selling. 860 acres wheat land six miles from Pendleton, $12000. Terms, Small grocery and second hand business Including tiio building all for $1000. The business Is averaging $50 per day. Mast be sold at once on account of sickness. 960 ACRE WHEAT FARM. SH miles from Pendleton, new S room house one of the best wells n the country, wa ter piped in the house, one half of tbe land m stubble and the other one-half in summer fallow. 200 sacks of wheat to seed this fall goes with the place and 14 head good work horses, harness and 1 1 colts, 2 good cows and 1 heifer, 2 gang plows, 2 sets of harrow, 2 seed drill. 1 reaper, 1 hack, 1 buggy, S good wagons, W -Interest 16 foot nolt Bros.- Imr ester. All the hay and furniture goes with this farm If sold at once; good reason for sell ing. All for $35000, $25000 cash, balance easy terms at 8 per cent Interest. Address, Dan Kemler 210 V. Bluff St. Pendleton, Oregon OF THOSE) GERM PROOF FULPER. FILTERS WE NOW HAVE A SUPPLY They, a little ice, water from your hydrant and you have mountain water in your just as good and entirely free from contagion. PRICE . KOEPPEN'S- The Drug Store Trut LOCALS Pastime pictures pitas all. Phone Main 1 for United Orchestra. Snyder chimneysweep TeL Red $811 Do ra take the East OregonlanT Saw dust for sale at the Oregon Lumber Yard. Automobile for hire, day or night, f'hone Main 74. Good Spauldlng hack nearly new, only $71. Phone Main $. $1600 for the A. L. Knight residence on Lewis street Lee Teutsch. Wanted Girl for general house work. Apply 11$ West High street Fresh Eastern and Olympla Oysters and Clams arriving daily at Lyman's. Dr. L. K Blakeslee has returned from Union county, and has resumed practice., m A. L."' Knight residence on Lewis stret can be bought for $1100. Lee Teutsch. More raoTlng pictures shown than iny other theater In the -Ity tha f'tatlme. If price is right have many to buy two vacant lots on north side. Lee Teutsch. For good, dry slab wood, call at or phone your order to the Oregon Lumber Yard. Oood 7 year old horse, weight 11(0 pounds, work single or doubU. Price 1116. Phone Main t. If you have two to four vacant lots near hospital I have many seeking in vestment. Lee Teutsch. The Ladles Aid of the Christian church will serve meals during the 29-30 and 1st of October. Tou don't have to wait long at Pat ton's shop. Five barbers every Sat urday. Across from Alexanders. Wanted Middle aged woman to do general housework. Inquire Frazier's book store or 712 W. Railroad street. Wanted Furnished cottage, t or 7 rooms, with bath, near down town district. L. B. Ryan. Phone Main 418. For rent Three five room houses, all newly painted, two blocks from Hawthorne school. Inquire Kim Mor ton. 1 Sharon & Eddinga sell galvanised Iron bath tubs. Light and easy to move around. Just the thing for farmers. . $1000 buys 4 room house, furnished ready to move into. For particulars, see Mr. and Mrs. Hatter or call on Lee Teutsch. For rent Two nice rooms, all mod mi conveniences, use of parlor and piano. Apply 224 Thompson street, opposite high school. For Sale or Rent Eight-room modern house, good location, furnish ed or unfurnished. Four lots and barn. Phone B-S78I. Laura Mulr will be in Pendleton October 1 to sew In families. Any one wanting to engage same can do so by writing her at Milton, Oregon. Parly In financial distress has plac ed with us for sale a beautiful Ho bart M. Cable piano, cost $450. No reasonable offer refused. Elilers Mu sic House, 813, Main street, Pendle ton's home store. home. Just as pure, j i -i $4.25 and up Sieves You Best PERSONAL MENTION B. C. Kidder is down today from his home in Athena. D. R. Collins of Milton, transacted business in Pendleton last evening. Bruce Painter of Walla Walla, is over from that town for the transac tion of business. Martin Anderson returned this morning from a business visit to the west end of the county. A. W. Groenwald, formerly an In structor in the Pendleton academy, left this morning for Spokane. Don C. Brownell of Hermlston, came up from that place last evening for the transaction of business. Miss Florence Harris, one of the teachers In the local schools, came In this morning from her home In La Grande. Harry Hays, the expressman, Is laid up with a mashed finger, the in Jury having been sustained while hauling lumber. Dr. S. W. McClure, chief of the bu reau of animal Industry in the north west, is in the Willamette valley on official busness. Miss Mary Whitney, one of the pub lic school teachers, arrived last eve ning from Eugene, where she spent the vacation months with relatives. Attorney J. T. Hlnkle is up from his farm near Hermiston to examine the filed water claims which are now op en for inspection at the court house. The Miasea Beatrice and Marion Quackenbush of Portland, returned home today, after a visit of a few days with their cousin, Mrs. Pat Mc Kee. A. H. Chandler, a Susanville cattle man. Is In Umatilla county, hunting winter range for his herds which he will bring out to the wheat fields this fall. Attorney Oliver P. Morton of the reclamation service legal department, is in the city on business in connec tion with the water rights adjudica tion. Miss Nancy Stevens, who has' been visiting her Bister, Miss Frankle Stevens, will return this evening to her home at Indiauolo, Nebraska. Hon. C. A. Barrett, direct primary candidate for the republican nomi nation " for joint senator, passed through the city last evening enroute for Union county. Dr. C. A. McChesney, special agent in the Indian service and a member of the competency commission recent ly appointed to examine the Indians on the Umatilla reservation, left this afternoon for a brief visit to Seattle. Dave Cargill and wife have returned from an extended visit with relatives In the states of Iowa and Nebraska. MOSIElt PRUNES BRING GROWERS BIG PROFITS Moser, Ore. Twelve cars of Italian prunes, grown to perfection in the Mosler valley, have been sent out from the local packing house, and every one of these cars contained more han 1000 crates of prunes, each of which brought the shippers 60 cents f. o. b. Mosler. The average price of 60 cents a crate maintained this season is the highest In years. This season's crop of prunes has been the most profitable gathered In the Mosler valley fofmany years, and the farmers, who during the poor seasons of the past two years dug up their prune orchards and planted the land to apples, are now regretting their action, while those who stuck to the prunes ahe smiling with satis faction. With the end of the prune season the farmers about Mosier are looking ahead to the harvesting of the apple crop, which gives promise of being larger than for many years past larger because many acres of new or chard are coming into bearing and finer in quality because with each year the growers are getting experi ence and are learning better how to care for their orchards. BIG BRICK BIvOCK TO RISE AT MEDFORD ' Med ford. Or. The building to be erected by Porter J. Neff as a home for the Mall Tribune has undergone several changes since Its construc tion was announced recently. When completed It will cover the block. 130x100 feet. Mr. Neff will erect a building two stories in height, 40x100 as a home for the Mall-Tribune. Johns & Turner have the contract. Next to this, J. E. Westerlund will erect on the corner a building 50x100, which will be fit ted for bachelor apartments. When completed the buildings will form one block. Score Cards to Be Published. Spokane Wash. lien H. Rice, sec retary and manager of the third Na tional Applo Show, has Issued notices to exhibitors nt the Spokane show, November 14 to 19, that the score cards of all commercial exhibits will be published at the close of the show. It Is explained that one of the edu cational features of the exposition is giving the Information to each ex hibitor of the record made by his dis play, also to make this date public, so that competitors may see how the exhibits were scored and Judged. This plan was adopted at the 190S show, but was dropped In 1909. Expect Fisheries Award. Washington, Sept. 9. Reports from The Hague state that the award of the tribunal of arbitration In the New Foundland fisheries dispute between Great Britain and the United States may be expected within a few days, possibly today. . . "The Republican Tarty Is In Dan ger" Is the heading of a long editorial In an organ. But that Is nothing to worry about, If the people are gottlutf along all right, or Improving their condition. SOMETHING ABOUT PRESENT CHAPTER HOUSE Members of Pendleton chapter of the American Woman's league will be Interested to read the following facts regarding chapter house construc tion. Just received from headquar ters: Chapter houses completed and oc cupied, 14. In course of construction and nearly completed, 1$. Under contract for Immediate erec tion, 20. Qualified for and contracts being bid on by contractors, 61. Total of chapter houses to he com pleted this fall,, already in various course of construction and under con tract, 111. Had the members of Pendleton chapter worked as energetically as the members of those one hundred and eleven chapters have done, there would have been 112 chapter houses reported In that total. Fifty new members were admitted Into the chapter yesterday and It Is hoped that many more may be report ed in time for our regular meeting In October. ' Applicants can now become voters and take advantage of the corres pondence courses immediately, by signing notes for the balance due on their memberships. These notes do not shorten the time for completing the payments and draw no interest. LIBRARY NOTES. Honrs. Library will be open on week days from 10 a. m. to 12'30 p. m., 2 to 5:30 p. m., and 7 to 9 in the evening; Sun day the reading room will be open from 3 to 5. Books may not be ex changed Sundays. Do you take books from the city li brary? If not, why not? It belongs to every one of you and whatever is on Its shelves Is yours to use, just for the asking. There are all kinds of books here from the severe public document to "How to Dress a Doll." The reading room is light, airy and well equipped with comfortable chairs and tables and any one Is welcome who cares to spend a quiet lipur at any time when the library Is open. Three dally papers and all of the leading magazines are to be found upon the tables. About twenty-five new children's books will be ready for circulation Saturday afternoon. The following J are some of the more interesting ti tles: Master Skylark, telling the thrill ing experiences of a small boy living In the time of William Shakespeare. Etu, Our Little Eskimo Cousin, Our Little Hawaiian Cousin, Our Little Swiss Cousin, etc. This little cousin series contains catchy sketches of the life and customs of the people in va rious countries, written for the chil dren. Just so stories by Kipling, tell about how the camel got his hump, how the rhinoceros got his skin, the crab that played by the sea, etc. Scientific American boy at school Describes and Illustrates many Inter esting .things a boy can do and is ex tremely etertalning as well as Instruc tive. Still others are: Wonder Tales from Wagner, Green Mountain Boys, Franklin's Autobiography ror school use, Lamb's Tales from Shakespeare, Songs Every Child Should Know, Poems Children Love. FOOTBALL HANGS IN BALANCE UNDER STRINGENT 1910 RULES Chicago. With the football season of 1910 about to begin, followers of the great college game will witness a style of play very different from any used since the code was so radically changed in the winter of 1905-06. The rules committee In answer to the howls of protest hurled against the game at the close of last season, held several meetings last winter and spring in the hope of hitting on some scheme which would eliminate the danger element. Suggestions were so licited from every football authority throughout the country and especially from coaches and former players of the large colleges. Unfortunate deaths at West Point and Annapolis made It Imperative for the committee to take some action which would appease the persons so strongly opposed to the great college game. Several of the coaches with ideas in mind to make the game safer called out their respective squads and tested them in a practical way. It was these experiments which bore great weight in forming the new code oi rules. There Is no branch of sport In which the danger element can be wholly eliminated, and statistics show there are numerous branches of sports In which the number of accidents and fatalities exceed greatly those In foot ball, but in the last few years public sentiment has been so bitter against football that something radical had to be done to Insure Its future. With the one thought of preserving the game to the college, its under crnduates, and graduates, the rules committee bent to Its task with unre mitting energy and after several long sessions, In which all sections of the country were represented, several changes were made and adopted, and now remains to be seen how far reaching these alterations will be tow ard the elimination of injuries. SMOKING ROOM FOR WOMEN. Chicago's New Theater to Contain In novation In Convenience. Chicago. Chicago Is to have a the ater with a woman's smoking room nnd a ticket-selling system especially for women. The new theater will be housed in a 20 story office building at the south ed corner of Madison street and Wa bash avenue at an announced cost of $3,000,000. , It will have a seating capacity of 2200. , "What is a primary for" asks the movrns p'rer. Well, It Is not for an assembly. (great Bns'pias Wohlenberg 50 doz. Children's handkerchiefs at, each lf 50 doz. hemstitched handkerchiefs at 2 ff : Sf 12 l-2c White outing flannels, yard 36-in. all wool serge in navy, brown, cardinal and 8 shades yard 5f 25c Hair ribbon, all colors at, yard Boys' fleece union suits at, each - Boys' all-wool union suits at, each $1.25 Misses' medium weight union suits at 85j and $1.00 Boys' extra heavy ribbed hose at, pair 25 Shoes of the roost durable kinds. Bring your children to this store for BETTER LOOKING, BETTER WEARINq SHOES, at a saving inprice. too. Wohlenberg Dep't. Store Better Goods for Less Money Talk about Ht Cornel Bring; your friends, to "The Roand-Up" and Third District Fair. Sept. 20 to Oct. 1. SPORTS PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE. This Morning's Games. Portland 1, Oakland 2; 11 innings. San Francisco 1, Los Angeles 4. Sacramento 0, Vernon t. Yesterday's Games. Morning game R. H. E. Portland 3 7 1 Oakland 2 6 1 Second game Oakland 4; Portland 3; 11 innings. At Sacramento R. H. E. Sacramento 2 7 0 Vernon 4 7 1 Nine innings. At Los Angeles R. H. E. San Francisco 8 8 1 Los Angeles 1 8 8 Nine innings. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Boston R. H. E. Philadelphia 8 7 1 Boston 2 t 2 Batteries Krause, Culp and Thom as. Livingstone; Kargar and Kleinow. At Cleveland R. H. E. Detroit 4 12 1 Cleveland .7 10 1 Batteries Works and Schmidt; Casey; Kaler, Harkness and Land. At Washington R, H. E. New York 8 IS 8 Washington 3 5 3 Batteries Warhop and Sweeney; Walker. Keisllng and Beckendorff. At St. Louis R. H. E. Second game: Chicago 4 I St. Louis 6 6 1 Batteries Young, Scott and Sulli van; Bailey, Criss and Kllllfer. At St. Louis, 1st game R. H. E. Chicago 1 8 4 St Louis 0 1 3 Batteries Olmstead and Block; Lake and Stephens. Chickens! Chickens!! Chickens All kinds, sizes and colors, young and old For choice dressed ones phone your order night before. Ws dress none except for orders so If you like cold storage poultry patronise tbe oilier fellow or store yourself. East End Grocery Res. Phone B. SPECIAL! WATER PAILS, 8 AND 10 QT. PHESERVING KETTLES, COF FEE BOILERS, COFFEE POTS, BEKLIN KETTLES. AND A M M HER OF OTHER CSEFVL COOKING VTENSILS. ALL OF ELLIOTTS" BLVE AND WHITE WARE AND EVERY PIECE GVARAXTEED, FOR A SHORT TIME ONLY AT 75c The Taylor Hardware Co. Talk about it! Come! Bring your friends, to "The Itound-Cp" and Third District Fair. Sept. 26 to Oct. 1. at Dep't. Store NATIONAL LEAGUE. At New York R. H. E. Boston 1 1 New York 1 t 4 Batteries Brown and Smith; Wtltse and Meyers, SchJel. Tie, called in' tenth inning; dark ness. At Chicago R. H. B. Cincinnati S 7 Chicago 8 12 t Batteries Rowan, Benton and Mc Lean; Ruelbach and Kilns;. ' At Pittsburg . R. H. E. St. Louis ....4 8 3 Pittsburg 2 10 t Batteries Harmon, and Phelps; Ferris, White and Gibson. At Philadelphia R. H. E. Brooklyn .1 t 3 Philadelphia 8 12 1 Batteries Bell and Bergen; Moore and Dooin. The Latest Fad for Men and Women As usual the Peoples Warehouse is to the front with the latest fad for both men and women. Silk hose to sell for 50c a pair. The woman's hose come in black only, while the men's come in black, tan, blue, gray, wine and green. These are the niftiest dressiest hose ever shown in the city for the price, 50c a pair. Pure thread silk hose. Work on the Panama canal is pro gressing; money will work wonders under any administration. . . Strength Counts in all life's affairs. Strength comes of pure blood; good blood conies when stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels are kept in proper condition by a little care and BEECHAH'S PILLS Sold Everywhere. in boxu 10c. and 25c. if Telephone Main 536 SMI.