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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1910)
EIGHT PAGES. DAILY m&Wt uBBGOXlAir, PEfBLBTOJf, OUQOV, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4. 1910. r PERSONAL MENTION A Complete Line ol ..Rubbers., to fit all Shoes for Women and Children. Another Shipment of School Girls High Top Button Boots Patent or Gun Metal at, $3.50 F. E. Livengood Co. The Ladies' and Children's Store. For Sale BSOB 160 acre dairy ranch 20 miles from town and thrc miles from store and pout office. Good 4 room house, Imni and chicken houses. Splendid orchard, about 23 acres alfalfa, bottom land. Thin I one of the best dairy rum-tics for the money In I'iniitllla county. 100 aero wheat farm S mill's from Pendleton. House, and barn, plenty water, for S'.'iSr.O. Must be sold at once on account of sickness. 320 acre wheat farm S 1-2 miles from Pendleton, ever lasting well of the beet water pood house and barn, will sell for $11000 if sold at once Small grocery and second liiind btiHlnew Including the ImllilliiK, all for $850; must Ik- sold at once on account of .Icknesa. 5 room house and bam, 711 Calln St., this property M easily worth $1250. I will soil It for $700, $200 cMh, balance in monthly payment. Any one wishing to Invest In business proerty, I have one business bhxit tliat wil net 10 per cent clear of taxes and insurance; tills piece of property would cost yon double the amount If you was to build Uls same piece of property; now the price tlmt I will make you will bold good for a few days only. Address, Dan Komlor 210 W. Bluff St. Pendleton, Oregon 1 LOCALS 1 Paatima pictures plsase aJL See Lane ft Son for signs. Call up Main 41( for signs. Phone Main 1 for United Orchestra. Saw dust for sale at the Oregon Lumber yard. Hand ironers wanted at the Troy Meain Laundry. Automobile for hire, day or night I hone Main 74. j Hohbach's coffee and oyster house Is now open; best of service. Wanted Woman cook at Southern Cafe. Apply 206 East Alta street. Fresh eastern and Olympta oysters at Hohbachs. Telephone Main 80. Man and wife wants position work ing on ranch. Call 607 West Webb : street. Gardena apple land is one of the i good investments I. have to offer. Lee Teutsch. More moving pictures shown thaa : my other theater In ' the -Ity ths ' Pastime. i See Art Elliott for good coffee and j lunch at Paul Hcmmetgarn's after . noon and evening. I Ask about Gardena apple land to ; day while E. C. Burllngame Is In our : city. Lee Teutsch. j Wanted Suitable middle aged wo I iiian to do house work for Invalid wo ' man. Apply 415 Perkins ave. A clean and careful shave always at Mark Patton's shop. Across from Alexanders. Phone for patrons. For rent Three five room heuses, all newly painted, two blocks from Hawthorne school. Inquire Kim Mor ton. Black 2101. W. Q. Fisher, express and transfer, phone has been changed to Rs. Phone Red 3472 and stand phone Hotel Pendleton, Main 11. For Sale Eleven room house, new, completely furnished, stone cellar, woodshed barn, chicken house, cement walks four lots Improved with fruit trees and flowers Cheap for cash or easy terms. See Harry E. Fol som, 902 Locust Hill, Pendleton, Ore. Doynes Turner left this afternoon for .Spokane. Attorney R. R. Johnson left this mormlng for Hermlston. D. G. Drake is here from Pasco for the transaction cf business. Mayor H. R. Newport of Hermls ton, is a Pendleton visitor. G. E. Adams of McKay, Is a busi ness visitor In this city today. George A. Herbert of Baker City, is a Pendleton business visitor. R. E. Thorn, the Hermlston bee man, spent last night in Pendleton. George Baer, of Portland, is spend. ing a week or so with friends in this city. Sam White and wife of Pomeroy, Washington, are guests of the Hotel Bowman. Mrs. A. A. DeFord has gone to Missouri for an extended visit with relatives. Mrs. A. Noble expects to leave to night for the cast on a visit of three or four months. Mrs. C. B. Johnson, left this morn ing for Portland, where she will visit relatives for a month. Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Montgomery leave tonight for California and Texas where they will spend a few weeks. Ed Monisette and son, Walter Mor- rlsette have Just returned from North Yakima, where they have been for several days. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Adams and child, left this morning for their home at Ukiah, after having spent the week in Pendleton. Mrs. G. B. Monkman of Hermlston, returned home yesterday after having spent Round-up week as the guest of Mrs. B. Jenson. C. A. Hermann, a merchant of Helix is transacting business in Pendleton today, having come In this morning on the Northern Pacific train. A. A. DeFord, section foreman for the O. R. & X., returned this morning from a brief business visit to La Grande. He was accompanied home by his son, Paul DeFord, who will enter the local high school. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Keith of Wa condn, Washington, who have been visiting for a week at the home of Mrs. Keith's sister, Mrs. C. S. Wheeler If-ft this mnrnlng for Portland where they will visit a few days before go ing on to California for the winter. MAX IX PUEAM SHOOTS AT BURGLAR; MYSTERY Asbury Park N. J. Dreaming there were burglars In the house, he says, 13. W. Van Zuker, a New York piano tuner stopping at the Imperial hotel, shot himself In the head and Is now In the hospital at Spring Lake. The case Is puzzling the doctors and po lice, for Van Zuker Insists the shoot ing was the result of a dream, but there are no powder marks about the wound and nothing to Indicate the shot was fired at short range. Van Zuker's wife was found in the room in a state of collapse. The wounded man was conscious when the physicians arrived and said: "I have just shot a burglar." There was no evidence of burglary nor anything to indicate that there had been any stranger In the room. Nobody appeares to have heard the shot, and yet Van Zuker la In a pre carious condition from the wound. Fortune For a Tree. Seattle, Wash., Oct. 4. An old ap pli tree for which $20,000 has been offered and refused is the property of an eastern Washington nursery. The tree grew from seeds planted twenty years api by an Indian, and produces a peculiar variety of golden yellow frulti remarkable both for taste and keeping qualities. For several years grafts have been taken from the tree and planted, the "offspring" of the tree now cover a thousand acres. Both the parent tree and the youngsters are carefully guarded night and day by armed guards. Iiryan and Hutches to Speak. Rochester, X. Y., Oct. 4. William Jennings Bryan and Gov. Charles E. Hughes are among the speakers on the program of the New York state convention of the Young People's So cieties of Christian Endeavor, which begins here today. Religious workers of national reputation will conduct classes and deliver addresses. Cholera Fptdomlc at Marseilles. London, Oct. 4. Fears that a cholera epidemic has broken out In Marseilles are expressed In a tele gram received here today. Three deaths from Plague at Marseilles have excited the people. GIRL STRIKERS SELL KISSES FOR FTXDS Glasgow. Selling kisses at a shil ling a kiss has been discovered to be a satisfactory way of Increasing the war J chest by a hundred girls employed at Nellston bleach works, Renfrewshire, vho are at present on strike for bet ter conditions. The girls hit upon the plan of tour- j Ing Renfrewshire during the week end in small bands with collection boxes. When a party of them reached Glasgow an old Highlander in charge of a weighing machine at Broomlelaw thought he saw an opportunity for Improving the occasion. "Look here, my lassies," he said, hailing them. "You know how the Duchess of Gor don raised the famous regiment of 'Kilties.' To every man who took the shilling she gave a kiss. If one of you give me a kiss I'll drop a shilling in your box." rromptly one of the girls accepted his challenge, and the exchange was duly made. The cue thuf) given, the game was played by them afterwards with great success. 8v money by reading today's ads. KOEPP EN is meeting the school folks over half wy these days by mak ing them a price on their FOUNTAIN PENS $2.50 $1 and giving a guarantee with each one. Their Jumbo tablets at 10c can't be beat Better see them. -KOEP P EN'S- The Brug store That But sua Tea Beat. SAVES XEIGHBOU'S SOX . WHILE HIS OWX DROWXS Berne. Two little boys of 5 and 4 fell Into the river while playing on the banks of the Suze at Btenne, Switzerland. A chimney sweep named Holzer, who saw the accident plunged into the water and succeeded In. sav ing one of the children and brought him safely to the bank. Ho wished to save the other child and entered the stream again, but could find no trace of It, and after waiting some time Holzer returned home, changed his clothes and went to his work. When iHolzer arrived home at night he learned that he had risked his life to save a stranger's boy while the sec. ond boy, his only son, was drowned before his eyes, though In the water he did not recognize the child. The father's grief was terrible' to witness, and he refused to see the par. ents of the child whom he had sav ed. "You have your child, I have lest mine,' was the message he sent by his wife to the thankful parents. A SALE OF TAILORED WAISTS THAT'S WORTH WHILE Wednesday morning begins a sale of twenty five dozen Tailored Waists regular $1 .50 and $2.00 Values at $1.10 Each Not Drummers Samples Not Odds and Ends Not Soilfed or Mussed Garments But every waist Brand new, clean, regular made, perfect fitting and highly desirable in every respect and all ex ceptionally good $ 1 .50 and $2.00 waists, on sale jWed- nesday while they last at 1.10 Each $ Wohlenberg Dep't. Store Better Goods for Less Money V irrr7fiS I SPUR TS if , Save money by reading today's ads. Job Printing, Tel. Main i World's Series to Start Oct. 17. Cincinnati. The national baseball commission today announced that the world's series will start in Philadel phia October 17 The first two games will be played in Philadelphia Octo ber 17 and 18. The third and fourth games of the series will be played in Chlcag.v October 20 and 21. The fifth game will be played in Philadelphia October 22. The sixth. game, If It is necessary, will be played in Chicago, and the seventh game, if the series goes that far. will be played in some city to be decided later. The first two games of the series were decided by the toss of a coin. President Murphy of the Cubs and President Shibe of the Athletics pre sided at this ceremony. Shibe flip ped the coin and as It spun in the air Murphy called "tails." The coin fell heads up. National League. At Boston R. H. E. New York 9 S Boston S E 2 Batteries Wiltse, Crandall and Wilson; Brown and Rarldon. At Brooklyn R. H. E. Philadelphia 12 12 0 Brooklyn 0 4 S Batteries Moore and Morgan; Bell and Bergen. At Cincinnati R. H. E. Chicago 3 7 1 Cincinnati 6 11 0 Batteries Weaver and Neerham; Suggs and McLean. At St. Louis R. H. E. Pittsburg 5 9 1 St. Louis 3 8 2 Batteries Adams and Simon; Hearne and Bresnahan. American League. At Philadelphia R. H. E Boston 6 7 4 Philadelphia 8 7 2 Batteries Hall and Madden; Dy gert and Livingston. At New York R. H. E. Washington 4 6 1 New Tork 0 6 5 Batteries Johnson and Ainsmlth; Vaughn, Caldwell and Blair. SMALL BOY ELICITS PRAISE FROM POPE Paris. A 7 year old Cains boy nam ed Gerard Vandenbroucque is the delighted recipient of a letter from the pope written entirely by the pon tiff's own hand in reply to a commun. icatlon addressed to his holiness by the boy thanking him for the papel decree fixing the age for the first com munion at 7 years. The pope's lotter, which was accompanied by a silver medal begins as follows: "My Dear Gerard Your nice letter was a true consolation to me, for if, as the Psalmist says, It Is through the mouths of babes and sucklings that the Lord receives perfect praise, him self being the one that gives them be ing," it Is verily he who Inspires the degree." In conclusion the pope sends little Gerard and his family a special bless ing. Co. L Attention. All members of company L, 3rd Infy.. O. N. O., are ordered to report at the armory tonight, October 4 at 8 o'clock. Muster and Inspection. By order of CHAS. J. FERGUSON, Commanding Officer. Hand Ironers wanted at the Troy Steam Laundry. Kirschbaum Clothes i m WiiJ: LOOK BETTER FEEL BETTER. WEAR. LONGER AND COST LESS We want to prove this assertion to your satisfaction by having you call and examine our fine line of KIRSCHBAUM CLOTHING for FALL $15.00 $30.00 VORKKIGMEN'S CLOTHING GO. Less Expense Makes Our Prices Lower HOUSE CLEANING Is the Next Big Event And we can help you if you will come to ua tad see tke Af ferent things we Lave in slock which makes Bows easy. v THE UP-TO-DATE WINDOW CLEANER 13 something every housewife should se. Hon is the time to look after Heaters Also coal scuttles, fire shovels, dampers, stove pipe and the setting up of stoves. See Us The Taylor Hardware Co.