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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1911)
TEN PAGES. AHjT BAIT ORBGOKIAW, FBCtDIJCTOlf, ORXQOIf, SATURDAY, APRIL 22, ltll. pags rrra Haviland China, Cut Glass Hand Painted .China, Etc, Still going at Auction Sale Prices If you diden't secure what you wanted during the Auction, come in . and we will make you a satisfactory price on any article you select. KOEPPEN'S The Drug Store That Serves You Best I LOCALS ! See Lane & Son for aigou. Pastime picture pleaae all. Dutch Henry for coal. Main ITS. Wall paper, paints, eto. Lane ft Eon. Phone Main 449 for bread wagon. Phone PlaUoeder for fresh meat ad lard. Main 44S. Front office for rent In Judd build ing. F. E. Judd. Wanted Night clerk at Hotel St George. Apply at once. All kinds or fresh fish all the Urn at the Pendleton Cash Market. The king of all So cigars, "Devlin's Fives," Joe Sullivan sole agent. For rent Nicely furnished front room; close In. Phone Red 3291. Everybody goes to the Orpheuui to 'see the best and the clearest pictures. For Rent House on North Side. Inquire Mrs. Nash, 208 Logan street. Bungalow on north side of river, al so furniture for sale. Charles J. Fer guson. I. C. Snyder guarantees good spray ing. Tours for good work. Phone R. 381S. Fancy baked goods from the Royal Bakery on sale at the Delta. Baked fresh every day. Dressed chickens Friday and Sat urday at the Cash Market, phone Main 101. Phone RsJ !sl for quick auto cab service. 25 cent fares In city. Rates by hour or mile for out of town trrps. Wanted Dy man and wife, posi tion on ranch. Inquire "T" this of fice. Special rates to horses boarded by the week or month at the Commercial Burn, 620 Aura street. Phone Main 12. Sharon & Eddlngs have secured the local npenry fir the Johnson Ideal Halter, the best cheap halter In the market. Fur Sale Cheap Two log houses at Meacham, Ore. Modern Improvements, Six rooms each. Knqulro of Meach nm Lumber Co. The Hast Orcpmian Is Kastern Oro Kn's ri preventative paper. It leads and the people appreciate it and show It liy jhelr liberal patronage. For Sale Second hand lumber, brick and wood for half price. Must clear lot at once. Apply at old build ing corner Court and Johnson. Phone Main 92 for good clean lump or nut coal. Prompt delivery to ail parts of the city. Crab Creek Lun ber Co., 700 West Alta street. If you want fresh meat from a- new, clean market, phone Main 44S. Farmers Meat Co., Conrad Platzoeder, manager. 224 B. Court street Penland Broa. Transfer Co., phone Black 8S91. Piano, furniture and heavy trucking of all k'nds. Calls an swered promptly. Office 847 Main at For good light get a Steelmantle kerosene burner. Odorless, smoke less, mpst brilliant light by small lamp; satisfaction guaranteed. Carl Obery, 211 Lee Street. For bread, cookies, pastry and cakes made fresh every day, phone Main 4 49 and the wagon will call. Royal Bakery, Webb and Cottonwood streets. For Sale Two acre home east Pendleton. Alfalfa, fruit, garaen. Good buildings, water system and bath. Address J. H. Bryant, Pendle ton, Oregon. For sale Reynolds' Automatic Harvester. Has only cut 1100 acres. Easy terms. Inquire of Pendleton Iron Works,w Marlon 3a.c or 8. C. Bittner, Pendleton, Ore. Tou can't burn slate and gravel! Don't try it Phone Dutch Henry, Main 173, for clean screened Rock Springs coal either lump or nut It burns clean and goes further. For sale Two hundred acres good timber grazing land, about 60 acres tillable, running water on place. This Is a snap If taken within next thirty days. Address W. B., Box 841, city. New hydrants Do away with your old rod and stop-cocks and use the anti-freezing hydrants. Call and see them at the Sanitary Plumbing shop. 304 E. Court stret, Alex Burt, prop. PERSONAL MENTION Special. Until May 1st we will sell 10 lb. can's pure lard, $1.60; 5 lb. can pure lard, kOc; 3 -lb. can pure lard 60c. Cen tral Meat Market. H. C. Rogers is among the Echo people In the city today. R. P. Penney of Boulder, Colo., is a guest of the St. George. Roy Rltner Is In the city today i,.n his ranch on the reservation. Miss Sybil Cole went to Pilot Rock this morning to visit with relatives. Miss Mildred Wyrlck visited the McKay creek school one day this week. Horace Addis, a representative of the Rural Spirit, has been in the city today. S. J. Campbell, county fruit in spector, is in the city from his home at Milton. Tracy G. Wheeler of Enterprise la among the out of town visitors In Pendleton. Mrs. John Timmerman came in this moaning on the N. P. from her home at Helix. City Attorney J. Koy Raley re turned this morning from a Bhort vis it in Portland. Pete Murray came down from his home at A Jains this morning on the Ldelayed local. C. C. Darr of Adams was an Incom ing passenger on the delayed local tliis morning. Senator C. A. Barret of Athena, came down on the local this morning to transact business. Fred Andrews of Echo came in from that town this morning to transact business in this city. William Albee came In from his home at Helix this morning on the Northern Pacific local. Frank D. Carruth of the faculty of the La Grande high school, is visit ing friends In this city. J. G. Cutler, Northern Pacific road master, was an Incoming passenger from Pasco this morning. Attorney n. R. Johnson returned on the delayed local from a visit Into the east end of the county. Art Grover, well known Helix res ident, made one of his frequent trips to Pendleton this morning. Ernest Knight, the well known young Helix farmer, came In this morning on the Northern Pacific. Mrs. Ji I. Agnew and Miss Elsie E. Agney came up from Hermiston yes terday and spent the night in the city. Jack Hoblnson, proprietor of the Domestic laundry, went to Hermiston thla morning to visit his proejet ranch. H. C. Means, the Umatilla hotel man, returned to his home this morn ing on the local after spending a day in the city. H. C. Means, the Umatilla hotel man, returned to his home this morn ins on the local after spending a day in the city. liev. and Mrs. F. J. Millies have ar rived in Pendleton and Mr. Milnes will occupy the pulpit at the Pres byterian church during the next few weeks. 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 I Great BARGAINS in Fresh, o ' o Clean, Dependable Merchan- dise of a Superior Character FOR. SATURDAY ONLY o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o $25, $30 and $35 Hand Tailored Suits for $7.50,-$8.50 and $10 Dress Skirts for . Choice of our Spring Coats at 12 l-2c Bleached Muslin for 12 l-2c Percales, 36 inches wide 1 5 c Berkley Cambrics .... $1.25 Long Silk Gloves in Pongee, black and Ladies 35c Hose in black and colors for Children's 15c black Hose for . Ladies' $1.25 Union Suits for Ladies' $1.50 Union Suits for . Ladies' $15.00 and $17.00 Silk Dresses for Ladies' $20.00 and $25.00 Silk Dresses for $18.75 w O O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o $4.95 1-3 off 9c . 9c . 12c white 98c . 23c 10c . . 93 c . $1.20 $11.90 $14.00 O Better Goods for O Less Money O O Q oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo S Wohlenberg Dep't. Store A pneumatic couch has been In vented for the comfort and conven-l-iu-e of motorists who must lie on their backs beneath cars to make repairs. Kead the want ads. l r.MIM .M IS A COMING MKTAI, WiisliliiKton. I). ('. Perhaps no oilier metal has been used In so great a variety of ways during so compar atively brief a history as has alumi num. It is a question whether the automobile Industry would have made such remarkable progress dur ing the last decade without the ac companyiiig development of metallic alumlnus industry, for many of the castings used In the manufacture of motor cars are made from this light, rigid metal. The use of alumlnus in the recently born art of aviation is also of great popular interest, and here again the same qualities of lightness and rigidity recommend it. Alumlnus is the most abundant of ail the metals. It is an essential con stituent of all Important rocks ex cept sandstones and limestones. It is found chiefly in the silicates such as the feldspars micas, clays, etc., and as the hydroxide in the mineral baux ite, from which it is now produced on a commercial scale. Its oxide makes up between 15 and 16 per cent of the earth's crust. In spite of this great abundance, the metal itself was, up to issn, a chemical curiosity, and one of the early reports of the United States geological survey quotes it at $1.23 a Troy ounce $15 a pound. The reason for Its rarity and high price was the lack of a commercial method of extracting it easily and cheaply from its chemical combina tion with oxygen, for which it has a remarkable affinity. With the in troduction of the electrolytic pro cess the metal has now taken a high high place among the commercial metals, and from a production or 83 pounds in 1883 its consumption amounted in 1909 to the enormous total of 34,210,000 pounds, valued at approximately 23 cents a pound for ingot metal. MAX LEADS DOURLE LIFE. Ajreil Chicago ltesidenf' Who Has Pnssed Away Was Head of Two I'll initios. Chicago, April 22. Two men who met yesterday at the inquest of Mich ael H. Ahem, a former real estate dealer of Creston, Iowa, each claim ing to be a son of the dead man, learned that Ahern for 50 years had been the father of two large families, one living in Creston and one in Chi cago. John Ahern, a son of the Creston branch of the family, lives In Seattle. Neither family knew of the existence of the other. Ahern, who was S3 years old, died suddenly at a h.'tel yesterday. At the inque'st William Ahern, GO years old, who lives here, and Matthew Ahern of Creston, each identified the dead man as his father and gazed amazed at the other. William hern said his father had left a wife with four small children .n Ireland 50 years ago and had com to America. The younger man, tak ing up the story, said his father had married In Galesburg. 111., in 1865, and seven children had been born, all but one of whom are living In Illinois and Iowa. His mother, he said, had been dead for nine years. The elder man then told of coming I to America with his mother after the four children had become of age and of finding the father In Chicago. t imam Anern appnea ior letters of administration to his father's es tate in the Interests of himself and John Ahern, the Seattle brother. The aged first wife of the dead man Is now in Chicago, according to her son, but was too feeble to attend the inquest. The dead man left property valued at several thousand dollars and the claims of the Chicago family may be contested by those in Iowa. In Germany there is a dog that can speak seven words. Xo woman is likely to have much respect for a dog that can't make use of a more ex tensive vocabulary than that. Do you read the East OreeontanT GREAT CLOSING OUT TAILORED TS AND su DRESSES FOR MISSES AND LADIES Notice the following reduced prices, then act at once. Such great reductions will make our ready-to-wear department the busiest place in Pendleton all next week. Sale will start Monday Morning and will continue up to Saturday Night. No Charges for Alterations All $ 1 8 Spring Suits go at $43.90 All $20 Spring Suits go at $ 1 4.85 All $22.50 Spring Suits go at $16.45 All $25 and $27.50 Spring Suits go at . $(9.65 All $30 and $32.50 Spring Suits will go at . . . $22.35 50 Suits Ranging in Price from $15to$30 will go on sale Monday and all week at one price, Choice $9.95 Now is Your Chance Closing Out Prices on Silk Dresses All $18 Silk or Wool Dresses $11.35 All $20 Silk or Wool Dresses $13.40 All $22.50 Silk or Wool Dresses go at .... $16.35 All $ 1 5 Silk or Wool Dresses $ 1 8.85 All $27.50 and $30 Silk or Wool Dresses . . . $19.95 MONDAY MORNING AND ALL WEEK L F. E. LIVENGOOD & COMPANY I