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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1911)
.. t wti,. .,iM, . .1 1 EIGHT PAGES SENSATIONAL RED DAILY ISAVT OHEGOMAN, PETDLETOV. OREGON. .MONDAY, JU.Y 10, 1011. PAGE THREE MmnaWK!ieHK.1 UCT S A.SLIL FOR 3 DAYS TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURS. OF THIS WEEK SUMMER. DIMITIES AND LAWNS Primrose Brillante summer Dress Lawns, beautiful pat terns 35c values, Sensational reduction . . 29c Organdie Patricean, regular 25c val., Sensation red. 19c LADIES HAND BAGS Late Importations All Leather $! 8 values, Sensational Red. Sale $11 $9 values, Sensational Red. Sale $6.48 $6 values, Sensational Red Sale $3.69 $10 values Sensational Red. Sale $6.98 $5 values, Sensational Red. Sale $6.50 val., Sensational Red Sale $2.25 val.. Sensational Red. Sale $1.50 val., Sensational Red Sale $2.98 $3.48 $1.69 $1.13 . LADBCS Mm CHILDRESS OXFORDS $4.00, $4.50, $5.00 and $6.00 This season's Pumps and Oxfords For Three Days Only .... $3.25 $3.50 Childrens pumps $2.45 $3 Childrens pumps $2 $2.50 Childrens pumps $1.75 We are agents for the celebrated Child Broadvalk Shoe, the shoe that was built for the growing foot SENSATIONAL REDUCTIONS IN MENS STRAW HATS All $.'5."0 Straw?, new shapes, now S2.G3 All $0.00 Straws, new shapes, now $2.45 All .$i'.r0 Straws, new shapes, now SI. So All $2.00 Straws, 'new shapes, :i v 81.45 PANAMA HATS $.."0 Values, Sensational Price .7.."i0 Values, Sensational J'riee S6.95 $i.50 Values, Sensational Priee $6.35 $.").00 Values, Sensational Priee $5.45 $3.95 Childrens Straw Hats Cut Very Low Sensational Reductions on Boys Suits, take advantage ol this sale to fit out the coming man $00 l!ovs' KnickeiWker Suits $7..j0 Uovs' KniekerlHM'ker Suits S6.15 $7.00 1 Soys' Knickerlxicker Suits .. $5.85 i.."0 !ovs' Knickerbocker Suits ... $5.15 $4.95 $0.00 Hoys' KnickerWker Suits $5.00 Bovs' Knickerbocker Suits $4.35 $3.95 SIZES FROM 2 1-2 TO 16 YEARS AILOl THE PROGRESSIVE STORE WILL NOT DISCARD LONDON YAHX DOUBTED 11V U. S. NAVAL OFFICERS Lurgo Ships Eound Moru Effective In Rattle. ' uiHl England Will Need Man) . New York, July 10. Xaval "officers stationed ut the. Brooklyn navy yards are inclined to doubt the Liondon dis patch in which was predicted the passing oC the drcudnaught type of battleship in favor or smaller ves sels of equally heavy armament. In their opinion Great Britain and the other nation of the world will even enlarge tin size o the present duy bultlo-shlps. Hear Admiral E. X. C. Leutz, V. S. X., retired, commandant of the Brooklyn navy yards, said: "it Is liurd to believe England's future navy policy Is to be toward the re duction in the slz of its war vessels. We have found the dreuduaught the most effective fighting- machines yet produced and consequently wu will continue to make our vessels In great er size." ltrciuliinuglits Arc Ncv.uiv. Naval. Constructor Robert E. Stockcr, l S. N., who has been sent to the Brooklyn navy yards to lay the hull of the battle-ship New York, could not reconcile, his experience In (.hip building with the report from London. : "We need all the dreadnaughts we ' can get," he asserted. "In the dread- naught has been found a type which Moodier runner Conscience Smitten WOULD PAY I'OU APPLES STOLEN .MAXV YEAKS AGO Is an improvement over everything built before. . "The Qualities of speed, gun More Sick People to be CURED Walla Walla, Wn. To the Public: I have taken Doctors York & York's special treatment for kidney and atom prh trnubla for about a month. I had suffered with this trouble for many years and doctored with many doc tors as well as tried various patent medicines, but all without avail. Now t am well and able to work. I have also gained twenty p"ounds In weight I am certainly glad to give these Chi nese doctors this testimonial. (Signed) ANDR. BERG. We receive testimonials dallly from rrAtofnt nutlents. If the Dublin desir es to Investigate them, we will be only to glad to show them. Doctors York St York successfully treat all chronic and blood diseases. Out of town people can write for free consultation paper ana circular, en close Sc stamp. YORK A YORK MKDICTNTC OO. 110 W. Main St., Walla Walla Wn by Awful Peed Committed When n Hoy. Bloomington, III. J. H. Ryker of strength and endurance cannot be j Madison, Ind., a former resident of contained In a bulk smaller than at ' this city, is determined to die with present incloses them. Our engines ' a clear conscience. He has begun to give a maximum of power with a make reparation for any sins which minimum of space; our guns are In- I he may have committed, and says he eluded In the narrowest expanse with 1 will succeed nt any cost, possible safety. If we want greater Rykcr's determination to purge his speed and secure it in the size of the conscience came several weeks ago, vessel, th urmanent must be sacri-' w hile attending a revival meeting. He flcod to a corresponding extent. In- had always been considered by his Versely If we are to Increase the arm- friends here and in Madison, Ind., as anient of our dreadnaughts, on u'a godly man, and had attended smaller vessel, we would have to dis-, church regularly: but the revivalist pense w ith some of our speed." ; added much to his religious fervor land instilled into his mind with par- Spaco Needed for Engines. Captain O. E. Burd, V. S. X., in Ueular force the commandment: charge of the machinery department of the navy yard, said it Is not pos- "Thou shnlt not And then came ?teal." another awaken- slble with the present engines to eco- ' iK Filled with renewed religious nomize in space without losing else where. MCUPAIMXti UOU ItE-t-'iADIXfi UAXADIAX PACIFIC RAILWAY CHAl I T'EUR ATTACKS BRIDE. lie the ardor and n desire to spread good among his fellow men, ho proceeded to preach an impromptu sermon to a small boy, whom he caught hunting for ripe ."rtiit in his strawberry patch. Ryker nabbed the little red-headed Spokane, Wash. Construction fellow and, as he held him by the firms in Spokane holding the sub- 1 nape of the neck, talked to him on contrails to build 132 1-1 miies of the text: a total of 162 miles of grade for the ; "Thou shnlt riot steal." Canadian Xorthern Railway company, "Aw, didn't youse ever steal any announce they will have between ti,- thing when you'se was n kid?" re- 000 and 7000 men at owrk on the line ' plied the boy, unabashed. between Hope und Kamloops, !. C, j Uyk,jr was dumfounded. He had within 45 days. The original con- stolen. As he studied his own boy- tract, which was awarded to Patrick hood lif he recalled that once ho Welch of Spokane, invohes a total had stolen a three-mile ride on a expenditure of more than $lu. 000,000 railroad train. On another occasion and Is to be completed in two years, he stole an apple from a grocery- The local builders already are ussem- man. bling their outfits with u view to es- ; . As he pondered over these hoyhooc tablishing camps at points along the ' crimes he forgot his sermon to the survey before the beginn.ng of Au- red-headed Ind, who made his escape! gusi. 'i'hu work is said to be the with a cap full of strawberries. j heaviest since the construction of the Then Ryker set out to make repa-J Canadian Pacific line through the. ration for his boyhood crimes. j ltockies and the Selkirk. .More than He figured out that the stolen rall- 80 miles of grade will be blown out road ride would have cost nt least 10 of solid rock on the steep banks and rents. To make certain that the rail- narrow canyon, along the Eraser road should not lost any money on j river, and three miles of tunnels will Its Investment, he sent Ml cents to j be driven, two of them being from the long suffering corporation. j 2000 to 2200 feet in- length. i Then he came to Bloomington to Most of the camps will be establish- hunt for the grocer, from whom ho ! ed along the line of the Canadian Pa- stole the apple twenty-five years ago. j cific railroad. !Thp man hnd left town, but Ryker' ' j determined to square his conscience, j DROWNED WHEN AUTO SKIDS. so he hns hpKun advertising through- . out Central Illinois for the grocer. Two Women Thrown Into Colon.dc He ls determined to pay him for the up Pie. ' Irrigation Ditch. ; j ,1 Will Not Hurt AanylKxly in Next Six Months. Xew York, , July 10 Mrs. Viola Stern of 264 9 Eighth avenue, a bride of two months, dropped her engage ment ring in the grass in St. Xich olas park and was searching for it when a man she had never seen be fore approached and asked if he might aid her. She told him about the ring and for nearly an hour they looked in vain in the grass. "You needn't bother to stay," the juttn at length told her, "I'll contin ue to look, and if I find it I'll bring it to you. My name is James A. Doiph. I'm a chauffeur and I live at 2376 old Broadway." Mrs. stern thanked him and gave her name and address. Then she started to leave, but hadn't gone far before she found the ring. She turn ed back to tell Adolph. but he had gone. Shortly after Mrs. Stern had fin ished her breakfast today Adolph called. She admitted him to the ap artment and told him she had found tile ring, whereupon, she says, he seized her by the throat and threw her to the floor. She struggled and screamed, and Mrs Ida Termune, who ilvi-s across the hall, came to her rescue. The two women were too much for Adolph. He ran out of the building and along Eighth avenue, yelling "Fire!" At Alio Hundred and Fortieth street Adolph was slopped by Policeman Winterhalter of the West One Hun dred and Twenty-Fifth street station. He compelled the chauffeur to go hack with him to 2619 Eighth avenue and a charge was made againht him j by Mis. Stern. In the Harlem police court Adolph was found guilty of disorderly con duct and sentenced to six months on the island. EIRE CJIAA'CES LESSENED. Ol UL BLOWN INTO RIVER. Bath- while mid- Kurt Collins, Col. Mrs. R. M. .i ..,. would show the box of Bucklen's Ar- Ull l VI ItlU 1 Vll I. 1 l - n O I I""' iMinw nnrl hit nD(n V 1) 1un. ning; or MVrand. 'e killed when 1 barilla. N. Y., always carles." their automobile skidded and over- 1 nn n??'er ha .1. 1...V. 1 Or BUIC 11 WUUIU JIU41I BOOM, IIU .11. UUUl. .. . . . , . A Peck Into His Pocket show the box of Buckler nlca Salve that E. S. L-oper, a carpen- turned Into an Irrigation ditch. women were pinioned in the wuter . and drowned I Recuperation there la not so much In the ordinary vacation as there ls In a single bottle of Hood's Sarsap- writes. Greatest healer of burns, bolls, scalds, chapped hands and lips, fever sores, skin eruptions, eczema, corns and piles. 25c at Kocppens. A Setback. Started saving up for your sum- arllla, which refreshes thetlred blood, mer vacation yet?" sharpens the dulled appetite, restores "i had started, but we ran out of the lost courage. Take Hood's Sar- coal and now I shall have to begin saparilla this summer. nil over again." Cauulit by High Wind While lug- and Drowned. Wheeling. W. Va. Two deaths, the wrecking of five motor boats on the Ohio river and a narrow escape from destruction of the Pittsburg Cincir.initi packet Queen City were caused by a severe storm that broke over this city. Dorothy Maxwell, aged 13, bathing, was blown out into stream by the wind and drowned be fore help could reach her. On the Ohio side of the river, near Bridgeport, Fred Young, a mill work er, was feeding his pigs, when a small run overflowed almost In un instant and carried Young and his pigs in a torrent down the hillside In to Bridgeport, where they were lodged under u stone culvert Young wus dead when his body was found but the pigs were alive. The Queen City was torn from her moorings and blown ashore, w here she crashed Into and destroyed several gasoline launches anchored at the Ohio Valley Yacht club's landing. The steamboat was not damaged. lAtv Ruins Thoroughly Soaked For est Throughout State. Portland, Ore. Reports received i.t the offices of the forest service, state forester and Oregon Forest fire as sociation covering all parts of the state show that the recent rains have not only extinguished forest fires which have been burning, but have materially lessened the chances of other fires starting for the next few days. While no serious fires have oc curred this season, the June dry spell resulted in a number o fires becom ing started In slashings, fern patches and old burns which were difficult to completely extinguish and were be ing watched to prevent their spreau ing. The recent rains have made it possible to take no further account of these fires. Patrolmen Stationed. Patrolmen employed by the forest service, private timber owners and Oregon Forest Fire association are now stationed in all parts of the state, although the full force will not go into the field until the middle of July. Already 350 fire wardens have been given state appointments as provided by law. These men while receiving no compensation from the state are responsible to the United States for ester for enforcing the lire laws, are authorized to issue burning permits and, if iuvejssar, arrest those guilty of setting out fires. It is safe to say that not less than 500 men will be actively engaged in Pan-oiling Oregon's tlmuertd area the coming summer. Tile stall- torester has appo.nted ( twenty supervising wardens who ari l under state pay and devote their en tire lime to suppression of files and enforcement ol fire laws. The coun ties in which these men are located are: Benton, Clatsop, Clackamas, Columbia, Coos, Crook .Douglas, Jack son, Klamath, Lake Lincoln, Linn, Marion, Multnomah, Polk. Tillamook, Union, Wallowa, Washington, Wheel er and western Grant, Yamhill, Ba ker, Harney. Malheur and eastern Grant, Wurdens Also Referees. These wardens will issue permits where there is no local fire warden available, act as referee in case of any dispute over the advisability of issuing permits and keep in touch with the volunteer fire wardens. In addition to this they will fie iiuently inspect locomotives and log ging engines burning fuel other than oil und see that proper spark ancest ors are maintained ns well as make sure that old slashings ure kept in the safest possible condition. Copies of the law and other fire lit erature is being freely distributed in the stute by the government, state and private interests seeking to reduce the fire damage. This, together with a better public sentiment in favor of suppression of fires should result in their being far less frequent and damaging this summer than during previous years. WATER DISPUTE LEADS TO KILLING St. Anthony, Idaho, July 10. J S. Xell was shot and killed at Darby in Teton basin, by Ellington Smith. Both men are farmers and the kill ing is the result of a row over the right to water in an irrigation ditch, although a bitter feud hag existed between the two men ror a number tf years, The shooting was a severe shock to the community as both men were of a quiet and retiring nature, neither showing anything of a quarrelsome disposition and both held the confi dence and respect of their neighbors. Smith fired but one shot, killing Neil instantly. That there is more than the water right trouble behind the tragedy was indicated when Smith was interview ed after being brought to St. An thony by Deputy Sheriff Pickett. The prisoner said: "When it is time for me to speak 1 will show that I had just provocation for what I have done. Further than that I have noth ing to say at present." ANNA OOULD'S SON IS RIGHTFUL H11R Do you read the E&st Oregonlan? Do sag-.m Loses Suilt to liar Child 1 from Gorman Inheritance. Berlin. Prince Heile de Sagan, Anna Gould's husband, just lost a long-fought suit in the G rmnu courts whereby he sought to set atiUe the right of his 2-year-old s.n, Prince Charles Jason Howard, to in herit the De Sagin family's estate in this country. Prince De Sagan set up the conten tion that as his son was born m France the boy is not eligible to in herit the estate, hoping thereby to make it impossible for his German creditors to attach the revenues el ti e estate. The courts have decided that tii-; baby prince is the legal heir tj the properties, and the the revenues may be seized to satisfy Prince He! e s debts. SENDS BRUM. TO SCHOOL, Only 15. but Ha Been Married a Year. Tacoma. Although married a year Auttie Bell Sparks, colored, la years of age, will be compelled to attend the public schools at the opening of the fall term. Mrs. Sparks, with her husband, was arrested recently by the police for violating of one of the city ordinanes. Sparks was fined 10 and ordered to go to work. Mrs. Sparks was turn ed over to Probation Officer Read, and he announced today tho girl would be made to attelid school, despite her marriage. The hawk flies at the rate of 150 miles per hour the elder duck. i0; the rook, 60; and the pigeon, 50.