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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1911)
PAGE TWO DAILY EAST ORE GONLYN, PENDLETON. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, ltll. FIGUT PAGES If Price Meant Beauty Then the Most Beautiful Dresses should be Made of Bank Notes. The poetry of life of which be coming dress is so great a part, is beyond price all may enjoy it who will live it. It's a womans peculiar mission to give more and more poetry to life, and she can do this largely through her dress, of course it is not given to all to orginate, but it is possible for all to select and adapt. Let each woman keep her own individuality and at the sometime make the very best of it by her dress. "Let her represent her own life and circumstances by her dress but at their ideal and not their lowest ebb." This, Pendleton's greatest and best store is better than ever pre pared to assist you, here you will always find fashions latest decree at prices no other store in Pen dleton can touch. Extra Special for Thursday Only $1.50 Long Kimonas 98c Ing, full pleated, in Persian figured lawns, blue, laven der ami red, also striped lawn in gray, light Line, lavendei anl pink ; very (bint;- rxl for the hot summer day3. SiVs 31 to 44. See window display on sale at this price Thursday one day only. Choice 98c The Peoples Warehouse 8 ATM PICTURE SHOWS Orjilietiin. Excellent program lor Tueslay'8 change; 1. The Railroad Raiders of ,62." Ka'em. A true? InclJent of the Am erican civil war. Here is a picture of real men. making real war. Sustain ed action in every scene. A story that provs truth stranger than fiction. 2. "The Thoroughbred." Edison. Comedy drama. Here is a racing story tot.! with all the vim and vigor ous vitality of outdoor life. The cast is a special one and brings out the unusual story with certainty and dis cretion. Three race horses are In tho picture and they p'ay their parts with an enthusiasm that is remarkable. 3. "For the Squaw." Pathe. One of the ben Indian pictures ever pro duced. The photography is excellent. The scenes are In the spring when the brook are in flood, to add to at tractiveness of the plctoral ortlon. 4. "The Foster Father." Pathe. Two rob;,r-rs are making a hasty re treat acros-i the roofs of some hous es, followed by the police. One i captured, but the other shipping down the fire escape, enters a room. Here he finds a dead mother and little ba by and quick'y seizing this chance, he clasps the baby in his arms and when the officers come they find wh3t they suppose to be a broken hearted fath er and husband at the side of his dead wife. Deceived with appee ranees, they let him go and he witl. the child goes to the west, where he strikes it rich In the gold fields and becomes a prosperous and respected citizen. Years lator his old pal Is released from prison and hearing of the where abouts of his old f-lend, seeks him out and threatens to expose him to his daughter if he is not given hush money Rather than this the reform ed man would give away all he has and is about to pay his old comrade money when the curtains are thrust aside and his daughter enters, having heard the entire conversation. Real izing her foster fathers black past she still forgives hi mand refuses to let .him pay money, thus ridding them both once and for all of all connec tion with the past, which they have left so .far behind them. S.1VE YOUR COUPONS. WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE DENTIST HEM) IN rONMXTIOX WITH MURDER Corvallls, Ore. Dr. E. N. North, an itinerant dentist located at Philo math. Is now In the Benton county Jail charged with the murder of Elizabeth Griffith, the woman whose body was found In the water above Henkle's mill dT in southwest of Phl- COMES QUICKLY. Don't Have to Walt for Weeks A Pendleton Illu-lration. Waiting is discouraging. Prompt action pleases everybody. A burden on the buck is a heavy weight. Hard to bear day after day. Lifting weight, removing the bur atn. I'.rins appreciating responses. Pendleton people tell of It. Tell of relief that's quick and sure. lomath, on Saturday, June 3. North was arrested at Eddyvlile by a party comprising the sheriff and deputy of Lincoln county and Sheriff Oellatly and the detective who has furnished the Information on which District Attorney Bryson and Deputy Arthur Clarke decided to issue a war rant. Dr. North made no objection to arrest and was brought to Corval lls today ut noon without difficulty. He is now in Jail awaiting a prelimi nary hearing, but at this writing it is not known exactly when this may bo held. The officials are not giving out in formalon as to the evidence warrant ing the arrest. It is known, how ever, that Sheriff Oellatly and Messrs. Hryson and Clarke have been very active in this case and shortly after the murder had detectives in the field and at work ferreting out the mur derer. From the flnt It was believed that Instead of suiciding, Mrs. Orif- famoiw French society drama. The character of the young woman is ad mirably developed and the Ironmast er is a man almost anyone might be : proud of. ! "Max Comes Home." A clever comedy. i "Winter Sports at Lucerne." In 1 teresting view of winter life, i Seven subject for this show. HEWS OF THS K0MHWST HS " Attacked by I tear. Monaca. Idaho. A hog owned by H. L H'iaglan.1 was attacked by a bear. The hog got the worst of the battle for he was still on the ground of attack while the bear was gone. Engine Sark lire LacroMe Grans. Lacrosse, Wash. A spark from a passing freight engine on the Lacros-se-Connell branch fired over 500 acres of bunch grass belonging to James Campbell, Theo. Strube and Gene Taylor, which was destroyed. Water Washes Hole in Ium. Meyers Falls, Wash. Through t-ume unknown cause water created a hole in the dam of the Kroll Lum ber company's sawmill at the falls and washed out the eastend of the dam. Tlio Cosy. Our program for Wednesday and Thursday is "Thanhouser Kid" fea ture, strong western, great home story and good comedy. "The Colonel and the King." Than houser. A delightful story, featuring the wonderful child actress the "Thanhouser Kid " in the leading role at the little king. George IV becomes king at the age of seven, but on his coronation day his cousin seiz es the throne and orders the boy kill ed. The man hired to do the Job. loy al to the little king, gives him into the care of an emigrant going to Am erica. Some scenes of Ellis Island are shown. In New York they be come separated and the boy is ship ped to the west, where he Is adopted by an army colonel, who desn't believe his story of being a king. Later a delegation comes from the boy's kingdom, telling him he is once more king but he refuses to leave his new home and dear friends, saying he is going to be an American soldier. "t;0HO Reward, Dead or Alive." American. A western story of ban dits and love. The lovers had a "po.n office" In the rocks and by chance the robbers hid their gold there, where it was found by Steve. The robbers, returning for their gold, found a love note end each thought the other had duped him. They had a furious fight, the noise is heard by the posse who captures thein Steve gets the reward and the girl. "The Harvest." Reliance. A pow erful story of inten.se human inter est, showing how a domestic tragedy was narrowly averted by a woman's quick wit The man was punished in thi case, not the girl, which is as It should be. "The Ingenious Accident." Eclair. Comedy, with the scene laid in the Alps. The young folks fooled pa into consenting to their marriage by a fake rescue. The perils and dan gers of the mountains are well shown. "Tommy Gets a New Trumpet." Eclair. Tommy's new horn was so strong that he blew everything away and caused much havoc. Good com edy. Don't fail to hear Hutchlns. the great whistler, at each performance. Heavy Eire Loss. Granger, Idaho. Fire starting from an unknown cause, in the rear of the Hotel Granger destroyed the hotel and seven other business buildings. The loss, which is estimated at a total of about $30,000, is said to be well covered by insurance. H unban! Would Not Eat. Butte, Mont. Because Mike Men ski, crippled with rheumatism, re fused to eat a meal which his wife had prepared for him with more than ordinary care, declaring that he had no appetite, the woman repaired to another room and, in a huff, drank carbolic acid, dying last night. Harvest Hands at S3 Day. Kooskia, Idaho. The big grain raisers in this section will pay 12 a day for harvest hands, and in all probability there will be a scarcity of men. The hay harvest is now on in the Clearwater valley and the grain is ripening fast.' It is now almost a certainty that the yield this season will be the largest in many years. Swim Fatal to Soldier. Fort Stevens, Ore A soldier named Dunn, of the 160th Company Coast Artillery, was drowned in the Colum bia river at Hammond. He was swim ming from the Hammond dock and In doing so drifted into the main channel. The tide was going out and his struggles to regain the dock ex hausted him. Pendleton Beer THE BEST Quality-quality first, last and all the time is the watchword in the produc tion of City Brewery Beer You do not find it lacking in that "life" so necessary to give it the required zest You assist in providing employment for home labor, build ing up your home city and supporting institutions that place rnoney in circulation here, when you buy homo products in preference to those that are shipped in. When you drink beer, insist on City Beer on draught at the following places: OPERA BAR, Anton Kraft, Prop. BILLY'S PLACE, W. J. Bogart, Prop. BREWERY DEPOT, Paul Hemmelgam, Prop. THE CRESCENT SALOON, J. IL Taylor, Prop. STATE SALOON, IT. J. Latourelle, Prop. JAILBHEAK FREES ALLEGED FORGER Parole, llurslar Charged With Aiding B. II. Stewart to Escape from Cell. Roseburg. Or. The most quiet and novel Jailbreak In Roseburg's history, set et liberty Ben B. Stewart, a soli tary prisoner, awaiting trial on a charge of forgery, committed from Canyonville, and accused of a similar crime at Boise, Idaho. Frank Kelley, a paroled burglar, who has been loaf ing about the court house off and on since last May. entered the sheriff's office during the night, according to the belief of the sheriff, secured the Jail keys which had been carelessly tossed on the safe, and liberated Stewart, after unlocking four doors. No trace of the pair has been found but their personal descriptions are being furnished to authorities in every direction. The fugitives are penni less and the belief is that they will endeavor to beat their way on trains. GIRL OUTWITS AUNT; SPOKANE MAN GETS BRIDE HE CAN TWIST BIG SPIKES. Man Dlneovcrs, Late In Life, Ho Una Wonderful StmifrUi. Wooster, Ohio. Michael Mansor, a confectioner of this city, although well along in years, has Just discovered that he has wonderful strength In his hands. Mansor watched a street fakir do ing feats with nails. He tried some of them and as astounded on finding how easily he could twist and bend nails. Then he tried the largest steel spikes and these he wns able to bend and twist with apparent ease. Mansor made a chain of the spikes to show what he could do with his hands. A strange part of Mansor's discov ery Is that although he has seen tricks of the sort performed he never befdre thought of trying to imitate any of the performances. Fireman Drowns. Salem, Ore. Hurled from the side of a scow over the swirling waters of the Eola Bar, Ralph K. Kennedy fireman of the government dredge Champoeg, was drowned in the Wil lamette river. Every effort to re cover his body has proved futile, although for hours a large number of men have been searching.' , l-'urnicr Suicide. North Yakima, Wash. Insane from continued 111 health, John P. Cleary, a lessee on the Yakima Indian res ervation, killed himself yesterday morning at 7 o'clock with a revolver. After spending a sleepless night in his home he fired a shot from a 38 callber gun that entered one temple and emerged on the other side of his head. Here Is a case of It L. Greenwald, 414 Lincoln (-treet, f ith had met with foul play, Pet.il; ton Oregon says: "I had se- vere attacks of baekachc and there THREE GIRL BURGLARS ROB wus soreness across my kidneys. I ! . , 20 HOUSES; GET. $-000 was iilso annoyed by a burning sen-1 satlon when voiding the kidney ?(.. j New Haven, Conn A series of dar cretions and the passages were too ' ing burglaries which have baffled the frequent. Being advised to try police in this city and surrounding Doan's, Kidney Pills, i did so and the towns, bave been cleared up by the contents of one box cured me. I arrest of three girls, Filimina and have had no cau-e for complaint .Mary Ragazlno and Christiana Car sin, e." sill all of this city, and the oldest 16 For sale by all dealers. Price 60 years of age. The girls have confess eents. Foster-MIIburn Co., Buffalo, ed to rifling 20 odd residences. Their New York, sole agents for the United ' average "haul was about $100. Ptates. I Remember the name Doan's and ! Present method of manufacturing take id other. , lime prevailed In 712 B. C. Tlio Pasting. The house of quality. A big feature program goes on Tuesday. "Range Pals." Selig. Written and produced by Francis Boggs. A true story of old Arizona in the eighties. Cast: Sheve, a cattleman, Hobart Bosworth; Dave, his devoted friend W. T. Santschi; Pedro, a Mexican dancer, Herbert Rawlinson; Charlie, Cheeney, a faro dealer, Frank Clark; Buck Wells, head of vigilance com mittee, Frank Richardson; Danny, an Indian boy devoted to Steve, Betty Harte; Mrs. Murdock, Steve's mother, Anna Dodge. Cattlemen, music hall habitues, vigilantes, etc. Like the story of Damon and Pyth ias of old, there existed between these two men a friendship absolute ly devoid of selfishness. "The Delayed Proposal." Biograph. Here is a film showing how a country bumpkin undertook to win a gay sou brette. Clad n his store clothes, the young, man studies a bk entitled "flow to Propose." The necessity for this educational process delays the proposal too long. The city lover ap pears and poor Zeke has exerted his efforts for nothing This is a good comedy and the characterization is above the average. "Bearded Youth." Biograph. Youth is not generally a handicap, but it proved so with this young doctor. In order to win his sweetheart's con sent to marry him he must have a practice. He wins out. "Over the Cliff." American Pathe. Here Is a tragedy which concerns a mountebank, hlH wife, a woman who alienated his affections and won him away from his wife. "The Iron Master." Edison. The Drake Arresti-d on Lllx-I Cliurjjc. Roseburg, Ore. J. 'O. Drake was arrested on a charge of criminal libel as the result of his having written and sent to The Oregonlan a com munication making charges against various Douglas county officials re garding the handling of the McClal-len-Mahan murder case. Judge Ham ilton, who is one of those accused, signed the complaint against Drake. who furnished ball. Chicago. Chicago was the scene of an exciting elopement made good af ter it had been threatened with fail ure. Bernard Gitler of Spokane and Miss Ida B. Adams of New York were married at the Grant hotel. Each eloped alone. Miss Adams from New York and the bridegroom from his home In the west. They were to meet in Chicago July 17. Miss Adams was not entirely at ease on account of the splonage an aunt was keeping over her. She packed up and reached Chicago " Wednesday. Her aunt was only a train behind her. As she was a few days early she decided to give her aunt the slip and take a chance on reaching Spo kane before her sweetheart left home for the tryst, but about the time Miss Adams hoarded the overland out of St. Paul Mr. Gitler was on a train bound for Chicago. The two passed each other at a side track. Miss Ad ams learned that Mr. Gitler had left Spokane. She wired him In Chicago that she was boarding the fastest train for this city. Meantime the aunt learned the girl's destination and started for Spo kane. She passed Miss Adams, who was returning. The aunt reached Spokane about the time Miss Adams arrived back in'Chicago. IN POUND, The following ' described animals have been taken up by the marshal of the City of Pendleton, to-wit: One bay mare weighing 900 pounds, branded 10 on left shoulder, roached mane. One gray horse weighing about 1000 pounds, branded N on left shoulder, roached mane. If said animals are not claimed by the owners or those entitled to the possession of them, costs and ex penses against them paid and they taken away within ten days from the date hereof, then at 2 o'clock p. m. of the 26th day of July, 1911, the said animals will be sold to the high est bidder, at public auction, for cash, at the City Pound, In the Ore gon Feed Yard, In said City of Pen dleton, the proceeds of such sale to be applied to the payment of such costs and expenses of making sale. Dated this 15th day of July, 1911. TOM GURDANE. City Marshal. Rail Fatalities are Few. Salem, Ore. Oregon leads all of the other states in point of the smallest number killed and injured in railroad accidents within the last year, according to a letter Just re ceived by the State Railroad Com mission from the Interstate Com merce Commission. There were 3804 deaths and 82, 374 Injuries on railroads In the Unit ed States in 1910, while in Oregon there were 57 killed and 181 injured. Three ("Iris Drowned. Spokane. Elsie Bltterlch, aged 16; Lucy Bltterlch, aged 21, and Goldle Robinson, aged 15, were drowned In the Pcnd d'Orellle river at Sandpolnt, Idaho. The girls had gone bathing, though none could swim. It is be lieved the Robinson girl got beyond her depth and that Elsie Bltterlch tried to save her and was herself overcome. The older Bltterlch girl lost her life trying to save these two, It is believed. MINISTER UPHOLDS DRINKING. Ho Also Apjrovo tlio Ufo of Good Cljrnrettc. Asbury Park, N. J. Drinking and smoking in moderation are not moral ly wrong. In the opinion of Dr. A. E. Ballard, president of the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting association. Nor does the doctor discountenance the use of cigarettes, provided they are made of good tobacco. Speaking at 'he Ocean Grove taber nacle, Dr, Ballard said he was brought up In a family where liquor was used regularly and that he had never had any conscious scruples about taking It. Many of the ministers In the con gregation disagreed with the speaker as to whether there was moral wrong In drinking, but Dr. Ballard smilingly Insisted that there was no wrong, in the moderate use of stimulants. PAYS LAST HONORS TO WIPE WHO IONG AGO DIVORCED HIM Cordele, Oa. An Incllent of un uua! occurrence was witnessed In Cordele recently, where the body of Mrs. James Ray of Milledgeville, for merly of Cordele. was brought back here for burial In Sunnystde ceme tery, from Hot Springs, Ark., where she died while seeking the recovery of her health. The' funeral was attended and the expenses of transit and burial paid by her former husband, whose name she still bore and from whom she had been divorced for several years. In attendance at the funeral also was n young son by the first marriage and the second wife of Ray i it Read the want cds. PROTECT YOUR HEALTH 1 during the hot summer and "bad water" months by drink ing our pure soda, root . beer, elder and beer. Cheaper Tliun a Doctor Bill. One dozen quarts -or two dozen plnls of the City Brewery's fa mous "Export Beer" delivered to your homo for J2 00. PENDLETON SODA WORKS. W, A. Ilcinmulgnrn & Bros. 400 E. Court St, Tel. Main 459 if if) r t is US SPEND YOUR VACATION at the OCEAN SHORE Z HOURS FROM PORTLAND SALT AIR, SEA BREEZES, COOL DAYS AND REFRESHING NIGHTfe. Ffrst-class hotels open all year at Gearhart and Sea side. Delightful trip to the mouth of the Co lumbia River through historic Astoria. ROUND Tickets Sold Dally by Agent of TRIP Nor, Pc. or O.-W. R. & N. Co. Return Limit October 31st. Illustrated folder and hotel directory will be sent on request. f . E. COMAN G'l. Ft. and Pass. Agt. S P. & S. Ry. PORTLAND, ORE. $13.15 lArCr"