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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1911)
EIGI1T PAGES DAILY EASTl OltXGOXLVN. PENDLETON, OREXfeyft, 8ATU11DAY, SEPTEMBER. 16, 1911. PAGE PTVTt i! PERSONAL MENTION Newsy Notes of Pendleton Ladies and Misses New Showing of 13 m mm Suns and Coats That's what we are Selling right now We are ready for yon with by far the biggest and best se lected lino of l?eady-to-Vear garments we have ever shown. SUITS 300 of them Sizes 14 to 20 and 34 to 47. 400 COATS to chooso from in all materials and sizes $5.00 to $40.00 NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS. F. E. LlVNGOODaCO. THE LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S STORE. OCTOBER Ladies' Home Journal Patterns Ready. Arthur Tyson of La Grande has been a Juvenile vls.tor at the Round Up. L. V. Brown, traveling freight agent for the Spokane International railway was a Hound-Up vis. tor yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Jap Stevens of La Grande arc Round-Up visitors. They were formerly residents of Pendle ton. W. J. Koch, representative of the Heaver Engraving company, has been here today with the ad men's special from Portland. Edward J. Brown, formerly travel ng man In this territory ofr the IJo ciflc Paper company, Is here today as a Hound-Up visitor. T. I. Richards, manager for the well known Richards hotel and grill of Portland, was on board the special from Portland this morning. Among the Portland visitors at the Hound-Up are Guy AV. Talbot, presi dent of the Pacific Power & Light company, and his assistant. Lewis A. McArthur. A. G. Webb, son of G. W. Webb, Pendleton's most respjeeted and hon ored pioneer resident, is here from his home at. Wallace, Idaho. This Is the first time he has Deen In Pendle ton since 1905. LOCALS i Coal and wood, phone Main 6. Pastime pictures plea all. Dutch Henry for coal. Main 171. Snyder, chimney sweep. Tel. R 1811. Private board and lodging at IDS W. Webb. Phone Black 1411. Phone Platcoeder for fresh Meat and lard. Main 441. Dr J. A. Best has returned from his vacation and has resumed practice. Everybody goei to the Orpheum to ee the best and the clearest pictures. Call at 777 Thomson street for board and rooms. H. H. Copeland. Everything that's good to eat. la meats and groceries at the Cash Market, phone Main 101. Plenty of chickens, Including sprit fries, dressed If desired. Pendleton Cash Market. Phone Main 101. McMinnvlllo has decreed that all wires muni be put under ground. Clus ter lights will soon be Installed. Special rates to horse boarded by the week or month at the Oonamerclal Barn, 120 Aura street. Phone Main It. If you want first class dressed chickens, phone to Gadwa. Black S972. About 800 feot of good new garden hose for sale at cost price. Sharon tt Eddlngs. Lost Package containing little girl's black pumps. Finder return to this office and receive suitable re ward. Take Northern Pacific Ry. to Spo kane. Leaves 1:10 p. m , arrive 8:55 p. m. Tlcketa from W. Adams, Agent, Pendleton. If you wast to mov. call Pelaw Bros., Transfer, ph.ne till. Large dray moves you quick. Trash hauled once a week. 647 Main street. Phone Main 98 for Parker's au tomobile. Trips to all parts of coun try and city. Quick service. Stand at French restaurant. For transfer 'work, haallng bag gage, moving household goods and pianos and all kinds of Job work, phone Malnn 4(1. B. A. Morton. Lost Ladles' gold watch, between Willow street and Round-Up Park. Elgin make. Initials M. C. on back. Return to this office and receive re ward. Lost Lady's black pocket book containing silver, pair of glasses, check and card bearing name of Elizabeth Ilagalns. Finder please, re turn to this office for. reward. You can't burn state and gravel! Don't try It. Phone Dutch Henry, Main 178, for e'ean screened Hock Springs coal either lump or nut. It burns cloan and goes further. Pasaengors to rortlaud can save money and at the same tlmo have aa enjoyable river ride by taking boat from The Dalles. Str. Bailey GaUert loaves dally, ticept Friday and Sun day at 3:80 p. m., arrives In Port land 9:30. Fare 11.00. Lost. A red memorandum book with two 110 travelers' checks sighed G. V. Parker. Leave at this office. Dancing! . Dancing! There will be dancing Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday nights of this week In Eagle-Woodmen Hall' under the Saturday night dance management. If co.ng east, or west, or south, have tickets routed Northern Pacific Ry. Close connections at Pasco with all through trains. W. Adams, agent, Pendleton. Money to Loan. Five thousand dollars to loan by the City of Pendleton on approved real estate security. W. E. BROCK, C. P. STRAIN, J. L.- SHARON. Finance Committee. Wheat Lands for Sale or Kent. One 2000 acre wheat ranch, one 840 acre wheat ranch, one 320 acre wheat ranch. Plenty of water, good buildings. Close to market. Good terms. Call on or address, W. S. Smith, lone, Ore. SPECIAL NOTICE Monday tlio lyflst Day. Miss Evelyn, representing the Rem ington Co., of New York., Importers and manufacturers of human hair goods, Is at t lie Peoples Warehouse with a large stock of the latest styles of hair goods, natural gray and white included. Your Inspection cordially invited. All goods at manufacturers' prices. Monday Is the last day. MANY KEEK CIIEEVS IiOVE. 0213 Women From WorW Over Don't Wnnt Mono- '. New York, Sept. 16. The charms of Colonel E. H. R. Green, son of the richest woman In America, have cre ated such a pan.e In feminine heartj that the bank duns of 1907 have faded In comparison. No fewer than 6242 women, some of thorn youthful and mnny quite hand some, have written pleading for the privilego of being his wife. They do not want his money. They tell him so frnnkly. All he Is called upon to do Is to come to them penniless and kindly permit them to win his love. '' I Of tho foreign countries, England lends In this marital marathon, with Franco a close second and France's i rival on land and pea, Germany, a third. No fewer than 1335 women have entered tho contort from abroad. GLEANINGS. Mothers are at last equal guardians with the fathers of their children In New Hampshire, thf women having fought for years to get Buch a bill I ussed. Miss Lillian Pear: MoOmber has just been graduated from Ann Arbor ns an engineer, being the first woman giaduate to take a bachelor of science in architectural engineering. Miss Mo Omber' will enter a New York office nnd will make' a specialty of steel structural work. California talking about changing its marriage laws, statistics showing that while the population of the state has Increased 96 per cent since 1890, tho proportion of the insane in the same period has l.ncreased 116 per cent, and there Is now one insane per ."on in every 200 inlhabitants. Last year one-sixteenth of the cost of the state government was attributed to the care of the Insane. In view of all the facts, it is propesd that a thorough physical examination be ne cessary before persons may marry. No doubt quite as surprising statistics may be shown In other states. Women as silversmiths and Jewelers are increasing In ntsmber, and many are showing beautltur work. Mlsa Rrooke Clarke of London has done wonderful work in the treatment of crystals and In mounting amethysts after old Florentine designs. Miss Vyes and Miss Remington In London recently showed remarkable designs In necklace pendants and old silver. The Mothers' congress In Texas U working to have medical inspection In all the schools of 15.000 or more, In regard to health after absence and nt least once a year In regard to sight and hearing. The teachers are to keep records of the sight and hear ing of the pupils. Ten years ago the number of clt les having medical school Inspection was 11 and today ;t Is 4 43. The first school physicians were employed in Boston In 1894 and now there is an army of nearly 1500 of them. New York first employed school nurses nine years ag.j and now they number be tween 400 and 500 and nre employed by eighty cities. Sixty-nine cities em ploy dentists to care Tor the teeth of children. Massachusetts and New Jersey are at the head of the list with compulsory school inspection, while Vermont, Mississippi, Montana and Idaho have not even begun the work. ' More than 200 women were enroll ed lat .term in the home economics department of the University of Wis consin, more than a hundred took the course :n ndvertislnig, and 175 en rolled in tho class in Journalism. The members of the latter class were from 13 states and two foreign countries. lilaok Pea was frozen over for 20 days in 401. On January 9, 1889, ice was seven feet thick on that vast sheet of water. A VALUABLE MAN. "Yes, he had some rare trouble with his eyes." said the celebrated occu list. "Every time he went to read lie would read double." "Poor fellow," remarked the sym pathetic person. "1 suppose that In terfered with his holding a good posi tion?" "Not nt all. The gas company gob. bled him up and gave him a lucrative Job reading gas meters." August Ltppinoott's. Young: Hoy Dice. Neil Ferguson, the twelve-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ferguson, of Juniper, died at St. Anthony's hos pital last night at 10:30, death being duo to appendicitis. The funeral ser vices will be held at the Methodist church n this city on Monday at 2 o'clock p. m. Driiiiui'.erH Have Hili Jinks. The commercial travelers 'in the city held a high Jinks on the streets during the noon hour. W.th their heads surmounted with little red caps they pranced up and down the city and then adjourned to the Round-Up where they are making themselves ev ident with their merriment and enthusiasm. d Ladies m Misses l AND "SoruK's.'' Johnson Honored. E. A. Johnson, formerly of this city, is now deputy United States district attorney under John McCourt, the ap pointment having oeen made this week. In telling of the naming of Mr. Johnson as deputy district attor ney, the Oregonlan said: Everett A. Johnson, of the law firm of Rldgeway & Johnson, was appoint ed by United States District Attorney McCourt yesterday to a position as Deputy District Attorney. This gives Mr. McCourt three deputies, the other two being Walter H. Evans and Rob ert F. Maguire. The large accumula tion of work In the district attorney's office this summer has made the ap pointment of another deputy impera tive. Mr. Johnson -came to Portland eight years ago from Pendleton. He was admitted to the bar three years ago. Come and See them New Silk Waists . at $3.00 Come in black and white and navy and white stripes. Peasant style at $3.00 each. Come and see these extra values. $8 and $10 Silk Waists for $4.95 These come in Fersian and plaids, silks and plain net, regular values up to $10.00 on sale at S4.95 INTEREST IN ART. The American Art Annual for 1910 11 enumerates 94 4 art museums, art societies, and art schools as against 403 In 1907. This volume gives a brief account of 280- museums and art so c:etles In the United states, a list of 102 art schools with a total registra tion of 31,700 and a list tabulating the answers received 'from 170 colleges and universities maintaining courses In the- history of art and giving 5877 as the number of students receiving instructions in this course and 7751 as the number who had worked In the studias. Of the art schools, the record show 57 as strictly professional, giv ing instruction in drawing, modeling and paint-ng from the antique and from life. Instruction in design is given In 66 schools, 39 of which re port alsl classes in the various crafts, such as bookbinding, pottery and met al work. While the United States is lacking In "the well organized in dustrial schools that are such a strong ractor in Germany, France and Eng land," the teaching of manual train ing and of aesthetics In the element ary and secondary public schools has, nevertheless "grown very rapidly." This, naturally, has led to the estab l'sliment.of normal art schools for the training of teachers in this work and of these the records show 39 art schools with normal courses, the reg istration of which in 28 was 1928. The summer schools play an important part In the training or. teachers, and the evening schools of students. The number of architectural feder ations in the country' has doubled, since 1907, from two to four, and now there are 31 professional schools of architecture, most of them connected with universities, the number of pu pils enrolled being given as 3043. An estimate of the annual exepnditures for art education in tne United States, compiled by Henry Turner Bailey in 19'i8, Is given in this volume as a to tal of $11,565,241, "divided between the federal government, the states, the municipalities and private sources. The federal government, however, makes no direct appropriation for art in struction, the Item of $95,000 used for instruction in drawing in the Dis trict of Columbia, the Military Acad emy nt West Point, and the Naval Academy being included in the gener al schools funds." Will am Walton In "The Field of Art," In the August Scribner (Fiction Number). Wohienbsrg Dept. Store 'IJETTEIt GOODS FOR LESS MONEY." I The East End Grocery Headquarters In Pendleton for I FINE POULTRY Phone In your order and It will receive our prompt attention Main 536. J. W. DYER, Prop. THE OFFICE A. SCHNEITER, Prop. PENDLETON, ORE Farpily Liquor Store Phone Main 299 711 Main Street. RESISTS NUPTIAL, KILLED. Read today's want ads. Nashville, Tenn.. Sept. 16. William Fisher opened fire on a wedding par ty near Springfield. Tenn , in an at tempt to prevent the wedding of his niece to Benjamin Manlow. Manlow I'M'.irned the fire, killing Fisher in stantly. The party then repaired to the home of a clergyman, where the wedding knot was tied. Fisher was the only member of the bride's fami ly who d.d not favor Manlow's suit. No prosecution Is expected. e Try I Rose Cream for Sun Burn and Tan If you wish to be FREE of those blemishes 25c KOEPPENS rhe Drug Store That Serves Ton Beat. IN THE CORRAL. 4t4V44 44 - . ""t I "(i IIHI'.tti'"" 'J.'. (I fift -tMVf WVW 4Tts '-H4-HrrlHI (('-...- , rwmm-7-frv--riWm i ".l leilWI il )ij H i i m -T-Sfr a..'TM l. im-v.mm ywww ' $y:':'- . -V fcr"'' - t " it - . F II w-'., v r--;v'-.-1 .3 j 4 ; f,x& v; :'-t AKr-tiyti ? .A- V- vjr ., '"r r-,- J . ' .i' , V' ' yV'j K-'i-v '.'. c -r -'- - - '"" - 1 , ) I PENDLETON The Cowboy Headquarters and We are Headquarters in Pendleton for oivEioy Appirnl of Every Description Eesidcs we save you bia; money on eveiy purchase. SEE OUR BTvEAT LIXE OF HEX'S XEW FALL Cl.OTIUXG FOR FALL. Keep yovr eye on our large corner window. Woriringmen's Clothing Do. 11A1X AM) WKDB STREETS, PEXl)I.KTO.Y, OIIE IB insmmiiitiiinii r ni-MiiTn-wiiiiiTri-iiiMjii tmmimw i ihi-"t-imim Kt awn For Its Str.i th The First fkmm Bank PESBLtVOil, CKEEON Courtesy Pacific Monthly. CAPITAL, SURPLUS and UNDIVIDED PROFITS . RESOURCES OVER Sul.000.0U 0 SECURITY V I! J