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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1911)
DAILY EAST ORECONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1911. PAGE THREE. SIGHT PAGES. STYLE ! A BIG QUALITY ! WORTH ! REDUCTION ON ALL For .This Week Only $20 Suits $15 $25 Suits $1875 New Shipment oi Middy Dresses if Hi! L H: f : I i For This Week Only $30 Suits $2250 $35 Suits $36.25 New Shipment of Middy Dresses Don't Overlook This Money Saving Chance E VARIETY OF WEATHER (Special Correupondence.) Uklah, Ore, Nov. 13. High winds, ra n and snow has prevailed over thin section fr.r si-vral days. T f L'V... . l j .ni.ui, no practiced nere sev eral years ago, has returned and I bought the drugstore and intends to remain here permanently. The Uklah Mercantile company in- j tends to move into Its new store room. I The building Is 30x100 feet and Is the I largest and be-:t equipped store In this j end of the county. Air. and Mrs. Wm. Footer gave a farewell dinner Saturday for Geo. iNeuman, who leaves for soon. Germany faid to be the best farm in Greene county, located southeast of Linton, took a mule to Dilun, who is a black smith, to be shod. Baker knew the animal was vicious, according to the allegations of the complaint, but 'said nothing to Dillon about it. Dilloa proceeded with hi. work, and while stooping over shoeing a fore foot the animal seized him by the pants with its teeth and threw him twenty feet. He alighted on an iron floor with such violence that the tendons of one leg wero torn loose and his left knee was fractured so that he is still com pelled to walk on Tutches, though the injuries were sutain'd last May. He alleges he wil' be a cripple for life and asks damages in the sum of $0000. The defendant Is the estate of the lute Elijah U. Martindale of Indianapol's, "She is Waiting 99 JM '-. if A !)K. -I.EOMIAIJDT S JHS.'OVKItY. Roy Case and bride nasscd through here on their way to Galena. hherman Hale, a farmer of this sec tion, has finished seeding. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Turner arrived Thur day from lendleton and will again n.ako their home in Uklah. Mrs. Geo. Stewart, proprietress of the Ukiah Hotel, returned home Sat urday from Kennewick. Carl Power of Pendleton, Is now the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Adams. Clair Sturdivant, after spending several months in Portland and the coast cities, has returned home. Mary McKenzie left' for Pendleton Sunday, where she will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Lazinka. Per- Hcm-Koid Will Interest Every Hon Wlio Has Piles, The public is indebted to Dr. J. S. Leonhardt of Lincoln, Nebr., for years of study of the treatment of piles, and for his distjvery of a successful rem edy, taken inwardly, which livens up the stagnant blood circulation and re duces the swollen vessels. Dr. Leon hardfs pre-cription is HEM-KOID sold by Pendleton Drug Co. and all druggists at $1 for 24 days treat ment. Guaranteed to give satisfac tion. Dr. Leonhardt Co., Station B, Buffalo, X. Y. Write for booklet. WIVES OBSCTItED GEXIL'SES. UMATILLA PROJECT ALFALFA FOR O.A.C. SELECTED AS BEST FOK FEEDING DAIHY COWS Kvvrrul Now 1Ioiimm Cndrr Course of OMiMrm-lloii In lltfinlston and Sur rounding Country IfnIlelon Man Improve Ills Property. (Special Correspondence.) Hermlston, Ore., Nov. 13. The Maxwell Land and Irrigation com pany has shipped several carloads of alfalfa, two carloads going to the Oregon experimental station nt Cor vallls. It. W. Allen, superintendent of the I'matilla experiment station, was given instruction to purchase two carloads of the best alfalfa. After a careful selection the alfalfa grown on the Vmatllla project as being the best that be had seen. The hay will be used In conductmg tests as a food fur dairy cows. H. T. Irvin will soon commence ex tensive work on the ranch owned by Mrs. Irvin near Cold Springs station. Mrs. Irvin has 160 acres In this tract, about GO acres Is already irrigated by a spring, which has a very heavy flow of water the entire year. Work has been star'ed on the house and barn. S. A. Ne vberry of Pendleton, Is hav ing his land Improved. The Newport company has taken a contract to do the work. It will be levelled and put into orchard at once. He has twenty acres under the project. James Means is erecting a five room home on Gladvs avenue. His family will occupy the home. The Hermlston Bank and Trust company is having a heating plant In stalled In Its new building. The firm of Littler & Fraser has the contract. Mr. Thomas II. Haddox has made his final proof on his 20-acre home stead before Commissioner Vpths grove. He has nearly all of his place in garden truck, four acres in or chard and about five acres in alfalfa. Ho has received a good revenue from his land the last two years. clerks and watchmen by thousands poured Into the corridors and scur ried pellmell In search of the sup posed miscreants. Guards grabbed their rifles and pistols to shoot to kill, but no robbers were visible. When the excitement reached its climax it was discovered that the delicate electric mechanism which is attached to every opening to a vault had become disarranged, possibly through a short circuit of the wires, and set off the danger gong. EXPEKIMEXT FATTENING LAMBS Carload of 1(10 "Marv'n PoU" frr.,. 1 'mi In ml for Agricultural Collegf. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vallis. Ore., Nov. 13. A carload of 100 lambs has just been received by the Oregon agricultural college de partment of animal husbandry to be used in fattening experiments. In the series of tests to be conduct ed at the college the lambs will be fed on hay and grain, half of them being kept well housed in the barn, while half will be allowed to run in the open. The object is to test the value of shelter for sheep in western Oregon, since there seems to be a dif frence of opinion,' some sheeD rais ers believing that just as good results can be obtained where no shelter is gien tne sheep. The lambs will be fed 100 days and then sold on the open market for fat lambs. They are of no particular breed, the object being to gain results that will be typical of what can be done In ordinary sheep raising. WOI LD GO IJAItK FOOTED. Aclicw and Pains of rheumatism are not permently. but only temporarily, relieved by external remedies. Why not u-e an internal remedy Hood's Sarsaparilla. which corrects the acid ity of the blood on which rheuma tism depends and enres the disease? PANIC AT THE TKEASt HY. llurglar Alarm Goc Off. but There Arc no Burj-turs. Washington The burglar alarm of the United States Treasury play ed a prank, and the armed guards of I nclo Sam's millions were con vulsed with fear that the govern ment's valuts were about to be sack ed. When the nulet of the staid old Treasury building wns broken by the signal which is Intended to announce that robbers nre nt work, officials, Big Horse and Implement Irtty Mod'I Say Vnhod Tootsies Are tlio IroiT Tliiiifr. Chicago. "Bare feet on the street and nt home are just as sensible as bare hands if not more so. Champ ed feet account for the modern 'grouch.' If people of today would go barefooted for five years It would work a miracle in our dispositions. Shoes have caused more wrinkles than age." So says Beulah Lantz Eddington who Is one of the prettiest model posing for commercial art work in Chicago. In New Orleans, where Misa Edington has taken part in the Mar di Oras for five years, there is a club o' young men and women who wear sandals summer nnd winter. Miss Eddington was among the organizers of that colony, and she has brought the fad tq Chicago, where there is now a club of twenty-five South Side girls who have been wearing sandals at home for several months. They declare that next sum mer they will wear them on the street. FALSE TEETH FOIl A FIXE THOTTIXG MAKE Spokane, Wash. Blanche, a Dae Ing mare, which won inore than $10. 000 In purses and stakes for its own er, M. Chllds of Spokane, during the season of 1911, soon will go under the care of a local dentist, who is constructing a bridge with three teeth for the animal's lower jaw. Blanche spilled her rider at the races In connection with the state fair at North Yakima last August, and when a well-meaning mounted policeman tried to stop the runaway the mare leaped over the low fence and top pled over an embankment, knocking out three of Its lower teeth. The ac cident deprived the mare of grazing in the long grass, so Childs engaged a denti-t to-span the gap with a bridge. Blanche is now campaigning in the south. Olio Who SiiKvedcxI says Others Stand at Cook Pot and Wastitub. Cincinnati, Ohio. The material for successful real e-tate dealers, mer chants, lawyers, doctors, even aero nauts and financiers, is hidden away in many a wife at present engaged in washing her husband's clothes and cooking his meals This is the opin ion of Mrs. Elizabeth Held, a prosper ous real estate broker, at present seeking divorce from her hu-band, Paul L. Held, engineer at the Fair view Incline. "I could have gone on," she said "like many other married women, washing clothes and dishes and living in a way that prevented my children from having healthful and pleasant surroundings. But I found out that I could earn money enough In busi ness to hire some one to do these things for me and to provide for my children with a nice home and ad vantages. "The day will come when married women will go right on with the work that they are fitted for. Most people think women are born cooks and dish washers, but the truth is that if a wo man can do these things well, she is quite likely, if she possesses intelli gence, to be able to ao owier nimes still better." Mrs Held has made considerable money In the real estate business, and her husband alleges that her success drove away contentment. and so are those she la waiting on. And mlnj you, a good high-ball Is well worth waiting for. Good, pure, ' wholesome Rye Whiskey, like the brands we are now selling, will make one wait patiently, but enjoy the wait when the liquid arrives cool, comforting, and refresh ing. If you are a high-ball lover, better try a bottle of this splendid Whiskey of ours. You will always want that brand afterwards. And the price will satisfy you, too. TheOlympiaBar Phone Main 188 and Pioneer Bottling Works Phone Main 177. PETERS & MORRISOX, Prop, COWS DUUXK ON HARD CIDER. After Seventeen Ilovine on Soree Eating Rotten Apples. Greenwich, Conn. Seventeen cows belonging to Soren Jensen of Bank ville are just getting over a two day souse. Apples that had fallen on the ground and were left to ferment were responsible for the cows getting drunk. The animals finally became fighting mad and Jensen couldn't milk them. Stop coughing! You rack the lungs and worry the body. BALLARD'S HOREHOUND SYRUP checks irrita tion, heals the lungs and restores comfortable breathing. Price 25c, BOc and J1.00 per bottle. Sold by Koeppen & Bros. A. C. Occasionally a Los Angeles tales man is not a real estate dealer. CHICHESTER S P'lLS is I.adlrftl AL your UrvffUt tor j a it ran ax 4.'hl-heft-tcr'a Diamond 1111 in Ited and Gold tneUllIcX hoves, sealed with Blue Ribbon. Take other- Ku r jnuw lFurcft. A&kfnrCIIICIIh.TEKa DIAMOND It R AND P1LLA foe S& years known as Best. Safest, Always Reliab SOLD BV DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE A MOlTHFrL OF RLACKSMITII. PREHISTORIC IMAGE FOFXD. Nov. 15 'II at Veston, The undersigned will sell at Ore. public auction on the Johnston Farm 2 Miles South of Town Over 25 head choice registered and grade horses, ranging 3 to 5 yrs.f 12 to 1500 lbs. One of tlio finest stallions ever taken into a show ring tlio registered rcrehcron Gloadive, and two registered mares together with 25 young mares and geldings by that noted sire llaglan. All to ho sacrificed at this sale. A Holt 14-fU combine, a new horso power and thresher outfit, cook house, feed racks, tank and steel trough, har row, gang plow, and cart, 10 set doublo harness and 2 Bindo; two-seated hack, etc., etc This is a bona fide sale. I am overstocked and must and will sacrifice heavily in order to savo further loss. Terms: Under $20 cash. Balanro 12 months on ap proved notes 8 per cent. (3 years if desired on stallion). 3 per cent off for cash. Sale Begins 10 a. ra. Free Lunch F. G. LUCAS, Auctioneer IRA M. KEMP and F. T). WATTS, Clerks. E. C. (CHANCE) HOGETCS, Owner. Kclic Apimrcnlly Had Iiiil Viulis turlMHl TlmmRli -Many As" Preston, Kans. What is believed to be the linage of the goil of a pre historic rneo was unearthed here by Frank Kelly, a contractor. The Im ago was found seventeen feet below the surface in soil that apparently lias lain there for a.cs. It was in n formation of very hard yellow clay. It shows the ln ad and bust of a man. Tho l'iKiirc is made of materials re sembling plaster of paris, though it is much harder. There were numer ous fragments of the same material lying near, nnd efforts are being made to place these together to de ti rmlne what kind of people made tho imago. Country Mule Hosortexl to Ilnrk-HU-ins: as n Method of Heveiifre. Linton, Ind. E. B. Martindale's es tate. Incorporated, is made defend ant in a suU for damages brought by James H. Dillon, on charge that is not of the ordinary. Clayton Baker, who is employed on the Martindale farm of 1200 acres, ONE DOSE MAKES INDIGESTION GO nvsPF.PsiA. ; s and OTIir.ll STOMACH MISKKY kxds St. George Cafe and Grill WHITE COOKS, SERVICE FIRST-CLASS Open Day and Night Prices are Reasonable Hot Merchants Lunch Daily 1 1:30 A M. to 2:00 P. M. French Dinner every Sunday from 11 a. m. to 8 p. nt. Entrance on Webb Street or through Hotel Lobby Independent Meat Market We have re-opened the Farmers' Meat Market on easf Court street and will carry a fine and fresh line of FRESn AND CURED MEATS, SAUSAGES AND LARD. POULTRY EVERY SATURDAY. KURRLE & SON Tlione Main 445. Prompt Delivery. Hoy Kills Svlf. Everett, Wash. l.eo liolger, aged lii years, residing with his parents, Jir. and Mrs. Joseph O. liolger, I Uuckcr avenue, shot and instantly 1 killed himself while trying to show j Arthur Humphries, 3301 Norton avc- : nue, his chum, aged is years, that j he was brave enough to spring tho i trigger of his revolver with the set ! safety on. It happened that the set was not placed and the bullet enter I ed the boy's eye and proceeded into his brain. He fell to the ground. Kills Companion. Castlerock, Wash. Arthur Wyant. son of James Wyant, a wealthy far mer of Toutle, Wish., this county, was accidentally shot by Kd Iarge, a hunting companion and . died two hours later. Tho accident happened ten miles from Toutle in the hills. Af ter doing what he could for his com panion Large left him with other members of tho party and hastened for help. Dr. Wolf of Castlerock was called, but death had taken plave be fore he could reach the Ecene.i lYcxvnlcr Primary NovciiiIot 1ft. Freowater, Ore., Tho council at Its last meeting set the date for city pri maries November IS. At that time a mayor, recorder, treasurer and three councllmen will bo named. riv, Minutes After Taking n Little li:i)M'psin Your Stomach Will 1-Vel l'iiu Auain I-iit Your Favorite t Poods Without riNir of DMross. If your meals don't fit comfortably, or you feel bloated after eating, and you believe it is the food which fills you; if what little you eat lies like a lump of lead on your stomach; if '.here is difficulty in breathing after eating, eructations of sour, undigest ed rood and acid, heartburn, brash or j a lelching of gas, you can make up! ;ur mind that you need something to stop food fermentation and cure in digestion. To make every bite of food you eat aid in the nourishment and strength of your body, you must rid j your stomach of poisons, excessive acid and stomach pas. which sours yrur entire meal interferes with di-M'-iinn and causes so many sufferers of dyspepsia, sick headache, bilious ness, constipation, griping, etc. Your case Is no dmcrent you are a stom ach sufferer, though you may call it by some other name; your real and only trouble is that which you eat does not digest, but quickly ferments and sours, producing ulmost any un healthy condition. A case of Pape's Diapepsin will cost fifty cents at any pharmacy here and 1 will convince any stomach sufferer five minutes after taking a single dose that fermentation and sour stom ach Is caus'ng the misery of indiges tion. No matter If you call your trouble catarrh of the stomach, nervousness or gastritis, or by any other name always remember that a certain euro Is waiting at any drug storo the mo ment you decide to begin Its use Tape's Diapepsin will regulate any out of order stomach wlth'n f ve min utes nnd digest promptly, without any fuss or discomfort, all of any kind of food you cat. II Your Neighbor Has Electric Light and you have not, just step into his house some even ing; after dark and compare its li.u'nt with your own. Study each point of convenience, cleanliness, clear ness, heauty carefully, and then fijrure out for your self if it would not pay you well to have your house wired for electric li.eht nt once. Electric Light Today is Cheaper and Better Than Ever Before since the General Electric Company placed its MAZDA lamp on the market 'e have arranged to supply our customers with the G. E. MAZDA lamps on very favorable terms. Tli-ve lamps give two to three times as much light as other lamps us ing the same current. If your house is located on any of our distributing lines we shall be glad to advise you about having it wired and will give you more facts about the efficient electric lighting of your home. m norm "Always at Your Service'