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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1912)
rAOE TEN. DAILY BAST OREOOXIAX, PENDLETON, OREGON. SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1912, TEN PAGES The Seeds to Sow, are the Seeds that Grow It's Time to Plant anJ here is ihe place to pet your seeds. Wc liave a fine lot of tlio following SEED POTATOES EARLY ROSE, EARLY BITRBAXK, EARLY 6 WEEKS, EARLY OHIO, LATE Ol'ITO. lH-itle, anything you want in pardon and flower seeds. All ilnr early vegetables that are now on the market are to ho found hero. Phono orders carefully attended. Standard Grocery Company, Inc. Where All Are Pleased Frank O'Gara, President. Bernard O'Gara, Sec. -Tress. Newsy Notes of Pendleton i;khI Roads Meeting. Members of the Umatilla County Good Roads association are this af ternoon meeting with the good roads committee of the local Commercial asstiatlon In the club rooms. Walla Walla Mini .Marries Here. A marriage license was Issued to day to Arley Lee White of Walla Walla and Maggie Smiley of this county and the couple were married at the Hotel St. George by Rev. Frank J. Milnes. ACTRESS AEH MTV DESERTS DIVORCE r.CRDEXF.D AMERICAN Monte Carlo. March 13. Within a short time after his wife named The odore Gerard, an actress, as corres pondent in her divorce suit against him, Edwin R. Thomas, a former Xew York banker, has been deserted by the actress, according to reports received here today. Thomas is roaming about Europe in a Jealous rage with a divorce suit on his hands. Patrons of the to Mi y li m M UJ hM Ik I FT? n r?33 rr an ii w m IS II If to anyone calling at our store and making a OosSi Purchase we will give absolutely free, a round-trip ticket on the O.- W. R. &N. to the corner stone laying ceremonies at the asylum, which takes place on Tuesday afternoon. You must call al the store to get your ticket. FRESH V0 VEAL FRESH FISH DAILY DRESSED PQULTR DAILY Everything new, everything clean, sanitary and strictly up-to-date at the "GOOD EATS" Phone Main 444 DOWKEY & MARSH, Prop. 815 Main Street Sues to Foreclose Mortgage. In the local circuit court, John F. Fink today commenced suit against Frank E. Ramsey .for the foreclosure of a mortgage upon land in this county. The mortgage, it is alleged, was given as security for a note for $400, no part of which has been paid. li. Citron of Portland is attorney for the plaintiff. 1rMrinr for Arbor Day. The schools of the state will ob serve Arbor Day which falls on the second Friday of each April and, in preparation for the observances Su perintendent L. R. Alderman is send ing out pamphlets suggestive of the "uiiv nnieii suuuiu ue aone on mat i day. County Superintendent Welles received a supply of these books to day, which he will distribute at once. ( alderlieaa Coming Home. Steady improvement is noted in the condition of S. B. Calderhead. gener al agent of the Northern Pacific in this city, according to information re- j ceived here from Rochester, Minneso ta, where Mr. Calderhead recently un derwent a seritiin nnerntion. Tlnrrlnp' , ' . complications, Mr. Calderhead 13 ex- j pected to arrive in Walla Walla the first of the month. Wa'la Walla Union. Five Drunks in Court. Five drunks were lined up before rolice Judge Fitz Gerald this morn- j i ing and each received the same treat ment. As a result the list of guests in the city bastlle has been increased for the next three days by five. The I names of the new inmates as regis tered on the docket this morning are Malcom Bell, John Eelding, Frank F.rlde, Bazel Simert and John Sledter. Return from Campaign Tour. James P. Xeal, candidate for the re publican nomination for district attor ney, and Homer I. Watts, possible candidate for the republican nomina tion for circuit judge, returned today from the Heppner country whero they had been circulating among the I VOtprs. Mr Vojll ct.ltno Via taea mtifli encouraged as a result of his trip. Watts states he has not yet decided whether he will contest for judicial honors, his decision depending upon developments within the next few A GUARANTEED ADVERTISEMENT Wo guaranteed the ACCURACY of every statement made herein, and ve usk that you hold 113 to a strict' accountability for our statements when you buy and wear Cherry Tree Brand ALL-WOOL CLOTHES All McmImts Out on Tuesday. Secretary Keefe of the Commercial association today issued the following j call: j Every member of the Pendleton j Commercial association including those that have recently put in their application for membership 1 are re quested and urged to meet in a body upon Tuesday, March 26, for the pur pose of participating in the short pa rade to be reviewed by the governor. This is fitting, since it was the Com mercial association that was instru mental in bringing this hospital to Pendleton. Make at a point to be there. When the clothing store man points to tho label, and says: "This is a Klrschbaum suit," he knows that the suit Is ALL-WOOL and a safe suit for you to buy. The fabric used for every outgarment and every suit barring mohairs, sold with the Klrschbaum la bel, is pure wool and all-wool. Let us tell ycu how we know; how the retuiler knows; why YOU can be sure: We might go by our., own expert judgment as the result of our over a half-century's experience in handling woolens. But we do nothing of the sort. We accept no one's opinion in any matter so vital to the clothes wearer and to the Kirschbaum reputation. We chemically test every piece of goods, In a la boratory Installed for the purpose in the Klrsch baum factory. First, in the mill-sample and, again when the roll of cloth isj received in our examining . rys ? : - : i ! ; t j(tV.4r ' ;- v ' v. i f .1 s r- ' i :. t .1 111 f ; : : 1 ; i ! ! ! ! 'II roam. Thus we make sure that ho fabric with the slightest cotton trace can reach our cutting tablea You are getting an ALL-WOOL, suit, when you get a suit with the Klrschbaum label. AX1) IT'S TIIOnoUGIILY-SHHUXK AMi-WOOIi Your Kirschbaum suit will give you the servico you have a right to expect because it is not only ALL-WOOL but thoroly-shrunk all-wool. Our fabrics come from the mills already shrunk. Here again to make sure to be certain that each piece is thoroly shrunk, we reshrink it. We use the most thoro shrinking process ever Invented the or iginal London process and we know that there la uo shrink left in a piece of cloth when It goes to 'our cutting tables. o, your Kirschbaum suit is ALL-WOOL, shrunk and reshrunk: A vital point for the lasting ex cellence of the work of designer, cutter and tailor depends on the fabric. HAXn-TAlLOmCD. Kach Kirschbaum garment la hand-tailored in every essentlnl part precisely the same as custom tailoring of the better kind. The shape is needle moulded into the all-wool, reshrunk fabric; and the coats are built on a solid foundation of finest hair-cloth and shrunken (linen) canvas. The hid den parts are carefully finished; inside seams are turned and serged, etc. There Is a refinement of detail an air of tail oring thoioness, In Klrschbaum clothes, that is a source of gratification as long as you wear them. AVTHOniTIVF. STYLE. The Klrschbaum Tailor Shops are tho birthplace of new styles. This half-century clothes industry is world-wido in its reach and in instant touch with every development in men's fashions. All dollies sellers know thl. Kirschbaum cre ations are watched for by the clothing Interests of America as your well-dressed Englishman observes the wardrobe of tho King. The man In Klrschbaum clothes Is In a position of stylish leadership wherever he may appear. KIKSCHIVU'M'S. THE I'.F.ST CLOTHES SHOPS IV AMF.KICA." That is the opinion of a "buKiness-nglneer." Ono who is familiar with clothes' manufacturing estab lishments everywhere. This expert was employed by us to show ways of bettering our product. Ho said, "I have never seen anything so good; I know of no wey to Improve what you are doing." In three years the sabs of Klrschbaum clothes have Increased two millions of dollars. In this per iod, for every dollar spent In advertising we have spent two dollars In Improving the clothes. TIIK KIKSCIEIAOI WAHltAXTY Wo giinrnntoo our goMls to tlio denier anil lilj customer, if anything goes wrong, wo will make It rlglit. Should you find any ImixTfoftlnn In tlio cloth or tailoring of a lvlrsrlihniini linnrf. imulc garment, it may 1h returned and the money will bo refunded. SEE OUR LARGE CORNER WINDOW DISPLAY. omiiigmsn s mmmm mm SOLE DEALERS IN KIKSCIIBAU-M ALL-WOOL CLOTIIKS IN PENDLETON We have other Clothing as Low as $3.75 a Suit py Walker Struck by Train. That Sam Walker, the man whose body was found near Thorn Hollow recently, was struck by a passing freight train instead of falling off tho train as has been supposed is the op inion of Gus Conoyer who lives in the Thorn Hollow country. He states that Walker appeared at his home on the night before the body was found and asked for shelter from the storm but declares he refused permission partly because he had no room and partly because lie did not like the stranger's looks. The man contin ued on up the track, h says, and shortly afterwardikjie heard a passen ger train and a freight train rumble by, one close behind the other. In vestigation, he says, shows whero the man's tracks turning out to allow the passenger to pass and then re sume the track. Therefore, he sup poses that in the storm the man did not hear the second train and was struck by It. Taft Machine Has Indiana. Indianapolis, March 23. Incomplete returns from twenty-five counties in dicate the adherents of President Taft 1 will control the republican state con j vention when It assembles here next , week and they will name four dele ' gates at large to the Chicago conven : tion. Klaus Favorite. San Francisco, Calif, March 23. Frank Klaus, of Pittsburg, Is a 10 to 8 favorite over Jack Diller, middle weight, whom he wTl fight this af t rnoon. Both are in good condition. Both made 158 pounds. Miners and OjKrators Itcwt. Clevelad, Ohio., March 23. After several days of sesB'ons with no ad vance efforts to avert the Impending strike of bituminous coal miners, the conference of miners and owners took a recess today and will meet again Tuesday. juick Justice for ItnplKt. Salt Lake, March 23. George Par ry got "railroad Justice" here today In a sentence of sixty-ono years Im prisonment for mistreating 11 year old Lydia Almstadt. He was arrest ed yesterday. Oldest Congressman Dion. Philadelphia, March 23. Congress man Henry Harrison Bingham of Pennsylvania, died hero today. He was "Father of the house," having been a member since the forty-sixth session. FAITHLESS 1IIP.I5Y, OS, SUED FOIl DIVORCE IJY WIFE, 75 Paris, March 23. A divorce today from Francis Houlet, age 93, is being sued for by his wife Helene, age 75 She says Francis flirted with young girls. WHIP MISERS, SAY'S JUDGE. Kansas City Jurist Sorry Ho Can't ilvo Stlngj- Father Fifty Lashes. Kansas City. Whipping would be fit punishment for misers who neglect their families, according to Judge E. E. Porterfield of the Juvenile court. Frank Wyant, who admitted that he had $23,000 in bank, was before the court for falling to provide his ten-year-old son with clothing and shoes, that the child might attend school. "I wish I had a whipping post for a miserable . old wretch like you," Judge Porterfield told Wyant. "A man like you should have fifty lash es." s Notice to Stockmen. For Bent 240 acres good pacture Plenty of water, at Meacham. Oregon. Inquire of Kopittke & Co., Pendleton, Oregon. SMOKE UP! 1 JHf.WIr,lm3ai That's the way our southern colonels do, nd, bellevs' us, they know something about the art. Go and do likewise, but GET YOUR. CIGARS FROM US, W. J. Connor & Go. Successor to HARRY O'DETX. Cigars, Candles and Pool Room. 149 Main Street Phone M. 4. "Clark's Grocery". COOKING APPLES, per box $1.00 BLACK TEA, per pound 25 MACARONI, per box . 50? STANDARD BERRIES, per can 20 FANCY PINEAPPLE, per can 25f Always Call for the 'S. & II." Green Stamps. CLARK'S GROCERY Phone Main 174 612 Main Street FIFTEEN FOR FIFTEEN . m rUs ASK Royal M. Sawtelle The Jeweler i i