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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1913)
'! PAGE EIGHT. TUTLY EAST r.ftEflOyTAV, PRNDLETON. OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER U, lim. E1GTTT PAGES. Just Tell Central "96" When placing your GROCERY ORDER to morrow morning. There is an absolute assur ance of quality and service, when you trade at the store "where all are pleased." STANDARD GROCERY GO. Frank O'Gara HISS HOBBS ON WAY TO CAPITAL SmiTATK SKCKKTAUY TO GOV " RUN OK WEST LEAVES FOR WASHINGTON. OX AX IMPORTANT MISSION Oarrles TiUUivo Irafw of Several Measures and Much Data. That Will He of Vain to the Oregon Tok-trtJon In OOnfress on State IjumI Matters. SALEM Ore.. Oct. 14 Supplied wth tentative drafts of several meas mrea and a large amount of data that as expected to be of value to the Ore iron delegation in congress. Miss 'Fern Hobbs. secretary to Governor "West, left yesterday for Washington, D. C., tn connection with a number of . to port ant state land matters. "A number of these matters have raniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiii!i!iiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1 If you are looking for Cod Teas 1 you are looking for this store p TVith our fine lines of hiph grade TEAS we are in a position to 5 cater to, and satisfy, the desires of the most rabid or E S particular tea drinkers. I Nothing But the Best I Schillings liest Tea Golden West Tea Xuraja Sjceial, package Hill 'Bros. Tea, package . Jlilvilla Tea, extra fine .... Fine Tea in bulk, from 25 to LET US PROVE THAT OUR TEAS ARE UNSURPASSED. I Boynton's Grocery W. L. Boynton, Prop. E I 612 Main Street- Phone 174 a'ij 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 lTl Basco & Brown's ZSst&sr "Who's Who" 15 General Admission 25c Front Half of House 35c Two Shows Nightly, 7 and 9. Matinees Saturday and Sunday, 2:30. FREE MATINEE to children under 16 next Saturday only. Compliments of company and house managers. Adults, any matinee 20c. Court and Johnson Sts. been under way for some time, but some are experiencing the usual de partmental and congressional delays." said the governor. "Miss Hobbs car ries additional data in their support for the information, of the several de partments and our congressional del egation, and will learn at first hand the nature of the opposition and de lay, in order that we may learn how to be of greater assistance to our dele gation in securing favorable action. The propositions up Include the fol lowing: "1. An endeavor to secure an early Issue of patents to a large acreage of lands selected gy the state as indem nity school lands These lands have been sold by the state subject to pat ent and delay in securing same in causing a considerable loss to the school fund in the way of interest. "2. Securing patents to certain lands long since reclaimed under the Carey act. "3. The acquisition of title through federal grant to about 4000 acres of swamp land In Swan lake Klamath county. "4. Securing patents to a large number of tracts of swamp land sold 25 and 50 .. 25t and 50 30? - 25 40 50 per pound. j- -AT THE- E3 "JJ J La Change of Bill TONIGHT vlusical Comedy by the state In years gone by and for which no patents have ever been re-i I celvetl from the federal government. I Adjustment of lUgrhls. "Fifth The fin adjustment ot the state's rights under the swamp not of 1SS0, either through selection of the lands In place by state and federal agents by a specific grant of forest lands in lieu of the state's swamp claim. "Sixth The passage of the bill to create a state forest through the ex change of state and government lands "Seventh The acquisition from the federal government of title to Sand island, near the mouth of the Colum bia. The annual revenue therefrom through the lease of fishing rights would be a valuable addition to the hatchery fund. Eighth Obtaining title to certain federal forest reserve lands along Tanner creek near Bonneville for the purpose of securing state control of the At ream that It mignt te used as a feeding ground -for young trout and salmon released from the state hatch ery At Bonneville." SALKM ELECTION WILL KK 1IK1J) AS ANNOUNCED SALEM, Ore., Oct. 14 By a mar gin of only 4 8 names, the petition for a local option election in Salem on November 4 was declared to be valid and County judge Bushey issued the notice of election. It was feared that the petition would be thrown out because of the many errors it contained. it was found that many womon had signed the petition for themselves and other members of their families, and some had used their husband's Initials when they were registered under their giv en names, and ward numbers had been confused with county precinct numbers. There were over 400 names on the pttition and only 250 names were needed. County Clerk Max Gehlhar finished checking the petition and found thero were 48 more valid names than the number required. COURT SETS PORTLAND BACK IN DOCK BUILDING I SALEM, Ore., Oct. 14. Further de lay was faced by the city of Portland in securing money with which to car ry on the construction of municipal docks when the supreme court sus tained a demurrer and quashed an al ternative writ of mandamus directed against Mayor Albee and Auditor Barbur to compel them to sign, dock bonds amounting to two and a half million dollars, approved by the city Po'inell. Chief Is Executed. LONDON, Oct. 14. A Pekin dis patch to the Dally Dispatch says that Chen, chief of the Peking mounted police, was executed. ' Chen was ar rested October 10, during the Inaug uration ceremony. He confessed that southern rebels had bribed him to make an attempt to assassinate Yuan Shi Kal as the president was taking the oath of office. Precautions for the protection of Yuan Shi Kai have been redoubled. He moves nowhere without a body guard. flabby and O'Brien light Draw. WINNIPEG, Man.. Oct. 14 Eddie Clabby of Hammond, Ina., and "Win nipeg Jack" O'Brien, fought a 12 round draw here. Clabby Is a broth er of the middleweight boxer The men are welterweights. Modern Dentists Dr. Thos. C. Oluuart, Manager. TAYLOR HARDWARE BLDG. Pendleton, Ore. JIM LEE RESTAURANT ''Good Eats All Kinds of Meals 624 Cottonwood Street Company in iaw iflrai newsy notes of Pendleton Ada nis Ab"ut the Same. The condition of Robert Adams Is reported to be about the same today He Is still very low but the physicians have not yet given up hope of saving his life. funeral of Pioneer Held. The funeral ot "Uncle Jlmmle'" Lehman, who died Saturday while bo Ing brought In from Lehman Sprlngi was held this afternoon at the Brow undertaking parlors and Interment v-as made In the Olney cemetery. Many friends of the beloved ploneei were present to pay their last re spects. VandTiool Will U Filed. The will of Lynch Vanderpool, de ceased, of Weston, was admitted to probate today. By the terms of the will, each of the three children, Anna Wlllson, John T. Vanderpool and Mary Isley, are given five dollars and the balance of the estate goes to the widow- for life At her death it Is to be divided equally between eight other children. Realty Transfers. State of Oregon' to City of Umatil la, 14.67 acres of tldeland at Umatll la; Saraton George to D. R. Brownell. lot 7, block 16, city of Umatilla; Doug las Leffingwell to Casey Lumber Co , trees and lumber on forty acres in section 12, twp. 1. S. It. 34. consider ation 1350: William Sutherland and wife to Delia Agee, lots 3 and block 79, Reservation addition Pendleton. i: to Mli Miirtin Very low. Having developed a complication In the last day which does not result in more than one of a thousand cases of typhoid, MUs Rachel Martin, dau ghter of C. H Martin, the county road engineer, la today in a very grave condition. A swelling formed In the glands of her neck yesterday and threatened to Bhut off her breath. Physicians lanced the swelling and this morning her fever was normal and she was breathing easier. Anoth er nurse arrived this morning from Walla Walla to assist in caring for her. County Jail Is 'Klnderparton." Furnishing food for the criminol ogist's mind is the county Jail today. Confined in it are six prisoners hard ly more than boys and another will be added tomorrow. Four of tho boys. Austin Williams. Fred Getman Jerard Uoblnson and David Koestner, were bound over from the Milton jus tice court on a charge of burglary. The other two. Amos Smith and Charles Edwards, are the two who were arrested several days ago and charged with the larceny of two horses. They were held under $5000 bonds by Justice Parkes today. The seventh is Wendell Galtoway, a boy bridegroom of but a few days who was arrested at La Grande upon in structions from the local officers. Ht hi accused of defrauding a hotel keeper of $32, W. J. Cell being Un complaining witness. VALVE OI1 FARM CHOI'S IS 110 MILLION' DOLLARS OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallis, Ore., Oct. 14. With an agricultural production of about $140,000,000 for the year 1913 about $13,000,000 in excess ot last year's valuation the Oregon farm er need not fear that he will be over taken by hard times. The exact fig ures based on estimates made by Dr. U'ithycombe, director of the experi ment station, are $139,505,328 for the current year, and $126,764,049 for tho piecedlng year. The total valuation is made up of $74,099,165 representing crop values and of $65,405,500 representing the value of other agricultural products. Tho leading crop money-maker is wheat, with an estimated production of 22.146,887 bushels, valued at $16. 510,165. Its nearest competitor la hay, 1,511,621 tons, valued at $13, 604,589. The value of the fruit crop U $8,000,000. The figures for clover seed, while the lowest of the nine sep-arately-llsted products, are in many ways the most gratifying of all. They represent a new Industry, vindicate the contention of the College author ities that clover and alfalfa can be and are grown successfully,, and in dicate that valuable additions to the fertility of Oregon farms have been made. ' Of agricultural products other than crops the value of livestock sales is $34,807,500; dairy products, $18,425, 000; poultry and eggs, $8,700,000; wool, $2,975,000; mohair, $356,250; and honey, $141,750. FRANCIS J. HENEY IS l'ROGRESSIVIJ CANDIDATE SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Oct. 14. With Francis J. Heney already the avowed candidate for the progressive nomination to succeed Senator George C. Perkins of California next year; Former Mayor James D. Phelan, prac tically certain of the democratic nom ination and John L. McNab, former United States district attorney, asked to stand for the republican nomina tion, California Is facing one of the biggest political fights In Its hlsto-v. The candidacy of Heney is accepted b:- all to mean that Governor Hiram Johnson will not be a candidate for the senate but will try for reelection. Heney and Johnson, two of the state'tt Uadlng progressives, are close friends find it practically Is certain that He ney's candidacy has Johnson's stamp of approval. As the situation now lines up next year's race for the sen atorshlp with the people for the first time making- the final choice, the race to succeed Senator Perkins promises to eclipse the governorship fight In real Interest and excitement. There will be no contest for the gov--.-.nr'n )f 'niunn runs aT.iln but the senatorshlp fight ! certain to be a hummer. MAN WITH "CRAZY JAG" EXCITES MANY HAS OS SCANT C'Mn'HIN'G AN OTHER POMCK VICTIM. WKAltS TIIKKK PAIltS. A modern Thomas Carlyle with an ambition to write a new philosophy of clothes might have found excellent material for a "Sartor Resartus" In police court this morning for the of ficers had two casey bearing upon the significance of wearing apparel. One prisoner in jail was found to be In an extremely negligee attire while an other had enough raiment to clothe a hnlt dozen men. A waiter at a local restaurant, whose name Is withheld because he refuses to give it was arrested lust night in the annex to the Senate room ing house after he had terrorized all of the tenants for a half hour. He was carrying what Is known In com mon parlance as a "crazy jag" and he gave Officers Russell and Scheer a lively tussel before he was finally put to bed in the municipal bastile. Thought not a sansculotte, he was sans coat, sans hat and sans shoes for he refused to dress before being as sited from his room to safer quarters. This morning when his case was call ed for trial, his Inherent modesty as serted itself and he refused to appear in a court of justice without a com pleter nttlre. Judge Fits Gerald, whose dignity is not offended by a mere matter of raiment or lack of raiment, made it known that the man's appearance would have no bearing upon the case but the pris oner was obdurate and refused to budge until his feet were properly shod, his head properly thatched and his back properly clad. Therefore, he la still in jail and still In dishabille. What the waiter lacks In clothing, a young La Grunde boy could have easily supplied and then had plenty to spare. Shortly after the hour when the former became an inmate of the Jail, the police, acting under in structions from La Grande, pulled Frank Clark, a 15 year old youth who was tired of home and mother, off the brakes of Xo. 9. The boy had run away from his parents and was enroute to San Francisco and, that he might not suffer any discomforts from his mode of travel, he had dressed himself accordingly. When taken to the police station to be searched, It was found that he had on three pairs of trousers and a pair oi" overalls on his nether limbs, two heavy sweaters, two coats and a jumper on his torso besides plenty of heavy underwear. He was required to do a disrobing act which filled all of the hat racks in the police station with cast-off clothing. The boys father arrived from La Grande on Xo. 17 and perhaps, if that parent believes In the old time form of punishment, the boy will need all of his clothes again. GOVERNMENT LAND AT YAKIMA ATTRACTS SETTLERS FORTH YAKIMA. Wash., Oct 14. Letters and telegrams are arriving at the land and reclamation offices Inquiring about homestead land to be opened to entry In this county In No vember. Washington press reports announcing the restoration to entry of 240 acres of land near Grandvlew and under the Sunnyslde canal caused the" Inquiries. No information has reached either of the offices here other than that which comes directly in newspaper dispatches. The restor ation of the land has been recom mended by tho reclamation service. There are seven tracts, varying from 12 to 20 acres each, and they in clude some of the finest and most de sirable land In the county The land is under a pumping project on Early hill. The drawing will be November 21 and the preliminary conditions will be similar to those which have pre vailed In recent drawings. The week prior to the drawing Is given up to the necessary preparation, utirt the time for filing will be be between 9 o'clock a. m. and 4:30 p. m. on November 21. The water right and maintenance together are $6.15 and the aggregate filing fee and com- GREAT BARGAIN 1200 acres, 175 bottom land, and 100 set to alfalfa, balance ready to seed, and fine irrigation ditches and plenty of water. The hill land is nearly all tillable, and has produced nearly 100 busht-ls of barley to tho acre. There is two good houses, and barns, orchards, and i9 in 1 1-2 miles to town and de pot. You can buy this fine farm for $32.50 per aero and on easy terms. E. T. WADE Pendleton. Ore. ..Dale Rothwell,. State Regis- Glasses fitted Wti fc thr latf sr and Slrf most scientific methods. Lenses Duplicated We Grind Our Own Lenses Kryptok Invisible Bifocals a Specialty. With Wm. Hanscom THE Jeweler P. O. Bld. Pendleton Just Compare QUALITY and PRICE and YOU will BUY your MERCHANDISE at The GOLDEN RULE We Can Fit Your Feet As Well As Your Purse Ladies Shoes in All This Season's Styles In Velvet, Iiuek, Gun Metal, Patent Colt, Vici Kid, and Rus sia Tan Shoes at $1.98, $2.50, $2.98, $3.50, $3.75, $3.98. Those nice warm Curafy Felt House Slippers are. here; call and pot your size while the stock is complete; leather solo felt slippers with fur top at - 98 Ladies' Felt Slippers, Felt Sole - 49 Ladies' Cuinfy Padded Leather Sole Slippers $1.49 Children's Felt Slipxrs 49, 89 Men's T.luck Calf Bhiclier Dress Sluw - ?2.50 Men's Ulaek or Tan Button or Blucher Dross Shoe. $2.98 Men's Black or Tan Button or Blucher Dross Shoe. $3.50 Men's Black or Tan Button or Blucher Dress Shoo $3.98 Men's High Cut Shoes, 11 inch $3.98 Men's High Cut Shoes, 15 inch $4.98 Men's Extra Heavy High Cut Shoes, 15 inch top $0.50 Boys' High Cut Shoes, 2 Buckles $1.98, $2.49, $2.98 Boys' Dress Shoes ..$1.49, $1.79, $198, $2.49 Wc are agents for tho famous BUSTER BROWN" Shoo for Children. 48 Busy Stores Golden mission at the land office $6.50 will be CHICAGO AMERICAN'S ARE CHAMPION'S OF THE CITY CHICAGO, Oct. 14. The Chicago Americans made It three in a row from the local Nationals and won the city championship. The score was five to two. Scott vanquished Friday in a duel against Humphries, had ample revenge on his rival. The victory for the American leaguers brings to a close the 7th Satisfactory Plumbing Let us figure with you before you place your order for pi king lum of any nature. A complete line of b&th room accessories I ai- ways on hand, includ ing the famous U. S. Standard bath room cleaner. J. J. Wodaege, the Plumber PHONE 32 NOW READY j Our stock of Overcoats, Suits Furnish- J ing Goods and Working Clothes is complete. You will find in our store the great est values we can possibly give you for the least money. In Overcoats we are showing cheviots with shawl collars; Meltons and Kerseys with duplex and velvet collars in a great many colors and pat terns, priced at $8.50, 10.00, 12.50 and 15.00. Special Rainshed Slip-on Coats $7.50. New men's and young men's Suits, great values at 6.45, 7.50, 8.50. 10.00, 12.50 and 15.00. Wool Sweaters 2.50. 3.00 and 3.50. Finest quality heavy Shaker Coat Sweater $5 Boss of the Road Overalls 75c Guaranteed Sox 2 for 25c Macinaw Coats, Sheep Lined Coats, Leather Coats, Wool Shirts. Wool Underwear and Weatherproof Clothes. lueMEN's cione co. Opposite St. George Hotel Rule We Lead. Others Follow meeting of the clubs, tho Sox winning four times and the Cubs twice with the first series a tie. AEROPLANE KX II I HIT TO HE HELD IX PARIS PAULS, Oct. 14. The fifth Inter national exhibition of aeroplanes and kindred machines will be held here at the Grand Palais In December ac cording to an announcement made to day. Applications for space thus, far In advance show that the event will be the biggest exhibition ever held. Our Reputation, Your Satisfaction We appreciate that our standing depends upon the satisfaction riven by our work. This necessity for eood work is not all, however, for oui pnuc in uic quality oi our r,i..,k; : i . incentive to make your satisfaction the first consideration. Allow us to install a 'Standard" bathroom, kitchen sink or laundry tray and your satisfaction will be assured. Bui The Handy Place to Buy