Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1907)
EIGHT PAGES. DAILY KA8T OREGONIAN, PEOT)MTON, OREGON, BCATrRPAY, FERRUARY 2, 1907. F AGE TOREK. A. OF THROAT - AND LUNG EBIES Basset ICiiwS eov for COUGHS AND GOLDS CURES THROAT u LUNG PBS DISEASES HCH SON'S UFE My ton Rex wai taken down year ago with lung: trouble. We doctored tome months without improvement. Then I began giving Dr. King's New Discovery, and I toon noticed a change for the better. I kept this treatment up for a few weeks and now my son is perfectly well and works every day. SAMp rippeE, Ava Mo. 60c AND SI.OO SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY TAIiLBlAN A CO. Society events Mrs. Ernest Sklles was a visitor at Walla Walla this week. Mr. and Mrs. George Hartman, sr., loft today for tholr home at Port land. -r Mrs. I.ee Morehouse returned this week from a visit of two weeks at Portland. Mr. Oliver P. Morton will leave on Monday for Washington, D. C, and New Voik city. Mrs. M. T. Starkweather was hos tess on Monday evening for the even ing Duplicate Whist club. The next meeting of the Young Married People's "500" club will be held with Mrs. Harry Thompson. Mrs. John Vert and sisters. Miss Jane and Diana Mcl.aln, left today for a visit of several weeks at Portland. Mts. Ben Rurroughs entertained a small company on Tuesday afternoon in compliment to Mrs. Elmer P. Dodd. The Sans Soucl club will meet on Monday evening, February 11, with Miss Huberts, Instead of next Mon day evening, February 4. . Mrs. Charles Bower of Reno, Col., who has been the guest of her sister. Mrs. Charles Isaacs of West Court street, will return home on Monday. MIhs Faye Johnson of Portland, who has been the guest of her broth er. William Johnson, for the past week, will leave tomorrow tor a visit at Faker City. The Auxiliary Tea given at the home of Mrs. E. P. Marshall on Tuesday proved one of the most en Joyablo events of ths week and was largely attended. Mrs. John Vert was hostess on Mon day for the Duplicate Whist club, The guests were Mrs. Monte Qwlnn, Mrs. Elmer P. Dodd, Miss Hoyd, Miss Jano and Miss Diana McLaln. The concert and dancing party given under the auspices of the Elks on Thursday evening, was one of the delightful social events of the week. About 100 couples enjoyed the danc ing until a lato hour. The last of a series of parties given by Mrs. W. L. Thompson, Miss Har riet Thompson and Mrs. a. W. Tholps will bo given on next Wed nesday at the home of Mrs. Phelps n Washington street. The Jolly Neighbors met this week with Mrs. Charles Greullch. The prizes for points were won by Mrs. Frank Perham and Mrs. Anton Nolte. The club guests were Mrs. George Perrlnger, Mrs. Anton Nolte and Mrs. Prultt. Invitations have been issued by Mesdnmes John R. Adams, J. Wilfred Earl, Richard M. Mayberry, Charles W. Myers, D. C. McNabh, Clarence Penland, Wood Pasley, Thomas Spohr, .Samuel R. Thompson and Harry C. Thompson for a dancing party at Eagles' hall on Wednesday evening, January 6. Mrs. Charles Myers was hostess on Thursday for the afternoon "500" tub.. The club prize was won by Mrs. Jchi' Adams and the guest's prize by Mrs. .William Collier. The club guests were Mrs. Una Sturgis, Mrs. flcnrge A. Hnrtman, sr., Mrs. D. C. McN.'ihb, Mrs. Thomas Spohr and Mrs William Collier. Mrs. A. H. Rugg of East Court street, was hostess on Thursday after noon to an enjoyable dinner party. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. R. I.. Oliver, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Mumford, Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Coon, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Stockman, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Stockman. Mr. and Mrs. A. Rugg, Mr. G. Rugg and Rev. Robert Warner. - Soclelv was well represented nt the two card parties given this week on Friday afternoon and this afternoon, by Mrs. Frederick Judd and Mrs. Jehn R. Tlckion, nt the home of Mrs. Judd, on Washington street. Pro gressive "500" was played on Friday afteinoon nt eight tables. The prises for points were won by Mrs. John Adams and Mrs. E. P. Marshall. A small but enjoyable company of the week was given on Friday after noon In honor of Mrs. Elmer P. Dodd, Mrs. Frank Moule being the enter taining hostess. The Invited guests were Mesdnmes W. L. Thompson, Ben Burroughs, E. P. Marshall, Fred Judd, J. R. Dickson, C. J. Ferguson, John Vert, Leon Cohen, Selkirk Norton, Chnrles Carter, Charles Isaacs and Miss Jane and Diana McLain: Miss Roberts and Mrs. Charles Bower of Reno, Col. when the guests assembled around an attractive table. The decorations were carried out in pink and white. Fancy screens firmed a cut-off from the main nortlon of the dining room. The KueBts entertained by the hostess were Mr. and Mrs. I.eon Cohen, Mr. and Mrs. John Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Roosevelt, Mrs. Fred E. Judd. Miss RohcrtH, Mr. T. C. Taylor. Judge Thomas G. Hnilev and Dr. F. W. Vincent. A prettily appointed dinner party- was given on Thursday evening by.,. Mr, norinn uuernsey ni me muei Pendleton. The hour set was 6;30, 4 NORTHWEST NEWS. 4 George K. Wentworth of Chicago, On: we I.. Heitz of Detroit and Don ald McRae of Portland, will build a saw, planing and shingle mill near Cosmopllls, Wash., that will cost J 1 fill. in. a. At Spokane, Charles Fillpot, con vlete.l of the murder of Nes Cole, nn old rancher, was sentenced to be hanged at Walla Walla April 19. Fllpot was convicted on circumstan tial evidence and .stoutly denies the crime. A' dwelling at Boise belonging to Fay Toung, burned. It was occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Sam J. Keith. The fire occurred early In the morning and Keith and his rf.ife barely escaped with their lives and night clothes. Neither house nor contents were in sured. After serving a few days of a sen tence in the Idaho penitentiary on a charge of the larceny of a horse on which he was convicted at Mountain home, Wlllllam West, of Boise, has been admitted to ball In tho sum of J3T.O0, pending a fifth trlnl on the same charge. William Cullln, seneral auditor of the Pot'atch Lumber company, has been arrested at Harvard, Idaho, as on absconder. It is charged that Cullln was bookkeeper for Allen & Co., of Philadelphia until about a year ago, wh-.:i ho disappeared, leav ing his account $20,000 short. The creation of two new counties, Bonner and Twin Falls; the passage of the ciici:et and best bill, the bill miking It a misdemeanor to hunt on ancther man's land without permis sion, the enactment of Abbott's bill requiring school district boundaries to be changed only at the April meet ing of the county commissioners, was the work of the Idaho house of repre sentatives on Friday last. Bud Metcolf, who with Bill Pollard, was held under bonds over two years ago on a charge of sheep stealing, has been arrested In Burns by Sheriff Richardson. Pollard appeared for trial, wns found gulltv and sentenced to the nen for two years, and Is now at liberty. Metcalf jumped his bonds and succeeded In eluding the officers until now. Sheriff Ambrose of Grant, will tiling Metcalf to Grant county for GENERAL NEWS. -r v The trial of Elnger Hermann, charged with the destruction of letter press copy books containing official and quasi-official communications re ceived and sent while he was commis sioner of the general land. off ice, will begin February 11, at Washington. The weather bureau, which relies more on scientific observations than on omens, Is of the opinion that the country will have an early spring this year, basing the prediction evi dently upon the fact that In most sec tions the winter so far has been rather more severe than usual. The liner St. Andrews, Phoenix line, from Antwerp to New York, on January 20 struck a large whale broadside In midocean, cutting him squarely In two. Whales sometimes are killed In this way, being caaght asleep. The Incident Is very Infre quent but by no means unprecedent ed. At Toledo, O., Rev. Albert Holden, charged with bigamy (having 13 wives), has pleaded guilty and been sentenced to six years In the peniten tiary. Holden married whenever the spirit moved Mmt and his women victims always were persons who had professed religion at his revival meet ings. Three miles from Roosevelt, Ariz, Mrs. Harvey Morris and her 7-year- old son were brutally murdered. A negro Is under arrest, whose throat has been badly scratched and who sustained other slight Injuries. He claims to have been hurt by two Mexicans while defending the woman and child. Eleven deaths have occurred as a resuR of the explosion of the am monia pipe at the Armour plant. The last one to die was Michael Donohuc. Charles W. Sehulte. a Memphis, Tenn.. millionaire banker, suicided at a Rattle Creek, Mich., sanitarium, by hanRlng with n shawl strap.' He was unquestionably Insane. A street car Jumped the track and crashed Into a drug store at Sixth and Pierce streets. Omaha, killing Sam Thomaa, a teamster, and injuring six persons. Hodge Deutch, an old man, probably will die. Thomas was stand ing In front of the store. Owing to the slippery track, the car got beyond control on a steep hill. Robert, the 8-year-old son of Rev. Charles Stenkard, pastor .of the Twelfth Presbyterian church nt Pittsburg, Pa., has died with a clot on the brain, the result of Injuries re ceived nt the hands of schoolmates who hazed him. The hazing was a crude imitation of the methods fol lowed at the Annapolis Naval aca demy. Fulton. Mo.. Is the original high 11 cense city of the United States, and has carried the policy to a logical. If extreme end. In 1874 the city raised licenses to $1500 per annum. In July of 1904 the license was ratsed to $3.- 000 and January 1, the council In creased licenses to $4000. Fulton is a city of 3000 and at the present time has two saloons whose proprietors state that they will be compelled to close business. OXFORDS FINEST SHIPMENT OF LADIES' OXFORDS WE HAVE JltRT RECEIVED Oim FIRST HIPMKNT OF LAIMES' OXFORDS FOR SPRING, TIGHT DOZEN IV ALL. VICI KID, WELT SOLE, DULL I'lMSII KID PLAIN TOE, PATENT LEATHER nLmiER WITH 1WJH MILITARY 1IEKL AND WHITE CANVAS OXFORDS IN ALL S17.FS. THE ALEXANDER.. N'e.n bi!'K", 'r.nt.. two enables vent over an embankment that was wnl.T-inrtdl by melting snow '. Kt II nr I). R. MrDni-nld. eonlu"tnr. and H. ThirrK fireman. Conductor Mc Donald's death occurred after he had laid for 10 hours pinned beneath a boiler, with his body partly submerg ed In the Icy waters of the St. Reels river. His fellow workmen, unable In help him, kept his head above the wnter nntll he died. He steadfastly refused to have his leg amputated. The bituminous deposits In Cnssla couptv, Idaho, In which there is being so much Interest taken nt this time begin about eight miles south of Onk ley and extends to tho Nevada line, covering nn area 350 square miles In extent. The deposits are found In n country the surface of which Is of lava formation, and Is considerably broken. Exports who have examined the formation state that a solid bed of coal of superior quality w'U prob ably be found deeper In tho ground. Hunting for Tronlile. "I've lived la Cnlifcrnia 20 years. and am still hunting for trouble in he way of hums, sores, wounds, bolls. cuts, sprains, or a case of pilts that Bueklon's Arnica Salve won't quickly cure." writes Charles Walters, of Al legheny, Sierra Co. No use Hunting, Mr. Walters; It cures every case. Guaranteed by Tallman Co., drug store. zfc. Refrigerator Car Service. Effective at once the O. R. A N. company will Inaugurate a weekly refrigerator car service from Port land. The refrigerator cars will leave Portland every Tuesday and will han dle perishable stuff for all point east of Ftnatllla. A similar servlvs will be operated on the Washington division. The latest advices from Yasnala, Poland, are to the effect that Count Tolstoi's health Is steadily Improving. After a few minutes' delay the coroner's Jury at Washington. D. C, in the case of William G. Copley, who was arrested on suspicion that he shot to death his wife and child, ren dered a verdict exonerating him from blame. OT FIVE DAYS Of This The Greatest Value Giving Sale you have ever witnessed. It will positively end Tues. eve Feb. 5th Everything advertised will be oat on the center table. We'll take Half Price for any Women's 'Misses'lor Child's Coat, Suit or SklrtpnthetHouse. Any $5.00 garment will be sold for $2.50 Any $7.00 garment will be sold for $3.50 Any $10.00 garment will be sold for $5.00 Any $12.50 garment will be sold for .$6.25 Any $15.00 garment w ill be sold for $7.50 Ladies' and Children's Underwear Values Ladies' 40c Underwear, garment 19c Ladies' 75c Underwear, any kind, cotton or wool, sell for 39c Ladies' $1.00 Underwear, pants, vests or union suits, sell 63c And son on to the highest priced ones. Children's cotton, fleece-lined shirts and drawers, worth 25c, selling for 13C Children's fleece lined pants and vestsworth 40c, sell at. 19c And so on to the best wool Underwear all reduced likewise. DEPARTMENT STORE The Home of the Porosis Shoes. To Show Hlwusc Ravages. MlnnetVolts, Minn., Feb. 2. A tu- : boroulnsla exhibition, similar to the exhibitions held In other large cities '' of the country recently, opened In . Minneapolis tndny. The exhibition ' comprises many pictures, charts, stn- tlstlcnl tables, model apparatus nnd models of snnltorln, nil bearing upon the prevalence, the prevention nnd the remedy of the "white plague." Dur- in gthe coming week. In conjunction with tho exhibition, there will be held a big nntl-tuberculosls congress, comprising the Western Conference on Tuberculosis and the Minnesota , State Association for the Relief and i Prevention of Tuberculosis. Often The Kidneys Are Wor.iier.cJ by (fter-Work. Unhealthy ZXrx.z "-lie Impure Blood. It cr.c-1 U h- co:i:k!crcd that only arinarv and bladder troubles were to be traced to the kiuncvs, but now modern science proves that ncarlv all diseases have 'their beginning in the disorder ol these most important organs. The kidneys filter r.:id purify the blood thnt is their work. Ti,rnf.ire wbev vour kidiicvsare weak Or ont of order, von can understand how Suicklv your entire body is affected and ow every orsjan rcems to fail to do its "i? you are sick or " feel badly," Win taking the great kidney remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-kooi, ma BS your kiduevs are well they will help ell the other organs to health. A trial will convince anyone. If yon .. sick vou can make no mis take bv first ,i....oii"g your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of rw vii...r'u wamD-Root, the great kidnev rc-.nedv, is soon realized. It Hands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases, and is sold en its merits by all druggists in fifty-cent and one-dollar ti.'c bottles. You liuy tinve a Rnmtlle bo'ulo Horn, of Swamp-Root. by mail free, nlso a pamphlet telling you how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention tins paper o,ben writinpto Pr. Kilmer & Co., lling- hamton, N. V. Don't make any mistake, but renuu-'.:r the name, Swamp-Root, r. v,i, r' Swninn-Root. and the ad' Children's fine ribbed black hose 5c pair Women will ruth for these splendid hosiery values, not a pa'r worth less than 10c and many worth 15c and 20c. Women's fine turnover collars, hand embroidered and Mexican drawn 5c each Tnu will be surprised to see such astonishing values offered, not a single one worth less than 15c, some worth 25c. Ladies' and Children's Furs at Half Price Any $5.00 piece, selling for. : $2.50 Any $6.00 piece, selling for $3.00 Any $7.00 piece, selling for '. $3.50 Any $8.00 piece, selling for $4.00 Piano Sale Annual clearance sale, of high grade pianos, organs and tew ing machines. PIANOS Stelnway, Knabe, Hardman, Emerson,, Ludwlg, Packard and many other well known makes to be sold 10 per cent cheaper than you could se cure them any other place on the coast. REWIND MACHINES Stan dard, White, Singer, Wheeler & W'lson and many cheaper grades, from (18 up. JESSE FAILING Managing Agent. Main street near bridge. FOR. SALE 6-Room Dwellllng $1100 f-Room Dwelling JKgOO R-Room Dwelling $600 87 Pulldlng Lota FRANK B. CLOPTON & CO. 1 1 2 E. Court. St.. Pendleton, Ore. Are Your Drugs Medicines Pure? Do they Comply with theJNew Federal Pure Drug Act? YouJBuy Quality From Us and Pay No More. The Pendleton jDrug Co. . "The Mark of Quality." Put, Wings totYourlWork An electric motor will do more and better work than any other power that you can use. The economy of Its use Is a demonstrated fact. If yeu want good, quick work at a minimum of cost, you want an electric motor. We will be pleased to give you our prices and to furnish complete esti mate to suit your needs. Northwestern Gas and Electric Co. CORXFR COURT AJTD GARDEN 8T. dress, Binghauitou,N.Y.,oneverybotUe.