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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1908)
PAGE EIGHT. We Arc Headquarters for the Famous ECONOMY FRUIT JARS Once Tried, Always Used. Phone Your Order Standard Grocery Co. Court St., Opp. Golden Rule Phone Main 96 I LOWER RATES FOR PENDLETON jnsikaxci: TKl'ST SENDS OUT ITS DECREE. if J! Ei T DISTRICT ATTORNEY THELPS ISSUES A WARNING C. J. Ferguson will handle any dis trict attorney business that may arise nOIIv DRINKING WATER. City Physician Cole Says Danger of Illness Can Be Lessened. "Boll your drinking water," says Dr. W. G. Cole, city physlclon, and he says that by doing so the danger of acquiring typhoid fever this summer will be greatly lessened. At present there are but few cases of typhoid In i the city or vicinity, but it Is getting Grand Jnry Will Probably Investigate; c,ose t0 the time of th, year wnen Beverage and Also Dispensers Jail that disease prevails most and pre Yawns for Men Who Persist In Sell ing Drinks Thn Produce "That Dizzy Feeling." Though the officers of the law maj seem to be doing little at this time along the line of enforcing the pro hibition law District Attorney Phelps says that things may be when the grand jury meets in Sep tember. cautions are in order. It is urged that special care should be taken this year because the wa ter In the river Is low and the work being done above the water plant causes the water to be rlley at times. The Tanglefoot Magazine. The Tanglefoot Magazine, a humor different ( ous publication, edited by Miles Over holt, formerly editor of the Freewa ter Times, at Portland, Is being clr Today Mr. Fneips is busy prepar- culated In the city today by A. P. lng to leave on a mountain trip to- j Noblitt, also formerly of the Freewa morrow upon which he will be gone, ter caper. The magazine Is now seV' for a month or more. This morning be discussed the prospect of law vio lations and In the course of the same sounded a warning to those who would sell booze within this county. "Under the prohibition law a sec ond violation makes a jail sentence of not less than 30 days absolutely necessary. In the Plamondon case Judge Bean held that this applied In cases where two or more indict ments are returned against one party and hehas been in court but once. So If the law is violated sbme people are going to Jail." Upon the subject of "near" beer Mr. Phelps says he knows of nothing that permits a person to sell any In tozlcating beverage no matter how mall a percentage of alcohol It may contain. The local option law pro hibits the sale of "Intoxicating" bev erages and apparently "near" beer Is under the ban If It has the faculty of producing the dizzy feeling. But up to this time no complaints have been made against the new drink and no edict has been issued against It Since the county went dry . Mr. Phelps has been In correspondence with district attorneys In dry sections of the state and In prosecutions that may arise here he will have the ad vantage of their experience. . While Mr. Phelps Is away Attorney eral months old and Is filled with a clean, high-class humor and. prom ises to be well patronized. . It Is on the order of the Philistine and' Is one of the many merited publications of the kind now being issued from the big cities of the northwest. COLDS New Teacher Accepts Alvin E. Gronewald, who was of fered the position of teacher of mod ern languages at Pendleton academy last week, has accepted the position and yesterday wired Principal W. H. Bleakney of the academy to that ef fect. Prof Gronewald will teach French. German and Spanish and will perhaps have charge of the athletics of the academy. He is a young man and is eminently qualified for the po sition to which he has been elected. Great Expense of Rewiring the Nullilliijrs of Tills City ami the Re duced lire Risk Will Not Be Re wartled by Lower Iiitftirunoo Itates Irox-rty Owners Are Justly In-ritgnmit. Big Crowd at Lehman. Mrs. Thomas Fits Gerald has Just written to her husband. Judge Thorn-1 the past month and as tntz ueraia, mat mere are now about 300 people camping at Lehman springs. All of the 30 cabins at the springs and the hotel are filled with people and large .numbers are arrlv lng dally by automobile, wagon an by other conveyances. Mrs. Fits Ger aid and children are spending -the summer there. Missionaries to New Zealand. Four Mormon missionaries to New Zealand passed down the O. R. & N. last evening from Salt Lake city and expect to sail for the island the first The very hour a cold starts la the f next week from Victoria., B. C. They are all young men who have been "called" by the Mormon church to preach Its tenets to the New Zea- landers. time to check It Don't wait It may become deep-seated and the cure will be harder then. Every hour lost at the start may add days to your suf fering. Take F & S Cold Capsules Used in time they savs all that might follow sickness, worry, ex penses. They nevr fall. Tallman & Co. Leading Druggists. Dr. Plamondon lias Appendicitis. Dr. J. D. Plamondon of Athena, Is very 111 with appendicitis at his home In Athena. He is being attended by Dr. Cole of this city. TEA Good tea and tea are quite different, both grow on the same bush. oar ncr returns yr wooej U jem doe Iks Schillias't Bui; pa hita, City Property for Sale Building lots from $300 to $1000 Five-room dwelling, one lot $1400.00 Two lots and dwelling, chicken fencing and house $800.00 Seven-room dwelling and two lots $2000.00 Five room dwelling, barn and four lots $1500.00 A home In any part of the city. FRANK B. CLOPTON & CO. 1 12 E. Court St.. Pendleton, Ore. IN SELECTING YOUR BANK "Ive careful attention to the stability of the bank and its willing new to co-operate with Its patrons In the development of their business. Our customers value and "bank on" our willingness and ability to assist them In every way consistent with safe, sound banking. This makes a satisfactory and profitable arrange ment for the future well-being of both bank and patron. We shall be pleased to have yon open an account with us. Commercial National Bank United States Depository That insurance rates In Pendleton will not be lowered because of the extensive new electric wiring ordered by the underwriters' association a few weeks rco Is practically assured, and that rates may be raised because of the failure of a few property owners to rewire as requested. Is also a pos siblllty. Lot Llvtrmore, one of the pioneer Insurance men of the city, has Just received word from a number of agents for fire Insurance companies represented by him, and they assure him that unless the rewiring Is done as requested that rates In Pendleton will be n ivaneed. Since the order to rewire Pendle ton business houses was sent out the electricians have been busy almost night and day and property owners had hoped that when the orders of the underwriters' association had been complied with and the risk in Pendleton reduced greatly by the new wiring, that the fire Insurance rate would be preceptibly lowered, but the Information given to Mr. Livermore seems to dispel any such hope and the same old rates, with a possible advance, will be charged here. There is widespread complaint of the action of the underwriters 'asso ciation In ordering a wholesale rewir ing of Pendleton and other northwest business houses, when many of these houses were already equipped with modern electric wiring and other ap pliances, and now that no reduction of the fire Insurance rate Is to fol low the rewiring and reduced fire risks this complaint is exceedingly bitter. Property owners feel that they have been Imposed upon by the Insurance trust and there Is strong talk of forming a mutual association among local business men and property own ers to carry the Insurance of the city It will cost practically $5000 to re wire all the buildings of this city which come under the ban of the in surance trust, and now that no bene fits in lowered rates are to com from this heavy outlay, property own ers are Justly Indignant. Another feature of the matter that where one building In a block not rewired, although all the remain lng buildings may be rewired, the rates will be raised on all the build ings in the block, regardless of the heavy expense of those who may have complied with the request of the underwriters' association. The work of rewiring Pendleton buildings has been In progress for It had been hoped by property owners that the present excessive fire Insurance rates would be reduced, owing to the greatly reduced risks. IT SAVED MY LIFE WRITES ECZEMA PATIENT. Ikxl-RUUleu Sufferer " Completely Cured by Vms of D. D. D. External Wash. One of the most remarkable Ecze ma cures recently credited to the well known D. D. D. Prescription has Just been recorded In Chicago. Mrs. K. Hegg, 15C0 West Madison street, under date of December' 9, 1907, writes us follows: "I suffered three years with Weep ing Eczema. It started with a little spot on my knees and sprad fast over my whole body. I spent hundreds of dollars and went to every good doctor I heurd of, but kept getting worse. Nothing would stop the awful Itch and burning. "I had to stay in bed from the mid dle of May to the middle of July. Then I tried D. D. D. Prescription. This Is the 9th of December and I am entirely free from the terrible disease. D. D. D. saved my life. "When I began this treatment, peo ple were nfrald of me, I looked so terrible. My husband was the only one who v'ould, take care of me. D. D. D. stopped the Itch at once so I could sleep, which I had not done before. Then I began to get better fast and now my skin Is clear and white, not a spot anywhere." Just a few drops of D. D. D. Pre scription applied to the skin brings relief nothing to swallow or drink We vouch for D. D. D. Prescription, also the cleansing D. D. D. Soap. Pendleton Drug C. Get a bottle to day If you have any skin disease. Be gin your cure at once. COURT STREET FIRM SECURES FAIR STORE ROOM IIARRAS ASKED QUESTION'S. St. Dcnnls-IIarras Case Once More In the Courts. Relnhold Harras was on the stand In the circuit court this morning in the case brought against him by De sire St. Dennis and on cross-examlna tlon he was asked some embarrass ing questions by Will M. Peterson, the leading attorney for St. Dennis. "Did you not while In a converse tlon with James Bell at Athena, say as follows: 'You have a lease on St Dennis' place for two years and I have one for 10 years; don't pay him any more rent and we will beat him out of It?' " was one of the queries, inls question Harras was not re quired to answer, but talking "Into the record" he denied he had made such a statement. Other pertinent questions nsked Harras related to his ability as i fighter and to the particular amount of booze he had supplied St. Dennis with. On his direct examination Harras said he had gone to the St. Dennis place after having leased It and that St. Dennis had run him off by telling him that he would kill him If he tried to take possession. The st. Dennls-Harras case was started yesterday, but much of the day was lost while a couple of di vorce suits were being tried. At the outset of the case the plaintlf's attor neys moved to withdraw their com plaint and by so doing they placed the burden of proof upon the Harras side of the case. Harras Is represented In .court by D. W. Bailey and J. D. Perry, while St. Dennis' case Is handled by Will M. Peterson and Lowell & Winter. PENDLETON IS ALRIGHT. W. A. Crank Says Town, Though Dry, Leads AH Northwest Cities. That Pendleton Is a better looking burg today than most of the small northwest cities, Is declared by W. A. Crank, formerly In business here and who Is now on the road. "I have been In BO or more towns during the past few months and I have not seen one that looks better or busier than Pendleton even If this place Is dry," says the former presi dent of the Booster club. He also ln- Ists that prohibition has not affect ed his business In this place. Marriage License. A marriage license was granted to day to the following couple: Carl Kupers and Minnie Ruthers. Five Year Ijouhc Signed Yesterday and Work of Moving Started Tills . Morning Preoent Quarters Inade- quMe for Rapidly Growing luM ness New Lines May Be Added. Cook and Perry have leased the old Fair store location in the Smith Crawford building for a period of five years and they are now moving into the new place. They signed a lease for the place yesterday afternoon and early this morning began the work of moving. According to W. S. Perry they will use the entire 50-front room for their stationery business which they as sert has grown too large for their old location.. In the new place they will have more room for the display of their line and also more warehouse room. In addition to their stationery busi ness It Is possible that Cook & Perry will also add other lines, though they have not yet fully decided upon that point When the Fair store went, out of business recently the south room on the lower floor of the Smith-Crawford building became vacant. However there have been several prospective tenants, among them a man who pro posed starting another dry goods store In that location. However, the build ing was secured yesterday by Cook A Perry. Now for those Vacation Needs If you are intending taking a summer trip, you will find many needed articles here, such as Suit Cases - $1.50 up to $30. Traveling Bags 1 . up to 20. Trunks - - 4.50 up to ?0. Bathing Suits 1. up to 6. Our "Keep Cool" wearing apparel will will assure you a contented vacation ROOSEVELT'S BOSTON STORE Where You Trade to Save. TOY PISTOL KILLS THREE. Lockjaw Follows Celebration of the Fourth hi State of Washington. Elma, Wash., July 14. Two deaths from lockjaw and a third boy dying as the result of toy pistol wounds on the fourth of July Is the record of a week in the state of Washington. The dead: Arthur Bauer of Rltzvllle, 8 years old. Harold Slorah of North Taklma, 10 years old. Dying: Ten-year-old son of W. B. Moores of this city. On July 4 the Mores boy injured Ms hand in shooting a toy pistol. The burn occasioned no anxiety, as it was very slight and nothing serious -was thought of it until Friday, when symptoms of lockjaw became mani fest. Doctors in attendance have giv en up all hope of saving the boy's life, and he is suffering intense agony that nothing but death can relieve. In the case of Arthur Bauer, of Rltzvllle, the lad received a powder burn from a blank cartridge. The next day he became ill, suffered from lockjaw, and on the third day was dead. Harold Solrah of North Taklma, lived 11 days after wadding was fired Into the palm of his hand by a toy pistol. On the tenth day he was tak en sick, seized with lockjaw and in a few hours was dead. 80FTNE88 OF SEALSKIN. Ia Rivaled br Ilomaa Hair Wkera Dandruff la Eradicated. Feulskln Is, admired the world ever f"r Its softness and glossiness; and yet the human hair is equally as soft and (1oy when healthy; and the radical cause of nil hair trouble Is dandruff, which Is en used by a pestiferous parasite thnt snps the vitality of the hair at Its root. Xwbru s Herplclde Is the only preparation that Is fatal to the dandruff germ. Wlthnut dan druff there Is no falling hair, but a lux uriant growth of glossy, soft hair ! cer tain. Scouring the scalp won't c:ir dn druft. Kill the dandruff germ. Thntir ands of women owe their beautlft:! r.iiM of hair to Newnro's Herplrida. aM-l t leading druggists. Send 10c. In rtan.J to The Herplclde Co., Detroit, Mich. Two si. 10 cents and tl.OO. C Koeppen M Bros. OLD VILLI AN OF 82 MARRIED. Young Woman of 24 Got II fH $40,000 Estate. The annullment of a marriage that no longer exists Is sought in a bill filed In the circuit court In Chicago by heirs of the late Frederick Schram 82 years old, who is averred to have been "broken, old, decrepit and In sane and took for his wife Elizabeth Fritz, 24 years old, of fair features, calculating, scheming and shrewd In tellect." Following the marriage property worth $40,000, it is charged, passed Into the control of the woman whom the heirs have made defendant the suit. Another action to have th will declared null and void is pending in the circuit court. In November. 1906. It is asserted the woman was employed as a ser vant at S4 a week to care for the ofd man's home. December 27 she per suaded him to marry her secretly, is charged. Several days lated he died of. apoplexy. On entering the Schramm home, It is averred, the woman began to exercise a system of fraudulent practices with a view to obtaining his property. He was pos sessed of an Insane delusion that he had become rejuvenated and, It declared, the defendant encouraged this belief and finally married him. in Rime Change Today. The New Dime has a first-class change of motion pictures today, with new Illustrated song which will be sung by Robert Fenner In his usual able manner. The old Dime will not be opened unless it Is on Saturday and Sunday In the future. The pic tures will all be shown at the New Dime this week. One of the Essentials of the happy homes of to-day is a vast fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness and right living and know ledge of the world's best products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to world wide acceptance through the approval of the Well-Informed of the World; not of Individuals only, but of the many" who have the happy faculty of electing and obtaining the best the world affords. One of the products of that class, of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and commended by the Well-informed of the World aa a valuable and whole- tome family laxaUve la the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get Its) beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and It's , easy to reach North Beach Take Steamer POTTER from Portland are now transferred to th railroad at MEGLER, fourteen miles up the Columbia from nwaoo. This eliminates the neeeaatty of steamer . waiting for the tide, and insures a prompt and regular Summer Schedule, u The Steamer T. J. POTTER, leaves Portland every morning except Saturday and Sunday at 8:30 o'dock.-Saturday only at 2 o'clock P. M. Remember the Summer rate on the O. R. & N. is $13.15 from Pendleton to all North Beach points and return ; good until September 30th. North Beach la famous, beautiful place the most perfect beach on the hole North Coast. TIkto are accommodations galore at prices to suit all tames; camping facilities without equal perfect bathing conditions; all sorts of amuxe merits and diversions. Come, have a good rest and a jolly time. Let us send you our new summer book, and tel 1 you all about NORTH BEACH. F. J. ftUINLAN, Local Agent PENDLETON,! OREGON Wm. McMURRAY General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. Clearance Sale Our Mid -Summer Clearance Sale embraces our entire line of Men's and Boys' Clothing, Trousers, Felt and Straw Hats. THE MEN'S SHOP MAX DAER Read the East Oregoniaa. for aale by all leading druggist. i