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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 17, 1908)
EIGHT PAGES. DAILY EAST OREGONLAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1908. PAQH JrlVJL One More Week of the Final Clean-Up Sale of the Bankrupt Teutsch Stock. Just look at these unheard of values then act at once. Such extreme prices will make things move Hvely.J ALL PARASOLS UP TO $3.60, NOW .7... 8o ALL WASH GOODS UP TO Mc YARD 9c ALL SUMMER DRESS SKIRTS VV TO $10.00 $3.97 ALL 50c AND 75c STRAW HATS 25c ALL WHITE AND GRAY CANVAS OXFORDS 98c Fall Suits, Coats and Skirts, Men's Clothing and Furnishings now ready for you. F. E. Livengood S Co. Teutsch'sJOldJStandJ City Brevities All kinds of good dry wood. See Mlnnis. Tents at cost. Goodman Hardware romjinny. For Sale Good family milch cow Inquire this office. Best nut coal. Give us a chance. Oregon Lumber Yard. See Mlnnis for good dry wood that burns. Lots of It on hand. Special prices on granite ware at Goodman Hardware company.'. Wanted Four carpenters Monday morning. Apply at fair pavilion. Ice cream freezers at "bargain prices." See Goodman Hardware Co. Get our prices on Cascade fir wood and slab wood. Oregon Lumbe Yard. Unfurnished housekeeping rooms for rent Enquire at East Oregonlan office. Miss Genevieve Fish, piano Instruc tion, 118 Monroe street, j hone red S8P1. Wanted A girl to do general housework. Inquire at Empire Meat Market. All kinds of transfer work done promptly. Stnnsberry & Milne, 'phone MLln 6 . Fine store and office room for rent. Eat OrcRonlan building. Enquire this office. Japanese rook and housekeeper wants situailon in private family. Address Box 486. Wanted Woman to do general housework; steady position and good wages. Inquire at this office. Hotel Bowman Cafe Is now open, 6 a. m. to 10 p. m., a la carte. Straw berries and Ice cream also served. i a r, -,' a a 889 We have a fine watch hospital, whore you may bring all your sick watches and clocks and have them re paired by the best talent In the city. Our Work Is tins IJest. Our prices are reasonable. We are the watch Inspector for the O. R. & N. R. R. That Is saying a great deal as to our ability. Try us and you will try us again. Louis Hunziker Jewelery nnd Optician. 726 Main. A NEW ARMY "POET." "Soldier Poet" A. L. Price Bids Fare well to Philippines. Washington, Aug. 17. The only poet that the army ever locked up I because there was too much sting In his lines, has decided to earn his bread and butter, and perhaps some fame on tho aide, by devoting him self exclusively to rhyming. A. L. Price is his name, and he has Just landed In the states from the Philip pines, where he earned the title of "The Soldier Poet," by wooing the gentle muse while serving under the god of war. Price sprang Into fame through a poem that he published about two "years ago. It was based upon the alleged rendition of "Always In the Way" at the funeral of a private In the marine corps. Himself a prl vate, Price resented this reported In sult. The poem was dedicated to the officer who was said to have or dered the playing of the piece and tho verses related how the officer was' "further down below us than a dog a nigger owns." The next thing Price knew he was In Jail. After his term In the army had ex pired tho Cable News American, In Manila, employed Price to write po ems for stated occasions like Decora tion day and the Fourth of July. When he left the Philippines, he left this ns his parting lines: "Farewell to the work that bleeds me. farewell to the gods that grind; Farewell to the work that you can not shirk, and the spirit strings that bind. I'm back again to the white man's land which the white man's hand controls; So I wave my hand to ' the black man's land, to the land of sluggard souls." PERSONAL MENTION Stole Mr. Buckley's Watch, O. E. Bromley, ft young colored man who was formerly porter on the private car of M. J. Buckley, general superintendent of Harrlman lines In Oregon, pleaded guilty In the munici pal court today to a charge of vag rancy brought against him by De tectives Coleman and Price, says the Oregon Dally Journal. Bromley con fessed to stealing a watch from Mrs. Buckley, but she declined to prose cute. Bromley will break rock for 80 days. Roynl Nelghlmrs Meeting. The Royal Neighbors will meet to morrow, Tuesday, evening. All are urged to attend. MRS. MARTHA CHILDRETH. Wanted, at Once. Good clean rags: market price paid. East Oreg.nlan office. B Hot or Cold Bottle The new vacum bottle, will keep contents hot for 24 hours, warm for 48 hours, and cold for 72 hours. Two sizes, pints $5.00, quarts $7.50. lit 'E IP IP EN THE DRUG. STORE THAT SERVOS YOU BEST 1 Peter West went to Milton on the afternoon train today. Fred Lampkln and Roy W. Rltner visited at Hermlston yesterday. Misses Hazel and Luclle Rader left yesterday for Portland on a visit for a week. A. B. Stephens, the Umatilla mer chant, is In the city today on a busi ness trip. Albert Eklund, member of compan L, arrived home from Portlund this morning. ' Mr, and Mrs. Ralph Howland were passengers on the' train to Portland last night. Engineer Horace W. King went down to Echo to do some surveying this afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Cohen leave to night for Portland and the coast upon an outing trip. B. Jensen, the livestock Insurance man, leaves tomorrow for Alberta up. on a flying trip. Miss Alma Harris will return to La Grande this evening after a few days' visit In the city. Charles VInler of the Bond Bros. furnishing goods store, Is 111 at his home today with a fever. Miss Ellen Stafford of Union, is visiting here at the home of her un cle, Dr. L. K. Blakeslee. Mrs. F. S. Ivanhoe of La Grando. came over today to visit with friends In this city for a few days. C. C. Hendricks has returned from Lehman springs, where he had been staying for the past six weeks. Mrs. John Hailey and daughter, Paralee, returned home today from the summer outing at Meacham. Mr. and Mrs. John Vert and Mis. Diana McLaln leave this evening for Wenaha springs for a week's outing. Miss Gertrude Fitz Gerald has re turned from a visit of several weeks In Portland and Puget sound points. Miss Edith Spink returned yester day morning from Newport, where she had been for a two weeks' vaca tlon. Pr. G. S. Hoisington Is expected home today from attending the na tional osteopathic convention In Mis souri. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Knight arrived home last evening from Newport, where they ha dbeen on a two weeks' outing. Rev. Levi Johnson has Just return ed from a trip to Umailla and Echo In the Interest of his Sunday school work. Mrs. Jennie M. Hunter has return ed home from Long Beach, where shf had been on an outing of several weeks. Mrs. William Hilton nnd sister, Miss Mattie Good, returned this after noon from a visit with relatives In Ta coma. Fred Taylor and family have re turned from the Barker place near Meacham. where they camped for sev eral weeks. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Wheeler have returned from Lehman springs where they have been sojourning for sev eral weeks. George Ferguson came down last evening from Weston, where he had horn visiting at his old home for sev eral days. A. C. Koeppen and William Bogert returned Saturday from Seattle, where they attended the Eagles grand lodge session. Judd Fish, manager of the Bow man Hotel, has returned from The Dalles, where he had been upon a business trip. . Dr. L. K. Blakeslee and Dr. Ralph Swinburne returned tpatuiilay (from a two weeks' auto trip Into Baker and Union counties. Roscoe Frost, of the Goodman Hardware company, has returned to the city from a 10 days' hunting trip In the mountains. Miss Winnie and Marie Struve leave tomorrow for Hanford, Wash., where they will visit for several weeks with Mrs. A. E. Grelner. Mrs. Henry Dixon Jones nnd daugh ter, Edna Zimmerman, came down today from Meacham, where they have been camping. Miss Lurle Dorothy returned last evening from a month's vacation spent In eastern Washington and at her home near Milton. bank, went up to Athena today In the Interest of his department. Miss Margaret Johnson left today for Milton where she will be em ployed by the Shield's Fruit company during the shipping season. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Brown, of the Hotel Pendleton, returned to the city Saturday from Lehman springs where they had been on a two weeks' out ing. Prof. L. W. Keeler of the Echo public schools, who Is one of the county teachers' examining board, Is a guest at the Bowman while in the city. Miss Mary Rltner left Saturday night for Portland where shg will Join a party on a trip to Crater lake. She will teach In the Portland schools again this winter. D. C. Brown, linotype operator of the East Oregonlan, has returned from Meacham where he has been for his health for the past three weeks, and Is now at work. Joe Parkes and family are down from the "Pines," their summer home near Meacham, but will return to the mountains shortly to remain until the end of the summer. The Phelps-Metzger party, which has been In the mountains south of Camas prairie for the last month Is now camped at the "Pines," Judge Joe Parkes' place near Meacham. Claude Hale, of the Pendleton Sav ings bank, left Saturday evening for Portland and Brownsville, where he will spend his vacation. Mr. Hale's childhood home was Brownsville. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Stewart of Hermlston, who have been camping at Meacham for Mes. Stewart's health, for the past few weeks, pass ed through the city today on their way home. Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Bailey and lit tle son reached home yesterday morning from Seattle where they had been visiting, Mr. Bailey going to that place from the American lake en campment. Harry Norwood, who Is in charge of one of the district fair advertis ing wagons, came In from Morrow county Saturday night to spend Sun day In the city. He returned to his work on No. 1 today and will soon finish the work of billing Morrow county. A Superb Array of Stunning New Fall Tailor-Made Suits Arriving Almost Daily, They Are Ready For Inspection. We are also showing our new Winter line of Ladies and Misses' Skirts They are or every conceivable style and shade. Come early and get your choice of these beautiful Skirts. Ask to see those famous "Fay stockings, we have them in all sizes Remember the Place Pendleton Cloak Suit House Buy of us and it's all right OPEN UP CENTRAL OREGON to ore will be shipped out over the line and be able to find a market wber' Tap, it is now practically Impossible be cause of the rugged nature of the New Line in Wasco County Rich Section. All of the central Oregon dlstrictj country aivd the lack of transporta from Condon south and tributary to tlon." th nmnosed line of the Wasco Coun-! Mr. Hunt Is enthusiastic over the ty Electrlo & Water Power company will be vastly benefited by the new future of the section and says It will be one of the best parts of the stata C. H. Rosenberg and family re turned home Sunday morning from Portland and the coast, where they had been upon an outing. Gay Hayden of the Boston store, returned home yesterday morning from a vacation spent In Seattle and other places on the coast. Douglas Johnson of the savings department of Pendleton Savings GOT BIG GAME. L. E. Hoover and Party Got Five Deer and Seven Bear. L. E. Hoover and his party, con sisting of T. C. Vincent and Ralph Allen of the Oregon Agricultural col lege, J. S. Tucker and Charlie Hoo ver, returned yesterday from a 10 days hunting trip at Fish lake, on the Umpqua divide, says the Medford Mall. They had for their guides two Mo- dock half-breed Indians and those Indians surely guided the party right. The first day out one of Mr. Tuck er's horses died dropped dead In the harness but the party pushed on Into the mountains, and when in the vicinity of Fish lake, on the Umpqua divide, the'entire party com menced to get busy, and as a result of the chase they slew five deer and seven bear. Speaking about bear, calls to mind the canebrakes of Louisiana and President Roosevelt, but the presl dent never In his best day's chase scored a record equal to the above. line according to J. E. Hunt, former 'Just as soon as the last spike of rail state senator from Multnomah coun- j transportation Is driven and the new ty and now a prominent hardware line opened to traffic, merchant of Condon. "There are now about four towns Boosting the Fair. In eastern Oregon that can beat Condon out a little bit," said Mr. Hunt last night, "but if that road Is S. T. Warner, booming the Morrow and Umatilla County fair at Pendle ton, September 28 to October 3, la completed as soon as it is said It will In Walla Walla today, says the Wal be there will be none that Condon j la Walla Bulletin. Mr. Warner Is out cannot boast over within a couple i with one of the development league of years. It Is to be the terminal of wagons and Is blllng all Iocalties. HIa the new line and will naturally be ! territory Is the northern part of Uma the center of a large trading business tllla county and Wlla Walla county, as soon as the road is In operation "We expect that Walla Walla will be and the produce of the country Is well represented at the fair." he stat moved over It. ed today. "Pendleton always helps "Adjacent to the new line as It Is! this city when it has a fair and the Garden city will undoubtedly recipro cate. We will guarantee all comers a good time and they can see some first-class exhibits." Two wagons are In the field. now proposed are vast wneat neias, Immense stock ranges, coal deposits and gold mining districts. All of these products will be brought on the road to Condon, the terminal of the line and the town will prosper because of the added trade. "But It Is not alone to Condon that the new line will be a benefit," con tinued Mr. Hunt "The whole dis trict will be the gainer. The wheat i Japanese cook and housekeeper of the country, the stock, the coal, j wants situation In private family. Ad which Is of good quality, nnd the gold, dress Box 486. Massaging, shampooing- and mani curing. Room 5. Smith-Crawford building, y I I NCLK SAM IS SHOUT OF FIGHTING SHIPS. Washington, Aug. 17. The navy department Is under considerable em barrassment for ships, according to a report from official sources. With a part of the American navy in the South Seas and with demands for pro tection from Americans In Santo Do mingo, Venezuela and other Central American points, the expedient has lit en found necessary of putting Into commission vessels which have long been out of use. The Wheeling will be placed In commission at the Bre merton navy yard. Will Attend Balloon Races. Berlin, Aug. 17. It Is announced today that Lieutenant Frank P. Lahm and Charles Chandler of the army signal corps, nnd Major Henry Her sey of the state weather bureau, will be official representatives of the United States In the great balloon competition to be held In Berlin 'Oc tober 10 and 11. Persian Cleaning and Dve Works UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. Ladles' and gents' clothing cleaned and pressed. Ladies' One gar ments a specialty. All work guaranteed. F. M. LORIMER, Proprietor Thone Main 194. Main Street, Near Bridge. Daugttfcr Born. Bom! to Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. Ste wart, a nine-pound daughter. For Sale or Exchange Ladies' chalnless Columbia bicycle, coaster brake. Inquire after 7 p. m., Frank Keller, 602 Water street. For Rent Store room on Main street In the East Oregonlan building. Apply at this office. Mil liens Oxfords Tan, Black and Patent Leather During This Week All $4.00 Oxfords for $3.50 All $3.00 Oxfords for $2.25 WORKINGMEN'S CLOTHING CO. The MOST GOODS for THE LEAST MONEY Cor. Main Webb Sts. Old Hunt Depot