PAGE EIGHT. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOIlEll 20, 1908. EIGHT PAGES. Don't Overlook the Little "Good-to-Eats" In addition to the great stock of staple groceries there's a large assortment of ap petizing relishes and the little luxuries which add to the enjoyment of a meal. Many helpful suggestions will be noted by glancing over our counters and shelves. Standard Grocery Co. Where small orders receive the same attention as the large ones. Phone Main 96 SCANT CHEER N6 FN I ATTACK OX RANK GUARANTY GREETED WITH SILENCE TRACK TOUTS TIT TO TIKE A TBI CONDUCTOR WAFFLE EQUAL TO THE OCCASION Gamblers, Dead Beats and Racetrack Hangers-on Passing From Walla Walla to Boise, Attempted to Se cure Free Rides from Pendleton on East Officers from La Grande and Baker Make Arrests. taken off and sent back to La Grande to be held for trial. The remainder were forced to purchase tickets, that ending the trouble. The Baker City police were sum moned to the station to be ready should disorder arise on the train, but all the would-be toughs were as calm as deacons when the train reached there. Crowd of 300 Bnive Cold aul Wind to Hour Kellriiig Senator Seuk in Be half of Candidacy of Man He De nies Having Called "Weak Sister" Soenkcr Evades Aniftvorlng Per tinent Questions from Gallery and Win a Laugh. Not one cheer greeted Senator Ful ton, not one. hand clap, not one ap proving murmur last evening when he finished his attack upon the demo cratic plan of guaranty of bank de posits, and It was not until the sen ator retorted to a query from the gal lery, cleverely dodging the question of why the postal saving plan had never before been advanced by the re- publicans with the stereoptyped re- j ply of "What has the democratic par-1 ty done?" that his audience roused j from its unresponsive mood and shouted at the thought of the dlscom- forture any doubting Thomas must have sufered from that reply. The meeting, which was hold under the auspices of the Taft and Sherman club, was prefaced by a parade of that organization, headed by the Pen- Used to Be Common Thing. In speaking of the matter, according dleton band, which acted as an es. Greek met Greek on eastbound passenger train No. 2 Sunday when a party of racing touts boarded the train with the firm Intention of run ning It themselves, but found a firm obstacle in the person of Conductor Fred Waffle, who was in charge. As the result several of the touts are In Ja.l at La Grande, while others paid their fare and went peaceably on out of the conductor's division to the Baker City Herald, Conductor Waffle said such practice used to be common and many times a train crew has found Itself almost wholly at the mercy of an organized band of ho boes In recent years the practice hag been broken up to a great extent and the experience Sunday night was the first of record on this system for a long time. FUNERAL OF MRS. AYFRS. Private Cur of Siicrintciidciit Camp bell Conveys Remain to Hoppner. At the Methodist church in Hepp ner Sunday were held the funeral ser vices of Mrs. Thomas W. Ayers, whose body was taken to that city for bur ial Sunday. Interment was made in Trouble, however, threatened until ! tne Heppner cemetery. officers from La Grande and Baker The funeral party was escorted to city were summoned and arrests were lne aePot ln lnls clt" Sunday morning made where the men were most trou blesome. Upon boarding the train at this sta tion the touts rushed through the cars securing the hat checks of the passengers. Conductor Waffle set tled with a number of them when reaching La Grande by causing their arrest and removal from the train. Enough, however, remained to make more trouble for the conductor. Brake-man Roughly Used, When the train was between La Grande and Union .several of the! touehs beat un the brakeman. and It was only through cool work on the ney and M1"i Elna by a party of 100 Elks and the trip to Heppner was made ln the private car of Superintendent Campbell of the O. R. & .. who kindly placed it ac the service of the sorrowing rela tives of the deceased. From the Wil lows the car was attached to a spec ial train into Heppner. In the party were Mr. Ayers, the bereaved husband. Dr. and Mrs. Eu gene Vaughan, Leslie Matlock, A. A. Roberts of La Grande, Mrs. Frank Richardson of Portland, Mr. and Mrs. Will Matlock. Tom Matlock, Mrs. D. C. McN'ab, Mr. and Mrs. James Kee- and Lavelle COLDS The very hour a cold starts U the time to check it. Don't wait It may become deep-seated and the cure will be harder then. Every hour lost a! the start may ed day o your suf fering Take F Cold & S Capsules Used In time they save all that nlght follow sickness, worry, ex penses. They never fall. Tallman & Co. Leading Druggists. Shorter Days, : Longer Evenings : Through the summer perhapa you were able to bear the an noyance of defective vision be cause the evenings were long and you read less by artificial light. Hut now attend to your eyes, for lamp lls?ht Irritates them and gradually they will become weaker and weaker. Call any time and we will ex amine your case. : Vinslovv Bros.: Jewelers-Opticians party returned last evening to this city. conductor's part that the whole crew Florence and Mr- J- w- Tallman, The was not badly worsted. Sheriff Rand and Deputy Ike Mc Cord left Baker on No. 5 and met the eastbound passenger at Telocaset where a number of the gang W5?e SHEEP COMMISSION HEADQUARTERS CHANGED. Dr. Lytle and Attorney Dan P. Smythe have given up their office In the American National bank build ing and secured the rooms formerly occupied by the Bruin Detective ser vice company in the same building The room vacated will be thrown into the. private office of Mr. X. C. Rich ards of Raley, Richards & Raley. Seth Richardson Touched. While returning from the Walla Walla fair Sunday Seth Richardson was the victim of a pickposket, who relieved him of a small sum by a neat trick. The pickpocket was one of a party of racing touts passing through Pendleton from Walla Walla to the Boise fair. In the crush he succeed ed ln securing Mr. Richardson's purse .and contents, amounting to about $4.50. A Hallowe'en Masquerade. Pendleton circle No. 527, Women of Woodcraft, will entertain Its friends at a Hallowe'en masquerade In Eagle's hall, Friday evening, October 30. Refreshments will be served dur ing the evening, and prizes will be given to the most successful mas-queraders. W. H. Daugherty of Portland, went down to look after his Interests at the Umatilla ranch near Fosters this morning, after having visited yester day In Pendleton. cort to the speaker. There were 50 of the old guard In the parade and 10 boys of the young, men's club. The audience filled the first floor of the theater and consisted of about 300 people. The 'speaker was intro duced by President Richards of the Taft and Sherman club. In the beginning Senator Fulton de clared that he was the original Taft man on the Pacific coast, that he had never remarked that Taft was a weak sister, and that he was In favor and in sympathy with the "my policies" i of Roosevelt. He declared that the men who had dared to propose such questions to him were by nature i cowards, and by Instinct linrs. From them Senator Fulton turned to pay! his respects to Mr. Bryan. I Attacks Mr. Brynn. j Opening under the guise of nhso- j lute fairness In declaring that Mr. I Bryan had no connection with Stand- I ard Oil or that he knew anything of , Mr. Haskell's alleged connection, Mr. j Fulton said that he would be belit- ' (ling himself and insulting the Intel- ligence of the people to accuse the j democratic standard bearer of such I dishonesty, yet during thecourse of! an elaborate speech completely boxed I the compass and accused Mr. Bryan of "intellectual dishonesty," declared I that "he has not that high Integrity I of character that Is necessary for a statesman or a political leader" and I that he was a man of "half baked Heas," a false prophet, a failure and! with but one fixed principle, that of personal advancement to the presl-! dency. I Business Depression Tlireatens. I The speaker opened his discussion delving into history, and the theories of government advanced by the two great parties. By adroitly presenting his case he for more than an hour preached the doctrine of the general prosperity of the government under re publican rule, Infering that to elect Mr. Bryan was to Invite a closing down uf all business and a recur rence of panic and depression. He referred to the last Cleveland administration as the longest four years in history and declared that with the announcement of republi can success at the polls in 1896 en tered upon a period of prosperity greater than any people of the world had ever known and that such pros perity had continued unbroken from JS96 until the present day. Hearers Do Xnt Respond. After an hour of revelling contem plation of the glories of the republi can past Senator Fulton took up the question of bank guaranty, declarins that the depositor must pay the amount needed for such guaranty and adroitly representing that such a sum would be equivalent necessarily to trom 23 to 40 per cent of the depos its. An opposite theory advanced was that the conservative banker would pay the tax "for the Insurance of the deposits III the vaults of hlS plunging competitor." When the TIMELY FURNISHING Now is Ihe Time You Heed Them Here is Ihe Place lo Gel Them Our prices and your pocket book are bound to be .friends. Popular Sweater Coats Children's Sweater Coals 12.00 Children's Sweater Coats $2.50 Children's Sweater Coals $3.00 Men's Sweater Coats $3.00 Men's Sweater Coats $3.50 Men's Sweater Con Is $1.00 Men's Sweater Coats $5.00 Men's Sweater Coats $6.00 Men's Sweater Coats $7.50 Warm Underwear G. & M. Umlerwear, per m-iiicnt $2.50 O. & M. Underwear, M-r garment $3.00 i. ii M. I'ndiTwcnr, tvr garment $3.50 U. & M. Underwear. Kr garment $3.75 Wilson Bros. underwear er garment 50c Wilson Bros.' underwear per garment 75c AYUsoii Bros.' underwear or garment $1.00 Wilson Bros. underwear per pirmcnt $I.2J Wilson Bros.' underwear per gannept $1.50 Wilson Bros.' underwear per garment $1.73 Wilson Bros.' underwear per garment $2.50 Wilson Bros.' underwear icr garment $3.00 Mimslng Union Suits, per suit $2.00 Munsing Union Suits, per suit $3.00 Muiisdiiir Union Suits, K-r suit $3.50 Miiiislng Union Suits, jkt suit $5.00 Dress Shirts Rotli stiff and soft bosom $1,25, $1.50, $1.73, $2, $2.50 Hosiery Black and tan 10c and 15o Fancy ami plain, xil or cotton.. - 25c and 35c Men's fine Hose 50c .Mini's heny winl 75c Men's fancy silk $1.50 A- Mocha & Dent's lino Gloves $1.25 to $2 Silk Neckwear All the latest sIiiim and novel tics 50c to $2 Pnajmas and outing flannel Night Shirts hi white, color and fancy patterns. THE B ST0N STORE WHERE YOU TRADE TO SAVE SINK TIMES III WEST EI NF.W PEOPLE AHKIVIXG I .A XI) VALUES ADVANCING Two Recent Heal Ehtato Transfers Show Upward Tendency of Price Small rami Recently Iurchad for 85 Per Acre Sells for $200 Gen eral conditions Becoming More Lively. Things arc becoming lively In the west end of the county. Though con ditions are generally regarded as quiet in that section, yet a number of new people are arriving and land values are steadily advancing. Two deals recently made in that section of the county show the upward tendency of prices. S. D. L. Ross, who had an 80-acre ranch between ifermlHtmi and Echo, has Just sold It senator had finished his discussion of j for tl)e sum ot jio.OOO, or at $125 mis proposition not one suggestion or TEA The cost of good tea is so very little: only a third of a cent a cup I a cent-and-a-half or two cents for the family breakfast I Tour rroctr returni your money if ft 4oa't Ik ScfclUlof ' Beit; w pay him. If We Have Your Business We appreciate It. If not, we want It. Our treatment will convince you of our sincerity. We are prepared to serve you In all the lines of legitimate banking. We pay Interest on time de posits, and have safety deposit boxes for rent. Commercial National Bank United States Depository applause greeted him, until he re verted to a general attack upon de mocracy. Bock to Protection. Senator Fulton disposed of the dem ocratic doctrine that the tariff was the mother of trusts by stating that of the 2T.0 trusts recognized by the Am ericans as bad, two, Standard Oil and Anthracite coal, were In lines not pro tecter by tariff. He rapidly turned to the question of labor and again urged the protertive tariff as a cure for such evils as labor was heir to, under present, conditions, declaring that it was far more Important to the laboring man than any Injunction law or other relief asked by labor. Again reverting to Mr. Bryan, whom he designated as nn absolute failure, the speaker brought his remarks to a close with an eloquent laudation of the virtues and talents of Mr. Taft. Mr. Fulton was frank In his declara tion that he had no time to discuss the democratic platform with the excep tion of the attacks upon Mr. Bryan and the guaranty plan devoted his dis cussion entirely to generalities of re publican history and prosperity and praise of the protective tariff. Railroad Employes Ilvamlncd. Ioal employes of th! train service and malntenanre department of the O. H. & N. were put through " physi cal examination yesterday ln Pendle ton by Dr. E. B. Waffle and Dr. Hen rtershott of Portland, the latter be lnj an eye and ear expert. per acre. On the Ross ranch only 20 acres was Improved and it was In alfalfa. In view of this fact the price -Is con sidered to have been a good one. The ranch was purchased by neighbors. For the price of $200 per acre,' Dr. M. S. Kern recently sold a 13-acre tract near Hermlston to Col. H. O. Newport. Only seven months pre viously Dr. Kern purchased the samo land for $85 per acre. However, he had Improved the place by setting out 3000 grape vines. Other west end realty deals also show a-steady advance ln land values In that section. night's meeting It was announced that Head Consul I. I. Hoak of Den ver, In charge of the northwest Jur isdiction of the W. O. W., would visit Pendleton on January 6 next, at which time a big reception will be given. Action for Money Settled. E. L. Smith brought suit yesterday through Haley. Richards & Raley against J. V, Coppinger asking judg ment for $357.7(1 on a note and $91.40 op account against the. defendant. The case was settled. BATTLESHIP MAINE HAS CIRCLED THE GLOBE Portsmouth, N. H., Oct. 19. The battleship Maine of the special squad ron which preceeded the Atlantic fleet around the world, arrived In the low er bay today. The Maine nnd Ala bama were detached from the fleet nt San Francisco nnd went ahead to pre are the way. The Alabama Is ex pected to reach New York tomorrow. ONE KILLED AND TV EXTY-TWO INJURED Kansas, Mo., Oct. 19. One train man was killed and 22 passengers In jured in a collision between passen ger and freight trains on the Santa Fe road nt Braddock, Kansas. The pas sengers were hurled from their seats. Nothing mlrfortunale matters much. If so be you can smile about It. Peter's Own. A Library Party. A book party, at which guests wll' be expected to donate one book to the Academy, Is planned by the stu dents of the class of '10 nt Pendleton Academy Friday evening. A plensant piiigram has been prepared and friends of the Institution anticipate a most enjoyable evening. lllake Culver was up from Hermls ton yesterday. Mr. Culver has been transferred from the reclamation of fice nt Hermlston to the Vaklmn pro ject, and was on his way to that valley. A FACT PROVEN. Should Convince F.vrn the Moat flop tical of Its Truth. If there Is the slightest doubt In t! minds of uny that Dandruff norms .In r t exlRt, their belief In compelled bv th fact that ft rabbit limcculiited w'th tie germs became bald In six week' tltv.. It must be apparent to any persn therefore that the only prevention t baldnefs Is t ho destruction of the form -which net Is successfully nccn np'.'sh-1 In one hundred per cent, of eases th Application of Newlirn's IfrrplrMe. Pnndruff Is caused by tlin s:ime rem which causes baldness nnd enn h p-c-vented with tho samo remedy Newt rv Herplclde. Accrpt no substitute. "Destroy th CRiisn you remove tho effect." Sold by lending drugirlsts. f'cnl 10c ' stnmps for snmple to The Ilerplelo i Detroit Ml'h.- Two iltea 60 cents and $1.00. A. C. Korpucn A lirna W. O. W. SMOKER. Local Camp Plans Interest Injr Ses sion for Monday Evening. A big smoker In which members of the order and their friends will participate was planned last evening by the local lodge of Woodmen of the World, and will be held on Mon day evening next in the society's hall. A program of entertaining charac ter has been arranged nnd all those who are Interested will be made wel come by the choppers. During the evening refreshments will be served. The smoker Is but one step In the campaign for membership which the organization has planned and which Is already under way. Last night as the result of agitation begun two weeks ago six new members were elected to the order. During last j tt.-iLA'r.rr -ivV Half Soles Sewed on Bet ter and Cheaper Than Others Can Nail Them. Now open In my new loca tion with a fine line of men's shoes, nil sizes, styles and prices. I only keep the kind thnt wear V ft&XM TSe Reliable Hi,Ky Shoemaker . - v.w- Main Street, next to Queen "s...!, Chop House. ONLY MACHINE TO SEW ON HALF SOLES IN THE COUNTY.