Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1910)
ESGHT PAGES. DALLY EAST OREGON lAJi, PIXDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1910 PAGK THRICE f "7 11 o o PeedletoHk Has Ever Known Right now at the beginning of the season, we start off with a most sensational cut in prices. Remember there is not one, last season's suit in the lot. Positively every suit included in this sale is this Fall's best styleand has just arrived. Come and examine these suits, then go elsewhere and make comparison of Style, Quality and Workmanship We guarantee tosave you at least 25 per cent on your suit ALTERATIONS FREE 1 25 Choice Fall Coat Styles are Here 97 of the choic est Fall Coats for Misses and Children are HERE The Peter Thompson Sailor Suits ARE HERE $32.50 and $35.00 Fine Hand Tailored Suits $28 The swellest collection of high grade hand tailored suits, ranging in size from 34 up to 45, nearly every called for color is in the lot, and everyone exceptionally good values at $32.50 and $35.00. Its the greatest suit bargain Pendleton has ever known. Take early advantage of this opportunity. Your choice while they last for $28.00 $26.50 and $30.00 Hand Tail ored Suits $2 1 .50 The choicest lot of Late Fall Suit styles you have seen are in the assortment All satin lined .of the most approved novelties, made of the choicest all wool materials and made by the La Vogue & Worth style factories. Not a suit is shown in the assortment worth less than $26.50 and most of them being regular $30.00 values. Tour size is here, your style is here; your correct fit is h re this week for $21.50 WoMemferg ID) p a ir ft m e ft Sftor Better Goods tor Less Money m 9 m m sj sj si s ssjsjsjsjsjsjsjsjsjs NEWS OF THE NORTHWEST .. Murderer Geta IS T Marshfleld, Ore. Fifteen years in the penitentiary 1 the punishment given Will White, who ha been on trial before Judge Vail In the circuit court at Ooquille. White Is a young man who worked In a woolen mill and resided at Ban don. He provided for hla mother and became angry at hla atepfather be cause he would not work and killed him In the family house. An attempt was made to prove toim Insane. The Jury after being out nearly all day returned a verdict finding the young man guilty of manslaughter. 'I'm Too Homely to Live." Olympla, Wash. "I'm so homely, I'm better off out of this world than In It," were the last words of Joseph ine Chrlssman of Shelton Saturday morning after taking a fatal dose of strychnine. The girl was only 16 years of age and was attending the Shelton high school, working for her board with a prominent family of that town. Saturday morning she told the wo man at whose home she was staying that she had swallowed strychnine, and expected to be dead In a few min utes. The woman rushed for assist ance, but upon her return Josephine was lying upon the floor dead. The young girl's parents live in the coun try near Shelton. No other cause than melancholia and dissatisfaction with her personal appearance Is given for the girl's rash act Refuses Medicine; Pies. Freewater, Or. Without medical attendance, believing that If he was to get better Ood would attend to that, William Saager. a member of a sect that has quite a following here, and Is known as the Church of Ood, died Saturday from typhoid. Both he and his family refused all medical as sistance. He recently sold his farm saying Ood had told him to close up his earthly affairs. He was formerly a hardware merchant Here. He leaves a wife and four children. New Department at O. A. ft Corvallls, Or. Veterinary science, hitherto taught In connection with annual husbandry at the Oregon Ag ricultural college, hns been made a separate department this year, and the regents have apolnted Dr. J. F. Morel to take charge of the new In struction. Dr. Morel Is a graduate of the Na tional University of Belgium. After receiving his degree there In 1900, he pursued his studies In the graduate school of the Government Veterinary college of Paris. He came to the United States and secured a degree from the Chicago Veterinary college In '07, and was afterward appointed by the Chicago board of health to make ofgflclal tests of cattle for tu berculosis. Since last January he has been at Corvallls, where he Is head of the Corvallls Veterinary hospital. Charged Willi Theft of Dust. Seattle. John Tyberg, a Norwegian laborer, is locked up in the county Jail and will be taken back to Nome, Alaska, to answer the charge of steal ing nearly $16,000 In gold dust from the sluice boxes of the Pioneer Min ing company, by which he was until recently employed. Tyberg arrived In Seattle from Nome Monday night with other for mer employes of the Pioneer com pany. Friday he walked into the lo cal assay office and exhibited a bag of gold which he said he had clean ed up In the Idltarod district Tyberg was paid 114,345 for the dust, and as he left the office a Plnkerton agent placed him under arrest The loss of the dust was known to the Pioneer people, and the detective agency had been watching Tyberg since his arriv al In Seattle. Tyberg protests his Innocence and the Norwegian consul has interested himself in hla behalf. taken hold In this county and there are many republicans who declare publicly that they will support no man who had any connection what ever with the assembly. It Is their contention that the assembly was a direct attack upon the rights of the people. There are many republicans who wlu suport West for governor In the event Bowerman is the republican nominee. After the primaries are over the chief issues in the campaign will be local option, Southern Pacific rule and the courthouse removal. It is almost certain that political lines will be for gotten The three Issues mentioned together with the anti-assembly feel ing will have a tendency to shatter the republican party organization. The prospects are good that Klamath will line up in the democratic column this year. Insurgency In Klamath. Klamath Falls, Or. With the ap proach of the primaries politics Is getting warmer In this section of the state. The primaries will be only the first step in the straggle. Insurgency so rampant throughout the nation has Don't Break Down. Severe strains on the vital organs, like strains on machinery, cause severe break-downs. You can't over taxv stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels or nerves without serious danger to yourself. If you are weak or run down, or under strain of any kind, take Electric Bitters, the matchless tonic medicine. Mrs. J. E. Van de Sande, of Klrkland, 111., writes: "That I did not break down, while en during a most severe strain, for three months, is due wholly to Electric Bit ters." Use them and enjoy health and strength. Satisfaction positively guaranteed. 80c at Koeppen Bros. ATTORNEY GENERAL To the Republican Voters: If my record is approved, I desire re-nomina-tion for the office of Attorney General on the Re publican ticket. During my term, I have saved the state over $500,000, as shown in voters' pamphlet, page 23. A. M. CRAWFORD Roseburg, Oregon. - v.