East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, October 18, 1910, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
DAILY BLAST ORKGOX1AN, PENTJLETOX, OKBGON, TVESDAY, OCTOnEU 18, 1910.
EIGHT PAGES
Proving It!
To have been first-
Proves Antiquity
To kave become first
Proves Merit
Standard Grocery Co. Inc.
Wkere all are Pleased
Frank 0"Gara, Pre. Bernard O'Gara, Sec-Treas.
214-216 East Court Street
For Sale
10 eara aaary m M
miles front ton aad three
miles traan stove aad poet
offlea. Good room heuee,
ban aad aalafraa houses.
Splendid orchard, aaoa 13
mtn alfalfa, battoan land.
Thia la one of the beet dairy
raaehes far tfaa nan ay la
TmaaUla eooaty.
leO acre usual tarm
mOea from Paadlesoa. Hom
and aara, pi est water, for
(MM. Mast he aetd at eaee
oa aoeouet of afafcaeaa.
S3
S 1-1
wfll
atsttag well of
rood aoaae eaa
aeO for tlltM aoU
building, aA foe NUi must
ft rooaa hwa
711 Oalvm at.
la aaaOr mrU flSM. I win
Kfl It tor f7H, aaaa.
helaaeata
SHERIFF CAPTURES
!
! Sheriff T. D. Taylor returned last
' night from Walla Walla, having in
i custody Jack Lennon, the Queen
chop house night waiter, who de
camped Friday night with the con
: tents of the cash register and $60
i which had been left with him by a
' friend for safe keeping. He had been
arrested in Walla Walla by Sheriff
Haviland at the instance of the Uma
tilla county officer.
Mat Hart, the man who is accused
: of stealing a cow and calf from J. P.
Kelly of Milton Friday night, waa
also arrested by Sheriff Taylor on this
trip. An attempt was made to sell
the animals to a butcher north of
the city and it waa this attempt which
led to his arrest.
1 Taylor waa notified and went to
: Milton Sunday night. Horses were
' waiting for him and by making a
night ride through the rain the local
officer succeeded in rounding up his
man in a cabin on Government moun
tain. The sheriff then returned by way
of Walla Walla to get Lennon, stop
ped in Milton, where Hart was ar
raigned and admitted to bail, arriv
ing in Pendleton last evening.
Newsy Notes
of Pendleton
To Clone Out Telephone Company.
A suit to foreclose & mortgage
against the Interstate telephone com
pany, waa filed tnrtnv hv w T.
Thompson, trustee. By foreclosing
mis mortgage U la sought to collect
notes amounting to more than 16000
and held by the American National
bank, the First National bank of this
city, the First rational bank of Pilot
Ru-fc and others.
Hop from John Day Country.
Henry Rosenboom, a well known
rancher from the John Day country,
arrived in Pendleton, last evening
with a load of SO hogs. Today, 1000
more of these animals wera hrnncht
In, all being delivered to the Carney
& Tweedy meat company. The hogs
all came from the -vicinity of Ritter
and were brought in bv In Arhnmst
Asa Arbogast, Fred Mulkey, Charles
tKinner and Joe Wilmert.
Motor Xeorly Wrecked.
While running at a Rood rata of
speed this morning, the motor car
struck a track jack about a mile west
of Echo and had a narrow escape
from a wreck. An extra gang at
work on the track had carelessly left
the jack under the rail without pu
tlng out a flag. The car was slightly
disabled but through the Ingenuity
of Engineer Carpenter he was able
to bring his load or passengers on
into Pendleton with a delay of only
a few minutes.
BUSINESS CILWGE.
A ay eae wfaaaag at taiast
ta !! pi aaaa tj', I kwa
oa aautaaaa Mash nana wfll
at It par aaaa ataar of taste
aad auaraaa( aUs pteee af
propera wentd aaaa yen
deeMa ma aaiiaai r was
a bmOd (hta aaaae pteee af
prepertr; now me patae east
I wfll Bjat yum wfD hold
goad far a law arnya eerfy .
Dan Tlomlor
WALLA WALLA MAN IS
LXJURED IX COLLISION
Aa the result of a collision with an
express wagon while riding a (bicycle,
Charles Smith, proprietor of the
"Bade" restaurant, lies In the Walla
Walla hospital near death's door, says
the Walla Walla Union of this morn
ing. At the hour of going to press
his condition was critical and Dr. C.
N. Suttner, the attending physician,
; holds out small hope of his recovery.
His Injuries were severe, the force
; with which he struck the tongue of
; the express wagon being almost suf
: flclent to drive the wagon tongue
through the walls of the chest. The
, fifth, sixth and seventh ribs on the
i right side were broken to fragments,
j the pieces piercing the lungs and the
! ulaphram waa torn loose, while the
! shock sustained was terrific.
I
PACPEK OWNS LAND
COVERING GOLD MINE
11 W. Muff BV
London. There Is at present liv
ing In Lewlsham, a suburb of London,
. a man who Is In the astonishing po
sition of being a pauper In England
and the owner of a gold mine In South
.Africa. According to Inquiries made
by the guardians. It has been estab
lished that after the South African
i war, the man Inherited a tract of land
( in that country, which, owing to his
poor circumstances he was unable to
' take over. It has since been discov
ered that this land covers a gold mine,
the value of which may possibly am
ount to hundreds of thousands of dol
lars. Its present owner Is very old
and In feeble health, and for the last
five years has received outdoor relief
. from the Lewlsham Guardians.
! The French government has adopt
ed 3.086 grains or 200 milligrams aa
the standard weight of a carrat and
has prohibited the use of the word to
distinguish any other weight.
WHO WOTTLTJ WTWU
THINK IT.
that it waa thai sM area trees etasa
ed sad priail Tan aaa vet added
wer out of year dreams ay having
iem cteaeed at SULUTYAN'S,
and thar are eeoad a a aaw avwo.
BeUeata aflk wateta ar ralta win be
cteaaed hi a aaaaaer that will sur
prise yau wtiea yam bring- them ta
SalMvaa's.
Pendleton Dye Works
Itl Vi Baat AJta at, Phoaa Mala ltt.
All Bottled Goods
at
Bargain Prices
See Window
a
Ingram's Grocory pfe ,7
W. A. Snedeker Buys Ingram Crock
ery Department.
Another Important hnslnena ohnnira
was consumated In Pendleton today
when W. A. Snedeker of the Owl Tea
House took over the crockery depart
ment or me Ingram grocery store.
Mrs. Snedeker was Dlaeed In phnro-e
of the new department, while her
husband will remain In charge of the
present at least.
Ingram intends to reduce hla stork
of groceries as low as possible by the
nrst or the year at which time he will
move out and Snedeker will have the
entire store now occupied bv Ineram.
The groceryman expects to move his
fixtures to Hood River where he and
his family will make their home.
Snedeker's "lease on the Owl Tea
House building does not exoire until
the spring and until that time he
will have "two stores, one on rvnrt
street and one on Main street.
land-Hoor mill company In this city.
During hla absence at the office hla
sister, Mrs. Flora F. Atcheson, min
istered gently to the aged woman's
wants, but every hour of Mr. Talbot's
own time was spent by her-side. This
loving devotion continued until the
end came.
Talbot was a mere youth, hardly
out of the secondary school, when his
father, feeling the weight of years
bearing Wm to the brink, called him
to the bedside and gave the mother
into the care of the son. The boy
construed his -promise to his dying
father In the strictest sense and shut
out all worldly pleasures for the soci
ety of his aged mother and their
companionship was complete.
They lived together with Mrs.
Atcheson, a life Of books, of calmness
and meditation. There were few cal
lers and nothing to disturb the clois
tered life they had chosen, and when
the streaks of gray showed on his
temples Talbot redoubled his efforts
to make the evening of his mother's
life one of peace and calm.
Mr. Talbot was accompanied to the
railway station by a few friends the
morning of October 13. They brought
with them a wreath and sheafs of
fragrant blooms, which will mark the
resting place of his mother In the
cemetery in Kanssns.
Our New
CLOTHES
Are Now on Display Ready for
Your Inspection
Men's Suits Made to Your Measure
If you an hard to fit in a roadv-made suit we will fit you
eemwetly by nakkig a rait to your exset measure. Notain but
new fall patterns to aeleet from. Large nrstthet unable you
ebooaa right and the pattern you moat admire,
Roosovolt's Boston Store
APPLE PACKERS NEEDED.
FIRES AGAIN THREATEN
MINNESOTA PEOPLE
Duluth, Minn.. Oct. 18. Fires am.
ong the brush surround'nr the forest
again sprang to life It is reported, en
dangering lives and property. The
people are alarmed and are fighting
tne Diazes.
OLDFTELD SUSPENDED.
Speed Devil Under Ban Because He
Arranged Race With Jack Johnson.
Whereas. Barney Oldfield, under
the A. A. A. rules, a recognized and
registered automobile racing driver,
has announced or caused to be an
nounced in public press and upon
posters his entry in a so-called track
race with Jack Johnson, at the
Sheepshead Bay track (unlicensed for
automobile contests), to be held Oc
tober 20. 1910, official sanction for
which contest has neither been ap
plied for nor issued, which action Is
a direct violation of rule 68 of the
1910 contest rules of the American
Automobile association, viz:
"An entry In any unsanctioned con
test, or an authorized annoucement
In public print that an entry has been
or will be made, shall be deemed suf
ficient cause for Immediate disquali
fication by the contest board of the
owner, entrant, driver and car, or any
or all of them," and
Whereas, the conduct of W. H.
Pickens, Mr. Old field's manager,
and his statements In the public press
In connection with the proposed un
santloned contest are Injurious to the
welfare of the sport and Industry and
destructive of the confidence of the
public in automobile contests, and
Whereas, the entrance Into an or
ganized so-called sport which Is un
der the ban In most of the states of
the union and who Is as we, believe
without requisite experience lnau
tomoblle track racing and has yet. to
demonstrate his competency as a rac
ing driver, would preclude the grant
ing of official sanction for Buch so
called contest, as detrimental to the
Interests of regularly organized au
tomobile competitions: .,
Therefore, Barney Oldfield Is, un
der rule 68, hereby suspended and
disqualified until further notice from
future competition or participation
In sanctioned automobile contests.
And W. H. Pickens Is hereby dis
qualified from participation In any
sanctioned automobile contests, eith
er as manager or an entrant, pro
moter, owner, driver or In any other
capacity, and they are each of them
hereby directed to show cause why
such disqualification should not be
made permanent.
CONTEST BOARD, A. A. A.
S. M. BUTLER Chairman.
KEEPS HIS VOW.
Son Promised Father on Deathbed to
Inter Mother by His Side.
Spokane, Wash. When the mound
of newly turned earth In the ceme
tery at Ottawa, Kan., closes over the
coffin containing the body of his
mother, Mrs. Mary A. Talbot, who
died at his home, 808 Shannon street,'
Spokane, on October 11, W. A. Tal
bot, now on the way to the old home,
will have fulfilled a promise made
at his father's deathbed, in 1889. This
was to care tenderly for his mother
during her lifetime and to Inter the
body beside her husband's grave af
ter death.
Mrs. Talbot, who was (7 years of
age when she passed away, had as aa
attendant and companion during the
last SI years her son, an official of
the auditing department ef the Hoi-
Not Enough to Handle Oopfi Pack
ing Schools Necessary.
Spokane, Wash. '-'Reports from
practically every commercial orchard
district In the northwestern and Pa
cific states and provinces In Canada
Indicate the lack of sufficient compe
tent packers to handle the crops this
season, thus strongly emphasising the
need of institutions where men and
women can learn, the principles of
preparing apples for the market
Packing schools should be established
in every community In the fruit belts,
as the labor problem Is becoming
more serious every year."
Ren H. Rice, secretary and mana
ger of the National Apple Show, Inc.,
said this In an Interview today, add
ing: "The demand for experienced pack
ers in the apple districts this fall is
the best evidence that provisions must
bo made at once to supply growers
and shippers with competent help In
the future. Calls are coming from
all over the western country and the
supply of packers Is so limited that
in many instances It has been found
necessary to send wholly Inexperienc
ed workers into orchards and packing
houses. With the many orchards
coming Into bearing in 1911 and te
following years, the problem is bound
to assume proportions.
"We expect to relieve the situation
by conducting a free packing school
In connection with the third National
Apple Show in Spokane, November 14
to 19. A. P. Bateham and J. M. Car
roll of Mosier, Ore., packers and
teachers of wide experience, will have
charge. Instructions in the diagonal
and square packs will be given from
9 to 1J o'clock every morning in the
state armory, adjoining the big ex
position tents. The management has
arranged to provide everything requir
ed free of charge to the students.
"Growers In all parts of the coun
try have approved the plan and the
numerous Inquiries coming by every
mail Indicate there will be large class
es through the week of the apple
show."
Yield of One Tree $60.
North Takima, Wash. Sixty fcoxes
of apples from a single tree, sold at
a dollar a box, is one of the pleasant
features of the harvest for T. W.
Clark of Nob Hill boulevard. This
very productive tree is a Red Cheek
ed Pippin, 18 years old. vThlle this
$60 performance Is rather above the
ordinary claim, even for North Ta
kima orchards, there are many trees
which will produce from 20 to 30
boxes.
The English market Is rapidly
opening up for fruit from this sec
tion. J. Nichols of Convent Garden,
acting for hla firm here, has pur
chased 200 carloads to be packed and
shipped at once. The London mar
ket has previously preferred the
Yellow Newtons, but this order In
cluded a number of the red varieties.
Aeroplane for ' Sahara.
Paris. The ministry of war and
the French Aerial league are endeav
oring to establish an aeroplane ser
vice across the Sahara desert The
route will be from Southern Oran, at
a point where the railways end, to
the French possessions In Senegal,
now an overland journey of four
months.
If the aerial serv'ce can be estab
lished the journey could be accom
plished In twenty-four hours.
Aerial travel in the Sahara would
be comparatively easy. There are no
fogs, the air Is exceptionally clear,
there are no mountains to cross, and
the wind Is less variable than In hilly
country.
AT TI f,
PICTURE SHOWS
The Orpheum.
1. An Indian Glrl'a Awakening. Ea
sanay, 1000 feet long. A beautiful
story of the hopeless love of an In
dian maiden for her white protector.
A pretty costume picture with many
strong dramatic Incidents, excellency
acted and exquisitely photographed.
J. The Gambler's Wife. Paths, 1,
000 feet long. A good drama show
ing how a devoted wife saved her hue
band from rata,
8 A Dog on Business. Essanay,
1000 feet long. A snappy farce com
edy with a scream In every foot
"Weary" gets a hunch that would
have been worth a couple of thou
sand to an ad man, and he makes
use of It
Song Smarty.
The Pastime.
"Mrs. Rlvlngton's Pride." Lubln,
drama . Mrs. Rlvlngton's pride
would not permit her to explain
where she got the necklace. She
leaves the house stung to the quick
by the unjust suspicion cast upon her.
"The Wrong Box." Vltagraph,
Drama. A dellclously funny mixup.
How a young man came very near
losing his best girl. Higher class
comedy rich In wit and humor.
'Resourceful Roberit." Lubln,
comedy. This young man proved his
title when the father of the girl ha
wanted to marry said "No" and added
other unpleasant things. Robert won
out.
"Ingratitude." Urban drama. A
story true to life.
"Military Kite Flying at Rhelms."
Eclipse, scenic. The ecenee here
ahow how useful the kite may be In
war.
Detroit Free Press: A Chicago
dressmaker says that dresses should
be made to fit, not only the body, but
the disposition. How'd you like to
have to hook a gown around your
wife's disposition also?
CINNAMON BEAR
ON CITY STREETS
Pendleton residents were this
morning treated to the rare sight of
a real live cinnamon bear on its
main streets. The animal was six
months of age and was brought In
from the John Day country by Her
man Rosenbloom, the well known
Ritter rancher,
Rosenboom secured the bear and
his twin 'brother when not more tha
two or three hours old. They did
not open their eyes until nine days
later. The mother bear was killed
and the two cubs taken home. The
other cub was shipped to Tacoma,
Washington, a few days ago and this
one will stay near Pendleton aa he
was purchased by William Schwandt
who will use him to train hla bear
dogs with.
The cub is a very fine specimen of
the bruin family. Though but sir
months old he now weighs nearly 100
pounds and Rosenboom says he will
easily weigh 400 when he attains his
growth. Having been given all he
could eat since the day he was born
the bear shows the result of hla good
keeping and Is much larger and has
a much better coat than bear of the
same age which have roamed the
woods. He attracted no little atten
tion on the streets,
Perseverance Is the staff upon
which progress leans.
MUCH APPENDICITIS
IN PENDLETON
Many people In Pendleton - have
chronic appendicitis and mistake It
for stomach or bowel trouble, if von
have wind or a-aa In the tnmnnh nr
bowels, sour stomach or constipation,
try simple buchrhorn bark, rlvcerlne.
etc., ae compounded In Adler-l-ka, the
new German appendicitis remedy. A
SINGLE DOSE of this simple remedy
will relieve you you will be surpris
ed at the QUICK ACTION. The Pen
dleton Drug Co.
Guard
Your A-p )
sight
With
tho Bost
Sontinol
Known
PROPERLY FITTED GLASSES. Scientific Op
tical Knowledge conscientiously -uned, in the testing of
eyes and prescribing of glasses insures you a perfect fit.
Ve use the latest and best methods and carry a full line
of Optical Goods.
EYES EXAMINED,
GLASSES FITTED,
LENSES DUPLICATED,
, FRAMES REPAIRED
Hundred of tatitfieal patrons recommend our Work
DALE ROTH WELL. Optometrist
with Wm. Hanscom, THE Jeweler
Chances Good in Venezuela.
Washington. Men who are willing
and able to establish themselves In
transportation, merchandising, manu
facturing, agricultural pursuits, min
ing or the founding of a bank would
do well to go to Venezuela, according
to the annual report of Consul Man
ning of La Guayra.
The consul emphasizes opportuni
ties for manufacturers of agricultural
machinery, glass and earthenware; a
big demand for butter Is also men
tioned. Beer, wines and mineral wa
ters are set forth as articles that Am
erica should supply.
Irfoodi
Sarsaparilla
Eradicates scrofula and all
other humors,' cures all their
effects, makes the blood rich
and abundant, strengthens all
the vital organs. Take it.
Get It today In usual liquid form or
chocolated, tablets called rsatabs.
Mass 4k.
SM B. Court M.
Dry, wat, ebeaal-
eat aad
Wa oaU for aad
deltvar aaywhere.
OLD SPOTS
Never eoeae tmetc wfcea aleaaed ay the
Berlin Dye House
JACK WED8TEB,
MANAGER.
Cold Weather Hints for Women
at Wonder Store Low Prices
Good quality Outing FlanneL per yard lo
Outing Flannel Night Gowna. ft to f 1.60
Women's and Mlseea Wool Vnfcm Bulla U0 to iJD
Women's and Misses Cotton Union Suite SOo to IM
Women's and Misses' Cotton S-pleee Underwear, gar. Uo and SOe
Fine, new Una of Women 'a and Mlaaea Suits and Coats for Whiter.
THE WONDER STORE
DISPAIN A BOmnnr Mala mmi Owl StrMt