t TACK EIGHT DAILY EAST OREGOMAX, PENDLETON, OREGON, l-'ltlllAY- DKCKMUKU 0, 1910. K1G11T PAGES l-KHOLHi Newsy Notes of Pendleton physician nhd came to Washington u bout seven years ago with the inten tion of retiring and devoting his tlmo to horticulture. However he had an extensive practice at Huntsvllle at the time of his death. PURE COCOAMUT BUTTER FOR HOME COOKING. "Nature's Perfect Vegetable Fat." The weakest stomach can digest it. Comes in 3 lb., 5 lb., and 10 lb. air tight tin pails with a cook book in each pail. Order a pail today and pive it a trial. Your money back if not satisfactory. Standard Grocery Co. inc. Where all are Pleased Frank O'Gara, Pres. Bernard O'Gara, Sec.-Treas. 214-216 East Court Street I h.-iit Is I'noliniiged. Wheat Is still quoted at 71 centa by local buyers today. 1-lnal Aiviniiit Tiled. Attorney Charles Carter the final account of the John W. Hughes, deceased, county court. has filed estate of with the Paiiulitcr Horn In Portland. " Mr. and Mrs. John Nissen, this morning received the news of the birth of a 11-pound daughter In Port land, to Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nissen. HELIX PHYSICIAN ENTERS BEAUT1FIL GAME BIRDS Dr. John Griswold Will Bring In Fea ture Exhibit Muslo Will Also be One of the Features of Show In Armory Concert Each Evening. HOBOES ARRESTED. CAUGHT WITH GOODS BREAK INTO ECHO GREEK. SECTION HOUSE AND BOB Testimony in Horgevln Case. The testimony is being taken to day in the bankrupt case of Bergevin vs Mosgrove. J. S. Beekwith Is the referee in the case. John Vauulmn Seriously III. John Vaughun, the electrician, is reported very ill with smallpox at his home . His fever Is said to run ex ceptionally high. The officers have quarantined his house. To Attend Tlinhonnvn's Convention E. L. Smith, local agent for the Holt combined harvester, left last night for La Grande to attend the an nual convention ofthe State Thresh ermen, which is to be held in that city today and tomorrow. LIQUOR liOW DISCUSSED. (Continued trom Page One.) Trunks Rifled and House Looted Marshal Boreland Effects Capture and Men are Now in County Jail Had Keys to Railroad Houses in Their Possession. A group of Mongolian pheasants will form one of the interesting ex hibits at the Pendleton Poultry show to be held in the armory next week. The birds are the property of Dr. John Griswold and were entered by him this morning. These pheasants, better known as China pheasants, are regarded as am ong the gamest and most beautiful game birds in existence. They abound In the Willamette valley where they have flourished since, their introduc tion a few years ago, but every effort to establish them in eastern Oregon thur far has failed. Dr. Griswold has some splendid specimen of this great bird. Music Will Be Feature. Manager Fletcher of the United Orchestra who is also treasurer of the poultry association, has completed all arrangements for the music and re hearsals have already started. The daily concerts last year proved to be one of the most enjoyable features of the show and according to Manager Fletcher the muBic this year will be even of a higher order. Since the shotf was responsible for the existence of the orchestra, its members are particularly anxious to make the show more successful In the musical line than it was before. niNDUS DEPORTED WHEN FOUND TO BE DISEASED San Francisco, Dec. 9. Eleven Hindus out of thirteen who arrived here on the Manchuria on Sunday are to be deported under orders issued yesterday by Dr. M. W. Glover, medi cal Inspector, who declares them to be affected with hookworm. Hindus have been coming here in far smaller numbers sinee the immigration offi cials began rejecting many on ac count of bookworm, Seven Miles of Paring. North Yakima, Wash, Dec. 9. Yielding to a petition of taxpayers, the city council has decided to cre ate a paving district embracing sev en miles, expending thereon some $600. 000 this spring. Eighty-eight blocks in the older residence portion of the city, and half a mile of the Tleton drive come under the plan for city Improvement. (Special Correspondence.) Echo, Ore., Dec. 9. Yesterday af ternoon the Greek's section house here was broken into and some $50 worth of goods stolen. Trunks were broken open and the place completely looted. Later, about 6:30 p. m. Marshal Boreland apprehended three hoboes on the railroad track and found the stolen goods in their possession. They were arrested and spent the night in the city jail and this morning were given a hearing before Justice Scholl, who bound them over to the circuit court in default of bonds which were $500 each. They gave the names ot Jas. Feeny, Wm. Allen, and Frank Ryan. A loaded revolver was taken from the latter which was identified by the r.rppk as his DroDerty. They also had a full set of keys with which they could open any section or car house or any switch. They have the appear- - . rm ance or proiessionai yeggiueu. j.": prisoners were taken to Pendleton on the motor by Marshall Boreland, o be turned over to the keeping of the sheriff. Other Echo News. At the regular meeting of the Hen rietta Rebekah Lodge No. 26, I. O. O. F. on Wednesday evening there was work in the initiatory degree. Three new members, Misses Audrey Waten burger, Zena Houser, and Irene Rip pey were Initiated. Rev. W. C. Galliger and wife of FYeewater. visited here the first of the week with Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hoskins. Mrs. Hugh Smith returned yester day from a visit with friends in Pendleton. Alexander Mcintosh returned last night from Portland where he had taken two carloads of beef cattle. Mr. Mcintosh Is feeding cattle on Butter creek. The Ladies of Needle Craft held one of their usual pleasant socials for themselves and husbands at the I. O. O. F. hall last night. Dr. and Mrs. Alexander Reld came up from Stanfleld last evening and will return home today. Mrs. Nellie Horton made a business trip to Pendleton on Wednesday. Kesimio Work on Tank. v Work was resumed this morning on the new steel water tank for the O. R. & X. The work is being done by the local crew under the direction of Joseph Slegle, foreman of , the bridge and building department In the Pendleton district. Story nour Tomorrow. The regular weekly story hour for children will be held at the library at the usual hour tomorrow morning with Miss Anna Waugh In charge. The story will concern the life of Rosa Bonheur, the well known French artist. Rod Hawk in Trouble. Red Hawk, an Indian from the res ervation, was haled Into police court this morning and fined $5 by Judge FitzGerald for drunkeness. His friends are making a heroic effort to raise the amount to save the un fortunate redskin from incarceration. Moving Standpipe. The standpipe at the O. R. & X. depot Is being moved one engine length west. This will leave the passenger coaches nearer the depot when the trains stop for water and will also give the baggagemen the wide plat form on which to work. Domestic Lnnndry Incorporated. Articles of incorporation for the Domestic Laundry were filed this mor- nlng in the office of the county clerk by Attorney Charles H. Carter. The amount for which It was Incorporated was $10,000 with 100 shares at $100 each. J. F. Robinson, Mrs. J. F. Rob inson and Charles H. Carter were named as the Incorporators. CASTOR I A Wot InfnBt and Childnn. lb tti Yw Hue Always BU Bm tha Old Indian Woman Dead. Pa-tap-po, known also as Adamls tic, one of the oldest Indian women on the Umatilla reservation, wnose age has been variously reckoned at from 80 to 104, died this morning at o'clock at her home. Her relatives came in. this arternoon and securea large box from the Folsom Under taking parlors in which to Inter the remains. ALTITUDE RECORD 13 AGAIN BROKEN IN FRANCE Pan. France, Dec. 9. Aviator Le Ganeux in a Bleriot monoplane, to day broke the altitude record, going 10.400 feet This is unofficial, as tne Instrument Is not yet verified. 1 Every day Is anotoher day for a man: and every woman la another sentimental interest. And Don't You - Fornet It! That the Pendleton Dye work can taka inr of your old suits, dresses or coats and clean and press them with their nD-to-data methods so that whea thav are returaed to yen ther will look like new. Phona as and we will call far your bundle an 4 deliver It whea finished Pendleton Dye Works SILK PETTICOATS All colors and Btylca of ruffles, wearer, each An elegant article and good ?5.50 and 85.90 Armenian Lace for Handkerchiefs, etc., all widths and pat terns. Pendleton a Wicked City? H. M. Carr, who Is acting as man ager of the local Western Union of fice In the absence of George Gillette, is In receipt of a letter from a resi dent of Rosburg asking whether or not It Is true that Pendleton Is wicked city as reported. Mr. Carr, who formerly lived In the city on the L'mpqua, Is of the opinion that Pen dleton could learn much of the ways of the devil from Roseburg, herself. Henry Lazlnka Not Dead. A report was freely circulated this morning that Henry Lazlnka, the well known stockman, had died suddenly last night. Just when the news be came common property and was being freely discussed in subdued tones by his many friends that gentleman himself appeared on the streets as hale and hearty as ever to disprove the statement of his demise. "When I die," he said, "I'll go out with noise so loud there will be no mis take about it." Quelle restaurant, who will probably take out a license, thinks the restau rant license has been placed at too high a figure and that tho whole or- rtinnnce is a little too severe, wow- ever he believes that such an ordl nance will have a tendency to ellml nate all undesirables from the saloon conducting element and put the bus Iness on a more wholesome hnsls. Attorney Charles H. Carter was an other who characterized the ordinance as a good one, but said that, from a more or less superficial knowledge of the ouestlon. ho believed the drug store license was somewhat too large Some Druirjrlsts Satisfied. However, A. J. McAllister and Georgo Hill, proprietors of the Pen dleton Drug company, declared tho ordinance to be perfectly satisfactory to them. "The $150 license fee," said McAllister, "simply divides our an nual profits with tho city. The whole ordinance seems to me to bo an excel lent one. and I th'nk that after tne licensees conduct their business un der It for six months, they would not go back to the old way If they had the option. By abiding by its provisions, they will sub-consciously come to re spect themselves the more and can walk forth from their saloons each night without feeling that their vo cation places a stigma on themselves family." Enforcement Questioned. Circuit Judgo l. J. Bean, who was levated to the supreme bench of tne ate at the last election, remarked tersely, when Intervlwd, that It was uch easier to draft and pass an ordl nance than it was to secure its cn forcement. Tom Swearingen, proprietor of the French restaurant, and who conduct a most respectable saloon in the iiys when Pendleton was "wide open' gave it as his opinion that, under the new ordinance, there will be no profit in running a barroom. He reconglzes the fact that the number- will be lim Ited to twelve whereas in former days flourished, yet he declares dol lars'were spent In those days whero ickles are spent now. LawrenceFrazler, senior member of the firm of Frazler-Nelson Boo company, thinks the ordinance is all that the people could demand. One feature which he considers unjust to the saloonman is that clause which bars them from their places of busi ness on Sundays. Minister Surprised. Rev. Ralph E. Storey of the local Baptist church, who as one of the leaders of the prohibition movement, expressed himself as ngreeably sur prised at tho drastic character of the ordinance and stated his belief that. If it is rigidly enforced, the conditions which will ensue will be much bet ter than they have been In the past two years under prohibition. Attorney CharleB Ferguson was one of the few who took decided objec tion to the document. He believes that It is too radical, that the pendu lum has swung too fnr the other way. 'There Is too much in it," he said. 'Simplicity is a cardinal virtue In a law, which fact the council seems to have forgotten. I firmly believe that the new ordinance will prove too un wleldly to secure wholesome results." C. E. Roosevelt of the Boston store, voiced his opinion that the or dinance Is Just right. "It is a com promise between prohibition and the wide open town," he said. "Further more I believe the council are sincere in their endeavor to regulate the sa loons and will strive to their utmost to enforce the ordinance. And the business men will be behind them." Dan McKenzle and Sam Thompson, both extensive farmers of the Adams country, expressed their opinion that the ordinance as drafted will be high ly satisfactory to the farming element of the county. Big Charley, the Chinaman who for years has worked for Antone Nolte, was outspoken in his condemnation of the ordinance. "New law velly bad," he said. "Velly bad on saloon man. No can do business However, Charley's occupation is apt to make him somewhat biased In his Judgment and therefore does not carry any great weight. Not RealdenM of Umatilla. A prominent citizen of Umatilla writes this paper stating that William Reno, who was arrested In that town Wednesday for sodomy, and Roy Or ton, his victim, are not residents of Umatilla and asks that the statement to that effect be corrected. Ha char acterlzes them as hoboes and says that the fair name of the little rail road city has Buffered much and oft en for the actions of these transients. The East Oregonlan gladly corrects the error, which was quite uninten tlonal. THE WONDER STORE mspam a Bounty Mais ess Cm Sm ( Throe Burglars Captured. Marsnai uoreiana of Echo, came up from Echo last evening, having In his custody three young men who had been captured in that city after they had burglarized t he section house In that town and secured quantity or doming, as they were caught red-handed and with the goods on them, there Is small doubt as to their guilt. The names of the cul prlts are James Feeney, William Al len and Frank Allen. They are now enjclng the hospitality ot Sheriff Taylor. Attended Father's Funeral. Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Hill returned last evening from Huntsvllle, Wash where they had been to attend the funeral of Hill's father, the late Dr. B. F. Hill. The deceased formerly lived in Kansas and at one time was appointed as a congressman from that Stylish Overcoats and WINTER. SUITS Are Now on Display Ready for Your Inspection Men's Suits Made to Your Measure If you are hard to fit in a ready-made suit we will 'fit you correctly by making a rait to your exact measure. Nothing but nw fall pattern to select from. Large swatches enable you to choose right and the pattern you most admire. Roosevelt's Boston Store PORTLAND TO ENTERTAIN'. Elaborate Arrangements Made for Amusement of Woolgrowers of Nation. Portland, Ore. When the wool- growers of the West come to Port land for tho annual convention of the National Woolgrowers association, they will find an extended entertain ment program ready for them. The committee named to arrange this fea ture of the meeting is headed by B. S. Josselyn, president of the Portland Railway, Light & Power company, and consists of 270 prominent busi ness men. They are mapping out special treats that will delight the visitors. A trolly ride about Portland will be given on the afternoon of Janu ary 4, the first day. t'ortlana has grown so fast in the past few years that this trip will be a revelation to many of the delegates who have not been in the city lately. Wednesday night there will be a reception and dance In the assembly hall of the armory. A smoker and vaudeville perform ance will be given at the armory on Thursday night for the enjoyment of the visitors and some stunts will probably be pulled oft that will have special application to the woolgrow ers. a theatre party will be given visitors Friday night. A "Seeing Portland by Gaslight" trip Is planned for Saturday night. Tho chief stopping points on this Jaunt ' will be the Elks club, the Commercial club and the Portland Press club, . which will keep open house for the delegates. As all business of the con vention will have been concluded by this time, the livestock men can give themselves over wholly to enjoyment and the next day they will leave for their homes. This is the first convention In eight years the association has held in a big city, - sessions having been held of late In the smaller centers of the interior and the inter-moun-talh region. On this account it is expected the number of delegates in attendance will be very large, as Port land Is favorably located, because of Its central position In the Paclfto Coast region, to bring out a record number of visitors. The Ladles Aid of the Presbyterian church will hold a bazaar Friday and Saturday and give a chicken pie din ner Saturday In the Smith-Crawford building. Dinner from 11 to 2 for 36c. Special tor H7qq1 Only From Dec. 5 Until December 10 Phone Main. 45 303 E. Court St. SUPREME COURT JUSTICE WILL BE NAMED SOON Washington, D. C. Dec 9. Infor mation given out today indicates that the question ,of the appointments to the supreme court of the United States will be settled next week and that President Taft has decided he will send his apoplntments to the senate during the week. He has consulted the leaders of the insurgents, regulars and some democrats. It Is learned that the list from whom the selections will be made Include Justice swayie of the New Jersey su preme court; Judge Lamar of Geor gia; United States Judge Russell of Texas; Judges Hook and Vandeventer of the U. S. Circuit court; United States District Judge Pollock of Kan sas; Senator Sutherland of Utah; W, D. McHugh of Nebraska, and Hughes. RATTLE IS EXPECTED IN MEXICO SUNDAY El Paso, Tex., Dee. 9. Citizens of Parral, fleeing to escape being caught between federal and Insurgent forces which are gathering in that vicinity arrived in El Paso today. It Is report ed that sharp fighting has been going on since yesterday. A body of Insurgents, marching toward Chihuahua will meet a similar force of federal troops marching to meet them, Sunday. Some sort of battle Is expected, so refugees say, They declare federal troops are pre paring to attack Temoalchio, Madera, and Guerrero, which are now controll ed by rebels. Jettison that Burden of Trouble BalasVand back to the Harbinger of One pair of Gloves or 2 Neckties with every Ladies or Gents' Suit OLD SPOTS never come back when cleaned by the Berlin Dye House Call for and Deliver Anywhere Save Worry By saving your Eyes, our Opto metry Department Is fully equipped to scientifically exam ine your eyes and fit you with correct eyeglasses or spectacles. We fit any eye that responds to light SUITA1LK GIFTS FOIL CHRISTMAS Opera Glasses, Field Glasses, Eyeglass Holders, Lorgnettes, Etc OUR PATRON SEND . US THEIH FRIENDS. DALE ROTH WELL, Optometrist with Wm. Hanacom, THE Jeweler, Pendleton Make Yourself a Present of an Quorcoat or Grauonoiio and at the same time, save enough on your purchase to buy her something nice Prices almost cut in two Vorkingmon's Clothing Company w Lea Expense Makes Our Prices Lower Happiness! ..J 1 state but did not serve. Ha wm