East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, June 16, 1911, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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PAGE SIX
UMATILLA TOHAVE
WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
MAsOMc DANCE IS
ENJOY A 1U.K OCCASION
Now Ycsvtahlcs Kind Tliolr Way to
Market In tlc V4 End Town
Now Toiuils Cluh lias Ikvn KoniK-d
With Sixteen Member.
t Special Correspondence.)
Umatilla, June 16. It is stated
that a well known Umatilla gentle
man will soon start up an up to date
weeky paper in this city. The paper
will also be equipped with an up to
date prlntery.
Rrrak In Irrigon Ditch,
A large break was found In the Ir
rigon ditch a little above this city
and a number of teams and a gang
of men are now employed in repair
ing the same.
New Vegetables.
New potatoes, peas and other vege
tables are finding their way to the
market this week. The potatoes are
A No. 1 quality and the ranchers say
that the crop will be an excellent
one.
New Tennis Club.
A new tennis club is being form
ed here this week and about sixteen
have already signified their inten
tion of joining it. The courts will
be near the athletic grounds.
Bathing Cluh Reorganized.
The Umatilla Bathing club is re
organizing after an almost twelve
month vacation and it expects to
have the bath'ng houses and running
boards ready next week.
Masonic Danoe.
The local Masons are giving a
giving a dance Friday evening, June
1. in Pounds' hall. Pendleton Unit
ed Orchestra will furnish the music.
Personal Mention.
J. W. Duncan has returned from
a short visit to his daughter, Mrs. F.
P, Connor in Portland. Mrs. Dun
can win femuin in roruancl sever&J
months, . ..' I .
'S. w. H. SwiUler has returned
from a visit to friends in Portland.
Alex Milburn was in Portland for
the past two weeks and has returned.
Mrs. F. E. Ubil who was In Port
land the week-end, has returned.
H. J. Burnham and Mrs. Burnham
were Portland visitors during the
Rose Carnival. They have returned.
Robert Lingow, the former yard
master here, has been appointed to
me same position at Wallace, Idaho.
.Mrs. Lingo and family will follow in
a tew weeks. Both Mr. and Mrs.
Lingo have resided here for a long
time and the departure is genuine
ly regretted.
W. F. HiRR'ns has returned fmm
California where he had been visiting
c?s parents.
F. L. Pullington. engineer nf
Grande, has been assigned the motor
car and entered on his new duties on
jnonaay.
Mrs. S. A. Saylor, of Portland, has
arrived and taken a cottage on the
river for the summer months. Mrs.
fraylor has many friends here who
re pleased to see her In good health
Is of two kinds -conceit and the big
nea mat comes from t sick head
ache. Does you. head ever feel like
a gourd and your brain feel loose and
ore? Tou can can it In no tim h
cting on your liver with Ballard's
"erDine. Isn't It worth trying for
the absolute and certain relief you'll
fcet A. C. Koeppen ft Bros.
fpokane. Wash., June It. Man
agers of dairies In and near Spokane
will Issue a Joint order on June 21,
compelling milkers and other male
workers In their establishment to
shave every other day. Thomas S.
Griffith, president of the Glen Tana
Dairy farm, said be believes the plan
originated by J. B. Haggin, a mil
lionaire dairyman In Kentucky, will
be adopted In all parts of the coun
try The local dairymen already have
ruled against tobacco chewing arM
have installed wash basins and lai.n
SPOKANE DAIRIES TO
ABOUSKERS
dries in connection with the mllklns; .m "rnoul "nt from member-1
tables. The milker, wear whit? u 2 ' "hlbecau P"cal view. re-
which are ch.ngeTeverV JaJ Sm'P rdln Pron,bltlon- Colquitt made
of the dalrym"? wTat. whfle a h" fr the non""U on the'
ban on whSSn ? "without question I nroh h mn "T""' the
one of sanitary Important .uch an fh T ' k' 7' bt toT
order might make itfflcul! 2 ? c sen id v 7 .be6n I""1 criU '
cure sufficient help, even at th. prS- Method,"? chur'ch- " fr" ""l
ent wage scale, which ran, from JC churc. I
135 to 145 a month, in ... ..... ..!'ora. "ow on e time of the
is announced, facial adornments
the way of whiskers must go.
..-.I. "i
In
Dill While Crate
Lincoln, Neb., June 15.
Allts White, novelist, eriltm
Empora Gazette and author
famous query. "What's the
r the
matter
-.w, ftumias;- was the commence
ment orator at the fortieth annual
txerel.- of the University of xe.
braska today. The day's program
will close with a reception by the
chancellor this evening.
STOP
In
j In
THAT STOMACH TKOUBLB
As scion m you notice
the appetite lagging-,
digoatloa becoming weak
bowel, oostlve, take
flOSTETTER'S
STODACH BITTERS
HILLS' MURDERER
SUSPECT IS SEEN
Startling evidence that the man
who murdered the f,ur members of
William Hill's family last week is
still In the immediate neighborhood
of Ardenwad, where last weeks
murders took place, came early today
when Gus Obrist, a dairyman, was at
tacked by a man believed to be the
murderer, says the Portland Journal.
Obrist works for A. J. Dysle. a
young dairyman, recently married,
who has lived in Ardenwald for the
past month. For three weeks, late
at night and early In the morn'.ng,
Dysle and Obrist have seen a rough
looking man hanging about the barns
and the house, who would disappear
In the woods across the road when he
saw that he was observed.
Dysle thought the man might be
one of the many tramps that infest
the neighborhood, owing to the prox
imity or the Southern Pacific tracks,
which ruu. near the house, until he
saw the man after the Hill murders.
Then he notified the police and sher
iffs office and took care not to leave
his young wife alone in the house.
At 2 o'clock this morning, Obrist
had f'.nished milking the cows in the
barn, behind the Dysle house, und
was walking down the lane that runs
from the barn to the house when the
same man whom he had seen a num
ber of times before ran up behind
him and struck him in the back of
the ueck. at the same time bringing
his knee up so as to strike Obrist in
the back. Obrjst is a young Swiss
who has been In this country but a
short while. He is sturdily built and
managing to shake off his assailant,
ran for the house.
The .nan who had attacked him ran
on down the lane, jumped the fence
into the road and crossed th road in
to the thicket of woods that lies be
tween the road and the Johnson
creek bottoms.
It is the belief of those who have
been working on the Hill case for the
past SlS flays that the man who mur
dered the Hills and the man who has
been prowling about the Dysle home
and other farms within a short dis
stance of Ardenwald, are the sace.
Deputy Sheriff Phillips, Deputy
Sheriff John Talley and T. F. Cowing.
Jr., a brother of Mrs. Ruth Hill, one
of the victims of Friday morning's
murders, hurried out to the Dysle
place early this morning and spent the
day scouring the woods into which the
man fled and from which he has been
seen to come on the occasions of his
v.sus to the Dysle place and neigh-
uu ling larms.
These woods are about mii, i
and not more than a quarter of a mile
wide, but are extremely thick and
nuisiae mat slopes down to
me jonnson creek bottom ih.
"8" oi way or the railroad.
When Obrist told Dvsle nt th.
tack this morning Dysle telephoned
tne snerirf and the police. Two po
licemen got to the Dysle place within
"n an nour out were unable to find
anytning or Obrist's assailant. They
"ra oogs barking loudly at a farm
... oiner siae or the Johnson creek
ooiioms, nowever. ant it l Bimnn.
me man ran in tnat direction.
POLITIfAF. VPITE VWITO
u j
Republicans ar. rciniin .....
- ..,v.v.uB v.ci iUB
inueclsion of democratic
support Harmon or Wilson.
Democrats are lanc-hm .ir, uAiM
- o o tucii
"..rc.es over tne predicament they
claim their leaders have gotten the
republicans into over the tariff
R is said that ov. wnnn'
mendation of certain oditnr. .k-
Independence thev hv h- i
criticizing public men and his declar
ation for publicity as one or th.
safeguards of the nennio um ..
. . " tun .1 1 ill
j the support of certain governors In
. ti- a. .!..... . . . .
Ohio progressives have started a
campaign to obtain a morn II he ml
constitution for the'ir state next year.
Persons of every political party who
believe that the new constitution
should be drafed in the Interest of
the people rather than of special
privOege have banded totethor
the campaign. I
Governor Colauit nf tvo. I
fused to permit the Methodist church
of whles Is a member, to expel!
him Without k. flffht frnm I
""onai aem.
mOfTfltlrt innuanf In. .
hence there promise, to be a merry
governor Harmon of
William Jennings Bryan.
nas lost no time In an
niing that he will not h a
dldate for the presidential nomlna
tlon again, but he does not like War
mon and Harmon has already given
luiice mai mere la no love lost be
tween himself, Bryan and Governor
Wilson of New Jersey. He wll stand
on nis record as a nroirreiivo
one of the proudest things to which he
directs emphasis In the series of bills
17 in all which he was forced
through after Ohio had vainly de-
manhejed their passage for years.
HuiM-ratlon there Is not so much
the ordinary varatlnn a-
a single bottle of Hood's Sarsap-
wnicn rerresnes thetlred blood,
sharpens the dulled appetite, restores
the lost courage. Take Hood's Sar
saparilla this summer.
A political campaign involving a
l-nlted States senatorshlp, the gov
ernorship and other Important state
office, will soon be on in full blast
In Kentucky.
DAILY EAST ORE GOXIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, Jl'XE
MRS. LOVE STATES
CAME
HOME TO DINNER
MUCH INTOXICATED
Wife of Sidney Love Takes Witness
Stand to Defend Herself Against
Cluirucs Made by HubniKl Has
Quit Cigarettes.
Baker, Ore , June 16. Looking pale
andjivorn out, Mrs. Marjorie Burnes
Love took the witness stand yester
day to defend herself from the charg
es brought against her by her hus
band. SiJney C. Love, In his action
for divorce. She was under direct ex
amination all the forenoon by her at
torney. Benjamin Tuska, and answer
ed questions readily at most times,
faltering occasionally when her home
life was brought up. Once she was
visibly affected when the events Just
prior to the birth of her baby were
discussed.
. Sha wore a heavy veil, ns she has
all through the hearing.
She recited at length the details of
her acquaintance with Love. "Dur
ing his courtship," she said, "he was
affectionate, and my marriage with
him was one of pure love. He told
me always during those days that we
were to live In New York, as he would
not care to live in Chicago at all.
Home Drunk, Vjrly, Sullen.
. "The beginning ' of my illness was
one night when he came home to din
ner very much Intoxicated. I had
nver but once before seen him so
much undr th? influence of liquor.
His condition was such th.it lm
swayed and I had never seen that be-
rore. All through dinner that night
he was ugly and sullen to mo. nn.i
w hile I was too ill. i went to the the
atre with. him. Spine friends were
with Us and saw how I felt, so would
r.ot accompany us. We returned home
in wie motor and when we arrived he
did not heln me out hut lof
alight as best I could." Re thetl or
dered the chauffeur to drive him to
ft ciub snd left me standing alone
on tne street at midnight."
"The next day the doctor told him
what was the nature of my Illness and
he, was greatly pleased. He came
back and was very kind to me In
deed." She then told how they had gone
to Newport, and while she lay 111 In
bed he had the house full of guests
every night, making so much noise I
could not sleep."
Visited Hospital Sleepily.
Shortly afterward, when she was.
taken to the Roosevelt hospital in
New Tork, for an operation for the
removal or her appendix, the wife
testified that he came to see hr euerv
day, corroborating Love's statement.
uui, me aaaea, -ne never stayed
long, and orten-times laid down and
siepi wnne ne was there "
She also acknowledged that he was
very Kina ana good to her after her
return irom tne hospital.
She dwelt at some length on the
details Of hl8 failure In himlnaaa aov
ing that after the crash came, he had
atKea ner to lend him some money,
and that she had done bo. tn th
tent of S7000 and later hnri
a cnecx tor 13000. About thin Hma
she testified, the baby was born, and
ner motner suggested the trin to En
land. Her mother, she M mm tn
her room and they talked the plans
ever ana Mrs. Burns called to Sidney,
who was In the next room, to nub him
If he and Marjorie would not go to
cngiana with her and live as her
guests.
He agreed." she added, "ind n-iti.
tears in his eyes thanked my mother
for her kindness and showed in every
way mat ne was deenlv nffeotorf k
i . ,. r '
Has Quit Cigarettes, she Says.
un cross-examination, whlph wa
startea bv Attornev Rand shnrttv
iore noon, sne asserted she had given
up smoking cigarettes and hnil nnt
smoked since she left New Tork. She
said she did not think it nlro nt Mr
Band to ask her If she bad smoked
today, after testifying that hVi
nled that Love had not known of her
smoKing until after their marriage,
saying he had encouraged it during
meir engagement.
0ll Ut.. Inch A Kto ury IwMMk,
Wm mUtot l'itMTHK .MTM .UFEBIOKI
unwu, It. h1m IUl
J I
Alt.
f1 Umlu4
r 1 rirririiMiai i mm
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
FIRST-CLASS SERVICE
HUSBAND WAS CRUEL
IPe Quelle
Cafe
and Oyster House
Meals 25c and up
Best 25c Meals in
the Northwest.
LA FONTAINE BLK.,
2'mAJX STREET
" ARE
TO
E A VOTE
O. A. C.
AI.VMM ASS'N
ADOPTS 1 1 E EE 1 1 EN 1 I' S I
Important Questions of pulley Will
le Subnitttod to Moiiibcrshlp u Is
Done in Eastern Collogvs Associ
ation Has mid Secretary.
Corvallls, Ore., June 16. As a re
sult of action taken at the annual
meeting of the Oreeon Agricultural
College Alumni association the prin
ciple or tne rerorms will henceforth
be used at times In connection with
alumni affairs. The executive com
mittee of the association Is authorized
to take a vote of the entire alumni
membership on any question of al
umni policy when In the judgment of
the comm'ttee it Is desirable to do so.
The plan of submitting important
Issues to the vote of all the graduates
of the institution is in voarue In ninnv
of the large eastern colleges and It is
believed the scheme will work par
ticularly well In Oreiron where the
uses of the initiative and referendum
are well understood.
One question has already been re
ferred to the membership of the O.
A. C. alumni and the vote will be
taken within a short time. The ques
tion Is jpon the adontlon of a mo
tion introduced by Carle Abrains, '00,
of Salem, to the effect that the O. A.
C. alumni recommend one man for
membership upon the board of re-
gents. It is probable that during the
coming year several questions will be
submitted to the O. A. C grads though
at this time the one mentioned above
is the only question ready for sub
mission. Officer of the O. A. C. alumni as.
sodation for tjie ensuing year are E.
B. Aldilsh, president; A. G. Roquet,
vice president ttilj Marry llolgate,
Rt?crel:iry-treasurer. The executive
committee consists of the president,
secretary and the following, Mrs. C.
M. MeKellops, Corvallls, Mark Wea
therford, Albany, and Mrs. John Ful
ton, Corvallls.
The secretary-treasurer is to be
paid a salary, the amount to be reg
ulated by the executive committee.
Baby's Vital Point.
The most delicate part of a baby
Is Its bowels. Every ailment that ft
suffers with attacks the bowels, also
endangering in most caw. the Ufa
of the Infant McGee'. Baby Elixir
cures diarrhoea, dysentary and all de
rangements o( tjje stomach or bowels.
A. c. Koeppen It Bros. "V;
ANGLER GETS "PADDLE CAT."
Strange Creature Is Taken From the
uuppewa tuver.
Chippewa Falls, WU.William
Leipnitz of this city, while f'shing In
the Chippewa river, caught the
strangest specimen of the finny tribe
ever seen here. It is called by old
ALL"
6RADS
Refinish
r-
3 5S
IS EASY
:
Shabby, scmchec
are unsightly and a c
be made to look bri
pense and you can
VA1
stains and varnishes i
all kinds of surfaces t
able, lus
finished
other e:
color ca
10, 1911.
rlvermcn n "paddle cat," and who
say it hud been many years since one
has been seen in these waters.
This fish wus flftv-two Inches lone
and weighed twenty-two pounds. The
euson It Is called a "tuddlo cat" Is
on account of the queer shape of the
Head. The "puddle" Is the nose of
the fish, und on this one it measured
twelve inches. The fish had ears that
hung down six inches below the gills
The mouth opened at leaBt six Inches
In color the fish has a bluish cust.
The fish Is snld to be a salt water
specimen where It is often found, but
It Is a mystery how the fish has stray.
ed up Into the cool fresh waters of
; tne I'liippewa.
LOCAL FIRM WILL CONTINUE
VALUABLE AGENCY
The Pendleton Drug Co. of this
city has Just closed a deal whereby
it will continue to be agents for ZE
MO the well known remedy for ec
zema, dandruff, and all diseases of
the skin and scalp.
The extraordinary leap that this
clean liquid external treatment for
skin affections has made into public
favor in the last few years proves Its
wonderful curative properties and
makes It Indeed a valuable addition
to the fine stock of remedial agents
curried by the Pendleton Drug Co.
They have a limited supply of
samples, one of which will be given
free to any skin sufferer who wishes
to test the merit of the medicine. A
booklet "How to Preserve the Skin."
w'li also be given to those Interested.
ITS TOtJB KIDNEYS.
Don't Mistake the Catie f Ton
Troubles A Pendleton Citizen
Show, now to Cure Them.
Many neoola never nnnMt thai
kidneys. If suffering from a lama.
weak or aching back they think that
It I. only a muscular weakness vhm
urinary trouble seta in they think it
will soon correct itself. And .0 it !
with all the other symptom, of kid
ney disorders. That I. Just where the
danger 11... Tou must car. these
troubles or they may lead to diabetes
or Bright, disease. The beat rem
edy 1. Dsan'a Kidney Pills. It cure,
all Ills which are caused by weak or
diseased kidneys. Pendleton pt.pl.
testify to permanent ear..
Mr.. Thomas Myers, III R. Court
treet, Pendleton, Oregon, says: "X
member of nor family complained a
great deal of sharp pain. In th back
and was also caused much treable by
two frequent Msrtakaa of tha kldnev
secretions. Wktn a trial of Dean.
Kidney Pill, was rattotlM, tftll rem
edy was procured and th. Oonteats of
two boxe. restored the kidneys to a
normal condition, bringing roU.f from
all the distressing symptoms of kid
ney complaint."
For sale by all dealers. Price II
cent. roater-ICIIbarn Oo Buffalo,
New Tork. sol. agonta for the United
Btates.
Remember the nam. Dean', and
tate ne other.
Fur
AN
3
elf.
EIGHT PAGES
HEADQUARTERS FOR
Toilet Goods
We are Sole Manufacturers
and Distributors of the
Celebrated
PS
TOILET CREAM
COLD CREAM
TOOTH POWDER
and
JIT. HOOD CREAM.
Tallman & Co.
Leading Druggists of East
ern Oregon.
Liquors You'll Like
because of their perfect purity
and excellent flavor, are stand
ard goods In our establishment
Every brand of Liquor has been
carefully mellowed by ag, pure
ly distilled, and is fully guaran
teed by us. The same way with
our Port, Sherry, Claret, Rhine
and Moselle Wines and every
article we handle. You get
more than your money's worth.
In quantity and quality.
TheOlympiaBar
Phone Main 188.
and
Pioneer Bottling Work
Phone Main 177
PETERS A MORRISON, Prop.
arred
1
ft--
CNSIVE
furniture that
your home can
w at slight cx-
r
on, giving to
feet and dut
of beautifully
iy, walnut or
is. Call for
Hale & McAtee
PENDLETON
Oregon
Do row r4 th Bast OrafonlaaT