page rrm K1QHT PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1911. BROKEN ARM IK PERSONAL MENTION CLEAN-UP SALE ON Our First Showing of Ladies and Misses Slits S Dresses For Early Fall Wear Come in and see them F. E. LlVENGOOD(SbCO. THE LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S STORE. Quarterly Style Books for Fall. Ladies Home Journal Fashions Now Ready 20c with any 1 5 c Pattern Free. locals I See Lane A ' Son for signs. Pastime pictures please all. Dutch Henry for eoal. Main 171. Wall paper, paints, etc. Lane A Son. Private board and lodging at 105 W. Webb. Phone Black 3431. Phone Platzoeder for fresh meat end lard Main 44S. Phone Main 5 for dry wood or Rock Springs coal. Cull at 777 Thompson street for board and rooms. H. H. Copeland. For sale 4 good milch cows. In quire 21S Jane. Phone Black E091. Everybody goes to the Orpheum to ee the best and the clearest pictures. Wanted Sewing at 400 W. Alta street. Prices reasonable. Work guaranteed. Everything that's good to eat. In meals and groceries , at the Cash Market, phone Main 101. Griddle cakes without grease. Try a Wear-Ever griddle. Call Black 2092 for information. market, it's here. Farmers' Meat Co., Conrad Platzoeder, manager, 224 E. Court street, phone Main 44S. For transfer work, hauling bag gage,' moving household goods and pianos and all kinds of Job work, phone Malnn 461. B. A. Morton. You can't burn slate and gravel! Don't try It. Phone Dutch Henry, Main 173. for clean screened Rock Springs coal either lump or nut It burns clean and goes further. Lost O.-W. R. & N. pay clteck No. 6969 for 136.35 in favor of Kick Puloe. The public Is warned not to cash this check but to kindly return same to owner at Thorn Hollow or P. O. Box 867, City. Passengers to Portland can save money and at the same time have an enjoyable river ride by taking boat from The Dalles. Str. Bailey Gatzert leaves dally, except Friday and. Sun day at 1:30 p. m., arrives In Port land 9:30. Fare SI. 00. Ix't GcorRO Haul It. Phone George Stangler at Gritman Bros.', Main 511, for light or heavy hauling of all kinds. Trunks, furni ture or pianos moved promptly and with care to any part of the city. Wanted at once, an Al fresh Jersey Will Hyatt left this morning on the local for a visit at Echo. Attorney Herislelgh returned on the local this meriting to Echo. City Recorder Frunk McKenxle of Hermlstou, is a bus.ivess visitor in the city today. A. P. Bradburn, the well known traveling cracker salesman, is in the city today. Harold Brock, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brock, returned yesterday from Wenaha Springs. Mac Smith, the Vansycle farmer, was an incoming passenger on the N P. this morning. Hany Bickers, the local real estate man, was a westbound passenger on the local this morning. Roy Alexander returned last night from Cold Springs where he had been trending several days. J. W. C'allender of Athena was business visitor in the city yesterday ainl remained over night. Mies Bessie Campbell came in from her heme at Pilot Rock yesterday and spent the night In the city. J. E. Beam and family have re turned from Lehman, Springs, where they had been for an outing. Miss Helen Gray passed through Pendleton yesterday en route 'to her home In Walla Walla from Wenaha springs. Deputy Sheriff Joe Blakeley left on the local this morning for Bea vert's Island near Umatilla where he has business to transact. Forrest L. Baker, formerly a mem ber of the mechanlca.1 force of the East Oregonian, arrived this morn ing on the Northern Pacific train af ter an absence of several months. Mrs. Tom Swearingen did not ac company her husband home from Lehman Springs as announced in this laper yesterday, but will remain at the popular resort several weeks yet. (Special Correspondence.) Hermiston, Ore., Aug. 22. James Merriwelher, a recent arrival from Fort Wayne, was the victim of a run away accident this morning and Is now laid up with a broken arm. He was driving from the east to the west PJirt of town when his team became frightened and ran. throwing the driver to the ground. This is the same team that recently ran awuy with Al Robb and seriously injured that man. TALENTED PARROTT SAVES 20 PERSON'S 'Coikj On. Hurry:" It Sings Out When Sioke Spreads. New York. A talented green par rot gave an alarm of fire in a 10 story Madison avenue apartment house and saved the lives of 20 per sons who would otherwise have been suffocated by the dense smoke which filled the upper doors of the building. The parrot, owned by Henry W. Dearborn, superintendent of the Hudson-Fulton Celebration associa tion, noticed the smoke shortly after midnight and aroused Its master by calling repeatedly: "Come on, Har ry; come on, come on!" - The fire was in the apartment Just above. Dearborn awakened his fam ily and ran with his parrot's cage un der his arm to the street, where he found a policeman. The bluecoat manned the elebator and rushing through the upper floors of the build ing, aroused all the occupants. The blaze was confined to two apartments, causing a loss of $50,000. SPECIAL SESSION' OF CONGRESS ADJOURNS All $4.00 and $3.50 Oxfords for $2.95 All $3.00 s.nd $2.50 Oxfords for $1.95 All Boys, Misses' and Children's Oxfords Reduced. j . Every pair this season's Wohlenberg Dept. Store 'BETTER GOODS FOR LESS MONEY." (Continiued from page one.) CHINESE ADMIRAL EXECUTES HIS SON cow; also have a full blood . giving I one and one-half gallons a day that For Sale Good team, harness and I will trade for fresh one and pay hack. Suitable for camping purposes. ' difference. Address W. I. Gartwa or Inquire 413 W. Alta. j phone Black 2972. A double boiler In your teakettle. . Let the Wear-Ever representative. front of People, Ware- show you. o- - BUck 2092. noUMe Augim one &iy Coal and wood, phone Main 6. Rambler bicycle, equipped with mud B. L. Burroughs, agent for dry' guards, lantern hanger, and pump, wood and Rock Springs coal. Phone Suitable reward for return of same to Main 5 . ln omce. ! Choice bunch of saddle ponies for ale at the Round-Up feed yard, 212 W. Webb. Lumber at Darr's mill 112 00 per thousand. Six miles west of Mea cham, Oregon. About 800 feet of good new garden hose for sale at cost price. Sharon & Eddlngs. Special rates to horse? ooarded by the week or month at the Commercial Barn, 620 Aura street. Phone Main 13. For Sale From one to twelve good, young, well broken, Jersey dairy cows for fale. I. W. Short, Milton, Ore. Experienced woman wants posi tion as cook with harvesting crew. Address 701 Thompson street, Pen dleton. Wanted at once, lady solicitors for city and road. Pleasant work, good pay. Experience not necessary. Call mornings. Mr. Lee, 206 W. Webb. Phone Main 641 for Parker's au tomobile. Trips to all parts of coun try, Lehman Springs in particular. Quick service. , If you want to movo, call P6nlav. 1 Bros., Transfer, phone 3391. Large dray moves you quick. Trash hauled once a week. 47 Main street. Wanted At once, fresh Jersey cow. Inquire W. I. Gadwa. Phone Black 2972. Meat' Meat! Meat! If It's on the ;K.TUITY TO HARBER j LEADS TO PRISON CELL Cincinnati. A 15-cent tin to a barber is the real cause of much trou , ble In the family of John C. Byland of Boone county, Ky. His son has been sent to the Kentucky peniten I tiary for five years and he Is a pris oner charged with the embezzlement of $18,000 from a Rlchwood, Ky., deposit bank, j More than a year ago his son, Ray mond Byland. went Into a barber shop near where they lived and got ( shaved. He did not notice that there ! was another customer In the shop. When he had been shaved young , Byland gave the barber 25 cents and told him to keep the change. Both 1 Bylands were working in a bank, the son getting 150 a month. The other customer in the shop was one of the directors of the bank. I The director called a meeting of the board the next morning and an investigation was begun. All agreed no man working for 150 a month should tip a barber 15 cents for a shave. Before the investigation clos ed John C. Byland and his son fled from Kentucky. Later the directors announced that $18,000 was gone. Raymond Byland was arrested eight months after .heir disappear ance in Sacramento, Cal., where he was working under an assumed name. He was brought back to Ken- AttackeU by Dead Youth's Wife He Kills Her Also in Naval Arsenal. Honolulu, H. I. That Admiral Lee Chun, a prominent "flicer of the new Chinese navy, executed his son for showing revolutionary tendencies, was in turn wounded by his daughter-in-law, who sought vo avenge her husband, and killed the young wo man, is the news received here by prominent Chinese connected with the revolutionary cause, who have been obliKed to llee from China to save their lives. Admiral Lee Chun, is In charge of the naval arsenal at Canton and the remarkable story was smuggled out from there past the Chinese censors and in defiance of orders command ing secrecy in the matter, issued by the Pekin authorities. Cablegrams from China have referred to the ad miral as being ill, but have not stated from what he suffered. It is stated that the admiral's son became fired with the spirit of the revolutionists and started to preach sedition among the Chinese sailors at Canton. The father learned of this, summoned the youjig man to 'his room, denounced him as a traitor and shot him dead on the spot. The young man's wife heard the report of the pistol and at once got a revolver, rushed into the admiral's room, and as she opened the door, fired. The bullet hit the admiral in the thigh, but uetore sne couiu iuc second shot, the admiral shot her also, and her body Jell over that or her husband. Every effort was made to keep news of the tragedy from becoming public, but the revolutionists have spies in Canton and they sent the information to Honolulu. that part of Arizona's constitution. The president himself has been compelled to concede the right and Justice of the initiative, the refer endum and the recall, with the sole exception of the judiciary. f The president's refusal to accept the wool schedule Is equivalent to saying that he is 'not willing to agree to the schedules acceptable to the progressive element of his own par ty. The wisdom or the unwisdom of his views must be settled by the people. , By Joseph L. liristow, U. S. Senator from Kansus, Republican-Progressive. Copyright 1911, by the United Press Association. The special session has not accom plished what it should have, though it has to its credit some substantial legislation. The corrupt practice act will have some restraining influence on exces sive expenditure of money in con gressional and senatorial elections. The reciprocity bill, I think, will not produce satisfactory results. I think '.t will slightly reduce the price of farm products but not the cost of living because the reduction will be all absorbed by the middle men. Efforts of progressive republicans to reduce excessive duties on manu factured articles failed through a combination between the president, standpat republicans and certain democratic leaders. The passage by the senate of the resolution for direct election of sen ators is the greatest triumph of the session for progressives. But that is tied up In conference, because certain southern democrats demand as a price of direct elections that the fed eral government' shall give up the power it has always had to regulate the times and manner of electing senators. President Taft's veto of the. state hood resolution was an unjustifiable exercise of power. Because he per sonally disapproves of the recall of judges, he saw fit to deny the people of Arizona the right to frame their constitution as they think best. announcement of Democratic Leader Underwood, that hereafter caucuses would be open to the public and press. He said this open work will tend to shape legislation In the peo ple's favor. He said Congress Is now responsible to the peoples' will, and they should next turn their attention to the Judiciary, intimating that the recall was the way to do It. Friction matches were first manu factured in 1827. , it Pure food laws have England since 1267. existed in I Try I jRose Cream j tor Sun Burn and Tfan if you wish to be FREE of those blemishes tucky and sent to the penitentiary. He saw his little child for the first time when he returned. His father was arrested In Detroit and taken to Kentucky, where he will be tried this week. The father says he is glad the chase 1b over and asserts that he Intended to return to Kentucky and surrender. 25c KOEPPENS fhe Drug Store That Too Best. Serves IMPALED UPON A SHAFT. Cyclist Collides With Milk Wagon at Foot of Mountain Trail. Pasadena, Calif. J. Honda, a bi cyclist, was impaled upon the shaft of a milk wagon witn wnien he coi llded at Sierra Madre and was brought to a hospital in this city with a piece of hickory pole still protruding from his right breast. Riding at high speed down a moun tain trail, which led Into Slerr Madre, Monda suddenly turned Into a street along which the milk wagon was be ing rapidly driven. The cyclist was aunblo to turn aside to avoid the collision and the shaft was driven Into his breast. Dr. Lemoyne Wills was summoned and under his direction the shaft was not withdrawn from Honda's breast but sawed off until he could be op erated upon In a hospital here. (UllSWOLD SEEKS THE STAGE. Woiiuin He Sues for Breach of Prom ise is Yachting. New York. While the great "Ruz- lelamb and Brunhilde" breach or promise case is being prepared lor trial in the October term of the su- neme court, Russell A. Griswold the fair young plaintiff for $50,000 dam- ges against Helen R. Smith, la toi- owlng a stage career. After a brier course of tutelage in the chorus, Ruz zie has received the part of Launce- lot Gaggs In "The Henpecks" at the Broadway theatre. And such Is his levotlon to the profession' that Ruzzielamb raises no objection when in the third scene of the first act he Is required to come upon the stage with his beauty marred. He appears with crosspatch- es of court plaster over the counte nance with which the wealthy Miss Smith was once so charmed. He is sunnosed to have suffered all this laceration at the hands or Henry Peck, the former village barber. Once In his chorus days, it is said Miss Smith sat In a box and when the eyes of Ruzzt and herself met she smiled at him and waved her hand. At least, Ruzzle says so. Moreover, he says he did not smile back not he! As regards this scene no word confirmatory or otherwise could be obtained from Brunhilde, who Is cruising !n Maine waters In her yacht the Viking. By Congressman James Mann, Repub lican, of Illinois. (Copyright 1911, by the United Press Association. The democrats should have confin ed themselves to reciprocity legisla tion, but instead they bungled legis lation and prevented the passage of the bill providing for the direct elec tion of United States senators, by coupling it with another constitution al amendment to deprive the federal government of one of its own neces sary powers. They prepared tariff bills without full knowledge and tried to put Pres ident Taft in a hole and got there themselves. Oilier Statements. Senator Frances E. Warren from Wyoming, Republican, said the most noteworthy result of the session had been the strengthening of President Taft's influence as a safe and sane leader. He declared the Republican party had gained by his action in pre venting hasty and ruinous revision of the tariff. Congressman Murdock, from Kan sas, Republican, said the most lm portant thing of this session was the HEADQUARTERS FOR Toilet1 " Goods ' We are Sole Manufacturers , and Distributors of th Celebrated TOILET CRE.1M COLD CREAM TOOTH POWDER . and MT. HOOD CREAM. Taliman & Co. Leading; Druggists of East ern Oregon. oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo o o o o CANNON IN TRESTLE MISHAP. Former Speaker and Party Have Nar row Escape on Trolley. Washington, D. C. Attorney Gen eral Wlckersham, former Speaker Cannon, Representative Mann of Illi nois, republican leader of the house, and a party of republican members of congress had a narrow escape in an accident of the Great Falls & Old Dominion railway when their special car, traveling at a high speed, ran down a cow. For time it seemed that the car would be hurled from a high trestle, but it held to the rails and no one was Injured. o o o o o o o o o o o o o 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o D o o o o o o o The Frog aid tine Poind Lily Words by John Kemble Music by Lester Keith SUNG BY SALLY FISHER OF A Knight for a Day" Company Complete Piano Score, Words and Music FREE In next Saturday's issue of the East Oregonian. By special arrangement with the owners of the Copyright. Read the want ads. The saving of thi music series provides an easy way of securing, with out expense, a collection of song hits from the recent New York Muical Successes. One of these Big Song Hits will appear each week. All music published in the East Oregonian are the latest popular hits. Order Your Paper Today. oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o