East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, October 09, 1911, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

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    EIGHT PAGES.
PAGE EIGHT.
DAILY EAST OUEGOXIAV, PENDLETON', OREGON', MONDAY, OCTOUEH 9, 1911.
A GOOD COOK
DEMANDS
THE BEST !
That's why those
MAIN :;.
firing groceries for an appetizing anJ
moal alwavs ak ''Central" for
Newsy Notes
of Pendleton
11
THEY GET IT !
QUANTITY and QUALITY with EVERY
purchase at the
STANDARD GROSEslY COMPANY, IHG.
Itnys Half StvCoti on MeKa.v.
William Huff of ins city has just
parehasej of Irwin A. Rarne anil
wilV, a so of this city, 3-M ai'Vfs of
land on the North Fork of the McKay
for $2300.
Rack from Spokane 1-tir.
- Frank Frazior k'tif of local hor-e
breeders and trainers, returned this
IN' DIKE PKKIL.
ris'litiiv; for l.Jfo Aim I list Onset of
tlio Lowly Reef Slow.
Ilcston, MaM(. Tho bean Is fightinn
the battle of a lifetime to keep Its
prestige as Roston's foremost food
stuff. It received a solar plexus a short
time as;o when Mntisties were gather
ed showing that the output of niaca
rona was fast putting the Boston buk
rd bean on the toboggnn.
Now another rival has hove In
sight the beef stew and Miss Rer
tha Stevenson, Radcllffe graduate and
proprietor of several restaurants In
thif eitv and t'.imbrilge, stands spon-
foicnoon from Spokane, where he I ""r tor tne new claimant ruu
liaj been with his fa t pacer
during the Spokane fair.
Reola,
WHERE
I "RANK O'GAUA, Pres.
ALL. ARE TLEASED.
UER-NARD O'GAUA, Scc.-Trcas.
Louis La K.-iiio Ruriisl.
Tlie body of Louis Ia. Rone. the. nge-l
pioneer who died recently in this city,
was laid to its final rest yesterday uf
ti moon In Olney cemetery. Funeral
services were held in the Folsom un
dertaking parlors at 2 o'clock, Rev.
Nathan Evans preaching the sermon.
L
10 ATTEKD SYNOD
1'KOMINKXT MK
AS (t)l'XTKY
ASKED
LIFE TUVSTEES
To attend the annual state synod
of the Presbyterian church, a delega
tion of nine ni'ivsters. and elders from
I'matill.i county will .leave Fendleton
t marrow for Tor. land. Though the
synod will not coninieree until Thurs
day, the local presbytery is scheduled
to meet in the F:r t I'res! ytenan ;
church at Portland Wednesday. Com- :
wencins Thu:.d.iy the sytiij, will con-I
tinu-j through Sunday at the Mt. Ta-,
1 r church. . j
Tlie synod met last year at Fendie
ton in the midst of the wet vs. dry
campaign and it will be rtm-mbered
tliat the nti'ii.-t. rs f'.mi over the state
had rath. r a s r: .! q t me h. re. on
one oecasi-m their street "neetins be
ing broken up by ov-.r-ripe eggs
1- ;: tisns.
s the -frsonnfl of
ikh-g.ition: Mod-
t'oiirt tirant.s Divorce.
Circuit Judge G. W. Phelps this af
ternoon Granted a divorce to Frank
Skinner from his wife, Evelyn Skin
ner. J. B. Perry was the attorney for
the plaintiff in his suit.
favor.
TOXli WAR IMPENDS ON"
SLAVE GIRL'S AtVOrXT
Socio! ln Prepare for
; IMav Arrest Two Oun
thrown by ...!.':
The foil, iwine
tlie l niatil a county
rator W M. LI akney of Freewater,
Rev. Frank J. Milnes of Pendleton.
R-v R. F. Harper of Milton, Rev. K
W. Warrington of Pilot Rock. Mis
sionary J. N. Coi nelison of Tutuiila,
Rev J. G. Pit k '-n Indian pastor at
Tutuilia. Elders J W. Maloney of
rendleton. Philip J.ines of Tutuil'a
and Scharpf of P;lot Rock.
-r.RING A THIRST.- ATLANTA
MEN WIRE TO DLT-EGATES
Prohibition Measures in Georgia Will
Re No liar to (hk1 l lu-er.
Atlanta, da. "Will it be necessary
to bring our lkiuiJ sustenance with
us?"
This is the question many members
of ti:e famous military organization of
Chicago. Baltimore, Boston, New j
York. Philadelphia and other cities
which will attend the peace cele- j
bration, are wiring to the directors
(t the love fea-t. The managers of'
me peace ce eorau .n nave been wir
ing the answer:
"Just bring a thirst: we will provide
liquid lefrvshint-nts despite prohibi
tion." The solution is th locker tie j. The
entertainment committee has arrang
ed with several of the leading clubs
of the ci'y to furnish 5000 cards each,
which will be given the vi-itors in or
dT to quiet any fears of a lack of li
quid cheer, which have b'on enter
tained by the holdiers governors,
mayors and other distinjuishej citi-city.
These carls will give the visitors '
the privi'eges of the locker clubs and
a these clubs ar? plentifully stocked I
with liquors no one i ej go thirsty. I
Spokane. Wash. Fif'tcen . promi
nent men in various parts of the Unit
ed States have been invited to be
come trustees of the National Coun
try Life congress to meet in Spokane,
November 24 to ill, under tho aus
pice of the country life committee
of the Spokane chamber of commerce
and the country life commissions of
Washington, Oregon, Idaho and lion
tana. They are:
Charles S. Barrett, Union Ci'.y, Ga.;
president Farmers' Educational and
Cooperative I'nion; J. H. Worst, North
Dakota, president National Dry
Farnvng congress; Dr. Henry Wal
lace Des Moines, president National
Con-i rvation congress; Edward J
Ward, Malison, chief of Civic and
Social Center Development, Univer
sity of Wisconsin; Whitman H. Jor
dan, G.neva. N. Y president Amer
ican Association of agricultural col
leges: W. H. Hoard, Fort Atkinson.
Wis., editor Hoard's Dairyman.
F. D. Cohurn, Topeka. secretary
Kansas State Board of Agriculture;
James J. Hill, St. Paul, chairman
board of directors Great Northern
Railway compary; Liberty Hytle
Bailey Ithaca. N. Y., president Col
i leee of Agriculture, Cornell; G. Har
old Powell. Los Angeles, manager Cit
! rup Protective league; Dr. F. W.
I Gunsaulus, president Armour Insti-
tute, Chicago; Walter H. Page, New
j York, editor The World's Work; Jo
jseph Chapman, Minneapolis chairman
agricultural committee, Minneapolis
State Bankers' association; N. J.
j BacheUler. Concord N. H., master
National Grange, and K. L. Butter
field, Amherst, president Massachu
setts Agricultural college.
"The National Country Life con
gress which has e.-tablished head
quarters in Spokane, purposes to con
tinue and enlarge upon the good work
of the National Country Life com
mission," sa'd Fred Niederhauser,
secretary of the organization, "and it
is planned to make it a clearing
house for prosre-sive ideas and
achievement in the essential industry
of agriculture. We shall have speak
ers of national repu'ntion to discuss
Social and economic problems and de
vote some time to the redirection
the rural school and church. im
provement in soil production, build
ing of permanent highways and the
readustment of methods of market
ing products of the farm."
Demonstrating StotUlurd-Dayton Car.
U. Barrel!, representative of the
Stoddard-Dayton automobile, Is in the
city today with a demonstrating car
and is interesting at least one popu
lar business man in tlie well known
machine.
Tito Lucky Number.
Ticket No. 6351 won the $23 prize
at the Max Raer store when the con
test was decided Saturday evening.
The holder of the number has not yet
appeared anil is requested to call at
the well known furnishing goods
store.
Two Chinese
I'.XIHMll.'oilS
Men. j
San Francisco In the arris' .of
Lee Wing and Ch'n Chow, two Chi
nese charged with carrying conceal
ed weapons, there was brought to
l'ght an impending tong war in Chi
natown between the Hop Sings and
the Sin Suey Tings.
The police say they have been tin
pble to get to the bo'tom of the af
fair. They have given it out that the
trouble started over the posses-Ion of
a Chinese slave girl.
The two prisoners are both mem
bers of the Hop Sing tong. The Chi
natown squad of policemen learned
that war was Impending between the
two tongs. Unusual precautions
wero taken to stop any shooting
Patrolmen McPhee and Cummincs
concealed themselves In Waverly
Place and awaited developments. They
! saw Lee Wing and Chin Chow acting
in a suspicious manner. The police
men started to approach tho Chinese,
when the latter fled. The matter
was continued in the police court.
Antoifts Hear Prchlent.
Three auto parties from Pendleton
joined the big throng which listened
to President W. H. Taft Saturday in
Walla Walla. In the T. C. Taylor car
were Mr. and Mrs. Taylor and Mrs.
Ncsmith Ankeny, in the Fred Judd
car were Mr. Judd and Mayor Mur
phy anil in the McComas car were E.
J. McComas and Dr. E J. Sommer-viile.
if Wki
men who want.to look young
and who wish to show class,
yes and that quiet dignity
that proclaims good taste
Then W ear
College Brand Clothes
they are underpriced as they
are sold for less than regular
charges.
Qui!
Business
Ti STORE
Clcsing
Out
Clifford Pnijtt Mnri'lcl.
Announcements have been received
here of the wedding of Dr. William
Clifford Pruitt to Miss Hazel Ballou
Horton at Oakland, California, Octo
ber 3. Dr. Pruitt is the son of Dr. J.
M. Pruitt, formerly a prominent resi
dent of Pendleton and who still has
extensive property interests here. The
newly married couple will reside at
1403 Tenth avenue. Oakland.
QUAIL EAT OlT OF HANDS.
Covey Makes Daily Trips to Feeding
Ground.
Columbus, Ind. There Is at least
one covey of quail in Bartholomew
county that seems to know that It is
protected by law and for that reason
1) unafraid. The covey, which con
sists of about thirty birds, files down
in a feed yard here each evening
feeds and flies away in the early morn
ing. Some of the birds have become
m. tame they will eat from the hands
of the men at the feed yards. No one
has so far molested them.
Dies at County Farm.
Ben Butler, for some time past an
inmate of the county farm near this
city, died last Saturday following a
stroke of paralysis. He was aged sixty-five
years. Previous to entering the
county farm he was employed on the
Andy Larson ranch at Juniper. Inter
ment was made in the Olney .cemetery
today.
GOES TO COl'RT PICK-A-BACK.
A.
ThjE OFFICE
SCHNEITER, Prop. PENDLETON, ORE
pan)ily Liquor Store
Phone Main
299
711 Main Street.
Local Engineer Carries Taft.
When President Taft's special train
pulled out of Pendleton Saturday
morning Engineer L. W. Jones of this
city, was at the throttle and will re
main there unt'l Lewiston is reached
of j He had been held In the city two days
for this service, which is a tribute to
his reliability. The train was In
charge of Conductor McGilvery, who
is on the regular run betvyeen here
I.alxirer Suing t'oiiiixtny for Tiroken
Rack Too lior lo Hire Horse.
S'eubi nville, o. For six miles
Frank Relka, a miner, rode to court
on another's man back. He was not
paying an election bet.
Relka had to go to court. He can't
walk and has no horse, so a friend of
fered his broad back. Relka Is t-u-ing
the Glena Run Coal company for
damagrs for injuries received while
at work in one of the mines. His
back was broken.
He heard the case was to be con
tinued 'and road pick-a-back to court
to object to the de'ty. He told the
court he was wlthort money to ob
tain proper surgical treatment and
the court provided a horse and bug-
Ky for the trip home, and prom sed
to get a physician for him.
Pendleton Dye Works
CUT PHICES FOR SEPT.
LADIES' SUIT3 CLEANED AND PRESSED J0
LADIES' SUITS PRESSED .' L0
MEN'S SUITS CLEANED AND PRESSED 2.M
MEN'S SUITS . PRES3ED t 750
Have your clothes cleaned at ail up-to-date place and by up-to- '
date method. ,
Phone Main 109. t I-S E. Alta.
si sssi sixj 5Sss Aoi&Ts ??
I "Why Harkins, where have you
i been ? You look like a wreck."
"I know it. My twin brother and 1
I had a quarrel and I hired a bruiser to
; lick him. The man mixed us up
and here I am."
Antone Knolte is over
hemp at Pasco today.
from his
Silk Waistmgs ' I
Plain, checks, stripe and fancy
r-tripp, yard 70,
Ulaek an 1 v.liito c).-ck ami
1'iain Silk Pnpiiii, van! ...
Fanfv Poplin, vanl
saline yard ....
Mtsi
73
65
93
UXDEinVEAK FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY.
THE WONDER STORE
The Store for Thrifty Peoplo.
BLANKET TIME
and Spokane.
Court Comes OcIoImt 30.
Instead of meeting on the first
Monday in November as has been the
custom, in the past the supreme court
of the state begins its fall session in
Pendleton on the last Monday In Oc
tober. Consequently the Judges will
arrive here October 30 to. take up the
eastern Oregon session. The dates
f'ir the holding of the court term are
fixed by the legislature and the act
providing for meeting here in Octo
ber each fall was passed by the last
legislature.
PASTS; TRIES TO KILL WIFE.
C'oinnHTclol Club Meets Tomorrow.
Secretary J. E. Keefe has sent no
tifications to all members of the
Commercial association of a regular
monthly meeting tomorrow evening
and he requests a full attendance.
I-argewt Realty Transaction,
The Portland Journal yesterday
gives Pendleton the credit of havifig
the largest realty transaction in tho
state outside of Portland last week.
The transaction referred to was the
transfer of the .Schmidt property to
Joe Busier and Gus La Fontaine.
Our
ni:ii!in-i's .sunlit blankets aro irood values.
A wool lilanket 11-4 .size, white or frray for
$4.85
An extra fine ainl heavy wool blanket, extra larire size
$5. 65
Thin would U; a -rood value sold regularly at $8.50.
Al.-o a good Li"; lot of cotton Llankets at correspondin;
low
prices.
THE HUB
THE DIULMMEKS SAMPLE STOKE.
;oo(l Words From Ileriuistoii.
The first knock is yet to be heard
on the Pendleton Round-Up. For an
aTfair that attracted the wide atten
tion this unique celebration enjoyed,
this Is indeed an enviable record.
The Northwest press gave wide pub
licity to the Round-Up and in not a
single instance so fur found after a
careful search, has there been an ad
verse criticism of either the amuse
ment features, the event as n whole,
or the treatment of visitors by Pen
dieton people Ileriuistoii Herald.
Young Whitman College Journalist.
Lawrence Whitman Is the most re
cent of Pendleton students nt the Uni
versity of Oregon to become Identi
fied with college activities. He lias
Just been selected an news editor of
th Oregon Emerald, the university
semi-weekly publication. Whitman Is
a sophomore at the Mate Institution.
Peter Crockett, who Is a classmate of
Whitman, and who was leader of tho
Pendleton debating team that won the
state championship two years ago, H
mentioned In the Hnaralil as one of
the first candidates for forensic hon
ors to get into training.
l'loreneo Roberts Plewl.
A large and representative audience
greeted Florence Roberts and her
associates In "Jim the Penman" at
the local theater last night. Tho
company is remarkably well balanc
ed and the' play was pleasing t'J those
who witnessed It.
Retired RnplVt Minister Rccomos In
sane; Is I'mlcr Restraint.
Long Reach. A. L. Wyatt, who Is
believed to be a retired Haptist min
ister of Phoenix. Ariz., Is in a sani
tarium here, following a week of re
ligious fasting, the climax of which
was an alleged uttempt to smother his
wife to b nth.
The Wyatts came here reeent'y and
took a deep Interest in open-air re
ligious meetings. A week ago they
began to fast and pray.
Shrli ks brought the pol'coto their
apartments In time to save the life
of Mrs. Wyatt, who also Is in the san
itarium. Her husband became vio
lent and still Is In restraint.
CONSENT IS OIVEN BY DUAL
RELATIVE TO WEDDING
Fulton, Mo. In the dual capacity
of father of one principal and step
father of the other, Richard Reynolds
of New Hloornfield, near here, gave
the consent necessary to the Issuance
of a license, and made possible the
marriage of Miss Myrtle S. Reynolds
13 years old, and James Leslie Joy
cole, 17. The marriage followed.
"Why do they call these dentists'
offices dental parlors?" asked Smith
of Ids friend.
"Why, parlor is the old-fashioned
name for drawing-room."
Correct a bad
stomach or malarial
disorders
I1Y TAKING A COURSE OF
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS
It Does tho Volk
At AH Druggists.
Hotel McFeely
'The Only Strictly First-Class,
Modern Priced Ho: el in the City
New House. New and Beautiful Furniture. Hot
and Cold Water in Every Room.
NO INSIDE ROOMS.
Rates $1.00 and $1.50 Per Day
Corner Alder & 4th Streets
Oppositt Keylor Grand Theatre, Walla Walla, Wash.
AUCTION SALE
of 50 choice Pendleton resident lots. Located in different
parts of the city. Call and learn particulars.
MARK MOORHOUSE CO.
Phone Main 83. 117 E. Court Street.
DALE RGTIIWELL
OPTOMETRIST
I'JifS Tented, (Masses prop
erly filled, for the correction
of any defect that can le
remedied with glasses.
With random TUB
Jeweler,
Pendleton, Oregon.
COFFEE
Closset & Devers Golden West, Stee
Cut Coffee in 1 lb. cans 45c per can
No coffee in Pendleton equal to it.
Try one can, Do it now We want
you for a steady coffee customer. This
one trial will make you such.
CLARK'S GROCERY
8
Phone Main 174 612 Main Street