EIGHT PAGES. DAILY EAST OUEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBKIl 13, 1911. PAGE FIVE. ! LOCALS ! Cool and wood, phone Main 5. Fust'me pictures please all. Dutch Henry for coal. Main 178. I C Snyder, chimney sweep. 113812. For rent Front office In Judd building. Apply to F. E. Judd. Everybody goon to tne Orpheum to ee tho beBt and the clearest pictures. Dr J. A. Best nag returned trom h'a vacation and has resumed practice. For Rent Nicely furnished rooms. 313 S. Main. Phono Black 2451. Eleven new pupils enrolled at the Pendleton Business College yesterday. Wanted One roomer. Charges reasonable. Inquire 311 Coshlo street. For Kent Three furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Inquire "F. M." this oft Ice. Mr Fred Buchannn, Echo, Ore., entered the Pendleton Business Col lege yesterday. Everything that's good to eat, In meats and groceries at the Cash market. Phone Main 101. For Sale 200 hens and pullets, ex cellent laying stock. Address, Mrs Geo. Bain, lJnx 662, Pendleton, Ore. Special rates to horses boarded by the week or month at the. Commercial Barn, C20 Aura street. Phone Main 13. Wanted Eight per cent money on first class alfalfa and fruit land se curity, loans to run trom 3 to 6 years Write to H. E. Bush, Nyssa, Ore. Tako Northern Pacific Ky. to Spo kane, leaves 1:30 p. m. arrlvo 6.05 p. m. Tickets from V. Adams, Agent, Pendleton. For Sale 6 passenger Franklin, run but little, cost J2S00. JC00 will take It If sold this wjck, owner go ing away. J. W. Davis, 700 E. Webb. If you want to move, call Penland Bros. Transfer, phone 3391. Large dray moves you quick. Trash hauled once a week. 647 Main street. For transfer work, hauling .bag gage, moving household goods and pianos and all kinds of Job work, phone Malnn'461. B. A. Morton. A Snap Owner leaving Pendleton, must sell good 9 romn hmise, furnish ed, three blocks from Ma.n street, at bargain; terms. Phono Black 2731. Wanted A girl for general house work on farm 6 miles out of town. Work Is light, only two In family. Call 120 Monroo street, city, or Farmer Line 28. You can't burn slate and gravel! Don't try It. Phono Dutch Henry, Muin 173. for clean screened Bock Springs coal either lump or nut. It burns clean and goes further. To Portland or California, take Northern Pacific, via Pasco, and S. P. & S. Ity Leave 1:30 p. m.. ar rive Portland 8:10 a. m. See W. Ad ams, agent at passenger station, for through tickets and all arrangements. I have several large tracts of Uma tilla county wheat land and stock ranches for sale. Will take In ex change property In Portland, Spokane or Pendleton. E. T. WADE. If co.ng east, or west or south, have tickets routed Northern Pacific Hy. Closo conm ctlons at Pascl with a'l through trains. W. Adams, agent, Pendleton. INr Kale; o Hint. Six room house and two acres of land, one acre In nlf.ilfa Two wells on place and water piped In yard. Barn, chicken yard, brlrk cellar, all In good condition. Call on or nddess Burr Johnson, St9 Hazel street, Pendleton. ;ii 1 .lack for Sale. T have a good pedigreed, 6 year old Mammoth Jack for tale or trade for good gentle mules. Address Adams, Ore, H. p. p. No. 1. or call at my res idence on big Spring Hollow. HI) LAFAVE. I-mio pack is one of the most com mon forms of muscular rheumatism. A few applications of Chamberlain's liniment w II give relief. For salo by all dealers. Read the want ads, : PERSONAL j : MENTION Mr. and Mrs. Hurl Gillanders have moved from Meacbam to this city Edgar Smith has been in the city today from his ranch near Vansycle. John S. Bentley Is back from a two weeks stay at La Grande and Hoi Lake, J. D. Cnsey of Hilgard was among the out of town visitors in the city last evening. C. A. Perkins has returned from Cambridge, Idaho, where he invested in some land, Will Jamieson, well known Weston resident, made Pendleton ono of his frequent visits yesterday. Lola K. Lawrence of Uklah, came in yesterday from hep home and re mained in the city over night. E. K. Cleaver of Chicago and C. C. Cleaver of Prairie City former business men of this city, are here on a business mission. Dr. F. D. Watts of Weston, who has been prominently identified with the Mabel Warner case, came in yester day rVom the ex-normal town. Undertaker Kalph Fol.-om left this morning by auto for Athena in re sponse to a message stating that Wil liam 7M ger had been found dead In bed this morning. II KK WUF.STI.1XG SAVES GIHL. Home Training Knabies Child to Ov ercome, AHsuiluut. Newark, N. J. From a line of ten men, Emma Hess, 12 years old, pick ed John Norton, of Belleville, as the man she accused of attacking her near the Erie Railroad Riverside ave nue crossing. on this identification Noiion was held fur the grand Jury In bail of JfiUOO by Acting Judge Ochring. Phy.-ical culture practiced at her 'home prevented the girl from being seriously injured. "I can throw my brother wrest ling," Emma told Captain Brown w ben ho asked her how Bhe could get away from a man the size of Nor ton. "When he stooped down to catch my feet and throw nie to the ground I Jumped over his back and ran away from him," the girl related Continuing, she told that Norton had thrown hr up In the air, struck her In the side and tried to choke her, but she said she broke all his holds and was able to outwit him. Her s'ories of her athletic prowess were corroborated by her mothir. LOi'AL OITIOX 1 1 ITS GIXGKR. and "oiirt Puts It in Drink ('las Hal's Snhx as Sueli. Georgetown. Del. Hereafter the thirsty stranger in Su-sex county must complain of violent pains in his stom ach and declare that he Is "mighty" sick b f Te he can purchase any Ja maica ginger from drug stores or gro ceries, according to a decision by Judges Rice and Wooley, sitting at Georgetown. The decision was given In the ense of Levin Hasting of Delmar. who has eight separate and distinct In dlciments hanging over him for the sale of ginger. According to the ar gument of his counsel ginser was a drug and did not come as a medicine but as a beverabe, the sale of ginger was unlawful. A number of the merchants got to gether and decided to appeal the case which bad been brought as a test case by Deputy Attorney General Frank M. Jones of Georgetown, .as the t'nited States put no revenue tax on ginger. SLAMS WIXPOW OX ROBBER. Woman Bravely Cireuimeuls Bold Burglar. Altoona. Pa. While alme in the house Mrs. Sarah K. Carver, nged 7.r. bravely frustrated a burglar's bold attempt at robbery. She heard the marauder trying to effect nn entrance and, leaving her bed, she hurried to tho bathroom Ju:t as the window was being raised. She slammed It down and held It. resisting all efforts to open it. Tho man on the other side tried to frighten her away, but she called f-.r help and he fled Minnesota nstor Says Psalms Beat dingle of Moixly-Sniikey Style Minneapolis, Mill. Some of the modern hymns sung mainly In Sunday schools are being ellmlnat'-d In a re vision of song books used in the church -4oday, according to Dr. An drew Gilles, a prominent figure in the deliberations of the Northern Minnesota conference of the Metho dist Episcopal church, In session in Minneapolis. Commenting on the statement of Governor Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey that "Beautiful Isle of Some where" is "silly," Dr. Gillies said: "Governor Wilson's criticism is' an expression of the general trend tow ard greater discrimination In the choice of hymns a return to the grand hymns, which combine inspir ing poetry and moving music, after a season of popularity of tho jingles ol the Moody and Sankey popular mu sic types." WHERE LIXC'OLX SAW BATTLE, Monument to Mark Site (if Old Fort SU-vens, Near Capital. Washington, D. C. Old Fort Stev ens, one of the line of breastworks thrown up about three miles from Washington at a crisis in the Civil war, is to be marked by a monument. On the site from which President Lincoln viewed the defeat of Gener al Early's attempt to capture Wash ington in 186 4, a bowlder monu ment, o stand about nine feet high and to be capped by a five-ton stone, will be erected within a few months. In the face of protests from his cabinet, President Lincoln went to the fort to witness the conflict. At the time General Irly's forces were so near the capital that an ordinary field gun fif today would have cast shells Into the White House yard. The president became the target of Ear ly's sharpshooters and a surgeon ; standing near him was shot, but Un- coin refused to quit the fort until the federal forces had won. 1ROOPS BALK LYXCHIXG OF INDIAN' SL'SPIXTED OF Ml'UDER Girl Ifmnd in Woods Willi Tliroal Cut Is BelijevPd to Have Been SUiin by ClicTokm Who Is Lodged in .Tail. Asheville. N. C. Saved from a mob bent on lynching and which was dis persed only when the Waynesboro militia had been called out. Ross French, a Cherokee Indian living on thp Birdtown reservation near here, was lodged in jail. French is charg ed with killing Ethel Schuyler. 14 years old, after attempting to crim inally as ault her. The police say he made a partial confession. The body of the girl was found in the woods with her throat cut. No trace of her assailant was found. French was ar rested on the strength of bloodstained finger prints on his hat. ;oi.i)i:x sligs ix wovxns. Ynqtil Indians l'sel Precious Metal in Bullets, Traveler Say. San Francisco. Bullets of solid gold were used by the Yaqui Indians in the battle they had with Diaz forc es during the recent revolution, ac cording to reports brought to San Francico with the arrival of the steamer Curacao from Mexican ports. When wounded soulders of Diaz were operated upon after the battle in Maza'lan hospitals, passengers on the Curacao said, many of the golden slugs were found. Backgammon was invented hy Pala modos, of Greece, in 1224 B. C. $10o REWARD, $100. j The renders of this paper will lie pleased to learn that there Is nt least one dreaded 1 disease tlint science hns hwn able to cure , In oil Its stncps. and tlint Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only vosltlve care now ' known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being n constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh ("tire taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surface of the sys- I torn, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and .giving the patient strength hy building up the constitution and nsslst- , bus nature in doing Its' work. The pro prietors have so much faith in Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Bob ; lars for any case that If falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. j Address : F. J. OltEXFY lc CO.. Toledo. 0. Sold by Druggists, 75p. j Take Hall s family Pills for constlpa- I tlon. SMART, NEW Double - Textured Coats JUST IN BY EXPRESS Probably No Style of Coats for Fall and Winter are so Popular as These New Models of Double-Textured Woolen They're so Snug and Comfortable ! So Clever and Charming in Style, though PracticalEvery One of Them A splendid choice of models Some in solid colors with plaid facing, collar and cuffs Others in fancy mixtures with plain backs collars, cuffs and belts to match. Made with the loose, semi-fitting, box or empire backs. Notched, roll or cape collars. You will be pleased with them every one new and fresh for they just reached us by express. See them today. Priced at $20.00, $25.00 and $35.00 New plain man-tailored Suits in Navy Blue and Black New Silk Dresses at . . . $ 1 5.00 to $25.00 Silk Waists in plain and figured Messalines $3 to $7.50 Come to the store of Worth, Style and Quality Wohlenberg Dep'i. Store Bett"ct:X The Cat is Out of the Bag The truth will out ! We announced a great special in men's Fall Suits and Overcoats for this week only. Now comes the public with the unsolicited assertion that Our $ 10 Suits Equal the $ 15 Ones Sold Elsewhere They have bought and are now happy, but we still have a fine line left. Spending money is altogether different at this store come and learn the real value of a dollar and Bear in Mind This Offer Closes Sat. Nkl it See Our Large Corner Window and Act. Quickly Workingmen's Gothics Co. MAIN AND WEBB STREETS, PENDLETON', OPiE V "1 T iw,mimi.iii ! iiWMIMMMIIIMrrwTMIlTnrnnTTTMMTTMWTirTMWgTTTllMTlTinMriiri.nMr inwriUf.IMM ,MI nin, ii i in i ii.imi. mwulCTSSawaiMLWyi.!l'l!f.J.t u'g' f'A'T I" 'i mi ni l , ml Thy S sa ii mm a si i m ti. h I 3 St Ull V r 1 M t 1 fl H I 1 kA Ki a ScJ THE SECOND DAY OF OUR GREAT D SSOLUTION SA I WAS A HUMMER. Every body told their friends about it. Every body was well pleased and went away feeling well paid for their time. Especially were the crowds well pleased with the low prices in the ready-to-wear section. Coats, Suits and Dresses went like hot cakes. FRIDAY will be another great day, stacks and stacks of new merchandise will be placed in bins to take place of lots sold out. SHOES are going by the dozen, families are loading up for years to come. Prices are same as the first day only new lots have been added. If you can find any body that don't know about this GREAT DISSOLUTION SALE tell them about it. You will do them a great favor. Come Fri. morning you will find many new lots at prices that will make your heart glad F. E. LIVENGOOD & COMPANY THE LADIES AND CHILDREN'S STORE