East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, December 15, 1911, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE NINE, Image 9

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    TWELVE PAGES.
Drn.r rat onrnoviAir. rrirnMrmM i.Mnr. FninAY, December, is, nil.
PAGE NIJTE.
Vim
Til
When It Conies To Selling
Buildmg Material
Only the Best Grades of Lumber,
Lath and Shingles and in fact any
thing that is required in the building
line is allowed to enter our yard.
ESTIMATES FURNISHED ON SHORT NOTICE
Crab Creek Lumber Co.
Phone Main 92 OSCAR. MAHLER, Manager'
"VILLAGE LIFE MAD FOIl BOYS"
Environments In City Fur Better, Says
Frofnwor Allen Hoben.
Chicago. Village life will not nec
essarily mako Jack a good boy It
may make him much "tougher" than
his cousin In Chicago who nips street
cars.
A revised point of view on the In
fluence of the small town on youth
Is suggested by Professor Allan Hoben
of the University of Chicago In an ar
ticle on "The Minister and the Bay"
In the current number of the Biblical
World.
"The village is the paradise of the
loafer and the male gossip," says
Professor Hoben.
While the ooy In the village may
be psysically stronger and know the
names of birds, the educator asserts,
ho Is exposed to idleness, vicious en
tertainments, bad religious opinions
Household Helps
ARE THE
Practical Xmas Gifts
THERE is an electric answer for almost every house
hold need, and the. Christmas present that makes the
wife's work lighter each day is the gift ideal.
See Our Holiday Line of
Electric Irons Electric Coffee Percolators
Electric Toasters Electric Curling Irons
Electric Chafing Dishes Electric Frying Pans
Electric Hot Plates Electric Samovars
They cost hut little, and less than
2 CENTS AS HOUR TO OPERATE
Also Electrjc Radiators and Electric Motors to run
swing machines, vacuum cleaners, meat choppers,
washing machines, etc
Pacific Power & Light Company
"Always at Your Service"
and a variety of other evils that do
not affect his city cousin.
Professor Hoben declares the vil
lage church is inclined to overlook
the boy because he promises little to
ward the immediate financial support
of the organization and the increase
of membership.
"Atrocities" In China also, alluding
to which some one exclaims, "This
Is not war; It is savagery." But be
hind a very diaphanous disguise, war
ij savagery.
jne is waning
and ao are those she is waiting
on. And mind you, a good
high-ball la well worth waiting
for. Good, pure, wholesome
Rye Whiskey, like the brands
we are now selling, will make
one watt patiently, but enjoy
the wait when the liquid arrives
cool, comforting, and refresh
ing. If you are a high-ball
lover, better try a bottle of this
splendid Whiskey of ours. Tou
will alwaya want that brand
afterwards. And the price will
satisfy you, too.
TheOlympiaBar
Phone Main 1SS
and
Pioneer Bottling Works
Phone Main 177.
PETERS A MORRISON, Prop.
Drostail
J U Oj
FAnd
i ; - I
A " IF J
keen in touch with the world. You
don't have to oav monthly rental .for a
" Kellogg;" we sell it to you outright. Any
person who knows how to use a pair of
,i:.r, o trie-foil a "Tf 11rkrar" it'c a
very simple matter.
Our Froo Books Toll Everything
Winter will toon be here ah by your
a u. J !-! ..Lllun
lire Blue hiu visit juui usiguwiv T ft A
over a "Kellogg" Telephone
receive the latest newa from your
friends in town sell your produce
to the city stores and have the
weather bureau call you up
m a ft a
No one knowa when they may want a
doctor in the middle of the night
you can talk to him inside of 5
minutes when you have a
"Kellogg" Farm Telephone. Drop
us a letter to-day and we will
mail you some very interesting
and valuable information
when a frost or storm is coming, its Free. Simply ask for Bulletin
KELLOGG SWITCHBOARD SUPPLY CO.
PACIFIC COAST OFFICES
M Seventh Street, Portland
25 South Wall Street, Spokane
324 So. Lot Angeles SU, Lot Angeles
Complete Line Carried
in Stock
M FIRST ST., SAN FMKC1SC0
GENERAL OFFICE
CHICAGO
G. A. JOHNS HAY
EPJEM1E RACE
More eompllcat'ons in the Oregon
senatorial campaign may be added by
the entrance into the race of C. A.
Johns of Baker. While Mr. Johns
has not yut announced his cand dacy,
It is understood that he is giving the
matter careful conslderaion and may
come out Into the open if he f nds
that conditions are favorable "Tor him.
IIIb name has been mentioned in all
part of the state and it Is very prob
able that he will try for the toga
unleKs ex-Senator Fulton should try
to defeat Senator Bourne.
Mr. Johns Is well known all over
the state, having been In politics for
many years. He has served the re
publican party in various official ca
pacltle and Is known tr be strong in
Eastern Oregon. He was a candidate
for the nomlnat'on for governor in
the campaign In which George Cham
berlain was elevated to the high of
fice. He has taken an active part In
other political affairs and is quite!
well liked throughout the state.
SINGLE TAX BOOKS
BY HENRY GEORGE
At Frazer-Nolson Book Store
Progress and Poverty .
Social Problems
The Land Question
25 Cents
... 25 Cents
. 25 Cents
A SNAP FOR $2500.00
shed, bath,
Must sea J
7 room modern house, atone cellar, barn, wood
toilet, shade and fruit trees, 1-2 block ground.
Call at once as bargains of this character can't lest
It to appreciate It.
MARK MOORHOUSE CO.
Phone Main 83. 117 E. Court Street.
Other Property of Every Description.
Money to Loan on City and County Realty.
WANTS CRIPPLES TO FIX
ON SIZE OK Til Kill HOME
John Arbuckle Seeks Information as
to Xiimlx'r Who Can Cue Arms and
Hand unri Thereby Become Self
mi ppor ting.
New York "Want to obta'n some
idea about the
are too busy trying to take men's
work away from them. I don't be
lieve in suffrage. Women spend all
4heir time and money on their clothes
and amusements, and let their homes
take care of themselves."
Waterloo Bridge Centenary.
London On Oct. H a century ago
the first stone of Waterloo bridge was
who can uie their own arms and not Waterloo bridge then, of course,
hands, who Juld like to become self-; the battle being still unfought, but
tupport'ng, so that I can form some the Strand bridge. The change of
opinion as to how large to build my
Home for Cripples. Address John
Arbuckle, Arbuckle Bros., New York."
This advertisement was inserted In
a Brooklyn newspaper by" John Ar
buckle, the aged millionaire sugar re
finer, who said:
"I am planning to build a much
larger home for cripples than I first
intended. I have invented various
things that cripples who can use
their hands and arms can do quite as
well as men and women who have
the use of all their members. In
summer they can plow and harrow,
drive mowing machines and hay
rakes, cultivate corn and potatoes and
all k'nds of vegetables.
"In winter they will be employed
in large workshops, so that the year
round they will not only be self-supporting,
but can have a bank account.
I expect them to earn from ,8 to .10
a week. The women will pay $3
weekly for board and the men $4. "
"I have invented a sewing machine
with which a cripple who cannot use
his feet can earn from $7 to $8 a
week. This invention will be patent
ed, but any cripple can have free use
of it."
Mr. Arbuckle's Home for Cripples
Is a part of the "Mary and John Ar
buck'e Farm," situated at New Plats,
N. Y.
"You sc my wife had better judg
ment and a bigger heart than I have,
so her name goes first," remarked the
aged millionaire.
The colony consists of seven con
tiguous farms, conta'nlng over 800
acres. The Idea is to give work to
old men and old women who need
employment in the open a!r and nu
tritious food to bring them back to a
condition of health that will enable
them to withstand the wear and tear
of city life.
name was Included in the act of 1816
the third obtained by the company
which constructed the bridge. It was
opene'd by the prince regent in the
presence of the Duke of Wellington
on Waterloo day, 1817. Waterloo
bridge coBt about a million and was
worth every penny of it. Foremost
in enthusiasm was Caneva, who pro
nounced this to be "the noblest bridge
In the world," alone worth the Jour
ney from Rome to London to Eee It.
Asked what most impressed him in
England, he said that it tvas the fact
that the trumpery-Chinese bridge then!
in St. James' park was government
work while Waterloo bridge was that
of a privatQ company.
IICXG WATCH OX FLAGPOLE.
TOWN SITES DISAPPEARING.
Kansas VMR Vanishing by Sup
predion or TranKixrtatiHU
Hutchinson, Kan. Eastern holders
of bonds is ued by the town of Sprlng
fie'd in southwestern Kansas will be
Interested in the news that the town
site long deserted has been sold and
will be plowed for wheat. Spring
field once had 2000 population, and
was the scene of a bitter fight over
the county seat. It built a $10,000
schoolhouse and Installed a system of
waterworks, the hydrants having long
been used for posts to which the cat
tle herders hitched their ponies. It
had two hotels and many stores, and
was looked upon as one of the lead
ing business prospects of the south
west, but the railroad passed it by;
the county seat went elsewhere, and
the population vanished. For a time
a dozen families remained among the
ghosts of the town's glory. It shared
the fate of several ambitious towns
of the short-grass country.
Now the Santa Fe is building across
1 the five ra'lroadless counties of the
' southwest, and towns are being pick
ed up bodily and moved to the road.
One town. Ulysses. , recently moved a
mile from its old location to avoid j
the bonds issued when it was in its ,
boom days. The bondholders had j
Judgment against it and all they can
secure Is a section of raw prairie,
worth perhaps (10 an acre. I
These experiences have been paid i
for by the settlers as well ns by the
eastern Investors for where the towns
have van'ahed It meant the loss of the
property of the men who settled them.
But the southwest is finding Itself
and by the consolidation of towns and
the building of railroads and automo
bile highways it Is getting such mu
nicipal facilities as it can afford
and no more giving a stability that
has never been known In the more
hysterical days of early boom methods.
Steeplejack Climbs Forty Feet Above
Roof to Reclaim His Timepiece.
New York. Men have been known
to hang their watches on the chande
lier, after sitting up with a friend,
but J. Hughes a steeplejack who
paints the flagpoles of the city
buildings, went that one better. A
week ago he painted the flagpole of
the Yorkvil'.e court building. A few
days ago he returned there searching
for his watch.
"I looked at it just before I went
up the pole, and I can't recall having
it, since," he told John R. Rooney, the
court janitor They went to the roof
to Investigate.
"I don't see it, but I hear something
ticking," observed Roney, during a
lull In the gale. He was leaning
against the flagpole.
Hughes looked up and soon was
climbing aloft to where the watch
hung from Its silk fob in the hal
yards of the flagstaff, forty feet above
the roof.
"How do you account for that?"
asked Rooney. when the steeplejack
descended.
"The aviators call it ethereal as
phyxia," said Hughes. "Let's get an
antidote."
You'll get the best meal
in Pendleton at the
A clean kitchen
Particular cooks
Attentive Service.
For Breakfast
Ranch Eggs
Buttermilk Hotcakea
Good coffee
Every day
We invite your patronage nd
aim to please you.
Regular Meals
25c
Gus. La Fontaine
La Fontaine Block, Main Street.
WOMEN GIVE AWAY $10,000.
When you want
the
AUTO CAB:
PHONE MAIN 408. S
The OREGON MOTOR CO.
315 E. COURT ST. 1
Two Hani Working Missionaries Now
in the Capital.
Washington. To have made J10,
000 in six years, only to give it away
and to continue to make money only
in order to give it to charity is the
unusual record of two young women
who reached here a few days ago.
For s'x years M;ss Edith MacDon
ald and Miss Ida Lackey have been
traveling all over the United States
selling a ten-cent periodical, the Bi
ble Training School, and devoting the
proceeds of their sales to charitable
enterprises.
After attending the Rible Train'ng
Echool at Nashville, Tenn., in 1905,
they went through many states, fin-1
Jshing up In Utah. They made $00
over their expensed and with it they
sent a missionary and h's wife to In
dia. After a visit to Southern California
they started on another missionary
tour and made several hundred dollars.
"S. Y. THIEVES' DEN,"
DECLARES HETTY GREEN
LAWYERS TO PROBE CASE.
Mrs. Patterson's Acquittal to Be In
vest ignteri by Rar A-ochit:ou.
Denver. The grievance committee
of the Denver Bar association will be
gin active investigation of the trial
of Gertrude Oibson Patterson for tho
murder of her husband, Charles A.
Patterson. The committee has re
ceived from Spec'al Prosecutor Hor
ace G. Benson a transcript of the evi
dence given by Francis J. Easton.
which will be the particular feature of
the trial Investigated.
DIFFERENT STYLES
In plumbing appliances are as
much In evidence with us as
in any other avenue of bus
iness. SANITARY BATH ROOM
APPURTENANCES
are as requisite for health as
a doctor is when you are sick.
Our estimates on plumbing
will prove satisfactory.
PI.VMBING
HERE IS AI.
Ql'ICK ACTION COMPRES
SION COCKS.
This la the only plumbing
shop in Umatilla county that
keeps this latest and most up-ta-date
device. It saves time
and trouble and many plumb
ing bills.
Beddow& Miller
rcndleton's Only Exclusive
numbers.
Court and Garden Streets.
Phone Black 3556
Woman Financier Is Agnbist Equal
Suffrtwjo and Idle Women.
New York. New York City is a
den of thieves, according to Mrs. Het
ty Green, who has had some experi
ence with our leading financiers.
"There isn't any honesty nowa
days," she declared. "People don't
know what the word means. The
country is money mad and is willing
) to do anything for money, whether
it is honest or d'shonest. Wholesale
thievery is going on everywhere.
"Oh, no," added the richest woman
grimly, "they haven't hit me hard. I
keep away from them and mind my
own business.
"Another thing," she said, "that's
nil wrong Is tho home life of tho peo
ple. There aren't any homes. Women
lllf o nMJ f . 11
wMua vvercoais maae nere in
tirat-class style from $30 to $50
Fit and Workmanship guaranteed
Altering of all kinds neatly done and a specialty made of Ladies'
Tailoring.
Ladies bring in your old coats and suits and have them ro-
modeled.
(SLDEslEC
Fine Tailoring
SI." Main Street, Xext to Eilers Music House.