EIGHT PAGES. , PAILT E.V3T OREGONIAN, I'EJSDLETON. OREOOII, SATUHDAV, JAXUARY 1912. 1 - ' i ' PAGE FITO. 7 Sale If 1M1 ClMiip In Our Ready-to-Wear Section i 23 Mixture Coats that sold at $27.50. ( 27 Black Broadcloth Coata, regular to $25.00. 43 Suits, Ladies' and Misses, values to $30.00. Your Choice of the Entire Lot Don't wait. This is your last and biggest chance. . E . Lineneood The Ladies' and Children's Store. &Co. PERSONAL MENTION through, the Powder river valley to Fort Nei Perces on the Columbia. He returned across the Kocky mountains in 1822 and was not seen again on the ColumoM.. ' t With his going the Hudson's Bay company took the place of the North west company went of the Rockies. I For one year Finan Macdonald led the C. F. Dittebrandt of La Grande Is Snake country expedition eastward a visitor' In the city today. j from Fort Nez Perceg through this H. D. Bonlfer and family of Gibbon va ley. But for two years succeeding spent last night at the St. George. I the parties went in and out by way tt -nr c.uf. j. ,,. u 'of the Bitterroot valley of Montana II. W. Shaft? was down from nls, ii; . .- , . u In the fall of 1825 travel was resumed C W. Armstrong of Freewater was a business visitor in the city yester day. D. O. Saunders was . among the Freewater people in the city yester day. . J. D. Cochran, well known Free water resident, spent last evening In the city. J. J. Hamley and F. J. Milnes of the & Co., saddle makers, are transact ing, business in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Caldwell of Cottage Grove, Ind., are registered atj' the Bowman. Milan W. Smith of Waitsburg, Was., wag among the out-of-town visitors in the city yesterday, Charles Newcomb, the Pilot Rock butcher, returned to his home this morning after spending the night in the city. Charles A. Barrett, Joint senator for Umatilla and Morrow counties, came in from Tils home at Athena on the lo cal this morning. Mrs. John Vert left this morning for Portland and will leave In a few days for southern California where she will spend the winter. 1 LOCALS "1 Pays to Advertise. Only costs 15c for shave at Patton's barber shop; 5 barbers employed; no long waits. Plenty hot water, clean towels and the shop that does not so licit the trade of Chinamen, Indians or Japs. . Give us a trial. The Melrose System. Burroughs. Main 5. Fuel. Main 178 for coal and wood. For alfalfa hay call N. Joerger. I. C. Snyder.chimney sweep. It 3812. You should have the Melrose Sys tem. August Noreen, ladles tailoring a specialty. 217 K. Court street. Phone Koplttke & Gillanders, for dry wood and Rock Spring coal. Everybody goes to tne orpheuni t ee the best and the clearest pictures. Clean beds and airy rooms, furnace heated, including bath, at 621 Willow street. Wanted Small ranch, good build ings. Give particulars. Address, "N.'i this office. All kinds of good dry wood, also clean nut or lump Rock Spring coal at Koplttke & Gillanders. LoRt Black and tan Airedale pup. Finder notify this office and receive reward.. . Wonted Three or four housekeep ing rooms. Enquire of W. J. Connor at O'Dell's c'gar store. 480 acre wheat ranch, one as good as in the country for the money. Price only 140 per acre. Teutsch & Bick ers. 160 acre wheat ranch; 80 acres In grain; good small house and shed barn. Price only $3250. Teutsch & Bickers. For Rent Six room house, modern. Hot and cold water, both, toilet, woodshed, etc. Enquire Dr. C. J. Whlttaker. Special rates to horses boarded by the week or month at the Commercial Barn, 620 Aura street. Phone Main 13 Also dry wood for ale. Probably president Taft was wise to be diplomatic though the aves age American feels like taking a shot at the Bear. If you want to move, call Penlanl Bros. Transfer, phone Jtf 339. Large dray moves you quick. Trash hauled once a week. 647 Main street. For' transfer work, hauling bag nci. mOvin? household goods and Dlanos. and all kinds of Job work phone Main 461. B. A. Morton. Save yourself fuel troubles by us ing our famous Rock Spring coal and good dry wood. Delivered promptly. Ben L. Burroughs, phone Main 6. Five room house, all modern Im provements, completely furnished, west end of town, $20 per month. En, quire Bentley & Lefflngwell, 815 Main street. Lost Saturday on the north side of the river a ladles' small gold rope necklace with rectangular Jade pend ant. Finder plr-aso return to "A" this office. Reward. Attention Eureka Lodge No. 32. Eureka Lodge, No. 32, I. O. O. F., will hold installation of officers Sat urday night. There will be something special and a banquet. All Odd Fel lows invited. W. F. TATLOR, Secretary. "GIUTTIEST PATIENT'S 14th OPERATION ATHLETES SAVE LIVES BY DIVING IN ICY WATER IIU Gamoness Has Kept Alive Youth Who Injured Himself In a Mara tlion Run. Ronton. Doctors and nurses of the Boston City hospital united In calling Joseph A. Cahalan of Rochester "the grlttie t person that ever came into the hospital." Drs. McCullen 'and Holt have forwarded to the Presby tcrian hosltal In New York the X-ray plates and operation history of the patient There ho will undergo his four teenth operation since June, 1907, s'nee which time he has spent over thirty-three months within the walls of - various hospitals. . ' Dr. Wlll'am Mayo of Minnesota will make a complete study of his case and for that reason has asked for all the records at the City hospital and at Harvard University medical school. Gameness has been the only thing that has kept Cahalan alive for the last four years. He was competitor In a Marathon run of 1906 and finish ed in twenty-fifth place. The follow ing year he trained for the event. Be fore he had completed twenty miles he collapsed, having displaced a num ber of intestinal organs through overexertion. Tut) Skaters Drowned, liut Six Arc Heseueil by Daring - students and KevlvecT. Melrose, Mass. Two boys were drowned and six others required med ical attendance to save their lives when thirty skaters were thrown in to the water of Daw's Pond b the breaking of thin ice. The drowned were Sargent Flagg, . aged twelve years, and Hugh Mclntyre of Green wood. Only the heroic w.ork of young ath letes who leaped Into the pond and dragged out the struggling boys pre vented greater loss of life. Among the rescuers were Clarence Wana- maker and Edward McCarthy, Dart mouth students; Donald Hanson of Harvard, Elmer Wanamaker, captain of the Melrose high school hockey team, and Dettmar Jones of the Mas sachusetts agricultural college. Jones dived repeatedly into the deepest of the water and brought back a boy each time. He also recovered the body of Flagg. The accident happened at the close of the annual hockey game of the Me'.rose high school team and the Melrose high alumni. One of the boys, Hugh Mclntyre, stepped on an ice cake which became separated from the main body and floated with him Into open water. . Many had gathered around, Intent on extending aid, when the ice beneath them gave way, throwing them into water ten feet deep. Amid screams and cries for help the young men, who had been attend ing the hockey'game. Jumped to the rescue. through Powder river and Burnt riv er under the leadership of Peter Skene Ogden, who Was one of the most forceful men ever In charge of the fur trade on the Columbia. He endured hardships that would have soon driven another from the field and he has left his name in Utah ay a permanent record of his ability. He f.r.st gave name to Mount Shasta and to the Humboldt river region. His I name is honored in Oregon, where he I died in 1854. He continued in charge of the Snake country business until 1829, 'when it became necessary for him to lead a party to California. In 1829 John Work or Wark sue- ceeded Mr.'Ogden and continued in charge until the coming of Nathaniel J. Wyeth from Boston, who built Fort Hall at the Junction of the Snake wiih the Portneuf, and the Hudson's Bay company bought him out and af- j terward for a long number of years : transacted their business from that fort and from Fort Boise on the riv- I er of that name. The use of the Ore-: gon trail from 1834 on is another chapter and belongs to another pe riod. The fur trade along the coa9t led the Yankee sailors to bring their: trading vessels to the Pacific and di-. rcctly occasioned the discovery of the ' mouth of the Columbia river by Cap-j tain Gray. The Astor enterprise has- j tened the opening of the fur trade on, the river and directly occasioned the ' opening of the way across the plains : by which the Union Pacific railroad now crosses and really opened the way for the pioneers who settled Ore- j gon. In this way the fur trade was: directly responsible for the title of Oregon passing to the United States. I The use of the Oregon Trail was; first by the Indians from time imme- ; mortal, then hy the Hunt party on ' foot, then by the trappers on horse back, then by the pioneers in wagons, then by the railroad coach and Pull- i man car, and now by the auto. WON'T REOPEN DIVORCE CASE AFTER HUBBY'S DEATH New York. A decision denying the appeal of Mrs. Bessie A. Hunt, divorc e dwife of the late John W. Hunt, millionaire turpentine manufacturer of Los Angeles, to reopen the proceed ings In which Hunt was filed in the supremo court in Brooklyn. Hunt died in December, 1910, leaving an etate of more than $2,000,000. He obtained the divorce a few months before his death. If the decree had been set aside, Mrs. Hunt would have been entitled to a right in his estate- BOY PLAYS WITn GUN, - SHOOTS OFF ONE HAND Dayton, Wash. Don Romalne, near hero, a lad of 7 years, discharged an old gun with which he played and the contents almost tore off the boy's right hand and inflicted severe wounds in the right arm and shoulder. Three of the fingers had to be amputated, and the boy's hand is in bad condition The accident is the second serious one within a few months at the Romalne farm. Mr. Romalne having sustained a severe skull fracture last summer. Hall Teams Exonerated. Cincinnati, Jan. 6. The trouble some ticket scalping scandal that fol lowed the world's series in New York and Philadelphia last October was giv en Its quietus by the National Base ball commission here today. While the commission gathered enough evidence to assure It that wholesale ticket scalping took place in both towns, yet this evidence indi cated that neither the New York Na tionals nor Philadelphia owners, man agers, players or employes were in collusion with the scalpers. FOR THE CHILDREN Ai-SO FOR GROWN PERSONS QUICK - SAFE - RELIABLE NO OPIATES NO NARCOTICS FOLEY'S HONEY and TAR COMPOUND A COMMON COLD neglected may go- quickly into CROUP, BRONCHITIS, or PNEUMONIA which often means a sud den fatality. Keep FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR COMPOUND always in th bouse and give at first sign of a cold. Refuse substitutes. John pprsons, Stewart, OhJo, writes: "We use Foley's Honey and Tar Com pound as our best and pnly cough remedy. It never fails to cure any of ny seven children of cough. My .2-nonth's-old baby has had a most se vere cough which our Doctor said he cculd not cure and that Baby would i surely die. Several of our relational and neighbors had gathered to witness tye ending of the child's life. Two bottles of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound cured the child and he Is I alive and well today." FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS. TALLMAN & CO. Guarantees Hyomei HISTORICAL" SOCTKTV IS FORMED (Continued from page one.) ''' ' ''' ' ' The Famous J$3& Lamp The best part of the day is the evening, when the whole family it gathered together around the lamp. . . The old day of the imoky fireplace and flickering candle are gone foreva. In their place have come the convenient oil stove and the indispensable Rayo Lamp. There are to-day, in the United State, alone, more than 3,000,000 of these Rayo lamps, giving their clear, white light to more than 3,000,000 home. Other lamp cost more, but you cannot get better light than the low-priced Rayo gives. It has become so popular we may almost call it " the official lamp of the American family." The Rayo is made of solid brass, with handsome nickel finish an ornament anywhere. Aik your dealer fnr Rayo lamp i nr Wri'r for oVarripiive circular to any agency of Uw Standard Oil Company (Incorporated) planting of the Astoria enterprise at the mouth of the Co'.umbla, was an important link In the chain of title which the United States claimed and successfully proved to the Oregon country south of the '49th parallel. After the departure of the Astorians from the Columbia the trail from the Rocky mountains to the Pacific . by way of the Snake river and Burnt and Powder river and the Grand Ronde was not used for some years, except by detached parties. But in 1818 an other party of fur traders and trap pers had passed over it under the lead of Donald Mackenzie, who had been a member of the Astor party but ! had joined the Northwest company of; Canada. The career of Donald Mac Kenzie has not been fairly written in j history, in all probability. He was a! wonderful man In his dealings with Indians and was a man of great phy-' slcal strength and endurance. If he ! had differences with Wilson Prlco Hunt they were those common to the different dispositions of men, and In-I cldent to his own really superior ex- perience in the field of life of the. f" trade to that of Mr. Hunt himself. He was selected by the Northwest com-1 pany to return to the Columbia and ' take entire charge of their interior: business, as distinguished from that of the coast, and he It was who reor- ( ganized the trade from the different forts or posts and who himself under took to lead and carry on the Snake river trade which aa yet was undevel oped and became one of their richest fields. He succeeded In the wonder ful feat of ascending the Snake river from the Lewlston country to the neighborhood of Huntington through the terrible, box canyon. This he did in the month of April, 1819, without a mishap, showing the skill of the Canadian voyageura in tho manage ment of the batteaus used in the fur trade of the earlier days on the Co lumbia. Ho made a winter trip on (now shoes from his trappers on the Portneuf in the dead of winter across the plains of southern Idaho and I If you really mean that you want to drive every bit of catarrh from your nose and throat why not try a sensible remedy that is guaranteed to banish catarrh, or money back. ! If you already own a little hard rubber HYOMEI (pronounce it High-o-me) for only 60 cents. If you do not own an inhaler" ask for complete HYPMEI outfit which contains no In haler, this will cost you 11.00. Then breathe HYOMEI and get rid of catarrh, relief comes In five min utes, a day's treatment will make you happy, a week's treatment and snuf fles, mucous and hawkings go, an other week and goodbye to catarrh. Try it today on money back- plan. Sold by Tallman & Co. and druggists everywhere. Rare Bargains In CLEAN A BLE DISE MERCHAN The greatest bargain event of the year Every article in the store reduced in price Warm Blankets, Comforts, Warm Underwear and Hosiery all go at a great Saving All SUITS to go at HALF PRICE Take Early Advantage WohJenberg Dep't. Store Better Goods for Less Money Lumber and Building TiS a 1 A Large and Complete SLock Al ll3tCri3l ways on Hand and PRICED RIGHT The Best Mill Work to be Obtained in the Northwest Let Us Figure With You on Your Next Order Pendleton Planing Mill and Lum- har Varrl J A. BOP.IE LUMBER CO., Proprietors DGl I 01 II PHONE MAIN 7 Holiday Hints To Lovers of Good Meats A choice "Ontral" " Roast. A "Central'' steak that's tender. A Scalshipt oyster dinner. A "Central" ham for lunch. A "Central'' fish or poultry or der Insures satisfaction. rhone the Sanitary Market. Main 33. CENTRAL Meat, Market Slir or wir 250 pairs of fine, Men's Dress Shoes, the famous Endi-cott-Johnston and other standard makes. Right up to the tick of the clock in style. SOLI) REGULAR FROM $3.25 to $5.00 a Pair EXTRA SPECIAL OFFER, WHILE THEY LAST. 0 Workiiagmen's Clothing Co, Clearance Salo Triors for 'Men in Every Department.