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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1912)
0 EIGHT PAGES DAILY EAST OJIEGONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON. TUESDAY, JUXE 11, 1912. PAGE FIVE Extraordinary G loan-Up Salo PENDLETOH, FRIDflY.rai -tl IliriC I A On Tho Hound-L!"Tr PERSONAL MENTION 5E os. UUIII. I t Ground. todies' Spring and Summer Suits Just 35 left and every one strictly up-to-the-minute in style. All light shad es ex cepting white serge, will go at the follow ing prices this week : i ? 1 $22.50 Grades will sell for $14.95 25.00 Grades will sell for 16.90 30.00 Grades will sell for 19.85 32.50 Grades will sell for 2 1 .35 35.00 Grades will sell for 23.60 37.50 Grades will sell for 2485 No charges for alterations and a perfect fit guaranteed or your money back. See Window Display Tonight. IraaooD k co. THE LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S STOKE. LOCALS Bicycles! 727 Johnson street. Fresh crawfish every day at the St. George Cafe. State Hotel Furnished rooms at special rates by week or month. SchllU Malwaukee beer on draught at the Sideboard. Have your wood sawed by the gas oline wood saw. Phone Main 13. For Rent Front office In Judd Building. Apply F. E. Judd. Wanted Good girl for general housework at once. Main 576, 613 Mark. For Sale 29 head fresh Jersey milk cows. Inquire of R. H. Stevens, Dutch Henry Feed Yard. Go to W. W. Hoch's for Schlita draught beer. For sale 160 acres good timber land near Gurdane, Oregon. Price $1000. Peter Kriser, Pendleton, Ore. Large shipment or new sidewalk lumber JuBt received at the Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard. Dry slab wood, Just the wood for summer use. Oregon Lumber Yard. Phone Main 8. Before you buy a sewing machine be sure and look at the Central Nee dle Standard. Jesse Falling. Screen doors and window screens, all sizes and prices, at the Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard. We also make them to order. For Sale Fine laying strain of Barred Plymouth Itock hens; also cocks. Phone R. 6351. Land scape gardening. Work guar anteed or no charge. Smith Bros., 621 So. Main street. - Carload of fine cedr posts now for sale at the Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard. Both Plain and tar red. To rent Furnisned apartment house. Modern conveniences. In- SPECIAL Prices on PURSES all this month F. J. Donaldson Reliable Druggist. We give People Warehouse Trading Stamps. quire Monterastelll block. Phone Black 3861. Trash hauled every Tuesday. Call Penland Bros.' Transfer. Phone Main 339. For rent Barn large enough for 16 horses with corral In connection. Will rent part of barn. Apply 415 Lllletb street. Phone Black 3081. For rent Suite of unfurnished housekeeping rooms In East Oregon Ian Building. Steam heated, also gas range in rooms. Apply at this office. Strictly first class chop suey and noodle parlors. Open day and night Tray orders a specialty. Everything new. Under State Hotel. Phone Main 6(7. Un Co, Props. For Rent to a lady, a large, well furnished room, with sewing machine, very close In. Cheap. Inquire 719 Lllleth. For sale Yellow pine, rod fir, al der and maple wood; also Hock Springs coul. Phone Black 3622, or leave orders at Demott's Cigar Store, Main street. Moth prowf cedar chests, great va riety of sizes and prices. Every home should have one. Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard. Wo want to move two hundred cords of dry slabs within the next thirty days to make room for new stock. Oregon Lumber Yard. Passengers for Portland can save money and at same time enjoy a clean and refreshing river ride by taking the Str. Bailey Gatzert, leav ing The Dalles dally except Sunday and Monday at 3:30 p. m. Fare to Portland $1. Special Prices on Cord wood. Good dry red fir, slab wood, cotton wood, yellow and black pine. Special prices in five cord lots. Clean Rock Spring lump and nut coal. Save mon ey by seeing us before buying. Ko plttke & Glllanderg, phone Main 173. ruts Engine for Sale. For sale One 14-horse power dou ble cylinder Pitts engine in good shape. Price 1500. R. H. Wilcox, Pendleton, Ore. Papers of Juno 1, Wanted. We want several copies of the Dally East Oregonlan of June 1, 1912. Will pay cash for same if delivered to this office In good condition at once. Let the Auto Track Haul It. Our specialty Is quick work. Phone Main 339 for furniture and piano mov ing short trips In the city or transfer ring to the country. We haul any thing. Penland Bros. rules guide airmen1 in CASE or BIRTH OH DEATH New York. The International con gress on the laws of aviation in Par is has adopted n regulation for the guidance of an aviator on whose ma chine a Mrth or death occure. The new rule of International law Is as follows: "In the event of a birth or a death occurring on an air craft the pilot must enter the event In a log book and notify the authorities at tho first place he descends." Mrs. H. L. Garrett Is here visiting with her son, Lee Garrett. Clifford L. Morgan went to Hermls ton this morning to spend a few days on his ranch. Misses Itosie and Myrtle Ross left this morning on the Pilot Uock local for their father's ranch. G. L. Hurd, president of the dis trict fair board, Is here today from his home at Stanfield. Attorney Charles II. Carter lias re turned from a short business visit In Portland. Geruld Stanfield came in this morn ing from La Grande and went on to Stanfield on tho local. George Phelps left on the local this morning for Portland where he will participate In the week's festivities. William McKeen, Walla Walla mer chant, passed through Pendleton this morning en route to the rose festival, Douglas Ball, well known represen tative of the Blake-McFall paper company, Is here today from Walla Walla. Miss Stella Benson left this morn ing for Seattle, where she will' visit her sister during the summer. She spent her vacation In the sound city last year also. J. M. Cornellson, missionary at Tu tuilla, und his little daughters, Esther and Mary, left this morning on the local for Portland where they will at tend the Rose festival. Strayed or Stolen. Pendleton, Oregon, June 9, 1912. Two chestnut sorrel horses, welffht about 1000 pounds each; white strip In faces; long manes and talis; both shod all around; one branded double "E" on left hip, the other had no brand but had white spot size of hat on left hip. If found kindly notify or wire any Information regarding same at my expense. T. D. TAYLOR, Sheriff. NOTICE TO PAY PAVING ASSESSMENTS. Notice Is hereby given that the Common Council of the City of Pen dleton has. accepted the pavement re cently completed by the Warren Con struction company on Webb, Cotton wood and Aita streets, and that the assessments for said paving are now due and payable at tho office of the City Recorder in Pendleton, and all persons owing assessments who have not made application to pay said as sessments in installments are hereby notified to appear at the City Record er's office and pay their assessments for said paving within ten days from this date, If not so paid the lien for said paving will be liable to foreclos ure under the charter and ordinances of the City of Pendleton. This notice is given by order of the Common Council of the City of Pen dleton, and dated this 8th day of May, 1912. THOS. FITZ GERALD City Recorder. 1IOUX DAWG" SONG IX TEXAS. A7 n ik rT Greater America's Its record of growth without parallel in the history of amusement. More and greater variety and mul tiplicity of novel, original and solidly worthy features than any other solely western institution in existence Representative Show The wondrous West of story and tradition. The West of the Indian and the Buffalo, of the Cowpuncher, the Pioneer a"d the Homesteadsr, The Weit thai 3 pasting and has Almost passed BIGGEST FRONTIER EXHIBITION in the WORLD Direct and intact from the great Oklahoma Ranch, whose name it bears and whose fame it proudly conserves EVERY PARTICIPANT, TO THE MANNER BORN Cowboys, CowRirln, Indians, Vaequero. IXurnlM, Renoritan, ITuntrrs, Trappers, Scouts, Rangeri, Ronghriders, Ducking Ilorscs. liunaloen, lyong-homed Kleora, und every and all other 1 inures and Features of toe Cattle Trail and hound-up. btiatcuing from oblivion and reviving for public profit and pleasure the romances, penis, Lordships, chivalries and spevtucuUiX rouUne of tho Great Western Outdoors A COMMEMORATIVE FETE Unfolding the roll of the ntnrmv and convulsive history of the Vanished Border and di-ei ling, eteo hy ep, to the living present, as exemplified on the 101 Uanth, uLicu still resists the encrocchmea' of advancing settlement EVERY ELEMENT AND INCIDENT RINQS TRUE The West depleted of its champions. Every name renowned for skill or daring in avocations of the range Mm. PICKETT THE MODERN UR5U5 Only man who ever battled, barehanded, with a Spanish bull, a poti'Jv? feature of every exhibition TWO DAILY PERFORMANCES QUORIOUSUY INAUQUIMTKO IY A TYPICAL OVERLAND TRAIL FORENOON STREET PARADE A prodigious parr:int ihfTnvnt and ilisiinct from ur.y that t?v-r travnvd thecitv'n thoroughfares and iiuruUi iiitr everv c!aiactcr und (XMaphc: naiia of ltti itrjir t-fitri.iri f ri- i -m ' ' ."- Reserved 5rbto ana Grand Stand C including bu.111r.6lon. 7 5 cts. All tickets at the show grotiUUii nay 01 exniouion si The Pendleton Drug Store Street Parade, One P. M. Afternoon Performance 3 o'clock. Evening Performance 8:15 o'clock. '..r.'. 1- -I A A I id si 'i I X t . 2 -aoo 1 kSTLZ 'V IT IU'IiBER MAM FACTIRIXG PL.1XT IX)Il STAX FIELD (Contlued from page 1) Something of a lighter Is the Cow boy's Canine Friend. Austin, Texas. The Texas cowboy version of the Missouri houn' dog song is different from that which comes out of the Ozarks. It is said that the lop-eared hound which is found in the ranch territory of this state Is of sterner breed than that of Missouri, and that the animal fear lessly follows its cowboy master Into town ever ready for a scrap. The houn' song of the Texas ranches seeks to portray the cowboy estimate of his canine companion. The lyrics fol low: When I ride in from Lazy Z Ol Jim-dog trots along with me; It makes no difference if he is a houn' You bet the town boys don't kick him aroun.' One day a tenderfoot come to tho 1 door Of old Sum Peterson's general store, An when he saw my lop-eared houn' He made a start to kick him aroun.' I jus' lit in and smoked him up, While Jim-dog chawed on the onery pup; 'Till the tenderfoot had to be made a-new. When me and my ol'houn' got through. Every time I come to town I bring along ol Jim-dog houn'; He trots along by my cayuse An' mixes in when hell breaks loose. We runs things in our ranch town Don't care what boys are a-hangln' aroun,. But my ol' houn' dnnt bother none Unless some dern fools starts the fun. Additional verses are Improvised to suit the time and occasion by the rid ers of the range. KECUOSS OCEAX TO MAURY. Tlio Misses Eli7JlK'tli and Clnra Allen, Tltanlo Survivors, to Vl In Iontlon. New York. Sailing on the Baltic wore the Misses Elizabeth and Clara Allen, daughters of James B. Allen, former mayor of St. Louis, and nieces of Dent Robert of San Francisco. The young women, survivors of the Titanic disaster, are recrosslng the ocean for their double wedding In London on July 11. Miss Elizabeth Is to marry Dr. J. B. Menncll and Miss Clare will wed Professor Charles Hasklns of Har vard University. They came to Am erica on tho Titanic to complete thelt trousseaux. The girl who really can sing Is nev er anxious to show off. Most women seem to think It their duty to cry at a funeral. "Pritehard'a Antiseptic Spit Re ceptacle was Invented and patented In 1908 by R. W. Pritchard, an Ore gon man, and consists of a mouth piece which is made of rubber and Is dome-shaped with a self closing slit and a rigid portion at the base, on which to attach the receptacle. The receptacle or bag may be con structed of rubber, paper, skin, oil cloth, or other suitable material and a net covering to protect the recep tacle. The officers of the company are Dr. G. E. Watts, president; R. W. Pritchard, secretary and manager, and E. V. Llttlefield, counsellor. They have chosen Stanfield as a factory site they declare because of the Ideal cli mate of the lower Umatilla valley for the manufacture of rubber goods and because many ot the residents of the Furnish project formerly lived near Akron, Ohio, the home of the largest rubber factories in the country and consequently are in a frame of mind to give the Infant Industry encour agement and backing. , The company is throwing 100,000 shares of the capital stock upon the market, according to Mr. Hurd and confidently expects to pay as large dividends as are paid any rubber fac tory in the United States. FRAME RESOLUTION' FOR COLUMBIA RIVER OPEXIXG (Continued from Page One.) ways for commerce In this vast Inland Empire, reaching to all parts of the same; And Whereas, The highways are not In condition to afford transporta tion for the vast amount of produce grown In this Pacific northwest; And Whereas, Tb United States government has on hand machinery suitable for undertaking the project of making these two streams navi gable and the utilization of said ma chinery would be economical, and along the line of the broad public policy that initiated the Panama ca nal; And Whereas, The benefits of the Panama canal will not be realized to the Pacific northwest unless the Co lumbia and Snake rivers are made navigable; Therefore Be It Resolved, That the Pendleton Commercial association re quest our senators and representatives to urge upon congress the advisability of utilizing the machinery used In the construction of the Panama canal, after its completion, for the Improve ment of the Columbia und Snake riv ers, making the Columbia navigable, to the International border, and the Snake river navigable to American Falls, Idaho; And Be It Furthor Resolved, That the Pendleton Commercial association enlist the co-opcratlon of all the com mercial bodies In tho northwest, the delegations of the Inland Empire states In congress, and all others in terested in opening the Pacific north west to the markets of the world, in the said improvements. J F. ROBINSON. President. J. E. KEEFE, JR., Secretary. W.' L. THOMPSON, Chairman Committee on Public Policy littlf: fox ttrrier is made town's mscot Has Xo Known Owner, but Manages to Get Along Just the Same. Grandview, Wash. A diminutive fox terrier drifted into Grandview a short time ago and since his arrival has divided his time between a local drug store and the Northern PaclfiJ depot. Tramp Is the name applied to him. A few mornings ago a record crowd left here to attend the Yakima blos som festival. Tramp likes crowds and followed to the depot without at tracting attention. Soon after Grand view was left, passengr-rs noticed Tramp seated In a car seat alone. The conductor inquired for the owner. Several women explained that the dog was a tramp and asked that he be allowed to remain on the train. The conductor yielded. At North Yakima Tramp paid no attention to the Grandview crowd and trotted up Yakima avenue. Just what he did to arause himself during the day is not known, but when the train was ready to return to Grand view there was Tramp. On the return trip he attracted considerable atten tion, for those who saw him wonder ed how he spent the day and how he happened to be at the depot at the right time. Since his return he has been pop ularly oted the town mascot as long as he chooses to hold the office. DREAM OF KLOrKMI'XT TRUE Mother Gets Son to Confess nml Pair Are Forgiven. Pittsburg, Pa. Dreaming that she saw her son, William C. Stiltzell, aged 21, and Marie Jean Fulton, aged 19, enjoying wedded bliss In a three room flat, wealthy Mrs. W. H. Stilt zell, mother of young Stiltzell, per suaded her son to confess that he and Miss Fulton had been married on April 15 at Greenburg. Upon the pair's return home nei ther Stiltzell nor the bride said any thing about the marriage, but the dream of Mrs. Stltlzell's so weighed on her mind that she was unusually depressed, and the son, fearing she would become 111, confessed the elope ment. The young pair were forgiven. A man minus a grouch of some kind misses a lot of fun. ROWDIES HOOT CARXEGIIC. Disturbance Marks First SimhvIi ns lil Reel or of Abenicoii University. London Rowdy scenes marked the delivery of Andrew Carnegie's ad dress as Lord Rector at Aberdeen University at Aberdeen, Scotland. The students, the number of whom was large, hurled chairs and rugs . about the hall and kept up an Inces sant din, singing and whistling, but finally permitting the Ironmaster to proceed. After he had begun tho rowdyism was resumed, but the pro ceedings closed with rousing cheers, for Carnegie and Mrs. Carnegie. Carnegie advised the students to "remain teetotalers until you have become millionaires." Many a man is so unlucky that If he ever got a place on the ladder of fame the rungs would break. "A FUSSY PACKAGE" We have just received a fresh shipment of Whitman's Choco lates direct from the factory at Philadelphia. Among the lat .est packages we are shewing Is "Whitman's Sampler" contain ing an assortment from each of the famous packages. To those who are looking for a high grade eastern candy, we can personally guarantee the fresh ness and quality of every pack age of Whitmans. tallman (Sb Co. SOLE AGENTS. We are ready for you with our CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM served with fresh Strawberries Its the kind that make you come again. Koeppen's The drug store that iervei you best.