East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, October 21, 1912, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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DAILY EAST OIIEOONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, OOTOIi'KIi 21, 1012
PAGE FIVE
Showing of New Merchandise That Everybody
New Messalines
heavy grade, 27
30-inch Corduroy in wine, brown and
navy, extra good quality, yd. 75c
36-inch two toned Silks, good soft
Taffetta, all combinations of colors,
yd. .... $1.50
Low heel, broad toe, tan welt Shoes
for school girls, sizes 2 1-2 to 5 1 -2,
all widths . . . $3.50
LOCALS
I. C. Snyder, chimneysweep. R. 8812.
Fresh oysters, crabs and crawfish
at the St. George Grill.
Wanted Good csean rags at the
East Oregonlan office.
Ladles wanting hair work done, call
on Mrs. Cornwell, 617 Cosble.
If you want dry slab wood, phon.
Main s.
For rer.t Three nicely furnished
housekeeping rooms, 811 Vincent St.
Lost bunch of three keys. Return
to thla office for suitable reward.
For bottled sodas and beers, phone
John Gagen, Main 177.
Rooms and board at 200 Water
treet. Mrs. C. H. Beltel.
State Hotel Furniffr.ed rooms at
pedal rates by week or month.
Psrdleton Iron Work can use, sev
eral tons of scrap Iron.
Have your wood sawed by the gas
oline wood saw. Phone Main IS.
AH work guaranteed at new gallery,
room 4, over Taylor Hardware store.
Get your pictures takon at the new
gallery over Taylor Hardware store,
room 4.
Cabinets, $2.50 per dozen at the
new gallery, roam 4, over Taylor
hardware store.
Wanted Girl for housework. Good
wages. Apply, 301 Willow street,
phone Clack 2602.
D. N. Iteber, M. D. Eye. ear, now
and throat specialist. Office Schmidt
bldg, rooms 10 and 11.
Wanted At onoe, a good local man
for agent at FendleUm. Write Grand
Union Tea Co., Walla Walla, Wash.
See 13. H. Decker for Dry Wood aud
Rock Springs Coal Phone Black JI2,
or leave orders at DeMotts.
For rent Nicely .furnished suite
1 block from Main fit., 201 Water
trect. Heat furnished. Phone Mala
669.
Wanted Clerk-messenger at West
ern Union Telegraph office. Oppor
tunity for brlfht boy to learn busi
ness. Strictly first class chop suey and
noodle parlors. Open day and night
Tray orders a specialty. Evethlng
new. Under State Hotel. Phone
Main 667. Un Co, Props.
Bent 26c meal in Pendloton at the
Boston Restaurant. Everything
thoroughly renovated, clean And first
class. Tables for Utiles. Meals 20c
and up. Ung D. Goey, prop.
For sale All my ftiousehold furni
ture for sale cheap in a ten room
house. Mrs. C. A. Turner, 701
Thompson street.
Ileward Offered for Lost Hon.
Lout, In the mountains southeast
of Bingham SpringH on Bobsled
ridge, one dark buckskin fcorse, mlgbt
be called light bar. Has Mack mane
and tall with black stripe down back,
wire mark on right stifle, branded
two circles on right shoulder with bar
extending up from top circle and
down on lower circle. Will pay re
ward for return of above described
animal or Information leading to re
covery of same. Address or notify
Frunk Baling, Pendleton, Oregon.
Special This Week
Summer Necessities
FOR gCNBUIUT
SUNSHINE COLD CREAM
SUNSHINE LOTION,
(Jnatrlte)
It very soothing, soften and
whltena the skin.
DISINFECTANTS !
CHLORIDE LIMB FORMAL
DEHYDE.
CRUDE CARBOLIC ACID, Urge
bottle lOo
F. J. Donaldson
RELIABLE DRUGGIST.
20 shades,
- in. wide
a good
$1.99
F. E. LIVENGOOD
NOVEMBER Stamping Patterns now ready. Embroidery Books, Qyarterly Style Books and The
Dance In German Hall.
There will be a dance given In Ger
man hall, middle Cold Spring, on Sat
urday, October 19th. All are cordial
ly Invited to attend.
Youth- i'oiiipunioii for 101.1.
The Youth's Companion appeals to
every interest df family life, from
housekeeping to athletics. It begins
with stories of youthful elm and vig
or, with articles which disclose the
secrets of successful play In the great
games, with charming tales of life
at the Kirl s colleges. But The Com
panion does not surrender these read
ers when they have entered the more
serious paths of life, others will wel
come the page for little children and
the weekly doctor's article. Fathers
will find the Important news of the
day as Jt Is. and not as it Is rumored
to be. The entire household will ap
preciate the sketches which touch
gently on common foibles or carica
ture eccentricity. In short, for less
than four cents a week The Compan
ion brings into the homes cloan en
tertainment, pure Inspiration, fine
Ideals,' increase of knowledge.
Names rarely sen In tables of con
tents will be found In The Compan
ion's Announcement for 1913. which
will lie set upon request with sam
ples of the paper, to those not famil
iar with it.
Every new subscriber for 1913 will
receive free all the issues for the re
maining weeks of 1912; nlso, free, the
Companion Window Transparency and
Calendar for 1913. In rich, translucent
colors the most beautiful of all Com
pa ion souvenirs.
THE YOUTlir.S COMPANION,
14 4 Berkeley St.. Boston, Mass.
New Subscriptions Received at this
Office.
lYtr Sale.
One hundred twenty acres land un
der Umatilla irrigation project. 63
acres under ditch, 20 acres alfalfa;
price $6500. Ten years' time. Will
take small property In Pendleton part
payment.
Have for rent 15 acres alfalfa, 6
acres fine subirrigated garden land,
together with good place for geese,
ducks and all kinds of poultry, five
miles from Pendleton. G. 11. Roberts.
HE MADE LOVE WITH CLEAVEK
Nw I on Trial for Assault With In
deiit to KM -Wife.
Denver. Colo. How Arthur Gash.
In making Jove to his wife, Clara
tianh. smote on the cheek with a
meat cleaver, thereby causing a deep
gash In Mrs. Gash's face was explain
ed to the jiry In the criminal court.
Gash Is on trial charged with as
sault to kill. Mrs. Gush accuses him
of trying to c.fcrt short her life with
the meat cleaver. She testified that
on the evening f June 27 her hus
band came home and embraced her.
At the same time, she said, be care
lessly drew the sharp edge of a meat
knife which he carried across her face
causing a deep cut. As a result of
that cheek-splitting embrace she ays
she was forced to cut all social af
fairs for several weeks.
Gash pleaded accidental cutting MS
a defense. He says his wife Jumped
around so "friskily" that she natural
ly ran up against that cleaver and
wac to blame for the whole cutting.
NOTED DUCK, REPORTED
DEAD. IS ALIVE AND
HUNTERS ARE HAPPY
Duluth. Minn. It develops that the
report that the celebrated Spirit
Lake duck, known all over Minnesota,
which was reported recently to have
been killed, is alive. This will be
good news to the hundreds of hunters
who go to Spirit Lake to burn their
annual offering of gunpowder at the
shrine of that elusive wild fowl.
No less an authority than John W.
Nelson,' who lives near the lake,
claims that the mysterious duck lives.
"I have known the Spirit Lake
duck ever since he was raised and
turned loose as a decoy," said Nelson.
"The duck killed was a mallard, while
the true Spirit Juck Is a wamus
duck."
"What is a wamus duck?" he was
asked.
"Well, a wamus duck Is well, It's
hard to describe a wamus duck," said
Mr. Nelson, "but the Spirit lake duck
Is a wamus."
is Wanting.
New Outing Flannells, yd.
6V4C, 8V3C and 10c
36-inch White Outing, heavy weight,
yd. . . , . . 15c
Cotton Bed Blankets . 50c to $1.50
Wool Bed Blankets $3.50 to $9.00
Good Comforts . $1.50 to $4.50
Stamped Pillow Cases, pair . 85 c
Stamped Corset Covers, each . 35 c
PERSONAL
MENTION
T. it. Yates of Stanfield visited in
Pendleton yesterday.
Will M. Peterson, local lawyer, was
a visitor in Adams yesterday.
-Mrs. Edgar Fischer of Walla Walla
was over from her home Saturday.
Horace Walker, county commis
sioner. Is up from his Stanfield ranch.
C. K. Bland of Hermlston was am
ong the Sunday visitors In the city.
A. J. McLeod was among the Echo
people who were here yesterday.
' Julius Guderian, prominent ranch
er, is in from his farm south of the
city.
P. C. Hunter of Echo, made Pen
dleton one of his weekly visits yes
terday. Louis Bergevin came in from Athe
na on Saturday and spent yesterday
here.
Sheriff und Mrs. T. D. Taylor spent
yesterday in Athena, returning home
last evening.
S. R. Olduker of Hermiston was
among the project dwellers visiting in
the city Saturday evening.
H. M. Cockburn, county commis
sioner, came down this morning from
his home at Milton.
Miss Una Smith lias returned from
Denver where she had been to attend
the wedding of a friend.
A. 11. Bucholts, A. J. Hill and Orley
Adams of Nye were in Saturday to
attend the Lane meeting.
J. R. Kanaga. who has spent the
summer und fall at Joseph, is in
Pendleton on a business trip.
Walter McCormmach, proprietor of
the Pendleton Auto Co., returned last
evening from a trip to Walla Walla.
James Cooper and William Hoch
were two of a party of hunters who
went up to their Gibbon cabin last
evening.
Mrs. I. Parkes of Walla Walla will
arrive this evening for a visit with
her son, Justice of the Peace Joe H.
Parkes.
John Thompson, proprietor of the
Hotel Hermiston, came In from the
project town Saturday and spent the
night here.
James Crawford, formerly well
known citizen of Pendleton, is up
from Portland to look ufter his busi
ness Interests here.
Miss Vera Jacques of Pilot Rock
visited In the city yesterday as the
guest of her sLster Miss Georgia Jac
ques who is attending high school.
Miss Viva Warren and Miss Anita
Klrkpatrick, teachers in the Pendleton
schools, spent Sunday at their homes
In Weston, returning to Pendleton lust
evening.
James Crawford, former resident of
Pendleton and part owner of the
Smith-Crawford building and other
property In the city, Is up from his
home in Portland.
Secretary J. E. Keefe of the Com
mercial association, who attended
the Freewater Commercial club ban
quet to fruit growers Friday evening,
returned home yesterday,
Mr. and Mrs. Westbrooke Dickson
returned yesterday from Walla Walla
where they went to witness the Oregon-Whitman
game. They made the
round-trip in their car.
C. N. (Pat) McArthur, former
speaker of the house, and again a
candidate for the legislature from
Multnomah county, was in Pendleton
a short while yesterday while en
route to Union county.
Notice.
Gns will be turned off on North
side tomorrow from 2 until 4 p. m.
PACIFIC POWER & LIGHT CO.
Here la a' woman who speaks from
personal knowledge and long experi
ence, vis., Mrs. P. II. Brogan of Wil
son, Pa., who says, "I know from ex
perience that Chamberlain's Cough
remedy Is far superior to any other.
For croup there is nothing that ex
cels It." For sale by all dealers.
FARMING WITHOUT
FARMS IS SCHEME
Chicago. Boys with a longing to
learn farming without going to the
u.untry will have their hopes real
ized If a plan suggested to the board
t education is adopted. The attempts
to teach the science of agriculture by
theory in the public schools have not
been successful, and as there re
cently has been a demand for iU
teaching under more favorable con
ditions it has been suggested that an
agricultural school be founded.
A great number of boys In the
public schools have expressed a de
sire to learn farming, and, according
to Superintendent Ella Flagg Young,
it Is the solution of the high cost of
living. The members of the board
favor the suggestion and plans will
be submitted for the erection of a
school on the board's land at South
Forty-Eighth avenue and West
Twelfth street.
Dormitory for Deaf Pupils.
The land is a mile long and half of
a mile wide Many citizens have ex
pressed an opinion to trustees of the
board that there is n need for such an
institution.
Trustee J. B. Dibolka introduced a
resolution recommending that the su
perintendent make a report as to the
advisability of constructing a separ
ate school and dormitory for board
ing, lodging and Instructing the deaf
and dumb children attending numer
ous public schools. -
He said that there are 300 such
children scattered throughout the
system and that it will be much bet
ter to house them together during the
five school days of the week, where
they can receive the best attention
mentally and physically. The resolu
tion was referred to the school man
agement committee.
Contracts were let for a new nor
mal art and gymnasium building for
the Chicago Teachers' college. This
building L to be. as to exterior ap
pearance, a duplicate of the east
wing of the "normal school." known
as the Parker Practice school,
salary increase Asked.
A communication was received from
the Chicago Teachers' federation, ask
ing for increases in the salaries of the
elementary school teachers; also for
a shortening of the term of the sched
ule of salaries from clever, to ten
years. The increases asked for are
JI0 a year for each teacher for the
first ten years and $100 a year each
for the last three years.
Increases in the cost of living and
the requirements for teachers are
among the arguments offered for the
proposed salary raises.
The. maximum salaries paid now
are $1,200 yearly and the federation
nsks that it be raised to $1,300, while
the minimum Is $650, which the
teachers want Increased to $700.
YEAR IN PRISON CELL
BREAKS NURSE'S NERVE
After Completing Sentence Young
Woman I Arraigned on Another
. Charge and Rows Head on Court
room Table, Sobbing.
New York. After a year In the
penitentiary, Helen Louise Watson,
a trained nurse, who tried to keep
the secret of her Identity and shield
the family when she was convicted
of shoplifting In a Brooklyn depart
ment store, and maintained her Inno
cence when accused of steallg $1600
from a dead woman. Mrs. Mary Por
ter Gregory Devereaux of Mamar
neck, N. Y., broke down In the Mount
Vernon court. She pleaded guilty to
larceny In the first degree.
Prison pallor showed In the face
of the pretty nurse, and her defiant
manner at her trial had given away
to mtter hopelessness. She bowed
her head on the table and sobbed.
Nerve Completely Gone.
No one expected she could ever
lose, her nerve so completely and af
ter the exhibition of coolness she dis
played when detectives and agents of
societies were trying to learn the
names of her parents. Even when
they had determined to their own sat
isfaction the Identity of all her rela
tives,' the girl steadfastly sought to
protect them from disgrace by reiter
ated dentals.
When Helen Watson wa arrested
detectives found she had been night
Buperlntnedent to nurses in the Long
Island College hospital and had been
Forrest Mills Underwear
for ladies and children, absolutely the
best on the market. Let us prove it.
Union Suits in Fleeced Cotton
75c to $1.50
Silk and wool or all-wool $2 to $4.00
Coats, Suits and Dresses
for women, misses and children, in all
the new materials and all sizes, at
prices that are right.
& CO.
Ladies' Home Journal now on sale.
discharged. Also they: learned that
many valuable articles) from the hos
pital were found at her home. Other
nurses said the ybung woman was
suffering from kleptomania, as the
articles she took were often value
less.
Has Slater In Chicago. j
In Raymond Btreet Jail, Brooklyn,
the nurse declared Bhe "simply had
to take certain things" which caught
her fancy. More serious thefts she
refused to confess. Investigation
showed that the father of the girl
was dead. He had been a professor
in a western university. One of her
sisters Is the wife of a clergyman in
Chicago.
At the time of her arrest Helen
Watson was engaged to Dr. Donahue,
a physician at the . hospital. He
broke off the engagement.
When the nurse was arrested, the
police carted away a wagon load of
wearing apparel and many Jewels
from her room at 151 Congress street.
Brooklyn. Several families for whom
she had worked identified the stolen
articles.
60.00(1 SOLDIERS MIWTERED
AGAINST SPANISH STRIKERS
Reservist Retired for Six Years Are
Summoned to Rejoin Army Social
War Praetiiwlly Dedared.
Madrid. All the Spanish reservists
who have left .active service during
the last six years were summoned to
rejoin the colors and 60,000 men who
ordinarily would not have been cal'.ed
to Join their regiments until next
March also were ordered to report for
duty.
The decree mobilizing this vast ar
my was published and is regarded as
showing that the govrnment consid
ers the railroad strike serious.
Premier Canalejas asserts that the
railroad men have virtually declared
a social war. He says their demands
are impossible of fulfillment.
LITTLEST BABY OK ALL
BORN IN NEW YORK
New York. The champion light
weight baby of the entire history ii
medical practice, according to New
York physicians, Is being carefully
guarded In nn Incubator at the Lying
in hospital. Second avenue and
Seventeenth street, for fear the faint
ypark of life It possesses may expire
at any moment. Nevertheless, its
chance for existence seems favorable
It weighs only twenty ounces.
You May be Planning
A Trip East for Holidays
Thanksgiving - - - Christmas - - - Hew Years
The Season Is Near. What is Your Destination?
DIREST LINE
AND FAST
The be of Accommodations In Standard ami Tourist SltxpJng Curt),
ami "Hotter Than Dest" Dining Car Service, for In serving our ntoala,
a la carte style, we delight in surprising you with appetizing tUshe
a variety of litem and those tiltEAT 1UG 11 A K ED 1MVTATOES.
Our itleONorc to furnish full information ami to Hr-anin your trip.
WALTER. ADAMS, Agent, Pendleton, Oregon
A. D. CHARLTON, Assl. Gen. Pass. Agt.
Portland, Oregon
It owes its present hold on life to
Dr. Charles H. Goldsmith of 1910
Lexington avenue, who, first believ
ing the little girl, born prematurely,
had come Into the world dead, later
noticed a slight twitch of one of the
eyelids. He then revived the Infant
by breathing Into Its mouth. Mrs.
Mary O'Connor of 2595 Eighth avenue
Is the mother of the child, and at the
time of its birth was suffering with
whooping cough.
After Dr. Goldsmith had been hur
riedly summoned to the O'Connor
home he told the parents, after care
ful examination, that the baby was
dead. The rhyslcian was astonished
at the diminutive size of the infant.
An eight pound baby Is not consid
ered a large one, yet this little new
comer was only one-sixth the weight
of an eight pound baby.
As it lay on soft material arranged
on a table, the father, hearing the
doctor's verdict, started out to find
an undertaker. A few minutes after
ward the physician noticed a slight
movement of an eyelid The father
returned a few minutes later, having
arranged for the burial, to find the
physician working to revive the child,
though the appliances usually used l
such cases were lacking and there was.
no time to send for them.
WOMEN OPEN DRY GOODS BOX
BATTLE FOR RIGHT TO VOTE
Plead for Amendment Which Remove
All Restriction to Their Sex In
the State of Kansns.
Kansas City. Mo. Women mounted
dry goods boxes, chairs and other
available things to stand upon in Kan
sas City. Kan., and talked for "vote
for women."
All along the main thoroughfare
crowds assembled to hear the speak
ers. Twelve of them were In action
It was the opening of the campaign
in Kansas on behalf of the adoption
of an amendment to the state consti
tution giving women the right to vote
in all elections state and county.
At present they can exercise suf
frage only in city elections. The am
endment will be voted upon at the
November election.
Lost Eastman 3-A canirra In case.
Dropped through Eatt section of
erand stand on Saturday afternoon.
Finder notify S. A. Hons. Box 4S5
Everett. Washington.
The Pioneer and
"Old Reliable"
Runs 4 Daily
Through Trains
To and From the East