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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1913)
DAILY EAST OREGON! AN, PENDLETON. OREGON. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 21 1913. PAGE TIIKEE. oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo WEST URGES AID o o o o o FOR BIG PROJECT u EIGHT PAGES. mm o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 8 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o u I WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION FRIDAY, FEB. 28, 1913 At my home place 3 miles North West of Pend leton, the following described property. I span large mules 7 and 8 years old JO head Poland China hogs, from registered stock 3 head heifprs from regis tered Short Horn Bull 1 registered Poland China Boar 4 set but chain harness superior drill, new wagon and water tank Cassady gang plow 1 Stover engine with pump- jack 2 cultivators 1 hay fork 1 00 lbs. barb wire Lead bars, butt chains and chains 1 heating stove I gasoline range, new set sleigh runners blacksmith anvil vice champion forge AND OTHER. ARTICLES TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION FREE LUNCH AT NOON Terms: All sums under $50.00 cash. All sums over $50.00 Bankable note bearing 8 Jo interest and due Oct. 1, 1913. 2Io discount for cash. DAVID A. NELSON, Owner COL. W. F. YOHNKA, Auctioneer E. L. SMITH, Clerk o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Salem, Ore., Feb. 21. Declaring trat there Is a moral obligation on the part of the state to remedy the conditions that exist on the old Colum bia Southern Irrigation project In Crook county, due to the failure of those who attempted to reclaim the lands Involved under the Carey act, Governor West sent a message to the senate urging careful consideration of the Forbes bill, which provides for an appropriation of $500,000 for the completion of the project. Under the provisions of the bill the money is to i-.e returned to the state when the lands are reclaimed. The eovernor's message, which was referred to the ways and means com inittee says: "T wish to call vour attention to House bill No. 177, which recently passed the house and which I am ad vised has been referred to your ways and means committee. "This bill calls for the appropria tion of $500,000 to complete what is known as the defunct Columbia South ern irrigation system. The proposeJ nrnWt would cover 27.000 acres of land, 21,000 acres of which are Irri gable. KHtimate In Submitted. "The estimated cost of completing this project is set forth in the report made to this office under date of No vember 20, 1912, by State Engineer John H. Lewis, and Is as follows: 'For the construction of the re mainder of the irrigation worKS ne cessary for the complete reclamatioon of the lands in Oregon Desert Land Segregation List No. 13, it will require $443,704.69, and if the state Is to un- dertage the reclamation of these lands this amount should be appropriated and available for expediture within the ensuing two years." $ 1 5.00 at Value YOU CAN ALWAYS DO BETTER AT THE Golden Rule Store WE LEAD, OTIIERS FOLLOW ACTOK POLITICAL SUCCESS. to oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooQQQ Newsy Notes From the Sporting World w HUNTING THE GRIZZLY BEAK OUT OF COLLEGE WOLGAST SHOWS UP IN TRAINING San Francisco, Feb. 21. APPrehen. slon concerning the condition of for mer Lightweight Champion Ad Wol gast is pretty well worn off as the re sult of the showing the Dutchman Is making In his training. The Cadillac demon still lacks the "pep" that he showed In past training pells but he Is rounding to nicely, and will not be below the weight for the Murphy encounter Saturday, but will be In trim for the Harlemlte. Murphy is already at the necessary 13$ pound notch and Is ready to step Into the ring at a moment's nottlce. He will probably ease off In his train ing today while Wolgast will work al most up to ring time. Betting was notched at 10 to 8 with Wolgast on the long side. It was stat ed that 10 to 6 will be the ringside betting. Seats for the match are going like doughnuts, and a packed house will greet the fighters. BAKEIt ALL-STABS TO PLAY UNION Faker. Ore.. Feb. 21. Baker's All Star basketball team will leave for Union whore they will meet the team of that place tonight. The game is looked rorward to with a great deal of interest and is expected to be a hot contest. The Baker boys have been practic ing steadily since their return from the trip to the Panhandle several weeks ago, in which they took two of a series of three games. The Union boys for their part have a good team and will enter the court with the spir it that wins. The All-Star team will line up as follows: Frank Cox, F. Herbert and S. Pobst. forwards; H. Burke, center and H. Miller, H. Weeks and A Fin ley, guards. DISCOVERED. (An unpopular song.) It was a summer evening, the sky had turned to gold; The birds were singing merrily as they have did of old. The baseball player had came home to greet his darling spouse; The ghost had walked that day and he had purchased him a souse. And when he up and handed her the remnants of his pay She hooked him one upon the lamp and to him she did say: CHORUS. "Kick In. dear heart, kick In again; Come forward with the cash. You know it always gives me pain To clout you on the mush. You may have been a holdout once And copped the magnate's tin, But I don't fall for holdout stunts Kick in, dear heart, kick in!" Exchange. SHU! LADIES! SECRET TO DARKEN FADED GRAY HAIR-USE SA6E TEA Say Sapo and Sulphur Darkens Hair Beautifully and Ends Dandruff. Common garden sage brewed Into a heavy tea with sulphur and alcohol added, then left to age and carefully filtered, will tnrn gray, streaked and faded hair dark and luxuriant; re move every bit of dandruff, stop acalp Itching and falling hair. Jst a few applications will prove a revelation If your hair Is fading, gray or dry, scraggy and thin. Mixing- the Sage Tea and Sulphur recipe at homo, though, Is troublesome. An easier, way is to get the ready-toruse tonic, costing" ahouf 50 cents- a large bottle at tdrug stores, known aa "Wy- eth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem-, younger. edy," thus avoiding a lot of muss. Some druggists make their own. but It Isn't nearly so nice as "Wyeth's." While wispy, gray, faded hair Is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractive ness. By darkening your hair with wyeins sage and sulphur no one can tell, because it does It so natural ly; so eveniy. xou just dampen a sponge or soft crush and draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. Do this tonight and by morning all gray hairs have dis appeared, after another application or two it will be restored to Its natural color and be even more glossy, soft and luxuriant than ever. Loral druggists say they are selling lots- of Wyeth's.' Sageand -Sulphur' and It surely helps folks appear years Corvallis, Ore., Feb. 21. There will be no more "ragging" at O. A. C. The faculty com- mittee on student affairs has determined to put a stop to this style of dancing, and has an- nounced that any student seen "ragging" will be ousted from the hall. Profcwrfoiiallsni. They took his trophies all away And branded him a "pro." And placed a stain upon his name That all the world might know He played a game of marbles once In childhood, years ago. Exchange. Sir Goorge Alexander Intends Stand as Unionist Candidate in Next Elertlon. London. Sir George Alexander, the latest of our actor-managers to ap pear in a music hall, intends to stand as a Unionist candidate at the next general election. Besides being an accomplished actor he probably Is one of the most public-spirited men on the stage, and sets an example by his ac. tivitles in municipal affairs. He is a member of the London county coun cil and a Justice of the peace. It is almost twenty-two years since he began as an actor-manager. His first big hit as an actor was as George d'Alroy in "Caste." i Sir George has the reputation of being the best-dressed man in Lon don, but this he denies. He has strongly advocated the ere ation of a municipal theater. Strength comes from well digested and thoroughly assimilated food. Hood's Sarsaparllla tones the diges tive organs, and thus builds up the strength. If you are getting "run down." begin taking Hood's at once. It gives nerve, mental and digestive strength. MODERN IDEAS OF COMFORT IN DAYS .OF THE CAESARS Diovery of IJfta Recall Tliat Ro man Had Hot and Cold Water and Heating System. Rome. Prof. Bonl's discovery that at least three large lifts, one of them 120 feet high, were used in the pal ace of the Caesars on Palatine hill In Imperial Rome, comes as a surprise to those who have always regarded these conveniences as essentially mod ern. "Discoveries likethese," said a life long student of Roman antiquities, "make one realize how little the world hns changed in habit or achievement since the days of Cae sars, mere nas been found near Pompeii a Roman hot and cold wa ter system. The occupants could turn on hot or cold water or both. Just as In a modern house, and this was to wards the end of the first centurv, A." D. A mode of bathing remarkably like the Turkish bath is described by Cel sus, a writer on the art of medicine. He advises the bather to go first In to a moderately heated room and per spire slightly, after which he should anoint himself and pass Into a hot air room. Having perspired there, he should pour hot, warm and cold wa ter by turns over his head, and final ly anoint himself process being probably a precaution against cold. "Few people recollect that the Ro mans Introduced a system of heating their houses by hot air. The stoke holes were outside and were connect ed by shafts by whih the air clrculat edunder the floors and up inside the walls. "As. to articles of the toilet, we could teach the Romans but little. They had. combs, razors, , toothpicks, nail files with a roughened surface and sm.ootb nQtchfgrrllshtng mir rors, toilet boxes, scent bottles, 'pins! brooches, hooks and eyes." ARE YOU A COLD SUFFERER? Take Dr. King's New Discovery The Best Coufch, Cold and Thorat and Lung' medicine made. Money refund ed if it fails to cure you. Do not hes itate take it at our risk. First dose helps. J. R. Wells, Floydada, Texas, writes: "Dr. King's New Discovery cured my terrible cough and cold. gained 15 pounds Buy it at Koep- pens. MRS. WILSON'S PAINTINGS SOLD FOR GEORGIA SCHOOL Philadelphia. Feb. 21. Proceeds of the sale of paintings by Mrs. Wood row Wilson, wife of the President-elect on exhibition this week at the Arts and Crafts Guild here, will be given to the Martha Berry School at Mount Berry, Ga. The arrangement is made by special request of Mrs. Wilson who has been interested for many years in the school, which Is located near her former home at Rome, Ga. There are some 50 canvases in the exhibit, near ly all being poetic interpretations of New Jersey scenery. PEERESS WRITES FILM PLAY. Marchioness Townsend the Latent Recruit to Those Devising Dramas for Movies. London. The latest recruit to the playwrights who devise dramas for the picture theaters is the Marshion- ess Townsend, wife of a peer, who figured in a famous Inquiry as to whether he was capable of managing STOMACH GOES BAD SOUR, GASSY, UPSET? 'Iape'g Diapejiniii" Cures Indigestion, Gas, Heartburn or DysiMisia in Five Minutes. EVERY HOME NEEDS THIS FINE REMEDY Mild, Reliabe Laxative-tonic Something No Family sliould Be Without. Is ino wen-regulated home should be without a laxative for there Is scarce ly a day in a family of several per sons that someone doesn't complain of a headache, of sleeplessness, or show the first signs of a cold. A laxative then becomes a necessity or what was a trifling congestion at the beginning may run into a serious cold. No harsh remedy Is needed, but simply a mild laxative-tonic that will makethe liver active and stir up me bowels. People who havetried a great many things, and are them selves heads of families who have seen the little ills run to big ones, will tell you that there is nothing better than Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, wnich you can obtain at any drug store for fifty cents or one dollar a oottie, the latter being the family size. Among the great believers in Syrup Pepsin for constipation in old or young, and as a general household emergency remedy, is Mrs. J. W. An derson, Osawatomie, Kans., who writes after using one sample bottle and two dollar bottles of Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepsin: "On the plea of the duty that every one owes to fellow sufferers, I appeal to all such who are bowed in spirit, broken in health and discouraged with life, not to give up until they have given Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin a fair trial.' Syrup Pepsin is scientifically com pounded and its purity is vouched for. Mothers give it to tiny babies, and grown people, taking a little larger kfc MRS. J. W. ANDERSON amount, find it equally effective. It is mild and gentle, pleasant-tasting and free from griping. It does not hide behind a high sounding name and is absolutely free from any prohibited ingredient. Fam ilies who once use Syrup Pepsin for ever avoid cathartics, salts, pills and other harsh medicines, for these only do temporary good, are nauseous and a shock to any delicate system. Such things should never be given to children. If no member of your family has ever used Syrup Pepsin and you would like to make a personal trial of it be fore buying it in the regular way of druggist, send your address a pos tal will do to Dr. W. B. Caldwell. 417 Washington St., Monticello. 111., and a free sample bottle will be mail ed you. his affairs. Lady Townsend. who before her marriage was Miss Gladys Sutherst, is an accomplished writer. She has written poetry and also an amusing little boog of maxims and musings. in which, for example, she remarks: "When women are donng fancy work with their needle they are very often doing embroidery with their tongues." . Her picture play Is entitled "A Strong Man's Love." She also has completed five or six other plays, which have been acquired by an Eng lish film company. But these are not her first dramatic works, for about four years ago she wrote a play "with words.' for which she also painted scenery and acted as her own stage manager and prompted. $50,000.00 TO LOAN on Farm Lands at; Reasonable Rata of Interest No Long Waits for Money MARK MOORHOUSE CO. 117 E. Court Street Phone Main 83. Time it! In five minutes all stom ach distress will go. No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of gas, acid or eructations of undigested food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache. Pape's Dlapepsln is noted for its speed 'in regulating upset stomachs. It is the surest, quickest and most certain remedy in the whole world and besides it Is harmless. Millions of men and women now eat their favorite foods without fear they know now It is needless to have a bad stomach. Please, for your sake, get a large fifty cent case of Pape's Dlapepsln from any drug store and put your stomach right. Don't keep on being miserable life is too short you are not here long, so make your stay agreeable. Eat what you like and digest it; enjoy It, without dread of rebellion in the stomach. Dlapepsln belongs in your home anyway. It should be kept handy, should one of the family eat some thing which doesn't agree with them or In case of an attack of indigestion, dyspepsia, 'gastritis or stomach de rangement nt daytime or during the nlKnnnisTnere"l give'We qtfisfcWif: surest reMef known. lift yjx- - v LI a V. BOUILLON At luncheon' CUDES innerin the evening a most delicious, satisfying and sua taining bouillon made from the finest of beef. Made in a minute a cube in a cup add hot water and serve. Everybody like A Cob to CmpM-A CvM la a Mint On CmU In Hm W 4 for 10 cmntm 10 for 25 cent Tina of 50 uj 100-pric is Ism Km el Oto BaalHo Ctbat fat FREE CORNEILLt DAVID k CO., Sole Afte DfL W NrtkMMrStMNwTtk For Sale by the Following Dealers : R. ALEXANDER. A. C. KOEPPEN & BROTHERS. CASH MARKET. TENDLETON DRUG CO. CLARK'S GROCERY. . THE STANDARD GROCERY. DKRaWH'BRfOTHBfta. '-'t C.BAY BROTHERS. - " TALLMAN & CO.'S DRUG STORE.