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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1914)
E10TTT PAOKSI DAILY EAST OREOONIAN, PENDLETON, OREOON", SATURDAY, XOVKMnKR 28, 1014. PAOE FIVE Now For Raincoats Balmacaans, Heavy Coats, Heavy Shoes, Rub bers, Umbrellas, Sweaters, and a Little Heavier Underwear. Why not look at our line before you buy? Perhaps would be of mutual Benefit. 1:4 I 1 ! irffrrmrnmrnniimmnimmirm f UiUuMwwukiuiuuuiiauiiuiU EMPLOYMENT BUREAU WILL BE OPENED DECEMBER 1ST 1NSTITLTION WILL HE KXOWX AS civic ooi-tek club to HELP MEX With Percy Hubert In charge of the I'l nee the rooms on the second floor of the Hendricks building are now being mado ready for use as a reading room, coffee club and em ployment bureau under the direction of the civic club end the churches of the city. The Invitation will be known as the Civic Coffee Club and will be In regular operation by the first of the month. As a matter of fact It Is In operation to a degree now as Mr. Hilbcrt succeeded In getting Jobs for three different men yester day. Lost evening a meeting of the joint committee having the work In charge was held at the city hall and plans for the Institution were discussed. Aside from the members of the committee, a number of business and professional FHEE 01 Buy $35.00 worth of household poods at V. Stroble's and Ret a hoHutiful oil paintinp frets buy $3.00 worth of merchandise and gtl one at cost, or $1.10. Wo pive you a rnrd and punch it for each purchase makinp every little nrticlo bought count for you on the picture. Fine Christmas Presents Nothing more suitable, nothing more appropriate for an Xmas gift and you pet them free. H'c iar? every tweemh vscd in keeping house. The cheapest place in Pendleton to but household goods. V. STROBLE Telephone 271W. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIMIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli 1 irocorios tor Bosh More Value for Less Money ROMAN BEAUTY ATFLES Extra fancy, fine eating and cooking. the box 1-35 KPITZENBUKGS Fancy Hood Rivers, box .$1.23 COOKING APPLES Small, loose pack, no culls, box 75o CABBAGE, SOLID HEADS Fresh crisp stock, pound 8c SWEET POTATOES Smooth, even stock, 7 pounds 25c HEAD LETTUCE Fresh, crisp, tender, each lOo CELERY No. 1 stock, tho bunch lOo GRAPES Red Emperors, good eating, pound 20c FRESH EGGS Strictly fresh, dozen 45o Our Line of Bottled Specialties Nice to Choose From OLIYKK. PICKLES, WHITE OXIOXS, IlELTsilES,' OILS, DUESS. 1NGS ETC.; KIPK TOMATOES, frwh solid California stock, lb. lOo SARATOGA CHIPS home made, fresh, package Be FRESH CANDY NOW IN Peanut, Mixed, Creams. CHOCOLATE MINTS, and many others, GRAPE FRUIT Florida's, largo and small, 4 for 25c and 10c each ASSORTED NUTS All kinds. OPEN UNTIL TEN TONIGHT S3 I THE SPECIALTY Phone 470. iniuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiimiiiiiijr E II H m I .; I- tt---: I : EH trz: WJ Pleated Show You men were In attendance and much en couragement was given the ladles In charge of the movement Arrangements for financing the In stltutlon have not yet been completed. According to Mrs. E. T. Wado, presi dent of the civic club, It Is anticipated the expenses will be from I ISO tt $175 per month. Some of those pres nt last evening thought the expense would run much higher. Free elec trio lights and free phones for the first three months have been prom ised. At meeting last evening a letter from Den Selling of Portland was read, the letter being In answer to queries made by local workers. Mr. HUbert, who has been retained to have charge of the coffee club was formerly In the ministry and he has had experience In work of this sort In Cincinnati. Kxkano to Ixwo Mayor SPOKANE. Wash. Nov. 28. Mayor Hlndley who has been City Coromls sloner of Spokane for three years an nounced thtat he will resign In the Immediate future to accept a call to the Central Congregational Church at Winnipeg. pjcmo 212 E. Court St root. CASH GROCERY I H2H Main St. LOCALS Advertising in Brief BATEH Per Hot first Insertion 10 Per llu, additional losertloa, . . .6e fir Hot, Mr month 11.00 No local uka for I mi than Count 0 ordinary words to Una, Lorala will not t taken or tb 'pbooe and remlttaoca oiuat accois pany order. Whipple Piano tuner, phone 22eR. Phone I. C. Snyder, chimney sweep. Good winter quarters for horses and rigs at the Alta barns. Wanted Good, clean rags at the East Oregonlan office. Fashionable dressmaking at lit W. Court Phone t5 1 J. Girl wants work In private family. Phone 235J. For rent Furnished i roomeJ modern house. Phone tH. For sale Three good lots or trade for automobile. Phone 21IJ. For rent 7-joom modern house, 117 Grango street Inquire John Vert Wanted at once Housekeeper. Mrs. Thos. A. Hodgson, 1101 E Court at The Alta House, a good, popular, yet cheap place to stop. J. M. Sheph- enson, prop. Five room house for tale on north side. Corner lot Improved, Address "W" this office. To Rent Nine room modern house, hard finish, corner Garden and Webb. Inquire 211 West Webb. Good dry, black pine wood, $5.60 per cord, lt.00 If sawed. Delivered tee B. B. Gervals or phone 77$. Old papers for sale; tied In bundles. Good for starting fires, etc. 10c a bundle. This office. Try the West End Market for gro ceries and meats, 1301 W. Alta ct Phone 778. Free delivery. Satisfac tion guaranteed. For sale Two modern cottages lo ci" ted on east Court street, seven blocks from Main street Inquire of Walters' mill. For sale Modern seven room house and seven lots, with barn, close to school. 12000 takes It Inquire or address "A" this office. "Mutt" takes the big loads and "Jeff" shows the speed. Penland Bros, haul anything and reasonable. Furniture van and storage warehouse. Office 647 Main street Phone 33$. Several small farms on Umatilla river particularly adapted to hogs, dairy or poultry, $750 cash, balance on or before 10 years. 7 1-J per cent See Berkeley. Agents Sell guaranteed hosiery: 70 per cent preflt; make $10 daily Orders repeat regularly; best agent's seller In existence. International Mills, West Philadelphia, Pa. Lost On stairway Moose hall, la die' Elgin gold watch, hunting case Name engraved in cose, also baby pic ture. Kindly return to office of Dr. Ohmart for suitable reward. Matrimonial agency of highest character; strictly private and rell able. Pest In the' West. Eighth year. Why not better your position? Full Information 10c. Ideal Introduction Club, Box Hi. Vancouver, B. C. If you want a real bargain Inves tigate at once. House partly furnish ed, arranged In apartments and all rented, located on 60 foot corner lot close In. Place more than pays for Itself besides a good place to live Price $1250.00, very small payment down. I am leaving the city and If the place does not sell In the next four days I will lease It See me at !10 TuMln street. Uncle Sam Involved. The government has Inspected our meats and approved them as being fresh, pure and wholesome. Have you this pretection elsewhere? Protect your health, phone 414, Oregon Mar ket Adv. Lout, strayed or Stolen. Near Hermiston. Oregon, about November ISth. one Iron gray horse named Harney, branded Circle N on left shoulder. 10 years old, weight about 1200 lbs., and one ronn horse named Ronnie, branded N on left shoulder, 12 years old. weight about 1200 lbs. Reward will be given for Information loading to their recov ery. Address Julius La Course, Ad ams, Ore. Adv. , RESOLUTIONS OF CONDOLENCE Northwestern Frontier Exhibition Asportation. Re It Resolved, By the stockhold ers of tho Northwestern Frontier Exhibition Assolatlon In annual meeting assembled, that we cause to be spread upon the minutes of this meeting this resolution of regret over the untimely death of Mark Moor house, one of the original board of directors one who had from Its be ginning a most Important part In the great success which attended the Round-up, and one whose loss will be deeply felt by us, and that we extend to his family our heartfelt sympathy In their loss. J. V. TALLMAN. J. Tt. RALEY W. L. THOMPSON. (Adv.) Committee Dot-ling YVork Consllldate. Toul Hemmelgarn, proprietor of the Pioneer Bottling works, has pur chased the Pendleton Soda Works from E. E. Turner and has consoli dated the two, at the location of and under the name of the Pioneer Bot tling . Works. All orders placed by the patrons of either Institution should be sent to 222 East Court street, or telephone 177. Best quality and quick delivery of beer and all kinds of sodas and soft drinks. Adv. RELATIVES CROWD TO LEAUN IULWARKS DEAD SHRERNESS. Eng. Nov. 28. Thirty bodies from the British bat tleship Bulwark were recovered from tho River Thames. Tho Bulwark was blown up off Sheerness, presumably the result of an Internal explosion. hi ink u so. PACIFIC 1111 DEPUTIES AUK OX WAV TO CAM FORMA TOWX TO ARREST TIIKM. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 28. Armed with rifles and revolvers, 40 deputies under Sheriff Hummel left In auto mobiles for Lancaster, where 60 tramps were reported to have seized a Southern Pacific train after loot lag several store and saloons. Ac cording to telephone reports from Lancaster, many of the tramps are armed and threatened to resist If an attempt was made to capture them. Floyd Rankin Is In from McKay. William Mills Is In from his Juniper ranch. D. C. Brownell Is up from his home at Umatilla. 8. Norton Bobo was up from Stan field last evening. J. S. Sullivan of Nolin was In Pen dleton yesterday. J. Beaker of Meacham Is down from the mountain today. Charles J. Pell of Adams is a vis itor In the city today. V. T. Wlgglesworth of Heppner Is a guest of the St. George. E. W. Fehr of Helix was among the overnight visitors in the city Ralph B. Stanflcld came up from his home at Echo last evening. G. IL Bishop, Freewater attorney, Is transacting business here today Louis C. Garver, Irrlson fruit grow er. Is registered at the Bowman today. Gerald E. Stanfleld, well known young sheepman, Is in Pendleton to Jay. E. J. Muir of Enterprise formerly of this city, Is making a visit In Pendle ton. P. H. Buchholz, prominent Stanfield merchant. Is transacting business here today. tt. C. Lens, owner of the Pendleton Roller Mills, Is down from Spokane on a visit J. L. Miller, traveling passenger agent for the O-W. R. & N. Is In Pen dleton today R. G. Classen, district agent for the Metropolitan Life, Is making Pendle tpn a visit. Prof. W. A. Ford of the Umatilla schools. Is among the Saturday visit ors In the dry. Joseph Kelly of Hermiston was up from the project town yesterday and spent the night Julius Gudcrlan, prominent stock man of the south end. Is making Pen dleton a Saturday visit. Arthur G. Means, young merchant of Umatilla, came in last evening and remained over today. John Guivette of Walla Walla, for mer well known resident of this coun ty. Is over for a visit today. Walter M. Pterce, owner of Hot Lake, and W. G. Sawyer of Hot Lake, are at the Pendleton today. James Johns, president of the Hart man Abstract Co., left this morning for Heppner on a business visit. Harry N Dryer, prominent young merchant of Umatilla, Is among the visitors from the west end of the county. CHILD DEAD IX FLAMES; MOTHER IS BADLY BURNED ABERDEEN, WTash.. Nov. 28. As a result of using kerosene on a smoul dering fire at her home at Carllsls near Hoqulam. Mrs. Charles Gekolor was perhaps fatally burned, her three year old daughter is dead and the home Is destroyed, with three hundred dollars In savings. When the flames lsnlted the child's dress the mother fouRht bravely to extinguish them but f he was overcome by smoke. When she recovered consciousness the child ! was dead, but she clasped the body! in her arms and leaped into a nearby creek. The mother was rescued w-lth the body held tightly In her arms. Tragedy Clowes Romance DENVER, Colo. Nov. 28 A Kan sas Ctly romance, resulting In a mar riage ten years ago and a divorce one year ago, had a tragic sequel here a few days ago when Mrs. Wllla M. riteher drank poison with suicidal In tent. She is In a dying (condition at the County Hosptal. She received word that Hugh S. Pitcher, who Is manager of a clothlnlg store, had married another woman. ' 'On the ground of mental cruelty and lncompatablllty Mrs. pitcher ob tained a divorce and alimony a year ogo. The couple formerly resided here. A short time ago. In the hope hope of effecting reconciliation, she relinquished her alimony claim and In a few days heard her former hus Mnd had been married since March to his former stenographer. She left a note declaring this to have been the cause for her attempt at suicide. :i i STOCK EXCHANGE IS OPENED IX NEW YORK NEW YORK, Nov. 28. The New York stock exchange op ened this morning for restricted trading in bonds. The rule forbidding trading in stocks was rigidly enforced. Whether the exchange will remain open will depend on re- ports of today's experiments. fell Mill Jsfflrg Rg "y v 1908 POPE-HARTFORD, only $165 1911 Six-Cylinder Franklin,only $650 New tires and in fine shape 1913 Ford Touring Car, only $300 1912 Reo Touring Car, only . $350 Here are some exceptional bargains if you want a car cheap. They will not last long to you'd better hurry. OREGON MOTOR GARAGE Phone 468 B. F. Trombhy, Prop. 119-121 W. Court St. NEWS OF FARM AND RANGE Huh 18,000 Sacks of Barley Walter Adams motored over Tuesday from Athena, where he Is becoming known as the "barley king." Walter holds about 18 000 sacks of this cereal an J Is looking quite pleasant over market conditions. Weston Leader. Oregon Apples to Siberia Oregon apples are finding a market In far away Siberia and the call for stock this year Is unusually heavy. A ship ment some time ago of 125 boxes of Hood River apples to Vladivostok was received In excellent condition and met with ready demand from the na tives. Within the last few Jay8 other shipments have, gone frward, being routed bv way of Puget Sound, from which point they will go by steamer to Japan, .thence to Siberia. SECRET OF GETTING 4 FOREIGN TRADE The partial or total ce.ssation of the foreign trade of the nations' en gaged In the present European war has served to emphasize the relative ly small development of the foreign commerce of the United States, espe cially with the South American coun tries. That something else, other than taking advantage of Europe's temporary extremity. Is needed to de velop and hold foreign trade Is be coming apparent to American busi ness men. A writer In the Sioux City, (la.) Tribune gives some of the reasons why the United States has lagged behind in the race for the world's trade, together with an en couraging note as to the beneficial effects of the new tariff act upon our foreipn commerce. He says: "John F. Fowler Is at the head of the export department of W. R. Grace & Co.. New York, which does the largest business with South Amer ica of any firm In the United States. Mr. Fowler is credited with knowing more about actual buslnes conditions In South America than any other man In the United States, having handled exports to thot continent for 25 years, and 13 years of this time living In the various South American countries and acquainting himself, first hand with conditions as they, ure. I "In an article in the New York World Mr. Fowler snys it s not lack of banking facilities or a credit sys-j tern, nor lack of shipping facilities, nor yet the lack of experienced sales-, men or advertising that has been the drag on United States trade with South America, while Germany and England and even Holland and Bel-, gium have gone ahead. I "He states the fundamental prop osition: Teople in South America do not buy on sentiment any more than people do elsewhere,' so the fact that this is a republic, and there is a Pan-American union and a Monroe doctrine and all that sort of thing, gets nowhere In South America when BELGIAN REFUGEES FLEEING FROM tit'. rat i ll I, II, II. ! i II 1 KB I i T-T W K'HI ' .v?y,:.. i ir- mm in Usdl Cars It comes to commerce.. South Am erlcan people patronize people who' patronize them, which leads Mr. Fow ler to make this observation ""In seeking trade relations out-t side our own boundaries we have been prone to overlook the fact that bar ter is a good principle. Hitherto our( tariff might well be considered as In restraint of foreign trade.' Our old tendency was to exclude everything that we were not absolutely compell ed to obtain abroad, but our new tar iff is something like an Invitation to trade both ways' and a sign that we are at last open to do more barter ing. We must not overlook the fact that Europe has always been the large market for South American pro ducti'and, reciprocally, naturally got( a corresponding share of the return! trade " "Nobody knows Mr. Fowler's polt-j tics. Maybe he hasn't any. He 1s , simply an experienced trader In the' world's markets, and he Is but tell ing what must appeal to everyone as a lotrlcal and fundamental truth. "This country can not expect other nations to buy, buy, buy of American manufacturers and Jobbers and not sell to Americans In return. Com- merce is not a Jug-handled affair like j that. This country can riot erect a wall of high tariff schedules and sayj to other nations, 'Tou can not cell In our market.' and then expect the ether nations to welcome us In their markets. "According to Mr. Fowler, our new tariff has given trade with South Am erica a wonderful Impetus and It will iTeadily Increase If we maintain the present tariff policy. In view of this testimony and other testimony exact-j ly like It by men familiar with trade; conditions in the world's markets, j what folly to consider seriously the; reactionary 'program to re-enact a! tariff that Is 'in restraint of foreign! trade!' "The thought suggests .one ray of light. The manufacturers who In crease their business by the abolition of the old 'restraint of trode' will probably cease to subscribe to cam- vnlr-m ftiM In ft tta rfl-onirttiiont ' ! PHILADELPHIA 'EXCHANGE WILL OPEN OX MONDAY PHILADELPHIA. Nov. 2S An nouncement was made that the Phil adelphia Stock Exchange will be re-, opened on Monday. November 3', at 10 a. m., for transaction in all se uritics liste l on the roTuktr and un-, listed departments of the exchange, j AUTO DRIVERS ARE ARI.STED BY WHOLESAIJC PORTLAND. Ore., Nov. 2S. 4 Arrested in connection with the "safety first" campaign and charged with violating state and municipal statutes. 26 automo- bile drivers were fined 12 each, 62 were released with a warn- Ing and a score discharged for lack of evidence. In the munici- pal court today. The wholesale arrests continued. - A 1 t i V-V - - r-m . i tJlMItM.TlwX,tt, X - HEDMOXD REPORTED IX ARMY i ; : ' y :: j. -y" . 7 ' - : i :-. John Redmond. LONDON, Nov. 28. A rumor U now In circulation In parliamentary circles to the effect that John Red mond, the Irish nationalist leader, has been given a commission In th army and that he will socn leave for the front. (Continued from page two.) A Vlctrola concert will be given to morrow a;ernoon. commencing at I o'clock. In the rooms of the library and the public Is Invited to hear it. IL M. Warren has furnished the li brary with h's best diamond disc Vlc trola and his latost records. Miss Ermi Mon.ihan. d -.tighter of John Monahan of the Hotel Pendle ton, is over fro:: Walla WalU where she la attending college. Mrs. Claude I. Uarr thLi morning underwent un operation for the re moval of her appendix. She has been quite 111 for several d iys but the sur gical treatment is expected to relieve her. Announcements have been receive' from Spokane of the b'rth of a son to Rev. and Mrs. A. M ickenzie Mel drum, formerly of this i lly and nioro recently, of Athena. The baby haa been christened William Gordon. THEIR HOMES iUL1 iklf .H'1.1 J N"- ' I A -- - IsC-Si-vAcfC; i sr