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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1915)
PA OF FIVE DATLY EAST OREGONTAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. TUESDAY. JANUARY 2fl, IMS. ETGT1T PAGES. IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllUlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllll III IMA TOW W . V V ILill Ji MlLfM. is the season you need foods that are most nourishing that pure clean food insures health and vigor regardless of weather conditions Wednesday Special Jan. 27 13c the lb. "PEMECO" BEEF BOILS LEAN A FRESH SHIPMENT j of Cream, Brick and Limberger CHEESE Knights Pickles I SERVICE . QUALITY ! THE CENTRAL Phone 33 Iniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiir; I uu v- u Hot Chocolate Hot Chili Hot Tamales made to your tatte FRESH CANDIES EVERY DAY Sliwiiiiillll! uuuuuMuMUitiiuMwiuUii For SALE CHEAP 1 8 (load Good Work Llulos For Further Particulars See E. L. Smith & Co. Pendleton, Oregon E3 1 CHOICE EATING bio APPLES WHILE THEY LAST 50c BOX Winopaps, Red Check Pippins, Gnnos nml Kome Beauties. FRESH TODAY KIPPERED SALMON-10 to 30 chunks. ort PUKE PORK SAUSAGE None letter, tubs ...... 3V COTTAGE HAMS Average 50t and 60 CHOICE HAMS DflTATflirS J.anm whifn Rolid K mMV - - -- , - SHED POTATOES Largo white, non-irrigated, sack ipl.oU APPLE JELLY Rich apple flavor, pint - J5J CIDER VJIS'I'AiAU iw pvt. FRESH EGGS-2 dozen - SPECIAL Our 25 COFFEE lias no oqual. A SMOOTH, EXCELLENT BLEND. ASSORTED CANDIES Pound - -J WALNUTS No. 2 hard shell, pound THE SPECIALTY rhone 470. Next Door to OR RIB SANITATION MARKET (Continued from page two.) Mra. Paul PeFord nd baby daugh ter of Glendale. Oregon, are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mra. A. D. Sief bert, Mra. DeFord'a parents. Mr. and Mra. Jamea are visiting In the city. Hill of Helix Alfalfa Hay for Sale. Farmers north of Pendleton on the O -W. It. at N. and the Northera Pa clflo railroad. I can furnish you choice alfalfa har. cheap freight, quick delivery." R. C. Burllngame, Farmer. Walla Walla, Wash. Adv. lib? AND COOKING AT lf US. stoeK. PAVt. '. S1.40 pure gai ion v .... 75J RICH, ...... io CASH GROCERY . ... p Quelle Cafe. G28 Main. H Himmm mm Hiiiiiiimiiill'linimH' iiiiiimiuiiniiiiiniiiiir1 ' "Li BOXES LOCALS Advertising in Brief UATEH. Fr Una first Insertion Ir IIm. atldltlonal IumHIui ht ii.oo rr llnw. tier month. No local taiito for i thin 'jOc. rnimr Aprilmrt marAa to Una. Loral will not be Uko otst tb 'pbooe and remittance aiuat sccoto paoy ordar. Dressed hogs, 9c lb. Phone 295W, Phone I. C. Bnyder. chimney eweep For rent Furnished housekeeping rooms, 602 Water street. Wanted, work by competent wom an. Inquire 170X West Webb. Phone 111, Kurlle ft Elliott dellca teaaan market, for your meats, etc For ale Good dry wood. 110 Thompan street, or phone I7IJ. WanteJ Good, clean raga at the Eaat Oregonlan office. For rent 7-room modern house, 117 Oranre street. Inquire John Vert Wanted Offlre work or house work by girl of 1. Apply this office. La Tim clears, made In Pendle ton. Five room houae for sale on north aide. Corner lot Improved. Addreaf "W" this office. Bmoke the La Tima cigar. For sale Desirable residence lot on North Side. Close In. Addreaa P. O. Dox 40. For Bale 18 acre alfalfa ranch; Ideal for atock and dairy, will con alder trade. Dox 2, Richfield, Ida. Wanted Middle aged woman to keep houae on ranch. Apply "K" thla office. For Bale Two moJern cottagee lo cated on eaat Court atreet, aeven blocks from Miin street. Inquire of Walters' mill. Old papera for sale; tied in bundles. Good for starting fire, etc. 10c a bundle. Thla office. Try the La Homer 10c cigar. Wanted Good, competent woman to work on ranch. German, Fin or Swede preferred. No children. Apply "I" thla office. "Mutt" takes the big loads and "Jeff" ahows th speed. Penland Bros, haul anything and reasonable. Furniture van and storage warehouae. Office 647 Main street Phone JS. The Alta House and Barn. Head- ouurters for farmers and stockmen. Call and see ua. Stephenson It Eng lar. proprietors. Phone 447. 7uz East Alta street. . Several small farms on Umatlllt river particularly adapted to hogs, dairy or poultry, 1760 cash, balance on or before 10 years. 7 1-t per cent See Berkeley. For rent 2 sections well Improv ed land, 800 acres plowed, seed and feed on farm. For particulars write to Clyde Weittenhliler, Ontario, Ore gon. B. L. Allen, Laurens. Iowa, or A. F. May, Pendleton. Oregon Landa for sale Bargains In Amer ican Falls and So. Idaho wheat landa Th tiiur to Invest. 960 acres In Central Idaho, adapted for diversified List your farminr and stock raising land with us. We do the rest, wasn Ington and So. Idaho Land Co., Wal la Walla, Wash. riiinirra's Dancing School. Beginning Thursday afternoon, 4 P m.. at Commercial gymnasium. Par ticulars Phone J. 11. Merryman, Ho tel Pendleton. Adv. VICTORY FOR THE RUSSIANS IS CLAIMED AT PETROGRAD GERMAN ADVANCE 1LS BEEN ROLLED HACK AFTER SE VERE ENGAGEMENTS. FETROGRAD, Jan. 25. A brilli ant Russian victory in southern Poland und the development of a Russian of fensive menacing Lod were unnounc ed in an official war office statement It declares the Germun armies ad vancing toward lvangorod have been rolled back with heavy losses after a determined resistance, ivan.norod Is the main fortress protecting Warsaw ugainst an advance from the south. The Slavs are declared to have occu pied Kielce and Tpnoso and to have driven the Germans back from 20 to 30 miles along n 40 mile front to the Iillca river. , Carlhaldl Goes to London. ROME, Jan. 26. General Riocclotti Geribaldi, son of the Italian liberator and father of Constante and Bruno Garibaldi, who were killed recently in France, has gone to Paris and later will visit London on a secret mission connected with the Italian Interven tion in the war. When the moment of Intervention arrives General Riocclotti Garlbadll will command the Garlbaldlan Legion. I HEAD STUFFED FROM ? CATARRH OR A COLD f Says Crenm Applied in Nostril X Open Air Passages Kiglit Up. Instant relief no waiting. Your clogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of Jour head clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blowing, head ache, dryness. No struggling v for breath at night; your cold or catarrh disappears. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Palm from your dtugglst now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream In your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage , i u j ni.Airr. vhn onrtli'inuted in tlie swollen mucous membrane and rellefl It's Just fine. Don't stay stuffed -up with a cold or nasty catarrh. r i Art CorPtck Of Athena, was am ong: the visitors In the city yesterday. It. B... Lewis, prominent Echo citi zen, was up yesterday from his home. J. B. Kennedy, retired farmer, left! yesterday for Hot Lake for a sojourn. Charlea Cowan, owner of the Irv. Ington HolKhta properly left today for Seattle. . W. P. Llttlejohn, Athena miller, who Is doing Jury duty here, is at the St. George.- County Superintendent I. E. Young Is spendlns; the day In I'matlUa on school business. Douglas Lefflngwell, local Insur ance agent, accompanied by Ed Thompson of San Francisco, went over to Hot Lake yesterday. L. H. Pinkham, Spokane sjove salesman and father of Louis H. pink ham, Jr., a former t. of 0. football player and coach, spent last night at the Pendleton. Lyman Hlce arrived home this mor ning from Portland where he had been receiving treatment for his eyes. He went on down to Eugene for a couple of days to visit with college friends. MOVIE FILMS TAKE THE PLACE OF SCHOOLBOOKS CLEVELAND, Jan. 26. Education under forced draught, founded on the theory that "seeing is believing'' and taught exclusively with motion pic ture films is the purpose of the latest Institution of learning here. Heading, writing, orithmatlc, geo graphy, domestic science with ull Its branches and many other subjects will be taught with the uid of fims. Pupils will be enrolled as in other schools. I'encils and paper will be Ubed only for examination at various intervals and all papers will be graded In the cuBtomary manner. The scheme Is headed by C. G. Thompson, man ager of a film service and is backed by reprettentatlve business men. NEW GRAVITY WATER SYSTEM AT Ml UNO Ml'LINO, Ore., Jan. 26. Springs two miles distant, at an elevation of 200 feet, have made possible a grav ity water systetn for residents of Mul Ino. The- elevation furnishes 110 pounds pressure. The capacity of the present plant Is sufficient to secure a flow of 50.000 gallons a day. The water from these springs Is stored In a concrete reservoir. Three Inch mains are tapped for resident use. Local capital has financed and put In the system at a cost to date of nearly $2600. There Will be some additional expense necessary. CHURCH WORKERS ASK THAT ALABAMA BE DRY MONTGOMERY. Ala . Jan it. To frame a law providing for state wide prohibition, hundreds of dele gates to the Alabama Anti-Saloon league convention are in session here odav. Thnrrh and Sundav achool workers ar Dredominant. The con- vention will laat two days and will.T. Scott, chairman of the board of dl- urge the passage of the law by the state legislature. SEED AMENDMENT KILLED IN THE 1IOCSE WASHINGTON. Jan. 2. By a vote of (6 to 29, the house killed the amendment to the ag ricultural appropriation bill In tended to end government dis tribution of free seeds through congressmen. HOLD DEPUTIES FOR 4. fstMMMtWmOiif, jNKMt One of the Wonndwl RoovcR, N. .1.. Strikers. Twenty-two of the special deputy pitched battlo with eight hundred enmloves of the fertilizer plants at Roosevelt, J.. nave ucm held on $3000 ball each by Justlco letfclsamiSslSJSBCTWL'BBiWf WITH f 'W A-'. ' - T'T" hS V-tf V. .V V wf. V ' v I n -i tr vN Mr- I i V A lh mm $ Jft KEWS OF FARM AND RAXGE W'alhi Walls Oraln IH Harlej which has been ascending with wheat during the past six days, has outstrip ped the more widely known cereal, says a report from Walla Walla. Bar ley Is now worth $30 and there are few nfferines on the market More than half the crop remains to be sold. About 10 per cent of the wheat crop remains In the valley, but there is a great proportion of this in the hands of mills and warehouse companies. Most of the farmers have come to the belief that the limit has Just about been reached, and are Blowly turning their grain on the market. Dealers are now offering 1 for the prewent season's crop, with an ad vance of 33 1-3 per cent cash on con tract. One offer of $110 with 25 per cent cash down was offered last week, ii Is said. Few farmers are willing to contract, however, with prices ai me j resent level. VOICE TRAVELS FOR 3400 MILES ON TELEPHONE WIRE LOCAL OFFICE CATCHES CON VERSATION BETWEEN FRIS CO AND NEW YORK. 1876 Bofeton to Cambridge 2 miles mi Boston to Providence 45mllea 184 New York to Boston 235 miles 1S92 New York to Chicago 900 miles 1911 New York to Denver 2,100 miles 1915 New York to fan Francisco S.0' l,es New York has talked to San Fran cisco and San Francisco has answer ed. The human voice, spoken into a telephone transmitter and propelled by the almost infinitesimal power of the breath, has traveled 2,400 miles. Manager Mable of the local telephone plant last evening received over the wire copies of the messages sent across the continent almost as soon as they were transmitted. The conversation over the wire jes- l.rilii. -a na tha furiTinl ODenlniT Of the first transcontinental telephone line Joining the Pacific and Atlantic. It Is fitting that the first conversa tion over the wires should be between Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone, and Thomas A. Wat son, who made the first telephone and who first heard a spoken word over the wire. Mr. Bell was in the office of the American Telephone & Telegraph company at 15 Dey Mreet, wnne -Mr. Waton was on the sixth floor of the Grunt Avenue building at San Fran cisco. Following the Conversation between San Francisco and New York, Theo dore N. Vail, president of the Ameri can Telephone & Telegraph compan telephoned from his home at Jeykell Island off the coast of Georgia. 1.200 miles south of New York, to Thomas 'A. Watson at San Francisco. Mr. Vails voice rang out clear and distinct over 4,600 miles of wire. Mr. Watson congratulated Mr. Vll upon the wonderful organization : which had made transcontinental tel ephone service possible. Mr. Henry rectors of the Pacific Telephone and TelegraDh company then ' addressed Mr. Vail. Later in the afternoon Pres ident Wilson from the White House in Washington, telephoned to Mr. C, C. Moore, president of the Panama Pacific International exposition. Still, no literacy test will bear out the man who looks for a gas leak with a lighted match. Public Dane Next Friday. Big public dance Friday night, Jan uary 29th in Moose hall. United Or chestra. All are Invited. Good time assured. Adm'sslon 60c. Adv. KILLING IN STRIKE RIOT Suydam of the Wuarter sessions court at New Brunswii-k, N. J., to answer to the charge of manslaughter which was Incorporated In the warrants on which they wrre arrested. Tlio fisht of January 19 resulted !n one striker wounded. d and twenty o'.hvis Shoe THIS We have one extra good lot of mens work shoes, welt soles, calf leather, sizes 8, 9 and 1 0 regular $3.50 sellers, Special this week $2.65 25 pairs mens high top shoes, good solid shoes 12 in. to 16 in. tops, values to $6.50, extra Special this week- S4 We are agents for the John Pilling Guar teed Shoes for Boys, sizes 2 1-2 to 6, 52.25 and 52.50 The Alexander Dept. Store Pendleton's Eiggeet and Pest Dept. Store. We give S. St II. Green Trading Stamps. SlOO-Milo Line Ready. SAN FRANCISjTO. Jan. 26. May or Rolph will "call up" Mayor Mltchel, of New York, and, over 3400 miles of desert, mountain, snow and water, extend a cordial Invitation to visit San Francisco to see the exposi tion. The brief ceremony of opening the transcontinental telephone I?ne will be witnessed by a large gathering of city, state, federal and exposition of ficials, cltliens and members of me Pacific Telephone It Telegraph com pany. It is Dredicted that the event ana those who participated actively in the Inauguration will become a subject or historical Interest. The officials of the telephone company have arranged to make the opening of the wire an auspicious occasion. The room In which the telephone Is located In the company building has been decorated. A special program. Including several features, has been arranged. ' It is believed there will be no dif ficulty In establishing a connection between San Francisco and New York although officials of the company say that the test is being made at a 1 1 1 1 j 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 : 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ( 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 IhallowellI I CONCERT COMPANY I OF CHICAGO TEN REAL ARTISTS S In presenting this organlxatlon to the public the manager wishes 5 to announce the talent of the Ilallowell Concert Company is composed 2 of musicians who have been with such organlxatlons as Arthur Try- S 5 or, R. Kryl Bands, Chicago and Minneapolis Symphony Orchestras, ZS and are graduates of the best musical schools of America and foreign rr S countries. They are all soloist as well as ensemble players, s John H. Wentxel, baritone. A pupil of Oscar Saenger formerly s E with the Madam Butterfly Grand Opera Co., has a deep, rich voice pj w th a large range. I One Night Only Feb. 3, 1915 H Admission 75c. Children, 25c. THE ALTA THEATRE riiiuiiiiiiinuiiiiiiii;i!niiiiii!iiiiiiii!!iiiiiiiiiiuniiiiii!iiiiiii!ui;!iiiiiiiiiinii;iii!iiii? 1 LiU TUESDAY WEDNESDAY "The Self Defense" Bert Hadley Violet Mersereau Wm. Shay A good offering, well photographed and "De Feet of Father" Flirtation Costs Him Roll and Daughter A comedy novelty in which the entire story is told by showing only the feet of the various character "Girl of the Pines" Bert H&dley Edna Maison Joe King experiences of a girl masquerading as a boy NUF ittmii Specials WEEK - 35 time of the year when severe climatic conditions have to be contended with. When a man falls he to hit the bottom. never seems THE TRICK SHE PAYS. There Is hardly an American wom an nowadays who can keep pace with the demands made upon her time and energy without paying the penalty of Ill-health. It may be that dreadful backache, dragging pains, headache nervousness or the tortures of a dis placement. It Is the price he pays. t-.io,i rmnnund X ijjiiaiu ' w . , cornea as a boon and a blessing. A simple remedy made from roots and herbs which brings glorious health to suffering women. Adv. JlIIIIZIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIZIIlIIIIIIII2tIlIIIIIIIl 1 F. E. Van Dusen General Contractor and S s Superintendent. PEXDLETOX, OREGON. E iiniiiiuimiiiiiniiiuimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii II E I 1 absorbi insr SAID" ttmrm swnsm I