East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, April 14, 1915, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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DAILY EAST PRECOMA N. PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1915,
PAGE FIVE
U i
TRY ! TRY
KNIGHT'S FAMOUS GOODS OUR FRESH VEGETABLES
CENTRAL MARKET CENTRAL MARKET
'73 Phone 33 173 . Phono 33
The Expression of the Highest
Perfection in Meats
USE
"PEMECO" PENDLETON MEAT
CENTRAL MARKET
TtT
Phone
LOCALfS
Q Advertising ia Brief
BATBS.
Ptt IhH first loMrttoa 1M
Pr lloe, additional tsMrUoa....M
Pet IIm. par aoata 11.09
lie local take foe lss tbsa &.
Csant ordinary wonts to line.
Locals will aot kt Usoa or or Ue
aoao tad renltUace Bust accost
paaj arte.
Tot fuel foe five.
Furnished rooms in the Nye Apart
sseat Bouse, SO! Water street.
Far sale New Bconomy Chief
cream separator. Inquire lit Thomp
on. t Fir room house for aale oa north
aide. Corner lot Improved. Address
"W this effiee,
Jetia Rosen berg, watchmaker and
Jeweler, Court and Cottoaweeo. All
work guaranteed.
Terr many people desire to boy
laada la eastern Oregon. What have
yon to offer, and price? N. Berkeley.
Bxperlenced fanner wants to rent
ranch and buy an outfit Will trade
valuable city property In exchange.
Inquire at The Hub.
Wanted Experienced girl with
good references for general house
work. Inquire (14 Lewis street
Phone 711 J.
Isaae Jay, the blacksmith, horse
shoe r and wheelwright. Is still doing
business at hla old stand, 631 Cotton
wood street.
Millinery of today
Fashion has decreed to the days of yore, this with the
touch of the present up to date grace and style presents
to you the old new fashioned girl.
Today's hats for the mother, daughter and child, mod
erately priced.
CARRIER MILLINERY
740 Mala Stroe.
qv Oargoins Daily
Green Tea Special blend, pound 30?
English Breakfast Tea Bulk, 3 pounds $1.0Q
Dill Pickles Fresh stock, quart 20?
Bulk Lard Pound 15
Freh Roat Peanuts Quart 10
VEGETABLES
Carrots, Beets, Green Onions, Celery, Cauliflower,
Spinach Grass, Tomatoes, Lettuce, Rhubarb, Radishes
FRUITS Fresh and Dry
Oranges, Grape Fruit, Bananas, Berries, Apples,
Peaches, Lemons.
SPECIALS
Green Chili Cheese Package 15
Bluhill Cheese Plain, package 15
Young Americans Large size $1.00
Cream Brick Fancy stock, pound 30f
PICNIC HAMS Extra choice, special cure, select ham ;
average size $1.00 to $1.25
Shipment weekly.
THE SPECIALTY
Thono 476. Next Door to
PEMECO-
EMECO" QUALITY
33
173"
HAMS LARDS BACONS-
Bedding plants, baskets. Forshaw
For rent Three furnished house
keeping rooms. Apply 511 Lllleth.
Furnished housekeeping rooms, 813
Thompson.
Wanted Woman to cook on
ranch. Phone 14FS.
Black Minorca eggs for hatching,
11.00 per setting, 15.00 per hundred.
U IJoyd, S01 E. Court.
For rent Nice front room, also
suite of housekeeping rooms, 10 Wa
ter street, Main street block,
For sale 4 1-J acre tract and
modern seven room house in River
side. Address R. H. Patton, care this
office.
Dunham, Brownlow A Payne, con
tractors, builders, job work. EsU
mates and plana furnished. Golden
Rule Hotel basement Phone Ml J.
The Alta Hoase and Barn. Head
quarters for farmers and stockmen.
Call aad see us. Stephenson Bng
lar, proprietors, phone 44T. 11
Beat Alta street.
For Bale II fe. cut, 14 la. cylin
der Holt Combine, II horse equaliser,
good condition. IttMO.'F. O. B.
Kennewlck. Wash. 8. D. L. Rose,
Athena, Ore. ,
"Mutt" takes the big loads and
"Jeff shows the speed. Penland
Bros, haul anything and reasonable
Furniture van and storage warehouse
Office 147 Main street Phone 111.
Wanted A neat appearing young
man with an ear for music to travel.
Must have capital to finance himself.
State In first letter how much of an
Investment It will be possible for you
to make as a security, if with your
own eyes you see our men make fifty
Telephone 413
CASH GROCERY
Quelle Cafe, 628 Main.
l4
TRY
TO KEEP YOUR MONEY
working in Pendleton and
Umatilla County.
CENTRAL MARKET
Phone
33
J
dollars per week. All correspondence
Ignored without information and ret-jby
erences. Address, T. C.
Vanslckle,
Walla Walla, Wash.
For rent Grocery store, with fix
tures; also butcher outfit and dellv-
ery wagon, on West Alta street. In-
quire 00 Wet Webb or phone 42L
For Sale Very Itrasoaable,
Modern 7-room huse and 7 Iota
abbtit II blocks frtm town 1 block
from paved streets. Suitable for
chicken falsing and gardening. In
gn4re "Mm. c. A.," this office. Adv
Xotloe to the pttbtle.
On and after this date I will not
pay or be responsible for any bills
charged to my personal account
Dated April I, 1915.
WILL LANE.
flood Coal aad Wood.
Our Rock Bprtnga coal bums dean
giving you more heat and leas dirt
for yonr money. Good dry wood
that doesnt Mil. lut burns. Also
slabs and kindling. Protect yourself
from cold and coat order from B.
U Burroughs, phone i Adv.
Notice. . . ,
Big dance at Moose Hall Thursday
evening, April 15th, given under the
auspices of Moose Lodge No. 780.
Everyone invited. Good music. Ad
mixslon 50 cents. Adv.
IN BAN KRCPTCY.
In tlx; District Court of the IJnltcd
State for the District of Oretcon.
In the matter of Jesse D. Holden, a
Bankrupt.
To the creditors of Jesse D. Holden,
of Pendleton, In the County of
Umatilla and District aforesaid,
Bankrupt
Notice Is hereby given that on the
11th day of April, A. D. 1915, the
said Jesse D. Holden was duly ad
judicated a bankrupt and that the
first meeting of his creditors will be
held at the office of the undersigned
referee ln bankruptcy at Pendleton.i
Umatilla County, Oregon, on April
the 27th, A. D. 1915, at 10 o'clock
a. m. of said day, at which time and
place the creditors may attend, prove
their claims, appoint a trustee, ex
amine the bankrupt, and transact
such other business as may properly
come before the said meeting.
Done and dated at Pendleton, Ore
gon, this 13th day of April, A. D.
1815. THOS. FITZ GERALD,
Referee In Bankruptcy
CANADIAN SHIPS ARE
RIVALS OF YANKEE'S
CLEVELAND, April 14. Opportu
nity for an American monopoly of
shipping between ports In the United
States and South America Is threat
ened by Canadians, who are now op
erating more than half of the ships
plying on the Great Lakes.
Canadian vessel owners, anticipat
ing a long period of business depres
sion in the dominion as the result
of the war, declare they will send B0
ships through the Wellnnd canal,
equip them for ocean traffic and go
after the South American trade.
At the present time there are on
the lakes over 100 Canadian vessel?,
each of 2200 tons capacity, which Is
small enough to pass through the
Welland canal and large enough for
ocean traffic. On the Great Lakes
there are nbout twenty-five of the
vessels, owned In the United States
Many of these Canadian boats will
be sent through the canal, down the
St. Lawrence and to the coast.
SCHOLASTIC HONORS
ARE WON BY GIRLS
BOULDER, Colo., Acrll 14. Schol
aatlo honors to the girls again. The
smartest students at the University of
Colorado, according to official marks,
are the women students, with an av
erage of 81.02. The general average
of the men was 77.15. Members of
fraternities, however, averaged lower
than athletes and non-fraternity men.
A 14-year limit for common occu
pations was established ln Alabama
this year to go Into effect in 1916.
thus reducing the number of states
law also contains a 11-year limit for
mines and regulates street trading
and the night messenger service.
H Luyytiai. ItiLII llUlijl
M. D, Orange, well known Juniper
farmer, wu In the city yesterday.-
James H. E. Scott, Milton attorney,
la a business visitor here today.
Marvin Watts, manager of the
flouring mill at Athena, has been here
today.
J. M. Scarborough, well known Her
mlston merchant la a visitor In the
city today.
J. B. Saylor has been in the city
today on a buninens trip from hla
home at Milton.
Leon Cohen, prominent local mer
chant, left yesterday for Portland on
4 short business trip.
Superintendent William Bolllns of
the O.-W. R. N. Co.. Is In Pendleton
today on a trip of Inspection.
J. W. Brooke, Walla Walla attor
ney who was Interested In a case on
trial yesterday, was a guest of the
Pendleton.
Jack A. Gibson and family returned
, Sunday from Dallas, Ore., where they
had been in attendance upon Mr. Gib
son's mother who Is still very 111.
Social lA strike.
MILAN. April 14. A general strike
of all workmen was launched In a
protest against the killing of a so
cialist by policemen Sunday during
an anti-war demonstration. Great
pressure was brought to bear In an
effort to prevent calling the strike on
the ground the action would place
Italy In an unfavorable light abroad.
READJUSTMENT OF
COAL RATES WANTED
CHICAGO,
April 14. Readjust-
nient of
coal and coke rates, proposed
rn railroads in the "western ,
wertern
i u v wri'ifi ii in uuauH in nie h PHiern
advance rate'' caae. was arirued todav
in the interstate commerce commls-1
sion's investigation. Local coal oper- (
aiors oi iiunou, unio, inaiana, uma-
homa and other middle western Btates
opposed proposed rate increases.
Are breach of promUe suits actually
more numerous ln the springtime, or
do they merely seem so?
PROHIBITION IN ENGLAND.
(Continued from Page 1.)
side of the wedge between Saint
Mlhiel and Polnt-a-Mousson. Three
times they advanced In attempts to
take the strong German positions in
the A illy forest, but were repulsed with
fixed bayonets after a bloody hand to
hand encounter, It was declared.
BERLIN, April 14. At least 600,-
000 Russians have been killed, are
missing or wounded since the beginn
ing of the Carpathian fighting, ac
cording to semi-official report Of
ficial reports showthe Russians have
lost 71,000 troops and . 608 officers
since the war opened.
(Continued on Page 1.)
Mrs. Jerome Troxell and Mrs. Ross
Carney entertained six tables at Five
Hundred Tuesday evening
home of Mrs. Carney.
at the
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Mentzer have
returned from an extended trip
through the east and south. They
returned by way of San Francisco
and visited the Panama-Pacific fair.
Yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock
In the office of Recorder Thomas
Fits Gerald, Oliver Smith and Miss
Catherine Lander of this city were
united in marriage, Recorder Flti
Gerald officiating. The only witness
es were Mrs. O. A. Stolts and John
Kearney.
4
4 CONGRESSIONAL UNION
4 CAN ACXDMPLISH MISSION
4 e O
NEW YORK, April 14 The Con
gressional Union hnres to exist only
one year, and In thnt space of time
to accomplish Its mission national
kuffrage, said Mrs. William Kent, of
California, a delegate to the confer
ence. In a year the union hopes to
'pass the Susan B. Anthony
amend-
pnssed, It has assurances that the 27
Si
states needed would vote for It. thus:tion hut nn .mi.. nntnnf i.
j giving nation wicio sunrage.
444444444444
MAftRlEH AGAIN. V
LONDON', April 14. Announce
ment is received here from Paris that
Mrs. Cornelia Baxter Tevis, eldest
daughter of Governor and Mrs.
George W. Baxter of Knoxville, Tenn.
has been married to Evelyn Tolin of
' London. Mrs. Tevis was given awav
by the American ambassador, it is
re"orted At . Cornelia Baxter,
marriei1 HuUh Tevis, California mil
Ilonalre who dled ln Japan on their
honeymoon. She married Hart Mc-,
u.v ,
ke lhe divorced Pittsburg million-
aire
in 1905 and went to Paris to
live.
They were divorced and she re-
sumed the name of Tevis.
PltOPKIKTOR INDICTED.
(Continued from page one.)
the French government, for 190.
Sheriff Taylor, who happens to be
president of the Round-up, and S.
R. Thompson, livestock director.
learned of the theft and recovered
the animal, later re-selling him to
Hustont Simms was arersted by
Sheriff Taylor and la said to have
made the statement that he acted
upon inBi rue uons irom i em pie.
Both Temple and Simms were ar-
ra trrtaA fVila mnrnlnai ami iri van until
p,m m 1 m nin.v
o
i - ( f I
m fcrrr-- 7
plead. They were placed under
J1500 bonds, Temple furnishing his
and Simms going back to Jail. Tern-1?
pie has retained W. M. Peterson to,
defend him, while Simms has em
plcyed L. A. Esteb of Echo.
Other Indictments.
Six other indictments were returned District Attorney Charles F. Clyne.
this morning by the grand Jury but Especially will this be true of
bench warrants had to be Issued fortuity cases, Clyne declared. The
fm,r nd thev have not vet been functions of the commission will
,a triiio n'K-fu nhn I. i.
leed to have robbed Fred Snellen-
berg in a local rooming house and
K..niinti of
nnlatt n-na inriipteri fnr larcpnv and
Ray Clark of Milton was indicted for
larceny not ln a dwelling. Clark was
arraigned this morning, vv. L. Hol-
brook was arraigned yesterday after
noon and this morning pleaded not
guilty to larceny. S. A. Newberry is
defending him.
Among the witnesses being exam
ined this morning were seven young
men who were at German Hall Sat
urday night when the cutting affair!
took place.
WHEAT CROP.
(Continued from page one.)
tions the spring wheat is Indicating
an uncommon yield, although the
shortage in rainfall will not be felt
for some time.
One thing noticeable about the
wheat acreage this season in the
Pacific northwest is that In the sec
tions where the greatest output perl
acre is generally shown, the increase
in acreage has been limited some
showing practically none. The gains
have almost Invariably been made in
the lighter land sections. Therefore
do not mean as much to the total out
put as would be the case If the In
crease was spread over the entire
Pacific northwest.
Umatilla Gain Small.
In Walla Walla county. Wash., arud
In Umatilla county, Oregon, the
gains have been practically too small
to consider. In the Big Bend an3
Palouse the showing is better so far
as acreage Is concerned. In Sher
man and Gilliam counties, as well
as Morrow, county, Oregon, the in- f
crease In the planted area Is morel
noticeable. Central Oregon likew ise I
has a very liberal increase In thel
wheat planting over a year ago, al
though last year's showing was com-!
paratively small, due to unfavorable!
climatic conditions. In the Willnm-j
ctte valley there has likewise been!
a liberal Increase ln the area of all!
grains and down in the Klamath
county a similar condition is shown.
Baker county has some Increase In
the planted area of wheat.
The Cropa in Idaho.
In Idaho the increase in wheat
planting is marked in some localities
and practically nominal elsewhere.
Total acreage of the state, however.
Is fractionary greater than In 1914.
Coarse grain acreage also prom
ises to be heavier than a year ago
end crop prospects are excellent.
Reports from various fruit growing
centers of the Taclflc northwest
practically assure the greatest com
bined crop of fruits in the history of
the Tacific northwest. Apple blos
soming was much more profuse than
a year ago. The cherry trees were
simply loaded with blossoms and
most of them have already "set "
The pear crop shows n similar con
dition in most sections, reaches have
Keen nurt somewhat In a few sec
J generally expected. I
nillilllltlintillllllllllllllllllllinillllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllilllllllllll
j p-y (3
Because we undersell the other fellow. We don't care
what the other fellow's pricet are, you can always buy 2
the same good at the HUB for let. E
wa
BOYS' KNICKERBOCKER SUITS
Boys' Norfolk styles in grey, brown, serge and plaids for S
fl.35, ? 1.05, ?2.95, ?3.95, ?l.35.
Men's suits in serge, plain brown and plaid for ... 97.50 E
Young men's suits with long pants for ? 1.85 E
Men's $1.00 overalls C0 E
Men's heavy bib overalls for 45 E
Men's wool pants for $1.09 E
Men's khaki pants with cuff bottom for 95? E
Men's corduroys for...:. $1.45, $1.95, $2.45, $2.85
Men's heavy work shirts 3Se E
Men's black sateen shirts 45
The big Jumbo shirts, triple stitched seam for 98t E
One lot of men's hats, all late styles, not any old thing but E
right up to date styles for $1.00 E
Another lot of better grade for f 1.85 E
John B. Stetson No. 1 quality hats $5 grade for.. $3.35 E
John B, Stetson hats, $4 grade for $2.95 H
s
S
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AFROPI ANP C.TIINTS
VrT c-An
ARRANGED FOR VETS
I WASHINGTON. Anril 14 Mem
bers of the arrangements committee
for the G. A. R., encampment to be
held in Washington this fall said to
day that a fine aeroplane exhibition
was assured for the gathering. While
the army's machines are all ln the
far west it was stated that the navy
planes in the east would be available.
Secretary Daniels has expressed much
Interest In illustrating to the veter-
I ans all such military developments
i since their days of active service.
TRADE COMMISSION TO
TAKE CARE OF TRUSTS
CHICAGO, April 14. Federal dis-
,trict attorneys in general and the
department of justice ln particular
b reeved by vigilant Inveetl-
anti-trust violations by the automat
ic workings of the federal trade
commission, according to Federal
practically reduce the number of
district attorneys take Initia
live In instigating Investigations to
an almost Irreducible minimum, he
; believes.
I do not mean me iruae commis
0E3EQ0U
TONIGHT AND
m 9 t m m E a e i
' J Hi
0
TBeOhUB
t -r it 1
V n I
t f ImI LI Ua mam Smm
THE Hypnotist
Special Prices . 15c 25c 35c
r ' "i w " '" "l r ""' P"" m
Tuesday and
Mary Fuller
in a delightful
THREE REEL COMEDY
Soap king's daughter marries scion of Knickehbocker
family while dueal suitor captures mamma.
(
Jods Lit Ho
In which a 1915 racing model auto is matched against the
village beau's 1902 car. The story of a faithful sweet
heart, the frustrated elopement and a mery chase.
ff f'!
1 1 1 f It 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 It 'I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 tFE
sion shall be a permanent Inquisitori
al body seeking evidence to convict
business men," he said. "But list
functions are to a great extent reme
dial and restraining. It likely will
be protective of legitimate interests
and preventive of corporations violat
ing commerce laws."
Quickly, Relics
Without Distens
The congestion of waste and
refuse from the stomach, ferment
ing ln the bowels, generates pois
onous gasea that occasion distress
and Invite serious Illness. Health
and comfort demand that this con
gestion be speedily relieved and the
foul mass expelled.
The well-founded objection most
people have to the violence of ca
thartic and purgative agents is
overcome by using the combination,
of simple laxative herbs with pep
sin that Is sold in drug stores under
the name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin. A dose at night brings re
let next morning, without discom
fort or inconvenience. A free trial
bottle can be obtained by writing to
Dr. VT. B. Caldwell, 45J Washing
ton St., Monticello, Ilia.
TIKATii
ALL WEEK
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Wednesday
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