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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1915)
EIGHT PACES DAILY EAST ORECONIAS, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1915, PAGE FIVE rill JEHU lis Tdo Flavor of Pomoco That Leaves That Satisfied Feeling . The Quality of Made in Pendleton Meati is Proven By the Incre&sintf Demand GET THE BEST, ORDER "PEMECO" JMNCH MEATS KOASTS "Fe.mcoo'' Lunch Tongue 'Tcmecti" Pot Uoaats "Pcmeco" Jellied Tongue "IVmeeo" Prime Rottala "I'fitipco" Rolled Hum "Pemeco" I'ork Roasts "Pemeco" Head Cheese "Pemeco" Leg Mutton "Pemeco" Minced Hani "Pcineco" Veal Roasts llll'K I'HI ITS VKtiKT.lUM-S Rip Red yimatoc. , String I'.t ans fancy Peuohes .w corn Concord Grapes ,.w n,.etH Ijirge Ripe Hunanas Young Onions Fancy Cooking Apples Radishes I AM V ( IIKKSK KNK.l.TS Full Cream Cheese Snur Pickles Wisconsin Hrlck Cheese Sweet Pick Irs Fancy Hwlss Cheese Chow Chow , Itomatourn Mason yuarta Jelly , F.lkhorn Chill Cheese Fancy Olives. SERVICE QUALITY SANITATION The Central (market PHONE 455 LOCALS Advertising in Brief HATKft. IVr line first Insertion 10c Per Mn, ltlliiittml Insertiuii. . . . fe per Hue, mt month II oti No locals tnkt-a for less tluui -or. Count 6 ordinary Heron to line. Locals will not W tnken iver the phone and remittance wast accom pany order. Hoomii and board 117 Grange St Wanted Girl for general house work. Mrs. TrornliU-y. 1'hone il6. Kelly-g Auto Iti'lMilr Sliop. All work guaranteed. Electric starters a specialty. Second hand cars bought and sold. Cottonwood street, opposite city hall. Phone 633 W. H. Morrison la in from Helix for the day. John Hughe of Heppner spent yes terday and last night in the city. Mr. and Mrs. llnrdo McDonald of Walla Walla are among the visitors in the city. H, Norton Hobo, editor of the Stan field Standard, in a visitor in the city today. John Banister, prominent Weston resident, la in the city today on a bus iness mission. Suit. I. K. Young and Frof. a. C. Hampton motored to Walla Walla and return vestcrday. John Callender, well known resident of Athena Is in town today on his way home from Sun Francisco where j he visited the fair. Hp was accotn-l panied to California by his to dau-' ghterh who live in Portland. House for Salo. Two acre trad, "-room modern house. Large barn and chicken house. Matlock and W. liluff. Terms Phone 3.0SJ. Adv. For fuel fone fit. Want to rent or buy used electrie vibrator. Address Box 706, City. For rent Four room modern house. Phone J9I-W evenlngi. For sale Five acre tract with good house In Riverside. Address Box 15 R. F. I). 1, City John Rosenberg, Court street watchmaker and Jeweler. All work guaranteed. Very many people desire to buy lands In eastern Oregon. What have you to offer, and price? N. Berkeley. Old papers for sale; tleO In bundles Good for starting fires, etc. 10s bundU This office. Furnished rooms for light house keeping and lodging at lirown hall. Thone 350. 1 ' For aale at a sacrifice, If taken within the next week, my home at 1 203 East Court street. Phone R. C Jury, 20M. , "Mutt" takes the big loads and "Jeff" shows the speed. Penland Pros, haul anything and reasonable, j Furniture van and storage warehouse. Office 147 Main street. Phone 339. For sale One 36" Ohio Alfalfa! cutter, und J8 H. P. gas engine. Write or Inquire of P. H. Buchholi Co.,! Htanfield. Oregon. Why pay 1125 an acre for wheat, land when I can sell you land as good from 125 to 130 an acre. Write' M. Fltzmatirice, Condon, Oregon. For rent Nicely furnlshel front apartment In Mnnternstelll Building.' Inquire Flat 2. Mnnterastelll Bldg.j or 621 Willow street. ) Competent cook and housekeeper wishes employment on farm. Per manent position. Address Mrs. C. Ladd, 513 Railroad ave. W. For trade A new, modern 110 bbl. electric flour mill located In valley town 20,000 population, will trade for eastern Oregon or Washington, wheat land. Price 122,000. For par ticulars write 566 Trade Street, Sa lem, Ore. PtihllC Daiioe Tonight. Moose HaJl. The public Is cordlaly Invited to attend the regular Saturday night cance tonight In Moose hall. Music by Sawyer's orchestra. Admission, 50 cents. AdV ' For sale. On account of leaving the city, I wish to sell my modern home, 225 Jane street Reasonable terms. Of will rent to right party. Call at house or E. O. office, (Adv.) SCOTT BCTLER. Fur Kali-. My home place on McKay creek of 320 acres, 160 In summer fallow, 100 In stubble and 20 In alfalfa. Will aell stock and equipment with place. If desired. Write or see Charles Man ning, Pilot Rock, Ore. Adv. For Kale fiieop. One Buffalo Pitta 25 H. P. traction engine In good condition. Inquire Van Tclten Lumber Co. Adv Hair dressing and dyeing, mani curing, shampooing, scientific elec tric facial massage and scalp treat ment, ladles or gentlemen. Combines made to any design. Hair and orna ments at reasonable prices. Miss Hart, at Hansen Millinery. No Through Rates in Future Over the Denver, Rio Grande OHDF.lt OF INTERSTATE OM- M1SSION FINALLY SETTLF.S FAMOI s DISPITE, Hereafter it will lie Impossible for Pendleton people to purchase rUl ay tickets straight through to toe ta.'t via the Denver & Rio Grande This in substance , Is the effect oi" the decision of the interstate cc m i.ieree rommiwlun this week in tht famous Ogdcn Gateway case. It will be mcessary, If local people wish to uo by way of the It. & R. G. to Mop at Ogden and purchase a ticket on lr-.i that point. in ISM the I'nlon Pacific announc ed its Intention to discontinue the lim-i-change with the D. & R. Q at titdeti of piuwnger business t'i or lro!:i points on the Oregon Short Line, a part of the Union Puciflc stem. The l. & K. G. contended that as these rales had been In ef fect about 1 years they should not lie cancelled. The 1'nion Pacific stood upon what It warded nj Its legal rih'hi to retire from an am nge menl which abort hauled Its own lines and contended that It was entitled to the long haul on passenger traffic' to and from terrritoy served by the Oregon Hhort Line. The prlrcipal re;.son assigned was the large expen ditures made by the I'nlon Tacific In the construction of branch lines, particularly to Yellowstone Park and in Oregon Short Line territory, the testimony. Indicating that in recent eai $109,000,000 were expended In the construction of branches for the purpose of enabling the Union Pa-, rifle to serve Idaho and adjacent ter ritory, while the D. ft R. G. on the oilier hand had not Invested i dol lar In Oregon Short Line territory. Commissioner Harlan in announcing th majority opinion of the commis sion, says: , Good Cool and Wood. Our Rock Springs coal burns clean giving you more heat and less dirt for your money. Good dry wood thst doesn't boll, but birns. Also labs and kindling. Protect yourself from cold and cost order from B L. Burroughs, phone I. Adv. VvIhI Attacks on Riga. PKTP.OG HAD, Aug. 12. A Zeppe lin bombarded Fort Vst-Dvlnst. at the mouth of the Gulf of Riga. German aeroplanes are attacking Riga dally. newsy notes of Pendleton Iiii)N Xrw Auto. Arnold Planting of Adams has pur chased n new model V-i'i Huick auto from the Oregon Motor Garage. On Low Gear for 860 MILES Without once stopping the Engine Walla Walla, Wash., to San Francisco, CaL in a FRANKLIN CAR Start: 6:10 A. M., Sunday, August 1, 1915 Finish: 5:50 P. M., Wednesday, August 4, 1915 Mountains or desert practically all the way. Route through Pendleton, Ukiah, Burns, Harney, Lake View in Oregon; Redding, Red Bluff, Win ters and Oakland in California. The hardest test ever given an automobile engine. ' A practical demonstration of direct air cooling and endurance of the Franklin. Car driven by J. W. McCormmach of Pendleton, Ore. Inspected, certified and sealed at start; officially checked at finish. Pendleton Auto Company Phone 541 812 Johnson Street One Icirw Warmer, Today has been one decree warmer than yesterday, the official thermo meter elvini: a maximum temneratnrr of 93 and a minimum last night of .',5. pcrPartforN I Far Vision J V J f mli cornel ityk ( H X2iodTf. With jjr fXjsnzr Part fori Ncar Vision, This Illustration tells the story of the value and convenience of GLASSES For fur and near vision, yet they look exactly like single vision lense. No linos and no cement. For genuine Kryirtuk Ix-nscti see Dale Rothwell, Exclusive Optician American Nat. Bank Bldg. I Phone 609. (Continued From Page Two). Miss Helen Curry of Ij( Grande ar rived at noon today to visit Misses Hel en and Mary Johns while enroute to San Francisco to attend the conven tion of the Gamma Phi Beta sorority. She Is the delegate from the University of Oregon chapter. Mrs. H. S. Garfield left at noon to (lay for the Willamette valley to visit Iter daughter. Mrs. W. 1 Hutton and sister, Mrs. I'ope, have returned from a month's visit In Wonatchee, Waterville ftnd oilier Washington cities. Mr. and Mrs, T. J. Tweedy and Mr. and Mrs. J. l Johnson will leave this evening fur lirhman Springs to spend the Weekend. Mr. Johnson is the su perintendent of construction on the federal building Job. Wheat a I.lttl.- Off. The local w heat market Is reported a little off today, flotations dropping to the 90 cent mark. Farmers are not relling anything. Industrial Haroinctor I'p. l,OS ANGELES, Aug. 14. William tl. Wilson, secretary of the depart ment of labor, said thnt Industrial conditions throughout the country were good "Moreover," he added, "they are Improving. There Is a difference of only 10 per cent between depression and prosperity at any time. The down curving line of depression reached Its lowest point Inst year. There la ngaln an upward sweep, and the line now Is nbove the point repre senting the prosperity of the country In 1009?' ('Union, la., Is lliMNlfd. CLINTON. In.. Aug. 14. A cloud burst struck this city. Ten square block!, Including the business district. tr under four feet of water. Street car service has been suspended. The big tents of a circus playing here were swept away. OHi'irate- To Farmers' Convention. W. W. Harrah, prominent Pendleton farmer, has been notified that he has been chosen as the deleuate from the unions of Oregon and Idaho to attend the national convention of the Farm ers' I'nlon which Is to he held at Omaha beginning Sept. 7. NEWS FROM THE FARM AND RANGE er a successful run of 14 days In his' would injure the early market. The own grain. With a 24-inch separator Lamb Fruit company and the Milton and one 14-foot header he coxered Fruit Growers' Cooperative union considerable territory, 40 acres terns snipped several cars of prunes last; 1)1 best day's run. Mr. York cropped veek. said to be ripe enough for con- 3700 sacks of No. 1 wheat from 2J6 sumption by the time they reached j acres on the east side of Dry creek, the market, which is almost entirely ,-.4rt sacks from .13 acres on his home! east of the Rockies. Milton Eagle. place, and 2973 sacks from 15S ecresj on the Bob Kilgore place. He also Some Chantre. hal 3.i bushels to the acre from SO' '"When water becomes ice." asked; acres of spring-sown barley. Wh'le the teacher, "what is the great! he has had a better average in other change that takes place " X. to Portland. Livestock Agent Danl ,vl,,, 1liB ,,- h.,r.0, nvstm, im.iJml,! ik. li.iu w "i. in- .,,,.. in 2 Otrs of Ca'lle Shipped Eigh teen cars of cattle from the I'kiah and Camas Prairie country are being loaded today at Pilot Hock for ship ment to the Portland market and eight more cars are being loaded in this cit to go over the O.-W. R. &!. u. w.. m,- rtiMnticfio.i CI. irk expects to ship out several; cats next week to Kansas City, too. er. price.' Indies Home Journal. KIDS WANTED. For sale One two story, eight room, brick school building, situate on school grounds at Athena, I'ma tlla County, Oregon. Sealed bids wilt be received by the board up to and until 6 o'clock p. m. August 2Sth. 1?15. The board reserves the riht to reject any and all bids. Reason able time will be allowed to remove building from premises. For further j Information enquire ot the office of ' B. B. Richards. Athena. Oregon. ERNEST A. ZERRA. Clerk of School District No. 23. $2.V(HI0 K-tato lrlmti, " " The last will aild testament of the late Jnseuh Harris was admitted to probate today. The personal proper ty of the estate in this county is esti mated to be of the value (if JJS.OOO. I'y the terms of the will the widow Secflroa 17700 in addition to 13300 pre viously advanced, and this amount Is to be hold In trust for her by two sons, Edward nd Robert Harris. The bal. nnce of the estate Is divided equally between the eight children. In addi tion to 'the personal property, deceas ed owned real property In Mitirefola Many Hunting PnrUc !av6. The deer find grouse season being scheduled to open. In the morning, many hunters are leaving this after noon for the haunts of the game. The woods will be full of men with guns tomorrow and there will be a general carnage among the bird?. The deer hunters are going Into the far south end while many of the grouse hunters are going into the Mencham country. A party compos ed of V. h. Thompson and son, Ed ward. Sam R. Thompson and Cecil Curl left this afternoon for the Ma- iham hills and another party going In the same vicinity Is composed of C. S King. Dr. F. D. Ingram and Dr. I.. I). Idleman. L. G. Fruxior. Fred Earl and Ray Crystal are going tip iiloni the, Walla Walla river and Dr. M. S. Kern and Fred Lampkln left this afternoon foi Weston mountain The Tromhley-Ross-Drake party end the Mutlock-Estea-Vaughan-Sweek party left this morning fcr the south end About Red Wlient - bushels per acre is .some rhis year, and the Ferguson crop of German Red south of town is the S best yet reported to the Pre-Ss. This variety has yielded well wherever S harvested this season. Differences' of opinion exist relative to Its pro-:r (M llushi-l Me"t A remarkable dnctlve merits. Some give the rea-s yield for this season and an umiMial'sen that it Is two weeks later In ma-, one for any season, was obtained by tm lr.g I'.ian uUlcr wheat, and that it E was hot in a critical stage of devel-!:; rvpment when the excessively hot s sjoncy Farm Makes 10 Bushel' The harvesting of the 200 acres of! wheat at the agency has just been i completed and the yield was found' to bp S"00 bushels, an average of 4"' I u.-ln Is to the acre. ! William 3. Ferguson, one of the KnFt End's largest farmers, from a Min.rter section of the resrvatlon land lie Is handling south of Athena. He had 14S acres of thK tract In Ger man red wlveat which yielded 3.5 a Packs, or approximately 60 bushel" to! that all other varieties of the nore. From a total of 3H0 acres RI,,wn here produced heavily In the same neighborhood he. hid an fiij Introduced, but gradually nvrage yield of between 23 and 24 i cued In yield In aiter years. Fieid"nfo L"niiiiiHiiMiiuniuiiuuiiniiiiiiniiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'-- (Gigantic Unloading Sale 1 the hub I BOYS' CLOTHING ! weather came. Others say that hav-13 ... ... . . n a new variety to the soil of this; Mothers, now is the time to prepare that boy for school. - section. Is the reason lor tne big y.eid und cite in support of the theory's wheat z. when ' less-1 S How-! Lot 1 Boys' Knickerbocker Suits to afc-e 9. ; ru o, th suit $1.00 Lot 2 Boys' Knickerbocker Suits, sizes to 10, sale ru't the suit 1 .0." sacks per acre, the remainder h'''ver. the German Red Is provim: aS L)t 3Your choice of this lot. all si. OS. Sillo ric.' the German red stands up as sirali-'lit j to Way. for it's seed for fall sowing's Is in great demand Athena Tresn a pine pole and cuts beautifully. E A. Dudley planted more than 6'HI acres or it, aim is aiso mm to oe kc- shipped Cars tsnlo Hilaert . s tii. g a big yield. nM(1 ,-lark t fkiah, made a hin- J. M. Ranlster Is getting a pood, nient of five cars of cattle via Pilot: S eron this vear from hl9 East End ttnelr to Portland last Wednesday. S holdings. Although pretty badly The rattle were In first class market: 5 Boys' H. & B. School Shoes ill "down," 75 acres on the obi homoj condition and will bring the top price. . ...., !.... Art ...t-A.i i .fc. ... r.. I'lactr weal i'i ion,,, iuironv, .... i ne nt-rp inpvw in mr .hoiii i,a. Copplck, yielded 1707 sacks of club country. and red chaff While this Is by no While being driven into town the mi ana a poor showing, the same tract rattle became scared at the erhaustls two y,rars ago produced no less than at the pumping station and stamped- s 1S4C sacks. He had a satisfactory j P,j carrying away a fence and ctus- s yield from the Ginn ranch, and SO I ,..g the drivers much worry and pro-Is acres of the sirs, iayior place aver aged about 50 bushels to the acre liis own outfit is now threshing on the Richmond place adjoining town, which Is yielding well. On the res ervation he had an average of 35 bushels per acre from 140 acres. W'oston Ieader. Finishes Harvest. J. . X. York has housed his harvesting outfit, aft- testntlons against said pump until s the;- finally got the festive bovines S tinder control. Pilot Rock Record. Boys' A. B. C Suits ?2.i5. $3.-15 aibl $3.S5 E Boys' Knickerbocker rants in small si.es only, sale price the pair 15 Boys' Knickerbocker School Pants, all sizes, sab- price, the pair !!, U5 and S5r pun metl calf, button or lace, regular .?2.."0 and $;'.0(i values, sizes b 1 to 12, sale price SI. 15 Size 12' j to 2, sale price !f l.5 Sizes 2'i to 5 1 o, sale price ?l .?." i Children's Goodyear Welt Shoes, no better shoes made Sizes to 8. sale price ? I . i. Sizes S'o to 12. sale price JI.15 Sizes 12 a to 2. sale price $l.h5. rj Remember that these shoes sold from $2.2" to ?: th- pair. OKI t'nrs of Prunes About 100 S ears of Italian prunes will have left's Millon-Freewalor this season by toS morrow nU'ht. 75 or SO of them this z week Shields Fruit Co. shipped r.o 23 Sample Stores. c'aimcd they were too green THE HUB 745 MAIN ST. they ; 3 and ?lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllli7