DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1915. PAGE FIVE Exploits of Long Tom to be Made Poem Comparative Losses of Seven Nations in the War if its A 1 i t I Sheriff T. I). Talor I in Athena today. EIGHT PACES PERSONAL MH1H cook ORDER FROM OUR FRESH STOCK OF "PEMECO" BOILED HAM "PEMECO" MINCED HAM "PEMECO" LUNCH TONGUE "PEMECO" HEAD CHEESE "PEMECO" BLOOD SAUSAGE "PEMECO" BOLOGNA The Delicious, Sanitary, Made in Pendleton Kind. KNIGHTS Sweet Midgets Sours Chow Chow Sweet Mixed Large Ripe Watermelons 30 to 50 Choice Ripe Canteloupes, 4 for 25? Fancy Ripo Peaches, Basket 25 Oranges, Bananas, Lemons, Grapes, Apples, String Beans, Radishes, Onions, Corn', Cabbage, Etc. SERVICE QUALITY SANITATION The Central Market PHONE 455 LOCALS Advertising ia Brief HAT EH. Pr lln flint Insertion 10c fa Mue. additional lawrtluii tte Per line, per mouth 11.00 No Itirnla tnko for less ttuin tf.V. Count fl ordinary words to line. Local! will Dot tw taken liter th phoo and rftoittaucc must accom pany order. For fuel fona fi. Roomi and board 117 Grange St. Want to rent or buy uied clectrie vibrator. Addroaa Box 706, City. For Bale Five acre tract with lood noose In Riverside. Addreaa Box 15 R. F. D. 1, City. John Rosenberg, Court atreet watchmaker and jeweler. All work guaranteed. Very many people desire to buy land! In eastern Oregon. Wbat have you to offer, and price? N. Berkeley. Old papers fnr sale; tie.! In bundles Good for starting flrsa, els. 10s bundla. This office. Furnished rooms for light house keeping and lodging at Brown hall. Phone 850. For sale at a sacrifice, If taken within the next week, my home at 1203 Kaet Court street. Phone R. C Jory. 20M. "Mutt" takes the big loads and "Jeff" showa the speed. Penland Drew, haul anything and reasonable. Furniture van and storage warehouse. Office 47 Main street. Phone J3. For sale One 36" Ohio Alfalfa rutter, and 28 H. P. gas engine. Write or Inquire of P. II. Huchholi Co., Ktanfleld, Oregon. Why pay 1125 an acre for wheat land when I can sell you land as good from $25 to (30 an acre. Write M. Flfotmaurlre, Condon, Oregon. Competent cook and housekeeper lahas employment on farm. Per manent position. Address Mrs. C I.add, 11 Railroad ave. W. Kelly's Auto Repair Shop. All work' guaranteed. Electric starters a specialty. Second hand cars bought and sold. Cottonwood street, opposite city hail. Phone (33. Howe for Sale. Two acre tract. 7-room modern house. Largo barn and chicken house. Matlock and W. Uluff. Terms Phone 308J Adv. I "or Sale ttioap. One Buffalo Pitts 25 H. P. traction engine in good condition. Inquire Van Pettcn Lumber Co. Adv. For Sale. On account of leaving the city, I wish to sell my modern home. 228 Jane street. Reasonable terms. Of will rent to right party. Call al house or E. O office. (Adv.) SCOTT BUTLER, JiiuiumiiiiiiimiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiL g Mow Open fllong Kong Cafe; 5 NI NOODLE PARLORS I Noodles i AND 1 Chop Stieyf Outside Tray Orders Specialty. E 5 Boxes for ladles and gentlemen. E S OPEN DAY AND ALL NIGHT mkalsT ao AMiriiS 5 S Special Chicken Dinner E 5 Sundays 5j r 548 Main Street E Next to E. O. Bldg. Plums (03 5 ftiuiiiiwimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii; KNIGHTS Queen Olives Ripe Olive? Stuffed Olives India Relish AMERICAN GIRL INVENTS HOSPITAL DKVICKS. . V.-' . i-i Stud it.. Mivj. If. PARIS, Aug. 17. Miss Grace (.liiKette. an American portrait artist, has been placed at the head of the 1'indnge department In the American ambulance hospital at Neullly, where 7000 compresses, 2000 cotton balls. 4C0 rolled bandages, 300 combines and 1000 fluffs must lie turned out daily. Hawaii Judge Naniod. WASHINGTON. Aug. 17. The president appointed William Whitney federal circuit Judge of Hawaii. Wanted I'nfurnWied three or four room house. Address P. O. box 3S3. For Sale. My home place on McKay creek of 320 acres, 160 In summer fallow, 100 In stubble and 20 In alfalfa. Will sell stock and equipment with place, If desired. Write or see, Charles Man ning, Pilot Rock, Ore. Adv. Good Coal and Wood Our Rock Springs coal burns clean giving you mora heat and less dirt for your money. Good dry wood that doesn't boll, but btrna. Also labs and kindling. Protect yourself from cold and coat order from B L. Burroughs, phons 5. Adv. Aerial Attacks on Rigs. PETROGRAD. Aug. 12. A Zeppe lin bombarded Fort Ust-Dvlnst, at the mouth of the Gulf of Riga. German aeroplanes are attacking Riga dally. Con Dung Low CHOP SUEY NOODLES"?; HOT TA11ALES CHILLI CON CARNE - SPANISH STYLE LUNCHES COFFEE Everything clean and up-to-dat; FIRST CLASS BERV1C1 TEA Sc Package Under State Hotel dor. Wsbb and Cottonwood Sts Phona 1(7 Psndleton, Or f. X Roy L. Zerha of Walla Walla wad in Pendleton, yesterday. Mrs. J. W. Stout of Walla Walla Is a Pendleton visitor. J. ft. Douglas of Ukiah Is down from the south end of the county. C. T. Luce and L A. Flnley of Oles are registered at th St. Ueorge. Mr. and Mrs. Kcott Joseph of Walla Walla were guests of the Pendleton. Sid Say lor, veteran barber of Uma tilla, war in the city yesterday on bus iness. E. E. Elder, a well known farmer of Echo, Is a business visitor In the clt today. John Endicott, local real estate man. li ft today on No. 17 for Portland on a business visit. James li. Perry, local attorney who has been III for some time, Is able to be nn the streets. Teddy Haiiswirth, local naloonman and hunter, returned on 17 today from the mountains around Duncan. Ui-ne Rlanrhett and Torn Hodgins spent Sunday in the Meacham country and each bagged two grouse. James Devlin and Jack Roach left yesterday for Tillamook to represent the local Redmen at the state con vention. Elmer Searcy has returned from a bojourn v(it Lehman Springs and is! considerably Improved In health I through his outing. j W. R. Frey of Vancouver, . B. C, I formerly of this city, is back on a visit with old friends and to look after property interests, W. D. Humphrey, proprietor of the Court street barber shop, Is at Hot Lake taking treatment for a severe attack of lumbago. William Huston, who has been driving a truck for the Waffles has re- lined his Job and gone to work on' the Frank Frazier ranch. F. K. Juild, vice-president of the American National Hank who was called to Hartford. Conn., recently by his father's death, is enroiite home jnd is ejpnted to arrive In Pendleton i nursiiay. Richard Rice, son of ;. M. Rice, re turned on No. 17 from the north fork of the t'matllla where h had been for several days. He had evidence of his prowess as a hunter and fisherman with him. C.M.VKSTOX WALL KAVKS CUTY. (Continued from page 1.1 velocity was 65 to 73 miles an hour, with occasional gusts blowing as high a 90 miles. The only damage thus far caused was the destruction of window panes and insecure woodwork on exposed buildings. A heavy rain fell throughout the j day and last night the streets were filled with water to the curbing. IlaroinotiT Drops to 2. At il o'clock the barometer stood at 2H flat, having fallen from 29.6.1 at noon. It is estimated that 5000 persons left Galveston bv train. Interurtian nnd automobile during the last Si hours, night practically all or the homes, especially those on tho beach, had been evacuated and the j penile gathered in downtown holds and public buildings. Tak Fawn To I'sitn. Ceorge Itancler. who is farming the Roy Raley ranch In the west end of the county, has taken the spo'ted fawn, captured some time ago liy Frank Pedro, to the farm and will raise it there. The little animal had lost its mother and Pedro saved it from starvation. It has been In Pen dleton for several weeks, and has grown quite tame. LANSING AT NEW YORK t .T . h 7r;"'h : ' " '"''rrU'" lf st.nc Rb,rt Lansing, was n,de at I .g he conference on the Mexican situation, at which the .mbaW,do,.s' - H f V1' y r m iLsx r;--., .-e.sfln(riai siHanaiaiaii sm aaniiKraBsv'w'.iss SiSSassRisiai4 IU Kl.Vij IIOIISK. OPTIIK ROlM 11' TO UK IMMORTAIJZEI IN VKR.SK. "Long Tom," redoubtable bucker and leader of the Round-up string of ou.laws. Is to be Immortalized in po etry. R. C. Warriner of Portland, who used to he In the Pendleton country In the early days, has set for himself the task of telling of the renown of the pride of the Round-up in metri cal verse, and has written to his old friend, J. F. Robinson, for data on the life history and pedigree of "Long Tom." Warriner has sung the pralw-i of the Round-up In verse before. Two years ago he wrote "The Buckaroo," and last year composed a companion! poem entitled "The Buckaress." j Roth were published in the Oregon Journal and the East Oregonian. Mr. Warriner Is a great booster for the Round-up and plans on being present this year again. "Long Tom,' before he became a sensation as a huiker, was just a common, ordinary. hard-working farm horse Some seven or eight yei.ni ago he belonged to R. F. Klrk patrlck. well known reservation far mer, and distinguished himself while in the Klrkpatrick service by prov ing his vicious temper on several oc casions. One man received a brok en arm from one of his kicks. Later he became the property of-Al-len Bros, near Echo and some of his bucking propensities were discovered when farmhands tried to make a sad lUthcrse of him. 0. G. Allen, one of his owners at that time, later became a photographer and took many pic tures of his erstwhile farm horse at tlie Round-up. The J. E. jinlth Livestock Co.. acquired the animal and worked him to the plow nnd combine until a few days before the first Round-up when he Was brought In for a trial. Though worked Oown by a season on a combined harvester, the big sorrel brute made such a showing that Sheriff T. D. Taylor, tiien director of livestock, purchased him outright. Since that time he has bad an easy life, straying In pastures green for evelel months of the year and spending tiie twelfth at his favorite pastime, bucking. Hcivsv notes of Pendleton Docket Called Ausnist 2- Local attorneys have been notified that the docket of the circuit court : will be called on August 26 to prepare cases for trial at the e)temrer term of court. Cases will be set lmmedi- I utelv after the docket is called. The Enind iurv has been called to con vene nn the 31st and it is anticipated that the trial of cases will continue nil through September. Judge Phelps la now in Portland, having just return ed from San Frarlstco. He will assist the Judges there for a time and then attend the convention of the Oregon and Washington bar associations. ;. L. Mi-Oellan Smti Twice. Two suits were filed in the circuit I court todav aeainst O. L. McOlellan. Charles W. Kirk, proprietor of a hard ware store at Athena, brought one ac tion for 136. ST.. alleaed to be due on account and the First National Hank of that town hrnunht the other to col lect on two notes of 3300 and Jinn. H. I. Watts of Athena appears as at torney for the plaintiff in each case. Suit To ("olloct. The oreuon Lumber Yard has brought suit against I. E. Twltchell to collect 3136.76 alleged to be due for materials furnished. W. M. Pet erson Is plaintiff's attorney. MEXICAN CONFERENCE f"'m " '-""-A-"."-lcan count,,.,, conferred will, the secretary and ,.,, , Mtxlt,0 , ,llllf,,,lu.e , the ?j 2. - fe ll -1 1 ) S x Vl i oil il H The losses of Europe In the war up to May 31. as compiled by the French ministry of war, are as fol lows : France Killed, 460,000; wounded, 6a.o(i0; prisoners, 180,000; total 1, 300,00. England Killed, 181, 00; 'wounded.! 200.0O0; prisoners, 90.000; total, 471, -j pinp ! Belgium Killed, 49,000; wounded. 49.000; prisoners, 15.000; total, 113.- 000. Russia Killed. 1,630.000; wounded, l.OSO.Ond; prisoners, 850,000; total, 3.7SO.O0O. Germany Killed. 1,630.000; wounded, 1.880,000; prisoners, 490, 000; total. 4.000.000. Austria Killed. 1.610.000; wound ed, 1 86.1,000; prisoners. 910,000; to 350 ACRES OF GRAIN AND 4 HEAD OF HORSES BURNED AV.LLA WALLA, Aug. 17. About 350 acres of standing grain. 650 acres of Hubble in which was piled at set tings, the sacked grain from that area, two headers and four head of horses, weer destroyed by fire on the H. H. Hungate and son ranch In Spring Valley, about 12 miles i.orth eait of the city, yesterday afternoon. The loss has been roughly estimat ed at from 315.000 to 340,000. this bring the biggest grain fire of the season. It is believed that the grain was well covered by insurance. The fire started about 2 o'clock In the cfternoon. when a gas engine was heir,? moved from one setting ;o an other. Mr. Hungate was in the midst of harvesting at the time and still has left standing about 350 acres of Kr.iin yet to be cut and threshed. the loss was not suffered by the Hungates. the fire having swept, clear across the road into anntherj field, the owner of which was not lciiined last night, althongh It Is be lieved to have been the Stonecipher place. The fire was soon checked! after It had crossed the road. how- ever, so that the loss there was not! nearly so great. - j .Minut 50 acres of bunch gra.s on ; tho Max Zurger farm burned. j Some Stacked Grain saiM Hundreds of men rushed to th'1 M-cne to assist in fighting the blaie. ' but many arrived too late to '.v of; any assistance. When the fire be-! gan sw eeping across the stubble, ' tcnn.s were put to work plowine In fmnl of the fire while men fniirht1 hard around the settings to save the stacked grain there. Ry tneir ef'nrtsj a Mod deal of the grain was saved. ' :t i.eini; impossible to tell last night how badly the various piles had i ecn burned. It being dark before the fire-' fighters could stop for a breath. j Horse Hrnel at Plow I While one of the men was dri irg; bij, eight horse plow tc:lm n 'ro-as the field, passing throuch the fire Itself, four of the horses limned aw.,y, when the blare was under them nnd so entangled the other four that they were burned to death In the ha'ticsa ; before help came, the driver h:i'n: to ri.n for it himself. i 5. (Continued From Page Two). Mrs. Wood Pasley and her mother. j Mrs. Thompson, former residents ofjj Pendleton, arrived last evening from j Portland to lie guests of Mrs. 1'. an j: Tatoni. Mr. and Mrs C. T. Hargrove leave tomorrow for The Palles which city the will make their future home. Mr. nnd Mrs. Volney It y bee have re. turned from Plngham Spring where they spent their vacation period tal, 4,385.000. ! Turkey Killed, llO.Ofti); wounded.) 1 144.000; prisoners, 95.000; total, 343, -j j 000. j I Totals Killed. 5.290. OuO; wound-' ' ed. 6.478.000: prisoners, 2.63'i.M'tO: I giand total, 14,398,000. j ! This table was prepared for pob-! lication early In June, but was with-i held because the French authorities feand the enormity of the figures might have a bad moral effect on tht!: people. The computations. while! probably not exact may be consider- j ed the most complete record of loss-j es so far put together. The losses of, Serbia are not available, but as thatj country has suffered from pla?ue in! addition to war they must be large. ) The largest total loss is charged to Austria-Hungary, the largest pro- portionate loss to Belgium. Enough GIRL STRVCK BY AVTO. LA GRANDE. Ore.. Aug. 17. Due, alinoFt entirely, to the fact that the machine was running at less than six miles an hour, bystanders agree is the fact that the three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rees of Cove, is alive today. The lit tle one darted out from behind a string of parked cars in front of The THE ONLY CURE FOR CATARRH Is ly Obtaining Free and Equal Breathing Through Each Nostril. THE BENEFITS ARE, comparative freedom from fre quent colds, headaches, acute ear, sinus, and throat dis ease. The arrest of a slowly increasing deafness from the closure of the eustachean tubes. The restoring of the voice to its normal quality and the freedom from a troublesome and annoying disease. The treatment is operative, there are p.o failures, and but little if any pain. D. N. REBER, M. D. Kjc. Far. Nose and Throat SpetialUt. Schmidt I3Mg., Pendleton. "" 'JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllHIII'llllllill'd Gigantic Unloading Sale Here are & few of cur sale prices. I You had better take advantage of these prices MEN'S HATS Men's Hats, a big assortment to chose from, values to $2.00 Lot No. 1 Sale price 51.00 Lot No. 2 Values to $2.."0, sale price SI. !." E Lot No. 3 Values to $:i.0(. sale price Sl.5 J. 12. Stetson Hats, regular $4.00 values, sal" price i?2.!5 BOYS' HATS i ChhuI Felt Hats for boys' regular ?1.2 hats, sale price " ;ro I Kegular $1.50 and $2.00 hats, sale price ;. E MEN'S Men's Eaton Flannel Shirts, rr.ilit staple patterns, regular $1.00 values, sale E price . lc Men's Army and Navy Work ShirK 2 full po. kt ts. regular 75c values, sale price -15c Men's detached collar dress shirts, values at $1., all sizes, sale price ISc Men's Fine Golf Shirts, bir assortment to choose from, values to $1.50. sale price Sir BOYS' WORK SHIRTS f: s Lvt No. 1, sab price ZT? 5 Lot No. 2. sale price ;Kr S r Boys' Military Collar Dress Shirts, sale price 15c THE HUB I 23 Sample Stores. 745 MAIN ST. 5 r.IMIIUUIIIIII!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIllllilliii)ul7. persons have been killed to popitatv a country like Sweden. fiirce May 31 there have been aiar.r violent battles to swell tie totals f;iv en the French offensive north of Arrar, where 15 000 are said to hav been slain, the Austro-Itallan en gagements, the great battle in Oall cia anil the German offensive in. th Ar'onne. The most astounding feature of this table is the ratle ef killed U wounded In previous modern wsrsr the number of wounded has been to the number of dead as four or five to one. Here the two categories are much more nearly equal. Mary of the wounded have Joined their regi ments, but many are crippled for life. The sick, who have been nu merous in ail the armies, are not list ed bere. Toggery late Saturday evening and n.llH.ed with the Conkey car. rt-iven by Glen Conkey, the well known high school athlete The blow knocked the child unconscious and left th tody lying In such a way that th wheels straddled her. one of the for tunate turns of events. She vecev cred consciousness about midnight and except for several b3d skin bruises, ia fully restored to her nor mal condition today. SHIRTS try coi,ar.