Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1915)
DAILY EAST OREfiONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. F.EI'TEMTIER 8, 1913. r.;i il!lllIIIIIiIlll!lllllllllllll!llllll!IIIUIIII!!IIIII!llllllllltlllllilll!IIIIIIISUIIIIIIU)llllll!l!!:' .) LiUTTOII, LAMBS GO UP QUARTER PARADING CONVICTS CHEERING WARDEN OSBORNE AT SING SING I .OUT. 0IF10 HY. I ;4l en EIGHT PAGr.3 rrnri nn S The Great Big Baked Potato Route REACHES THEM ALL. Reduced Rates The Direct Route 1 5 A few days lay-off and visit will greatly profit you. COLUMBIA RIVER GRAPE CARNIVAL, 1 Kennewick, Sept. 13-15. INTERSTATE FAIR & LIVE STOCK SHOW, Spokane, Sept. 1S-18. I STATE FAIR, 5 North Yakima, Sept 20-25. ROUND-UP, PENDLETON, SEPT. 23-2S. I A. D. CHARLTON, A. G. P. A., Portland, Oregon. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllr PHONE 666 PHONE For INDEPENDENT MESSEN GER SERVICE Open Day and Night Commencing September 10. Rates 15 cents and up. RAY KELSO, Prop. UMUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMtlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllirtlllMU I HOPPLES, CHOP SUEY, CHINA DISHES I GOEY'S KVVONG HONG LOW I WW A W 116 Wert Aha St. Upitain. Phons 433 riltmilllllllllllltltllMMIIIMIMIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllln- THE Sf W. Don't Write Name., iv X Address Please state if new or renewal. Apply to local agent for informa- tion aa to rates, trains, etc. W. ADAMS, Agent, EZilsT'i; Pfndleton, Ore. I Pear Pricw Are Normal. WENATCHEE. Wash., Sept . Complete auction returna of Wenat chee pear ahlpmenta aold in Chicago the beginning of the week show that the market remained at Its previous level. Prices varied from 11.45 to 11.10. . A wide variation of prices was paid for extra fancy Bartletta, The top was S 1.60 and the minimum 1 1.25. The association shipped a car of Winter Bananas east Thursday, the second of the season. Our Great "Family Bargain" EAST OREGONIAN $1.50 (Published every Tuesday and Friday, for one year) McCALL'S MAGAZINE .50 (Monthly for one year) ANY ONE McCALL PATTERN 15 Regular Price, $2.15' We are enabled to give our readers, old and new, the benefit of this money-saving club offer, only because of a very spe cial arrangement with the publishers of McCALL'S MAGAZINE. WOMEN Love This Magazine Com in or writ to sec a tamplt copy McCALL'S is the Fashion Authority and Housekeeping Helper of more women than any oilier magazine in the world. All the latest styles every month; also delightful stones that entertain, and special depart ments in conking, home dressmaking, fancy work, etc., that lighten housework and save money. McCALL'S has been a family favorite for forty-five years. It is the magazine that satisfies. Mr. J. T. D., luhtcribcr oi Temple, C., write": 'You may put niv nntne on ttip lit with thrwe who lliink MeCAI'.L'S MACAZINK is worth twice a much as 50 ccnt a year f'ir every one in the lamily. So many prcoy f.i.liions nii'l Hi t00bt crivfd, cne of mult good reauinir I tan hanlly ait to see it. Dress I'aiienn FU tK, (' bywndinp ptjl crd Miss This Offer direct to The panv, New r caff at (lie office of fli'i paper Number and The East Oregonian continues to be the leading paper published in Oregon east of the Cascades and if you are not already a subscriber you should take advantage of this big offer. Also good for renewals. If you desire McCall's Magazine in connection with the Daily East Oregonian, either by carrier or mail, write dT phone us for special clubbing rates. CUT OUT AND MAIL US TODAY East Oregonian Pub. Co., Pendleton, Oregon. Enclosed find $1.50 for which please send me the S.-W. East Oregonian and McCall's Magazine for one year as per your special offer. (Courtesy Tuesday's Journal.) PORTLAND, Ore. Aside frum the three loads of xmall sized steers from southern Oregon and a load of hogs from the Interior there was praticcul ly nothing offering on the market to day. Whllo there was a Kale of extreme tops yesterday in the swine division at 17, the bulk of the stuff did not move above 6.i)0 for best quality, as per forecasts In these columns dur ing the last few days. The big kil lers will not pay above 16.90 for their hogs and as the wants of the small buyers are quickly overfilled, the big fellows are able to secure what is left at their own prices. While Btill higher prices are ruling for swine at eastern points, conditi ons along the Pacific coast are dif ferent. With general business con ditions In the east greatly Improved, the coast situation Is showing little change because the lumbering Indus try Is the big factor here and lum ber Is very dull. Other northwest Points are not paying as much as the local market for the bulk of their swine requirements. General hog market ranee: Best light S 6.90 Medium light .806.85 Good to heavy 6.50 6.75 Rough to eavy 5.50 . 00 Mutton Market Higher. While the mutton that came for ward to the North Portland yards overnight was contract stuff that a local meat company purchased direct In the country, there was every Indi cation of an advance of 25c through out the mutton and lamb trade here. Commission Interests were today quot ing top lambs up to 16.75 In the North Portland yards although aa yet no toppy quality has been available this week with which to test the situ ation. Mutton market started steady to strong and higher In the east today. General mutton market: Choice spring lambs . . . .$.506.75 Common spring lambs .... 6.75 6.25 Choice yearling wethers.. 5.50 Good yearlings 4.753 5.25 Old wethers 4.75 6 5.00 Choice light ewes 4.60 iff 4.75 Good ewes 3.70i?4.nn Rough heavy ewes . 3.50 3.60 ALL FOR ONLY $1.50 fafs mpttUy pCrUAZINE) m FREE McCALL PATTERN Each uilcrHtc r for this Great "Family Ibrcaiii" Htavrhixw frum her tirM copy of McCAI I.'S n f thr crlrt-ratfj McC'ai McCall C i ork, ptvini Six desired, alur 15,) A request j&p oin- jst -''Iff L t A At the left is shown a part of the celebration arranged by the convicts In Sing Sing prison, to welcome War den Thomas Mott Osborne back to t attle Situation Quirt. Market for cattle la quiet. Offer ings mere limited overnight at North Portland. Only atuff available was aome undernlied stuff from southern Oregon which receivers were anxious to sell around I8.25 for steers but were unable to do so early In the trade. General situation for cattle shows practlcaUy no change from last week, extreme tops still holding around 6.9flfiT.OO In a very limited way. Market for cattle was steady to strong at the start of the eastern markets today. General cattle market range: Select steers f,.Wa 7.00 Heat hay fed steers 6.25 fi 6.35 Good to choice 6.0AI&6.25 Ordinary to fair 5.005.75 Best cows 5. no ti 5.50 Good to prime 4.50'ff4.75 ."elect bulls 4.50'g4.75 Fancy bulls 4.25 Ordinary bulls 2.o0fi3.ti0 Pest calves 7.00fi 7.50 Livestock sliipiK-rx. Hoss R. M. Lemon, Grass Valley. 1 load. Cattle J. W. Sevier. Eugene, 4 loads. Sheep Gilmore Talbot. Carson. Wash.. 2 loads: J. W. narrow. Lyl Wash . 2 loads; C. W. Gibson, Halsey, 2 loads. CIIOSSF.S OCKAX TO HE AX IXTFHXKD BRIDE tif&JffCO SCVfiaV. NEW YOUK, Sept.. S. Miss Hilda SchweiKcr of Itremerhnven, Germany, is living proof that love lauphs at war. She has Just arrived In this country to marry Lieutenant Paul Hespe, of the valiant German sea raider, I'rlnz Kite! Friederich, now Interned at Newport News. t'he was engaged to marry the of ficer three years ago but he was sent to China and so the wedding was postponed. Later It was arranged for her to go to the orient, but the war broke out and Intervened. Fl nally the Prlnz Eitel put In at New port News and was Interned. The handsome German officer Immediate ly wrote to hia fiance and her trip here Is the result. Miss Si'hweiger was born in Ixin don, whore her father was in busi ness and lived there until six years ago, when her father died, she went to Rremerhaven and there met Lieu tenant Hespe. Ingenious mechanism In a new German lighthouse that uses electric ity as an llluminant switches on a new lamp and moves It Into focui should the original lamp be extln gulshed. I , ' ; (r tf lkLtU-'i&. IL .ft i 'ff' '. " i ll - - 1 3 r , ..." - s H'?f ,s- - I the prison after a two weekr vaca tion. At the right Is shown Wardei Osborne telling his "boys" that he has two real homes, one at Aeourn, N. T., and the other at Sing Sing. Events in the War One Year Ago Today Xew York Xcgrc Is 115. NEW YORK, Sept. 8. Probably the oldest person In New York state is Mrs. Susan Gillls. born In slavery on the plantation of Colonel John Peterson, near Peteraburg, Va., 115 years ago, according to figures she insists are correct. The aged wom an, remarkable Tor her attainments at this great age, lives at 571 Classon avenue with a daughter, who Is 84 years old, and a granddaughter, who is" 4 2. She has a great-grandson 18 and a great-granddaughter 17. Although Mrs. Gillis Is bent with i ape. she weighs 189 pounds. She can thread a needle without the aid of. glasses, tell stories of antebellum times and do a little housework. Mrs. Gillis attributes her longevity to reg ular hours and steady employment and freedom from worry She was married to her first husband in the south and he died during the civil war. Then she came north. Exist ing records of her birth, Mrs. Gillia says, were destroyed when the feder al troops made an attack on Peters burg, burning her master's mansion, but she is quite sure that she was born on December 25, 1800. JOHN S. BAKER, FUNERAL Di rector and licensed embalmer Op posite postoffice. Funeral parlor, two funeral ears. Calls responded to day or night. Phone 75. J. T. BROWN'S FURNITUER STORE Funeral director and licensed em balmer. Most modern funeral par lor, morgue and funeral cars. Calls re sponded to day or night. . Corner Main and Water streets. Telephone 63 INSURANCE AND LAND BUSINESS HARTMAN ARSTRACT CO. MAKES reliable abstracts of title to all I I j CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY FIXEHAL DIRECTORS. ATTORXETS. j MALE HELP WANTED. lands In Umatilla county. Buys and; all kinds of real estate. DoeaHOL'GLAS W a general brokerage buslnes. Pays taxes and makes Investments for non residents. Writes fire, life and acci dent Insurance. References, any bank in Tendleton. JAMES JOHNS, Pres. C. H. MARSH, Sec. BENTLEY LEFFINGWELL. REAL estate, fire, life and accident Insur ance agenta. 815 Main street. Phone 404. SECOND HAND PEAI.EHS. V. STROHLE, DEALER IN NEW and second-hand gsods. Cash paid for all second-hand goods, bought Cheapest place In Pendnleton to buy household gooda. Come and get our prices. 2 It E. Court street. Phone t71W. AUCTIONEERS. COL. W. F. TOHNKA. AUCTIONEER makes a specialty of fat mere' stock and machinery sale. The man that gets you the money." Leave orders at East Oregoalaa office. The prison band played "Hail to the Chief" when Osborne appeared and placards carried In the parade boost ed him for governor. French Soldier Suicide. PARIS, Sept 8. The idea that a soldier of France should desert the army at the time of hia country' greatest need, so weighed upon the mind of Lieutenant Poncet that he committed suicide under the halluci nation that he himself was a deserter. The lieutenant was a clerk of the supreme court, and had been detailed to act as a representative of the min istry of Justice before the second court-martial of Paris. He was call ed upon to Investigate many cases of desertion. His mind thus fixed upon this subject it came to haunt him. and preyed upon him until he became deranged. Most Captives Satisfied. OTTAWA, Ont., Sept, 7. Investi gation by an official of the Canadian department of Justice and the Ameri can consuls at Halifax and Moncton, N. B., of the complaint made by Ger man prisoners at the Interment camp at Amherst, N. S., showed that a majority of the prisoners are satis fled with their treatment and the complaint arose from a few irrecon cilables according to an announce ment today. Reports that the prisoners were improperly housed and fed reached Germany. The Canadian government defied these reports, but said that an Investigation was being made. Jitney Tax Is Upheld. OAKLAND, Cal., Sept 8 On the grounds that the operating of Jitney busses continues a "business,"' and is therefore taxable, the superior court upheld Oakland's 160 annual license. The specific case brought by Leroy M. Phillips ws Instituted to test the city's ordinance and will be appealed. ROUND-UP The 1915 Round-up will be RALET & RALEY, ATTORNEYS AT I .law. Office In American National Hank Building. FEE & FEE. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office in Despain building. CARTER & SMYTH E, ATTORNEYS at law. Office in rear of American National Bank building. JAMES B. PERRY, ATORNEY AT law. Office over Taylor Hardware company. PETERSON & BISHOP. ATTOR neys at law: rooms 3 and 4, Smith Crawford building. ATTORNEY' in all state BAILEY, at law. Will practice and federal courts. Rooms T, 8 and' , Despain building. j GEORGE O. COUTTS, ATTORNEY at law. Estates settled, wills, deeds, mortgages and contracts drawn. Col lections made Room 17. Schmidt block. FREDERICK STEIWER. ATTOR ney at law. Office In Smith-Crawford building. S, A. LOWELL, ATTORNEY AND counsellor at law. Office In Despain building. rilYSICIAXS. DRS. WHITAKER ft WOOD. DEN tlsts. Office hours i a. m. to ( P m. Mllarkey building, Pendletot Oregon. VETERINARY SURGEONS. C W. LASSEN, M. D. V. COUNT1 veterinarian. Residence telephone 17; office telephone, 19. r?vAT50 1 -n-.'&'rj" AttH. erI of 4 Work Lewi and Clark trail, on tk Pacific Ocean. li25miliofforesfc .-JCUISOf IfACB. Bis. modern hotels at WWA V SUSJLt Fine bathing in Surf and two $35,000 Natatoria. Manifold amusements, golf, tennis, etc. Inexpensive Hotel, cottage and camp ccorwnodatkm A LONG tk grand wnie Colunv bi on Tk brtft lakfeir Limited Tram to Portland, ttience thru tk pictureMiu Holland f Onrgon'and Astoria to tK Oceansdc SiiTWia on Exposition Trij via North Bank and th fast new 3 million dollar staamsh (ratbrtknf JE2 Stud for Our Tmeatiom Bklt $13.15 ROUND TRIP ", From Pendleton. ! Particulars of ticket j agent ! NORTHERN PAC. RY. O.-W. R. & N, CMZn.Lir.L.MM.1 IN ' Pricti DATES. held on Sept 23, 24, 25. WANTED PARTY WILL PAY Cash or give trade for Umatilla conntj farm, $20 to 150 per acre Box 11. Athena, Or. Addr MISCELLANEOUS. TRESSPASS. NOTICES, STALLION season cards and sale bills of every description printed at reasonable prices at the East Oregonian. W have a fine lot of stork cuts that out patrons are allowed the free u of AUCTION SALES THE EAST ORB gonlan makes a specialty of auc tion sale bills, cards and advertisln We can furnish auctioneer, clerk and advertising complete that will aaur ygu ot having a successful sule. ENGRAVED CARDS, INVITATIONS wedding announcement. emboe private and business stationery, eta. Yey latest styles. Call at East Ore gorjjan office and see sample. LECJAL BLANKS OP EVERY D9 ecrlrtlon for co-inty court, circuit court. Justice court, real estate, etc., for sale at East Oregonian office. m..gf-i. as - BEAVER ENGRAVING - COMPANY . v S a ,. if r - r ... r jm I t if I