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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1915)
EIGHT PAGES DAILY EAST 0REG0N1AN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1915. PAGE THRKF. AT E Visit Our New Art Needle-Work Department. PEACE AND PROSPERITY PENDLETON ALTHOUGH all Europe Ll embroiled in a war of death and destruction, the peo ple of Pendleton are enjoying the greatest of pence, pros perity and happiness and more especially so the men who are wearing Bond Clothes fl5 to $30 If YOU are not among the big, happy, well dressed crowd of Bond Clothes wear ers, we issue the invitation right here to COME ON. Just call and take a look at that suit we bought for YOU. Bond Bros. Penaietou Leading Clothiers RECORD OF DEEDS AND OTHER INSTRUMENTS Satisfaction of Mortgage. A mortgage executed by A. H. Westgate to Elisabeth Hemphill et al. Aug. 1, 19H, la satisfied. A mortgage executed by John D. Beavert to Home Builders Assn., March 20, 11&, Is satisfied. A mortgage executed by Simon P. Hutchinson to Vermont Loan & Trust Co., Sept. f, 1910, for $900 Is satisfied. A mortgage executed by Simon P. Hutchinson to Vermont Loan A Trust Co., Sept. It, 1910, for $1000 is satisfied. A mortgage executed by E. C. Brownell to D. W. Jackson, January IS, 1914, for $350 Is satisfied. A mortgage executed by J Wick to McCook ft Bentley July 22. 1915, for $$14 Is satisfied. Chattel Mortgage. Horace Cook to Third Nat. Bank, Walla Walla, $2,500. on the stock, tools, wagons, farm machinery now located on the Beal place near Vin cent, also the Interest of first party of In and to about 350 acres of wheat to be harvested during the year 191$. Flora Wilder to H. 8. Murray, $115. 2-3 of all the crop of wheat to be sown during the fall of 1915 on the NE. 1-4 of Sec. 4, T. 5 N R. 35 E., W. M. and also 2-3 of the crop to be grown on the Mike Ryan place during the fall of 1911. Custav Elchner to Chris Breeding and T. N. Olmstead. $1, $89.77; II hOIMt and mares, also all farm tools, machinery, wagons, harness, etc. A. H. Nebergall to American Nat. Bank. $1,181.30. on 150 tons alfalfa hay In stack on Jas. A. Fee ranch on Wild Horse. Mortgage. Henry R. Forth to Northwestern A Pacific RjrpothM hank $700. the NW. 1-4 of Pec. 24, T. 2 N. TV 31 B.. W. If. Quit Claim Deed. Heiti.r H. Mol-ean to R. E. Rucker $1: 10 acres, title descriptive. Deed D Oerberdlnf to A. Phillips $750; lot 11 and 29 feet of the east end of lots 13 and 14. block 4. Weston. Lee Hummell to M. E. Shutrum 12, 000; a tract of land In lot 4 of Sec. 10, T 2 X., R. 32 E., W. M. Michael S. Winter to U B. Mc Clure, $2,700, the NE. 1-4 of NW. 1-4 and N. 1-2 of NE. 1-4 of Sec. 18. T. 1 N H. 30 E., W. M. Walter It. Belts to Joseph Cunha $300; the NW. 1-4 of SW. 1-4 of Sec. t, T. 1 S., R. 34 E W. M. WOMEN MAY BE RTKONG and enjoy life whether In the home Pr business w.rll if they can keep st bay those alL-miita p.uliar to their sex. If every woman realized how Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, that simple remedy made f'.nn rocU and herbs, goi to the real of the trouble and overcomes s.i-k ii pt..m aa backiclie, head, aches, nervousness, and Irritability, they would be healthier, happier and stronse'. If you suffer fro.n uni form o? female Ills why do-i t you try It. It will pay you to do so. Adv Tornado Damages Town. MORGAN C1TT. La.. Oct. 6. One killed and 12 injured is the toll of a tornado that Invaded this city and razed 12 dwellings and a store build ing, besides wrecking the sheds of a lumber company. When the tornado, traveling In a northeasterly direction, struck the northern part of the city It created a panic. The path of the storm was about 100 feet wide. Eacatt Wallace, a iw gro, was the only one killed. French Have plenty Socks. PARIS, Oct. 5. The ministry of war announced that the stock ot warm unergarmenta .socks and sim ilar articles for soldiers at the front Is abundant for the winter campaign and that It Is useless for relatives ol soldiers to send garments unless the wish to do so. A tierman scientist has succeedeu in curing cancer In lower animals by Injecting Into their blood so'.utions of the salts of tellurium and selenium Against Substitutes Ask For Get the Well-Known Round Package Caution Avold Subititutejpf JyyLagMBgUiilifMi cwt,wn,u.l.a. BY THE VOLUNTEERS M'AHKs ROM EXJIXK SKI I1LAZK TO THE O.-W. It AND x. station. No Betoas Damage is Done Is Sec ond Time That Fire Has oocunxl at Depot In Ist Six Weeks Hall roewl OMr'als Insiicet Wells Oth. er New Note of Echo. (Special Correspondence.) ECHO, Ore., Oot. 6. The roof of the O.-W. R. & N. depot at this place was set afire yesterday from the sparks of No, 17. An alarm was given and the fire was extinguished by the Echo volunteer fire depart ment before any serious damage waj done. This is the second time in the last six weeks that the depot root has been on fire from the same cause A party of O.-W. R. ft X. officials arrived here Sunday morning on No. 6 In their private car. Among whom were Harvey Lounsbury. general freight agent; Farmer Smith and Wm. McMurray, general passenger idgent. They were taken by lauto out to Inspect the new artesian well some 20 miles southwest of Echo. Ralph H. Mitchell of the Portland Oregonlan, accompanied them. Messrs. Hubble and Schlarbaum, formerly of Spokane, Wash., have opened the garage on Bridge street which was operated at one time by Leavell brothers. The garage will be known as the City Heart Oarage. A new lumber yard has been op ened here by Thomas Ross with of fice and salesroom In the Reel warehouse opposite the O -W. R. A N depot. Several carloads of high grade lumber have been received and more are on the way. The annual election of the Ladles' Aid Society of the M. E. church was held al the residence of Mrs. J. R. Jordan on Last Thursday. The offi cers elected were as follows: Mis. T. M. Johnson, president; Mrs. J. I). Sterns, vice president; Mrs. J. S Danforth, secretary, and Mrs. Wm. Esselstyn, treasurer. The Epworth League of this place held Its first social and business meeting of the season on Friday ev ening at the league room of the M. E. church. Plans were made for the organization of a Junior Epworth league und several new members were voted In the league. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tefft of Payette, Idaho, are here visiting with his brother. Bert Tefft and family. J. B. Savior of Freewater, and Charles Gherklng Athena, came down last Thursday to participate in duck hunting at the opening of the sea son , Mrs. Ixiuls Scholl. Jr.. spent Sun day with Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Reeves of Stanfield. Mrs. Harry Reese of Stanfield, spent Saturday in Echo Thomas Leavell returned Saturday to his home in Spokane after u short business visit here. Mayor Hugh D Smith Is home from a two weeks' stay In tne Green Horn country near Baker City. E. N. Litsey arrived home Friday from a visit lo the San Francisco fair. Mrs. W. T. Jones and Mrs T O. Smith spent Friday In Pendleton. Earl Esselstyn. who has been at Helix with the Tum-a-Lum Lumber Co., has returned home and accepted the position of bookkeeper with the same company under his father. Wm. Esselstyn. WE CAN DRESS YOU UP IN THE Season's Newest Attire BROADCLOTH FUR TRIM MED SUITS ARE THE LATEST craze, so say the producers of proper wearing apparel for women, and this store can show you many pretty styles made up in beautiful shades of broadcloth and so reasonably priced that all car. afford to have one. Will you look today? GIVE A S1EIN-BLOCH the try-on test, before our big mirrors, under the full glare of real daylight, see the elegant fit and graceful lines, produced on your figure. The perfection of 54 years of good clothes tailoring will be pleas ing to you, and you pay no more than others ask for ordi nary clothes. j.," JT SL SPECIAL CORSET DEMONSTRATION NEW SELF-HELP NEMO WONDERLIFT AND OTH- ER MODELS ALL THIS WEEK. FLORSHEIM SHOES FOR COMFORT. ALEXANDERS Merchandise of Highest Quality Only. Shop in the Daylight Store Mr and Mrs. Kreidar left on Sun day for Bend, Ore., where tney ex pect to make their home. They have spent the past two months visiting here and at Pendleton. Mrs. Frei dar la a sister to l'ra c H. Lisle and John Young. WHO PAYS THE WAR BII.I.V Money makes the mare go, and it takes money likewise to make the war go. The all lea are negotiating for added hundreds of millions, while Germany proudly reports "the larg est financial operation in the world's history." a borrowing of 12 billion marks. Qovemments borrow, but people Pay. The burden la on the backs of tolling men .women and children. When a loan is subscribed at home the people supply the money direct, and shoulder taxes to repay them selves. Whether the government borrows abroad or at home the mon ey must be wrung from the peo ple's pockets. War mortgages the Industry and labor of a people and the fruits of their soil as well as their toll. time, energies, life. The Pay for the wars their governments make not only with hardship but with enslavement Deprivation and starvation are part of the price of war the innocents must pay. Bank ruptcy, loss of a people's savings, destruction of Industrial capital, waste of utilities, devastation, are measured in human soil and in hu man suffering. Governments borrow lightly, and people pay heavily. What benefit are the people themselves, who art paying for this war, going to receive from their Investment? They are all stupidly paying and "going It blind." Wars involve contests between peoples as In who shall pay the more. Thus the victors may be the greater losers. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. COW TESTING ASSOCIATION IS FORMED IN VINCENT DISTRICT VINCENT, Freewater, Ore., Oct. 5. One of the first cow testing asso ciations In eaatern Oregon, and the second one in the state was organ ized last week by farmers in this section of Umatilla county, and the adjoining territory in Walla Walla county, Washington. The following officers were elect ed for the ensuing year. Bert Coyle. president; R. E. Bean, vice presi dent; J. O. Russell, secretary; Verna Brown, treasurer; with the follow ing board of directors: R. H. Well man, Lou Hodgen, W. W. Phillippl, Bert Coyle, J. O. Russell, Verna Brown and R. E. Bean. The mem bers of the board of directors will meet early this week when arrange ments will be made to secure a first class tester, secure necessary outfit, etc. It is planned to start this work about November 1st. There have been more than 500 cows entered In the association, being divided among 30 dairy ranchers, the tester visits" each ranch once each month, tests each cow for butter fat, and figure cost of feed. By doing this the poor cows can be eliminated and the standard of each herd improved. This is a pronounced step for pro gressive dairying in this section of Oregon and Washington, and while there are many such organizations in the eastern dairy states, the west has been slow In falling in line. GRANDSON OF SUGAR KING WEDS HORLICKS THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Mad In the) largest, bast quipped and sanitary Malted Milk plant in the world We do not make "milk prnducta" j Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, etc.! Ask For HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made from clean, full-cream milk and the extract of select malted grain, reduced to powder form, soluble in water. Best Food-Drink for All Ages. Used for over a Quarter Century Visess you may "HORUOIC8" you may got a Substitute. "4Qgr Take a Package Home TO PENDLETON VOTERS: I wish to announce my candidacy for councilman from the third ward, at the coming city election, und if elected will adhere strictly to the following plat form: "I am In favor of law enforcement; In favor of equal rights In the expenditure of the peoples money In all parts of the city, and the elimination ot all unnecessary expense." A, J. OWKN, t IXDIDATE FOR COUNCILMAN FROM 3RD WARD. Serbs Free from Typhus. NEW VORK, Oct. 6 Dr. Richard P. Strong, professor at Harvard Uni versity, who has been directing the anti-typhus campaign of the Ameri can Red Cross sanitary commission in Serbia during the last six months returned on the steamer Duca de Gil Abruzzi and declared that the Serbian army is free from typhus i and is la as good physical condition as any army in the world. He said the total number of deaths from typhus in Serbia had been be tween 30.000 and 150,000. "'hortly before he sailed, Dr Strong was decorated with the order of San Sava by the Serbian govern- j ment. 12(4,927.63, according to a report filed in the superior court by W. A Sullivan, inheritance tax appraiser. Mr. Kohn died here April 18. He left 1557,000 in cash. In his lifetime he acquired a reputation for having more ready money than any other person on the Pacific coast. Advising Board .Meets. WASHINGTON, OCt. 5. Secretary Daniels' new advisory naval board will hold Its first formal meeting here tomorrow to undertake the work of advancing national pre paredness by equipping Uncle Sam's navy with the latest patentable de vices of marine warfare. Bigger Militia Favored. WASHINGTON, Oct. 5. At the opening session of the conference on national defense here. Colonel J. Palmer, past commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, urged as a means of preparedness an increase in the militia, which, he said, could be attained by offering proper compensation for services as an inducement to young men. He also urged iuildlng of "coast defenses that will look dangerous, whether they are or not." and said that his idea ot preparedness was j based on the motto, ' Trust in God j and keep the ponder dry." Lady Gertrude Crawford, who is making munitions at Erlth England, has for many years been highly skill ed in the use of the lathe, an 1 in her workshop at her home in the New Forest, has turned out wotk which has astounded her friends. HI BIG MEALS! NO INDIGESTION OR GAS PAPE'S DIAPEPSrX" IS QUICKEST AND SUREST STOMACH RE LIEF KNOWN" TRY jt. Time It! Pape's DIapepsin will digest anything you eat and over come a sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach surely within flvo minutes. If your meals don't fit comfortably or what you eat lies like a lump of lead in your stomach, or If you have heartburn, that Is a sign of indiges tion. Get from your pharmacist a fifty cent case of Pape's Diipepsin and take a dose just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach ens or heart burn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea, debilitating headaches. diziness or Intestinal griping. This will all go, and be sides, there will be no lour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's DIapepsin Is a certain cure for out-oforder stomachs, because It takes hold of your food and digests it just the same as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief In five minutes from ill stomach misery Is waiting for you at any drug store. These large fifty-cent cases con tain enough "Pape's DIapepsin" to keep the entire family free from stomach disorders and Indigestion for many months. It belongs In your home. Experiments by a Brit.sh expert of reforesting some of the hill of Chi na have led to the establishment of a comprehensive course In foieitry In a university In that country the rat- llatllesnakc Trade Hurt BROWNSVILLE Tex.. Oct Mexican bandit outrages have sudden stop in this section t somewhat extensive business of tlesnake catching. Large-sized rattlers abound in the brush along the border and curio ers sold them to shows and parks alt OVar the country. Mexicans ordinar- i ily do the snake catching but since the Mexican outlaws have Investor the brush the snake catchers will ! not venture Into the brush for fear of being shot as bandits. Made from the right crude The Jury of Awards it both San Francisco and San Diego Expositions found an o.l made from California asphalt-base crude, highest in lubricating efficiency. Thst oil was Zerolene.The fict, too, thtt such unbiased author bl"? '. - N,rl1 Eninr. engineer, of the Psckird and Ford Motor Companies, and others, hire also gone on record in favor of oils m.di from aiphalt-base crude-in iccord with the de cision of the Exposition jaries-proves that Zero lene is made of the ngkt crude, and made rftft STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) ZEROLENE the Standard OU for Motor Cars kohn Estate 14.248.181. SAN PRANCI8CO, Oct I estate of the late Isaac "O Kohn. wns valued at $4 LMs ami the Inheritance ihn tlx mm Ll'TTK. Mont.. Oct. H. less than i meyer, the sugar king, and Mrs. He a week after both had secured dl- atrlce Uluckwell were married here, vorces In the district court at Black-! In 1914 Mr. lllackwell sued Mr. Ma foot. Idaho. John Mayer. Jr.. grand-ier for alienation of his wife's af- Americas Greatest Cigarette BE PREPARED TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OPPORTUNITIES AS THEY ARE PRESENTED. THIS CAN BEST BE DONE BY ACCUMULATING FUNDS IN OUR SAV. INGS DEPARTMENT. A LIBERAL RATE OF IN TEREST PAID AND YOUR DEPOSIT IS ABSO LUTELY SAFE. The American National Bank OF PENDLETON Corner Main and A!ta Streets. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $400,000. late Iheoitore A. Ha 1 fections. ininillMHIIMIIIIIIHIIIHnilllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllr.