EIGHT PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1916 PAGE THREE The New Town BOARDMAN Ready for Business WHERE Junction new Coyote Cut off and Spokane branch 0. W. R. & N. ON COLUMBIA in North Central Morrow County. 164 miles east of Portland and 66 miles west of Pen dleton. 18 miles from anv other town. Building Will be Com menced at Once. WHY U. S. Reclamation Service has completed dam, and grates and main canal of West Extension of Umatilla Project, 27 miles long. 2500 acres will be opened for irrigation in Spring 1916 and 3500 in 1917. Tributary to Boardman under canal are 20000 acres. Small Farms and Diversi fied Farming. WHAT ALFALFA Level land, good heavy sil ty, sand loam. Settler on every 40 acres. Rail and River transportation. Near Markets. CHEAP LAND HOMESTEADS. AND WRITE US FC PRICES AND INFORMAT IN. WHO IS WHO BOARDMAN is the cen ter of all this new irrigated land. A beautiful level spot. Schools, churches, roads, water system, and modern conveniences will be added. Fine place to make a home. Location for several business houses, still open. Houses needed. Special Offers on Business locations. Ground Floor n portu-nities. Address Boardman Townsite Company Or DODD 6 KENNEDY, Hermiston, Oregon KRMT 'BRIDGE 10 BE PUT IN PLAGE AT ONCE f Men Who Buy Stein-Bloch Suits Buy More Than Mere Garments TIMBERfl IRE Al.l. READY WORK WILL OTART IMMK in vilil.v STEAK ECHO. lie Re Will Be IS In and WiJI lilKf limbic Tarried Away b' OHM llleh Water In Bat ICC ere Sllwr Tea til ven by Mrs. Mlflm Portland Man a a visitor. DEAR LITTLE DEER RAN UP A RATHER DEAR BILL PORTLAND, Ore.. Feb. 2 - De tective Johnny Price took Patrolman Today And A Generation Hence The flight oi time m ',.s us Ihlnk of Iho luturc. '1 ho baby ol loilny icflccts whnt may be acquired when be Jyowt u,j. Ami ny nnnence that bring relief to the eipectant mother Is the Orst ami, l Ml Ml of oblljntlon. Tlwre U a uplrnjiit remedy known at "Mother! Prised tiiat bus bern a snfaruari!. a helpful dally laflu ence, to a ttort of icemen. Applied exter rally to the muscle I tiny become pliant. thry irtretch Mtlmut uniluo pain, there Is an nlaence of lit it If. the nerves are southed br taking nwr.y ttic bur Jen of leaving all to just natural cori'lltloiw. Therr l In 1 Mi th.r ' Friend" the direct nnil irnmcllate Is'lp thai all expectant moth in mpiire. Used by tlulr on hand, guided hy their own mi mis, tluy learn at once tha lh-vieit relief fnni morning slckncs result Irur from undue itretrlilng. They ciperlenca .U !) calm and nightly rest. It l Indeeil 'Mother's Friend." (let a bottle Unlay of any clruggtit. Then write lnoUUId Keirulator Co.. 410 Uronr IIMg., Atlanta, for oni of the mod aotert iTnlnf, and valuable little boots n i u: 't U worth writing fur. stones brace ..f tame dear t. Tacom i yetterdax expecttni to lead them in j th.- Elks' parade, but when he trie i million Aim: TO USE 1., Jitney them from the stable to the AKItoi'l.AV F. To ol TICK 4) club rooms In the tonneau or a mt-ij rowed Ford, the) revolted and I , V. ...... Aa nmhnt Price saw at once mat the deer I Couldn't march, but he didn't want to rob the procession of his own pres. fa ence. so he thought very fast l.lace to leave them He si florist's shop. "Oh, Joy! The very place aid. "Certainly, you may the little dears," Bald florist lady. When he got back the nil right, but where, oh w the lovely hyaiin'hs. the carnations, the flaming I Where, Indeed? , (Note- The florists bill settled I for J leave them, the oblig'ng fragrant nlimlingT LCY LtX him -l HERB MEDICIXE CO. Ma Til Gradrn st. Our roots have been tested 10ft yeafa, We can cure nil chronic diseases or abscesses Come to us If you are suffer ing from catarrh, asthma, lung or bronchial trouble, constipa tion, rheumatism, appendicitis, dropsy, kidney, liver, stomach or female trouble, obesity, blond ind skin diseases or nervous debility. Sufferers from these and many other chronic diseases hnve been restored to health and happiness without poison ous druse, by "the Chinese herbs. Come and mo us. ONE THIRD WHEAT CROP IN ILLINOIS IS LOST SPRINGFIELD HI. Feb. 26 Fully one-third of the wheat crop of Illi nois has bean killed this winter by frosts and floods, according to a state ment made public by B. M. Davison, secretary of the stale boarM of agrl- opinio Expected D"U. COPENHAGEN, Feb. 25. "I x pad to bze drowned. Hundred me ters aloft. Defective motor Findei please tell my wife and little boy. good-bye." This farewell message of Captain i hi, commander of Zeppelin i.-u. was discovered in a floating bottle by a Swedish vessel A second mess.' Be was found later and said, "The , rew Is now drowning " SPRING MEDICINE Hood's Sarsarcrilli, the Out Blod piMbf, Ii tha B ' nrlnu siokn. . i conies in sc-ie de- - to very man, woman a-"' child , i mir 'Im.i'.e. It I thai run-down condition of .! yati ii that results from l.npurr, , irapoveri died, devitalised blood. it i- marked by loss of appetite J nod 'hit tired feeling1, and In many cases by some form of eruption. The best way to treat spring sick ness is lo take Ilonr s Sarsaoavd'a. This old r, hable family medicine purifies, onei dies and revitalizes the blood. It is an all-tlje-yenr-round iltcratlve and tonic, and is abao- iutely ihe In t Spring medicine. net your blood in good condition it once now. Delay may bo dan- j reroUS Ask your druggist for Hood's Parsapat ilia, and insist on j having it. for nothing else can take It- plaeo. t 1 i n i NEW VidlK, Feb 25 Edward W. Browning, a millionaire realty opera tor has decided that his handsome and magnificent limousine is no long er the proper Vehicle to convey a map of his wealth from his home to his Office. He Intends erecting a hangar on the roof of a building which ne owns and In which he has his oflce and will use a latest mortcl aeroplane to make his morning 'Msh to business and to return home ngaln at night Architects are now drawing the plans for the structure. Browning is the son of the hue E Franklin Browning, millionaire cloth ing dealer. He married Miss Adela il. weii last April. His -home is 41 INTERN l III A ESI I DEPART MENT M TAKE TlOJi TO GET TIOLiATOR.S. Reports Have noon Received of ille gal Manufacture of I.biior Others jetting Heady to Eatabttsta Hidden still Dope BganggfeN Arc Also Heaping Harvest. Oregon, and others are getting ready to establish hidden stills, according to information that has come to I,. V. Elliott, special agent of the internal revenue department for the Oregon mid Washington district. "Indications of moonshiners have been called lo our attention." said Mr. Elliott It appears that they will require our attention in the near fu ture, and we certainly do not intend t, let them do business very long in this state. Doie Smuggling Problem. But the most difficult work ihe special agents of the internal revenue service have to perform is in running down dope smugglers. "In my opinion the illegal traffic will never be eradicated until the government changes its method so it can get positive evidence against those handi ng the dope. We now git perhaps one of 10." He said he thought tin cm should authorize the emplo; (Kast Ortgoalan Special.) ECHO, ore., Feb. 26 Under the directions of Koad Supervisor Wattcn burger the timbers for the county bridge at the Kmigrant crossing iiutter creek were hauled out yester day and ihe bridge will be Immedi ately put in place. It will be forty five feet long and Is to replace the bridge carried away hy the recent high water n Hutter creek other bridges were carried away but they were all private property, .not county. A silver tea was given on tWsdneS day at the home of Mrs Alex Mai" colm. the proceeds going to keep up the expense of the electric light on he county bridge at this place. Clarence Sprlngston of Portland at one time a resident of this place, vis ited friends here the first of the week. Mrs. H Phillips returned home Monday front a short visit In Port- visited here on Friday. Mrs. Agnes Wigle arrived here Monday from Portland She has ac cepted a position wdth Ob and Hob mercantile establishment. Tom Qlllett was her- Friday from Pendleton. Mr. and Mrs J. S. Baker of Aber deen. Wash . was here the first of the week visiting Mrs. Baker's broth er. Jesse Mathes. f'has N. Crary left for Seattle on Tuesdav In April he expects to go on to Alaska. Wm Esselstyn. manager of th lo cal Tum-a-!uni lumber yard is ex pected home today from Portland, where- he has been attending the con- Mr. and Mrs Ouy Jonas were ousi-j neas visitors in Waitsnurg. Wash., the past week Mrs. George J. Maestrettl of Milton.' is here visiting with her parents, Mr.' and Mrs A E. Hard Heistand Moore was a business vis itor In Portland the first of the week. Stanley Lyons of Pilot Rock June- j tlon, spent Thursday evening in LJclio with friends Miss Jennie Hagman of stanfield. spent yesterday In Echo. falt'S famous rn a WFKH OYSTERS Fine, I'lean Furnished Kooms In Connection. SEA CRABS Steam Heated. The Quelle Restaurant Exclusive distributing depot In Pendleton for FALT'S Sea Foods SNiin Places Order. ST. LOUIS, Feb :M The Western Cartridge Company has received a million anil a half dollar cartridge order from Spain. BETTER THAN SPANKING. ttpattklag does not cure clilldreu uf bed setttng. There Is a cciistltutloiinl cnuse fur ibis trouble. .Mrs. M. Summers. Box IV, Nutre Daas, Ind.. will send free to any neither her successful heme treatment, with lull Instructions Scud no money, but erlte tier today if ynur children trouble yon In this way. Degt hltime the child, the l,n:i. es are it can't help It. This treatment disc cures ndulls ann ge,l people troubled nlth urine difficulties by day er night. . ernmenl j .ment ol men who can mix with dope-useri; and get direct evidence against the' smugglers. If this were done, he said I he belelved the Pacific coast could be cleaned up ill a comparatively short while. The fact that the few per sons how being caught with the dope. nearly always have large quantities on hand convinces him that the ille gal traffic is uoing on to a surpris ingly large extent. Light viitcnoc (ilven. Persons caught with dope in thelfl possession are usually given compar atively light sentences by the courts. Mr. F.lLott pointed out. because it hasi been impossible to produce evldenci other than the mere possession of the I stuff. He conn nds if men could lie I WASHINGTON. Feh. :. Docu ments and letters showing that after Korea had pledged her neutrality In the RUSSO-JapaneSe war and after the I'nited States had pledged Korea her aid in maintaining her neutral stand. Japan landed troops In Korea with out even a protest from the Americ in government, were sent to the senate from the White House Democratic members of the senate asked for the documents following Colonel Roosevelt's denunciation of the Wilson administration for off-ring no protest when Belgium's neu trality was violated by Germany, col onel Roosevelt was president at the lime, and democratic congressmen as sert the case of Korea parallels that of Belgium. employed to get svldet traffic in the dope, mi vere sentences could be said the regular revenu, not get this direct evid the courts frown upon i Matin) iji Egypt Humored BERLIN. Feb. 26. "Reports from Cairo that a rebellion recently occur red among the reserves there are printed under the date of February ualln in the Ital an paper L'Ordlne, se-'snvs the Overseas News Agency. "The He I reports say that IC persons were killed use "During the mutiny it is declared Hit n British maior shot an Arab who "More money is being made out oil were 1" executions in 'a smuggling dope than air. other kind , January." of smuggling that has ever been at tempted on ibis coast." declared Mr Bricks made of peat are E0tt. 1 in small buildings in Swe They buy more than right fabrics more than right lines. They buy wear. In every STEIN - BLOCK garment, no matter what the price, is put 100' , of STEIN-BLOCH workman ship. Every stitch must be right and every stitch must be there. This is to tailoring as cement is to concrete it is the "binder" which insures permanence of form and stability of worth. 5 ALEXANDERS S DOXOt I V. Il l PI. Y H - KER AT THIRD. T. R. MADE NO PROTEST WHEN KOREA INVADED "" .'j.'.p ,'... AMt ttJNa ter fitted for the infield and played him at third, a position he has stuck to ever since. Haker's next engagement was with the Cambridge Clab, In Maryland. He remained there until tfle fall of 1J1T, when he got a flatter ng offer to play with the Reading club of the Tri-state League. On September 1. 190s, he Joined the Athletics in Chicago He started as a regular the following spring, the same year as Collins. His first season as an Athletic reg. ular found Paker hitting .305. and he led the American League In trip les, with n neteen. and stole twenty bases. In 1310 he f dl below the .300 mark. That season he had fifteen triples, twenty-five doubles and two home runs. In the world's series against the Cubs he bitted .40S. Paker became a diamond hero in Ull. He made forty doubles, four teen triples and led the league with nine home runs. He was the home run leader in 1913. Baker quit the Athletics after the season of 1914 and last year played with a semi-professional club in Maryland. NEW YORK. Feb. 26, J. Franklin Maker, one time Athletic idol, who has signed with the New York Yan kees will play third base, according Manager Donovan and Maisel. the regular third baseman, will be shift, ed to the outfield Haker signed a three year contract, "hich is said to call for $6.00" a Near. The purchase price is under stood to have been Ua.OOO. Anvng the profess on Paker is known as the "clean-up" hitter. His long drives, which are usually made when men are on hase. makes him feared by aii pitchers. lutfieldeds always move back when the "Home Run King" comes to the plate. While relating about his baseball past recently Baker gives Charley Herzog the credit of starting him on his diamond career Baker had been playing us an amateur in h s home tow n Tr ipp, Md.. in 190$. when he was nineteen years old. Herzog was with a semi-professional team at Rid geley. Md. Baker at the time was playing in the outfield, and Herzog was so im pressed with his hatting that he of fered Paker a Job for 15 a week. "1 jumped at the offer." says Ba ker in lellint of il. "It sounded I ke Motorist Kills CViyaes. PORTLAND. Ore.. Feb. 26 Ray King arrived in Portland from Uresh am with a huge coyote tied to the front of his automobile. The animal had been killed after a four.hour chase with fox hounds In the vicinity of Oresham. Mr. King had been hunting several days. A dog helonging to a member of his partv was killed Saturday by a wolf ,.,r other animal which it fush-ed. a mill i farmei hat Baker LUSITANIA WIDOW TO PRESENT AUTO TO GEN, JOFFRE SMALLPOX SCARE ON AT THE STATE PRISON SALEM. Ore.. Feb Three new cases of smallpox developed at th" state prison and further precaution to prevent an epidemic were taken A case developed a few weeks ago and the patient has nearly recovered. When that case appeared about 4 0 convicts who had been associated with him were'vacclnated. Everyone not already vaccinated will be vaccinated as soon as poosi bjp. and an order barring all visitors until danger Is passed has been Issued Friendly Helpfulness iS a s'lYmlid win f rviVrrtn in HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS in caws of Poor AppttStt, Trril gestion, Blliousnefv and Comtl patin. Try a bottle. siiiHiiimNMmmMmiimmnii.iuiiNHim I A Few Things to Do Tod&y I First Cull up Phone ii and order a load of mill-ends for kindling. All short lengths and the best thing in the world to start vour fire. A big load for a dollar and a 1 half. mm Second Order enough of our Rook Springs coal to fill your bin. Third Build a good big rod hot fire. Fourth Congratulate yourself that you have the best fuel in Pendleton. 5 Fifth Resolve to do it again. B. L. BURROUGHS, Inc. I Cor. Webb 6 College Phone 5 THOMPSON tOToH. oi INIM AN ATOMS. Feb. Mrs. F. I powered motor car H. Thompson, widow of E. Pill hand overhauled as Thompson, who lost his life in thai dsn. Joseph Joffre. UUttanla disaster. Is havinn the Mb commander-in-chief late hus-1 "It Is Ihe I orth cause. hlo it b 1 i I am sure (I nch army j .,. wful n t 1ft. ties." ist I can do to aid a said Mrs. Thompson n. Joffre will find th.' e discharge of his du- Con Dung Low CHOP SUEY NOODLES HOT TABLES CHILLI GON GARNE nI'Wimi (TO B LUNCHES COFFEE Ever ihind and date F1HST CLAM tBRVI 1 TEA 5c Package Under S.ate Hotel Cor Webb and OstlWOOd Ms 1'hone 1(7. Pendleton, Mr rfillllllinMIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIUinilMHIIinilllllUHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinillUIIIMIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU