Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 18, 1916)
PAGE EIGHT DAILY EAST OREGON! AN. PENDLETON. OREGON. SATURDAY. MARCH 18, 1916. TEN PAGES Ksa Storage Repairing If vou want the best service in both, come to the Independent Garage ' - i - - sHiHKfeggfw. c Let Us Repair Your Car Expert repairing of autos, combined harvesters, ?as engines and machinery of all kinds. Parts of all kinds made correctly and promptly for any machinery. Up-to-date machinery and best mechankr. Try us. Handy Fire-Proof Storage Three entrances and 20,000 feet of floor space. Light, well ventilated and fire-proof. Service station for gasoline and lubri cants; free air and water. Prompt and courteous attention. One trial of our satisfaction giving will make you a booster Hemmelg'arn & Webb, Props. Corner East Court and 1 Telephone 63S m ECHO HAS PLANT OF ITS OWN NOW WHERE ICE CREAM IS MADE JOHN K. JORDAN BI VS PUCE POIiMKHl.Y LOCATED T IIKK.MISTOX. Hammer Kitchen Is Helng Built In llio Webb BMW; Mr. QMM I back After Trip to seuttle and PortMnrt; DaoMttc BdFnce Cass hm Exhibit of Ph (East Oregoninn Special. 1 ' BCHO, Of., March It, John It M I Jordan who lately purchased the ice ,S 1 'ream plant of Sapper Urns, of HWV S ' mist on and moved It here has begun HI 10 operate it. The ice cream will be 555 1-nowi, as the Velvet Brand. HI Mrs. Rom Webu la ha vtna a verv d Hill. Wednesday Seattle uul ;ind - Mr. 2EE 1 1 neat lUmtner kitchen en : rear of CM of her eottai 1 1 ley street. Thl property 1 1 copied bj Mr and Mrs. A I Perry Gould returned II from an extended Vlait to 1 1 Portland. 5 Mrs Harold Btttlni . left Saturday for The I visit with Mrs. Batting ! A 1!. Glllett of Bttttei II Mrs Hettinger agpe I on to Almeda Cal.. where her hus i! band has been working at the caapen- Iter trade since last December. II Lemuel Kstah, who is a Student at j I the Willamette 1'niversity, Salem j ;., Is home on a visit and will re-1 1 1 main until the 20th of this month. The Memlcnhall farm on the Mi.-! j dews, a large part of which has long lain idle, is to be Bleared of the sage brush and put In alfalfa i 'has. Ward I has leased 40 acres or it for eight1 years and A. H. Moore go acre. A number of Echo people attended; the dance at Hermistnii last evening I C. E. Lewis of Btanfteld, is drilling a well at the shearing plant site smith Of Echo. rr. Hanry Toe of Portland, ore., at I one time a Stanfield property promo ter, was a visitor here on Wednesday. James Kyle of Stanfleld, attended the meeting of the Paradise district directors held here on Thursday Horn on Wednesday starch -IS . six pound sun. to Mr Correa. Joe Hubble left V ; short business trip t ; Idaho. H Intends to ikane. Wash . : md Mrs. j, lonnera Fe it his pare lllllllllillllliM '- 1 1 -,v i rywi iii-iii -."l;i i ri' pi llj MUUTO 1 J. D. Beeson CONTRACTOR Estimates furnished and given. Country work a specialty. Phone 308-W. 401 Aura ! Two wayfarers were resting b roadside. , "This is a tough life we're l-adin' ' j mused one of them, "r'ding cal trucks at the risk Of our lives, gittin chased by. brakemen an' cops an dogs. Bleep In1 in barns an' haystacks companion "Woddye kin' all de joy nut of life?" HISTHIOMC wisdom. Omar Is your friend I.ushington still on the stage? Helny No; he gave it up last month Omar Because whv" an eatin the leavin's from other Helny He was recentlv married to folks meals Honest. Bill, sometimes tne daughter of a wealthv sugar plant I think it s worse than workin' for a fr down gouth llvin " Omar Ah! I see. Another case of Hey. wots the matter with you? "I sugar c ured ham. at Bp home The Kipper On hesti gave a dance last nig celebrating St. Patrick Miss Neva Forrest al I day from Pendleton i frit nds. Mrs. Kellar is down l rkh.h visiting with j Mrs IClmer Hubbard. Miss Lizzie Vey of here, the guest of her Honese. A very pretty display exhibition last evening at th and Miller Co. store. They were the j work of the Echo high school girls in the domestic science department This is the first year the Keho school has had this department and much enthusiasm is being shown by the pupils. at plea was ..I Con Dung Low CHOP SUEY NOODLES cst.: HOT TABLES CHILLI CON CARNE SPAVII! s.Ty K LUNCHES COFFEE Everything clean and up-to-date FIRST CLAM BKRVICB TEA 5c Package Under State Hotel '"or Webb and Cottonwool S' Phone ii67. Pendleton, Ore. Prevents roughness during the summer NYAL'S FACE CREAM A superior vanishing skiL tone soon absorbed. LEAVES NO SHINE Price 50 cent Koeppen's he T)rug Store That Sei ves You Best Save Money on Your Stump Blasting The explosives that get stumps out cleanest and cheapest are those that have a heaving and lifting effect, shattering the stump just enough to break then up. Then you can handle them easily. The farmer," says an Experiment Station, "should use an explosive that stands all ordinary shocks of handling and does not easily freeze. He does not need the expensive nitro i i H -,- r i glycerine explosives, i housanus use STUMPING AGRICULTURAL. ecause they go further 1 hey arc made especially n farm conditions, irm Powders the product manufacturer of high ex- the United States are the mine "giant powders" for agri use. They are made in two -Giant Stumninc Powder, ideal for blasting in wet ground; and Eureka Stumping Powder, the money-saving, low freezing explosive for blasting stumps in dry soil. Ask your dealer for Giant Powders an'! blast ing supplies. If he does nor have them v.e shall that you are supplied. THE GIANT POWDER COMPANY, Con. " Every thine tor Blasting" Home Office i SAN FRANCISCO I CfrVNrsFARM POWDERS wr b Wm 4 of the oldest m Pives in 11 4v brands CLUBS NOW FURNISHED TROOPS AT THE FRONT ATHKXS. March IN At last the warriors have got down to using clubs: just ordinary clubs, for brain ing men. The Austro-tlerman soldi ers are supplied with bludgeons and on parts of the British front the allv soldiers have been furnished clubs covered with spikes. These British clubs look much like the Big Stick American cartoonists used to picture T. R. using. The clubs are for use the ' Mils big I lie rt 1 llllex- Dy troops entering trenches sly and slaying nolselesay so tl In other parts of the trench know what Is going on. fine of the newest missies great war Is a. huge shell the i threw at the Dardanelles guns could throw the shell plodlng It and these ne must be ten nches in bon fl long, one of these which fell in the liritish Ploded has been taken ill I'erts: It was ten inches In diameter and fifteen inches high, made of sheet tee I with wooden plug-disks at each end. This big steel ran contain sev. enty siN pleoei of scrap iron and twen ty f ire pound of ti i-n tro-tol"n. The miesle weighed si pounds, The fir ing of the big shell must have beer touch) work Imagine a fire .Tucket ten inches thick. I hat would blow a hole in the earth six fee; deep and ten feet In diameter. Imagine your self facing the ilm of IlKhtiiiK tin lose on this flfty-oiie pound cracker and then. While the fuse was sput ter rig, place the cracker in the mouth of a itlant air gun and firing the gun in time to net the ci acker out of yeUf neighborhood before it went off. Most hand bombs don't go off lis contact rh'-.i must be lighted first ana then thrown. Sometime th No Tires are "larger?- taken Type for Type, than GOODRICH Black-Treads 30 x 3 1 , ($10.40 30x3' j Ford S'" ' ($13.40 32 x 31 $15.45 33x4 Safety Tread $22.00 34x4 "Fair-List".... $21.40 36x4Ji $3J,60 37 x 5 $37.35 38 x 1 $50.60 SIZE for Size, nnd Type for Type, Goodrich Tires are as large as the largest put out by any Maker, and WILL BE SO MAINTAINED. This means larger than corresponding Sizea and Types of many other Tires for which even h igkrr prices are asked. It means, too, the mod generously made ' FABRIC Tires on the Market, at any price. Manufactured by the largest Rubber Factory in America, with a 47 year Experience in Rubber working, and a Record for DEPENDABIIJTY which makes the above statements worthy of prompt acceptance. Made from the new "Rarefoot Rubber," which gives its maximum Traction with minimum Fric tion, with resilience, liveliness and long-life to Tires. PRICED on that "Fair-List" basis initiated Jan. 1st, 1915, by the B. F. Goodrich Co., which saved more than $26,000,000 last year to Tire-Users, through its propaganda against Padded Price-Lists. Priced so reasoiiaUi low that Competitors, whose products are not comparable. e(iim sujierior ity on the mere strength of their Higher 1'ricea (and the Larger Profits they demand from the Tire-User and Dealer). Goodrich Prices are based on what It coste the largest, and longest experienred, Rubber Factory to manufacture Tires, as ONE of the 265) lines of Goodrich Rubber Goods for which it buys Crude Rubber, and over which its Overhead Expenses are divided. Good Business Men should know, from this, why Goodrich "Barefoot'' Tires rat be (as they are) the best Tires on the Market AT ANY PRICE, -though quoted at the moderate "Fair-List" fig ures frankly and openly published herewith. THE B. F. GOODRICH CO. Akron, Ohio . GOODRICH 66) T ires Complete Stock of Goodrich Tires Carried at the Oregon Motor Garage 119-121 West Court Street. Telephone 468. The slowest bomb I whisk and is rhaps, Is thei P n on a stone or the butt of h lijse a tioeket ! ani then, after a space of sev Opper and al! tbr le , other fellow may pick It up and throw It back at him. Ibuub exports onda, throws It. The bomb throbs in figure that any soldier can pick up the man's hand Just before It Is due n lighted hand bomb and throw it I to explode, giving him warning. If awaj from himself if he has five sec ring he throws the bomb too soon the ends to spare. r 1 ! I i jrlier - M ann. ttamur or chards hy UaaMI l.oles for trees. Wrilr fur tkt bvjk thai yos prrjtt. lighting is done with a match cig.ret; others light by pulling tie string wh ch rubs two strips o I-biir together somewhere in the db' of the bomb. lioth sides (j t reat war have I bs of various for various needs. If the ener ' Mt mingi for instance, you must a bomb that svlll explode atjick and that w ill have done its job by tio tithe sou roach the scene. The l u nch base the fastest hand bomb known. The thrower wears a leather thong on hii rim and book Ion th s thong is attacked to a hook on the bomb. The act of throwing lights the fuse, which is so short and so quick burning that the explosive is almost Immediate. Hill bint ara irjnt1 of n hMt Jerard & Temple, ol Pendleton, Oregon, agents for the Harris Manul'actui Company, of Stockton, California, have received their first shipment of Bide Harvesters', a sample of which will be on exhibition in Pendleton. They wish to notify all the farmers or uuers of combined harvesters to call jiee thpn, with reference to what they may need for the coming season's the sample machine is get Up anil ready lor operation and can be operatetl how th e working points and all advantages of this wonderful gas com- Mtie tun Harvester. he machines are made Side Hill and Standard, The Side 80 in. cylinder, 42 U In, separator, with 40 h. D. en trine. T Mill is of one he three stantl- ngg are oi inree tiinereiu sizes, bu in. cylinder, lz',-2 separator, 4U n. p. en ; 85 in. cylinder, 48 separator, 4fi h. p. engine; 40 in. cylinder, 54 '. sep r, r,0 h. p. enirine, therefore, before plucirig your orders for an' other make achlne do not overlook the opportunity of seeing one of the strongest anil built combined harvesters on the Pacific Coast. I ill.