Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1911)
PAGK SIX AHiT K8T OHJt GOJTIAN, PIOTkLETrON. OREGON. FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1911. EIGHT PAUEB f Ihe GREATER ALEXANDER. BEPT. aster TTTk ' 17V ( tots SafartV We now offer for the earlv Easter trade a beautiful line of Silk Waists, plain colors as well as Persians, stripes and plaids, messalines and soft taffeta. $5.00 Value, $3.25 $6.50 Value, $4.35 $7.50 Value, $5.00 $9.00 Value, $5.50 $12.00 Value. $7.00 Silks and Dress Goods 36-in. Black Silk Taffeta, etox! quality, always sold at this store for S1.50. Earlv Easter Sale - 9S Ladies' Vests A lanre assortment of gatize vests, prices from 10c to 7fc. See one counter Ladies' Gauze Vests, specially priced for this sale at 10 Ladies' Purses For our Early Easter Sale we will sell any purse in our stock, values up to $1S.50, yours at 1-2 price. Trimmings We are showing the most beautiful line of trimming ever shown in this store, another larcre shipment just received. Lawns Dimities and Sheer Dress Materials Those lines are shown in patterns that are new ami up to the minute; all the spring shades can be found, and patterns to suit every taste. Prices from, jhe yd 10$ to 7o Guaranteed Silk 7 Petticoats at . . i)u I In Xew Spring Shades and Black. 1 UX : Of such splendid quality of taffeta that both we and the makers guarantee it fully if it shows signs of splitting at the end of three months' wear, bring it back and we will irive you a new Petticoat at once ; you don't have to wait for it to come from the factory; and tills guarantee holds good even at this special sale price of S3.75. A full line of spring shades and black; they have 15-inch tailored flounce finished with accordion pleated ruffle ; cut full, along straight lines; extra dust ruffle of percaline. Special for tomorrow's sale $3i75 Hair Goods at 1-2 Price J ust before Easter when all are busy look ing for headwear we will place on sale our entire stock of hair goods at prices never be fore heard of at this season. Switches that sell at $10.00, puffs up to $2.50, all at 1-2 Price. Fit that new suit or dres3 over a Nemo or R. & G. Corset, Children's Hosiery We have them in all sizes S1.25 to S3.00 lu-gular 20 host?. Come in black only ; all sizes. Our Earlv Easter sale 10$ Wo have just received some very new styles in both , Suits and Coats We are now able to show the very latest styles at prices noticeably low. We call sitocial attention to our lines of suits from $18.50 to $30.00 v r- .1. .. 1 1 V.'?. : 1 1 I i:. . J' I m 3026 Tisrs Quit Camp. Monroe, I.a., March 24. Players of the Detroit American league team, who have given the people of Monroe a lot of excitement during the last few weeks, will break camp today to begin their exhibition tour. The Ti ger cubs left this morning for Shreve port, La., where they play the Texas league team this afternoon. The full grown Tig-r also leave today, going to Birmingham. Ala., where they play tomorrow and Sunday. Other games are scheduled for the regulars at Memphis, Louisville, Evansville, In dianapolis. Columbus, Cincinnati and Dayton. The youngsters will go from ?hreveport to 'Waco, Tex , thence r Dallas, Oklahoma City, Wichita, Kan., Eniiorors in Caucus. Vienna, March 24. Emperor Wil liam of Germany, arrived here toray f r a brief visit with Emperor Franz Joseph. The conference between the rulers, It is said, was arranged with a view to discussing several Import ant questions of International politics and diplomacy, especially the attitude of the Austrian royal house toward that of Italy in the present dispute with the Vatican. Baltimore, March 24. Prince de Cassano came to America under the auspices of the Maryland Peace so ciety. Prince de Cassano came to America especially to deliver this address. Everett, Wash. Edward Date, the S-year-old son of William Date, saw yer at the Three Lakes mill, was drowned Wednesday. lie was trund ling a little wheelbarrow loaded with groceries and tried to cross the mill pond on the li The wheelbarrow evidently ran off the logs nnd the boy followed it. About two hours later, the boy being missed, his father went to look f'r him. He found thu wheel barrow .nd after fishing for the hoy witn a pike pole, found the body In 11! feet (if writer. E 31 Makes Healthful and Delicious Pastry -a Jit.; A Food cooked with hoe lards and compounds is so thickly coated with grease as to give the gastric juices little chance to assimilate and digest it. Cottolene contains no hog fat. It does not coat the food with grease, and food cooked with it is easily digested. From the standpoint of health there is no com parison between food cooked with Cottolene and food cooked with lard. Lard is just hog fat Cottolene a vegetable product of Nature. Cottolene makes food which any stomach can digest, and builds up the tissues of the body. Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY IP iHMmia tm ma bmzm V' Ml Eft IS WKDIiril 5 T1.MI.S AM) TIIiaCK DIVOItCKI). N'ew York, March 24. One .if the queerest divorce suits on record Is set for a hearing today In the New Jer sey chancery court nt Newark. John Milton Plpp of that cLy asking for a legal separation from a womnn who. since her marriage to Slpp In lss. has been the wife of four other men. Five times married, three times di vorced, one" convicted of bigamy, the allege,! record or Mrs. Hattle King - Slpp-Derby-Lorschelder-Brny-ton, who now resides nt Avon, a su burb of Rochester. She Is now thlrty cisht years of nge, and began hr matrimonial career with Pipp at New ark more than twentytwo years ago. when a mere girl. There were no children, and after two years she left Sipp and went to Rochester. Without having obtained a divorce from the Newark man, It Is alleged, she mar ried Eugene F. Derby, of Huffnlo. In ls2 In extenuation of this mtlon. site subsequently stated that she had heard that Plpp was dend. After a couple of months Derby tired of matrimonial bonds with Mrs. Klng-Sipp-Derby, and returned to Rochester, and after n whirlwind courtship she became the bride of John Lorsehelder, a Rochester man. Derby had divorced her In the mean time and her new husband soon fol lowed suit, Mrs. King, Slpp-Derhy. Lorsehelder. although apparently unable to hold the affections of any man for any considerable length of time, was still a charming woman, and among her admirers was Dr. Decker, a Rochest er dentist. So smitten did he become with the much-married womnn that his wife sued for a divorce, which was granted. Dr. Decker, after a trip 'abroad with the woman, made her his legal wife, but their matri monial bliss was short lived. The dentist soon asked fpr n divorce and was given a decree. Meanwhile her first husband, Mr. SIpp of Newark, heard of her adven tures in matrimony, and had her In dicted for bigamy. She was arrested In this city and later Indicted, tried and convicted, but escaped without a prison sentence. Her ardor as collector of husbands unabated, Mrs. Klng-Slpp-Derby-Lors. chelder-Decker was added another to the long list about two years ago by wedding E. H. Brayton of Roch ester. Meanwhile, Mr. SIpp consid ers himself the legal husband of the woman and Is seeking for a divorce. The case was called In Newark ome weeks ago, but In order to give the de fendant a chance to be heard, an ad journment was granted by the court until today. A Fierce Night Alarm. Is the h'rse, starting cought of a child, suddenly attacked by croup. Often It aroused Iwls Chamblln of' Manchester. O., (R. R. No. t) for their four children were greatly sub ject to croup. "Sometimes In severe attacks," he wrote "we were afraid they would die, but since we proved what a certain remedy Dr. King's New Discovery Is, we have no fear. We rely on It for croup and ror coughs, colds or any throat or lung trouble." So do thousands of others. So may you. Asthma, hay fever, la grippe, whooping cough, hemorrhages fly beforo It. 60c and J 1.00. Trial bofle free. Sold by Kneppens. IHvli-s iinck in ("nlro. Cairo, M ir, h 21. --After a visit to the winter palace at Luxor and oth er points of interest in Egypt. Lord DecJeg and bis bride, formerly Miss Vivien Gould, returned to Cairo today. Humors Come to the Surface In the spring as in no other season. They don't run themselves all off that way, however, but mostly remain In the system. Hood's Sarsaparllla re moves them, wards off danger, makes good health sure. I PoifflisnflPnS I Third annual regimental indoor track and field championships will bo held in ItoKton tomorrow. Some of the inost prominent ath letes or the United States and Can ada will take part tomorrow night In the ntliletlc and bicycle games to be held In Buffalo. National amateur swimming cham pionships nt fifty yards will bo decid ed in Philadelphia this evening, and the 100-yards title will bo contested tomorrow In New York. Huffalo-s fourth annual exhibition of power boats and sportsmen's and athletic goods will open tomorrow In the Broadway Arsenal and will bo the biggest ever held In the Queen City of the tkes. A week from tonight will bo "so ciety night" at the fifth annual Pitts burg automobile show, when double admission will be charged, enabling tho aristocrats of the Smoky City to look over the enrs without having to rub elbows with common persons. Thousands of Los Angeles children will take part tomorrow In tho fifth annual kite flying tournament of the public schools of the southern Cali fornia metropolis, which promises to be more Interesting thnn ever before owing to the Inclusion of a division for aeroplanes. After considerable trouble Hugh Mcintosh, tho Australian and Eng lish fight promoter, has been success ful In clinching the postponed twenty round bout between Sam Langford, the colored cyclone of Boston, and Sam McVey, the Parisian heavy weight, and the fight will take place tomorrow night In tho big Paris Hippodrome. Do yon rd the Bast Oregon!.? sai Water Lure .Small Boys. Spokane, Wash. Prompted by the warm weather, 20 boys Wednesday went swimming In the McQoldrlck's mill pond. They were In for 20 min utes. The temperature reached a higher mark than it has since October 12, 1910, tho government thermometer registering 70 degrees, the lowest be ing 35. The average dally tompera ture for the month, so far, hns been more than four degrees above nor-: mal, with a precipitation of 30-100 below normal. Try HOSTETTERS STOMACH BITTERS when the utomach is "out of order." It will quickly tone and strengthen it, also prevent Dyspepsiafic Colds i b i Do yen reo.4 the Bast OregonlanT