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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1911)
DAILY EAST OREGON! AX, rENDLETOV, OREGOX, T1IIUISDAV, APIUTj 27, 1911. EIGHT PAGES) OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOO o o F The Peoples Warehouse PAKE TWO o o o o MILE IN LENGTH o o o o o o o Extraordinary $150,000.00 8 l Sale a Specials o o o o o For Friday, April 28 1911 J o o o o o o o o o c e o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Newest Arrivals Womens fancy Neckwear Womens 50c Silk Hose Mens New Spring Straw Hats Mens Oxfords, Tan and Gun Metal new spurn; coats. from which you can choose aKnit seven dis tinct correct nuxlels, made of serges, tweeds, and home spun, in navy, Mack, mixtures and other colors. We call your special attention to the values quoted, as this is an exceptional offerinjr. See what others ask $17. oO for, then these here at S11.95. DRESSY LINGERIE WAISTS Yoke of Venise embroidery, Yal. laee and C'luny insertion. Body of waist and sleeves also trimmed $1.49. FIXE PERSIAN LAWX WAISTS Entire front of finest pin tucking:; long sleeves and lack trimmed with cluster tucks. Shoulder seams of Leading S9. Millinery Special for Fri. All Gage and Fisk Hats Reduced OXE TIIIRI). The seasons very latest and swell est creations. 5 trimmed hats will so for S2.95. 10 and $12.50 trimmed hats will go for $5.95 Your choice of any Flower or Foliage in our stock at 25d the bunch. SOFT SILK PETTICOATS AND SLIPS Assortment of tdlk petticoats are now at high tide. It's an easy matter to choose a stylo that will suit in just the right shade to match your gown. New soft niessaline petticoats and slips are shown in a number of new shades. Some of the petticoats have silk taffeta .lei'MV tops, which fit closely. Flounces are accordiou plaited. Taffeta petticoats are also shown in extra large sizes in changeable colors, black, navy and gray. Some fancy mcsi-aline skirts are also seen in plain white and light evening shades, daintily trimmed with fine laces and inser tions. Accordion plaited flounces are finish ed at the top with beading and riblwui bow. A wide range of prices from which it will Ik- eav to suit almost anv purse limits S4.95 to S10. Pure Food Grocery Fresh Dairy Butter, roll 60 Peanut. Butter, jars 15 aud 20 Condensed Soups, 2 cans 25 Pure Dressed Clams, pint jars 35 Genuine Camenbort Cheese, cans - 60 Yeet Cheese, cans 50 Pineapple Chocs, each 65 Fancy Cream Brick Cheese, pound 30 Ripe Juicy Oranges, dozen 25 Compressed Yeast, 2 cakes 5 'Maple Ilutter,try i jar today, each 45? Dundee Marmalade, jars 35 Pure Minced Clams, cans 12 1 2c and 15 Xuefchatel .Cheese 15 ; 2 for 25 German Breakfast, Cheese, each 10 Fancy Imported Swiss, pound 45 Fig Pudding, cans 15 and 25J Hawaiian Pineapple, 0 cans SI THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE Where It Pays to Trade Save Your Coupons e9OOOQOOOOOO0OOOOOOO8 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 9 o o o (Special Correspondence.) Milton, Ore., April 28. The funer al of Mrs. Fred Sehrier, who died In this city Inst Fridny, was held In the Presbyterian church nt Freewater Tuesday afternoon, the Rev. Dr. Wenkney officiating. The funeral was one of the most largely atended ever held at Milton, the procession being fully a mile long. Mrs. Sehrier was formerly Miss I,ulu Baldwin and was well known tiere. She was born at I'klah, Ore., 23 years ago, and a few years ago became the wife of Mr. Fred Shrler. a prominent rancher near Freewater. She left a babe a few days old. Interment was made in the I. O, O. F. cemetery at Milton. Delegates to the grand lodge from Milton Encampment No. 62, are A. A. Mann,' J. F. Oraddick. E. Williams, H. M. Cockburn and J. W. Muir. Mr. nnd Mrs. Chas MeKenzie were Garden City visitors today The Walla Walla "Rears" seem to have a grouch because the Athena "Millers" beat them In a good game of baseball Sunday. Hurrah for AthenaT Mrs. Flem Ilerry of Walla Walla Is the guest this ween- of Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Henry. Pearson's academy and the Milton high school will have a track meet on the college diamond Thursday afternoon. MANY SHEEP ARE SHIPPED FROM ECHO 'randma Pearson. .T.is Hoskins transacted business In P ::dl(tun today. P. F. Atkinson mad.? a business :::: to Stanfield this morning. C nstrur-tion gang Xo. 2 left yester ' iv f. ir Co?. artificial silk is produced from cellu- fPpecial Correspondence.) E'-ho, Ore., April 27. R. T. Bick-r-"l shipped five carloads of sheep from h.-re the first of the week, billed t . S'.mh Omaha, wi'h graz.ng and j.. -ture privileges at Huntington. Mr. r.'.ifknell purchased the sheep of M. fv (.'"rrigiil of Butter creek. L. V. Holmes left Tuesday morning f..r Portland in response' to a tele gram stating that his mother, Mrs. A nun-la Hoirtus was dangerously 111 nt that place. i rnard Caliison returned yester- . from a tr p to Wallula. where he f..und his horse, saddle and chaps wliiih 'Acre stolen from here on last Ft i.'ay night. K1 Hammer of the K.ho Mercantile company, has purchased th.- ul- rej-ii'-nce and grounds, comprising C.vo lot.i en the corner of Kennedy and :-.'; streets. Mr. and Mrs. Hammer v.iii make this their home. Mr-. M. A. liarker is home from 11 ppner, where she was vi.-iting .vith h r daughter, Mi.-s Iicu'.ah I'.ark'T, ' wh.j teaches at that place. K. T. George and Mr. and MrJ. K. K. Lewis left for Walla Walla 'his nioin.ng to attend the aviation meet. Th"y went over by automobile. J Percy Jarman was among the vis- ! it irs in Pendleton yesterday. j Mr. and Mrs. H. Canniff, old resi-; dents of (Jalloway, but now of Lex- j ineton, havt spent the past week with i Foley Kidney Pills con'aln In con-! -entrated form Ingredients of estab-j lished therapeutic value for the I prompt alleviation of all kidney and ; Madder trouble to progress beyond j the reach of medicine, but start talc ing Foley Kidney Pills atonce. Re fuse substitutes. A. C. Koeppcn & Bros. ! t'JSTS AVOID I Tl SSI.K WITH I.OFIl S.in Francisco. The San Francisco cust .r.is ' f:"i: e has. in a measure, vpik.-d the guns of the New York de ; r.tment nnd the Argus-eye, 1 I.oeb, who has proved himself no resjiector of wealth or might as those assets are measured in s'nn Francisco, finds himself outwitted by the sagacious w 'iiari of the west. When .she goes abroad this sum mer to see the coronation of King leorge and his plain, hut royal, spouse-, she will without dismay and without fear of subsequent unpleas : n notoriety take with her all her L'-w-gaws. laces, furs and cowns. In !' o t, she has already gone London ward with more than $3.ono,nno worth ' 'rinkets. How does the customs official know? lier-ause she registered them all with Chief Hoarding Officer Chas. C. Stephens before she started. She 1 him the value of everything down to gloves and stockings before she :-et a foot on the Overland train which took her to the New York point of embarkation. She received a certifi- .ite and an accompanying inventory, v.Meh. when she returns after all the f houtir.g and the tumult in "Lunnon," will exempt her from paying duty on anything except gross packages pur i hased abroad. If only Mrs. George McNear of Oakland, had thought of the simple precaution, she might have avoided an unpleasant Incident this winter, or Mrs. Remi P. Schwerin, who also had a little tussle with the customs offi cials; or Mrs. J. Livingston Taylor, of Cleveland, O. lose. One process employs nitro i glycerine which is really nothing j more tnan soluble gun cotton, from it the threads to be used in manufac ture are drawn in either ether or alcohol After the thread has been drawn and s ready for wearing it is supposed to demonstrated. If it Is, it entirely safe. If it is not, it may be exceedingly dangerous, for it then remains nothing less than gun cotton spun into a fabric. Sri in the future It may be worth while to remain from stamping the "near silk" clad foot or yanking vic iously at the cravat of the same ma terial, even those casualties from ex plosive garments have not yet been reported. i:plosivk SOCK IS LATKST D WGFIt The Sound Sleep of GooJ Health can not be overestimated and any ailment that prevents it is a menace to h;:lth. J. L. Southers, Eau Claire, Wis , says: "1 have been unable to lilcep soundly nights, because cf pains i '.cross my back and soreness of my! kidneys My appetite was very poor! and rny general condl'ion was myrn run flown. I have been taking Fo Jy Kldrey pills but a short time and tiow sleep as sound as a rock, my general conditlorr Is greatly Improved nd I know that Foley Kidney Pills , nave cured me." Good result always follow the use of Foley Kidney Pllla. 'They are a prompt corrective of uri nary irregularities. Try them. A. C. Koeppen Bro. New York. That various citizens throughout the country maybe the un suspecting wearers of gun cotton neckties and explosive socks liable to blow up at any moment, Is the start ling possibility Just brought to light here. Nor is the feminine sex Im mune from the danger since petti coats may likewise be articles of de- tniction. This unsuspected condition of affairs has been discovered through a local prtest recently filed against the manufacture of artificial (ilk from cellulose, In which It ap pears there is a possibility that al most any article made to represent real silk may be actually explosive. There are several processes it ap pears according to protest by which at tiii: tii i:ti :ix. Travelogues. The Johnson-Wlllard company, presenting by stereoptiean views, Jack London' famous trip to the South Se;l Islands in "The Snark," and also Introducing Willard, the Man of Mystery," delighted a small but appreciative audience at the Or egon theater last night. As much or more was offered than had been pre viously advertised and It was the con census of opinion of all present that it was one of the best performances of the kind that has ever been given in this city. The graphic descriptions shown by slides nnd the lecture given by Martin K. Johnson, companion to Jack London, of their trip to the South Sea, Islands proved to be both Interesting and instructive. Willard performed some marvelous feats In the way of card tricks and his imitat ing of a dog fight, railroad train, Ger man band and many other things was a wonder to the audience. He performed the extraordinary feat of growing In height about eight inch es, and then settling back to his nor mal size. Another performance will be given tonight, at which time Mr. Willard will give some demonstrations In the art of hypnotism besides performing other difficult feats. A change of program will be presented in the views of the South Sea Island trip. (iOTIIAM GOSSIP. ; New York. If there Is such n bug as the love microbe and Sunday supplement scientists affirm that there is it has certainly been busy In the family of George Jay Gould. Miss Marjorle. who is now Mrs. An thony J. Drexel, Jr., was the first vic tim of the affection-inspiring bacillus. Next came Miss Vivien, who was scarcely out of short dresses before she became engaged to Lord Decles, and her matrimonial alliance with the titled Tirltisher speedily followed. Jay Gould, at the tender age of twen ty two. Is soon to be the head of a house, his marriage with Miss Annie D. Graham being set for Saturday next. And now Dame Rumor is whispering that Klngdon Gould Is smitten with the charms of a certain fair Philadelphia girl, to whom he has offered his hand and heart and such few millions as he will Inherit from the goodly estate founded by the first Jay Could, wrecker of railroads and financial pirate. Miss Graham, who becomes Mrs. Jay Gould next Saturday, Is a charm ing maiden of twenty. More, she Is a princess of the blood royal, altho-ugh at present her family is not working at the trade ow ruling. Queen Lydia Kamekeha Lilluokalani of Hawaii commonly called Queen "Lll" for sli .rt is her grandmother. Her fat he:- was John Graham, an Ameri can, and her stepfather is Hubert Voh. the famous portrait painter. Miss Grah.tm "hows traces of her Hawai ian ancestry in her face, wir, h is i.iotl mt i i'hi-r than beautiful. Another wedding in high life m ex pected before long, when Miss Cath erine L. Hamersley, an heiress to millions, will become the bride of Vincent Astor, only beloved son of Col. John Jacob Astor. The word "beloved'" is not used In any facetious spirit, sini- Damon anil Pythias "had nothing on" Col. Astor and his hand some offspring In the way of Insepar ableness. Young astor Is by no means a society fop, but a sensible, studious and father quiet young man who at times appears rather weight ed down with the responsibility of the hundred or two million dollar es tate that he will some day be re-ii'n-il to take charge of. .VI 'ss Catherine Hamersley, Vincent .V tor's "Intended," Is one of the two children of th lat" J. Ho-ker Ham ersley. who died some ten years ago. The Hamersley children, L. Gordon ami Miss Catherine, share an estate valued dt between forty nnd fifty mil lions. Until they reached maturity the youncsters were kept In Ignorance of the great fortune that awaited them. The courts gave them a very moderate allowance and they lived plainly anil dressed simply. thus avoiding the development of the jn silnct of snobbishness that Is su often in evidence among the children of the very rich. President Taft will spend a busy two days in New York next week n Wednesday he will open the Il'lnd Workers' Kxhiblt at the Metropolitan opera house, review the Seventy-first regiment cn the fiftieth anniversary of Its starring for the front, and dine with the Hungarian Republican club. On Thursday he will attend the an nual dinner of the Associated Press and the American Newspaper Pub lishers' association nnd has also promised, If possible, to look In at the banquet of the Aeronautical society. A Now riwh Mill. New York, April '.7. As a result of the Importation of 500 pounds of fogash, a Hungarian fish dainty spe cially Imported for President Taft to eat at the Hungarian dinner here to night, society has started a fad and It Is said will encourage the Importation of the fish for its large smart affairs. One of the secrets of success In ad vertising Is to say something that will Interest people. Ml I .,... -n mi a . ji.. For Infants and Children. ALCOHOL 3 PER ci' v-p AVv-getabk rVrparallonrar-similaiiiigrhcRiodandRrtiila imguie aiomactis andDowebof Plromotcs Di-slionJdf rrti' ness and KVsi .Contains neitrw Opium.Morphirte nor Mineral OT NARCOTIC. MstSmi CiwXrr Aperfpct Remedy rorCtTnsHrm tion . Sour SttTiuach.UlatThoa Worms .Convulsions Ji"VTrisli ncss audLoss of Sleep. Fax Simile Signararf of NEW YORK. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of t jr. i I t : 1 Exact Copy of Wrapper. In Use For Over Thirty Years tm( eiimua eoamiRr. Niw roaa em, lei; Ton etrv. Tuft to Stenk. New Yrrk, April 27. President Taft will address the members of the Associated Press and American News paper Publishers' association' at their Joint annual banquet tonight. TII IJ NKW COLLKGE PRBSnENT. (Minneapolis Tribune.) The new college president has come to stay. Pewall the passing of the scholar as we may, he cannot com pete with the business man. The graces of culture and the nice refine ments of conduct must be learned from deans or department heads or taken on the mere personal authority of classroom teachers. So seretly fond are the young of bowing to supreme authority or none In these high matters that they In cline to learn them badly frm com rades. The new president may have them but he has no time or opport r ty f ir their exhibition except on the puhlie platform and boys and girls do not learn vlt.il things ther". He has no time to stay with his chi'.rireu even at that long range much m the year, so busv Is he promoting it in tin- sentimental invent mctft world advrrti.eng t to parents, an. touting for it ; lasses, deorating it wi'h ath letic i.i-ne mill filling Hie ears of the Kroninllocs with its ahieveiuen's; ami al'"e all haunt, uk places where sudden u-aMh Is g.itu.-t anil wher the po-Mssors of It are ale u' to da-. In the hope that some of it will come off on the trustees of his college. We suy collegu, not university, ad visedly, because the old hope that tho small colleges would escape this epidemic of business is gone. Wheth er for men or women, the spirit of tho commercial age drives one of its motive powers Into every vacancy. Tho only board of trustees that has dared put an old fashioned scholar at the head controls tha fortunate university whose endowment la suf ficient to Its needs If not to Its wants. Many of the new college presidents are scholars and g entlemen, and scholars and gentlemen do these things under the lash of duty. Hut fhey cannot work at tho old traded too. If the youth of this generation j of vast material endowment nnd dl versifle, opporunlty are to get what ! the old college presidents gave It ; must be from some more Intimate i source. 1 Perhaps the deans of the university colleges may develop Into something like the Oxford and Cambridge mas ; ters nnd diffuse the penetrating In- fluence that has m ule some of them more Immortal than their scholar ship. That is on the kr s ,,f the gods. T emu a ro 1 1 n. oxr. pay. Take I.A.V-VTIVR llliOMO ljulnin T lil.-t.s. Druirsrixl refund money If it f liU to cure. K V,". illltiVK'S Mi-nature Is on ii -h hex. 25c. o Mini ti v. waf J k Ti. . xrfj&? . iw.iiiii .- -.a . .i.i'Wj Mif - H 4f- ' is ltln,Mii,. iln, Aerial ljirn -' mi. I n i- i. .. . . .,. . . Making I- lights Idiily, tin- linla ,.,. r the Week, at the Walla Wallft i'nlr (.naiiids. .varj bummer Excursion Fares (lean llrcnd fir NoV- York, New York, April 27. Commission er of Accounts Fosillck, who has been making an examination of the baker ies of the city has about completed his task and the result of his work re veals the fit:t that present measures for the protection of the public health through insistance on sanitary condi tions where food is prepared are n farce. Mr. Fosdick will, within a day or so, make an effort to have several hundred smaller cellar bakeries clean ed up or put out of existence, claim ing that their conditions are Intoler able. Tho thought of eating food pre pared In such places is shocking, de clares the commissioner, whilo the danger from tho spread of disease is sufficient In itself to Justify the city In taking rigorous measures. Only about one In every hundred cablegrams Is a personal message, the other 99 being official, commercial or journalistic. To the East. And Convention Fares May i 2 to Oct. 1 4--Fof E.ghet'a'0"nthays To St. Paul, Minneapolis, Oinaha, Kansas City, and uunrr .eastern icrminais $80 00 To Chicago To St. Louis To Denver 72.50 70.00 55.00 To other Eastern points, projortionately low fares lliese are round trip fares. LIBERAL TIME ALLOWED FOR TIUP. STOPOVERS PERMITTED. It is not t0 early to plan your summer trip. If you will advise us where you want to go and where you want to visit and when you want to ' start, we will adviso the lowest cost and best nr ranfrcinents. ' TICKETS ARE FIRST CLASS and can he used on the NORTH COAST LIMITED Tho Crack train to and from the East. And on our other three Transcontinental Trains Secure full information from any passenper representative. Northern Pacific Railway WALTER ADAMS. Agent, Pendleton, Oregon A. D. CHARLTON", Asst. Gen. Pass. Apont, Portland Ore.