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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1911)
PAGE TWO. DAILY HAST OUBGONIAN, PENDliETOX, OltEGOX, Tl'I-SDAY, OCTOnEIt 17, 1911. EIGHT PAG 198. Save Your T. P. W. Trading Coupons, erery one of them, don't miss an opportunity to get all of them yoj can, because they mean an actual saving to you of exactly 5 Per Cent, of your cash purchase 5 saved on tvory dollar spent. A sure saving of $1.00 out of every JO.OO. Poos that sound good I Can you save one dollar out of ovcry twenty as easily in any other way i Can you ot such nice things any other place or in any other way as we give FREE with our trading coupons i WE HAVE A VERY FIXE STOCK OF PREMIUMS NOW. New Brasswaro, Xew Cut Glass, New Electric Lamps, Xow Fancy China. Plain llaviland China, Silverware, Rug and many other new and beautiful articles, all of which are riven absolutely free to our cash customers for trading coupons, and by trading here in Pendleton's largest and best store you simply save just 5 per cent of your necessary ex Tvnses, such as groceries, dry goods, clothing, ets. Stop and consider the matter, you'll readily see the sense in trading here, you'll realize the saving to yourself. Don't wait, Kgin now. WOMEX'S HOUSE PRESSES. Made of best quality Percale in stripes and figures, high neck and long sleeves, full ranee of sizes. Special for Wednesday, $1.50 grade for .1 $1.13 STRIPEP FOULARP WAISTS A large range of colors, black, navy, brown, etc., made with high neck and kimoua sleeves. $2.9S values, Weil. $1.79 OUTIXG GOWXS. Ladies outing flannel gowns, made of best quality outina flannel, tucked or plain vokes, trimmed with blue, pink and white. All sizes. $1.50 values Wed. only $1.13 CHILDREN'S OUTIXG PETTICOATS. A fine choice of colors, made with plain or scalloped ruffles in pink, blue and white. Nice warm garments for the little folks. Cheaper than von can possiblv make them. 50? Quality Wednesday 37? 65? Quality Wednesday 52? CHILDREN'S WHITE OUTIXG GOWXS. These white gowns, trimmed in white, pink and blue are very pretty, and serviceable too. Economically priced. OS? Value, Wednesday 69? OUR FAMOUS ART PEPARTMEXT. Second Floor. SATIX PIN CUSHIONS. We have every length, color, size and width. Satin cover ed pin cushions, all ready for use. Just the thing for Christmas presents, or shower presents. Easily covered ; colors, red, yellow, blue and pink. Prices range from each .. 15? to $1.0Q LINEN LUNCH CLOTHS. We have just received a new lot of linen lunch cloths, buf fet scarfs, tray scarfs and tea cloths in the very best qual ity of linen, hemstitched borders; also new lot of real eluny luncheon sets, buffet scarfs, doilies, etc., fine qual ity linen, with cluny edging"; all sizes and prices from each 20? to $10.00 POLO CLOTH For those long coats, 50 inches wide, excellent finish and pos itively brand new. Come in, let us show you. FLANNEL SHIRTING In a few patterns for men's shirts. Medium dark colors; worth 75? yard, sjeoial at the price of, yard ...35? 25? FUJI SILK 25? A nice silk of 27 inch width; good lustre finish: looks like 50? silk ; comes in white, pink and blue. Fuji silk 25? EIDERDOWN Of all wool, 27 inches wide; best quality. Comes in gray, red and white; special, the yard 60? 50 SILK WAIST PATTERNS New in stock .of the newest, freshest on the market, in stripes. plaid. Dresden, etc., all colors. $.U to SH.OU. rices per pattern The Peoples Warehouse "Where it I'ays io Trade. Save Your Coupons. AIM PICTURE SHOWS Orlicuni. l'lsj Edison feature for Tuesday's change. 1. "New York State Barge Canals Fiom the Hudson IUver to Lake Erie. Total length with branches, 460 miles. The largest enterprise ever undertaken by a single state. Esti mated cost, $1 OS, 000, 000." In this latest Edison educational offering. In teresting from beginning to end, ve are impressed by the fact that man appears to have little part in the stu pendous work. The massive and com plicated machinery seems to act as though it were Itself alive and cn dewned with Intelligence and yet man ; planned and operates it all. Many of the views are at close range. In ' all respects the photograph Is per ', feet. 2. "The Willow Tree." Vita graph. A romance of Southern Call- i fornla. Lost reason is restored and a sweet heart recovered by the recol lection of home and mother, associated with the willow tree. It Is different from others, not appealing solely to the Wild West melodramatic thrills. It is logical and human In its senti ments and truthfulness to facts. 3. "The Passing of Dappled Fawn." I Fathe. Dappled Fawn Is the daugh- ter of the chief of her tribe, and is l.i love with a young brave, but her ' affection is frowned upon by her father, who gives her to a trapper In exchange for many gifts. Heartbrok j eu she leaves with the trapper, and i they ride away from the camp tow ! aids their" new homo. Big Bear, her ! lover takes a horse from camp and j follows her. He catches up with them, and there ensues a spectacular I fight on horseback between the trap i per and the Indian. Big Bear is kill ed and' poor little Dapple Fawn I throws herself from a cliff to join her : lover in the happy hunting ground. 4. "Tin Mines and Foundry' In Ma- lacca." Pathe. Being an exceeding ly Interesting and instructive picture ; of these Industries. 6. ' "The Burglarized Burglar." Essanay. Here Is as funny a com I edy as you will see In many a day. There Is a decidedly novel twist in ! the plot of the fortune hunter and ! the heiress and a finish you would ! never guess. It will prove productive I of many good laughs. Known For Its Strength j The First iafiona! Bank PENDLETON, OREGON CAPITAL, SURPLUS and UNDIVIDED PROFITS . RESOURCES OVER 00 a, SECURJTY bluffed the sheriff nnd put him to flight. Ho won the girl by his clever tusa. , "The Thysiclan's Monkey." Itala Tho roctor received a pet monkey and In answering a hurry call left the monkey in his rooms. The neighbors thought the doctor was crazy, judging by noise In his apartments. Lots of laughs In this comedy. "Foolshead, Somnambulist." Itala. Mr. Foolshead had a number of try ing experiences while walking in his sleep and his awakening Is funny, indeed. WIFK CAIXS AFFINITY IX . SLKKI' Ill'llHY I1EAHS "Oh! You Jerry!" Enritiiringly Mumb les Woman IiiveKtitnitioii Ix-ads to Filing of Divorce Suit. Chicago, 111. Discussing affinities In your sleep "right out loud" especi ally when hubby is a light sleeper and apt to be attentively listening with a supersensitive and Inquisitive ear. Is not a very wise plan for wives to pursue. Mrs. Anna Breitung Is charg ed with thinking of her soulmate not only In the daytime, but with having babbled his name in her slumbers. She found this out when her spouse, Charles Breitung, filed suit for a di vorce in the superior court charging among other thing habitual drunk enness. Breitung, who Is secretary of Wil kin, Breitung & Co., clothing manu facturers at 210 West Van Buren street, sets forth in his bill that they were married in July, 18'J9, and that shortly afterwards his wife began the excessive use of intoxicants. Then one still night hubby awoke to hear Mrs. Breitung chuckling In her sleep and epaculating. "Oh, you Jer ry." Breitung listened for a few min utes as she repeated the word "Jerry" over and over again, thinking that she might be dreaming of the "Tom and" variety, but the expected suffix came not. Then Breitung became suspicious and began to wonder what Jerry's last name might be. After an investiga tion he found out that Jerry was a very live member of the. detective force of the police department. In his bill Breitung declares his wife frequents saloons and a certain down town cafe and that she is not a fit per.-'on to care for their three children, all girls, ranging from 3 to It years of age. Besides he was tired of having his slumber disturbed by the name of his rival, "Jerry." The farmer, the parson, the storekeeper, the judge and the blacksmith all agree that they owe their youth fulness, health and happiness to the regular use of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey as prescribed. SKX DECIDES 1VM1TIXK GltANT. Court ltesorts to Old English Preced ent In Settling Estate. Belleville, III. Judge Perrln of the probate court resorted to an old Eng lish law precedent In the final settle ment of the states of Schuyler C. Hill, Mrs. Ruth Hill and Ellen Sawyer, who were killed In a wreck at Benld, III.,, last year. The jadge held that tho wife, owing to her wenker sex, was the first to succumb to the Injuries. As a result the $3,000 estate will go to Hill's relatives. The rnstinie. Coming for Tuesday's change of program. A remarkable western picture, full of exciting' incidents and replete with superb acting and hor-e-tnanship. "Dad's Girls." Sellg. Dad, a like able old pioneer character lived am ong the foot hills of the western min ing region with his two daughters, Rose and Madge. He had been do ing a little prospecting and about the time the story starts we see him tak ing some of his quartz to Andy Thomas, a young assayer. Andy is a good hearted chap who has fallen in to the clutches of a card sharp, who holds his I. O. U. for a large gamb ling debt. The gambler offers to cancel this debt if the assayer will put him next to somn good claim and report unfavorably on Its value to the owner. Andy's chance comes when Dad brings in this new-found quarts. Dad refuses to sell. Then the gam bler decides to kidnap the girls. The girls effect a thrilling escape and In the getaway Rose is slightly wound ed. The crowd Is for lynching the card sharp and his accomplice, Andy, but the, girls intercede and the pair are given an hour to get across the line. "College Sweethearts." American. A well acted and very amusing farce comedy. Bill and May are expelled from their respective colleges for flirting with each other. Bill's fath er casts him out on the cold world. He merely intends to give the young sters a less.m. Hill geU a Job in May's home. Then the fun begins. "Divided Interests " Lubin. How a man decided between two women. John Converse, a young widower, hesitated which of two women to take for his second wife. His small son Lester liked pretty Miss Stone, his daughter Margie was devoted to Mrs. Weeds, a pretty widow. In several tests Conver.-e decided they both came out equally well. Finally he wrote a letter to each woman stating her favorite had been stricken with small pox. Mis stone wro'e a note of sym pathy. Mrs. Weeds hurried to the house and begged to nurse the strick en child. The decision was soon made after this test. "In the Arctic Night." Vitagraph. It excites a delightful thrill and acts as a tonic to our emotions. "Art Industries in Kabyiic." A very In.-truclive film. INVEIK IN PENNSYLVANIA SHAFT TO SOIT1IS DEAD 'Ilio Cosy. For Monday and Tuesday, western comedy, two strong dramas and two comedies. "The Vagabond " Rex. Hopkins, the hobo, while strolling about comes to Editor Lee's home and is kindly treated and employed in the news paper office, but is discharged by the foreman for Incompetence. At the general store he Is approached by a group of night riders and asked to join them, which he does. Learning that the night riders plan to attack the home of Editor Lee he manages to escape and warn the editor. So he paid his debt of gratitude to those who hail befriended him. "The inventor's Wife." Itala. This Is a skillfully laid out and stirring drama about an inventor of high ex plosives and his frivolous wife, who wanted money bad enough to bo will ing to pteal her h"sband's scheme. The play Is very effective from the first scene till the dramatic close. "Rattlesnakes and Gunpowder. " American. A western comedy. The sheriff of Klckiip Gulch and an east ern drummer both proposed to Edith and Shu decided to test their bravery by asking them to put an arm In a rattlesnake's hole. The drummer balked, but the sheriff scattered to bacco In the snake's hole and put his arm In fuarlessly. Tho drummer In the night entered the general store ond substituted Iron filings for giant powder. Next day he sat amid the fake powder lighting matches and "Blues" tiud "Grays" Join in Cere mony of ResM-t to Confederate- Sol diers Who Died While ITisoners. Philadelphia. Pa. With representa tives of botli the "Blues" and the "Grays" present a granite shaft erect ed by the United States government r. memory of the Confederate dead who were buried in the Pittsville na tional cemetery here during the Civil war was unveiled with appropriate ciremonies. The speaker of the day was John Shepard Beard of Staun ton, Va. Music was furnished by mu sicians from the Philadelphia navy yard. The shaft stands nine feet six inches in height, and bears this Inscription: "Erected by the United States to mark the burial place of 184 Confed erate soldiers and sailors, as shown by the records, who, while prisoners of war, died either at Chester. Pa., and were there buried, or at Philadelphia and were buried In Glenwood cemetery and whose remains were subsequently removed to this cemetery, where the individual graves cannot now be lden-tiiied." Hotel McFeely The Only Strictly First-Class, Modern Priced Hotel in the City New House. New and Beautiful Furniture. Hot and Cold Water in Every Room. NO INSIDE ROOMS. Rates $1.00 and $1.50 Per Day Corner Alder & 4th Streets Oppositt Keylor Grand Theatre, Walla Walla, Wash. SAYS QUININE WILL NOT BREAK A COLD HOW TO Cl'ltE COLDS AND tiltll'I'i: IN A FEW HOCUS You will distinctly feel your cold breaking and all the grippe symptom's leaving after taking the very first dose. It Is a positive fact that Pape's Cold Compound, taken every two hours, until three consecutive doses are ta ken, will end the grippe and "break up the most severe cold, either in the head, chest, back, stomach or limbs. It promptly relieves the most mis erable headache dullness, head and nose stuffed up, feverlshness, sneez ing, sore throat, running of the nose, mucous catarrhal discharges, sore ness, stiffness and rheumatic twinges. I'ape's Cold Compound is the re sult of three years' research at a cost of more than fifty thousand dollars and contains no quinine, which we have conclusively demonstrated is not effective in the treatment of colds or grippe. Take this harmless compound as directed with tho knowledge that there is no other medicine, made any where else In the world, which will cure your cold or end grippe misery as promptly and without any other assistance or bad after-effects as a 25-cent package of Pape's Cold Com pound, which any druggist in the world can supply. Ion't tr.flo with a cold Is good ad vice for prudent men and women. It may be vital in case of a child. There is nothing better than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for coughs and colds in children. It Is safe and sure. For -ale by all dealers. : When you want ; THE AUTO CABj PHONE MAIV 408. j The OREGON MOTOR GO. j WHERE TO ? Seattle ? Spokane ? Portland I Arrive Seattle 8:15 A.M. Arrive Spokane 9 :55 P. M. Arrive Portland 8:10 A. M. Northern Pacific Railway Tho Pioneer Line, First class trains. Close connections. Good leaving time. Good arriving time, SLEEPING CARS FROM PASCO Throusth Tickets to all Points Secure tickets nnd full information from W. ADAMS, AGENT X. P. RY PENDLETON. Ask about EXCURSION FARES for these events: Nation Apple Show, Spokane, November 23-30. ( East End Grocery The most popular trading place in town is now agent for the Celebrated Seal Shipt Oysters J. W. DYER, Prop. Phone M 536 ir 315 E. COUIIT ST. "Born with the Republic" IT AMES. E. PEPPEj WHISKEY Oldest distillery in America and the best Whiskey ever made in Kentucky. Established in 1780. Columbia Liquor Store Sole distributors in Pendleton, HERMAN PETERS, Prop.