pack kigiit. DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN, rEXPUETOX, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 191S. EIGHT PAGES. MILTON IN THROES OF SMALL POX SCARE Newsy Notes of Pendleton nderuear, Shirts, Our prices will please you. WEWANT-lgl 3 TO BE PUS. BANNER YEAR We'll make it worth while for you if you'll trade here. Standard Grocery Co., Inc. PHOXE MAIX 90. FRANK O'GARA, Pres. P. 0. RECEIPTS III 1911 GAIN OVER 10 NOT AS GREAT, HOWEVER. AS PREVIOUS YEARS GAIN Month of December Slakes Rest Showing of Increase of Any Dur in Year Just Part Total Amount for Year Over $22,000. Figures Just compiled by Harry Rees, assistant postmater, show that the receipts of the local post office for the year 1911 were about one per cent greater than for the year 1910. The receipts for the December just closed show the bus'ness for that month to have been about three per cent better than for the month of De cember, 1910. The following tables show the re ceipts per month during 1910 and 1911: 1910. 1911. January t 2,023.80 2,072 15 February . . . 1,580.78 1,737.13 March 1,576.56 1,725.03 April 1.886.37 1,822.38 May ...... 1.463.41 1,694.77 June ...4... 1,525 93 1,394.12 July 1,675.54 1,956.56 August 1,922.62 1,659.66 September .. 2 018.01 1,849.21 October .... 2,237.99 2.190.55 November .. 1,924 12 1.754T.83 December .. 2.344.08 2,429.65 , Totats $22,056.39 122,286.04 Gain, $229.65. For the year, 1909, the total re ceipt at the postoffice were $20. 574 36 and the gain made by 1910 over 1909 was about seven per cent. The December business for the year 1909 amounted to $3023 39. The fis cal year in the postal department closes March 31. NEW PHONE SWITCH AT LUXD A ALL HOME SCENE ' OF HAPPY CARD PARTY Sunday School Missionary Occupies ; Pulpit Colonel Stanfield Sliii Sheep to Portland Market New, liaby Girl at Johnson Home (Special Correspondence). Stanfield, Jan. 2. A new' switch i board has been installed in the local telephone exchange. It is of modern style and considerable larger than the : one formerly used. Three carloads of Bheep were ship- i ped from here to Portland Saturday! night by R. N. Stanfield. Saturday evening at the home of! Mrs. E. Lundwall, occurred a very de lightful card party, there being twenty1 four gutsui present. The rooms were beautiful with Christmas decorations of green and red. Including the Christmas bells. Pedro wis the game in whirh the guests indulged. The first prize for ladies was won by Mrs. j. f. Bagan, consolation prize, Mrs. H. Wessell. First prize for gentle men was won by H. C. Bartholomew, consolation prize by F. M. Smith. Fol lowing the card gamos, the hostess served delicious refreshments. Those present voted It a most enjoyable evening. iie Ladies Aid Society held a re ception last evening. Sunday at both the morning and evening services in the Presbyterian church the pulpit was filled by Rev. J. F. Vernon, of Milton, the Sunday school missionary for the Pendleton and Grand Ronde Presbyteries. He vas greeted by a good sized congre gations and his sermons were very much enjoyed. Frank. Sloan was transacting bus iness at Echo Saturday. , Mr. Phelps of the Umatilla Storage tc Commission company, with head quarters at Hermlston, was here Fri day looking after business of this lo cal branch. ' Miss Kdna Brownfield Is here from Grangevllle, Idaho, visiting her! mother. I W. R. Howard went to PortlanJ Sunday to attend the funeral of his brother, who died In that city on Sat urday. Mrs. D. E. Bale arrived rom Port land Sunday and Joined her husband who recently opened a barber shop at Stanfield. Mr. and Mrs Wadhams of Seattle are recent arrivals here. Mr. Wad liams Is employed by Eschbach, Bruce Co., and will operate the large ditch machine in digging the drainage ditch here. Mr. Keefe came from Portland yes terday to take a position in the office of the Inland Irrigation Co. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johnson, resl- That During 1912 You will buy your Groceries at this store. Phone orders carefully attended. Stock crisp ..id fresh every day. WHERE ALL ARE PLEASED. BERNARD O'GARA. Sec-Trww. dents on the Furnish project aeT re I ceiving congratulations over the ar rival of a daughter at their home Sunday afternoon. Dr. Reid, the at tending physician reports all well. Dr. M. S. Kern of Pendleton was a Stanfield visitor Sunday. R. N Stanfield went to Portland Sunday to look after business mat ters. The Umatilla Drainage Ditch Board of Directors held a meeting Saturday evening. Considerable important bus iness was transacted. Robt. Gllmour was a Hermlston vis itor Saturday. Mrs. R. N. Stanfield and daughter Barbara came wrom Pendleton Fri day and are spending a few days here. Chas. J. Ward went to Portland Friday. County Commissioner Horace Wal ker went to Pendleton Saturday eve ning. Misses Gladys and Eva Ward, who have been spending holiday week with their father Geo. L. Ward, re turned to Pendleton yesterday where they are attending the Sisters' school. Sunday the Presbyterian " Sunday school held Its annual election, all the officers and teachers being re-elected. The officers are W. T. Reeves, super intendent, Mrs. J. E. Reeves, seretary tieasurer. Harry Ornduff of Pendleton was transacting business in Stanfield yes terday. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Priegnitz were motor passengers to Echo yesterday. At The Grand. The Austin Co. in "Vacation Time" is playing to capacity houses. The full cast la seen In different charac ters. Six classic songs are presented and with the singing and dancing chorus take well. After the show last night the Austin Co. entertained at the Moose hall during the banquet and dance. Several new members are be ing added to the company and will greatly strengthen same. Thursday night the enmnflnv will present "My Neighbors Wife," a farce full of vim and comedy from begin ning to end. Rehearsals have also begun for the war drama for the benefit of Malabon Camp of Spanish American war veter ans, Jan. 15, 16, and 17. DANCE UMBO-JUMBO" AND TAKE OFF FLESH Conventionalized "nula-Htila" Rec ommended by Congres-iional Delo pnto from Ilawa'J a an Effective Rcdncer of Too Much Fat. Washington Well calculated to remove superfluous flesh Is the new mumbo-Jumbo" dance, which "Prince Cupid," otherwise Jonas Kuhlo Ka lan'anaole, the' congressional delegate from Hawaii, has Introduced here. It U an Americanized version of the "hula-hula," a native dance, which make9 the performances of the Roulin Rouge look like a high school class in calesthenlcs. According to those who have seen It on its nat've heath and that In cludes all the friskily Inclined tour ists whj vi'!t Honolulu, the "hu'.a hula" exceeds the speed limit of ter pslchorean achievements. Even in its denatured form, the "mumbo-Jumbo" makes the "turkey trot" and the "grizz:y bear" seem quite tame. "I can assure you," gays gen'al Prince Cupid," "that the new dance is worth a whole cour-e of Muldoon Ing .o those who want to take off av ordupols. but I am told, the Ameri can! l'ke anything unique It's unique, all right.' "The native dance was not consid ered risque unt'l the Americans de manded something with local c'o'or. Then I am told the native dancers added a good many trimmings to their original gyrations." "Prince Cup'd" thinks that In its conventlona.lzed form the dance is "all right." However s'nee fashion able Washington ha frowned on the "turkey trot" and the "grizzly bear" partisans of the new dance hardly ex pect It to obtain widespread popular ity. There Is no prospect that it will supplant the ea'd waltz and two-step at debu'ante affairs. TO SELL SEIZED ROYAL JEWELS De.iyHrfxl Famly Protest Portugal Offer. K nrs Private Property. Badajoz. The Portuguese govern ment has declared iti intention of selling 'he Jewels and other valu able wh'ch have been found In the roya' palaces, Including rlnce Mi guel's Jewe's which alone are valued at $2,500 000. The depoed royal faml'y has pre sented a cla'm, stating that with th4 exception of the crowns the remain der of the valuables rons'tlns; of bracelets, necklaces, belts and Jew eled arm" sr the pr'va'e property ol Klnr E'nonM! tn Queen Amelle. The rah'""t m'nlsters are conslaer 'rg the matter It won nit a happy New Year for everybody Thursday Afternoon Club. - The Thursday Afternoon Club is to meet this week at the home of Mrs S. A. Lowell on Johnson street. The meeting will be at 2:30 Thursday afternoon. Uk'ah IjiihI Sold. A deed was recorded today trans fering a quarter tect on of land near Ukiah and two lots In the town of Ukiah from Flora and A. R. Turner to Rl A, Morton of Colfax for a con sideration of $1500. Installation Is Postponed. The installation of officers of the Sir Knights and Royal Arch Masons which was scheduled for Friday even ing, January 5, has been postponed unt 1 a week later, January 12, on ac count of the prior date conflicting with the date of the opera, "Elijah." Revival at M. E. Church. Revival services willbegin at the Methodist Episcopal cniirch this eve ning, conducted by the pastor. Ex cellent music is being arranged for. Everyone is cordially invited to at tend these meetings. Song service, 7:30, preaching, 8 p. m. each evening. Commercial Club to Meet. The firt Commercial club meeting of the new year will be held In the club rooms tonight and President Smythe and Secretary Keefe join in requesting that a goodly attendance be out in order to make the beginning of the year 1912 propitious. School Resumed Today. . After a vacation from studies for ten days the public schools of the city resumed their work th's morning with a slightly increased attendance. There will be no Interruption In the regular school work now until the national holiday, Washington's birth day, February 22. Looking: For Location. Dr. W. S. LeRoy, of Appleton, Wis., arrived In Pendleton last evening and is the guest of Dr. R. B. Brundage. Dr. LeRoy has Just finished a post graduate course In the Wraetmer In stitute of Suggestive Therapuetics at Nevada, Mo. He is Intending to lo cate some place in Oregon. . Charles Eggorth Improving. Charles Eggerth, welKJtnown Pen dletonian, who has been taking treatment at Hot Lake for an ailment dating from his birth, has been visit ing in the city for a few days and declares he is Improving so much that he has hopes of a complete cure. He will leave this evening for the sanitorlum, to complete his treatment. $3,180 for Sportsmen. The county during the past year received from sportsmen a total of $3380, according to figures compiled and authenticated today by County Clerk Saling. Of this amount $1815 was secured from anglers and $1565 from hunters. The sale of licenses during 1911 exceeded by a consider able figure that of the preceding year. O. A. C. Club Meeting. A meeting of the Umatilla county O. A. C. alumni association has been called for tomorrow evening by C. .G. Brownell, president. The meeting Is to be held at the Hotel Bowman and will begin at 7:30. All graduates of the Oregon Agricultural college, all students and former students are In vited to attend. Sues for Divorce. Through his attorneys. Carter & Smythe, James Baldwin of Ukiah. has commenced suit against his wife, Olive Baldwin, for a divorce on the grounds of desertion. His complaint cites that they were married at ,,Tkla June 10, 1908, have one child, Earsei, aged two and a half years, and that In March, 1910, defendant without cause wrongfully deserted the plain tiff and has not lived with him since. Two in Police Court. The new year started this morning In police court with but two entries in the docket, a most propitious be ginning In view of the usual New Year's celebration. Only one of these two offenders, John Z ll, was a drunk and was given a two days' sojourn In the city bastile in order to make a new set of re'olutlons. The other man to make a bad beginning, Jack Hale, Is charged with vagrancy and his case is not yet disposed of. Means Not a Cundidate. That he Is not a candidate for chief of police of Pendleton, has not been a candidate for that office and will not be is emphatically declared today by Tom Means, local contractor and builder. During the past few weeks and during the recent mayorality campaign the name of Means was linked by gossips with the marshal ship. However, Mr. Means says there has never been anything to the ru mors and that he does not aspire to the place now held by Chief Gurdane. Leap Year Social Jilg Success. The leap year social given by the Epworth League was a decided suc cess In every way. The parlors were tastily decorated and thronged with a merry crowd. The readings by Mr. Akers and Miss Maud Gregory and the musical numbers by the Misses Greg ory were heartily encored. The or iginal poems by Dr. Temple and Miss Lecll Evans brought forth rounds of applause. Many of the beautiful bas kets proved the young gentlemen to be artistic decorators and the viands there'n testified to their high culin ary skfll. The young ladles appear ed a little awkward as acting as es corts but the boys performed their part to perfection. Moose Have Royal Tlmd. The newest lodge in the city, the Loyal Order of Moose, was host to a happy. New Year throng last even ing In . the handsomely equipped apartments Just fitted up in the Matlock-Brownfield building. Several hundred members and friends gath- With several cases of smallpox In one family at Milton somewhat of a! tenro lv now on In the east end town ! and the proposition of how to handle mo a iuiiuon nas Deen put up to Dr. D. J. McFaul, county physician. It Is In the home of a.famllv namMl Hurrl.n that the once dreaded dls- j ease now has a foothold. Several of the children are ill and in consequence thereof others living In the town are ; becoming anx'ous lust the dl. ease ! spread, I Last eveninar Dr. McFnul env In. structions that the home where the diseaso now exists be thoroughly quarantined so as to prevent others from being infected. He does not con-lder the situation snfflnlpntu. i- rlous to necessitate the closing of the i schools in Milton. I ered to hear the dedication exercises' in which Attorney Joseph T. Hlnkle or Hermlston was the m-lnclnnl speaker. Following the exercises, the crowd adjourned to the ranee hall where the hours before midnight Were poyously spent in trinnlnir tha llp-ht fantastic. Jake Welsh Able to Be Out. F. E."Jake" Welsh, proprietor of the Court street cigar store, who has been In the hospital for eight weeks following an operation, is able to he down town again although he Is still very weajc. Farm Land Is Sold. Trajan and Carrie Tucker of Wes ton have sold their farm land In the Weston section of the countv to Wil liam McKenzle for a consideration of $6000. The deed was recorded to day. Pat Doyle Pays Up; Goes Free. It did not prove very profitable for Pat Doyle to hesitate in refunding to Thomas Thompson and sons the $30 which he was overpaid. Because he waited until the law stepped In to assist his former employers, he is out several days' time and eight good dol lars of his wages. The case against him was today dismissed by Deputy District Attorney Newberry upon the payment of the $30 and costs by Doyle the costs amounting to the e'ght dol lars afore mentioned. Mitoliell to Stay Here. C. J. Mitchell, manager of the Ore gon theater for several years but who retired from that position yesterday, will remain in Pendleton until spring according to his own statement today. He declares he will accept a pbsltion with E. J. McComas until then and will probaaly move to British Colum bia later. His wife, and child will leave In a few days for Spokane where they will spend the winter. Mr. Mitchell states he has :trled hard to make the theater business profitable fie re but has been unable to secure a patronage that would pay. Mrs. I-Yed Crawford Dead. Mrs. Fred Crawford, of this citv but who has been living in Portland for some years is dead. The follow ing notice of her death is from the Portland Oregonian of yesterday: "Mrs. Mary A. Crawford, formerly a resident of Pendleton died at the fam- llv residence. 107 East Twentv-spv. enth street, Saturday at the age of 39 years, ueath was sudden from heart disease. She is survived by a wid ower, Fred Crawford, and two dau ghters, Annabel Crawford and Mrs. Robert Pierce." Laurent's ..GRILL.. Martin Building, East Wobb Street. French Chef and all white help. Best Coffee in Pendleton. Fine steaks and Hot Cakes like mother used to make. French Sun. Dinner 40c Short Orders at Moderate Prices Fresh Crabs, Crawfish,. Lobsters, Oysters and Clams. We solicit the patronage of all There Are Two Sides to every question, but there can be only one opinion of our Cleaning and pressing. It Is commended in the highest terms by those who have fa vored us with their patronage In the past. We have the most up-to-date methods and can do work quicker and better than our rivals, because we are better equipped to do the work. And we charge very moder ately for our service, too. . , Pendleton Dyo Works Phone Main lti. :06V4 B. Alts, Shoes, Cloth Elafs, all continue to go osteon Store St, George Cafe and Grill WHITE COOKS, SERVICE FIRST-CLASS Open Day and Night Prices are Rea8onab!e Hot Merchants Lunch Daily 1 1:30 A M. to 2:00 P. M. French Dinner every Sunday from 11 a. mT to g p. m. Entrance on Webb Street or through Hotel Lobby Busy! We r.rc busy invoicing and opening up new shipments of merchandise, but will bo ready wi.li an announcement of new bargains, in a few days, that will make the whole city sit up and take notice. olden Bule We Lead, Winter Underwear Greatly Reduced Men's $1.00 Shirts and Drawers 73 Men's $1.25 Shirts and Drawers 98 Men's $1.50 Shirts and Drawers $1.29 Men's $3.00 Union Suits S2.19 Ladies' $1.25 Vests and rants . 98 Ladies $1.25 Union Suit3 98 Ladies $2.00 Union Suits " $1.69 Children's Underwear low priced. Clearance Sale Prices in all departments. WONDER STORE The largest and most varied stock of Diamonds in Eastern Oregon. ' . We buy direct from the importers, for cash, and knowing these precious stones as we do, are enabled to give you just what you want and at just the price you wish to pay. YOU CAN MAKE YOUK SELECTION OF A DIA MOND AND WE WILL MOUNT IT IN ANY DESIRED MANNER, Wm. HANSCOM THE Jeweler 1912 Prices At Clark's Grocery Mince Meat, 14 pound pails ..." $1.50 ghreaded Coooannt, S packages for a5o French Mushrooms, can.,; 354 Crab Meat, pan sso Lobsters, can , 350 60 Brooms while they last at ! 35 15 Market Baskets while they last . 5 CLARK'S GROCERY Phone Main 1 74 mg, Furnishings down in price at the - Busy! Busy! Store Others Follow. 612 Main Street 1