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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 18, 1912)
DAILY EAST OREGONIAX, PKXDLEJrOIf, ORE430K,' THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1912. PAGE THREES. mm my mm EIGHT PAGES. GOODS SALE THIS SALE will inaugurate a period of rare White Goods selling such as Pendleton has never seen before. Two important features of this sale are the wonderful range of style and qualities and the lowest prices ever named for embroidery and muslin underwear of equal merit. COMMENCES NEXT MONDAY, JANUARY 22ND UNEOUALRD' MUS LIN UNBEIHWEAIi Special Sale of Gowns 1 75c, Salo price 49 $1.00, Sale price 69 $1.25, Sale price $1.50,- Salo pr. ?1.13 $1.75, Sale pr. $1.39 $2.75, Sale pr. ?2.15 $3.50, Salo pr. ?2.59 $3.75, Salo pr. ?2.79 $5.00, Sale pr. $3.78 SEE OUR WINDOW Special Sale of Combina tions $i.50, Sale pr. ?1.13 $1.75, Sale pr. ?1.39 $2.75, Sale pr. 82.15 $3.50, Sale pr. 82.59 Corset Covers all styles and prices. Special sale ol Skirts $1.25, Sale price 98 $1.50, Sale pr.. 81.13 $1.75, Sale pr. 81.39 $2.75, Sale pr. 82.15 $3.50, Sale pr. 82.59 $3.75, Sale pr. 82.79 $5.00, Sale pr. 83.78 $6.00, Sale pr. 84.48 SEE OUR WINDOWS Special Sale of Drawers 35c, Sale price. 24 40c, Sale price. 281 75c, Sale price 49 $1.00, Sale price 69 $1.25, Sale price 98 $1.50 Sale pr. 81.13 $1.75, Sale pr. 81.39 One Special Lot 75c Huck Towels 39ff All Linen. Thi I .of nf Kmhroirlpri J Includes Everything from 35c to 75c values SEE THE WINDOW DISPLAY LOOK Embroidery Sale look ( THIS IS A GREAT A i rvr cv PYriTDTinM 1 1 AL VALUES at U Gj& SEE THE WINDOW DISPLAY COME and SHARE in this GREAT WHITE GOODS SALE PILOT ROCK TO HAVE A BIG REVIVAL (Special Correspondence.) Tilot Rock Jun. 18. Evangelistic sevlces will commence next Saturday continuing during the next two weeks. Mr. Warrington will be assisted by Itov. Van Nuys of Portland. The Williams Jubilee Singers' con cert which appeared here Friday night at the Sturtevant lio.ll, certain ly was a great success In every way. A largo attendance was present, the pro ceeds being $122.50. Mrs. Walter .Smith spent Saturday and Sunday In Pendleton with her mother, Mrs. C. H. Blctcl. Bessie Campbell and Olllo Smith were visitors at Pendleton over Sun day. Mr. Terry of Uklah passed through Pilot Rock Monday on his way to Pendleton. Lon Etter was a visitor at Pendle ton Sunday. Floyd Patton of Pendleton, was a visitor at Hot Rock the first of the week. Mrs; George Curnes was a passen ger on the Tuesday evening local for Pendleton. , Bert Westgate spent Monday eve ning In Pendleton with his daughter, M iss Myrtle, who Is attending school there. Mrs. Owen Carnes and two children were v'sitors at Pendleton Tuesday night. Mrs. He'en Be'.ts and daughter, Florence, nf Nye, was In Pilot Rock Tuesday doing some shopping. H. H. McReynolds was a business visitor at Pendleton Wednesday. Esther Sturtevant spent Monday In Pendleton with friends. Herbert Hoylen whs a business Vis itor at Pilot Rock Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Casteel left Monday for Uklah to visit with his brother, Henry Casteel. 1TXIS' Ql'KKK CAVK DYEM,EltS 300O ltvplo Have Burrowed to Make Tlu-lr Homes in Clay end Rock. London. The capital city of the Matmatas, the cave-dwellors of Tu nis, containing about 3000 Inhabitants, Is one of the strangest In the world. It Is not erected upon the ground,' but Id burrowed In the earth, the country being a high, rocky plateau, barren, sunbaked and swept by the simoom. When one of these people wishes to build a dwelling he chooses his spot, traces a circle to show Its location, and then digs until he reaches the de sired depth which varies according to the number of stories he desires. The looms are caves hollowed out in the sides of the circular covered pit, and the bottom of the pit forms the court yard, which Is a usual feature of a Moorish house. Resides the rooms a passage Is also dug, communicating with the outside world, and a door Is built at the cuter end. The soil Is a malleable clay, Is easily cut and lends Itself well to excavation, the roof of each room requiring no support ns long as It Is well arched. The cave-dwellers inhabit the terri tory between the towns of Gabes, on tho Tunic coast, and the sandhills of the Sahara. IVeds Children Morphine. Cincinnati. Willy Hayes twelve and Ressie Hayes, ten, told Judge An Indian Home in Umatilla County vV ..IV ' v-' Caldwell in the Juvenile Court that they were given morphine daily by their mother. Mrs. Mary Hayes, the mother of the children, living at No. 645 West Seventh avenue explained she had used the drug and had given It to the children since they were ill as ba bies and required sleep. A telegram received by the court from the juvenile court of Lexington, Ky., asked that Mrs. Hayes be held pending the investigation of the charge that she took the children from the Children's Home In Lexington. The children will be kept In the ju venile place of detention while the ease is Investigated. COLLEGE BUYS MORE LAXD. Acrf ami a Half for Silo for School of Mins Huild;i!g for o. A. C. Pur chased. Corvallis, Ore. Secretary E. E. Wilson of the board of regents of the Oregon Agricultural college announc ed the purchase of an acre and a half E Tli Millions of Cascawt Users Never Have Headache, Constipation, Bil iousness or Sick Stomach. It Is more necessary that you keep your bowels, liver and stomach clean, pure and fresh than It Is to keep the sewers and drainage of a large city free from obstruction. Are you keeping clean Inside with Cascarets or merely forcing a pas sageway every few days with salts, cathartic pills od castor oil? This Is Important. Cascarets immediately cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gasses; take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system the decomposed waste mat ter and poison In the Intestines and bowels. No odds how badly and upset you feel, a Cascaret tonight will straight en you out by morning. Thoy work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from your druggist will keep your entire family feeling good for months. Don't forget the children their little In- sides need a good, gentle cleansing, too. Stomach Blood and Liver Troubles Much sicknesi starts with weak stomach, and consequent poor, impoverished blood. Nervous and pale-people lack good, rich, red blood. Their stomachs need invigorating lor, after all, a man can be no stronger than his stomach. A remedy that makes the stomach strong and the liver active, makes rich red blood and overcomes and drives out disease-producing bacteria and cures a whole multi tude of diseases. Cet rid ot yoar Stomach Weakness and Liver Laziness by tahlni a course ot Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discdvery the great Stomach Restorative, Liver Invliorator and Blood Cleanser. You can't afford to accept any medicine of unhnowH nmtosition as a substitute for "Golden Medical Discov ery," which is a medicine of known composition, havin4 a complete list of ingredients in plain English on its bottle-wrapper, same being attested as correct under oath. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets rcsnJafe end Invigorate StomacX ill IBl I gj ivrr acJ Rowels. of land just north of the present court of honor, west of the engineering shops,, as a site for the school of mines building. ritlCAX SAVAGES BVKX WHITES AT THE STAKE Tribes In Vprlsing Capture Portu- giieso Officials and Commit Horri ble Atrocities Punitive Expedition to Bo Sent. Lisbon (via frontier). Horrible atrocities have been committed by the tribes In Portuguese Africa during a rising of the natives there, according to a dispatch received from Angola by the Seculo. A number of Portu guese officials who were captured by them were burned alive. The rebllion occurred In the prov ince of Muxtma and the natives cap tured all the white men who crossed their path. Some of these were im mediately burned at the stake, while others had their lips severed and their eyes pulled out of their sockets before they were thrown into the flames. One British merchant was maimed but later was taken to his house, where his servants were murdered. Tho government has decided to send a punitive expedition. the affected part, the relief will be prompt nd satisfactory. Price 25c, SOc and $1.00 per bottle. Sold by A. C. Koeppen & Bros. GLEXX, OREGOX PIOXEER, DEA1 Old Settler of Vnlon County Leave Eight Children. La Grande, Ore. Tolbert T. Glenn one of Union county's oldest and wealthiest pioneers, passed away at Summerville. Mr Glenn was born in Wapollio. Iowa. In 1844. His fath er died at Vale. Ore.. May 9, 1900, Mr. Glenn attended school in Iowa, and after coming here helped his father in his farming and freighting untit 1SGS ho took up a homestead west of Summerville, where he remained un til death. Hj leaves eight children: C. Edwin in Wallowa county, William In this county. Arthur, Guy, Hattle, Daisy, Minnie and Myra. Lame back may come from over work, cold settled in the muscles of the back, or from disease. In the two former cases the right remedy Is BALLARD'S SNOW LINIMENT. It should be rubbed in thoroughly over When given as soon as the croupy cough appears Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will ward off an attack of croup and prevent all danger and cause of anxiety. Thousands of moth ers use It successfully. . Sold by all dealers. CHICHESTER S PUIS W- rue UIAMONP IIHAN A Idll Am yr DrvggUl tot a t kl-ekw-lrr'a llm.ITlm4 I'liU im Ht4 oJ faoU cMlhc tcial with It' , I; U4x-. VX Take Mkvr. Vuy mt Tnar V lrarrt(. A.kf.! lll- Itt H-TTB IMAtfONn HUII PILLnr.. c& yon knon u Beat. Safest. Alwi KeHtJ SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVtRVWHERS