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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 24, 1912)
TEtf PAGES DAILY EAST OltEGOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1912. PAGE FTVE THE GREAT (Li O SHOE SALE TODAY Don't Miss it IF. I. Liuengood S Go. The Ladies and Childrens Store Oregon "GOOD EATS" Fresh Meats, Fish, Shell I Fresh Fruits and Vege Fiah and Poultry every day. I tables in Season. OUR FIRST SATURDAY SPECIAL FLOUR ?1.05 PER SACK. Good Broom 30. E. M. DOWXEY Phono Main 444. G. E. MARSH LOCALS Burroughs. Main 6. Fuel. I. C. Snyder.chlmney sweep. R 3812. Main 178 for coal and wood. . The Melrose System. Bicycles! 727 Johnson street. Phone Koplttke & GUlanders, for dry wood and Rock Spring coal. Ten should have the Melrose Sys tem. Everybody goes to the Orpheum to aee the best and the clearest plcturea Wanted Three or four room fur nished house In desirable location. Address D this office. All kinds of good dry wood, also clean nut or lump Rock Spring coal at Kepittke & GUlanders. Kg and lump coal. $7.60 and $8. Weed, $7.00. Leave orders at Com mercial Barn or phone Black 3622. Far rent Large furnished front roem with or without board, 201 Wa ter street. Large stock of telephone poles at ths Pendleton Planing Mill and Lum ber Tard. For good cedar posts, go to the Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Tard. Far Rent Six room house, modern. Hot and cold water, bath, toilet, , woedshed, etc. Enquire Dr. C. J. WMttaker. Wanted Organizer for fraternal nai Insurance society. Good pay. Writ Charles Dempster, Spokane. Special rates to horses boarded by the week or month at the Commercial Barn, 620 Aura street. Phone Main 13. Alse dry wood for sale. If you want to move, call Penland Bros. Transfer, phone M. 839. Large dray moves you quick. Trash hauled once a week. 647 Main street. Far transfer work, hauling bag gage, moving household goods and pianos, and all kinds of Job work, phene Main 461. B. A. Morton. Save yourself fuel troubles by us Ing our famous Rock Spring coal and goed dry wood. Delivered promptly. Ben L. Burroughs, phone Main S. After one winter the Immigrant to Oregon won't go back. DONALDSON RELIABLE DRUGGIST OUR POLICY WIS PAY CASH, WE SELL FOR CASH. We both make money. We give you advantage of evr cash discount, also bargains In GOOD GOODS bought for eaeh. : WATCH OUR. WINDOW. Special Tills Week. Papular Candy, guaranteed er the pure food law, 10c n4 15c per lb. We pay lOo for each delivery Send your boy, any purchase of Me er over we will give him Me lie. Bpeelal sale on Druggists Sun dries all this week. Market Fort George Farm Lands. An opportunity to get a farm at a very low figure in Fraser River Val ley. Call and see or write us for particulars. Teutsch & Bickers. We have on hand several cigar show cases and counter show cases that we will sell very reasonable if taken at once. Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Tard. Livery Stable lor Sale Owing to press of other business, I am forced to sell the Pioneer Livery and Sale Stable at Hermlston. W. W, Stelwer, Jr., Hermlston, Ore. Alfalfa Hay for Sale. Apply to N. Joerger. 417 Eddy st. For Sale. Holt Combine Holley Harvester, In first class condition, practically new, cost $1800, hitch cost $250. total $2050. Will sell for $1100. Call at Room 4, Ronan Building, Walla Wal la, Wash. Combine Harvester for Salo, For Sale Daniel "Baby" Best Combine, practically new, only used In cutting 500 acres of grain. In per fect order. Geod reasons for selling. Apply Peter Tachella, Pendleton, Ore. Position wanted on stock ranch by man and wife, experienced. Address W. B. L., General Delivery, Pendle ton, Ore, DON'T PULL OUT THE GRAY HAIRS "Pull out one gray hair and a dozen will take its place" is an old saying, which Is, to a great extent, true, if no steps are taken to stop the cause. When gray hairs appear it Is a sign that Nature neds assistance. It is Nature's call for help. Gray hair, dull, lifeless hair, or hair that is fall ing out, is' not necessarily a sign of advancing age, for there are thou sands of elderly people with perfect heads of hair without a single streak of gray.. When gray hairs come, or when the hair seems to be lifeless or dead, some good, reliable halr-restorlng treatment should be resorted to at once. Specialists say that one of the best preparations to use is the old fashioned "sage tea" which our grandparents used. The best prep aration of this kind is Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy scientifi cally compounded with later discover ed hair tonics and stimulants, the whole mixture being carefully bal anced and tested by experts. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur is clean and wholesome and perfectly harm less. It refreshes dry, parched hair, removes dandruff, and gradually re stores maded or gray hair to Its nat ural color. Don't delay another minute. Start using Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur at once and see what a difference a few days' treatment will make in youfr hair. This preparation Is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle, and Is recommended and oold by . special agent, Pendleton Drug Co. PERSONAL MENTION Ernest Knight came In from his ranch near Helix this morning. Miss Effle Rogers came In from Helix on the Northern Pacific train this morning. Col. J. II. Haley returned this mor ning from a business visit In Port land. Frank Carruth, principal of the Stanfield schools, is spending the week end in the city. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Bott were am ong the Helix people coming in on the morning N. P. local. L. D. Howland, superintendent of Irrigation in the east end of the county, spent yesterday in the city. W. R. Bitney, Tum-a-Lum nursery man of Milton, .was an Incoming passenger on the local this morning. City Supt, J. S. Landers is attend ing the Men and Religion Forward Movement convention in Walla Walla. Misses Alta Sharp and Eva Stree ver of Athena, came down on the lo cal this morning to spend the day in the city. Senator Charles A. Barrett of Athe na, came In on the local this morning and Is attending to business matters here today. R. Henricksen and C. A. Kern re turned this morning from Long Beach, California and left this afternoon for their homes at Helix. S. D. Peterson, ccunty representa tive and candidate ror reelection, came down from his home at Milton this morning. Roy Bishop, traveling member of the Pendleton Woolen Mills manage ment, returned this morning on the Northern Pacific train from Yakima. Rev. H. S. Shangle, well known Mil tonlan, was among the large num ber of passengers disgorged by the local from Walla Walla this morn ing. J. E. Keefe, Jr., secretary of the Commercial association, went to Echo this morning to attend a meeting of the farmers who are promoting the Sturgis ditch project. Miss Bess Gallogly, a University of Oregon graduate, recently elected teacher in the Stanfield high school, came in this morning on the local and is spending the day in the city. Work Horses for Sale. For sale, twelve head pood work horses. For further particulars ad dress James Hill, Helix, Oregon, or call at my ranch, four and one half miles west of Helix. Demonstrators Ladies to demon strate in stores; no experience neces sary. Apply by letter, giving address and phone number, to E. A. D., Ore gonlan office. $75,000 GKMS VANISH AT HELEN TAFT DANCE Diamond Necklace Said to Have Dis- npiiearou While -400 Made Merry. Washington. Mystery surrounds the disappearance of a diamond neck lace, valued at $75,000, from the neck of a New York guest at a dinner dance given in honor of Miss Helen Taft by Captain Sowerby, naval at tache of the British ' Embassy at Rauscher's. Not only are strenuous endeavors being made to find the gems, but equally strenuous denials are being made that they -were lost at all.. Among the guests at the dinner dance were: Mrs. Nicholas Long worth, Mrs. Edward McLean, Mrs. Esmond Ovey, Miss. Mabel Boardman. Miss Helen Taft, Mrs. Richard Town send, Mrs. Lawrence Townsend, Mrs. E. R. Thomas, Mrs. Peter Goelet Ger ry, Miss Margaret Draper, Miss Har riet Anderson, niece of the President, Miss Cameron and Mrs. Clarence Moore. It was not until 1:30 o'clock, when the dance was drawing to a close, that the necklace is said to have been missed. SO SAI! WOMEN JUST CAN'T It KAMA' Til INK NIne-Teiitlis of Them Sentter-Iimined mul Minds Go Off nt Tangent, Says One of Them. Cambridge, Mass. "Nine-tenths of women are scatter-brained," says Mrs. Mary Thompson Chaplin, well known in Boston and New York so ciety circles. "The well controlled mind travels ns a planet does, steadily In its orbit, but the largo majority of minds fly off In any or every direction," she continued. "They bob about as a cork on the waves. Talk to most women about anything you choose. Perhaps you ask their advice about something. After the first sentence or two they change the subject. They can't think. Their minds have flown off on a tan gent, as usual. "Women need to learn how to think. They must learn to focus their sou on. usuio.w oqi smSnoqi learned this can solve every problem of "her life, be it little or big, quickly and easily. Most women don't know what they want." DEATH IX BLOWING NOSE. Altoona, Pa. From the effects of blowing his nose William B. Saylor, aged 38 years, died here. Saylor, who was assistant foreman of the Pennsylvania air brake depart ment, contracted a cold which set tled in his head. To clear his nose he gave a vigorous blow and ruptur ed a blood vessel. All efforts to stop the flow of blood proved unavailing, ibut he reported for work. The exertion proved too much for him and he was assisted home to die. S Hank Call Ismied. Washington, Feb. 24. The comp troller of the currency has issued a call for conditions of national banks at the close of business, February 20. STANFIELD ENJOYS SCHOOL CHILDREN HONOR MEMORY. OF WASHINGTON Kongx. Recitations and Readings Given by Children Drunken La lHrer reate Excitement anl I Juki In Jail. (Special Correspondence.) Stanfield, Feb. 24. Yesterday af ternoon Washington's birthday was commemorated in the public schools in an appropriate manner, two excel ent programs being rendered by the pupils and enjoyed by a large attend-J ance of the parents and friends, A program was rendered by the ele mentary grades, in charge of Miss Chezik and Miss Pratt. The program given by the fifth, sixth and seventh grades in charge of Mrs. Dumas, whose school room was beautifully decorated with flags, bunting, etc., was by the following: Vernon Waid, Mazie Risellng, Mil dred Hurd, Tom Bagan, Mazie Risel lng, Orpha Dunning. The Stanfield Women's Study cluS met on Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. E. Faucett, the prin cipal paper being read by Mrs. C. W. Connor, her subject being "Taft's Cabinet. A reading was also given by Mrs. E. N. Wheeler. Fred W. Stelwer, Pendleton can didate for district attorney, was a Stanfield visitor yesterday. A laborer named Gumm, who has been working In and about Stanfield the past few weeks, imbibed an over supply of firewater yesterday and be came so boisterous that City Marshal Hodges confined him In the city jail, W. H. Chure, an attorney of Far go, North Dakota, made a brief visit here Thursday as the guest of P. H Buchholz. County Clerk Frank Sallng came down from the county seat Thursday to look after his farm. Mrs. M. C. Baragar, who recently underwent a serious operation at a Pendleton hospital, returned to her home here on Thursday. E. P. Marshall, vice president and manager of the Furnish Ditch com pany and the Inland Irrigation com pany, with headquarters at Pendle ton, was here Thursday. R. A. Holte and John F. Bagan, vis ited Echo Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Thad Barnes returned to her home In Echo Thursday after visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Ful ford. Mrs. P. H. Buchholz went to Port land Thursday to remain a few days W. J. Haney. a well known farmer on the Umatilla Meadows, was tran sactlng business at Pendleton Wed nesday. R. W. Fletcher, circulation man ager of the East Oregonlan, was a .stanfield visitor Friday. Gay Hayden returned to his home in Pendleton yesterday. Last evening Miss Myrtle Anderson entertained a number of her fellow students of the high school, the eve ning being spent with music and games, after which Mrs. Anderson the mother of the young hostess, served delicious refreshments. Those present were Mis3 Mary Connelly, Helen Wheeler, Lillian Hoosier, An ita Howard. Julia Haagman, Myrtle Anderson, Messrs. Clement Howard, John Beavert, Floyd Brumfield, Glen Wallace, Harry Hoosier and Harold Wheeler. The"" Stanfield Commercial club smoker whlcM was to haye been held last night was postponed until Fri day evening of next week. John Towers went to Portland yes terday to remain a few days. Prof. F. D. Carruth is spending the week-end with friends at Pendleton. Miss Mildred Hurd was a Pendle ton visitor today. radium: COSTS OVER $5,000,000 PER POUND And it is not expected that Wm. B. Patty carries a hatfull, but it is a fact that he will bring several tiny tubes of the marvelous substance to show the audience and to perform ill Irires Are they receiving the proper amount of attention due them? Now, while weather conditions are unfavorable for automobiling Is the Time to Have Your Tiros Put in First-Glass Shape and we are in a position to do the work and guarantee it. PgemSIgIImi Aito tapatiy Give Us a Trial The Human Heart The heart is a wonderful double pump, through the action of which the blood stream is kept sweeping round and round through the body at the rate of seven miles an hour. " Remember this, that our bodies will not stand the strain of over-work without good, pure blood any more than the engine can run smooth ly without oil." After many years of study in the active practice of medicine, Dr. R. V. Pierce found that when the stomach was out cf order, the blood impure and there were symptoms of general break down, a tonic made of the glyceric extract of certaia roots was the best corrective. This he called Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Being made without alcohol, this " Medical Discovery " helps the stomach to assimilate the food, thereby curing dyspepsia. It is especially adapted to diseases attended with excessive tissue waste, notably in convalescence from various fevers, for thin-blooded people and those who arc always " catching cold." Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent on receipt of 31 one cent stamps for the French cloth-bound book of 1003 pages. AdJress Dr. R. V. Pierce, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. V. experiments with, at the Chisrtian church, Monday, March 4. The term "mystery" seems Inade quate in referring to radium. "Mir acle" appears none too strong. Each particle of this wonderful mineral constantly gives heat and light and "perpetually" throws off the tiniest particles of itself, yet apparently does not diminish In weight or strength, and scientists estimate this pheno mena will continue for many thou sands of years before radium die3 out. Experiments with liquid air and wireless telegraphy will also add to the Interesting and entertainingly in structive features. BAYONETS USED ON CHIL DREN, MEN AND WOMEN (Continued from page one.) of police, following a complaint from the millionaire mill owners, that the former chief of police "was not firm enough" in dealing with the conditi ons since the strike started several weeks ago. STICK TO HOBBLES; DEMAND LOWER STEPS Women Throughout Greater Boston, Headed by Mrs. Maria W. Clark, Start Strenuous Campaign Against Entrance to Street Cars. Boston. Mass. Women throughout Greater Boston are striving for abo lition of the present high steps on the street cars. The movement, mothered hv Mrs. Maria W. Clark, of tho Hvmb Park Current Events club, has enlisted the sympathies of the members of the 150 women's clubs, and they are co-oper ating m a crusade that car stens he lower. "We don't propose to give up our style because the steps are too high," said Mrs. Clark. "Let them lower the steps. Women will wear what they want, and If the hobble skirt prevents us from climbing cars let them lower the steps. To ask that women give up the hobble skirt if they so choose to wear it is outrage ous." Will Not Give Cp Hobble. She refuses to permit the street cars to say, mutely but effectively, to the women of Greater Boston: "You must give up your hobble skirts. You cannot get aboard of us with them on." Mrs. Clark insists that women shall wear hobble skirts if they so desire, and that the public cars be made to accommodate them. When Mrs. Clark first bdoaehed the subject to the club women her idea was met with smiles. "Do you think you will get men to agree to lower the steps, just because they are uncomfortable for us?" they asked. And Mrs. Clark's answer wass "Yes." Deny They Are Cranks. So she was given the organization of a committee. She brought into It a woman physician, Dr. Lucy Bar ney Hall. The third member was Mrs. Leila M. Speed, a well known business woman. These three formu lated a plan of campaign. "We are not cranks," Mrs. Clark told the Massachusetts railroad com mission. "We've got pretty good rea sons for demanding lower car steps. Any one who is familiar with our Vour greater Boston cars must see the Jus tice of our complaint." SPOKANE BODY URGES -DIVERSIFIED FARMING Spokane, Wash. Mixed farming, including dairying, hog-ralsing and chicken growing will be encouraged in eastern Washington and Oregon, north and central Idaho, western Montana and south-eastern British Columbia by the agricultural commit tee of Spokane chamber of commerce and allied organizations in the dist rict and the Inland Empire Federa tion of Commercial clubs. Daniel Morgan, chairman of the committee, today forwarded a letter to the de partment of agriculture, requesting the omployment of a farm expert, al so endorsing a bill for the appropri ation by congress of $50,000, with which to conduct additional field work in the Northern states. The State Bankers' association of Wash ington also has decided to establish a bureau of information as the initial step in a campaign to promote the back to the farm movement. "W. D. Vincent, chairman of the agricul tural committee, says his department Is taking up a general plan of work with a view to settling and develop ing the farming districts and increas ing the acre production of staple pro ducts. ' . ... For Sale, Four good fresh milch cows; Jer seys and Durhams. Inquire of R. H. Stephen,, 200 Willow street. ; HARE BIBLE FOR SEMINARY. Volume 400 Years Old Bequeathed to Philadelphia Institution. L Carlisle, Pa. In the will of Matilda R. Church-Keller, who died recently in Wormleysburg, a bequest of $18, 000 is given to St. John's church, near Shiremanstown. To her coach man, William Thomas Gregg, she gives $3,000', as a reward for faithful service. To the Lutheran Theological seminary of Philadelphia are be queathed $1,000 and a family Bible 400 years old, the Bible to remain the property of the institution. QUEEN OF ACTRESSES PRAISES PE-HU-NA. 5 y n 4. ' .'VvJI ff Julia v. v;iMarlowe . "I am glad to write my endorse ment of the great remedy, Peruna. I do so most heartily." Julia Marlowe. Any remedy that benefits digestion strengthens the nerves. The nerve centers require nutrition. If the digestion is impaired, the nerve centers become anemic, and nervous debility is the result.