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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1914)
-J I r p PAOE KIX DATLY EAST OnFOOyTAN", PEyT)T,ETON OTvEOON. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28. 1914. ETQ ITT PAGES v SB v- r-a m -m. mm m mm aw m w m m i r i v m m m mm arir iiiiiiiiriiinniuiiiiiiiiiiiii mmmmniiiiiiiiimmmiiMHiiiimimiiiiiiuiimmiiiiiiiimmmw I 1STMA MlllllllllIIIMIIIIlllllllllIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1 X 'ftapft Vote Umas Shoppimig Klow LL the stores are ready for you with large stocks of beautiful Christmas guts. 1 hey are prepared for the greatest holiday trade in the city s his tory. SHOP EARLY and have your purchases laid away. A SSORTMENTS are now complete. There are no "picked overs" for the wise buyers who buy now. The greatest latitude of choice from the nicest and most appropriate gift suggestions is to be found in Pendleton's stores RIGHT NOW. ffBuy and Buy" but not ffBy and By' WING to the great European war, the stocks now on hand of toys and many other wanted gifts, can not be replenished. Don't be too late. Start vour store visiting now and cet iust what you want instead of taking whatever you can get. SHOP EARLY. 4 Make Your Xmas Buying Easy ii IGi HGIIT SUBMARINES BEING BOLT FOR U. S. SAX FRANCISCO. Cal., Nov. 28. The Union Iron Works was already jputtins men to work In connection with the contract It has received for the construction here within the next few months of eight submarines for ithe I'nited States navy. Under this contract $3,000,000 will be spent 'P-esides the men already employed the company, it was stated, will re quire 250 laborers, 200 machinists, 100 rnul tiers and helpers and 50 cop persmiths and helpers. Forty-six carloads of raw material for the underst-a fighters have arrived thus far. Swallowed Watch Taken. ST. LOUIS, Nov. 28. A toy watch was removed from the aesophagus of Corrine Shine, 9, by an operation at the City Hospital. The watch had lodged at the lower end of the tube that leads from the mouth to the stomach and although It caused but little discomfort it was decided to re move It While the child was under an an esthetic an Incision was made in the stomach. Then an assistant worked a tube through the mouth down the aesophagus to hold the watch in place while the operator Inserted his fin per In the opening of the stomach and thence into the cardiac opening, where he located the obstruction and removed It. The girl will recover. H3SE AND HEAD STOPPED UP FROM CDID OR CATARRH, IPEfi AT ONCE PILOT ROCK CHILDREN ARE SERIOUSLY ILL BOTH ARE TAKEN TO HOSPITAL PERSONAL ITEMS OF THE VILLAGE. Mr Chunking, Healing lVUm- Instant ly CVars Noe, Head and Throat hto;v SaMj Oatarrlml Discharges IHilf IloadadkC Goe?. Try "Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, just to try It Apply a little In the nostril and Instantly your clogged nose and stopped -up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh. cold-inheaJ-or catarhal sore throat will be gone End such misery now! Get the mall bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at any drug store. This sweet tragrant balm dissolves by the heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heal the inflamed, swollen membrane which lines the nose, the head and throat; clears the air passages; stops nasty discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes Immediately. DonSt lay awake tonight struggling for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. Ca tarrh or a cold, with Us running nose, foul mucous dropping Into the throat, and raw dryness Is distressing but truly needless. Put your " faith Just once In "Ely's Cream Balm" and your coU oi catarrh will surely disappear. !(ttl(U!lllllllUHIIIIII!IIUII!IU!IIIIUIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIUIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIU 1 CITY LIVERY STABLE I Livery, Feed and Sale Stable Good Rigs at All Times AUTOMOBILE FOR HIRE f Carney & Hucy. Props. 5 Telephone 70. -5 lHUlinilllllIlllllllllllllll!IIIII!IIIIMIIllllll!llMIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!ll.- Tliompwon Street Between AMirt uimI Alta. IF you are not a Bryan Democr&ct and still insist on Prohibition Drink, we carry Hills Pros. Blue Can, 2 and ftound cans, llllls Pros. Freemont Boast, 1 lound packages. J. K. & J. I J- In 2 and 2 pound "Wadco," the King of them all In threes. Crescent 99, In 1 lb. packages. AIko a full line of Crescent bulk Coffees and Teas. JOHN W. DYER, GROCERYMAN Wt Alia St. Phone 536 (Special Correspondence.) PILOT ROCK. Nov. 28. Two 'of Mrs. M. O. La Hue's children were brought to the Grace hospital Tues day by Dr. Gllllland. quite 111. Miss Nellie Horn and Gussy Wilson were united In marriage Tuesday at Pendleton. This comes as a surprise to their many friends here, but who extend to them their most heartiest congratulations. Miss Eva Belts of Pendleton was a visitor here Wednesday evening. Mr. George Tomkln Is spending a few days In Pendleton with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Smith left Thursday morning for Pendleton to spend the day with his mother. Arthur Bond was a visitor at Pen dleton Wednesday evening. . Miss Virginia Gllllland spent Wed nesday evenuing at Pendleton. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Regain of Mc Kay visited her mother, Mrs. Thom as Jaques, Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Albert Boylen left Wednesday for Heppner to spend Thanksgiving. Miss Dlez Rice was a passenger on the auto stage Wednesday evening for Hermlston. Miss Alma Boylen spent Tuesday afternoon at Pendleton. Mrs. Albert Boylen visited friends at Pendleton Monday evening. Mrs. Markham, mother of Frank Markham. deceased, arrived here Monday from Chicago to straighten up his business. Marvin Roy autoed down to Pen dleton Wednesday evening. Miss Berne of Nye Is visiting Mrs. Harley Hlnderman for a few days. Mrs. Charles Mathews of Stewart creek 'was In town Wednesday doing some trading. WAR IN EUROPE MUCH LIKE FOOTBALL GAME CORRESPONDENTS FOLLOWING THE ALLIES HAVE EXCIT ING TIMES. A,noHtllc Delegate Leaven. NAPLE3, Nov. 28. Monslgnor Cer rettl, former auditor of the Washing' ton Apostolic delegation, left for Aus-1 tralia as the first Apostolic delegate there. fETTER HEALTH HIGIIT ALONG, Is your re ward for taking care of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. If these organs are weak and u liable yt properly perform their dally functions we urge a fair trial of HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters 3SSB055SB5 5 (By William G. Shepherd. United Press gtaff Correspondent.) BERNE, Switzerland, Nov. 12 (By Mail to New Tork.) Tou're out of bounds when you get here. This Is the sidelines. No censor can stop this, so I am going to tell the truth. Did you ever watch one of those brickyard, corner lot baseball games where there is no grandstand but where the crowd follows the teams over the field? That's this war in Europe. The "crowd" In this case Is behind the allies and It Is made up of every newspaper man In America who could Ket across the Atlantic. They're pressing the players hard, too. Often they get in the way and, by the same token, often they are punished for It knocked down In a rush or hauled out of the way by some angry player and punished. Place they made him take a long Gelett Burgess and I were going over the list of American Journalists the other day In Paris, who had been "pinched" at one time or another and It Included everybody over here. Some of them have had terrible times, too. One chap who really got onto - the English firing line because he was disguised as a Salvation Army offi cer, stood In the way of a British cannon one day and they had to stop firing until they had pushed him In to a trench. He went Into a room of a chateau over night without a bite to eat! That's what he got. Another fellow who has a hrtolt ot saying to every officer who stops him: "Why, how dare you? Don't you know who I am. I am " and al ways as a result gets In extra trouble tnt being fresh, slept In a barn one night untl he could be sent back to Paris In on automobile. In another to eat but three meals a day and noth walk bark to headquarters and told Mm that If he did not get there by a certain time they would shoot him. He landed on time, but brutal as they say some of these soldiers are, they have not been charged as yet with shooting anybody because he did not walk fast enough. I myself was held up for five days In a town on the corner of the Alsne battlefield. A very cross colonel said to me: "You have no right here. How did you dare to come? It's against the rules. You'll have to promise me that jou won't leave this place until I tell you to go." And lor five days I was forced to sUv there with nothing but a com fortable hotel to live In and nothing to cat but three moas a day and noth ing to look nt but the movements of I' ris of thousands of soldiers with all the Incidents of war. A couple of veiy cross English captains used to fe'roivl at me dally: I "Seeing anything Interesting?" I The colonel himself used to say, now and then. "Too bad to keep you here, I sup pose, but you broke the rules. Tou have no right here. Tou fellows have got to be punished one way or anoth er" It was terrible, but nearly every other American newspaper man over here has had experiences Just as aw ful. I Dutch Henry Foot! Yard LAYNE 6 HUGHES, Proprietor! Good Hay, Grain and Water Large, Hone, Cattle and Sheep Corrals First-Class Attenticn Day and Night Give us a Trial West Alta St. BASEBALL TWIRLEU AM) FORMER CLASSMATE WED SALEM, Ore., Nov. 2 S. Raymond K. Druke, former varsity twirler at eld Willamette, married Miss Emma WrUht Both are of Salem. The couple attended the local institution for several years. Drake served as head twirler of the Salem nine for two years, having stood up against the Multnomah nine in several contests. PROVISIONS FOR THE ARMY IN THE FIELD Tin res cent b a r 517 MAIN STREET We have the exclusive Sale In Pendleton of the good old I.W.HARPER WHISKEY which has taken Gold Medal awards at New Orleans, 1885, St. Louis, 1904, Chicago, 1895, Paris, 190 0. 92 Proof at 10 Cents a Drink or $4.50 jkt Gallon, BRCDING, HANSEN 6 MILLER Pendleton Oregoa Importance of Keeping Body well Nourished, In time of war, the greatest effort Is always made toward cutting off the enemy's base of supplies. It Is the well-nourished people who fight the strongest and live the longest and contribute most to human progress Is your stomach doing its duty does It convert food Into good blood and tissue? Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery has been so successful In the treatment ot Indigestion, that thou sands of former sufferers owe their good health today to Its wonderful power, and testimonials prove It. It arouses the little muscular fi bres Into activity and causes the gaa trltlo Juices to thoroughly mix with the food you eat, simply because It supplies the stomach with pure, rich blood. It's weak, impure blood that causes stomach weakness. Get good blood through the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and you will have no more Indigestion. It Is the world's proved blood puri fier. It's not a secret remedy for Its Ingredients are printed on the wrapper. Start to take It today and Before another day has passed, the Impurities of the blood will begin to leave your body through the liver, kidneys, bowels and skin, and in a few days you will . know by your steadier nerves, flimer step, keener mind, brighter eyes and clearer skin that the bad blood Is passing out, and new, rich, pure blood is filling your veins and arteries. The same good blood will cause pimples , acne, ecezma and all skin eruptions to dry up and disappear. Dr. Pierces' Golden Medical Discove ry Is the helpful remedy that nearly everyone needs. It contains no al cohol or narcotics of any kind. n m mi miimiiimiiiiiMi'"M!iiiiHiuiHimTm?mmminmiwnintmmmiiiHwiiiMiiitiimimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwi. m t 13 More Heat for Less,1 Money When You Burn COM Ideal fuel for furnaces and heating stoves. $5.50 per ton loose at Plant. $5.75 per ton in sacks plus 3o for each sack if not returned. Pacific Power 6 Light Co. "Always at Your Service' Phone 40 Pf,imnti;jTninitttnniiiiiiiiii;ii;in riiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiuE