LA GKANBt: EVKXINQ QBKKHVi;k. WEDNESDAY, NOVTEStBEB 9, 1910. ; THE ISIS . 7. ; PEESONALS. ' . 2 (C II: -IIIIEBT'S PROGRAM Am shining. s-nf-Pansy the Moom ,e Great seci bi-.uu. . j Tank lrw Rldlne- ' flanK auu """" " J Toe Pony Express Essany. The Masner. A Lucky Tootcahe Biograph. Beautiful dishea given to lady patrons of the matlnen. See dis play In lobby. AMISSION 10c- LOCALS' i Vacuum carpet cleaning, taking up, Mwlng and laying. L. F. Bllllnger, phoneg Red 562 and Red 141. la making a price on prescriptions ire charge a detinue percentage above cost, just as we do on drugs or sun dries. Prescription prJceB are there fore always farr and quite sure to average much less than those asked elaewhere. You receive also superior genice, because we employ In this department none but registered phar macists of known ability and be cause our drugs are kept fresh by ac tice Belling. Wright Drug Co. Prescrip tlon Pharmacists. All patent medicines advertised In this paper are for Bale by the Wright Drug Co. ested. Quality wg Roy Simth, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. E, Smith was taken to Hot Lake today, suffering with a severe attack of in flammatory rheumatism. Mrs. Joseph Barton and daughter. Miss Hattie arrived this afternoon from Baker City with Mrs. Fred Schil ke to attend the Eastern Star festivi ties tonight i Mrs. Pauline Moore Riley, a prom inent officer of the grand lodge of the Eastern Star, is a guest today with Mrs. Charles Noyes. Harold Grady left this afternoon for Eugene, Corvallis and Portland where ho will visit friends and alsp attend the big game next Saturday afternoon at Corvallis. Among those who will attend the 0. A. C. and TJ. of 0. game next Sat urday and cheer for their alma ma ter are Jay Reynolds and Forest Ivan-hoe. Attorney C. E. Cochran loft last ev ening for Pendleton where he ap peared today before the supreme court now In session there. WHEN you wear a suit of clothes, ay in and day out, In all kinds of leather, It has to be well made to Sand the wear. Adieus Collegian Clothes he Just this sort of service. That Is ! nit has given Collegian Clothes ch an enviable reputation among nng men. They are .very active, Id find that these clothes keep their tape and stylo right through the 'd wear. yon don't know Collegian Clothes n should tret acanalnted Immedl ly this fall. jCome In and try on a nit Trices are moderate, ranging from .00 to $30.00. ' jlsh Bros. lothiersandfurishers WINESAPS SOLD AT $2 FEB BOX. Fancy Apples Bring Good Sales Are Slow. Price Northwestern Fruit Exchange re ports the apple situation today as follows. , The market is abount unchanged since last quotations. The demand is rather sluggish, and and seems to cen ter now in low priced hard winter va rieties, principally Ben Davis. We have had a number of inquiries for strictly fancy well colored Ben Davis, running mostly to. four tier. Buyers are exacting and seem not to want 4 1-2 tier or the choice grades, so that we have been unable to fill sev eral orders offered us around $1.10 to $1.15. The fruit is wanted for cold storage and of course would have to be in hard keeping condition. . We have the following sales since the last report: P. F. E. 5881, 700 boxes of light colored fancy Rome Beauties, from Boise, Idaho, October 30; 308 128c, balance larger at $1.50 straight, f. o. b. shipping point. i G. N. 91598 from Cashmere, Wash., November 1, 547 extra fancy Wine saps, 50 fancy Winesaps at $2; 23 choice Winesaps at $1.50 all f. o. b. Cashmere. G. N. 91314, from Sherman's Spur, Wash., October 26, 544 extra fancy Stayman Winesaps, 64 Fancy Stay mans, 25 extra fancy Rome Beauties, 7 fancy Rome Beauties at $1.50 straight f. o. b. This represents the present ex treme limit of the market for Stay man 'Winesaps. We have been getting 10 to 25 cents premium over the gen eral market by finding buyers in out of-the-way places. Competitors are offering Staymans at bo much lower prices that we are obliged to sell somewhere near in the line in order to get orders. Journal. DR. M. P. MENDELSOHN DOCTOR OF OPTICS. AT 1105 ADAMS AVE. FOLEY HOTEL BUILDING. Ton take great risk when you trust your eye-sight to those without exper ience, without proper equipment, and of whose competence yau have no guarantee. HONEST WORK calls for experi ence, skill, knowledge of the power of light, knowledge of the anatomy of the eye, knowledge of the dlsiases of the eye, knowledge of every mus cle connected,-with the Bight, know ledge of the physique of persons whose eyes are examined. This knowledge cannot be acquired In a few months but by hard study and years anl years of practical experience. Over 29 years of practical exper. ienceDT FITTING GLASSES, the com pleteness of our equipment, the im mense stock we carry, the satisfac tion we have given others and the high moral and professional purpose of our business Is our guarantee to you that we have ALL these qualifi cations. Dr. MendelBohn is indorsed by all the leading occulists of the Pajlflc coast and by all the physicians of I Grande. All broken glasses replaced whlle yon walk OFFICE HOURS 9:00 a. m. to 12 m.; 1 to 5 p. m. t t t t " I It- vA ! ft ! ' Is i 1 Wit1 11 We w. Ladies' Tailored Suits t Silk lost P umes attern Hats 100 "0 r vz mil . 1? -ill I Patterp Hats put on sale to close out at prices that will be very interesting to you v OUR LINE OF LADIES' HATS HAS BEEN VERY POPULAR THIS ' SEASON, OWING TO THE FACT. NO DOUBT, THAT OUR STYLES AND PRICES WERE RIGHT, AND THEN BESIDES THIS, YOU WILL NOTICE SOMETHING ELSE ABOUT THIS LINE IT IS ITS INDIVIDUALITY. EVERY LITTLE ARTISCTIf! TOncw - w v UiltlHl , AktitiW AND THERE TO BEAUTIFY AND ADD TO THE APPEARANCE, HAVE BEEN GIVEN, AND NOW WE ARE PLACING ON SALE ALL PATTERN HATS AT THE FOLLOWING PRIC9S: fi WM values $37.49 $37.50 and $35.00 values $208 $22.50 values $1U(8 $20.00 and $17.00 values $13.98 $16J0 and $14-50 values $11.82 $13J0 and $10.00 values ....... .$.8,8 $ 9.50 and $7J0 values $ C39 60 LADIES' TAILORED SUITS THIS SEASON'S STYLES; STAPLES. CLOTH, COLOR ANd' WEAVE. THE GREATEST REDUCTION WE HAVE EVER MADE ON SEASONABLE MERCHANDISE OF THIS CHARACT-ER. THEY ARE BARGAINS YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO MISS. $32.50 values $230 22.50 28.50 values 20.65 18.00 27.50 values 19.40 15.00 Talues 9.4 . 25,00 value 16.28 values 15.45 J SILK DRESSES AND COSTUMES o ALL OF THE LATEST COLORINGS IN NOBBY AND UP TO DATE STY LES. IN FACT OUR ENTIRE LINE OF SILK DRESSES ARE PUT UP AT SALE PRICES. $37.50 values $28.60 2260 values 16.85 85.00 values 27.45 20.00 values 15.75 30.00 values 21.65 18.00 values .... 12.G0 DO NOT OVERLOOK THIS OPPORTUNITY. EACH ARTICLE AND EVERY LINE OFFERED DURING THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL SALE IS A BARGAIN. ALL ALTERATION EXTRA ON SPECIAL PRICED MERCHANDISE. Wool and Silk Costumes fine broadcloth street costumes ' in staple colors $22.50 andfh $25 values 111 13 y t IP ' j iTriHirF rrnrmn fmfFN wn in tf rpMrmArxiw o lf orr Q$44M-44X$ THE WINSTON ATTRACTION. Good Number for Tonight at the Stew ard by Stock Company. Another capacity house greeted the Winston players at the Steward Op era House last night to witness the production of "The Mansion of Ach ing Hearts" and to say that the large audience waa pleased would be but meagre praise. The play tells a beau tiful story, well written and splendid ly handled by the company. Miss Win ston excelled herself In the role of Margie Tempest, treating her audi ence to a piece of emotional acting that was superb in its realism. W. S. Van Dyke as George Tempest was ex ceedingly good, handling the part with a quiet forcefulneBS that is rare in the young actor of the present day. The other parts were all well played and the performance was a fine one. The costuming was excellent and the General opinion was that the" com pany was the best ever seen hereTTo night the offering will be that beauti ful story of Virginia entitled, "A Princess of the South" with Miss Win M.on in the title role, one of her great est soubrette creations. This company has firmly established itself as a prime favorite. Eirgs a Renl Standard ' Corvallis, Ore., Nov. 9 (Special) That utility measured by the egg and meat production is the real standard for the determination of the value of a hen and on the shape and color of feathers Is the proposition upon which Professor James Dryden of the Oregon Agricultural college, in a bulletin which has Just gone to press, . he wants an egg type, a meat type takes issue with the editors of the or a genial purpose trype and then i American Standard of Perfection and 1 niirv.i,flaa VV, t , " " i breeders of fancy chickens. ' PurtnaBe Pur bred fowls and grade up me noca. He should start with "To encourage the poultry indus try says Professor Dryden, hundreds of poultry shows are held each year and thousands of dollars are paid on premiums and all the premiums are awarded on the basis of the Ameri can Standard of Perfection. "We think we are encouraging the poultry industry by paying premiums for the feathers and other fancy points and for shape,, of body, and farmers go to the shows to purchase their breeding stock. They never suspect that the premiums indicate nothing of the egg laying qualities of th fowl. "The best poultry keeper in the country is the farmer and the far mer's wife. I have been ashamed many times in my chicken career that we who were "educating the farmers" were raising sickly, constitutionally weak chickens, and then go on to a farm and Bee running around the barnyard, without attention or care, thrifty, robust lively chickens. We are slaves to the dogma of the feath iumer and the Standard and the far mer produces the eggs. I bellve that the farm stock, the cross bred stock, or Bhall I say, the mongrel stock, have better vitality, are more fertile and are less prayed upon by diseases and produce more eggs than the average flock of pure breds. "The way to develop the poultry Industry is to. stop advocating pure bred or Btandard bred fowls for the farmer. He should decide on the type of fowl to breed and forget the names of the breed. Let him- decide whether cross bred fowls and use pure bred males to bring up the gTade. The country wants eggs and poultry and we cannot get these by building on the foundation of feathers or fancy points. "To discover the egg type we have to use the trap nest or some other means of keeping a record of eggs laid by individual hens. The trap nest is about the best thing we have dis covered In the poultry business. We will make slow improvement In breed ing without an egg record for each hen In the flock. The objection to the trap neat is that it requires too much labor for the farmer. I believe that the state or experiment station should come to the rescue here by establishing a breeding station where farmers could Becure at nominal prices cockrels of good laying pedi gree to mate with their flicks. It would not take very long to furnish every farmer with a male bird whose ancestry during two generations has a record of 150 eggs a year. Won't Let American Land. Tacoma, Nov. 5 The local Immigra tlon bureau Is up against it. When the Japanese liner arrived In port there was an American woman who Bald she was Mrs. Vera Hyland aboard, but she positively refused to give her age and consequently is not allowed o land despite the fact that she Is undoubt edly American born. Mrs. Hyland says she knows Presi dent Taft will make trouble for tha officials if they don't let her land. Room and board, heat and bath fur nished. Jnquire 1325 T. Ave. X X The Up-Building of This Bank is due to the fact that we have ample capital and that we bve adhered to a policy wna has been conservative, yet alcg progressive lines. We offer to our customers modern facilities for the prompt and prpper tran saction of their financial affairs; ample vault and safe room for storing and safe-guarding of their mosey, notes, Insurance policies and other valuable pap ers and such liberality of treat ment as is consistent with pru dent banking. YOUR account is cordially solicited. f The United States! I National Bank, t l GRANDE, OREGON X (.f.i4,v I' 1' I I I I I H'