Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1902)
Poa i lis id- V here is' nal'M.I el: ATTAT8. m 1 1 hi i in nniMti ii Him mil QUALITY DECIDES. VontJ ticeoil CHILDREN'S Ready - to Wear DEPARTMENT ticqp are summer days the weather we have been antici f n Tone. We have CHILDREN'S DRESSES and LJaw Hats in broad variety. Good quality WOMAN 'S W SHIRT WAISTS OUT IN GLORY AND VARIETY. CHILD'S DRESSES Nicely trimmed in .. Good Sizes 1 49c In Straw Hats there are many new shapes in this reason's striking styles. We have them. Bring your children or send them alone. The child gets an equal Jreatment with the lady. Alexander Dept. Store MHIIH ' 1 1 ' 1 1 1 ft ml I & It T MANTELS! In different styles, such as will prove objects of utility and beauty in any house. Catalogue of Mantels Free Electric fixtures, lamps, shades chandeliers, globes, etc. VERY LOW PRICES Will furnish original designs for til ing, wood work or mantles free. Spe cial designs for fitting up saloons, x Es timates furnished free. Kew Stores . t-n 1 - , . i and Alder I Yo intlfl nArVP.TT. l.O. Streets ' the Oregonian Offce Maters of Happy Homes Low prices, coupled with Car pets and Matting of known high quality, prove attractions irresisti ble. The question of Carpets and Matting, where best obtained, is set tled with promptness in our stock, where good style and real worth .make low prices so emphatic. BAKER & FOLSOM Hakers of Hartnv Hnme fissile Weigh It! When you buy DiamonU "C" soap you know what you are getting, as far as weight goes. When you use Soap you also know what you are getting, as far as quality goes. It is good soap goes further and does better work than any other laundry soap. It is honest weight and doe's honest work. , SAVE DIAMOND "O" WRAPPKRS Wo redeem them tor all sorts of useful and attractive articles. Illustrated Uk snowing over 300 premiums given for wrapper!, sent on request. A postal will brins it. PreralwB Bept, The Cutofcy Facktaf Co., So. Owka. Nek. ASTBn - IjjL WaS18?8 T0 MAKE USB fcttiWttSi 2"' " am St to trart.tra hor8e that yon SSoa want .i7 ,have the cow and, cL. 'If. boree.. A fifteen or kasinr501 want mi mi .i..i A Nickel Harvest t j?IU be jrours every day In the year it yon own J MILLS COIN UPtnATINu MAUHINUI 61 VARIETIES I I UT1 a anrl mnrulf milklnir ll (TIT ftfltlnnL. I MILLS NOVELTY CO., Chicap.l I II to 23 South JeMerson Street Fluffiness Is the Rule and Chiffon Is Plentifully Used In Making Sum mcr Neckwear; Variety of Belts and Buckles. New York, May 17. The wide lat itude allowed in details of dress this year makes it possible to affect a very choico appearance through the medium of neckwear. Never before has dame Fashion so accommodated her taste to that of her disciples. Individuality is the goal toward which the energies of the well-dressed woman are concentrated and it pos sible for her to gain this end througn Puritanical simplicity or extrava gant elaboration. Shirt waists are out in all their glory and variety. The tailor made do sign is in great demand for two rea sons; it s extremely smart in cut and finish, and is adapted to so many dif ferent modes of finish about the neck. Most recently it s shown with what is termed the belt stock. This stock is composed of narrow bands of rib bon or taffeta arranged upon a wired frame, pointed back and front and graduated until it is very narrow and high, reaching almost to the ears. The collar is not warm, as the do scripton might suggest, because only enough bones are used to hold it aright and the ribbon bands are stitched over the sheerest of founda tions. It has the advantage of being soft in pough and effect, and there being no stiff lining, 6ne avoids the inevi table marks of the tall linen collar. No matter how plain the stock it may be completed at the front er back with a bunch of daintiness in the form of a tulle rosette. For tiet and cravats, flufflness is the rule and chiffon is plentifully used in making summer neckwear. A charming fea ture of this year's creations is that they are so distinctly feminine. Every touch of "mannish" has been eliminated. The short, stiff bow which finished the front of neckties last season is displaced this year by long streamers depending from big bows and known as the coronation tie. The Shape of Stocks. Stocks are seen in the most unex pected of shapes. One that would attract a second notice anywhere is clerical in cut, being in form similar to the neckpiece worn by an abbe, It is carried out in white pique, with a double row of stitching in colors, between the lines of which French dots are embroidered. White and green is one of the freshest combi nations of the moment and dashed with a bit, of black is quite the pret tiest design a body could select. Among the expensive models are stocks of Irish lace for bodices and blouses for dressy wear. These are finished with four-in-hanus of silk crepe de chine edged with lace and caught with jewelled pins. In the last of collars that may be laundered are very dainty stocks of lawn, mull and madras. These are wound around the throat, the ends crossed behind, then brought back and pinned across the front, having lace inserted and bordered lappet ends. Almost any shirt waist that lends a broad effect to the shoulders is fashionable. The summer girl of 1902 is athletic and the result of her training is shown in the cut of her gowns. To be ultra-smart it is neces sary that the contour of the figure bo well-defined. The popularity of the broad-shouldered Gibson waist is due to the fact that It meets these de mands, combinng them with artistic effect. Belts and Buckles. The importance of belts as acces sories of the shirt waist is only sec ond to that of stocks. There Is posi tively no limit placed upon the dif ferent varieties of belts and buckles. Probably the most attractive clpsp of the moment is the harness buckle in burnished silver, gilt or enamel. Rivalling the harness Is the oval shaped buckle made in any of the three materials. Many of the enam elled buckles are in turquoise blue and dull green, but by far the more pleasing and summery are those of white. These are worn with soft crush belts of crepe de chine or Lib erty satin ribbon. Bleached alligator skin Is a iate novelty for belts and this is finished with elaborate buckles which exem plify the use of coloring on gold. As spring recedes and summer draws near come delightfully simple lawn frocks are shown. Many of the daintiest have not a thread of trim ming other than the fabric out of which the dress is fashioned. One of the newest treatments, is to have the skirt tucked in such a fashion that sharply pointed scallops are simulated. The tucks have their greatest length at the knees and are graduated so decidedly that the short tucks are terminated as high up as the hips. The fashion of shirring Bkirtc of diaphanous materials over the blps will ever be popular for the simple reason that It is youthful and grace ful. Certainly it is revived this year with a furore. Worn by a tall, slen-l der woman nothing could bo more pleasing or effective. The sheer, pure white linen lawns with just a sugges tion of green, with probably a dash of pink or blue here and there are in exi:nslvo and in many cases are made up without and llnng. All About Frocks, In one Instance such a frock baa a tucked blouse which sags percepti bly over the bolt-line all around the figure. The tucks descrlbo the pointed scallops before referred to, the longest reaching quite to the belt at tho front, the shortest being bust Mgh. The sleeves nre tucked In the same manner and confined ivt tho wrist by a band of tucked linen. Very pretty belts confine the bodi ces of summer gowns composed of alternate bands of lace and ribbon. The latter material Is thin and very shimmering. A novel finish for such a belt is two large rosettes of plain ribbon attached to tho end of the streamers, though at the waist the ribbon is simply slipped through a gold rlns in the most unaffected way. All white mull and stlk muslin frocks are daintily trimmed with rose of chiffon, embedded in soft little cushion of soft silk. Thcso are up pliqued over tho entire skirt and bodice. Tho effect is chie and were It not for tho immense amount of hand work required In making the ilowera and their settings the fashions would be one of the least expensive ones of the year. A silken lining, ton would be an item of expense, but this is not a necessity, as somo of tho .prettiest designs of the year are built upon foundations of ordinary white lawn. Very appropriate for summer wear are the washable kid gloves lately introduced for the outing girl. These are doubly welcome on account of be ing perspiration-proof. They nro of glace kid and come in a wide variety of light shades. Those who have a preference for combinations will find their taste appealed to effectively In the black gloves stitched with white and fastened with one conspicuously big pearl button. It is no longer a novelty to have the monogram engraved upon the glove buttons, but It Is a new and do cidely smart to have the clasps of el bow length gloves composed of tiny rings of dull gold burnished silver in to which are set circles of pearl or ivory painted with mlnatures of beau tiful paintngs by any or several of the masters. The vogue Is costly but quite the most exclusive Innovation of the season in this direction. Meeting Fraternal Order of Eagles. For tho above meeting, which Is to bo held in Minneapolis June 3 to 8, the O. R. & N. Co. will sell round trip ticlcets from Pendleton at tho low rate of $44. Dates of sale, May 2C and 30. Going limit 10 days, return ing, GO days from date of sale. Stop overs allowed in each direction. At the same time tickets are sold for tho above meeting, tickets will also bo sold to Missouri river points, (Kansas City to Sioux City inclusive) and re turn at the same rate ($44) under same conditions as Minneapolis sale. Full information can be obtained by calling at the O. R. & N. ticket of fice. Holds up a Congressman. "At the end of tho campaign," writes Champ Clark, Missouri's bril liant congressman, "from overwork, nervous, tension, Iobs of Bleep and constant sepaklng I had utterly col lapsed. It seemed that all .the organs of my body wore out of 'order, but three bottles of Electric Bitters made me all right. It's the best all-round medicine ever sold over a druggist's counter." Overworked, run down men and weak, sickly women gain splendid health and vitality from JSlectrlc Bitters. Try them. Only GOc. Guaranteed by Tallman & Co. The homllest man In Pendleton, as well as the handsomest, and others, are Invited to call on any druggist and get free a trial bottle of Kemp's Balsam for the throat and lungs, a remedy that is guaranteed to cure and relieve all chronic and acuto coughs, asthma, bronchitis and consumption. Price 25c and GOc. For sale by Tall- man & Co., sole agents. CORRECT Mrs. Kate Berg-, Secretary Ladies' Aux iliary of Knights of Pythias, No. 58, Com mercial Hotel, Minneapolis, Minn., After Five Years Suffering Was Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Dear Mrs. Pinkham : Whatever virtue there is in medicine seems to be concentrated in Ijydiu E. IMiiklium'H Vegetable Compound. I suffered for five years with profuse and painful menstruation until I lostlleshandstrcngth.and life had no charms for me. Only three bottles of your Vegetable Compound cured me, I became regular, without any pains, and hardly know when I am sick. Some of my friends who have used your Compound for uterine and ovarian troubles all have the same good word to say for it, and bless the day they first found it." Mrs. Kate Beig. $5000 FORFEIT IF THE AROVE GUTTER IS NOT GENUINE. "When women nro troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness, leucorrhceu, displacement or ulceration of tho womb, that bearing-down feeling, inllaniniatiou of tho ovaries, backache, bloating (or ilatulencc). general debility, indigestion, and nervous pros tration, or aro beset with sueh symptoms as dizziness, faint ness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all gone" and " want-to-bo-loft-alono " fcolings. blues, and hopelessness, they should romombor thoro is ono tried and truo remedy. Lytlia E. Piiiklmin'u Vegetable Compound nt once removes such troubles, lfefuso to buy any other medicine, for you need the best Mrs. lMnklmm invites all slek -women to write lir for ntlvlco. Sho litis truiiled thousands to health. Address Lynn. Muss. MISS ROSE OWENS No. 720 Seventeenth St., "If every suffering woman has the same experience with Wine of Cardui that I had, your medicine will be most r)pular. About a year ago began to have a worn out tired feeling with lassitude, pains in the back and head which kept increasing every month. I felt that I needed something, but to get the right medicine was the trou ble. I finally decided on your Wine of Cardui and only needed to take three bottles when I was fully recovered." MSN Miss Iioso Owens, who has a responsible position in (ho Government service nt Win Itose Oweni. VENS, I WASHINGTON, D. C. I It you art) a HUlToruiu wo- J "W'ashiiiL'lon, I). C. decided io try Wine of Carduij sho niado a wise choice. Over a million women havo been relieved of female wealcnoHH by this same Wino of Cardui. It in not a strong medicine but may bo taken evory day 111 the vcar by any woman with benefit. It does not force results, but corrects derangements of the menstrual organs. It strengthens tho nervous system, gives tone to tho bodily func tions, acts directly on tho genital organs, and is tho finest lonio for wo men known to tho scieiico of medicine. man wo would miy to you Unit V. moot tumiui seldom fails to completely cure any case of female ills. Wo pay eumhuticnlly, it never fnils io benefit. Kvery day hun dreds of sulferurs are writing to our Ladies' Advisory I)o partumnl. Thu letters are opened by persona compe tent to give advice. Airs, loiies was cured by follow ing (ho ad ice which was freely given her by the Ladies' Advisory Depart ment. Miss Owens was cured without advice by just buying a 1.00 bottle of Wino of Cardui from herdruggist and taking this great medicine in the pri vacy of her homo. No doetor'd ex amination, treatment or advice is nec essary. You havo read what tlieso two cured women have written. Is litis not enough to lead you to determine to bo rid ot suffering i1 August 111, 1900, Mrs. W. II. Jones, of Cameron, Mo., writes: "I suffered terribly at monthly periods for three years. I would sometimes go for seven months with no flow at all. Now I have my health back again and am expecting to be confined in January. I cannot pra'ue your medicine enough." WINEofCARJWI A million suffering women have found relief in Wino of Cardui. Are the new patterns in wall paper we are show ing. Our stock has that bright new appearance because all our stock is of this season's styles. Con fidence can be placed in your getting a strictly first class job and the very latest ideas in paper at reasonable prices if you call at our store. ARTISTIC DECORATOR AND PAPER DEALER COURT STREET LkMBlR Gray's Harbor Com. Co. SttCISSOIIS 10 A. C. SHAW & CO. Being one of the largest man ufacturing plants on Paget sound are able to sell you lumber cheaper than anyone else. New lumber coming in every day. They also make all kinds of boxca, including Apple, Pear, Peach, Cherry, and Plumb and berry crates, and are prepared to make you prices either in small lots or BY THE CAR LOAD YOUR SHOES Will be reapaired Proper ly if sent to G. BERQUIST THE IHOE MAKER. Shop in Pendleton Shoe Store Don't Let Your Carriage Hun Down lot want of a llttlo rplr. Taken In time, the coat insr bo trlfllnK. "A word to the wlso M unltlimt." We ilo cnrrlagu sml wagon repair ing In all Ita brunches, at lowest prices, and warrant all work to bo rlctly first clai. Mala your vehicle equal to now In appearance, dura bility and motion. Jobblnf promptly executed. See Us About Gasoline Engines NEAQLE OROTHBR8 Water fit, near Main, I'endluton, Or Patronise Home Industry and amok the beat clgari made-the Pride of Umatilla Pendleton Boquet Emblem Bent Ten Cent Cigaru Made HERALDO Clear Havana. Two for "5 Cento, Manufactured by mirn hnuMnniAii nriiin ninmAfiv lilC rtiflULttiUA UuAtt rAWUJM.vf t