PAILt "t OBJBBOK1AN, PENDLETON, ORKGOS. TUESDAY, JANUARY SI, lt5. PAGE THREE. If I 'I i ...JMPOR.TANT NOTICE.... eal Embroidery Sale 1 lug DiVKIi j - lady In Pendleton and vlclnltr wm.i. u ' i mo " M - nv ,, UR, uzu,AA XJarJrtUlVlLHiL BAXiau i" . but January, it reputation of this nn f en Wol 1 Ter m "nU 01 ne "Ptn, embroider, will l nU tor almost nothing. wertt of jronr purse. , RANuIMu IN FKICE FROM Sc TO $2.04 PER. YARD. U. t Macs now " black bose, fleece WfartbUw how 18c J flMft black hose ....23c fwfwt black hose ....S6c Cfwi black bone ..,.50e lac ; 28c 36C Um r. a- corsets. RIBBONS. Fncy rlbbom price . gjc Fancy ribbons, bent quality ,.80c Fancy rlbbona 25c 10 PER CENT REDUCTION ON ALL SILK AND SATIN TAF. FETA RIBBONS. SILKS. 60c Jap silk, an colon . S7c T5c and 85c Taffeta silk esc 81.28 fancy allk 7C Sl.IS black taffntta silk, 8-in. age $1.8 Mack taffeta allk, t-ln. Sl.IS DOMESTICS AND FLANNELS 10c Flannelettes . . . 8 1-So 19 1-Sc Flannelettes ...So II l-2c silk olives, se-ln to IS l-c fancy ginghams 10c 8 1-Jc toweling o 10c toweling 7c IS 1-So toweling .......to 15c toweling 19c AGENT FOR STANDARD PAT TERNS AND PUBLICATIONS. . w TrTWD UTIOf .TV 11 Y7 i.im m-r . flE A" UAU ivwiiui. rirTKKN PER CENT DISCOUNT. EXANDER DEPARTMENT STORE ' W.8M 1 fart PENDLETON'S BEST AND FOREMOST STORE. miMltHIIIIMHIII HIIIMHIIIIIIMMIIHIHMI or THE NEW YEAR freater happiness than lit pined through the pos- m of our peerless car. It on furnlah you lwth any. tdand one that wllbe lr i In style, construction aqt running and durable. e Brothers EETH LCTED BT THE MOD Uf METHOD, MCL r thoroughly equipped aodern me'' ode and to, and guarantee oar i be of the highest stand- Fnr prices the lowest I with first -elss work. Me Bros. Dmttats. W atlon Block. Ws Main ia. No Frenzied Finance m In ths real estate we have for sale. Real estate Is the only safe founda tion for a sound financial operation. There is somethlns to build on. Take your money and Invest It In property and It will Increase in value. We have desirable property In all parts of the city, as well as ranch. farms and small tracts. W. E. Davidson & Co. Ill Court Street, M'KINLEY BIRTHDAY FETE. Memorable Oborrranoe at Hla Native TTown. Canton, 0 Jan. 11. The Interior of the auditorium has been hand somely decorated for the great ban quet to be .given tonight In observ ance of the birthday of William Me- Klnley. The affair will be given un der the aaaplces of the Young Men's McKlnley club and will be attended by men of national prominence rep resenting every section of the coun try, lira. McKlnley will occupy . a box In the banquet hall with a party of friends which will Include Mrs. Garret A. Hobart. ' Justice William R. Day, secretary of state .in the cabinet of President McKlnley, will act as toast master. The following program of toasts has been arranged: "McKlnley," Vice-President-elect Charles W. Fairbanks. "Comrade McKlnley," General John C Black. 'McKlnley and the South," General Fitxtaigh Lee. 'Ohio," Governor Myron Herrlck. Our Country' Lieutenant Gover nor Harding. ,tyn Lump I ml P" beat and gives ' ""tenon tha- ... r"uon, and sells for r Oral in ka n s Delivered. H always on hand. 'PhotM Mats r1 COAL AND POD CO. I YARD WEAR )' 0, R, DEPOT. LET US SUPPLY YOU WITH Building Material Dimension lumber of all de scriptions. Sash, Doors, Blinds, Moulding, Building and Tar Pa per. BRING YOUR BIl.ii TO fJS AftD GK7 OUR FIGURES. Grays Harbor Commercial Co. Oppose W. C. R. Depot, H. M. SLOAN BLACKSMITH ' Horseshoeing, general repair ing, wagon making and repair ing. The way I have built up any business la by doing noth ing but gooJ work. Prices rea sonable. Cor. Cottonwood Aha Ma. WllMIHMMIIIH AT HOME.. iillivflE (jSp Eond Nothing or men STYLES RIGHT STATE LEAGUE HAS MET FOR GENERAL DEBATE. Near'y All the Problems of Absorbing tnmcx .ml Interest llie crninem of Michigan Town and Cities Are Being Considered by a reinvention of Officials and OduHs Canadian and Municipal Union. lor'a, Mich., Jan. SI. A score or more of the leading cities of the state are represented by thler mayors or other officials at the seventh annual convention of the League of Michigan Municipalities In session here. The dltcustions will cover a wide range uf topics as Is shown by the following program of papers arranged for the two days' sessions: The Use of Prisoners on Streets and Roads," Otis Fuller, warden of the Michigan Reformatory; "Munici pal Accounting, Howard C. Beck, dep uty controller of Detroit; "The Union of Canadian Municipalities," J. W. Drake, Windsor, Ont.: "Municipal Problems In Illinois," W. C. Crollus, mayor of Jollet and president of the League of American Municipalities; Municipal Boards," , Mayor E. Sweet of Grand Rapids; "Municipal Organisation," Moses Taggart, city attorney of Grand Rapids; "The Pur ification of Water," Prof. G. 8. Wil liams, University of Michigan; "Per manent Improvements," Mayor W. W. Todd of Jackson; "Contracts va Municipal Labor," C B. Pike, city surveyor of Manistee; ' "Municipal Government," Mayor Hugh Lyons of Lansing: "Non-Partisan Admlnlstra tion," Mayor Edward Frensdorf of Hudson, and "Theory and Practice, David A. Helneman of Detroit The meeting will close with the an nual convention banquet tomorrow evening. COMING EVENTS.' February t-t Western Lumber men's Association, Spokane. February 8-11 Walla Walla Poul try show. February 12 100th anniversary of the birth of Sacajewea's baby at Fort Mandan, with Lewis and Clark's ex. Dedttlon. June 1, 190S Opening Lewis and Clark exposition. June 12-28 National Woman s Suffrage Association, Portland. July 11-14 American Medical As sociation, Portland. A Grim Tragedy. 1s dally enacted, In thousands of homes, as death claims, In each one, another victim of consumption or pneumonia. But when coughs and colds are properly treated, the trag- edy Is Averted. F. G. Huntley, of Oklahoma, Ind., writes; "My wife had the consumption, and three doc tors gave her up. Finally she took Dr. King's New Discovery for Con oamptlon, Coughs and colds, which cured "her. and today she Is well and strong:" It kills the germs of all dis eases. One dose relievea Guaran teed at 60c and $1.00 by Tallman St Co., druggists. Trial bottle free. Schmidt Blk. Oh 1 1 1 I 1 1 M 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 H I I I H To Elect Episcopal Bishop. Harrlsburg, Pa.. Jan. 81. All of the delegates are here for the con ventlon to be held In St. Stephen's church this evening for the election of a bishop of the new Harrisburg diocese of the Protestant Episcopal church. The candidates most prom Inently mentioned for the bishopric are the Rev. Dr. James H. Darling. ton of Brooklyn, -the Rev. Charles C. Slattery of Faribault, Minn., the Rev, Edward J. Knight of Trenton, N. J. the Rev. Dr. Frederick P. Davenport of Memphis, Tenn., the Rev. Dr. Hen ry Lubeck of New Tork city, and the Rev. WIlTtam T. Faber of Lockport, N. T. Sunflower State lawyers. Topeka, Kan., Jan. tl. Eminent members of the bench and bar from every part of the state have rounded up In the capital for the annual meeting of the Kansas State Bar as sociation. The convention was lor mallv opened today and wilt last over tomorrow. ' Hon. Sanford B. Ladd of Kansas City. Mo.. Is the guest of honor and will aenver ine annual -, men itnown s ventlon address, me auenuance large and the meeting promises to be one of the most successful ever held by the association. Spoiled Her Beauty. Harriett Howard, at one time had her beauty spoiled with akin trouble. She writes: "I had Salt Rheum or Ecsema for years, but nothing would cure it, until I used Bucklen's Arnica Salve." A quick and sure healer fnr' rut., burns and sores. SCO at Tallman A Co.'s drug store. OSTEOPATHY Pelvto Diseases of Women. OREGON HOLDS RAIN RECORD. Wilson, Tillamook County, Bad 13( Inches of Rainfall in I MM. Wilson, In Tillamook county, Is the wettest town in the United States of which the weather bureau has any record. Rain falls there to the depth of 138 Inches every 12 months. It mists, patters, rains and occasionally pours from beginning to end of the year, says the Oregon Daily Journal. Fearing that something might be wrong with the gauge for measuring the precipitation at that place, As sistant District Forecaster Wollaber of this city, made a special trip to Wilson to make a thorough Inquiry Into the situation. The instruments were found true and the only reason for the large amount of moisture which they showed was held to be due to rain, rain, rain. The station is In charge of Mrs. Jennie Reehr, who has been measur ing the falling waters at the same spot for the past 13 years. Mr. Wollaber says that she Is one of the most cap able persons in the service careful and conscientious. Moreover, the gauge and Instruments used at the station are psrleflt Wilson nestles In a canyon, on each side of which the mountains rise to a height of It 00 feet above the level of the townslte. The weather experts are of the opinion that the topog raphy of the country contributes very largely to the excessive rainfall. "There may be other points In Til lamook county," said Mr. Wollaber, "at which there Is an equal amount of precipitation, but they are not fa vored with a government rain station. It Is probable that there are points m southeastern Alaska where the an nual rainfall Is heavier, but of course this Is merely conjectural. Clear Water, Jefferson .county, has an an nual rainfall of 130 Inches. That the next to the highest on record In the United States, although Neah Bay, Wash., Is a close second." AGAINST THE MACQUES. BUI in the Legislature Seeks Abolish Social Evil. wIU Notice to Debtors. All persons Indebted to please call and settle at once, as we need the money to pay bills. D. KEMLER A SON, The grocers. Two of Dowle's followers died at Zlon City Saturday, because of the failure of his faith cure. One of the most Important of the bills Introduced before the leglila ture during the present session Is the one Introduced before ths house Thursday relative to husbands who connive at ths prostitution of their wives, says the Salem, Statesman. This bill also applies to persons who live off or accept the earnings of prostitutes or who solicit persons' to go to the houses of Ill-fame for Im moral purposes. It also provides against the admittance of females under the age of 18 years of age Into houses of Ill-fame. For the violation of the law, If enacted, the transgres. mot would be arrested on ths charge of felony and If convicted, sentenced to a term In the state penitentiary of not leas than on year or more than five. This bill Is for the direct purpose of driving out of the state the most disreputable and objectionable class macques." It such a bill was passed these degenerated creatures would be compelled to face the alternative of supporting them selves by going to work or getting out of the state. The Salem authorities are now wag ing a persistent and unremitting war fare against these leeches of society, but they are unable to do anything more than to convict them on the aharge of vagrancy. A number of fhem are working on the streets un der charge of the authorities, having been convicted on the charge of va grancy. Cruise of Schoolhip. Philadelphia. . Pa.. Jan. 81. Eighty happy youngsters waved farewell from the decks of the schoolshlp Saratoga as that vessel sailed down the Delaware today for her annual cruise. The cruise this year will oc cupy 10 weeks and will take In all the chief points in the West Indies. It Is estimated that less than 18 per cent of women are In perfect health. Why this alarming state T For the anawer to the greater part of It, we must look to the so-called pelvic dis eases, or female troubles. It la rare Indeed to find a woman In the active period of lite entirely free from all these aliments. Is it any wonder that scientists are constantly asserting the degeneracy of the human race, when these must be the mothers of It, or that In France and Germany the death rate exceeds the births? Is It any wonder that so many false cures are heralded, and that for years quacks have made this their harvest field? With years of aufferlng and distress, aches In back, ovarlea and uterus, with their reflex accompanl ments, headaches, digestive disorders, bladder trouble, etc., is It any won der that woman submits to the burn ing caustics, pessary, electric shock and finally the surgeon's knife, only to find herself at last unsexed, nervous wreck and a hopeless Inva lid? Such la the story of a hundred In our own town. Cannot science end this awful tale? If not, a new and hardier race must take the stage. He who brings this story to a close will be greater than any now on his tory's pages. Such a one Is now striving hard for this glorious cause In the person of Dr. Andrew T. Still, the founder of osteopathy. Said Mr 8enator Jos. B. Foraker, "If the founder of Osteopathy does nothing more in this life than what he has done to relieve the suffering of wo men, his name will go down the ages as the greatest physician of any age, and one of the benefactors of the race." Is this eulogy merited? Let us ex amine his theory and see If It be rea sonable, for we' should reason on healing, although we have never done so. The body Is not a mystery, but works by law, Just as truly as any other machine. So have a reason. The uterus and ovaries have an abundant and delicately balanced nerve and blood aupply on which they depend to functionate, or perform their duty of life, procreation. Be cause of this abundance and delicacy of nerve and blood supply, they are easily disturbed. At this point Dr. StMl began by asking, "How does this disturbance come about?" Strange It is that no physician ever asked this before, or if he asked, failed to get an answer. Dr. Still never stopped until he had an anawer. The blood to the female organs, as well as to all parts Is controlled by the raso-motor nerves. These arias In the spinal cord, pass out between the vertebrae, thence downward through tissues and over Joints to the organs. Cut the vaso-motor nerve to any vessel and the vessel wall Is paralyzed. Then the force of the blood within the vessel spleads the wail, accumulating an excess of blood, an Inflammation or congestion. With these facts of physiology as a starting point, Dr. Still began the search for the agent cutting the vaso-motor nerve. Diligent search recvealed that the vertebrae between which the nerve leaves the spinal cord, were slightly displaced, the ribs, the lltb aad 12th, were drawn down and to gether, and that the pelvic bones, commonly called the hip bones, were twisted. "An Idea," says Dr. Still, "These bring pressure and cut off the nerves as they pass by them. If I straighten these It should get the desired result." He did the work The result you have In the above quo. tation from the wife of Ohio's greatest senator. You have been duped long enough Henceforth proceed by reason. In vestigate. There are several In our town who have been treated. Get a complete explanation and understand, Pick the wheat from the chaff, fur pretenders are numerous and will Infest our state until Senator Brown ell's bill, now before the legislature, becomes a law and compels all on. teopaths to go before an examining board. Don't Judge Osteopathy by what some pretender has been able to give you. Would you Judge medl cine from the work of a quack? Frequently we hear, "I have i uterine displacement, so Osteopathy can't help me." Does not the die placement come from the stretching of the ligaments, weakened by poor nourishment? What will correct it? Prop it up with a pessary, or correct the blood supply and nourish the llg amenta back to strength? Because you cannot detect the slight displacements of bones, don' be positive there are none. Trained fingers will find them and point them out to your satisfaction. Medical doe. tors, those who never Investigate, often assert that these displacements do not exist Any such we cordially Invite to call, as we have some ex. ceflent examples of all classes of displacements among our patients. Osteopathy makes no claim to curs all cases. Some mild cases are Incur, able, some very bad cases are easily cured. Most depends on the causes, whether It be a removable condition or not Then comes In the recuper ative power of ths body. Ths longer the case is delayed the more the re cuperative power Is lost Give Osteopathy a chance to save you before submitting to ths sur geon's knife, which must forever de stroy you as a woman, unsex yon, wreck your nervous system, subject you to ths terrible Initiative of ths scar tissue and leave you Incapable of motherhood, and unfitted In body and mind for . wifehood, a barren wreck on the sands of time, just liv ing because- you have not been called away. t There Is a chance for you. It costs nothing to Investigate fully with Doc tors Holslngton, Despaln block. Pen dleton, Ore., who are graduates under Dr. Still, the founder. They will glad ly answer any question. SAVED From a Drunkards J Grave Have been thousands of meat by the use of Trlb. It Is a positive cure tor the liquor habit Right here in Pendletsa many men have been stralghs- ened out and given a ne by ase of TRIB. TRIB SOLD BY TALLMAN CO. Posltlveli the made. Any quantity you Delivered to your heme Always call for OLYMPIA. A. N0LTE Telephone Mala Celebrated Pianos f The WorM'i Leading Mali urn earn The STEINWAY and the EMERSON pianos. New styles are ready for your selection. Latest stylea and designs In lace curtains, portieres and ruga. Agent fer the Improved White sewing ma chines. Payments ef t per month. ! Jesse Failing X Store ht Bridge. X ana - a a ea The Columbia Lodging House Well ventilated, fortable rooms. neat and corn good bed Bar In connection, where goods are served. the best Main street, center of block, be tween Alt and Webb streets. F. X. SCHEMPP PROPRIETOR. IB (DIAL LET CB FILL YOUR BIN WITH Rock Spring Coal Recognised as the best and most economical fuel. We are prepared to eon tract with you for your winter's aupply. We de liver coal or wood to any part of the city. j Laatz Bros. General clean-up of all winter goods at prices that will surprise you. Teatach'a. MAIN STREET. NBAR DEPOT. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeeeea ! The French ! I Restaurant i Beet S5 Cent Meal in the City. Private Dining Parlors. J Elegant Furnished Rooms la e Connection. , a OUS LaFONTAINE, Prop. S US Main Street. Walters' flouring Mills Capacity. 180 barrel, a day. Flour exchanged for whaat ' Flour, Mill Feed. Chopped Feed, etc., always on hand. V,,.v I? ,v rv v H V I '. id' ,,, , t iff-:, f 'i. r . u f I'- '',! i. . . ,i I1- f.f '