IM.GK TWO BAfLY RAST OHBSOJUAM. PKNDLKTTON. OREGON. WKDXESDAVV MARCH 1, 1911. EIGHT PAGES Only 4 More Days in which to get a Genuine Oil Painting Free f Saturday ends the picture deal, and until that time we will give the 14x22 inch picture with purchases of $5.00 and the 22x36 in. pictures with purchases of $10.00. Don't wait till the last day -come and select your picture while the assortment is good. There Are Many Reasons why you should buy your new prins; suit here. You should see our new spring lino of tmts. Until yon do. you will not le lieve it lwsible to pet such re markably jrood style and fit at the priee. Lasting shaje and pood tailor ins: mark nil of our suits $15.00 to $40.00 it j 1 : t Ladies' New ' Spring Oxfords and Pumps We've just received a large shipment of ladies' latest style pumps and oxfords. The latest style suede and pun metal oxfords. Xew 3 and 4 strap pumps. A full range of sizes. $3.00 to $4.50 NEWS OF- THE NOT ljk In Grando Mcrcliant Is Jailed. La tirande,. ore. W. V. Berry, proprietor of a loal dry goods store, was arrested this week charged with beating his wife. In his Inability to secure bond money he was Jailed. Teacher Sues for Damages. North Yakima, Wash. Etta Law rence, a school teacher of Naehes city, tiled suit against V. Ctoddsell for $523 damage lor injuries which she al leges were inflicted by a vicious horse belonging to Uoddsell. Send $250 Without Name. Moscow, Idaho. The Idaho Na tional Harvester company received through the mails $250 as a payment in advance to guarantee the shipment of a harvester to some farmer u southern Idaho, but the letter accom panying the cash was unsigned. Power for Milton Districts. Milton, ore. Milton Is supplying power to the Irrigated districts north and west of Frecwater, and building two new power lines, one on the east s;de of the Walla- Walla river, and the other west of Sunnyside. The work is in charge of City Klectrlcian L. K, Coyle. Pure Foods in Our Model of Cleanliness Basement Groceries in Sanitary Packages is Our Hobby 40 Fancy Cod Fish, boneless, packages, and tenderloins 10 P .Smoked Halibut, bright, clean, good, the pound Fancv Golden Bloaters, large 4 for..- Salt Herring, G for Blood Bed Salmon bellies, pound .-Op Fat Mackerel W and 30 Herring in boullion, can "2 Haddies and Ivippered Herring cans Minced Whole Clams, 3 cans .- 50 Green Turtle Meat. Prime Caviar, Sardel lens, Sardines, Salmon and Oysters, in the widest varieties. We carry only the lw-st brands of the world's best products. Shelled almonds 50 Pecans 45v I Walnuts Put up in jars. We receive Compressed yeait daily, 2 cakes for .". JSp Peanut Butter makes delicious sandwiches, jars - 20, 35 Fancv Stuffed Olives, qt Economv jars . 81.00 Fancy Green Olives, Economy jars SI. 10 Plain and mixed sweet pickles, pint 20 Dills, quart 20 Fancv sour pickle, quart 20p Chow Chow, int 20 Prf-scrvM Ginger, jars 50 and 90 OBAXGES We will continue our special sale on nice ripe juicy oranges for the bal ance of this week, spwial price doz 25 More Teacher at l-Vrndalv. Freewater, Ore. Feindale district is contemplating adding more school rooms. At a meeting of the school hoard this week the teachers were all reengaged for another year. The tenth grade is to be added and an other teacher employed for the high s.hool work. See Peril to Religious Papers. llutte, Mont. The Silver Bow County Sunday school association to night wired a protest to Montana'i congressional delegation against the proposed increase in postage rate on magazines on the ground that it would raise the cost of religious per lodicals. flitting Ice ut Klgin. Elgin, Ore. Elgin ice men have nearly filled their houses from North Powder, the ice shipped in being about twelve Inches thick. Yester day they commenced cutting six-Inch ice here. This morning the Ice eight inches thick and a car Is boing loaded for Palmers Junction for tie Urahatn packing plant. when the Northern Paalflc was rerr rylng trains across the Columbia. . Snow Aids Ills' llend Wlieat, Wilbur, Wash. The heaviest Bnow of the year fell Saturday, about four itches. With the snow came a mod eratlon of the temperature. Condi tions for a good wheat crop have not been better in four years. Lack. of. moisture in the ground before freez- ng weather in l'JOD and unfavorablo weather conditions in the spring of lit 10, with strong winds that drew what little moisture was left out of the ground during sprouting, time, was too much for growing wheat and light crop was the consequence. SOLD THE VORLD OVER;. Tiny Man Gruba Hlg Trees. hite Salmon, Wash. Weighing 87 pounds, four feet five inches ni height and 32 years old, Anton Schmidt is going Into the forest to tackle the big trees of the eountry as preliminary to setting out an or chard. Anton came from. Germany. where he was a landscape gardener t and laid out grounds for tho arlsto-1 crats of that country. So small and active is Anton Schmidt that he is often followed around by tho Indi ans, who regard him its an object of curiosity, and Sallle Queamps. says, "Me adopt little fello If he come o wigwam." round With Throat Cut. Portland, Ore. Robert MacCar- mack of Spokane, who was found on the street with Ills throat cut at an early hour Weduesday morning, died tonight as a result of the self-inflict ed wound. MacCarmack was 6 7 years old. Whicn MacCarmack w.u first discovered he said an attempt had been made to murder him, but it aiterward was discovered that he had inflicted the wound himself. De tectives Aichenor and Howell wade an investigation of the circumstances of the alleged tragedy and It was Teamed that MacCarmack had squan dered money which he had borrowed to send tils wife to Spokane. Eomm Asjr tour arugglnt for u Fre Peru. 1111 jj oiiuiuiiv State of Ohio, City of Tolodo, Lues C'OUUly u Frank J. Cheney ma -a oaU that ha la eolur partner of the firm if K. J. Cbanrj Co., doing aualneaa In the City of Toledo, 'ouaty and State aforesaid, and that acid firm will pay the aura of ONB BUNDKBI) IKH.LAK8 for each aad every caa of ca tarrh that cannot ba cored by the uae ot Malls Catarrh Car. FRANK J. CHENEY. Hworn to before me aad subscribed la bj pmence, tbla Otto day of December, A. D.. 18. IHeal) A. W. ULEABON, Notary Poalle. Hall's Catarrh Cora la taken Internally and acta directly on the blood aad aiacooa urfarea of the system. Bead for tattk- noniaia int. Sold by All Drocftata. Tft, Inknown Killed by Train, Sprague. Wash. Coroner O. L. Ad ams arrived last night and an inquest was held over the body of the un known man found by the Northern Pacific tracks west of town Thursday morning. Nothing was found on the body by which It might be Identified and it wa decided that ho met death by be;n5 struck by the train. A Crazy Spall. Tho otters was "Trovatore." Tlimigli I no moro may hold the. Yet Is thy na:no a spell, an,; t! e li:issn tu the prima donna. Ai.il it w:is. Her imn:e was Sopbronla f'zochlliiiiklw Icz. JuUsc's Library. THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE Save Your Coupons Where it Pays to Trade SAW ITS S7r,GM3 POINT. Story c Hs:r:n'in's rlrst Purchasf early eighties Iiit- bis oiri -e aad ! :s waniins on of bis tirst rail ed One m .r. Karriniat without any ; -n Bounced tbe I ur.-! road. "WLt: .'. . l ; ' u;o;.ey for it?" asliej Ui. ! ' "Never i . i , it." s;:l II: rri man. The rvz.C the bdiis Hay vlz-1 Southern, running from Luke Ontario to Stanley, N. Y. It was thirty-four miles Ions uud owned two crippled lo Conjotive.-. tv o iijiseiigtT cars n:i 1 s v en freight cars. "It isn't even a real good strcal: of rust," said a man who looked over it for him. Harriin.ui pulled out his map. lie was studying railroad maps even then. "It's g t the best harlor on I': lake." he said. "The f'ennsylva::;.. road has jrnt to fuy it." He started to build a big craiti ele vator and to improve the track. A fevr months later he disappeared from his office for several days and returned with a chevk for SJtiO.OOO. lie hail sold his road to tlie I'ennsylvania nil road. "They had to have It." he said "They saw it ns soon an I showed it to them "lint I saw it first." be added. lie Clure's Magazine. THE SOUP PLATE. A Seventeenth Century Cookbook Tells Why It Was Invented. A val"t of Tuls XIV. published n cooklxxik in lio In which he gives an follows the reason for the Invention of the hollow soup plate: The plates of the guests will be hol low In order that they may help tbem elves to as much soup as they may want without being obliged to take It poonful by spoonful because of the tffrgont tliej may hare for. one ajiothp- on seeing the spoon go rrom tne moutn to the tureen. GuesU, It will be Been, used their own spoons to All their plates, the large spoon to be used for serving the soup not being Invented till some time later. Tet even a hundred years after the Invention of tho sotip plate (1719) a work on civility rflvistd that all the dishes should be so placed on the table that every one could reach them with his spoon and that If the soup was served In a dish (tureen) every one should help himself with his own spoon without seeming to be in a hurry. A work ou manners that appeared Just before the French revolution deemed It best to advise Its renders that It was Impolite to pass the spoon back and forth between the mouth and the tureen. Difficult Horseback Feat There are no better horsemen In the world than the cavalry officers 6t the Italian army, yet even among them there are very few who could perform the feat achieved by one of them. To run an ordinary foot race Is easy enough, but to run at full speed for several hundred yards holding In one bond a spoon on which rests an egg and to reach the goal without dropping the egg is a feat which must be prac ticed carefully a long time before It can be performed successfully, and as a result there are not many who can be sure of accomplishing It whenever they try. Great, therefore, was the surprise when an Italian officer mount ed on horseback performed this diffi cult feat. Moreover, he selected a course In which tl;rc were two or three high fences, and these he cleared at full gallop without losing the egg. Tims For Stillness, Mrs. Macl-achlan was kind to her American boarder, but she did not pro pose to allow her to overstep the limits of a boarder's privileges, and she made u warv pUr cn Rnndnv the boarder mmrninff TTotn a waik found Hi vis- There la Only One "Bromo Quinine" That Is Laxative Bromo Quinine jD rue world oven to cure a cold m one day. Always rcmembw the full name. Iook far thii atfnatiiM on every box. 25c. aows of her rooni, which she Una ten wide open, tightly closed. "Oh. Mrs. MucLnchlan, I don't like my room to get stuffy," she said when she went downstairs again. "I like plenty of fresh air." "Your room will na get stuffy In one day." said her landlady firmly. " Twas never our custom, miss, to hae fresh air rooshln' about the house on the Sawbath." Too Strong. "My boy tells me you discharged him." said the late office boy's mother "Yon advertised for a strong boy, and I certainly thought he was strong enough." "Madam," replied the merchant, "he was too strenc. He bro!;e all the rules of the office iMid some of the furniture In the two days be was with us." His Fichinj Trips. "Pa, where do you go fishing?" "My son. 1 never go fishing nowa days." "Well. Mr. Snarler snld last night you were alwnys throwing a sprat t" catch a mackerel." Couragi. Courage that grows from constitu tion often forsakes the man when he has occasion for It; courage which arises from a vens'- of duty acts in t uniform manner. Addison. MaHo L'p by Herself. Sllllfiis We hear of ninny self made men, but seldom of n se!, made wo man. Cytil-tis How about the wo man whose face U her fortune? Phil adelphia Tiocord. The man who owes everything to his wife seldom pays it back. Life. Do you use an atomizer in treating Naflal Catarrh? If so you will appre ciate Ey's Liquid Cream Balm, the quickest and surest remedy for this dicease, In all curative properties It Is identical with the solid Cream which is so famous and so successful in overcoming Catarrh, Hay Fever and Cold In the head. There Is relief In the first dash of spray upon the heated sensitive air-passages. All druggists 76c, including spraying tub. or mailed by Ely Bros., 56 War-en -treet, New York. Better buy one good book for toe family than three or four cheap stoy papers. Boys and girls acquainted with great thinkers of great though' will not seek the Forb'ty of loafers r read the frothy, enervating nov .. All the news all i-last Oregonlan. the time In the High Mgxilo at I.a Grande. jh. Grande, Ore. One solid piece of timber hewn square, and measur ing six inches suare at the base and five at the apex, and grown In the forest owned l' the George Palmer Lumber Company, will be erected In front of the company's main office in this city as a flagpole. The piece of timber is the 'longest of any trim med as a flagpole in this county. Iiiy Sidewalks at I'ttsoo. Pasco, Wash. Frank Overton of Overton Brothers, Corvallls, Ore., who have the contract for laying side walks In Pasco, arrived here yester day. The contract provides for 100, 000 feet of sidewalk and 10,000 feet of curbing, all concrete. Excavating of about 4000 yards will have to be done before the work of laying tne walks can be commenced. They are bringing cix married employes with their families to Pasco. (Jb.ieot.-4 to I.onp Frog. Everett, Wash. Rather than to send his son, aged 10, to the public schools at Langley, on Whldby Is land, where little boys and girls play ed leap frog together, the Rev. J. H. Requa, pastor of the Friends' church at Langley, submitted to arrest on a charge of violating tho compulsory education law. He was taken to Coupeville Monday morning. Mr. Requa criticizes the sanitary and moral conditions at the school. Condemn i:igin Opcni House. Elgin, Ore. At an fidjourned council meeting the opera house of Robert LMumenstein was condemned, leaving Elgin without a playhouse. The dance hall of Henry Ruder was discussed. A committee wus appoint ed to investigate public buildings. Tho city clerk was also commanded to no tify the owners of property on the east side of Front s'reet to obtain deeds for land necessary to straight en the street. Drinks Liniment for Cough, Cheueluh, Wash. Charles Kumry, a rancher, Is In a serious condition as a result of taking poison by mistake for cough medicine. W'lth another rancher he roomed at a local hotel Thursdny night. Before retiring no placed cough medicine on the dresser. Later in tho night he Jumped from his bed and drank of a bottle from the dresser, believing It contained his medicine. After taking a large swal low he discovered he had drank por sonous horse liniment. Itldc 1000 MUCH, Itnya IjiihI. Pasco, Wash To leave home one day of the week and four days later (after having traveled over 1000 miles) to have purchased a fruit runch and begin its planting Is the t ry of J. p. Anderson, who left his 'imt at Badger, Minn., Monday, and ifter spending a day In Spokane ached Pasco at 12:30 p. rn, today. . y 3 o'clock p. m. Mr. Anderson had Hiircriased a 10-acre tract from the r.-isco Reclamation company and darted Immediately to grub and lev 1 1 his land. Mr. Anderson passed through this country 20 years ago, Slung! "1 would like to exchange this live 1 uliir opera l::g for a five dollar c h:if in:- dish." ".; -rry, mbs, but those opera bag.. ;,-o bcr-.i ir..irked down lo J'l.C.' -IViishiiigton Herald. The Rreipj. Mrs. John I do wish I had a gooil ivcl;e for falling hair. John -Most wo men nowadays Just pick II up again ami hang It ou the back of n chair. -Yotingstown Telegram. (il'MlTlOX ON THE FARM. When you plar.i. this spring, sow a few seeds of kindness-. Taey wul flourish so and produce such an abundant crop of. good cheer that you will be encouraged to plant luxgely of this crop uDother year. No. crop pays better. Tour oats vill nut be so apt to rust if you get tltem in early. The more, a man goes around, thf less he Is apt to develop into a crank. Don't complain If you lose some of your grain sacks at the mill If you have not marked them. Have every bag plainly marked. Don't be in too big a hurry. Ifa unwise, to work soil when It Is soggy and very wet. Walt until it dries In to erumbly.workablQ condition. Now mind this: Make two sowings of clover seed, one now and one early in April. I'se hntf red. other half atslke. Do not miss the alslko. Tho moro corn the more stock; the more stock the richer the land; the richer the land tho more corn and there you have the secret of a rota tion that Is sure to bring success. Entirely too many people In this world are making themselves cross eyed looking for the street of easy money? This is as vain and foolish as hunting for the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Just us soon as the froBt Is out of the ground it will do to sow onion seed and peas. Beets, early potatoes, spinach, radishes and lettuce may do planted early, too. Tender vegeta bles should wait until April or May. It Is a mistake to plant the same types of vegetables In the rame spot year after year; keep them moving to prevent insects and diseases from getting a foothold, and It Is a mistake) to forget that a garden needs plant food In order to nourish vegetables properly. Stable manure and a sprinkle of boneme.il will do, nicely. From March F'irm Journal. I'RKE HOOK ON PILES. If you would hit the mark you must ilm a little above It. Every arrow that (lies feels the attraction of the Mirth. Tho Kidneys and the Skin.. If the kidneys are weak or torpid, the skin will be pimply or blotchy. Hood's Snrsaparilla strengthens and stimu lates tho kidneys and clears the com plexion. By thoroughly purifying the blood It makes good health. Tells How to Cure limn WlUi In ternal Mellcln Do you know the cause of piles? Is It Internal or external? Will salves, suppositories or cut ting remove the cause? How can one bo cured permanent ly? Do you know how Dr. J. S. Leon hnrdt found the cause and cure? All these questions answered fully In a hnnklet mailed free by Dr. Lcon hardt Co., station B, Buffalo N. Y., or at Pendleton Drug Co. nnd drug gists everywhere who will sell the successful remedy, Ilem-Rold, under guarantee nt Jl per large bottle. PASTIME THEATRE A Week's Trip Through the Sunny South Commencing Mon. Night Feb. 27th and Continuing all Week Rose City Quintette PLEASING SINGERS CLEVER DANCERS FUNNY COMEDIANS Songs of Dixie and Witty Monologues George WILLIAMS & CLARK billie The Allgator Duo, In "Who Said Sam?" ' armour GOFF & TEBOW rube Soft Shoe dancers. ALBERT SCOTTIE A Typical Old Darkle Comodian. Another great feature on the bill is MISS EDNA WALKER CONTORTIONIST AND RING PERFORMER BILLIE CLARK, Comedian Featuring the latest song hits, ARMOUR GOFF Reading and Shakespearean Recitals. Complete Change of Program Thurs, Matinee every day except Monday. Evening Admission, 15c and 25c. Matinee Admission, 10c and 20o