East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, April 12, 1911, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
aha: iui ouooxiajv. ncraLKroft, objwoji. Wednesday, April 12, mi.
EIGHT PAGES
Easter Offerings of Merit
"ife
SAVINGS IX WOMEN'S
EASTER GLOVES.
A new pair of plws will
'e Lwessary to complete your
Easter toilet Take advan
taire of our Easter specials.
$1.75 SILK GLOVES
Women's SI. 73 silk
. llausquetaire cloves". 16-but-
( ton length pure silk, the pro-
"liii'tlou of a maker of estab
lished reputation, double fin
Tr tips, variety ( colors,
bhi'-k and white. Easter
price SI. 35
$1.00 SILK. GLOVES
6S?.
Women's S1.00 i-la.-p
silk cloves, well cut and care
f ul v made, double finder tiis,
Mark and white. Ea-ter
price 6S
S1.25 KID GLOVES 95
Women's S1.25 2-clasp
prlace kid ploves, made from
selected skins, black and col
ors. Easter j.rice 95
$3.50 KID GLOVES
S2.05.
Women's S3.50 place kid
16-button lencth, our lx?st
make, furnished in black,
white anl colors. Easter
price 82.95
NEW EASTEIt ARRIV
ALS PAILYSOLS.
The women of America
are emulating their sisters in
Japan and next summer sun
shades will bob like the sun
lit waves of the sea. We
have many new novelties to
show you. The prices range
from SI. 30 to S15.00
Only Three Days to Select
Your New Easter Suit or Hat .
$25.00 Easter Suits $18.75
Today, on second floor, we placed on sale "0 Women's Fine
Tailored Suits iu which there are beauty, value and sen-ice com
bined in this assortment can be found the most appropriate and
desirable models which will fit to perfection Gray and black,
brown and black worsteds, brown cheviots, navy blue serges, black
fvrges and diagonals Medium length, box style or smui-fittin;
jackets Skirts plain gored or panel back All sizes, including
stouts Regular values to 825.00 on sale only
$18. 75
SILKS.
As a style favorite the beautiful "SILK FOULARDS" prom
ise to hold a high position in the realm of dress, and we further
illustrate this fact. We'd call attention to the exclusiveness of our
showing along these lines for "really' ther're a marvel of color
ami design deftly woven into combinations of the most beautifid
,'nd stunning effects. Come IN let us show you. XO TROUBLE
NEW ARRIVALS IX OUR MILLINERY DEPT.
We have just received by express a fine assortment of Gage,
Fisk and Ileiman k Lyman hats for Easter. Come and see these
new creations before buying. You'll find here some of the most
Vautiful and stylish hats you'll see this season. They're priced
richt too.
DRESS GOODS.
Marquesettes, one of the seasons most popular materials. Comes
in cotton, silk, silk and cotton, etc. Just received a lt of new
colors in the all silk "Marquesettes. A pleasure to show our goods.
DRESS TRIMMINGS.
New arrivals in this section. We now can match most any col
or. Give you from the narrow soutache to wide 12-in. braids.
Also all kinds beaded trimmings, etc., etc.
GIRLS' FROCKS.
'harming little white frocks for girls' wear. These are pret
i'ly trimmed with laces and embroideries of the finer kinds.
They are shown in a number of very attractive models. Each
dress thoroughly well made in every particular.
Materials include mulls, organdies and nice quality lawns.
Dresses are shown in all sizes from 2 to 14 yrs. at 95 to $15.00
Pendleton's Cleanest and Best
Grocery in Our Model Basement
Peanut Butter, jars 15 and 35
Spanish Pepiers, cans 15 and 25
Oyster Cocktail Sauce, bottles 35?
Olives, stuffed with almonds, bottle 40
Olives, pitted, bottle 35
Olives stuffed with Pimientos, pint 40
Ripe Olives, pint 25
Green Olives, pint 35
French Ranch Eirgs, dozen 20c
Marschino Cherries, bottles 35 and 90
Preserved Ginger, jars 50 and 90
Sweet Relish, jars 40
Extra Fancy Sweet Wrinkled Peas, Diamond W brand, can 30?
Fig Pudding, cans 15 and 25
Home Made Salad Dressing, bottle, each 25
T. P. W. Cider Vinegar, bottle 10
T. P. W. Special Coffee, pound 30
Fresh Dairy Butter, roll .... ! 68?
$5.00 LADIES' WAISTS
3.65.
Every S5.00 waist in the store
U included in this sxvial sale. Al!
new ftvles, choice of Kimona or
regular sleevts. hitrh or I .hitch
neck, loth tailored and lingerie
styles: some genuine linens among
them. Lingerie waists leautiful
ly trimmed with lace and embroid
ery. Choice S3. 65
WASH GOODS.
In this department you would
be surprised to see the 'magni
tude." Any and all kinds, all col
ors, combinations, etc., from he
heaviest materials to the "very
cheer." All laundry, and the price
yard ' 5 to 50
XEW ARRIVALS IX THE
ART DEPARTMEXT.
We are now prepared to meet
your demands for Irish crochet
thread. We carry "Parlours' Ir
ish Flax thread, suitable for all
kinds of crochet work, also books
of instruction. All sizes, from the
very fine to coarse. Conies in
holder, readv for use. Price,
15
P.
Just received a shipment of pil
low tops for local high school.
Very new and neat design on lin
en crash. Suitable colors and de
sign. Be loyal to your school, buy
a P. II. S. pillow top. Your
choice 75c
2 for 25e
II. S. PILLOW TOPS.
tow
i. m
WIS
"7'
Illustration
from The Butterick
Fashion Sheet for
MAY
FREE Copies at our
Butterick Pattern Counter ,
.... Main Floor
THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE
Save Your Coupons Where it Pays to Trade
6?
HERMISTON ORCHARD
The Russian government has con
tracted for a kerosene engine pro
pelled boat for the transportation of
cholera patients from Infected dist
ricts 10 fnMiiiai.
Head the want ads.
CRISPS
W" J ISM M i " 1
V Vfcj - M rour lool 4-l- "
y prte tha lowMt. J
S S Hlh-trm4 V
H7. ! Hf. V
utlaf&rtlon. 1
1 PRICES REDUCED fl
I I On Uli taA sf&X
I 11 Vamn now . .. .fl.BO KX
I I Aft hw Doon...$t U'SjCl'
I I OKUfa Front Do.... r
1 I 1M14 Vlalah sirta I
1 I ttnt tiul far ttUhiM I rp- I
a . williahs ca V!S
WESTON NEWS NOTES
(Special Correspondence.) '.
Weston, Ore., April 11. Will
Compton spent Saturday and Sun
day with Milton friends.
D. V.. Jarman and family spent Sun
day visiting friends and relatives in
Athena.
Mrs. Delia Marsh who has been
visiting relatives in Walla Walla for
the past week, has returned to Wes
ton. The ladies' band gave a concert Sat
urday afternoon under the direction
of the band master, Mr. Smith of Wal
la Walla.
William McKenzie and family were
In Pendleton Sunday attending the
ball game. Many young people from
Weston also went down to witness the
game.
Mrs. R. D. Cashatt and two chil
dren came down from Spokane Sat
urday to spend a few weeks with Mrs.
f.'ashatt's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mar
tin NorDean of this city. Mrs. Cach
att's husband, Dr. Cashatt, waa for
merly a prominent doctor In Weston,
but who moved to Spokane a few
years ago and now has an extended
practice In Spokane.
The city council has set the day the
17th and 18th of April, for the remov
ing of all the rubbish, etc., from the
streetj.
A report coming from Spokane ay
that Mrs. B. B. Hall, formerly of Wes
ton, Is seriously m,
Carl McConnell of Milton, was in
Weston Sunday visiting friends.
Mrs. Jas. Cox and children arrived
Friday from Spokane. The Coxes will
make tHeir home In Weston as Mr.
Cox Is employed in Jarman's depart
ment store and Is considered one of
Weston's valuable baseball players.
Mrs. Frank Taylor and daughter,
Kuby, have gone to Walla Walla to
spend a few days Ruby Is receiving
medical treatment from the Walla
Walla doctors.
Mr. Ray Vanderpool wai seriously
Injured Sunday morning by the belt
from a gasoline engine coming off
and the boy was thrown through a
glass window.. The result yas a brok
en collarbone and a serious cut on
the head. Dr. Madden Is attending
him and ho Is reported much better.
Mr. Henry Wood of Athena, was In
Weston yesterday and he aays that
his wife who has been 111 for over a
year, Is decidedly better.
Kdna Banister was In Walla Wal
la and Milton on a visit Saturday and
Sunday.
Mrs. S. L. Kennard, who has been
visiting In Kansas for the past few
month, baa returned to her home at
Weston.
Mr. Rawla Miller was a business
visitor In Weston yesterday from Athe
na. He is going to bring his "Dime"
show over to Weston two days in the
week.
Monday evening a slight snow
fell, followed by a light frost The
fruit waa all in blossom and It la not
known yet to what an extent It was In
Jured.
' Tuesday the work on the road be
tween Athena and Weston was be
gun. The roek crusher Is hnrd at
work and the real construction will
begin In a few days.
As soon as the weather Is favorable
work on the brick yard will begin.
Tuesday was the dny set for opening
of work, but as It snowed they did not
work..
Mrs. Kva TJrehm of Weston, went
to Penleton Sunday to meet her tius
hnnd, who In working at Camas
prairie.
AEItOXAlTS IV RACK
TODAY FOU IjAIIM CVP
San Antonio. April 11. In an effort
to capture the I.ahm cup Aeronauts
Honeywell and Telland are today
sailing toward St. Louis. They as
cended at 6 o'clock last night.
A law against dealing In futures,
and well enforced, would compel
come churches to get down to earth
for awhile.
CASTOR 1 A
For Imbnts uid CMIdxen.
la Klcd You Has Alwajs Bocgr
horn the
ggnstfwof (
(Special Correspondence.)
Hermlston. Ore., April 11. The
Hermlston Orchard company has been
organized with Dr. Coe as president,
Frank Sloan as vice president, and
1'. C Holland as secretary and treas
urer, and James Kyle ns sales man
ager, with offices In Hermiston, to
take over the Skinner lands and to
place them in the east. Mr. Kyle is
mayor of Stanfield, while Frank
Sloan is president of the Commercial
club at Stanfleld, and vice president
of the Bank of Stanfield, and these
men, with Dr. Coe among the lead
ing people who made the selling op
erations of the Columbia InJ com
pany famous all over the west. More
than a thousand people were brought
to Hermlston and Stanfield by the
Columbia Land company, of which P.
C. Holland was manager at Hermlston
for the past two years.
The Skinner lands are all within
the limits of the city of Hermiston.
or adjoin the town. The Skinner
family were pioneers here and more
than half of their lands have been
put under water by the government
project. The total acreage amounts
to about SOO acres.
'Mr. Holland is arranging to move
his family here, and will occupy his
new home on Newport Heights In a
very fed days.
Hermlston continues to thrive, no
matter what happens elsewhere. In
the settlement of the Stanfield liti
gation, by which Dr. Coe makes a
clean up In the town of 30 per cent
of the property and lands under the
project there, a total of $150,000 to
$200,000, free from encumbrance, but
loses the management of both enter
prises, his hands are again free, and
he has turned all of his energies to
ward the upbuilding of Hermiston.
Women Need
sympathy and help when they are
attacked by weakness and suffering.
At times when Nature seems cruel
and very hard when depressions
and derangements come kind
womanly friends may givesympathy.
When ailments occur, the best
natural help and correction is the
safe and well-tried family remedy
BEEGWS
PILLS
They correct the result of errors '
and remove the cause of suffering. '
They have tonic, helpful action on
the whole system. They relieve
nervousness, headache, backache,
dispel depression and suffering.
Ik-echam's Pills give the , organs
strength, improve bcxlily conditions
and may be relied upon
For ,
Sure Relief
Foe females, BeecSam't PiiUaretpeclatlf
uttftble. So instruction wKh ch bo.
So Li Everywhere. In boxes 10c end 2Sc
FARMERS WAR OX
SQUIRREL PESTS
Never Out of Work.
The busiest little things ever made
are Dr. King's New Life Pills. Every
pill is a sugar coated globule of
health, that changes weakness Into
strength, languor Into energy., brain
frig Into mental power; curing consti
pation, headache, chills, dyspepsia,
malaria. Only 25c at Koeppens.
ST
ST sA '.'J
MAXY INVITED TO ATTEND
PENINSULA CONVENTION
Port Augeles. Nearly five hundred
invitations to attend the big Olympic
Peninsula Development convention.
April 21-22, nre being sent out to
commercial and publicity organiza
tions, newspapers and prominent men
of the northwest by the Port Angeles,
WashinKton. commercial club. The
citizens of Port Angeles are making
extensive preparations for the enter
tainment of the hundreds of visitors
who will attend the great booster
Kathering. A program of unusual In
terest, embracing talks by experts on
pertinent topics, road building and
charpit stump burning, demnnstrnions,
sight-seeing excursions, exhibits of
the products and resources of the pe
ninsult, etc., Is being prepared.
The convention will close with a
splendid banquet on Saturday night
at which It Is expected many of the I
prominent men of Oregon. Washing
ton, Idaho, Montana ami British Co-1
lumbla will sit together. I
The convention Is culled for the
purpose of organizing the Olympic
Peninsula Development League for
the exploiting of the marvelous re-!
sources of the northwestern section j
of Washington. It Is hoped to enlist
every community of the Peninsula In j
the movement as well as the co-operation
of the big cities of the north- j
west.
SOITH AFRICANS ARE !
STUDYING OREGON METHODS
Corvallis. Ore, In South Africa the
natives are being taught by the Ore
gon agricultural college bulletins to
add to their slender food supply. Q.
A. Roberts, a former student of the
college who Is now head of the In
dustrial department of the Old Untall
Central Training School at Rhodesia
Is using the bulletins from his alma
mater In instruction in vegetable
growing and poultry ralsjng. Writ
ing Dr. Wlthycombe, director of the
college experiment station, ho says:
"The native people are Interested
in vegetable gardening and fowl rais
ing, as both add to their food supply.
At present the food is of the simplest'
sort, consisting of a round grain'
cooked to a stiff mush, and a little J
bit of weed leaves or a few beans
cooked In water. During the past
three years we have been working on
the establishment of a course In ag
riculture. The work has progressed
slowly, and we have had to feel our
way, as there has been no previous
experience by which we might be
guided. The first year consists of
Judging and treating animals for the
simple diseases and the breeding of
sheep, goats, pigs and cattle. During
the second year our work is devoted
to the growing of farm crops, fruit
culture and fowl raining."
Plaza, Wash. The farmers In the
vicinity of Plaza are making a united
effort to exterminate the squirrel
pest. A decrease in the number of
squirrels is noticed already and hope
la expressed that In a few years the
pest will be a thing of the past.
Some farmers use strychnine in the
grain and others use phosporus.
Those who use strychnine claim It Is
less dangerous to stock than phos
phorus, although it is generally con
ceded thnt phosphorus. Is the more
deadly to squirrels. A few of the far
mers are using steel traps.
This movement was the outcomo of
Representative Miller s effort to enact
a law making it an offense to harbor
the pest on farms.
XO MORE PILES.
Hcm-Rold Docm Iu Work Tlmmmrlily
No Return.
If you have piles, you know that Ei
usual treatment with salves, supposi
tories or operations can't be depended
upon for more than temporary relief.
Outside treatment won't cure the In
side cause bad circulation in the
lower bowel. Dr. Leonhardt's Hem
Hold, a tablet remedy taken Internal
ly, removes the cause of piles perman
ently. Sold by $1 and fully guaran
ted by Pendleton Drug Co. and drug
gists everywhere. Dr. Leonhardt
Co., Station n. Buffalo. N. y., props.
Write for booklet.
CLEVER WOMEN,
Always Keoj Their Hair Fascinating
and Free from Dandruff.
Almost everybody in Pendleton
knows that there is no preparation
for the hair that can compare with
Parisian Sage.
It cures dandruff, stops falling hair
and Itching scalp in two weeks, or
money back.
It puts radiance and luster Into
that dull, lifeless hair that many wo
men possess, and does It In a few
days.
On March 25, 1910, Lulu D. Fix.
of Raphlne, Va., wrote: "Parisian
Sage Is a wonderful hair restorer; It
stopped my hair from falling out and
stopped my scalp from Itching; also
cured the dandruff."
Parisian Sage la sold by Tallman A
Co. for 60 ccnta a large botle.
East Oregonian by carrier, 65c per
month.
NATURE TELLS TOU.
A Many a Pendleton Reader Know
Too WeH.
When the kidneys are alck.
Nature tells you all about It.
The urine Is nature' calendar.
Infrequent or too frequent action;
Any urinary trouble tells of kldr v
111.
Doan' Kidney Pllla cure all kidney
Pendleton people testify to thta.
T. F. Felton, 807 Vincent street.
Pendleton, Oregon, says: "I can rec
ommend Doan's Kidney Pllli highly,
having used them with excellent re
sult. The secretions from my klJ
neye were too frequent In roas&ce
and I waa obliged to get up several
times at night. I also had backache
and I waa very desirous of getting rid
of my trouble. Doan's Kidney Pill
relieved me and after taking then I
enjoyed much better health."
For aale by all dealers. Price SI
centa. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
8tatee.
Remember the name Doan's and
take no other.
What we want and what we need
are often vastly different.
mm
...to
10c ROUND-UP
The One Perfect Cleanser
Rny a can uso it compare it witli any
other cleanser you have ever used. It Round
l j isn't a better product if it doesn't do
far bettor work it it isn't the very best
cleanser on llio market, in your judgment,
return tint container and your dealer will
retnm your money to yon.
Hound-Vp is n natural product. It comet
from tho earth a natural cleanser. Contains
no caustic or alkalis doos not injure the
hands not a particle. It works quick and
well, and is an economical cleanser to use.
A single trial of a 10c can will convince yon.
Order a can from your deader today. There
is a pleasant surprise in store Tor you.