TEN PAGES. AILX KASTT OKEGONIAN, PMNDLB7TON, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, PAGE FIVE Special for Saturday One More Day of the Big Suit and Dress Don't Miss it F.E.LlVENGOOD&CO. The Lad ies and Children's Store SA LOCALS ! See Lane & Son for signs. Pastime pictures please all. Dutch Henry for coal. Main 178. Wall paper, paints, etc. Lane A Son. Phone Main 449 for bread Wagon. Phone Platxoeder for fresh meat and lard. Main 445. Front office for rent In Judd build ing. F. E. Judd. Lost Dog collar with tag No. 17. Return to this office. Found Tracy with the goods at Donaldson's drug store. T'n king of all 5c cigars, "Devlin's Fives." Joe Sullivan sole agent. Everybody goes to the Orpheum to ee the best and the clearest pictures. I. C. Snyder guarantees gooj spray ing. Tours for good work. Phone R. 3S1J. Fancy baked goods from the Royal Bakery on Rfile ut the Delta. HakeJ fresh every day. Hressed chickens Friday and Sat urday nt tin; CaMi Market, phone Main 101. Wanted By man and wife, posi tion on ranch. Inquire "T" this of fice. . ,.; V r I'.ii.t Three furnished house keeping rooms, electric lights and gas. No i hihlri n. 701 Thompson. Home linking For. pies, cakes, brea l and doughnuts, phone Black 37 ",. ',, Orders taken and delivered. Special rales to horses boarded by the week or month ut the Commercial Itnrn, S20 Aura street. Phone Main 11. Shaoh & Kddliih's have secured the local agency for the Johnson Ideal Halter, the best cheap halter In the market. For Sale Cheap Two log houses .it Mearliam, Ore. Modern Improvements, Six rooms each. Enquire of Meach am Lumber Co. The East Orugnnlan Is Eastern Ore gon's representative paper. It leads and the people appreciate It and show Ir by their llbernl patronage. For Sale Second hand lumber, brick and wood for half price. Must clear lot at once. Apply at olj build ing corner Court and Johnson Phone Main 2 for good clean lump or nut coal. Prompt delivery to all parts of the city. Crab Creek Luu ber Co., 700 West Alta street. If you want fresh meat from a new. clean market, pnone Main 443. Farmers Mnt Co., Conrad Platzoeder, manager. 224 E. Court street. Penland Bros.' Transfer Co., phone Black 3391. Piano, furniture and heavy trucking of all k'nds. Calls an swered promptly. Office 647 Main et. For bread, cookies. pastry and cakes made fresh every day, phone Main 449 and the wagon will call. Royal Bakery, Webb and Cottonwood streets, For Sale Two acre homo east Pendleton. Alfalfa, fruit, garden. Good buildings, water system and bath. Address J. H. Bryant, Pendle ton, Oregon. A woman wanted on farm. Steady employment. Call at Standard Gro cery Co. Buy your chickens for Sunday's din ner at the Central Meat Market. Phone Main, 33. Buy your chickens for Sunday's dinner at the Central Meat Market. Phone Main 33. Wanted Man or woman immedia tely in this city. Good salary to en ergetic worker. Address C. S. W. this office. An experienced woman wants po sition as housekeeper or cook or ho tel work, city or country. "S," this office. Wanted Housekeeper and cook. Good wages to right party. Middle ugej lady preferred. Apply "F," this office. For good light get a Steelmantle kerosene burner. Odorless, smoke less, most brilliant light by small lamp; satisfaction guaranteed. Carl Obery, 2!1 Lee Street. For Rent Good pasture Jas. Mar pie place near Meacham. $1.25 per month per head. Stock to be deliv ered at ranch. R. Atterbury, Stan field, Ore. Before l.avln:.' your plumbing don" see me for estimates. Sanitary I'lum'.dn;; Shop, Z)i Bast Court I reel. Alex Burt, "the honest plumber." Tou can't burn slate and gravell ron't try it. Phone Dutch Henry, Wain 173. for clean screened Rock Springs coal either lump or nut. It burns clean and goes further. For sale Two hundred acres good Limber grazing land, about 60 acres tillable, running water on place. This Is a snap If taken within next thirty days. Address W. B., Box 341, city. Wanted at once Housekeeper In family of five, elderly woman pre f' rred. Wages, without washing, $25 per month, with washing, $30. Call on or write to Mrs. Ubel. care O.-W. It. & N. depot, Umatilla, Oregon. Special. Until May 1st we will sell 10 lb. con's pure lard, $1.60; 5 lb. can pure lard, 80c; 3 lb. can pure lard BOc. Cen tral Meat Market. A Mighty Man. Topliom, the prince of English strong men, had kuots of muscles where the armpits uro In the ordinary man. lie could take u Ivir of Iron one and one-half inches lu diameter anil live feet long, place the middle of It over the back of his neck nnd then force the ends forward until they met before his face. On one. occasion ho culled upon a village llbeksmith nnd Pi:'.de of him un pvoTlnstlnir enemy by picking up n number of .horseshoe nnd snnppInK them In two ns easily nr. If they hnd been pine sticks. Read the want ads today. Haviland China, Cut Glass Hand Painted China, Etc, Still going at Auction Sale Prices If you dident secure what you wanted during the Auction, come in and we will make you a satisfactory price on any article you select. KOEPPEN'S The Drug Store That Serves You Best PERSONAL MENTION T. L. Dunsmore of The Dalles, Is a Pendleton visitor. R. R. Stanton of Condon, Is a guest of the Hotel Pendleton. P. T. Harbour of Weston spent last night In Pendleton. L. A. Lamey of La Grande, is over from the Union county seat. B. F. Bagley of La Grande, Is a guest ofN one of the local hotels. I. M. Kemp of Weston, came down from that town yesterday evening. J. H. Price represented Weston last night at the meeting of the Blue Mountain league, Bert Moore of Echo came up from that town yesterday and spent the night in the city. A. S. Bennett, well known and prominent resident of The Dalles, is visiting in Pendleton. Edgar W. Smith and wife drove In from their Vansycle-ranch this morn ing In their new Ford machine. R. B. Stanfleld, manager of the Echo Lizards, attended the league meeting in this city last evening. J. E. Keefe, secretary-elect of the Pendleton Commercial association was down from Weston last evening. If. E. Bickers of the firm of Teutsch and Bickers, went to lone on the lo cal this morning on a business mis sion. T. S. Henderson of Milton, repre sented that town at the meeting of the Blue Mountain league last eve ning. Mrs. C. P. Bishop has returned from a three weeks' visit with friends and relatives in Hood River, Portland and Salem. Clyde Lester came over from Wal la Walla last evening to represent Bade's Bears at the Blue Mountain league meeting, Mrs. Clark Nelson and Mrs. Roy Alexander went to Walla Walla yes terdoy to witness the big aviation meet In that city. Asa B. Thomson, vice president of the Blue Mountain league, came up from Echo yesterday to attend the deliberations of the officers of that association last night. A. J. McAllister of the Pendleton Drug company, returned this morn ing from Walla Walla, where he had been to watch the birdmen fly. Mrs. McAllister will remain in the Garden City for about a week. HAD FURNISHED BOOMS. And He Had a Sign Out to Let the Neighbors Know. In a little setilei.iciit on the outskirts of Chicago two houses stand out more boldly than the rest. These two are the domiciles of two Italians of menus, who, although, belnjr very Ignorant men, vied witli each other for the. social leadership of the locality. One day a newcomer, in search of temiMirary lodgings, attracted by a conspicuous sign in the window of tho first of these two houses, stepped to the door to m."ko Inquiry. "I see you have furnished roonw here," he said to (he swarthy man who answered his knock. "Ya," rejoined the foreigner, point ing to the fiirnished room sign, "deiv's da sign." "Well, if you have one that's suitable I'd like to rent It for awhile." "Wo no rent da rooms," was the be wildering declaration. "I got my fam ily In here, and dey take up all da house." "Don't rent any rooms? Why, then, have you that sign stuck in the win dow?" "I'll tell you. Las' week dat follow next door hang such a sign In his front window, an' wo'n 1 soo dat I put one of da same kind in my front window, just to show da people dat he ain't only man In dis place dat have his rooms furnished!"-Judge's Library. SEEING THE FAR EAST. It Should Be Viewed Through the Bi ble and "Arabian Nights." Tho best books on tho east, as every otic knows, are the Bible and the "Ara bian Nights," and yet I found most travelers were saturating themselves with suippiiy descriptions of monu ments nud places, with tabloids of his tory, with technical paragraphs ou ar chitecture nud the ethnic religions, with figure.s about tho height of this nnd the length of that or coudensed statistics of exports and imports nud the tonnage through tho Suez cnnal and dates about the Pharaohs nud the Mughals. No wonder they see nothing, know nothing, enjoy nothing nnd come home bringing a few expletives, adjec tives nnd photographs which cau be hnd for n small price In either New York or linden. Tho first thing to do in going to tho enst is to turn your education out on your desk so that you can get nt the bottom of it, nnd there you will fiud the Bible nnd the "Arabian Nights" and the "Odyssey" nnd "Iliad" nnd "Virgil" and "Ilerodotus" and "Xeno phon," nnd you will realize what n fool you wore not to have devoted more time to thorn when you were asked to do so. Guide books cau get you to tho east, hut they do not get you inside. It Is temperament, not trains, that counts. Price Collier In Sorilmer'a Magazine. hands of the avowed disciples of Carl Marx. For four months . the county of Milwaukee has also been in charge Of the "Party of D'content." Milwaukee Is disgusted and ash amed. Her citizens are holding "tax meetings" nightly. They have been doing so for many weeks. The "let alone policy" that was adopted by the citizens generally for the first six months of the socialist adminis tration has been discarded. Thou ands of the socialists themselves have become alarmed and are joining the taxpayers' association, that Is protest ing against the prospects of greatly Increased taxation. The vague alarm felt some months ago has at last be come definite. Mllwaukeeans are afraid of the high taxes that are cer tain In case the great scheme and vi sions of the socialists become an as sured fact. Mllwaukeeans assert that the pres tige of the city has been hurt all over the country. Orders are being withheld from their manufacturers because of a fear that strikes and la bor troubles may delay or prevfent them from being filled. J v. . Special in SHO ES n i i FIVE DEPOTS PLANNED. O.-W. II. & N. U) Ilullrf Well on Dcs- , chutes Llna in Near Future. Contracts for the erection of five ; new passenger stations on the Des-1 chutes line of the O.-W. R. & N. Co. ! have been awarded to Moore Bros., of Portland and work on their construction will be started at once. . Three of these structures one each at Hunts Ferry, Gateway and Madraa will have bencral dimensions of 24 bv 70 feet and will be two stories high at one end. It Is estimated that theyf will cost 14 500 each. The two others w!U be erected at Fargar and Pax ton respectively and will cost about $2000 each. They will be 24 by 70 feet and one story high. The Hunts Ferry, Gateway and Madras stations will be fitted up with ' facilities for both freight and passen ger service, commodious waiting rooms for the public, offices and sev eral rooms to be used as quarters by the agents. Although these buildings will be somewhat larger than is demanded by present conditions on the new line, the company has looked Into the fu ture and intends that they be In use five or ten years. They will be mod ern in every detail and will be equal In many ways to the stations on the main line. Work on these buildings will be rushed so that they will be completed by the time the road Is ready for op eration. Tracklayers now are ap proaching Madras and with the com pletion of the new bridge across Wil low creek at the edge of that town the steel rails will be laid through that point to Culver Junction, which will make the line complete, as south of Culver Junction a joint track now being built by the other Des chutes valley road, will be used. In the last 30 days Gateway has sprung from a sagebrush flat to a town of more than 200 people. At least 50 dwellings have been erected, nearly all of them housing familk-s. Some are of crude construction, but others are of a permanent nature. for This Saturday Only Last year s Oxfords for $2.35 worth up to $4.00, none sold less than $3 This season's oxfords Tan, Lace and Patent Button, for Friday and Sat urday only . . . $2.45 h Our full line of children's oxfords are in, A splen did assortment of natty styles, prices right and quality assured. Our name is a guarantee for quality. LOOK BEFORE BUYING ELSEWHERE. Wohlenberg Dep't. Store If Jl UtTlLi; UOOD3 itjll LlESS money AT THE PICTURE SHOWS I.IKKAKY NOIl'.S. Adult Fiction. New books which will be ready for distribution Saturday morning: Daskam Smith College Stor es. Ei;gltston The Graysons. Gilson The Wistful Years. Hopkins The Clammer. McXuughtan A Lame Dog's Diary. Pnrrish Beth Xorvell. Porter Freckles. r.logrnimy. Harrison Oliver Cromwell. Keller, Helen The Story of My Life. Juvenile Fiction. Dana Two Years Before the Mast. Kwald Two-Legs. Habberton Helen's Babies. Hill My Wonderful Visit. Stories of strange Sights. Smith Three Utile Marys. True The Iron Star. Twain The Prince and the Pau per. Fairy Tales. llaaren Ballads and Tales. Little Hod Hiding Hood. Nature) Stories. Bass Animal Life. History. Coffin Boys of '61. Dye Stories of Oregon. Orphcun. Pendleton's favorite picture show offers a fine program for Friday's change. 1. "1861." Sells.' An - Interesting story of the civil war. "Hold Chatta nooga by all means. Hooker and Sher man marching to yodir relief. (Sign ed) Grant" Those memorable words had just died upon the Hps of the grand old general, as he gave Lieu tenant Allen orders to reach Thom as. One of the best war stories ever made. 2. "Jim, the Mule Boy." Edison. A mining story. There Is novelty, pathos and keen reality in every'foot of this wonderful film. 3. "Secret of the Forest." ' Kos mik. A beautifully photographed picture, it presents numerous unusu ally picturesque scenes. 4. "Tribulations of Jiggers." Kos mik. The laughable experiences of the well known comedian. Jiggers. He buys a new hat which proves to be haunted. 5. "The Twin Cinderellas." Pathe, Freres. Jeanette Xally in the exub erance of her joy at the wedding of her friend, takes off her overslippers and throws it after the happy depart ing couple. Officer Smith, Jeanette's lover, finds it and taking it to the po lice station, put it in his locker for safekeeping. Hardly has he done so when Officer Swat stows away an other pretty slipper in his locker. The latter has been lost by an actress on leaving the stage door, and when she discovers the loss things begin to happen for stowed away in the toe is all her Jewelry. Detective Beogan is assigned to the case but It Is baffling until, upon going with Smith to call on Jeanette, what should he see but the missing slipper. Of course, its not the one he wants but he doesn't know that. Jeanette is arrested, the actress is summoned. Detective Ree- gan. Sergeant Doyle, Officer Smith and Jeanette get mixed in an up roariously funny situation. Explain ing would spoil the picture'. See It and find out for yourself whose feet the slipper fitted. The Pastime. The house of quality. A program of interest for Friday's change. "Sir Percy and the Punchers." ' A comedy drama of the experiences of an Englishman with Texas cowboys, produced by G. Melies. You all know him, that handsome, haughty, effem inate Englishman, who lives for so ciety's sake and who figures out that the world over owes him a living. Of such a type is "Sir Percy Granville" who fals heir to a ranch in Texas and while on the way there becomes ac quainted with Mary Stevenson, whose father owned the adjoining ranch to "Sir Percy," Mary was returning from college and her youth and fresh ness appealed to this Englishman. So attentive was he to the girl that when Billy James, her old time sweetheart, met them at the station "Sir Percy" insisted on riding home in the same carriage. From the start he was the rival of young James. Don't miss the finish. It will bring a hearty laugn. "Her adopted Father." Selig. A clean and wholesome drama having its inception on the storm beaten coast and carrying the aroma of the salt sea air. A love story interwoven gives heart interest. "Dr. Charcot's Trip Toward the South Pole." Urban. Contains won derful and impressive views of the polar regions. A picture at once ed ucational and thrilling. It is a stu pendous spectacle to see the ocean heaving, swirling and as if it were chafmg under the fee floes which en cumber it. "The Camorra'sts; or Japanese Catching Fish With Birds." A nov el picture. "Girls Will Be Boys." Essanay Co. The novelty of the plot, the cleverness of the acting and the beau tiful scenic appointments make this story especially interesting. All Kinds of Lumber Products Shipped direct from Manufacturers to Consumer Keep tho Middlemen's Profits in Your Own Pocket. We will ' chcerf iily quote vou prices. INTERSTATE BUILDING MATERIAL COMPANY Paulsen Pills. Spokane, Wash: SOCIALISM IS A FAILURE. (no Year of It Plsffiists Milwaukee Party llordo of Off loo Seekers. Milwaukee, Wis. Milwaukee has had one year of socialism. It has been a disappointment even to the so cialists themselves, who complain lmt their own nartv has failed to support them In many of their under takings. For twelve months the gov ernment of the city has been In the WALSH'S If you want real bargains in the Grocery line, you can make no mistake by trad ing at Pendleton's Best Grocery. We can save you money on every article you buy. A trial and you will be convinced. WALSH'S "Home of Quality" Phone Main 442 Prompt Delivery, We guarantee everything to be as represented.