""Vie !".;'"'. 'r-w V . PAGE TWO Agent Hart, Schaffner & Working Clothe. After $10 Lingerie Dresses, After Supper Special $27.50 to $20.00 Men's Suits, light weight, After Supper Special . . . . I $6.00 Women's 25c Women's and Children's Hose, After Supper Special 50c Men's Fancy Sox, After Supper Special WATERMELONS at Special Prices After Supper, get one for Sunday. LET 'ER BUCK Watch Charms with Pistol, After Suppsr Special .... WE ARE Exclusive Agents for Women's Dent Gloves, Royal Worcester Corsets and Everwear Hosiery for the Whole Family per pair 25c and 50c $2.50 Auto Veils, After Supper Specials $1.69 The Peoples Warehouse Save Your Coupon SECY. FISHER WILL VISIT HERMISTON TO MAKE INSPECTION OF PROPOSED EXTENSION Will Pa-; Through Pendleton Enroute to I'matilla Irrigation Project Re main Itut I'ew Hours Other News J roil! Fanning (.'enter. (Special Correspondence.) HermisMn, Ore., Sept. 2. Secre-Fishe-r of the interior department will vfa:t Hirm ston about the 8th of this Tounth Mr. Blanchard, the engineer, stated that he wa.s of the opinion that the secretary would be hers but a few hours :-nd while, here would be tiken out to the dam by the project engi neer ar.J over the project. As the secretary cxpecH to be at Yellow stone on the lltn he can not g ve very much of his time to the Umatilla project. The Commercial club will Tie therefore take steps for h'.s en tertainment unless work is received hat he wiil remain longer. It is the op nion at the present time that he -U1 c ms by wayof Pendleton in the ' rpeeial car of Wi'liam McMurray, gen- I rral passenger agent, and will arrive Hrrmiston eirly in the morning. when he will be met by several auto mobile and escorted over the pro ject Mr. Blanchard is to wire the Commercial club in case any other lrranetrnt-nts are to be made. It is understood that Secretary Fisher is FIRE Could Lay Pin in Cracks. Four Long Years of Eczema. Only Relief in . Scratching. Used One Set of Cuticura Remedies. Hands Entirely Well. " I can truthfully say Cuticura Kerne dies have cured me of four long years cf ef-zema. About four years ago I noticed tome little pimples coming on my little finger, and not giving it any A ten: ion, it soon became worse and upread all over my bands. If I would have ibrm in water for a lone time, they would burn like fire and large cracks would come. I could lay a pin in them. After using all the salves I could think of, I went to three different doctors, but all did me no good. Tha only relief I got was scratching. "So after hearing so much about tho wonderful Cuticura Remedies. I pur chased one complete set, and after using them three days my hands were much better. To-day my hands are entirely well, one set being all 1 used." (Signed) Miss Etta Narber, R. F. D. 2, Spring ,Lke, Mich., Sept. 26, 1910. lS'o stronger evidence than this could t given of the success and economy of the Cuticura Remedies in the treatment erf torturing, disfiguring humors of tha kin. A siDgle hot bath with Cuticura ISoep and a gentle anointing with Cuti cura Ointment are often sufficient to aXTord immediate relief in the most dis tressing casea and permit rest and sleep when all else fails. Cuticura Soap and Ointment are equally effective in pre erring, purifying and beautifying tha kin, scalp, hair and hands. Although Cuticura Soap (25c.) and Cuticura Ointment (50c.) are sold throughout the world, a liberal sample of each, with 3?-p. book on the skin and . acalp, will be mailed free on application to Potter Drug 4 them. Corp., Dept. ' 2B, Boston, Mass. HANDS WOULD BURN LIKE DAILY RST Marx Men' Clothing. Hercule Boys' Clothe. Carhartt John B. Stetson Cowboy Hat. Let 'er Back. Supper Specials Shoes, After Supper Special $4.95 coming to the Umatilla project to In vestigate the western extension, but will not have much time to g.ve the people of Hermiston. It is stated by the reclamation ser vice at Hermiston that the water will be turned off in some of the lines about the 15th of this month. This '.s :'ur the cementing of those lines. This vork must b-.'gln soon if the lines are to be cemented. It is not known cx rctiy what line litches will be worked on at present. Mrs Nettie P. Hurlourt of Echo, has filed with Commissioner L'pthe grove her intention to make final vroof on her desert claim in section .'!4, township i north, range 28 E. W. M. Charles Johnson is installing city vater in the offices of the Western Land & Irrigation company. George Darveau, proprietor of the St. George Hotel of Pendleton, was in i he city yesterday with a party of diick hunters. W. B. Wilson, connected with the claim department of the O.-W. It. & X. Railroad company, is In the city today on business connected with his oifice. Ed F. Averill. deputy game warden, whose headquarters are at Pendleton, vas here yesterday hunting ducks. Mr. Averill while here met W. K Walpole, manager of the Oregon f.and & Water company, with head- quarters at Irrigon. They discussed the matter of Installing fish ladders at the Irrigon dam. John D. Rice Is expected home Sun day morning from Spokane, where he has been for the last two weeks on business. I W. H. Matthews is here from Spo . Kane, looking after his land Interests. . Mr. Matthews is conductor on the ' Great Northern railroad. He expects I to make this his home in the near ; future. j C. L. Downer left for Spokane last I evening, where he will spend several I days transacting business. I Henry Ott, living east of Hermiston, under the Umatilla government pro- y-ct, Is now picking h's second crop i f strawberries. Miss Jessie Williams, teaehsr of ; he L'matilla project, is now picking h a second crop of strawberries. ' Miss Jessie Williams, teacher of i tiie first grade of the public school, j has returned to take up her work for ! the fall. Mrs. I la F. Smith, the Hermiston niliiner, returned today after a month's visit in Portland. Harry' Spinning will put In 10 acres 1 1 apple trees this fall. He has twen ty acres in the third unit. Mr. Ed ward Lammers will also put In twenty acres th.s fall. Richard Bohn and James Merry wether will leave today for Ft Wayne. They will go to Portland and thence to Spokane. Mr. Merryweather was injured in a runaway some time ago. Howard Laughlln is Improving his 160 acre desert claim in the third unit. He expects to put it all Into alfalfa and fruit. William Rice of Boone, Iowa, has accepted a position with the First Na tional bank as bookkeeper, and has commenced his Jutles. Miss Jessie Matlock is expected Sunday to take charge of her duties at the public school. She has been spending her vacation at Eugene, Ore. For bowel complaints In children always give Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and castor oil. It Is certain to effect a cure and wlien reduced with water and sweetened Is. pleasant to take. No Dhyslclan can prescribe a better remedy. For sale by all dealers. OREGONIAX, PKXDLETON, OREGON, SATl'ltDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. 1911. $3.95 $12.95 19c 25c 25c Where it Pays to Trade T OPENS WITH BOOM (Special Correspondence.) Hermijcon, Ore., Sept. 2. The hunting reason opened yesterday with a noise that could be heard by all the people at Hermiston. At 3 o'clock in ' the morning the small lakes around Hermiston were swarming with hunt ers. Several large crowds coming in from Echo, Stanfield and Umatilla. From 4 o'clock until 6 o'clock there was continuous shooting. In one In stance two hunters from Pendleton ran out of shells and at six o'clock they were on the steps of the hard ware store awaiting the opening in order to suddIv themselves with more shells. It is hard to make an esti-. mate a to how many ducks were killed, bvt it is safe to state that every on of the hunters came back vith enough for their own use. The Hermiston Gun club has put a fence around the preserve and have r.otlces posted up forbidding trespass ing on their leased lands. This club consists of abount twenty-five of the prominent hunters of Hermiston, they have gono to quite an expense fixing up their preserves, with boats, etc. They have leased the Chnrles Baker property north of town. Check a cough or cold In the lungs before it develops h serious case. BALLARD'S HOREHOL'ND SYRUP Is an effective remedy for all soreness or congestion in the lungs or air pas sages. Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 per bottle. Sold by A. C. Koeppen & Bros. CJjAM SHELL GOLD PLAITED. Physician's Startling Discovery Am ong Peddler's Wares. Cape May, N. J. Dr. L. C. Ash lurn of Cape May purchased fifty clams of a peddler and in looking over them found a large one, which was dead, and upon Its shell noticed a spot v. hich shone mistily. He cleared the shell and discovered that the glistening material extend ed over both shells and was yellow end tijigbt when polished. He applied the acid test and discovered that th material was gold beyond question. How the gold got there is a mys tery whlh may be explained by some chemical combination which precip itated some of the sea water, which contained gold in solution, upon the shell. As usually treated, a sprained an kle will disable a man for three or four weeks, but ty applying Chamber lain's Liniment freely as soon as the injury Is received, and observing the directions with each bottle, a cure can be effected In from two to four days. For sale by all dealers. Church of tho Redeemer. The Sunday school will reasemble after the summer recess at 10 a. m. The Litany will be said and the Holy Communion celebrated at 11 a. m. Divine services at 8 p. m. All are cor dially invited. Charles Qulnney, rec tor. Slow, But Sure. "Fly with me," her lover pleaded, As he pressed her to elope; But his wishes went unheeded. For she calmy answered: "Nope! Not whiU 'aeros,' as at present. Are so apt to plunge and balk; Eut," aatd she, "the weather's pleas ant; Don't you think we'd better walk?" LIpplncott's. BOY RIDER IS INJURED BY HORSE (Special Correspondence ) Wenuha Springs, Sept. 2. Walter, the youii son of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Ronlfer was injured yesterday by fall ing from a horse, the horse steped on the little fillow's arm but did not break It. R. W. Fletcher of the East Ore ;ionlan end family were camped at Wenaho last week. P. A. MePhee went to Pendleton 7 uesday. Dr. H. S Garfield and J. W. Malo ney spent Monday and Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Thompson near Wenaha. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bonlfer were In Pendleton Tuesday. J. S. Campbell, a carpenter from Weston Is putting up several new buildings at the John Thompson ranch here. A forett fire Is raging between Glbon Station and the home of John Thompson on the reservation. Men are nt work fighting It down. It was started from a camp near the bridge, .Agent Swartzlander arrived from the Mission with several men who will see that no further damage Is done. Horn, August 26. to Mr. and Mrs. I' red Pl'.tman of Gibbon, a baby boy. . J. Furnish came In last even ing f:-om Stanfield. Miss Anna May Thompson left to day for Weston where she will spend ,i week visiting. Foar Horn Phonograph. t-an Francisco. The time when a f hip w: 1 be welcomed. 12 miles at sea, y the hooting of national airs, popu .ar tunes and perhaps eventually pho nographic records bellowed from gi gantic fog horns, seems not far dist ant. Pleased with the harmonious tooting of electric automobile horns, Lieut. Commander William Adger Moffett, lighthouse inspector of tho eighteenth d strict, maile inquiry as to the possibility of making a like horn fur lightho-ise service to replace Hie dismal blare of existing fog horns He learned tha one could be made which would be heard at the Farrel lone island, 23 miles out. As a sam ple, however, he decided to order one with a 12-mile range, and. hearing that it was completed ordered it for warded at once. It will be tried out on Blunt's point. Angel island. Digestion nml Assimilation. It is not the quantity of food taken but the amount digested and assimi lated that g.ves strength and vitality t.- the system. Chamberlain's Stom tif;h and Liver Tablets invigorate the Momach and liver and enable them to perform their functions naturally. For rale by all dealers. FINAL PROOF MADE EASIER ON DESERT Eiitrymcii Can Set-lire Title on Claims Even Before Witle-r In Secured. Salem, Ore. The General Land of fice made, a ruling in favor of the Desert Land entrymen in this state, which enables the entryman on a des ert claim to make final proof and se cure title to his desert claim, before securing a final water right certlfi eate from the state. The water rights for desert claims are initiated by fil ing a water right application in the office of the state engineer. This ap plication is sebsequently approved and returned to the applicant, and is his authority to construct wor s and apply water to the irrigation of his claim. This application Is analogous to the certificate the entryman re ceived from the Land Office, and as the Land Office certificate is replaced by a deed after final proof, so is the vater permit replaced by a final water right certificate or deed, after the land is under iirigation. It was this water right certificate that the Land Office demanded of the entryman holding down a claim on the isolated desert rear Denlo, 150 miles from the near est rallrond station at Wlnnemucca, Nev., and equally as far from thelo cal Land Office at Burns. The mat ter was brought to the attention ot State En&lneer Lewis, and he advised the General Land Office of conditions pointing out that proof could be made on a desert claim in three years, while under tho state laws five years is al lowed t't complete appropriation of water. H was also shown that such a rul ing would operate greatly to the dls tdvanta of entrymen on isolated desert claims, enduring hardship in their endeavor to build up the state and at '.he same time make a living. A favorable reply to this appeal was received yesterday and the entrymen vill here-j-.fter be required to furnish only the certified copy of a permit, und a statement from the State En nineer to the effect that the failure to furnls'i such water right certificate is not due to- the applicant's non compliance with the law, HITCHCOCK TO I'lttiE V. S. PARCELS POST Outlines Programme of IjCfrlslutioii to He Sought at Next Congress. Washington. An outline of the programme of legislation for the post al servlca which rostmaster-General Hitchcock will ask Congress to follow during the regular session was indi cated by Hitchcock. In his annual report Hitchcock will recommend the establishment of a parcels post service on rural mall routes; an increase in second-class mall rates, and a radical change in the system of compensating the rail ways for transporting the malls. Hitchcock explained that It was his first Idea to establish parcels post on the rural routes In order that the administrative details of the system night be worked out without disad vantage to the postal service gener ally. Gradually, he said, he would extend the parcels service to urban commun ities, so that packages and parcels might bo delivered locally by city car riers. Subsequently the service would be extended to Include railway trans portation. Hitchcock indicated that the admin istration expected to adopt the recom mendations of the Hughes second- class postage rate commission, which has bee In session for several weens in New York. The commission's re port will be submitted to Congress In December. IS SPRITE AT SEVENTY-FOUR. Vote-ran Vcgeturlnii I YigoroiM ami Fx-oiionilcal. Boston, Mass. George II. Ward of Middleton, Conn., says: "At 74 years of age I challenge any one In New England to walk, at any pace, anywhere and under any condi tions. "I know they're all afraid of mo. I defy any one to best me, and I am willing to take any one on young or old. Owing to my method of life, for eat absolutely no meat, and I sub sist only on crackers, oatmeal and peanut butter, I have wonderful en durance and am more than a match for anybody. Although I live, and live well, on 26 cents a week, I am healthier and heartier than the aver age man." He derides th.; Idea, recently made public by a western professor, that a man can live on 22 cents a week. But he considers 26 cents quite sufficient and would think any greater outlay of money an extravagance. "If a man wants to he can thrive beautifully and grow into a pillar of strength on 10 cents' worth of oatmeal a week, and thus he can actually get along on something like what the average fellow gives a waitress for a t p at a meal. "But I don't like to tie myself down to necessities like that. I wiint my little peanut buiter and my crackers. This, of course, brings my weekly bill up to 26 cents, but I don't begrudge .t. All of us have our weaknesses ome for drink or tobacco or some thing else. M ne's ft weakness for peanut butter and crackers." "I have a world of confidence In Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for I have- used It with perfect success," v. rites Mrs M. I. Basford, Poolesvllle, Md. For sale by all dealers. MILLIONS FOR INVESTORS. The great burden of nil the flnanc ;Pg will fall upon the New York banks and the subtri aury there. The government will have no Im portant paymen's to mike until Oc tober, when the interest on the $800. 000.000 consolidation loan of 1900 falls due and the first Interest upon the recent JjO.000,000 issue of three per cent Panama bonds will be paid. Diarrhoea is always more or less prevalent during September. He pre pared for It. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and D arrhoea Remedy Is prompt and effectual. It can always le depended upon and Is pleas. nit to take. For sale by all dealers. 1.100 SACKS WHEAT GO AT 69 CENTS (Special Correspondence.) Adams, Oregon, September 2. James McHane sold his this year's crop of wheat to the Interior Ware house company of Pendleton for 69 cents a bushel. The lot contained eieven hundred sacks. Reverend and Mrs. Stockton and family returned to their home in Ad ams Wednesday, after spending the rummer months on their homestead In Idaho. Mrs. A. Barker returned to her heme in Adams Wednesday after vis iting for the past month in Portland niece. Alma Raker, accompanied her peice. Alma Baker, accompanied her home to visit for a few weeks. Mrs. John Giess and Mr. and Mrs. John Winn were Pendleton visitors Wednesday. Mrs. Jim Chestnut went to Pendleton Wednesday to do some shopping. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Darr returned to their home in Adams Thursday af ter spending the past month at the Darr Brothers saw mill at Meacham. Bert Klrby of the Inland Mercantile company of Adams was a business vis itor In Pendleton. Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Morrison and vamlly rnd Mr. and Mrs. A. Marquis nnd family left for the mountains Fri day for n week camping trip. Bertha Whitley of Milton Is visiting friends and relatives in Adams this week. CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP Mills. Calomel niul Cathartic Pills are Violent They Act on Bowels as Pcpiier Acts in Nostrils. Take n Cascaret tonight and thor oughly clennse your liver, stomach and bowels, and you will surely feel great by morning. You men and wo men who have headache, coated tongue, can't sleep, are bilious, ner vous and upset, bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stomach, or have backache and feel all worn out. Rre you keeping clean Inside with Casearets or merely forcing a pas tageway every few days with salts, cathartic p. lis or castor oil? This Is Important. Casearets immediately cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the our, undigested and fermenting food and foul gnss; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the de composed waste matter and poison from the intestines and bowels. Remember, a Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning. A 10-cent box from your druggist means a clear head and cheerfulness for months. Don't forget the children. TEN PAGES. HIS TROUBLE NOT OF HEART Real Facts In Regard To F. R. Huffman's Illness. Relief Ob tained By Caring His I Stomach Ailments. 1 Waynesvillc.N.C Mr. F. R. Huffman, o! this city, says : "I suffered dreadfully with what I thought was heart trouble, and tried various medicines In vain. After other remedies had failed, Thed ford's Black-Draught restored me to health. I would not feel safe without Black-Draught In the house. I consldei it worth its weight in gold. It cured my indigestion, and by this means I was restored to health. 1 can Dot express my gratitude for its benefits." Good health depends on the condition of your digestion. Poor digestion and good health do not go together. Thedford's Black-Draught will thoroughly cleanse and set in order youi digestive system. It has done this for others, during tha past 70 years, and is today the most popular vegetable liver remedy on the market. Try it. Insist on Thedford's. Price 25c. M)S MOLINOS CLAIM TO HAVE HKKSKST FAMILIES Six Households m Agricultural District Contain Total of Seventy-three'. Los Molinos, Calif. Los Molinos claims to be the banner district of California for large families. There ore six families In the district that are safe from the reproach of "race suicide," numbering altogether seventy-three persons. C. Fidler, who recently came from Loveland, Colo., has thlrten children. Carl Guenther, owning ninety-six acres of fine alfalfa land in Subdivl ti'in A'o. .., six miles north of Ls Molinos, has twelve children, and E. Heppner, a thrifty German from North Dakota, has twelve, ten of them 'icing husky sons. He has bought ninety acres and expects to buy each son ten cows. W. J. Davis, Los Mo iinos' postmaster, has nine children, and Is still a young man. J. J. Kntz, j formerly of Saskatchewan, Canada, has eight sons i.nu daughters, ami George E. Spencer boasts seven. The three families holding the high tecords are Germans. Kntz, who has only eight, is also a German. llliiejuekcts' kangaroo Put Ashore. I'ortsnic uth, N. H. Murphy, tho pet kung::too of the battleship Wiscon sin, has been detached from the ship and ordered to the zoological gardens In New York. Murphy loses his fa vored position in the navy owing to his bad behavior. Iforavg Mothers No young- woman, la the Joy of coming motherhood, should neglect to prepare her system for the phys ical ordeal she is to undergo. The health of both she and her coming child depends largely upon the care she bestows upon herself during the waiting months. Mother's Friend prepares the expectant mother s sys tem for the coming event, and its use makes her comfortable during all the term. It works with and for nature, and by graduf"' expanding all tis sues, muscles ' - involved, and keeping t -.vu : od con dition, brings the . ae crisis in splendid physical condu.n. Tha baby too is more apt to be perfect and strong where the mother has thus prepared herself for nature's Supremo function. No better advice could b given a young expectant mother than that she use Mother's Friend ; it is a medicine that has proven its value In thousands ot cases. Mother's Mother's Friend is sold at drug stores. friend Write for free book for expect ant mothers which contains much valuable information, and many sug gestions of a helpful nature. BRADF1ELD REGULATOR CO., AnWa, Ca, APPELL'S Sooth African WATER BAG Keeps water . cool 48 houn or lunger, in un or ihadet Taka Sabstltat D r oi o e e tori. lurveyors, iporUmen, stockmen, farm ers, teamiters, anyone expoied to dry or warm weather. Uied by U. S. Gov't. Strong, light, easy to carry. Gutruori I Thla Letter Trplflea the AUUmtm v au ueare OtMltnmi Elkhtn. liulluu. Willi In Nrnda rcraitlr I Kid okio m 4rik ott of one of rour Iwitk African Wuer Bw. Wner inm IDC Uf ctnunlr turn food on thtdncn. Wc Kd out of your 21 fallen batl n it, nwr rv mtliuii i I til dtt. w Ihnih ihi umpttttm , rw 100 Im fi Oitdt. ud In lb momlnf I foaad ih watr tnarklln and aa cold mm Im i, MtM,.i. I a boon lo thoM llilaf la th arid tcsioni. Tmn tlmunh. W. t. WIDER FOR If W BT DBAUKS BTZBT WBKU Mad r Adam Appoll Wal llarCo., Portland, Or.