EIGHT PAGES. PAGV TWO. DAHiT BAST ORBGONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1911. Twenty-Eight Days to Christmas Nov. 27 Today Alone Is Ours. Buy Your Gifts Today Great Clothing Sale Now In Full Swing THIS first day of Our Fall Clothing Sale has been far better than we could possibly have expected, which shows that the people of Pendleton know that when we advertise a sale at cut prices we mean ex actly what we say and that everyone who takes ad vantage of the sale actually saves money by so doing. In tins sale we have included every suit we have. The season's latest styles of the country's best makers. The best makes are in this sale, Hart, Schaf fner & Marx, Ilirsh, Wickwire, Schloss Bros., Clothcraft and other good and reliable makes that are known all over the country for being right in quality, style, fit and service. We are riving the following low prices during this week : . . . $7.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for S5.9o $10.00 Suits and Overcoats will go for $7.85 $12.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for - S9.80 $13.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for .. $10.15 $15.00 Suits and Overcoats will go for $11.70 $16.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for $12.20 $17.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for $12.98 $20.00 Suits and Overcoats will go for $15.65 $22.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for $17.00 $23.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for $18.35 $25.00 Suits and Overcoats will go for $19.80 $26.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for ; $20.40 $27.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for $21.97 $28.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for $22.60 $30.00 Suits and Overcoats will go for $24.95 $32.50 Suits and Overcoats will go for?. $26.59 THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE SAVE YOUR COUPONS WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE (F. Mllnes. Minister, Phone . Main 544.) Thomo: 'Tlie Poet's Thanksgiving." Text: "Moss Uh I!, O my soul, and forget not (a reverie of aiiti-matciiuW Imii) all Ilia benefits." Thanksgiving is poetry. The great- ful heart is a singing heart.. "Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits." Who is the singer? There can be little question. These are the notes of David. It rings with the cadence of Davld'8 music. It bieahea with the fragrance of David' perfume. For Duvld is sweet. There Is not a caustic berry In the garden of his soul. His temper is us the blossoms that illuminate the Judean hills, or the gentle winds that came luden with the nectar of northern pines. David is a great poet, and his message is that life itself is a poem. David has been described as "a ruddy-faced, flaxon-hai'red lud, with elastic step and eager look, and the laughter of springtime's music accu mulating in his heart." He is the youngest child and his brothers are Jealous of him, but his mother adores him, and when he returned home at night from the folding in ot his sheep, his eyes are kissed into somnolence by a mother's love. Then he dreams acstacies, awakens early In the morn ing and goes again with his flocks. in return for his love his brother despise him, and because he knows not fear the giant is infuriat ed. Thereupon he slays the hujje ad. versary with a ellng, then returns to his flock, picks up his harp and again he sings What makes him sing? Is David's life a bed of roses? Rather It is a field of battlo and of blood Javelins are hurled at him, consplr- acies are plotted against him, a thou sand vicious enemies unsheath their swords and rush at him like angry bulls in furious conflict. David is surrounded with dangers and dis asters a thousand fold. Track him through life and It is like the debris that follows in the wake of a defeated army. Hut still he sings. What makes him sing Has he great riches? Does wealth make him happy? Not at this time. He has nothing but his flock and his shepherd's crook, nothing but his harp, and these belong to his fath er, Jesse. Nothing but the blue sky and the green hills and his own soul, and with this last he ix holding dia logue, singing to himself and to his God. But what Is he saying? "Bless tho Lord, O my soul, and forget not nil His benefits." When his life is endangered and his hear: is troken, he sings, "bless the Lord." Life Is a poem. Thut Is David's menage. That Is what he sang and that la what he lived. SPORTS The Football Situation. One more game on Thanksgiving will be attempted by a few elevens before snow covers up the gridiron for the winter, but practically the football season of 1911 Ui ended. Cornell and Pennsylvania both de feated by Pennsylvania state will meet at Philadelphia Thanksgiving day with the Ithacana strongly sup ported as favorites.. Pennsylvania xtate, still undefeated, meets Pitts burg the same day. The defeat of Wisconsin by Chica go and Minnesota's victory over Illi nois apparently gives the western conference championship t oMinneso ta. The point standing of the lead ing eastern teams up to date follows: Standing of the Leaden. Team. Pts. Scored. Oppo. Carlisle 286 43 Pennsylvania State 198 15 Princeton 179 15 Yale 161 15 Navy 122 11 Dartmouth 121 22 Pennsylvania 110 66 Cornell 98 38 Harvard 98 35 -Army 88 11 Wagner Batting Leader. Jfew York, Nov. 27. Hans Wagner of Pittsburg, though third In the of ficial list, stepped to the front again this year as the real leader among the . batters ot the National league, as Shown by the official batting average made public today. Kirk and Jack son of Boston, top the Plttsburger In the list, but each played in less than 40 games, while Wagner figures in 113 contests. Bchulte of Chicago leads the home run hitters with 21 circuit smashes to his credit; Luderous of Philadel phia being a strong second with It. S'necvkard of Chicago was the man who crossed the plate oftimest, being trt-J'U'J with 121 runs. Saturday's Football Scores. Navy 3, Army 0. Carlisle 29. Hopkins 6. Minnesota 11, Illinois 0. Brown 6. Trinity 6. Harvard 0. Yale 0. Purdue 12, Indiana 5. Chicago 5, Wisconsin 0. Ames 6, Drake 0. Iowa 6, Northwestern 0. Kansas 3. Missouri 3. Arkansas 3, Washington 0. Nebraska 6, Michigan 6. Wesleyan 17, Denlson 0. Cincinnati University 6, Witten berg 0. Ohio State 0, Syracuse 0. Lafayette 11, Lehigh 0. Washington and Jefferson 11, Villa nova 6. . Miami 7, Western Reserves 5. I', of o. for Athletic. University of Oregon, Eugene, Nov. 27 The University of Oregon Is tak ing a leading part among the higher educational Institutions of the west ii fostering intra-colleglate athletics. Much criticism has been lately di rected at over-development of Inter collegiate sports and there Is at pres ent a tendency toward athletics con fined within the individual college. The argument In favor of the latter form of sport Is that It does away with the bad features of inter-collegiate contests, such as professional ism, quarreling among colleges, and over-emphasis of athletics. At Oregon there are Inter-club and Inter-class leagues' in all branches of athletics, and especially In baseball and basketball. Tennis is a favorite diversion; and there are a large num ber of courts which are In constant use by both the men and women. In all these games cups are offered to the winning teams and every effort Is made to Interest all the students and secure their participation. New York Defeated, Havana, Nov. 27. Alrnendares de feated the New York National league baseball team yesterday, 6 to 4. IUTg Defeats Donovan. Spokane, Wash., Nov. 25. In a match here las night advertised for the ch:tmpfonhlp of. America, John Berg of Spokane defeated Jack Don ovan of Philadelphia, In two straight falls, the first with a crotch and near Nelson in 17 minutes, and the second, on a head chancery, in one minute and 50 seconds. SCOHES BORDEN FOR RECIPROCITY FIGHT Ottawa. "If there Is one thing more than another that every Canadi an statesman who Is worthy of the name ought to avoid, it is fostering or pandering to a spirit of hostility and animosity between Canada and the United States," said Mr. Richard Cartwrlght, former Minister of Trade and Commerce in the Canadian Sen ate, In speaking on the manner in which reciprocity was assailed in the last Canadian election. "I am afraid the mischief Mr. Bor den and his friends have done is greater than they will ever be able to repair. Do these people know, do these slingers of mud recall, that the people of the United States are to day close to a hundred million strong and within twenty-five years will reach a hundred and fifty millions? That is the kind of power that Is the sort of nation, that these people think it wise and prudent and in the inter est of the British Empire for us to Insult and estrange." Senator Lougheed, conservative, said that during the election American public men, from President Taft and Speaker Champ Clark down to the humblest, had made It plain that be hind reciprocity there was the ulter ior purpose of leading Canada away from England and to annexation with the United States. CORNELL WINS CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIP Bookllne, Mass., Nov. 25. Cornell today won the cross country Intercol legiate championship, here, scoring 48 points. Harvard was second with 68 and Pennsylvania third with 125. Points were scored on the demerit system. The average man Is a good Judge of human nature except In his own case. STOMACH MISERY JUST VANISHES NO INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA , OR GAS IN FIVE MINUTES A Little Diapepsln jfow Will Make Your Out of Order Stomach Feel Fine Digest All Y'our Food, Leav ing Nothing to ITmcnt and Sour. Let us carry the message and splrli of Dnvld Into the observation of this sacred day. Life Is not a check-book or a coiumn or nguros. ure is not a work of prose. Life Is a poem. God Is the great poet, and a ma' 's or a woman's" life Is the biggest nnJ sweet est poem He ever wrote. We cannot pray or suffer or love very much without realizing that life Is romance. J Have you no empty chair at your tuble? Yes, sa,ys some sobbing souU that is very real to me; It Is a large purt of my life.' Is It? The David spirit In Longfellow says that It is ulso poetry. Have you never listen ed for tho inaudible symphonies of the voiceless dead and heard only, "Break, break, break, and Oh for the toucrt of a vanished hand, and the sound of a voice that la still?" Have you never cried like "an infant cry- . Ing in the night, and with no langu age but a cry?" Then were you never comforted with the admonition: Alus for him who never sees The Stars shine through his cypress trees Who hopeless lays his dead away Nor looks to see the breaking day Across the mournful marbles play; Who hath not learned in hours ot faith Tho truth, to flesh and sense un known, That life is ever loru of deutu And love can never lose its own." Have you never observed tho green foliuge of autumn days turn Into the sear and yellow leaf? Did you never sit by the bedside of the sick and the dying? Did you never "stand on the bridge at midnight when the clock was striking the hour?" Did you. ' never fall in love These and all tilings else of beauty and worth are poetry. Life is poetry, and If we are grateful for life, let us thank God for poetry not for verses, but for poetry. Verses are not poetry, but only one of her many gowns worn on special occasions and to suit the tusto of special people. Poetry itself is a quality of soul. It Is that spirit of in. terpretation which turns the "Song ol the Shirt" Into a Song of Love,, makes the "Ode to Duty" an Ode to Joy, and pluys with her deft fingers upon the lute of life until this once bare and baneful existence becomes the blessed reality of a blissful dream. In our Thanksgiving, therefore, let us exhaust our expressions of grati tude upon the falsely-so-called "ma terial" things, for big crops and fat bank accounts. Rather let us praise God for the real things of life, those permanent possessions of soul which abido after we "shuffle off this mor tail coil." We can't take our gold, with us to that "Far Country," for gold there U not legal tender. A grlnv humorist with sagaslty even superior to his wit once advised his friend: "Do not take your gold with you when you die, because If you do, It will melt." Let us turn, then from the things that perish and praise God for the things that shall abide, the soul stuff of which poetry Is made. "Bless the Lord, O my soul:" for sunsets and morning dawns! Behold) the pearlaceous East boiling up like molten silver! The weight of the dark is no longer able to hold down the irky lid of mist. Gleaming swords of Illumination pnncture with great rifts, the blanket of night, so that oncoming billows of dawn rush through every aporature, and climb up along the rafters of the Bky, until they splash their foam In triumph against the dome of heaven and spill the bowl of the world full of day. The defeated clouds now break their ranks and em erge from the seething fusion, their torn and ragged garments dripping with liquid fire and glorified as If they had caught, from some upper celec tlal banquet chamber, the shed blood (Continued on Page J.) or write, cents In 14 East WE HAVE MOVED TO NEW AND ELEGANT OFFICES AT NO. 14 EAST MAIN STREET, SEIL BUILDING. . We cure any and all diseases that the human flesh is heir to. My wounderful and powerful roots, herbs and remedies are composed of Chinese buds, barks and vege tables that are entirely unknown to medical science of the present day. They are harmless, as we use no poisons or drugs. No knife used. We cure stomach troubles, liver, kidney, catarrh, lung, throat, asthma, nervous debility, female complaints and rheumatism and all disorders of the blood. We cure to stay cured, and guarantee to cure all kinds of Piles and Private Diseases of men and women. Call and see us Consultation free. If you are unable to call and see us, send two stamps for symptom blank. Address LEO CUING WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. Main St. Walla Walla. Wasn. As there Is often some one in your family who suffers an attack of Indi gestion or some form of stomach trouble, why don't you keep some Dla pepsin In the house handy? This harmless blessing will digest anything you can eat without the slightest discomfort, and overcome a sour, gasy stomach five minutes af ter. Tell your pharmacist to let you read the formula, plainly printed on these 50-cent cases of Pape's Dlapepsin then you will readily see why It makes Indigestion, sour stomach, heartburn and other distress go In five minutes, and relieves at once such miseries as Belching of gas, eructations of sour, undigested food, nausea, headaches, dizziness, constipation and other stom ach disorders. Some folks have tried so long to find relief from Indigestion and dys pepsia or an out of order stomach with the common,' every-day cures ad vertised that' they have about made up their minds that they have some thing else wrong, or believe theirs is a case of nervousness, gastritis, ca tarrh of the stomach or cancer. This, no doubt, is a serious mistake. Your real trouble Is, what you eat does not dlge't; Instead, it ferments and sours, turns to acid, gas and stomach poison, which putrefy In the digestive tract and Intestines, and besides, poison the breath with nau seous odors. , A 'hearty appetite with thorough digestion and without tho slightest distress or misery of the stomach, Is wnlt'ng for you as non as you decide to try rape's Dlnpepsln. Headquarters for Drummers' Sample Work Gloves Mr. Workingman, don't buy that next pair of plovcs until you have seen our lare lino and tho big saving we can afford you on every pair. No matter what size, what leather or what price you want to pay. You can do better here THE HUB Drummer's Samp'es at Lower Prices fresh r; By all means Fresh that's what you want. That's what we sell. This market for years has been Pendleton's most popular market. Drop In and see us you'll then see why It is. THANKSGIVING MARKET DELICACIES are found here in endless profusion. Everything fresh and good everything neat and clean, (EnniipiiPG Peati (Bo. Thone Main 18. 807 Main St.