DAILY EAST OREGOXIAW, PKXPLETOX, OMEGOIT. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 111. PAGE TOREK. STAUD LADIES' AID EPS BUSY They Fit and Wear EIGHT PAGES, The GREATEST Clea.A-Up Sal At ALEXAE3 DEBTS On Ladies and Children's Shoes ever given at this Store. AH this week All this week Ending December 2 It has always been the policy of this store to keep our ladies' and chil dren's shoe stock fresh and new to allow no broken lnes to accumulate as every customer knows who has attended our sales and know -what ri diculously low prices we sell. We have had customers standing in line waiting two hours for their turn saying in the- meantime that it was well worth their while. Not only is this sale on shoes but also on polish, shoe trees, laces, leggimrs, overgaiters, children's rubber lxxts, ankle braces, arch supports and hundreds of other articles too numerous to mention. Come in and see. This is our greatest Shoe Sale. Cut prices posted all through the department. Extra sales force Big families should not overlook this sale Alexander Department Store (Special Correspondence. ) .Stanfield. Ore, Nov. 27. The La dles Aid Society of the Pre by'.erlan church held their regular reml-month-ly meeting Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. IT. E. P.artholomew. The society Is doing considerable work this winter and their plans for the future Include a dinner which will be served within the next few day., probably on the day of the city elect on, December 5th. M. It. Ling wai an Echo visitor last week. Mrs. Charlotte liell has returned from .Seattle, where she fpent about a week visiting relatives Dan Bowman, a Pendleton business man, was a Stanfield visitor last week. Mr. and Mr.f. Ralph A. Holte spent . Wednesday afternoon in Echo. ! Phil Mann was transacting business at the county seat Thursday, i Levi P. G lrnan was a Pendleton visitor. ) County Commissioner Horace i Walker returned to Pendleton Thur ; day after having looked after county business in this vicinity for several days. Several shipments of sheep were received here for It. N. Stanfield last week. KIdwell & Caswell, cattle buyers, have received eleven cars of cattle which will be fed in the vicinity of Stanfield. Other shipments will fol low, reaching a total of four hundred head. They already have several hundred head of cattle at this point The schools closed Friday afternoon for Thanksgiving week. The teach ers are attending the meeting of the eastern Oregon division of the state teachers' institute at Baker. Friday afternoon there was a very Interesting mothers' meeting at the school room in the Webster building, following the close of school. Miss Minnie E. Baker, one of the teachers being in charge. That's the- kind of shoes you pet at this store if you are looking for cheap stuff, don't come here. SHOES are mv specialty and I handle X only the kind that satisfy nnrl mnlcft mv natrons HIV friends. I would like to prove thii assertion to YOU. I A. Eklund FIENDISH PAIX OF PILES. In- Done Away With by a Pleasant tcnial Medicine. All the worst tortures of human life, rolled into one, can hardly com pare with the fiendish pain of piles The victim eagerly buys anything that will bring a moment's east, but the trouble usually comes back. Get HEM-ROID a scientific inward pile cure, that frees the stagnant blood and dries up the piles. HEM-ROID (tablets), sold by Pen dleton Drug Co , and all druggists, un der guaranty. Dr. Leonhardt Co, Station B. Buffalo, N. T. Write for booklet. PKKSUYTKltlAX SUNDAY SEKMON elating to the deaclples of utility to see the Niagara Falls wasting all its (Continued from page 2.) 'power. They want to bury it with . . factories and smokestacks. That is nrd over-turned wine of quarreling wnat they call economy as opposed to gods Finally the old monarch of fire poetic dreams. Hut to him who can himsolf lifts his eyebrows above the value something besides money, it is horizon, looks down across the valley aesthetic Impropriety, primitive cras liko a smile of God. and calls, morn- situdc, and impious sacrilige. If "as tng! morning! Night is conquered, weii kill a man as kill a good book," it day has triumphed! ' (j, no less criminal to destroy a mas Hut all of this Is poetry. Seen on- tcrplece painting so Impossible of re ly by the eye of the poet, it exists production as Niagara Falls. So con only to the poetic of spirit. Only the taminating is the nauseating pleath- pi.ot's eye and the poet's lnterpre- ora, 0f utility thut we do not care lor i totlon can see and reveal how calla llllles any more; we want celery 1 "Each'purplo peak, each flinty spire go we can eat it. so shamelessly is Was bathed in Hoods of living fire this "bald barrenness of money gel Though not a setting beam could ting." Tho most pathetic aspect, glow i however, of this deplorable mlscarri- Within the dark ravines below lage Df American intelligence is its de- Where twined the path of shadow hid gree 0f hopelessness. It is the nature Round many rocky pyramid." 0f blindness to be unable to see. The Bless the Lord for the permanent conspicuous demerit of ignorance is wealth of soul called poetry, for pros. it8 incapacity to comprehend. Thus perlty of spirit and the increased pow. the bold secularist actually recrlml er to see. Our generation should nates those who Beek,"a harmonious beware of Its mechanical drift lest lt expansion of all the powers which lose entirely its instinct for art. Fi- make the beauty and worth of human nanclally we are tho richest people nature." Such emphasis of the po upon the earth; poetically we are etlc, says he, threatens to crush out bankrupt. When a man's sentiment U our practical sense. But we are cer permltted to atrophy, when his fancy tain that a cultivation of the finer wilts and his imagination withers, he senses in no way destroys the prac is like a tree without any sap. His tical. Rather it sweetens and beauti soul Is as barren and Indifferent as fe8 practical routine. The man "whose a tombstone. Yet this is tho Amcri- pleasure grows out of his work like can's drift; and more Is tho pity, he color petals out of a fruitful flower" l.i fast becoming stereotyped In his ji the man who believes In the dlvln ient. When warned by some proph- Hy of his call and sees the sublimity 't or seer, he retorts with cynical of his toll. t ry. "dreamer, and plunges on in ma ( - without sentiment there can be no mad rush for gold unheeding tne od- hpri1Rm. no natrlotlsm. no martyrdom vlous Inbel with Its cross-bones and Take the glow out ot the mind? You Its skull. . ' nave taken the warmth out of the We are not unaware or tne adverse gunbpnmi the tenderness out of moth- crltleism commonly made against our . iniiahv. the mission out of Pat ceremonial observation of Thanksglv- rtck nPnry-s oration, and the pathos ing any. it is tne nnoit ot mo secu- llt of th Ilfe of Lincoln. It '8 only lnrlst to look upon these devotions m ),iBhiy wrought hours and moodi as so much energy dissipated In the thnt Krent work is ever done. The air. Some folks are very solicitous i,eatn(f nf the snare-drum is as in that nothing be wasted. It Is excru- aispcnsiblo in war as t ie crack of the rifle or the booming of cannon. Re .fleeting, then, on America's great days and the sentiment required to keep EMPIRE ! CLUBS TO COMBINE i Pendleton's Pioneer Man. Shoe "She is Waiting 99 several days visit here with Mrs. A, B. Thomson. Mesdames A. H. Moore and F. J. Irvln spent Saturday In Pendleton and returned home on the motor In the evening. and so are those she Is waiting on. And mind you, a good high-ball Is well worth waiting (or. Good, pure, wholesomd Rye Whiskey, like the brands we are now selling, will make one wait patiently, but enjoy the wait when the liquid arrives cool, comforting, and refresh ing. If you are a high-ball lover, better try a bottle ot this splendid Whiskey of ours. Ton will always want that brand afterwards. And the price will satisfy yon, too. TheOlympiaBar Phone Main 18S and Pioneer Bottling Works Phone Main 177. PETERS & MORRISON, Props. Spokane, Wash., Nov. 27. Three hundred representatives of organiza tions In Washington, Oregon. Idaho and Montana will meet in Spokane to morrow to formally organize the Fed eration of Commercial Clubs of the Inland Empire. R. J. MacLean, sec retary of the chamber of commerce. ill call the meeting to order, after which temporary officers will be elected to conduct the business. The delegates will be entertained t a luncheon In the assembly hall of the chamber of commerce at noon. Edwin T. Coman, president of the hamber, presiding as cha:rman. Of ficials of outside organizations will be the principal speakers. Three hun- red and fifty members, of the local organization will attend the luncheon. The Mystic Order of Enakops. headed by W. S. McCrea, imperial kopsan, has arranged a compliment- rv banquet for the delegates In the Hall of the Dodges that night, begin ning at 10 o'clock. There also will be banquets in honor of the princess es of the empire and official repre sentatives of northwestern delega tions. The afternoon will be passed at the j fourth National Apple show and in witnessing the sham battle near the Monroe-street bridge between seven companies of federal troops, under command of Lleutennnt-Colonel C. W. Penrose, U. S. A., commandant at Fort George Wright, and the frater nal orders' purade in connection with the Enakops night Jubilee. Ten thou sand men will be in line. COSIES QUICKLY. Don't Ilnvo to Wait for Weeks. A tholr memory aflame In the soul, let Pendleton Illustration. . us observe Thanksgiving religiously, nr.m.. . jt.nn.anir, Some Ignore this day or use It, as Promr-t action nleases "everybody. I thpV do our sacred Sabbath, for nil . k...- t-h kom, is . h..vt, arlty and carousal. These folks are ioreigners, iiiouku not iiecoumy A burden on the back Is weight. Hard to bear day after day. Lifting weight, removing the bur den. Brings appreciative responses. Pendleton pepole tell of It, Tell of relief that's quick and sure. Here Is a case of It. L. Greenawald, 414 Lincoln street, Pendleton, Oregon, says: "I had se vere attacks of backache and there was soreness across my kidneys. I was also annoyed by a burning sen sation when voiding the kidney se cretions and the passages were too frequent. Being advised to try Doan's Kidney Pills, I did so and the con tents of one box cured me. S have had no cause for complaint since." For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foater-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, Nr York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. born In some country other than my own. That man is a foreigner, wher ever born; however distinguished his ancestors, however purple his blood who violates the spirit and memory of America's great days. Institutions and history. He is a foreigner to American Ideals. He is one of "the undesirables." Yet ours Is the re sponslblllty of lifting him by precept and by example to the higher stand ards of Christian Americanism. To this end, therefore, let us rekindle the old-time fires. Give us the fervor and the glow. Let us hear again the eloquent and instructive Fourth-of July oration; and on Thanksgiving and the Thirtieth of May let us teach and praise and sing: "Blcs the Lord O mv soul, and forget not all III; benefits." The goodness of some men de rends more on the police than on principle. but we want to utilize every means to make it more effective and to en list further help from the lumbermen and the public." The program opens on the morning of December 4 with the address of the president, followed by a report on the work of the association during the past season by Forester E. T. Allen. Then will follow short reviews of the 1911 experiences and lessons learned by the states, with Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon and California reporting. "Fire Hazard" will be the general topic Monday afternoon It will be I d'scussed from the viewpoint of the t sla-hing menace, the logging hazard, railroad fires, the camper, settler and ! hunter. Tuesday morning patrol and fire fighting will be the topic and or ganization for this purpose, commu niration and transportation wi'l be considered. Tuesday afternoon edu cational matters in connection with tho forests will be the subject and co-operation between public and pri vate interests to protect neglected ter ritory and bring about better fire pa trol will be considered. Fire losses, how to make the most of existing stat utes and needed legi lation along this line will be the closing topic. I YEAR OLD MISS ENGAGES IN TRADE PREPARE MEET OF Two Big Specials Saturday, Monday and Tuesday Japanese Tea Pols A new shipment Just received of this beautiful ware. Regular 45c Values CENTS EACH For 3 days only. Semi-Porcelain Platters Johnston Bros, famous make, pure white, size 16 to 18 Inches. Regular $1.25 Values CENTS EACH For 3 days only. 1 SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY Owl Tea blouse R-Jf.tSW8" (Special Correspondence.) Kcho, Ore., Nov. 27. Little Miss Irma Wllmarth of Hermiston was here Saturday getting subscriptions for a periodical publication. Miss lima I- only cloven years old but she is quite a little business lady. She explained that she hopes to secure a Urge enough subscription to win the prize of a Shetland pony, so she can j ride to school, her home being in the country. She made the trip here and j back alone on the motor. W. R. Tarker of Buhl. Idaho, is , here on a business visit. Mr. Parker it an old time resident of this place, i At one time he was proprietor of the i Golden Rulo hotel in Pendleton. He Its now eneaaoA in farmincr at Buhl. Portland, Ore., Nov. 27. Beyond vr. n,, Mr, t wide Friday I question the largest gathering for the nli:nt Kave tncir twelve-year-old son discussion of the subject of forest fires 1 p:,yri, a birthday party. A large ever held In the Vnited States will be number of his school mates were, that held in Portland December 4 and lPI..Sent and n very pleasant time was, 6 at the forest fire conference of thel0nioved bv all. ! Western Forestry & Conservation as- There will be no school here next soclatlon. Western states from Mon- week on account of the tenchers go- j tana to California will be represented, I inir to Baker City to attend Vir i not only by leading timber owners, j teachers' Institute. There were eight but by state officials and government instructors who left here this evening forestry mon will also attend. for the mcccn. ! "The general object of this confer-1 . R. Thomson and F.. K. Lewis ence is the exchange of experience went to Pendleton Saturday morning and suggestions in the practical work i on the motor returning home in the of fire-fighting and patrol and to de- evonlng. velop some systematic and constant Miss Anna Waugh visited friends co-operation between private, state ' in Pendleton Saturday, and federal agencies," said A. L.I Miss Irene Rippy, Echo's primary Flewellng. of .Spokane, president ot teacher visited Saturday and Sunday the association. "Our allied nssocia- with her sister Mayme Johnson In La tlons In five Taclflc states have al- Grande. ready spent money, hundreds of thou- Mrs. S. W. Spencer returned Satur gands of dollars per year, In this work day to her home at Heppner after Seattle ? WHERE TO? Spokane ? Portland ? Arrive Seattle ..S:15 A. M. f Leave Pendleton 1 :30 P. M. Arrive Spokane......9 :55 P. M. I Arrive Portland S :10 A. M. Northern Pacific Railway First class trains. Good leaving time. The Pioneer Line. Close connections. Good arriving time. SLEEPING CARS FROM PASCO Through Tickets to all Points East or West Secure tickets and full information from W. ADAMS, AGEXT X. P. RY., PEXDLETOX. Ask about EXCURSION FARES for those events: Xation Apple Show, Spokane, Xovember 23-30.