East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, December 06, 1911, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    a. i innpx vfc'tv- -t
pagk two.
DAILY BAST ORESGOIOAN. PENDLETTOX, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER , 1011.
EIGHT PAGES.
On(y 15 More Shopping Days
Till Christmas
Tinio flics, don't put off buying till the last minute, anil
ilu n ru.-h into the nearest store ami make vour selections in
a frantic hurry from a depleted picked over assortment.
COM'K TO THIS STOKE TOMORROW
:iU'l make your selections at your leisure. There are
thousands of things here suitable as gifts for men, wo
nun and children. Yon can spend as little ns you like
r as nun-h as you choose.
The assortment is broad enough fo meet the demands
i if everv purse. You need not Kuher about looking alter
the delivery just tell r.s when you want it sent and it
will 1h there on the dot. As to prices we positively
srunrantee every price we make to you to be lower than any
other store in town will offer on the same quality of article.
We do not sell junk." Every article that comes into this
cri :A store must come up to The Peoples Warehouse high
standard of perfection and ouality, and we fully guarantee
every article we sell satisfaction assured or yrnr money
cheerfully refunded.
Our name on an article insures its quality and style and
makes it a more acceptable gift. Selections reserved until
Christmas week for a small deposit. Mail orders receive
our most careful attention.
HOLIDAY ITAXD BAGS.
Completeness is the chief characteristic of
our holiday line, but cxclusiveness marks out
display as well.
In the stable numbers we have bags of
satin, moire, velvet, corduroy and leather,
prices $1.00 to ?S.OO
NOVELTY II AND BAGS OF TAPES
TRY $2.50 to 7.50
Two-toned velvets, the season's newest nov
elty $6.50 to $7.50
BRAIDED NOVELTIES IN BLACK
and colors $4.00 to $10.00
Make your choice early before the lines
are broken.
CHRISTMAS BOXES.
A great variety of Christmas boxes, all
shapes and sizes. 10c4 to 25
Christmas cards, stickers and shipping
tags, pkg. 5 and 10
XMAS WAISTS.
Finest linen tailored waists, in the newest
spring models, plain shirt effects, with side
pocket, also many pleated stvles. Sizes 152
to 46. Prices $2.95 to $5.98
SILK KIMONAS
in all tho pretty Oriental colors, made in the
regulation kimona model, also high waist
effects.
TEA GOWNS in light blue, tan, white,
and navv, daintily trimmed with lace and
ribbons. ' Prices....! $4.9S to $22.00
TAPESTRY REDUCED.
This includes all different grades of yard
goods in tapestry. Makes the best of couch
covers, portiers, sofa pillows, and over cur
tains. .Comes in plain reds and allcolor com
binations. Now is the time to buy curtains
at a reduction. We have placed tho tapes
trvs at tho following prices:
40 Values for 32
50 Values for 39
65 Values for 48?
75 Values for 57
$1.25 Values for .. .86
ATM PICTURE SHOWS
The Peoples Warehouse
WHERE IT PAY'S TO TRADE.
SAVE YOUR COUPONS
Tlie' Orplieum.
One of the very best programs for
Tuesday's change.
1. "Vitagraph Monthly of Current
Events." Vitagraph. This issue is
packed full of wonderful news hap
penings of the 'past month. Flrt and
foremo t Is the International Motor
Boat Races at Huntington, Long Is
land; the Annual Mardl Graj at Co
ney Island; the Start of the Aviators
at Sheepshead Bay, New York, and
the flight of the intrepid Rogers on
his way from New Tork to San Francisco,
2. "How They Stopped the Run on
the Bank." Sellg. Rumor has it that
the Forest City State bank is hard
pre sed for cash. The news spreads
and a run Is Imminent. T,he presi
dent faces ruin and disgrace. His fi
ancee secures a ferocious , live Hon
from the circus and the crowd tor
got about their money in an effort to
got as far away as possible.
J. "Christian and Moor." Ed'son.
A Christian knight fa'.ls In love with
a Moorish maiden Her father makes
an oath that anyone crossing his
boundary line shall bo killed. His
daughter is entrapped by an unknown
person and before It is realized she
has, crossed the boundary and is
doomed to death and is saved by her
lover.
! 4. "The Squaw's Mistaken Love."
American Pathe. An old miner load-
ng some of the younger men across
the mountains to the gold fields per
mits his daughter to accompany him
n the disguise of a man. Tho camp
Is i-urpr sed by Indians and the girl
and her companion are taken prison
ers. One of the squaws falls In love
with the girl dressed in men's clothes
and helps ,them to escape.
The Pastime.
Where you see only the best In
motion pictures. Tuesday's change
of program:
"An Accidental Outlaw." Lubin.
A strange streak of fate turned a
quiet cowboy Into a desperado and
tage robber and finally enabled him
to win the prettiest girl in the coun
try.
'An Old Sweetheart of Mine." Ed
Ison. By James Whltcomb Riley.
Adopted, from the well known poem
and carried out in a novel way. the
film conveys all the Doetic feeling of
the or glnal. Che verses are used as
sub-titles.
"A Revolution In the Bachelor
Club." American. A farce dealing
with a bachelor and a beautiful wo
man. The result of the mixup Is a
revolution in the club which surpass
es words.
"Coals of Fire." Sellg. A strong
frontier drama. This story treats of
two men, one a b'g, brawny fighting
man, who win a girl from the other
weaker in v tallty but superior in his
intellectual mentality. In future years
this disappointed man becomes gov
ernor of Missouri and saves his. old
sweetheart's husband frffm paying
the death penalty after killing a man.
GEO. WEBB PRESENTS
PICTURE TO LODGE
More momentous than any gather
ing he,ld by the Odd Fellows' lodge In
La Grande was the annual roll call
se.'slon last Saturday night whereat
a life size painting of Uncle George
Webb of Pendleton was presented to
the lodge as a gift by Mr. Webb, says
the Observer. Anxious to find a safe
and permanent abode for which the
ex-state treasurer posed before a
German artist in Portland 24 years
ago, Mr. Webb concluded to present
the La Grande lodge of Odd Fellows
with the valuable piece of art and
choosed the roll cnll night as the most
fitting occasion to bestow the gift
Past Grand Master and Sovereign
Grand Lodge Representative H. B.
Coolidgc made the presentation
speech in his characteristic impressive
manner and the gratitude nf the lodge
toward Mr. Webb was expressed by
others as well.
The g'.'t Is especially prized because
Mr. Webb was the first noble grand
of the La Grande lodge. This was in
1867 when the charter was granted
and the lodge lived In cramped cir
cumstances before it attained Its s'ze
and prestige. The struggle the orig
inal membership went through was
aptly told in a stirring address by
Cncie George" Saturday night.
Iff
FOUND
at last a place where one can trust
their best linen to be Laundered.
We use only harmless materials to.
cleanse all articles entrusted to us.
A trial order .will convince .you
that wo livo up to our advertise
ment.
We Also Do
.
Rough Dry
MORE TILVX SKIN DEEP.
Moro Tltnn a Skin Salvo Ih Xeelel to
Core riles permanently. .
Don't be disappointed If you fall to
get a lasting cure of piles with salves.
The cause of piles Is more than skin
deep. It is sluggish, flabby veins
pockets filled with thick, bad blood.
HEM-ROID. a tablet tonic remedy.
Is taken inwardly, acts on the circu
lation and cures all kinds of piles
thoroughly.
$1 for 24 days' supply at Pendleton
Drug Co. and all druggists. Dr. Leon
hardt Co . Station B, Buffalo. N. Y.,
mall a free booklet.
To Per Found.
TROY
Steam Laundry
TAIN BROS.,
Phone Mala 170.
PIJ.ES CURED IN TO 14 DAYS.
Tour druggist will refund money
if PAZO OINTMENT falls to cure any
case of Itching Blind, Bleeding or
Protruding Plies in C to 14 days. 50c.
RAILROADS MAY MAKE
BCIi.NS GREAT CENTER
Harriman Line Officials Talk or Mak
ing Town Western Terminus of Ex
tension. Baker, Ore. If the present plans of
the Harriman lines are carried out, it
will mean that Burns will be the fest
ern terminus of the extension now
under construction from Vale west,
but it is not believed that much work
will be done this winter. When Judge
Robert S Lovett. head of the Harri
man system was In Portland a short
time ago he declared that engineers
had been instructed to roaJke the final
surveys west of Vale. Me added.
however, that the western terminus
had not yet been selected.
While Bend is said to he the nat
ural terminus of an east and west road
connecting with the Oregon Short
Line at Va'.e, as it wonld conmect there
with the O.-W. R. & N. Co.'s Dee
chutes line, it Is believed that the
Harriman system does not contem
plate going farther than Barns at
present. This extension will require
about 140 miles of road west of Vale
and It Is reported that this has been
authorised.
The reason for the great Interest
the Harriman system has taken in the
Vale-Burns extension at front the
fact that Burns recently made an
offer of a tSO.000 bonus to David Ec
cles, president of the Sumpter Valley
railway, which now reaches Prairie
City, if he will extend that road to
Burns, and also that the extension
from Burns to Bend, can easily be
constructed. Although no official an
nouncement of the acceptance of the
J50.000 bonus lias been made. It Is
known to he under consideration.
I'nimpesiohable If you were to see
the unequalled volume of unimpeach
able testimony In favpr of Hood's
Sarsaparilla.' you would upbraid your
elf for so long delaying to take this
effective medicine for that blood dis
ease from which, you are suffering.
Saved Ills Wife's life.
"My wife would have been in her
grave today," writes O. H. Brown of
Muscadine, Ala, "if It had not been
for Dr. King's New Discovery. She
was down in her bed, not able to get
up without help. She had a severe
bronchial trouble and a dreadful
cough. I got a bottle of Dr. King's
New Discovery and she soon began
to mend, and was well in a short
time." Infallible for coughs and
colds. Its the most reliable remedy
on earth for desperate lung trouble,
hemorrhages, la grippe, asthma, hay
fever, croup and whooping cough. 50c,
$100. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed
by Koeppens..
RICH WOMEN KTIRRED
BY DYNAMITE CASE
Resolve to Work for Rotter Under,
"standing Hetuwn Capital and La
bor. New York. The accompanying res
olution, to be presented at a meeting
In the Waldorf-Astoria may be ac
cepted as an evidence that the whole
country Is awake to the gravity of the
fate that Heaves her single.
Edwards spent his vacation last
summer at a house near that of G.
F. Harrison, a prosperous farmer, who
had twin daughters. People living in
the neighborhood have often mistak
en one of them for the other and that
s'tuation between capital and labor
as laid bare by the confessions of the
McXatnaras.
The meeting Is Introductory to a
series of ten lectures by members of
President Taft's cabinet, the course
having been arranged by Miss Eliza
beth Marbury. Miss Anno Morgan
daughter of J. Plerpont Morgan, and
Mrs. Francis McNeil Baenn, Jr. The
resolution reads:
Resolved, that tho recent develop
merits In the MeNamara case show
such a lack of harmony between labor
and capital, whose interests should be
Identical, that our country Is In dan
ger of becoming a house divided
again-t itself. In the face of such ev
idence it behooves every citizen to
study the process of government and
the condition of his fellowmen in or
der that Justice and sympathy may
prevail nd the cauRe of common hu
manity be advanced.
The chief significance of this mes
sage lies In its being offered to an
audience representative largely of the
moneyed clans. The greater number
of those who have subscribed to this
course of lectures being given under
the management of the women's wel
fare department of the National Civic
Federation are names familitr to Wall
street and the banking and legal fraternity.
On the general committee with Miss
Morgan, Miss Marbury and Mrs. Ba
con are women whom the public usu
ally Identifies with society. Among
others are Mrs. Lindon W. Bates, Mr.
August Belmont, Mrs. George Blu
tnenthal, Mrs. Francis Higglnson Ca
bot, Miss Mabel Clyde, Mrs. William
Rand Jr., Mrs. Alexander Shaw, Mrs.
Walker Smith. Mrs. James C. Cush
man, Mias Caroline Shlppen, Mrs. V.
Everitt Mackey, Mrs Gertrude Rob
inson Smith, Mrs. Mary Hatch WUlard
and Mrs. Lindsay Van Renssalear.
Swellings of the fleh caused by in
flammation, cold, fracture of the
bone, toothache, neuralgia or rheu
matism can be relieved by applying
BALLARD'S SNOW LINIMENT. It
should be well rubbed in over the part
affected. Its great healing aid pen
orating power eases the pain, reduc
es swelling and restores natural con
ditions. Price 25c,. Sc andjl per
bottle. Sold by A. C. Keppen & Br-s.
To Portland or California, take
Northern Pacific, via Pasco, and S.
P. & S. Ry. . Leave 1:30 p. m., ar
rive Portland 8:10 a. m. Bee W. Ad
ams, agent at passenger station, for
through tickets nnd u arrangements.
There Is Only One
"Bromo Quinine"
That Is
Laxative Bromo Quinine
USED THE WORLD OYER TO CURE A COLD IH ONE DAY.
Alwavs remember tlie lull name. Ixwk
nr this riwiintiirp. on OVi'TV 1.::y C'n. ft f
For Sale 480 acres wheat land one
half summer fallow, one-half in stub
ble, plenty water, fair improvements
Short hmaul to Vansycle warehouse.
For particulars address J. C. Royse.
Juniper, Ore.
A Terrible Blunder
to neglect liver trouble. Never 1o !t.
Take Dr. King's New Life Pills on the
first eign of constipation, biliousness
or Inactive bowels and prevent vir
ulent Indigestion, Jaundice or gall
stones. They regulate liver, stomach
Bnd bowels and build up your heal;h.
Only 25c at Koeppens.
WEDS TWIN RY MISTAKE.
Captain, In Haste to EloK, Mnrriii
Sister. of Girl Ho Courted.
Annapolis, Mr. In his haste to car
ry out his elopement plans, Captain
Harry R. Edwards of the schooner
May H. mistook the twin ' sister of
his bride-to-be for the girl he had
been secretly wooing and eloped with
the wrong twin. The girl whom he
meant to wed is home mourning the
was what Edwards did when he el
oped.
He landed from the schooner in
tending to elope with Mary Harrison.
He met Betty first, and thinking she
was Mary hurried her off to a parson
and then aboard the schooner. The
schooner is somewhere in Chesapeake
bay, with Edwards and his wife
aboard, headed for Baltimore.
It was reported last summer that
Betty was Jealous of the attentions
paid her sister by Edwards, and it is
believed n some quarters she learned
Edwards was going to marry Mary,
and decided the best way to stop it
was to marry him herself.
CHRIsiIAN CHURCH
AUDIENCE WAS DEI.HiHTED
Miss Lingeiifelter Weil Received at
th0 Christ an Church Last Night.
To ay that all were pleased at the
Christian church last night is putting
It very mildly they were more than
pleased with -M'ss Llngenfelter, who
has been engaged by . Evangelist
Ho'mes to assi-t him In the closing
days of the revival. She sang both
before and after the sermon and re
vealed a wonderful vo'ce under per
fect control. Some feared that her
instructor, Mme. Armenta of Seattle,
had praised her too h'ghly, but none
left the church last night with that
If i
IL fi f J
W"'.v...- . .. , . .4
Give a Watch
Watches as Christmas Presents are
demonstrations of the deepest friend
ship between the giver and receiver,
and are remembered ALWAYS.
We have an elegant, and largo new line now showing of the fol
lowing celebrated makes:
Howards, Elgins, New England's,
Walthams, Hamiltons, Swiss Makes.
Prices range from our Round-Up $1.00 Watch, up.
All Fully Guaranteed.
You can buy now and have 'your purchase laid away. Our
.engraving is done by experts.
A. L. Schaefer
M M Mary LingeiifcHer.
Coming-ion Form RrJcctL
Olymplii, Wash. Olympla rejected
the commission form of government
by a majority of 68 votes. A com
plete republican city ticket was elect
ed by substantial pluralities. The so
cialists and prohibitionists combined
polled only 401 votes out of 17B3 cast
for mayor. Two women were nmong
Hid defeated ')(!.' II t candldatr-s.
opinion. In presenting Miss Llngen
felter to the public her Instructor
says:
"It gives me great pleasure to rec
ommend to the public mv gifted pu
pil. Miss Mary L'ngenfelter, who has
for the past four ytarj been nn ardent
student In my vocal school of mus'c
She possesses a rich mezzo soprano
voice of rare beauty and of persua
sive quality, with a modest and
charming personality .and a natural
taste for the highest standard in her
chosen profession. I am assured of a
continuation of the success she has
achieved in the past season In church
and concert work."
The people of Pendleton will miss
a rare opportunity to hear one of the
most gifted soloists of the coast if
they fail to hear Miss Llngenfelter.
The sermon of Mr. Holmes on
".Seedtime and Harvert" was highly
complimented in that there were sev
eral requests to have It repeated. He
spoke of thre eplantlngs In every life
and the results tha follow: Heredity,
Environment and Personality. Some
are foredoomed by the sins of parents
This Is nature's method of teaching
morals Others, though well born,
are doomed by a sinful environment,
but over both the tendency to sin In
herited from others nnd the tempta
tion to follow evil duo to one's sur
roundings, a strong personality may
conquer. Mr. Holmes Is strong In his
denunciation of sin, but equally
strong In hn nppenl for n eh.mno of
11 fo In the s'un'T. Ills theme fur io
n!t:ht I "A Prayer from Hell."
Franklin "G" Runabout
Four-Eighteen $1650
Preeminently the car for business.
Air-cooled it Btands without freezing.
If you have ever tried to buy a "second-hand"
Franklin runabout you have
found that but few are offered and that"
tho prices aro high even for models
several years old practical evidence
of exceptional service.
Pendleton Auto Co.