EIGHT PAGES DAILYEAST OltEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. MONDAY, APKIL 1, 1912. PAGE FIVE SELLING CLUB HAS PERSONAL MENTION Another Express Shipment THIRTEEN E OF Suits, and ..V For Easter Wear Suits ... . $20.00 and $25.00 Coats.... . 9.50 to 22.50 - , Dresses 7.45 to 25.00 7 : All Sizes . ' F. E. Livengood & Company "The "Ladies and Children's Store" LOCALS Bicycles! 727 Johnson street. Main 178 for coal and wood. For Rent Front office In Judd building;. F. E. Judd. J I. C. Snyder will spray your trees. Spray dope for sale by gallon. Phone Koplttke & Oillanders, for dry wood and Rock Spring coal. Everybody goes to the Orpheum t aee the best and thn clearest pictures. All kinds ot good dry wood, also clean nut or lump Rock Spring coal at Koplttke ft Oillanders. - Special rates to horses boarded by the week or month at the Commercial Barn, (20 Aura street. Phone Main IS. For good cedar posts, go to the Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber fard. Large stock of telephone poles at the Pendleton Planing Mill and Lum ber Yard. , Wanted Woman t wash " dishes, steady work. Apply Headlight restau rant, 126 West Webb street. House for rent, three locks from Main street, furniture for sale. Every thing complete. A bargain. Inquire Mrs. Lee Teutsch. Lot Sorrel horse, weighing about 1500 pounds, marked S C on left stifle. Any Information regarding same, ad dress T. J. this office. For transfer work, hauling bag gage, moving household goods and pianos, and all kinds of Job work, phone Main 461. B. A. Morton. " For Rent to a lady, a large, well furnished room, with sewing machine, very close in. Cheap. Inquire 719 Lllleth. , Save yourself fuel troubles by us ing our famous Rock Spring coal and good dry wood. Delivered promptly. Ben L. Burroughs, phone Main 6. We have on hand several cigar show cases and counter show cases that we will sell very reasonable If taken at once. Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard. For sale Big white eggs, full blood S. C. B'.ack Minorcas, the kind that lay big eggs and lots of them, $1 per 15. J. G. Miller, 704 E. Court street. The State Hotel, corner Webb and Cottonwood streets, under new man agement Furnished rooms by day, week or month. Phone Main S03. For rent Suite of unfurnished housekeeping rooms In East Oregon ian Building. Steam heated, also gas range in rooms. Apply at this office, $35 per acre, 90 acres only five and one-half miles northwest of town, 460 acres In wheat, good house, fine well with water enough to supply a 10,000 acre farm. Llvermore & Blck ers. 3900 acres, stock farm, about six hundred acres plow land, only $6.00 per acre, the best snap In eastern Ore gon. Llvermore & Bickers. $12,000. 360 acres, 80 acres In al falfa, 80 acres more can be put In al falfa. Above price includes mochin er. gasoline power engine and hay cutter, only 4 1-2 miles from Pendle ton Llvermore & Bickers. - Special This Week Prescriptions We save you money; our stock Is complete "and your prescrip tions dispensed as the Dr. pre seribes, by old reliable drug gist at a very low price. Just received a fresh stock of the popular red band candy at 20o per pound. F. J. Oanaldson Reliable Druggist. ' We give Peoples Warehouse Trading Stamp. - Grosses Goals . Work Horses for Sale. For sale, twelve head good work horses. For further particulars ad dress Jameg Hill, Helix, Oregon, or call at my ranch, four and one half miles west of Helix. Attention Knights. Damon Lodge No. 4, K. of P., will meet in regular session this evening. All Knights please attend. J. A. BEST. C. C. R. W. FLETCHER, K. R. S. At the Grand. Change tonight: Germain & Rejjla, the Mexican and the singer. Miss Lola Norwood, In popular songs and dances. Photo plays Three reels of known quality: 1 The Rmchman's Debt of honor. One of the Melles features; Bronvcho Billy's Christmas Din ner; 3 Please Remit. An Elison comedy. A royal treat awaited the patrons of the Grand last, night to the sur- price of all an orchestra of great abil ity consisting of Bisbee, Connelly, Goedecke and Manning, had been in stalled.! It was fully unsuspected as lately Mrs. Manning alone furnished the musical part of the program. The music was pleasing and the audience appreciated It greatly. It Is hoped that In the neaR,future a full orches tra will be installed again. The vau deville program consisted of extra good acts and the western musical cowboy act pleased everybody. The motion pictures although not featured at the Grand theater, came up to the best, have always one or more special pictures on the program. BEAUTY PATCHES REVIVED BY MILADY OF LONDON' Kngllsli Women Wearing Large Spots; Purs Has Startling, 'Stockiiiglcss" downs, London. Patches have arrived In London. The- period of coquetry has begun, for with draped gowns, pan nier skirts, feminine laces, ribbons and flowers come the powders and patches of other days. In Bond street and Piccadilly one already notes patches being worn. These beauty spots ore quite large and of the round variety, worn a little un der the left eye. Dimple or chin beauty spots have not yet made their appearance. ' Word from Paris Is that women are appearing almost stocUingless, wearing indoors directolre gowns, slit a couple of inches above the "knee, showing the edge of the garter. The slash exhibits stockings so fine, with quarter-Inch mesh, that the limbs appear to be bare. LI VIS 17 DAYS OX HAY. Wayfarer's Feet Fronen on Tramp, He Burrow Into Stacks of Oats. Tlsdale, Man John Wannamaker, who Was brought to a Prince Albert hospital, lived for seventeen days In a hole he dug In a strawstacK on the open prairie, subsisting only on grains of oats which he managed to shake fgrom the frozen Btraw and 'quench ing his thirst with snow. . Wannamaker left Prince Albert to tramp to Crooked river, and arrjvlng near Tlsdale without money, crept into a stawstack to spend the night The next morning his feet were froz en so badly that he could not pro ceed. It was seventeen days before help came. Hug Keep Dance Alive. Denver. "If the hug were taken out of dancing it would not last long, but would die a natural death," said Father Benedict in a lecture to young women. . '.'Married women do not dance with their husbands, but with other wom en's husbands," he said, "and mar ried men do not dance with their wives, but with other men's wives. "After telling your beloved that there is great danger in kissing, trans mitting germs," he continued to the young women, "allow him to kiss you twice In one evening, once when he comes and once before he leaves. It is not necessary that he should kiss you 100,000 times In an evening, though he may be 'engaged to you." It's easier for a man to make money if he's on speaking terms with his conscience. Mrs. W. C. Shulte ts visiting with friends in Walla Walla. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Weber are home after spending four months in Cali fornia. Carl Cooley, bookReeper at Alex ander's, spent yesterday in La Grande. C. B. Reynolds was among the Hermlston people in the city Satur day evening. Mrs. Clarence Moller, local milliner, went to Portland yesterday on a busi ness mission. C. A. Johnson, the Pilot Rock sheep man, Is a business visitor in Pendle ton today. Miss Edna Gates, former well known Instructor of voice in this city, is vis iting in Pendleton. J. A. Hubbard and L. P. Norvell were down from their home at Mc Kay Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. SchiCfier have returned from a sojourn of several months in Los Angeles. ' ' Thomas Jensen of Hermlston was In from the project town Saturday and spent the iilght here. Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Dale, promi nent residents of Helix, came In this morning on the N. P. Train. Mrs. G. W. Knight and daughter came in this morning on the North ern Pacific train from their home at Helix. Mrs. James A. Cooper Is spending the d:iy in Echo with friends, having cone to that town on the local this morning. George Gannon, former mayor of Pasco, and Wis daughter visited with Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Taylor yesterday while en route home from Hot Lake. W. R. Relnhart, traveling salesman for the Marshall Wells hardware company of Portland,, left this morn ing for points westward after spend ing a couple of days in the city. "Dee Matlock, son of Cass Matlock is in the city from his home at Ketch um, having been called here by the death of his brother, Edward Mat lock. , Carl Bowscher, a brother of Mrs. C. L Morgan, who recently came from the east to visit her, has taken charge of the soda foundaln at F. J. Donald son's drug store. Royal Sawtelle, the Jeweler, left Saturday for Portland in response to a subpoena requiring him to appear before the court trying Wong Si Sam for the murder of Seid BIng. HAVE "MOVIE FEVER" BAD. These Patrons Pay by the Week on Hook Accounts. Mlllvllle, N. J. The popularity of moving picture and vaudeville shows U greater than ever before, and three competing amusement houses are filled nightly. Employes of the mills and factories have opened "book accounts" at the places and settle for their week's en tertainment at the end of the week. In several cases old soldiers and soldiers' widows have accounts and pay their bills from the pensions when they arrive. Many who are scarcely able to pro vide themselves and their families with the necessities of life are seen almost every night among the pleas ure seeking throngs. No one is Immune from the "movie" fever, although the churches have given -a variety of entertainments the business of the playhouses Is steadily on the Increase. , prize dog rrrs out fire. Misters Paws Smothering Live Coals on Rug. Then Awakens Master. Louisville, Ky. After extinguishing a fire cuused by hot coals falling from a grate, a prize winning collie owned by W. J. Atkinson, awakened its master to have a look at his blis tered paws. " The dog sleeps on the rug In front of the grate and during the night live coals fell on the rug. Mr. Atkin son was aroused by the dog whinning and scratching at his bedroom door. He arose and followed the dog to where It indicated the burned places In the rug with its nose. Then the dog exhibited Its paws which had been blistered in beating out the blaze. LEG WORTH $12,500 AN' INCH. Stockman Of Missouri Sues Railroad - for Accident He Sustained. St. Joseph, Mo. M. C. Gray of Nod away county values his left leg at the rate of $12,500 an inch. Because he has lost two inches of the leg In an accident, which resulted in shorten ing the leg. he asks $25,000 damages against the Burlington Railroad com pany. The engine of a Burlington (train ran Into a caboose in which .Gray was riding at Vllllsca, la., which resulted in the Injuries. The case Is to be heard in the federal court here. According to the petition, the loco motive was run without due care or caution, negligently and carelessly, with undue and unreasonable grout swiftness and suddenness against the caboose. Gray is a stockman and was on his way to Chicago with' a load ot cattle when the accident occurred. SNIP, SNIP, RULE IV CHINA. Seattle. Horse cilppers from the United States are In great demand in China not for the horses, but for the loyal republicans who are now wearing their hair short. J. P. Hejl- bronn, a Manila wholesaler, who ar rived here from the orient said a Ma nila fim had received orders from China for 1000 dozen barber's hair clippers and these not being available horse clippers were sent and gave satisfaction. Flirts draw men as sticky fly pa ' per draws flies and often with aim liar results. (Special Correspondence.) Echo, ore , April 1. A Ben Selling club was organized here Thursday night. Gus C. Mosler was expected to address the voters but was called to Portland. In his absence, J. T. i Hlnkle delivered an address. At the close of the meeting the Ben Selling club was organized with thirteen! members. Thomas Ross was elected, president and E. R. Ware secretary. Manager C. P. Bowman of the new i Farmers' telephone line, has a force' of men erecting telephone poles here, j This line will extend from Heppner( to Pendleton, passing through Uma-1 tilla, Hermlston, Stanfleld and Echo, and penetrating the sourrounding country. I A basket social was given here Friday evening by the choir of the ' M. E. church and attended by a large number .of young people. A set' price of 35c was paid by each young ! man and 'he secured half the picture of some prominent man's face. He then looked for the lady holding the other half of the picture and when found she also had a dainty lunch for two. A short but Interesting program was given. The net receipts of the evening was over fourteen dollars. ; John G. Thomas, manager of the alfalfa meal mills of Echo, was a business visitor in Portland last week. Mrs. Albert Mullins has returned home after a visit .with her mother, Mrs. J. B. Strandley. of Clarkston, Wash. The Misses Zetta Galbralth and Avis Gaunt went to Pendleton Friday on a short visit. Miss Ilene Webb is visiting with friends in Pendleton. L. D. Shively left Thursday with the body of his Infant son for Spokane; where it will be" Interred. In his ab- sence Mrs. A. B. Crist of Spokane is here caring for his wife, and son Glen, who are quite 111. H. P. Lewis of La Grande Is a bus iness visitor here. Mrs. E. E. Lewis has returned, home after a two weeks visit with rel atives at La Grande and Union. ' Mrs; L. Hammer of American Falls, Idaho, is here visiting with Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Hammer. 1 Mrs. R. P. East left last week for Vancouver, Wash, where she ex pects to spend the Bummer with her daughter, Mrs. Chris Mikesell. Willie Knight,' formerly a pupil of the Echo schools, arrived here Sat urday from Colfax, Wash., for a short visit with friends. O. A. Cannon was a passenger to Pendleton on the motor Saturday. Miss Blanch Small and Mrs. Ruth Young visited In Pendleton Saturday. Miss Anna Waugh spent Sunday with friends in Pendleton. Miss Irene Rlppey, the Echo pri mary teacher, spent Saturday in Pen dleton. AGED WESTERNER FINDS SWEETHEART OF YOUTH Romance of Half a Century Has a pathetic Ending at Wooster, Ohio. Wooster, Ohio. Half a century ago when David W. Hartzler was a young man of twenty-one years, he Jovea Miss Lizzie Fordenwald,.aged twenty. But they had a lovers' quarrel and "Hartzler went west. In a few years he forgot and married. He accumulated a fortune. Miss Fordenwald did not know where he'- was, but during the flftv years remained unmarried. Three years ago Hartzler's wife died. He then thought of his first sweetheart, and some time later wrote her a letter. After several weeks of waiting he received an answer. The writing was a H'tle shaky, but he rec ognized the hand. A month ago the old man went to Smithvllle and found the home of his old sweetheart. "He saw an old wo man with wrinkled face and white hair but when she smiled the years seemed to drop from her and him, and a mist filled his eyes and hers, and there was no old woman nor old man. Three veek9 ago they stood togeth er and a preacher, who had not been born when they first learned to love, united them in jnarrlage. rne years i vo waucu seem oniy hours now, Dave," said the old wo man. . But a few mornings later the old man found, when he awoke that his wife was still sleeping. Her hands were cold and stiff and he could not wake her. HOUSE INJURES A CHILD. Eleven-Year-Old Tas Jaw Fractured When lie Caresses Animal's Nose. Philadelphia. Love for animals cost 11-year-old William Robinson of Germantown, serious injuries which may prove fatal. As he patted the nose of a horse that was tied to a pole near his home the animal Jumped at the lad with both front feet. The lad was hurled to the pavement. Hi" screams attract ed the attention of his parents. He was rescued and taken to a hos pital. where it was found that his lower Jaw was fractured. The boy's face was covered with deep lacerations.- Perhaps a woman changes her mind frequently to keep from wearing it. out. Don't Fool Woll &ZTrk, C STOMACH O" BITTERS this Spring? Tako the Bitters. It prevents Spring Fever, Stomach Ills and Malaria. of ail kinds neatly and promptly Mam I CANCER KILLS 40,000 A YEAR. Annual Loss to Nation $208,000,000, Says University Professor. Boulder, Colo. One death in seven teen is due to cancer, according to Dr. Clay E. Giffin Of the University of Colorado, in a talk to the university scientific society. Dr. Griffin further asserted that 40,000 persons died annually from cancer in the United States. He ex plained that this meant a loss of $208,000,000 every year and that $500,000 spent in educating the peo ple concerning . cancer would save $17,000 000 the first year. Cancer paste. X-ray and operations are the three ways of treating the disease, he says. If taken in time and treated, the. doctor said, the chances of death are three in 100, 000, but if neglected, soon offers only one chance In three. SEES THUG KILL HUSBAND. liOng Roach Muii Returns Home With Wife- and Is Shot by Burglar. Long Beach, Cal. Thomas Borden a member of the Long Beach police force, wus shot and almost Instantly killed by a burglar whom Borden and his wife encountered at his home on returning from church. As they started to enter their home, a mun emerged and without warning open ed fire. Three shots were fired and one bullet took effect, penetrating Borden's brain. The burglar ran down the street and was pursued by a passing citizen, who was forced to give up the chase when the bur glar shot him In the foot. ' WANT CAR STF.PS LOWERED. Missouri Women Flatly Refuse to rlmngw Style of Skirts. St. Joseph, Mo. If a movement started by an East St. Joseph wo men's club is successful, the steps upon the city's street cars will be lowered at least one foot. A petition for the change is being circulated by the club members, and when it is believed the petition has a sufficient number of signers. It will For This Highest Cash oflTO-io veal CENTRAL MEAT MARKET WE GIVE "S. & H." GREEN STAMPS. be presented to the street railway, company. If the company declines to... act, the women are in favor of taking: the mater up with the public utilities . commission. Such a thing as asking that the wo- i men change their style of skirt is re- . garded as absurd. The women insist the style of street car steps should ; be changed. f Up to Date Noodle Parlors. The Con Dung Low Chop Suey and I Noodle Parlors will open Tuesday evening at seven o'clock, closing at : two o'clock. We solicit your patron- age. Under . State Hotel, orner-.-Webb and Cottonwood streets. Phonev Main 567. Tray orders a specialty. L'n Company, props. Small men feel big whin standing on their dignity. As a result of our big Shetland Pony contest, we M'isli to announce that Miss Alberta McMonies, contest ant Xo. 14, wins ihe Shet land Tony, Cart and Har ness given away by us. Tallman Co. Week Price Paid lo. 14 I'j'ins Pony