ETOttT PAOKS DAILY EAST OREGONTAtf. PENDLETON. OREGON, FRIDAY. JUNE 7, 1012. PAGE TTTRFE 1! Satan! ay Spoeia $1.25 and $1.50 Corsets for . 98c 2-button Chamoisette Gloves, 35c val ues, Saturday special 2 1 c 50c values . 37c Rajah Silks, $1.00 and $1.25 values, Saturday Special 79 c Ladies Light Weight Underwear, Special I6c Suit Vo save you money on every purchase Alexander WE GIVE "S. & II." GREEN TRADING STAMPS LUMBER NEEDED NOW Sidewalk Lumber Large shipment Just received. Selling at prices that are right. Cedar Posts Carload Just received. We have them tarred or not, Just as you choose. Screen Doors and Window Screens All sizes and prices. We also make them to order. Cedar Chests, Absolutely Moth-Proof We have them In a great variety of sizes and prices. Pendleton Planing Mill and Lum- hor Vorrl J. BORIE LUMBER CO., Proprietors UBI IdlU PHONE MAIN 7 f o n t of all kinds neatly and promptly done Phone am 1 M AT THE PICTURE SHOWS Orplicimi. An exceptional good program for Friday's change. Four full reels of the bent pictures. 1. Duet of the Night. Essanay. One of 4he most beautiful dramatic pictures ever released, featuring Mr. Francis X. Buchman. How a ragged, drunken derelict, saved a young man who had been disappointed in love from becoming an out cast like him self. 2. Every rtose Has Its Stems. Edi son. A delightful ana unusual com edy of a fickle youth, a sweet little Miss in a flower store and a haughty stenographer. There is a pretty touch of sentimental and a touch of pathos. 3. Hypnotic Nell. Kalem. Miss Ruth Ruland plays In this picture a girl who sends for a "How to Become a Hypnotist" book. She trys her new art on the cook. It works, and at last hypnotized her bashful lover into proposing. 4. American Tourist Abroad. Kal em. This travel topic contains glimp ses of Home, of Pompel and a short glimpse of Egypt. 5. A Humble Hero. Scllg. The dramatic story of a day's devotion to his master. A race between a claim Jumper and a big dog (humble he ro) that the real owner had dispatch ed with a message. Frt- Tho Pastime. The home of good pictures day's change of program: "A Lodging for the Night." Bio graph. A very tense and dramatic picture of the old southwest. It gives a wild night's adventure of an Am erican In and near a Mexican inn. The difference between romance nnd realism is that one Is what the human heart wants and the other is what it gets. It is only a rank pessimist who will say that. In real life, they never mix. This picture Is a most remark able mixture of both. Plainly, it was made by a man who sees life with his eyes open, and Is a picture to please all. "Aunt Miranda's Cat." Edison. A hearty comedy Intermingling the love affair of an old maid and her charm ing niece. The story hinges on a pet cat who died and lived, but not In vain, and a happy ending Is the out come of its resurrection. "According to Law." Selig. How Tony's Tangle Turned Out." The god of love, luck and laughter hold a gay session full of surprises for all parties concerned. A true to life heart Interest story. "Henry IV and the Wood Choppr.' This Is played by real artists in facial expression and it is very amusing al so. "Good Fishing Off Iceland." A first class industrial showing fishing smacks on a tossing sea. The fish seem to be plentiful. Cosy. Friday and Saturday, sensational two reel feature, the greatest mine disaster ever filmed. "The Land of Darkness." (Two Heels.) Eclair. Startling story of the underground, showing in vivid style the horrors that confront the miners who labor In. the depths of the earth. Taken in the great coal mines of Belgium. Two Jealous miners had a fight in the mine, the lamps were broken and a terrible explosion took place, wrecking the mine and causing an underground lake to burst forth flooding the mine with water. The struggle of the entombed miners to escape from the rising waters and the desperate work of the rescuers to aid them, the crowds at the top of the mine ami the final rescue all form thrilling scenes. The storv which surrounds this subject is full of pa thos and will appeal to all A cast of more than actors and miners, headed bv the stars of the Sarah Bernhardt theater, Paris, were taken to the Belgian Colleries to give the story the correct settings. ."Ilide nnd Seek." Beliance. A tensely dramatic story of two men's temptation to steal a large sum of money they would have been success ful but for a clever child. "Toto the Doorkeeper." Itaia. To- to having won a prize in a lottery left the door to hold a janibree. The guests are unable to get in. It begins to rain and there Is troutle enough before its is over. "Hunting Ducks." Itala. On a beautiful reach of water sportsmen set decoys. Shooting ducks with a cannon Is shown also the work of the dogs in retrieving the game. (r At the Grand Toda. Hudson and Moran, In their Scotch cnaracter nove.ty dances, introducing the sword dance. Photo plays Love's . Terrible Sac rifice. Pathe film d'Art. Every thing comes to him who waits; 1000 Miles By Hall. A good scenic picture: The Heart of a Man. Bright and sparkling In western splendor, and a mighty good story besides. LAST "WILD MAX OF BORNEO" DIES AT 92 Boston, Mass. Plutano, the last of the famous pair of "wild men of Bor neo," died at the home of Mrs. H. A. Warner in Waltham. Plutano is be lieved to have been about 92 years old, and with his brother Wano, who died in 1905, had traveled all over the world. Plutano and Wano were brought on a ship to New York in the early '50s and were said to have been cap tured on the Island of Borneo. Since lSS" the "wild men" had been In the care of Captain Hansford A. Warner or one of his descendants. It was not possible to teach the lit tle men to speak English. HURT BY A COWS IIOKXS. Philadelphia. James Smith. 68 years old. an engineer on the Iisland road branch of the Heading railway, was the victim of a most peculiar ac cident or at least his Injuries were sustained in a most peculiar manner It happened this way: Smith was riding on. the idiot of his engine when the locomotive struck a cow. At the moment of the Impact Smith's back was turned to the cow and the bovlne's horns struck him in the left leg. fracturing both bones and dislocating the ankle. The fireman brought the engine to a stop and dragged Smith Into the cab nnd later sent him to the Methodist Hospital. The cow was killed. . If you have the Itch, don't scratch. Tt does not cure the trouble and makes the skin bleed. Apply BAL LAHD'S SNOW LINIMENT Rub it In gently on the affected parts. It relieves itching instantly and a few applications removes the cause, thus performing a permanent cure. Price 25c. COc and $1.00 per bottle. Sold by A. C. Koeppen & Bros. u"0HH T7 M mil COFFEE DON'T SAY COFFEE Just say "Send me a can of HILLS BROS." PlIOHEnfllNIOI Pondleton Wtf Cash Market COB.XER OF COURT AXD JOHNSON" STREETS Eveiyihing to Eat CHRISTIAN SCIENCE FAILS. BOY DIES l'ltOM IiOCKJAW Philadelphia. After having suffer ed f"r more than a week with tetan us, during which time no doctor was allowed to visit him by his Christian Science mother, who had faith in the efficiency of Christian Science treat ment, Henry Speakman, eleven, died In the Children's Hospital, to which place he was removed by friends of the family. The boy was assisting the maid to hang up the family wash about ten days ago, when a decayed clothes prop broke. In his effort to get away from the clothes that fell over his head he grapped the prop and a splinter of wood entered his hand. The mother tried to extract the piece of wood, but could not do so and lockjaw resulted. POLICE! lAVT OF persons dead: "Girls! Girls! We Can All Stop Wear ing DressShiclds!" Rip Them Out-Here's PERSPI-NO. I'll never wenr dress shields nun In, while loan get t lint remarkable powder, l'KH-SPI-NO. No Mr-eel Never nimiu for inel I Just put a little in my arm No Mora Partpiratlon Like TM. nd No Mora Drou Shield If You Um PERSPI-NO. pits, with the pad that comes with each box, and then my glory begins! No matter what tbe weight of your clothing, no matter how. hot and stuffy It may bo indoors, you need never bo afraid of perspiring any more in your arm-pits than you do on the back of your hand, If you use PKKSPI-NO. It's a marvelous yet a simple powder that anybody is safe In using. It keeps your nrm-plts lust as fresh nnd dry and natural as any other portion of your body. Use PERSPI-NO nnd hot theatres, dnnec-halls, and social affairs will have no. more terrors for you in arm-pit per spiration. It's good-bye dress shield forever. Satisfaction guaranteed. PERSPI-NO Is for snle at your drug gist's at 36o a box, or sent d lrect. on receipt of price, by the Perspo Co . 8715 Lincoln Ave- Chicago. For sale nnd recommended ill Pendleton by Pendleton Drug Co., Toll- rtian tt Co., A. C. .Koeppen & Bra., J. F. Donald -on. Reserves Dnli Madly to Address (iiven Over Phono and Find a Cemetery. Chicago. "Send policemen In a hurry. There are a lot of persons dead at No. 4 S 4 6 Southport avenue." This message was received by Ser geant John Buckley at the Sheffield avenue station. The wagon made a three-mile run to the place only to find that "No. 4S46 Southport ave nue" was a part of St. Boniface cemetery. There were, indeed, a lot of persons dead there, and some of them had been dead a long time. Detectives learned the call was sent from a drug store and are after the joker. MATCHES DEAD FISH AT BARGAIN" COUNTER New York. There was not the slightest trace of a smile on the face of a fashionably dressed woman In a Fulton street department store In Brooklyn as she opened a package containing a dead fish. "I wish to match this exactly," the said to the sales woman. Had the woman smiled, the clerk would have considered her a practical joker, but the request, unaccompan ied by a smile, seemed so uncanny that the clerk. Impelled by fear, pass ed a secret sign to summon Manager Xeaderland, who asked: "Why do you wish to match this, madam?" "It died In the aquarium of a friend while the friend was out of town, de pending on me to care for her fishes, and I want to replace-the dead fish with a live one exactly the same." "Third aisle to the right." said the manager, leading the way to a gold fish tank and an exact duplicate of the dead fish was transferred to a globe. WITXESS PULLS REVOLVER AXD DRIVES COURT TO ROOF Strength comes from well digested and thoroughly assimilated food. Hood's Sarsaparilla tones the diges tive organs and thus builds up the strength. If yon are getting "run down," begin taking Hood's at once. It gives nerve, mental and digestive strength. Told to Hold Up Hands, He Cries, "EverjiMKly Hold up Hands!" All Flue ami He Escapes. Waterbury. Conn. Edward Hoar was being questioned in a lawyer's office in the Odd Felows building. It was charged that he should contrib ute toward the support of a child. "Hold up your right hand again and testify," said E. B. Iteilly Jr., a lawyer. Hoar quickly retorted: "All right. Everybody hold up hands!" As he" said this he drew a revolver. Iteilly looked into the barrel and he and the woman involved fled. So did Constable Thomas McGrath, who had Hoar in custody. Out Into the hallways Hoar ran. There he saw beside Mr. Rilly, Miles McXiff, who had put his head Into the doorway but drew back when he saw the revolver; Thomas F. Mc Grath, the city prosecuting attorney; John McGrath, and U. G. Church, historian of the Waterbury Bar asso ciation. When the police arrived they found the lawyers on a thin roof which was easy of access from the hallway. Hoar got out of the building and has not been caught. BRIDGE FOR THE CHURCH. CASH FOR TITANIC WIDOWS. Sixty-two Women Will Divide Hnlf of Red Cross Fund or S150.00O. New York. Seventy-two widows, sixty-two of whom lost their husbands In the Titanic disaster, have receiv ed or soon will receive nearly one half of the $150,000 fund raised by the Red Cross emergency relief com mittee, according to the chairman's preliminary report. A Miss Flood lost nine relatives on the sinking ship; Mrs. Johnson, a professional singer, was so over come by the shock of her husband's death that she lost her voice and Is unable to support herself. WOMAN'. IB. MOTHER OF 20. POSTS LETTER To T. R. Seven Sets of Twins Among Army of Youngsters Wlio ;o to Church With Parent Married When 11 Yehrs Old. Marshall. Mich. Mrs. William Moore, wife of a farmer of Burling ton township, brought her twonty-sLx children to this place to attend church and, incidentally, watch her post a letter to Theodore Roosevelt, telling him the size and condition of her family. Practically the whole town turned out to watch the army of youngsters toddling along with Mrs. Moore, and the restaurant keepers hurried to make extra arrangements for feeding the brood. "They are a fine lot. too," Mrs. Moore said, "and I Imagine Teddy will be glad to hear that there is such a large family In this country. "Now, there's a fine man Mr. Roosevelt He has the right Idea nnd I would vote for him if I could." Mrs. Moore, despite her large fam ily, is only 46 years old. The young est of her children has not yet pass ed its first year. She was married first when she was 14 years old and married her present husband when she was 17, bavins giv en birth to one child by her first husband. Fourteen of the twenty-six children are twins, the others having arrived one at a timo. . "Yes," Mrs. Moore said, "it has been difficult to rear nil these children properly, but tt Is not as hard to have a large family in this country as most people suppose." Despite the cares nnd worries of governing twenty-six children and a husband, Mrs. Moore finds time to keep up with the times and Is a close student of the political conditions of the country. A regular morning operation of the bowels puts you In line shape for the day's work. If you miss it you feel uncomfortable and cannot put vim in to your movements. For all bowel ir regularities HERBIXE is the remely. It purifies, strengthens and regulates. Price 50c. Sold by A. C. Koeppen & Bros Woman Adopts Novel plan to Raise Money to Pay Off Debt. Bellefontaine, Ohio. Teaching auc tion bridge is the novel plan adopted by Mrs. Lee W. Bort of this city to raise money for the purpose of wip ing out the church debt. An advertisement was Inserted in the newspapers by Mrs. Bort, in which she told of her plan, and stated that all money would go into the church treasury. It is likely that she will soon have a large class, as she is an excellent player. An appeal had been made by the Rev. John Stuart Banks, rector of Trinity Episcopal church, for money to pay the debt, and as soon as Mrs. Bort heard of it it was proposed by her that she teach auction bridge and there was no opposition to her plan. HIDDEN" WEALTH IS SOUGHT. SPLASHED WITH HOT GOLD. Salt ljike Officials Burned ns Result of Accident at Murray Mueller. Salt Lake City About $3000 worth of molten gold bullion was splashed on Willard Hansen, state weight inspector; W. E. Farr. city sealer of weights, and H. B. Glaze of the Oregon Shrt Line Railroad com pany, at the Murray smelter. The three men were standing near a pot of bullion which was being melt ed, when a laborer accidentally drop ped a piece of ore into the metal. All three were burned, but not seriously. R FAY EDS DEAD HUSBAND. Divorce Is Annulled That Woman May Get Widow's Pension. Kansas City, Mo. Mrs. Ada J. Bevelle, a widow, technically was re married to her dead husband. Ben jamin T. Bevelle, a veteran union sol dier, when the circuit court at In dependence, Mo , set aside a divorce Bevelle secured six years ago, three years ago, Mrs. Bevelle contending that the divorce was obtained by fraud. She desired the annulment of the divorce In order to receive a wid ow's pension. Dead wood, S. D. When Samuel Bennett, a former resident of Lead, died a short time ago in Goldtield, New, he left a will bequeathing $5,000 to churches and friends In this dis trict. No money was found and It was thought that the e?tate was worth less. Now it develops that he was suspicious of banks and had hidden his wealth In a tin box on the outskirts of Goldfleld. This box contains 110 shares of Homestake stock which is worth over $90 a share and many dividend checks never cashed. A friend in Goldtield is said to know the location of this box and he is being sought by the administrator of the estate. AlIlESSin DARKEN THE HAIR A Little Sage and Sulphur Makes Gray Hair Vanish A Remedy for Ail HairTroubles. SLANDER WAY ED OX HIGH. South Xorwalk, Conn. The town school officials were excited by the appearance of a Hag which bore the words: "Wanted a man. not a grass hopper," and "Down with the grass hopper!!" The flag was hoisted to the top of the pole In the night and the ropes were cut. Late in the afternoon a lineman took the banner down. The Xorwalk board of education Is trying to select a superintendent of schools. Edward H. Gumbart. prin cipal of the high school, a candidate for the office, was displeasing to Dr. William J. H. Bohanno. a member of the high school board. Mr. Bohannon recently said that tho board of educa tion should select a man. not a grass hopper, referring to Gumbart. Hence the writing on the flag. It Is believed that the banner was put up by high school boys. Who does not know the value of Saga and Sulphur for keeping the hair dark, soft and glossy and in good condition ? As a matter of fact, Sulphur is a natural element of hair, and a deficiency of it in the hair is held by many scalp specialists to be connected with loss of color and vitality of the hair. Un questionably, there is no better remedy lor hair and scalp troubles, especially premature grayness, than Sago and Sulphur, if properly prepared. The Wyeth- Chemical Company of New York put out an ideal preparation of this kind, called Wycth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, in which Sage and Sulphur are combined with other valu able remedies for keeping the hair and scalp in clean, healthy condition. If your hair is losing its color or constantly coming out, or if you ara troubled with dandruff or drv, itchy scalp, get a fifty cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sago and Sulphur from your druggist, use it according to the simple directions, and see what a dilTerence a few days' treatment will make in the appearar.c J of your hair. All druggists sell it, under guarantee that the money will be refunded if the remedy is not exactly as represented. Special Agent, Pendleton Drujr Co.