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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1913)
(C PAGE TWO. mTI.V KART OKFOONTAN. ETOX. OKKOOy. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER in. 101-1 ETGTTT PAGES. A Magnificent Showing of e Season's Sfyles th JflfE are able to offer you the pick of the best styles from the leading manufacturers of the country. The prettiest and most becoming up-to-date wearing apparel in exclusive pat' terns and choice fabrics. You can be absolutsly certain that what you buy here is new and right and that the price is as small or smaller than you get it elsewhere. Ladies of Pendleton and Vicinity, don't fail to avail yourself of our unusually large stock of New Fall Suits Every fabric, made up in all tlie most approved styles in a great range of sizes and colors. Reasonably priced, from .$14.75 to $50.00 New Fall Coats The new materials, such as Boucle, Metallesse, Chinchilla ami other pile fabrics, as well as the staple smooth materials, made in snappy three-quarter and practical full length garments with throat closing aud draped effects, at prices that have caused much comment - $7.95 to $37.59 Auto Veils Good quality chiffon auto veils, one yard wide, two yards long. Good line of colors $1.25 to $3.00 Lace Drape Veils Lace drape veils in black, -white, green and brown : $1.00 to $2.50 Veilings Good line of shadow and Shetland veilings, black, white and colors, yard 35 to $1.00 Novelty Suiting A new fall auiting just received, in all colors, with neat de sign, medium weight, 36 inches wide, the yard 65 Round-Up Gloves You can't get them at any other store. Our gloves have "class" and quality. Exclusive designs. An article that is a real souvenir and at the same time 8erviceable..$l to $4.50 ROUND-UP SOUVENIRS You'll find here an excellent stock of souvenirs. You'll want something to take home with you. Come and see what we have. ROUND-UP HATS Here's where you can get the real Round-up Hat. Hats with an individuality and a style that you can't find elsewhere. They're economically priced, too $3.50 to $15.00 ROUND-UP MUFFLERS There's only one real Round-up Muffler, and you'll find it here. It comes in a wide range of colors, 32 inches square n very catchy design. Very attractive. Price $1.50 ROUND-UP PENNANTS Here's where you'll find the greatest values in pennant. good designs on extra quality felt 25f 50 and 75 NEW CREPE Material for dresses and extra waists. Comes in tan, blue, navy brown and gray. The yard 35 Call at Oar Booth in the Fair Pavilion and get Full Particulars Concerning Free Planing Mill Furniture. The Peoples Warehouse WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE SAVE YOUR T. P. W. TRADING STAMS BEN TILLMAN "COMES BACK" south Carolina Solon of Ue Plrtur- rMque Language Snows Old Time Vigor Again. (By Burton K. Standlsh. written for the United Press.) WASHINGTON', Sept. 12. "Pitch fork Ben" Tillman ha Joined the "come back." The aged South Car olina aolon. whose picturesque lan guage and vitriolic power of Invective earned him hia nickname, haa been in poor health for four years. He ha not once during that time shown flash es of his old-time-vigor in debate. But the other day, Pitchfork Ben" a yoke of steers, waiting beside a big Then the minister, who has alwuys re mnplo tree In the woods. It was a gurded his charge as r mere stepping lobby gift that reached the spot. ntone, and who has always had an eye Senator Williams for the democrats and an ear open solely for the call to tried to explain why maple sugar did the ciiy. begins to buse them as being not need governmental bounty, but i nnrurisied. miserly ana incKing in ae .?e had been caught In Page's net al ong with the others, and the best he would do was to set the senate laugh ing Page lost his tariff argument by a margin of only two votes the clos est rollcnll yet had on the bill. Diarrhoea Quickly Cured. ''I was taken with diarrhoea and Mr. Yoiks, the merchant here, per suaded me to try a bottle of Cham- sire for the gospel. They nuked (or bread and he has given them n stone. He hns eaten their bread snd used his strength to prepare for the city. la it any wonder! they have grown tired of this kind of minister? We have talked with hun dreds of farmers In regard to this. They love God and yearn for the ser vice the church could render. Many of them huve told the writer, "Send us Stork and Cupid Cunning Plotters Many a New Home will Have IJttW juai I - - 1 . . - herlaln's Colic. Crolera and Diarrhoea '. n n,an wn ,,v" our community snu Remedy. After taking one dose of It . " possibilities nnd Its needs; f was cured. It also cured others that wn0 ' sympathetic wth Us and I gave it to." writes M. K. Gebhart. Oriole. Pa. That is not at all unusual. An ordinary attack of diarrhoea can almost Invariably be cured by one or two doses of this remedy, sale by all dealers. Adv. see our faults nnd try to help us cor. rert them, and we will furnish, the money." Where can you find a minister with! There Is usually a certain dteree of drea I In every wnmsn'i mind ss to the probable pain, UlMtn-ai and danKT or cmiu-uirin. Hut, tUanka In a moat remarkable remedy known a Mother's Friend, all fear la ban ished aud tba period is one of unbounded Jarful anticipation. Mother's Friend la uaed externally. It la a moat penetrating application, makes por tbillty to ttumlertnke this task? There! the mtiavle of tha stomach and abdomen nfe n few of them and they are doing pliant so they expand eany ami nnturnny RURAL CHURCH IS LOSING OUT good work. They receive good salar lea and are doing a grent service. Olve us the light kind of ministers and thousands of rural churches now dead will be resurrected and other thou sands now dying will he revived. The rural minister must be conse crated to his task and be willing to give hi life for his people. And when that life is thus given, as Jesus said, "He will find It" and with It the life of the rural church, . SAYS SI IK WAS TOI.D TO "FIX" FAIiSK TKSTIMONY JnKMt V. Street Declares That Iturul Ministers to Blame for Decad ence, IXDIAXAPOLJS. Ind. , Sept. 13. Hundreds of rural churches are dead : and hundreds more are dying and the SAX KHAXCISCO, Sept. II. Three rural ministers are to blame entirely. Judges of the superior court of Sac- according to James W. Street, . of'ramcnto were called as character wit-! Mackinaw of the Rural Church De-:nenses by the defense In the trial of riouncemet to this effect was maoe without pain, without dlKtrcaa and with, none of that peculiar nuiwa, nervouaneas and other ayoiptoma that tend to weukan the prospective mother. Tbu Otipld and the atork are beld up to veneration; they are rated as cunning plotters to herald the romiug of a little sunbeam to gladden ths hearts and brighten tlio homes of a boat or happy fanilllea. There are thousand of women who hats sard Mother's Friend, and thus know from experience that It ia one of our greatest contributions to healthy, happy mother hood. It Is sold by sll driiggiils st 1100 per bottle, snd Is especially recommended as a preventive of caking breasts snd all other such dlatreaaea. 4 Write to ltradneld Regulator Co., 181 Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, ia., for their Tery valnabl book to expectant mothers. Ust a bottle of Mother's KrWnd to-day. ft COPA84 V fSnciczA J -vJW II mi ) 1 cut loose again. He equalled all past records for vivid language In speak ing his little say on woman's suffrage and comparing the present times to days of decedent Rome. "It appears to me," the senator re marked, "that the relation between i votes for women and divorce,. If not cne of cause and effect, U at least one of mutual acceleration. I am no pessimist, but I am enough of a sci-! entist to accept the' truth whenever 1 see It, be it pleasant or unpleasant, and I have read history to no purpose if It has not taught me that the purity and stability of the family has In all ages been the surest bulwork of the state. It has ever been shown that when the marriage relation became insecure and women quitted their own sphere to enter that of man, the fle cay and fall of states followed. "A most disgraceful and mortifying fact which every American must blush for is to see how the American mil lionaires are buying their daughters titled husbands. Some count, baron or lord, no matter how much a de banche and scoundrel he may be, is looked up by the rich father and pur chased in the open market "To me such people seem to be go ing straight to hell, and I am no stick ler for religion." Some speech. Once a session house democrats and republicans carry their partisan fight to the baseball diamond. The game furnishes Washington newspaper par agraphers with plenty of material for week. Now comes the announcement from the senate that the staid and elderly statesmen have challenged the juniors in the house to a golf cham pionship match. The senate already has a flourishing golf club, and the! beauty about It is that there are titles for every member. Senator Galllnger, who never had a golf stick in his hand, is honorary vice president. Vice President Marshall, who has actually played two games of golf, is honorary president. However, there are some honest to goodness golfers In the ciub. There is Senator O'Gormnn of Xew York, president; Senator Cummins, of Iowa, ranked as the senate champion;; Hollls, Xew Hampshire; Hitchcock, Xebraska; Llppltt, Rhode Island; Saulsbury, Delaware; Plttman, Xe- vada; Bristow, Kansas; Townsend. Michigan; Walsh, Montana, and Rans- dell of Louisiana. The only representative whom sen ators fear In their forthcoming match is Representative Oglesby, of Xew York, who covered the 8 holes on the difficult Chevy Chase links. In 77 which is mighty close to bogey. "We haven't the date set for the match yet," said Senator Saulsbury, "but It's up to the house." At least one member of the senate of the United States ha confessed his misdeeds. His name I Page. He comes from Vermont. He stood on the senate floor on the afternoon when the sugar tariff schedule was being disposed of and pleaded for a little more protection for the maple sugar of his state. "I plead guilty," he said hesitating ly," to having been an insidious lob byist for the past five years, and now It all goes for naught," Democratic and republican members alike nodded solemnly. Then one by one they chuckled. For scarcely a man among them had not accepted from Page of Vermont, along In March of any one of these past five seasons of "sugaring-off," a box of .the finest maple sugar that ever reached the capital. Each box was packed full of half ounce cakes separately wrap ped and on the cover was a picture of the old-fashioned bobsled drawn by IF HEADACHY. DIZZY. partment at Bethany Park, Ind. In Dlggs and Attorney Harris, charged' an article written ror the united Press with subornation and perjury before J. W. Street scathingly denounces the Federal Judge Van Fleet. Judges young minister who accepts a rural Post, Fields and Shields testified that pulpit merely as a stepping stone for j Harris" reputation was good. Xell a charge In the city. His article fol-. Barton followed the judges on the l s: I siand She swore she was importuned That the rural church Is decadent: by Harris to "fix" things with Marsha Is not questioned by those who have Warrington to testify falsely In the scanned the stream that overflows inDiggs and Caminettl cases, to the urban centers of population. It no longer possesses the strength t",in.n' TltlVIj IlKfilXS mould the lives of Its people on a large vfyt vmviiiv imnviv,. spiritual plane. Rural communities r"w MOKMMi are no longer immune from modern . u . , evils. The grossest forms of sin are1. . ANijhLES. Sept. 12Super- now found amM the moat attractive r Ju"e (nJmln F. Bledsoe of rural surroundings. "Countrv slums" Irnardlno county will try the are no longer a curiosity but an alarm- ?8e of "'"lre C.eorge H. Bixby. in situation demandine Immediate fnarJ th contrluhtlnK to the del attention H.in,!reit of rural ehurrh. . '"'lUency of minor girls. The trial es are dead and other hundreds are w 111 bpln Monday morning. An an dying. It Is not because there is no . - churches might render that so many j are dead. It is because the right kind ! of leadership ia not present. Tha lnrKt ttlnplo ttnm In shnnlnir the policy of the rural church is the minister. He cornea as a nevangellst and organizes the congregation. He ; U called to direct its workers In their efforts to brink the "kingdom of C5od among men." He Is given full charge' of the work. His time is his to be use j , as he directs. Seldom does his peo-j pie question the use he makes of it.' The people have confidence In him and trust him in all church matters. They usually pay him a larger salary than any member of his congregation re ceives, notwithstanding the great fu-i rore regarding the low salaries for ministers. The homes of the commu-l nlty are open to him. Every officer) of the church has the right to look to him for help In directing the work of j the church, how has ne acted under such circumstances? Only Stepping Stone. From a careful investigation of many cases it has been established that nearly every man who has accept ed a call to a rural church does so c.nly as a stepping stone to city work. He has been Imbued with the Idea that only beginners and broken down fail ures find a place in the rural service. He believes that the big men and the strong men always go ultimately to the city and that he will soon go. This; Idea results In sermons that smell of the roar and rush of the city. They are flavored with the city opportunity and its task. They are colored with the city needs and Its sins. He sees no local observation except to preach some sermons that he expects to use later In his city church. He reads no hooks except those that deal with the city service. Ask him about the problems of his community and he will look at you as though you were a fool. Ask him If he has planuned for the enlargement of the service his church renders the people and he smiles at your simplic ity. The Great White Way of the city holds him enthralled and he does not know that many of the evils of the city are already transplanted In his own lccallty. Many Are Bolng Harrowed. With this attitude Is It any wonder that his farmer folk grow hungry for spiritual food suited to their needs? They grow weary of being harrowed with the sins of the city while their br.ys and girls are going to the devil along the county lanes. Is It any wonder they have turned away from the church and the rural minister? by Acting Presiding Judge Perry Woods. Blood Humors Commonly entice pimple, bolls, hives, eczetru or salt rheum, or some other form of eruption; but sometimes they x!it In t:ie system. Indicated by feel ings of weakness, lansruor. loss of ap petite, or iremnil ile'.i'lty, without .uuMrr any breaking cut. They rre expelled and the whole pys tem 1 ier.ovate.1, t ireusthi nol and lutaM by Hocd'o Garsnparilla Get it todav In usual liquid form or ehognluted tablets (itlli'd Sarsatat II CASCARETS Your Liver In tail of Bile; Bowels Cloggied. &Wmach fionr, Tongue Coated, Breath Bad. Get a 10-cent box now. You're bilious! You have a throb bing sensation In your head, a bad taste in your mouth, your eye burn', your skin Is yellow, with dark ring under your eyes; your Hps are parch ed. Xo wonder you feel ugly, mean and Ul-temepered. Your system Is full of bile not properly passed off, and what you need la a cleaning up Inside. Don't continue being a bil ious nuisance to yourself and those who love you, and don't resort to harsh physics that irritate and In jure. Remember that most disord ers of the stomach, liver and bowels are cured by morning with gentle. thorough Cascaret they work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from your druggists will keep your liver and bowels clean for months. Children love to take Cascarets. because they taste good and never gripe or sicken For Sunburn TRY Mt. Hood PEROXIDE CREAM Every Jar Guaranteed For sale only by Tallman & Co. LEADING DRUGGISTS. You can't buy wrong if you buy of us Appersoi Each the'best car in its class If you are interested in "more miles per gallon" see us. I I Ask any of our customers about Pendleton Auto Service