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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1914)
PAGE TWO PAttX TSA8T ftftEflftKM. y. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, MAKClt 11, 1914-, -.. EIG1IT PAGES March finds us with much that is new for spring. In the Dry Goods and Ready -to Wear sections you will find large quantities of the new merchandise for spring. The styles for the coming season are firmly estab lishedEaster is not far distant. Purchasing for your spring ward robe should not be delayed many exclusive ideas and designs are here now that will be gone later, and thev cannot be duplicated. IX THE MKX'S DEPARTMENT IS A GREAT SHOWING OF THE SEASON'S BEST PRODUC TIONS. Stylos, conservative and otherwise; qualities not to Ikj found elsewhere; values that areleyqnd competition. Just received a' large yt'.,n choice lot of . kimonas The most dainty accessory to a woman's toilette. They come in a very wide ranjre of materials and patterns that vou'll have no difficulty in finding just what you want PLAIN STRAIGHT KTMONAS of crinkle crepe. Mesca line bound in both light and dark colors $1.25 and $1.39 Dainty Japanese figur- ed Serpentine Crepe il17lOnaS prettily trimmed with ribbon in empire stvle, in both lirht, and dark colors . $1.95 to $2.25 Satinette Kimonas Exceeding pretty are thse kimonas. Satinette looks just like mescaline, and retains its lustre after washing, $2.39 and $2.95. Beautiful Cheney and fr'-. ' Messaline Silk . . kimOTiaS in a large variety of colors and patterns ranging in price from : $3.95 to $7.50 New Arrivals in the Art Department STAMPED BATH TOWELS. These towels come with delft blue or rose pink stripes, and with the scalloped and a pretty design, usually to be done in French knots or cross- 6tich, stamped on the border, each 75 STAMPED WAIST PATTERXS. Some with punch work and some with French and eyelet designs. On good qual ity lawn with desieri for cutting and makins, each............ 50 ' MANY BEAUTIFUL NEW DESIGNS in pillow tops, table runners and center pieces. "T. P. W." Pare Food Shop AND "DELICATESSEN," ORIGINATORS NOT IMITATORS. "DELICATESSEN NEWS' COLD ROAST-PORK, "Home Cooked" pound 50 IMPORTED SWISS CHEESE, fresh wheel just in, pound 45 BOILED HAM. well cooked, sliced to vour order, lb. 45 FANCY CHEESE in the wildest varieties. PEANUT BUTTER, fresh and sweet, pound 25 HAWAIIAN SLICED PINEAPPLE, this brand for sale HERE ONLY, very special, 6 cans 95 BANANAS We are selling more bananas, than any one store in Eastern Oregon. Our price is RIGHT. Per lb 8 Average the dozen - 25 and 30 SALMON DAY Friday Special price on canned calmon this day Watch our ad. , , , Tlio Peoples Warehouse Save Your T. P. W. Trading Stamps. Where it Pays to Trade. HKRMISTON CHILDREN IN SPELLING MATCH HERMISTON. Ore., March 11. A great deal of amusement was had at the school house on Friday even ing when the children of the gram mar grades spelled against the older settlers of the project. Prof. B. T. Youel gave out the words, the children In the third grade spelling down not only the boys and Kir Is a few years their senior but their parents and teachers. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Garner and Mrs. B. T. Youel were winners of the match. Kenneth Youel was winner of a preliminary match between the pu pils In the grades who were equally divided. Rivalry between the seventh and eighth grade and the high school grows stronger every week. Matches between the two are held frequently. Each class wining from the other oft tn' enough to create an interest and a keen rivalry. The first meeting of the voters league was held Friday evening In the Skinner hall. 8. H. Oldaker presided as tempo rary chairman and a motion was made and carried that he appoint a commute to draft a platform to be read at the next meeting of the league, which will probably be the first part of the week. Political questions concerning the local community were brought up and discussed, after which the league adjourned. A dancing class for the young mar ried people was started Thursday evening. Mrs. Rudduck will be the Instructor and will have a regular class once a week for the older set. The United Projects Social Organ lzation will hold its monthly meeting on Friday evening In the Baptist church. Dairying will be the principal num ber on the program and will be In charge of Mr. L. J. Damon, the dairy expert of the O. A. C. and U. S. de partment of agriculture. Mrs. Laura Headington had her spring opening of millinery on Sat urday afternon and today the ladles of the town are bedecked in their sew Easter creations. The high school boys and girls had another of their dances on Friday evening. About twenty couples en Joyed the evening. Miss Hattle McCune arrived Satur day morning to make her home with her sister, Mrs. Laura Headington. . Miss EIna Thomson was up from Echo Friday evening to attend the high school dance. Woman ffw Varied Interests Social and Club News, Personals, Fashions, Home Hints and Other Items of Interest to the World Feminine. society A notable early spring wedding was that yesterday which made Miss Hazel Smith the bride of John Uumm. The ceremony was performed at 10:30 in the morning at the home of Mr. -and Mrs. Will R. Wyrlck, Sl West Bluff street. Rev. S. L Grigsby, pastor of the Presbyterian church officiating. Only a few friends and relatives were present The bride wore a tailored suit and hat. Her bridesmaid was Miss Kath erine Murom, Bister of the bridegroom and Mr. Mumm was attended b Charles Milne. Immediately after the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served tor the bridal party and guests who were Mr. and Mrs. Jurgen Mumm, parents of the bridegroom, A. J. Smith father of the bride, and Mr. and Mrs. Wyrick. The young couple left on the noon train for Portland and will go on to Spokane by way ot Seattle. In Spo kane they will be the guests of Mr, Mumm's. sisters. Misses Enra and Am anda Mumm who are attending school in that city. They expect to return within a week and will make their home at the Mumm farm six miles north of this city The bride is a very charming young lady and has won many friends since she came to Pendleton to live. Her husband is one of the best known of the young wheat farmers of the coun ty and is popular in local club cir cles. Little Miss Elizabeth Bond, the baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil lard Bond, was a hostess yesterday afternoon on the occasion of her first birthday, her guests being a number of other pretty babies. They includ ed James Raley, Marion Moorhouse, Burke Hays, Mary Augusta Schaefer, Jean Frazier, Stephen Bonney and Amy Elizabeth Aldrlch. The mothers of the little ones were present and en poyed the occasion quite as much as the infants. A well known young couple of Wes ton, Benjamin W. Lee and Miss Ber tha Viola Ferguson, were married at the local Methodist parsonage Monday evening by Rev. Charles A. Hodshlre, pastor of the church. Only a few friends and relatives witnessed the ceremony. At 3 o'clock yesterday ' afternoon Miss Chrystal Merna Rhinehart be came the bride of Edward P. Enright in the offices of Justice of the Peace Joe H. Parkes who performed the ceremony. The newly married couple are residents of Camas Prairie. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Poffenberger and son LaDue, who have been visit ing at the home of Mrs. Poffenberg er's brother, E. E. Baer on the North hill for the past two weeks, left this morning for their home at Delano, Minnesota. a piece of butter rolled In flour. Close the paste over the pigeon In the form of a dumpling or small pudding, pour ing in at the last a 1IUI ml.J shim to add to the gravy. Tie each dump. ling in a cloth, put them into a pot of hot water and boil them two hours. Sed them to table with made gravy in a boat. Partridges or quails may be cooked In this manner, says the Demvet Times, also chickens, which must be accompanied by egg sauce. Raisin Mixture ut in Cookies. Cookies a little out of the ordinary are these: Cream a cupful of sugar and half a cupful of butter; then add a beaten egg, and half a cupful of sweet milk. When thoroughly mixed, stir in gradnaDy three and a half cupfuls of flour, sifted with a tea spoonful of cream tartar. The last thtng flavor with vanilla. Roll oi pat the mixture fairly thin, and cut out Tound. Make a filliwg by cooking together in a double boiler, till thick, a cup ful ot raisins,, half a cupful of cold water and a tablespoonful of flour. Spread this mixture on the cookies when they come from the oven and put together sandwich fashion. Newark News. M. L. MEYERS HEADS SALEM ELKS THIS YEAR SALEM. Ore., March 11. Milton L. Meyers, of the mercantile firm of H. W. & M. L Meyers, was elected ex alted ruler of Salem Lodge No. 336, B. P. O. E., here He succeeds Au gust Huckstein, the present postmast er. Following are the other officers elected: Secretary, George C. L. Sny. der; leading knight, A. L Anderson; loyal knierht. Harrv Wendroth- turing knight, Arthur Wallace, and tuer, Kimer Giles. Roy E. Burke and Miss Ora May Buroker, a well known young couple of Athena, were married Monday af ternoon in this city by Justice of the Peace Joe H. Parkes. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Townsend of Portland will arrive this evening to be the guests for a few days of Mrs. Townsend's sister, Mrs. Wlllard Bond. The Care of Children Abundant Health is assured when there Is good blood in the veins. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the medicine to make good blood. Begin taking It now. It Is Just what the system needs at this time and will Jo you gra.il pood. Sharpens the appetite, stead ies the nerves. Adv. It should be the wish of all parents to have their children represent the best of thought and action. It should be their natural desire to have their children stand for the highest forms of citizenship which is true not only to itself but to those about It, to the nation at large and to the God above. In the public schools of New York Cltv where Mrs. Margaret E. Wil liams is director of Home Economics, there are 50,000 girls learning domes tic science and home economics. They have two years of teaching under ex ceptlonally qualified and enthusiastic teachers before they reach the high school, and while going through the high school they are given more and more of this preparation for home making. When a child Is shown that the stars move in orderly procession, that there la no disobedience, no disloyalty, no failure to perform their functions. Its mind must be awakened somewhat to a realization of the fact that hu man beings can do the same thing. The ideal is inspired in Its mind of at tempting in the humbler work of life to serve as faithfully as do the stars. Home Hints and Recipes Easy Mending. I buy at a department store nice, firm stocking feet for three cents a pair, writes a contributor to Mothers Magazine, I cut off the old feet that are past mending and sew the new feet on the old tops, using good darn ing cotton and being careful to stretch the seam as the thread will not break. These last as long as new stockings. , Pigeons Done In Dumplings. Take six pigeons and stuff them with chopped oysters, seasoned with pepper, salt mace and nutmeg. Score the breasts and loosen all the Joints with a sharp knife, as if you were going to carve them for eating, but do not cut them apart. Make a suf ficient quantity of nice suet paste, al lowing a pound of suet to two pounds of flour; roll It out thick and divide. Lay one pigeon on each sheet of the paste with the back downward and put at the lower part of the breast Spring Blood and System Cleanser. During the winter months impuri ties accumulate, your blooj becomes Impure and thick, your kidneys, liver and bowels fall to work, causing so called "Springy Fever." You feel tired, weak and lazy. Electric Bitters the spring tonic and system cleans er is what you need; they stimulate me kidneys, liver and bowels to heal thy action, expel blood impurities and restore your health, strength and am bition. Electric Bitters makes you feel like new. Start a four weeks' treatment it will put you in fine shape for your spring work. Guar anteed. All druggists. 50c and $1.00. II. E. Bucklen & Co., Philadelphia or St. Louis. Adv. lXVKXTOlt OF RliOCK SIGNAL IS RETIRED RAX FRANCISCO. March 11. W. W. Slater, known as the dean of sig nal enghvevrs, has been retired on a pension alter GO years' service with the Southern Pacific company. Slater Is credited with the discovery ot th principle of the automatic block sig nal, which he Invented. He began rail road life as a newsboy on the Colum bia Plqua & Indiana line. - He la now (5 years old. Millions of Flowers on Show. DANVILLE. 111., March 11. Mil lions of rare flowers are on display to day in the local armory where th three day's "two-state show" of Illi nois and Indiana florists is being held, Since the abandonment of the Cook county floral show in Chicago, the ex. hibit on today is the largest in the middle west. The halls were opened to the public today. A pain in the side or back that catches you when you straighten up calls for a rubbing application of BALLARD'S SNOW LINIMENT. It' relaxes the contracted muscles and permits ordinary bodily motion with out suffering or Inconvenience. Price 25c, 50c, and Jl 00 per bottle. Sold by all dealers. Adv. Public is Shown Cartoonists at Work. CLEVELAND, March 11. A novel exhibit opened here today when the public was allowed to witness practic ally all the newspaper artists of the city papers at work In one room. From rough sketches to the finished product were on exhibit. Many of the fartoons are famous. ......... . HERBINE cures constipation and reesiaousnes regular bowel move ments. Price 60c. Sold by all dealers. Adv. i , Masons Lay Cornerstone. ' PITTSBURG. March 10. Masons from all sections of the state gathered here today for the laying of the cor nerstone of the new Masonic. Temple In, Fifth Avenue, Schenley Farms, which will take place this afternoon. Proof of Quality. " The General Arthur smokes easily and burns evenly with a firm steel-gray ash. That's proof of fine ' han. workmanship. -Ths proof of the quality is in the mild, mellow fragrance of its cool white smoke. Best Family laxative. Beware of constipation. Use Dr. King's New Life Pills and keep well. Mrs. Charles E. Smith of West Franklin. Me., calls them "Our fam ily laxative." Nothing better for adults of aged. Get them today, 25c. All druggists or by mall. H. E. Bucklen Co.. Philadelphia or St. Louis. Adv. LA GHAN'DK RKSTAl'HAXTS MI ST CLEAN VP PLACES LA GRANDE, Ore.. March 11. "Filthy basements underneath some of the restaurants of La Grande and lac kof sanitary toilet facilities are two things that must be remedied at once or you must discontinue busi ness," are Instructions left here by deputies from the office of J. D. Mickle, dairy and food commissioner. Another evil that Inspectors reported while here last week is the use of tin cans as kitchen utensils. Many of the cheap restaurants on Depot street had dosena of these tins In Use when the inspector visited them. All the tdlbles found in pttorly soldered tin! were dumped. Several of the restaur ants have already purchased a full guply of sanitary utensils. Take HERBINE for Indigestion. It relieves the pain In a few minutes and forces the fermented matter which causes the misery Into the bowels where It Is expelled. Price 60c. Sold by all dealers. Adv. He Was Lazy All Right. WASHINGTON, March 11. Repre sentative Willis, of Ohio, who has the biggest voice In captivity, is relating his experience on a stumping tour during the last campaign. Willis dis likes automobiles and so hired a buggy to go around his district in. The driver was renowned for his laziness and pure gall. On one occasion he hitched up a raw broncho from the west to the buggy shafts and let the unsuspecting Willis In. The horse took the bit In his teeth and lit out. The going was mighty rough. Willis koked at the driver and suggested that it might be well to Jump. "Aw, no," retorted the lazy one, "don't Jump. He'll throw us out in a minute anyway." SKIN GRAFTING ON HAND OF GIRL IN DALLAS DALLAS, Ore., March 11. An op eration was performed by Drs. Boll man and Staats at the Dallas hospital by which tendons taken from a goat were grafted onto the hand of Mist' Lena Waldon. 8kln taken from her own body was also grafted onto the hand. Several weeks ago. Miss Wal--don's right hand was terribly burned: and crushed In a mangle at the Dallas steam laundry; and It Is In the hope of saving the member that the graft ing operation was performed. Muiirie, Indiana, Goes Dry. ML'NCIE, Ind., March 11. A muni cipal election voted the town dry by 462 majority. COLDS CAUSE HEADACHE AND GRIP. LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE tab lets remove cause. There la ony on "BROMO QUININE." It has the signature of E. W. Grove on box. !5c. Adv. Summer ReNort Hotel Burned. SANTA CRUZ, Cal., March 11. The Hotel Ben Lomond, a summer resort at the town of that name, lost its main building by fire. The hotel was unoccupied. The loss la about $40,000. . : , CASTOR I A Por Infanta and Children. Be Kind Yea Hat8 Alurays Errjtt Bean the Signature of The Great Song Success of FISKE O'HARA f 'S&'X - 1 a 7 l f - t$v ":J I in his romantic play "The Rose of Kildare' Words and music complete, by Chas. Bradley and Ed ware Paulton in next Saturday's East Oregonian WATCH FOR IT The saving of the music published in the Saturday East Oregonian each week will give you a collection of the latest and leading popular and comic opera successes. Absolutely Free To Our Readers