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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1915)
PACK SIX ;gontan. tendleton, Oregon, Wednesday. Ami. 21. 1915. EIGHT PAGE3 lit Id !....IJ AI m iris rai E. OBEGOM ElBIT&s tetir.R t'i show what it represents. I am gintc 1" get Genevieve H.V.W'Y to letter a ilain, rm titl ami atta'h to the lower bar of the frame. I would have got It done yesterday but when t Inquired for the tools with whioh to shape a board found that rpenter had looked his chest e only implement available pocket knife. I also learned I to my surprise, that carpenters won't. I in fact dare not, do a -lick" of work from noon on Saturday till Monday morning. What would Fendleton "wood butchers" think of that? 1 shall typewrite appropriate titles - v..i .- .h. vnn v. mnd lor and Place m wrani ,... Air l ViK-omforintily VM With' the two and a half doien photos .i.mi I.- uiiiuincr in froin which illustrate I'matilla countys .1.- .:..i.i.. .i smuilvliia-' Industrial activity. The two eastern M'Kti Exhibits) WIUi THKh. ri;Mn.inm mx is now on joit ii ci.xkks wkathek 11 VS HKl IN HAH. (By 0. K. Cranston.) SAN FttAXClSCO. April il. (SiH'lal. ) I hardly know where or how to begin. I have been her two whole days, am comfortably settled at a residential hotel In Leavenworth treet. In "The City," and shall be "on the Job" from now on during my (our. The weather la not very pleas ant. I have not seen the sun at all: as yet and It is uncomfortably cold, j especially in the evening, when ther( has been a cold, raw wina wm. tiwoeps in from the Golden Gate and .hills one to the bone. I find plenty to keep me busy. There are Innu merable details that must be looked after. The first thing I have tackled has boon getting our exhibit supplied with appropriate title so as to in form visitors of their names and or igin Our Round-up panorama framed and hung but bears no let (irer.m booths are in me vreson building and the others in the ag ricultural building, are attractive and well supplied with exhibit mate rial but all of this has been supplied by Malheur, Baker and Wallowa counties. Umatilla must get busy and send down a lot of stuff of this year's growth. Get this fact before ihe people of the county as emphat ically as possible. We will shift the articles now on show to make room for new material, rrovided of course, it Is creditable, and particularly If It Is superior. I know superior stuff can be got, but it won't get itself. We oucht to have grain, grasses, fruit and wool. The Tendleton Woolen Mills have a fine booth Just next to us on the north but It seems to me that the sheen men of our cdunty ought have a display of wool here, to also. Tliere Is more Catarrh In this section of the country tljun !l othtr diseases put Mgetlier, and until the last few years was aupixwil to be Incurable. Vot a great msiiy yesrs decturs pronounced It s local diaes. und prescribed local remedies, sod by constantly falling to cure with lcal treatment, pronounced It incurable. Scl ew-e has proven Catarrh to be a eonstl tutlnnal disease, and therefor requires conatltullonsl treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney Co., Toledo, Olilo. Is the only Constitutional cure on Hie market. It is taken Intarnallj In doses from 10 drops to a teaspeonful. It arts directly on the blood and mucous urfaces of the systesj. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cur, fiend for clrcnlars and testimonials. address : P. . CHENEt Co., Toledo, 0 Sold br Pruixlsts. 7 Sc. Take UaH's Family Tills for constipation BE PRETTY! TURN GRAY HAIR DARK KY GRANDMOTHER'S OLD FA VORITE RECIPE OF SAGE TEA AND SCXFUUR. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound d. brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streak ed or gray; also ends dandruff. Itch lax scaly and stops falling hair. Tears ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays,' by asking at any drug store for "Wy eth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this fa mous old recipe for about SO cents. Don't stay gray! Try ltl No one -can possibly tell that you darkened tour hair as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair dis appears, end after another applica tion or two, your hair becomes beau tifully dark, thick and glossy. 'president to review THE ATLANTIC FLEET WASHINGTON. April 10 The Atlantic fleet will be reviewed in New York harbor May 17 by Presi dent Wilson. Secretary Daniels an nounced the date at the conclusion of conferences with Admiral Fletcher, comander-in-chlef of the fleet. Details of the review and of the events ashore will be worked out as soon as possible by the navy depart ment, in co-operation with Mayor Mitchell, of New York. The review will be followed by a water carnival at n'ght and a land parade probably the next day. May IS. The exact number of war craft to be assembled at New York has not yet been decided, but practically all of the battleships, many of the crui sers, gunboats and destroyers attach ed to the fleet and some of the sub marines and auxiliaries will be order ed out. The review will be the first held since October, 191!. Not later than June 25 the fleet will start for San Francisco by way of the Panama Canal. Maneuvering on route, the ships, it is expected, will pass through the canal July 4. Yukon Ire Breaks Early. DAWSON, Y. T., April 20. The Yukon river ice is breaking up the earliest in its history. The river is already open from White Horse, the head of navigation, to Lake Labarge, IS days earlier than last year. The ice on Labarge is so thin that crossing is dangerous. PUT STOMACH IN FINE CONDITION SAYS INDIGESTION RESULTS FROM AN EXCESS OF BY DIKXHIvORIC ACID. Undigested food delayed in the stomach decays or rather ferments the same as food left in the open air, ays a noted authority. He also tells us that indigestion is caused by Hyper-acidity, meaning, there Is an ex cises of hydrochloric acid in the stomach which prevents complete di gestion and staru food fermentation. Thus everything eaten sours in the stomach much like garbage sours In a can, forming acrid fluids and gases whkh Inflate the stomach like a toy balloon. Then we fee a heavy, lumpy misery in the chest, we belch up gas, we eructate sour food or have heartburn, flatulence, water-brash or nausea. He tells us to lay aside all digestive aids and Instead, get from any phar macy four ounces of Jad Salts and lake a tahlespoonfu! in a glass of wa ter before breakfast and drink while H is effervescing and furthermore, to continue this for a week. While re lief follows the first dose, It Is Im portant to neutralize the acidity, re move the gas-making mass start the liver, stimulate the kidneys and thus promote a free flow of pure digestive Juices. Jad Salts Is Inexpensive and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with litl and sodium phosphate. This harm lew! sails Is used by thousands ol people for stomach trouble with ex cellent results. SHARP LOSS IS SHOWN HI WHEAT CHICAGO, 111. Wheat closed 5-8 f 3c lower. Prices at the opening today were somewhat lower. May wheat was l-2c down at the outset July was 1-Sc off and Septembe; unchanged. A better Inquiry was reported for the new wheat. The Liverpool mar ket was higher. A heavy reduction waa noted in the visible supply. Numerous stop orders in the later trading caused a setback in wheat. Com opened strong. Values were practically unchanged from last night's closing. The expert demand continued strong. Oats opened low er. Provisions were steady. WHEAT. May Open. 11.63 1-4; high, $1.63 1-4; low, $1.56 1-2; close, 11.60 3-4 July Open, $1.37 3-4; high, $1.57 3-4; low, $1.33 7-8; close, $135 B. Sept. Open. $1.22 1-2; high, $1.22 5-8; low, $1.20 1-2; close, $1.21 7 HOG MARKET IS HOLDING FIRM mmk IN Z in 'ru (Tuesday's Market PORTLAND, Ore., Market for hogs continues firm at North Port land with sales again this morning at $7.80, which was really the top for offerings yesterday, although one lot of stuff which carried no extra freight was sold to Puget sound at a nickel more. General hog market range: Best light $7.75 7.80 Medium light 7 607.5 Good to heavy 7.35 07.50 Rough and heavy 7.00 7 25 (attic Supply Nominal. Only two loads of cattle and calves arrived In the North Portland yards over night, these being the total ship menu of all livestock. One carload wis sent In from Oakland by F. B. White, while the same party had a car in from Yoncalla. General cattle market range: Select steers $7.60 7.75 Heat hay fed steers 7.25 7 35 (iood to choice 7.000 7.15 Ordinary to fair M0.75 Ui-Mt cows 6.00-36.2S Good to prime 5.75i?t6.00 Ordinary ; 4.0005.50: Select calves 7.5008 00 j Fancy hulls 6r.0tfi6.00! Ordinary 4.0006.00 General mutton range: Spring lambs $9 00 0 9.25 Grain fed shorn lambs . . . 8. 00 llest shorn wethers 7.00 Best shorn ewes 5.60 Wool stock Is generally quoted al $1.00 higher than shorn. Til Wound!0 Ga IT V ' :1 " ' " '"' "I This is the car that 38,000 happy owners have given the "rough and tumble" acid test of real automobile owners5 wear An automobile on the road for 18 months in constant, every-day use by an owner ceases to be a designer's theory. ' It becomes either a great automobile success; Or it becomes a great automobile failure. Multiply one model by 38,000 and give each one of these 38,000 auto mobiles day in and day . out rough and tumble road wear, and if this, car stands up and delivers, it has be come one of the rare great auto mobile successes. And that is the Maxwell success today that is exactly the u Acid Test" that the Maxwell has passed through, and that is why the Maxwell is the most talked about automobile that is built today. The Maxwell automobile is today one of the very few great automobile successes the world has ever known. And this is thecar we urge you to see. This Is the car that you owe it to yourself to see. We want to tell you about its hill climbing triumphs. We want to tell you about its speed and endurance records. We want to show you and add up for you every one of its new features. Read This list of Expensive Features. The 1915 Maxwell Has Tiese Features And Many Others. PURE STREAMLINE BODY A large, roomy, beautiful body, fitted with deep, comfortable upholstering, ample leg room, adjustable front seat and the best fourteen ooat, hand-painted and striped finish. All Maxwell bodies are constructed of pressed steel, mounted on a steel-channel sectioned frame, offering the greatest possible strength with minimum weight SPRING 8U8PEN8ION Without a doubt you will find the Maxwell the easiest riding, light car made. With Its amply sufficient wheel base, and semi-elliptic front springs and three-quarter elliptic rear springs, built of the very best ef spring steels, the Maxwell cushions Its passengers from all the Jars and bumps of rough roads. It is so comfortable and easy riding that you will remark the difference on your first ride. THE POWERFUL MAXWELL MOTOR The most powerful, durable motor of Its size made. Ample power to negotiate any road, mud, sand or hill always at your com mand. Almost troubleproof, every part accessi ble, and what is more, it Is a motor of genuine economy. More miles per gallon, day in and day out, than you would believe possi ble If one were to tell you. The Maxwell motor stands to-day one of the very best in dependable efficiency. DOUBLE 8HELL RADIATOR A beautiful, troubleproof, highly efficient radiator. Every part but the shell constructed of high-grade copper. It will not corrode and leak. Protected against breakage by a heavy pressed steel shell and special shock-absorbing devices on each side of the frame that protects it against the many strains and twists of the car. THE STEERING GEAR Irreversible worm and gear, the only safe steering device. Maxwell uses a gear instead of a sector. This makes adjustment very simple, as you have merely to turn the (ear one-quarter way and you have a new surface. Just as goo 1 as a complete new steering unit BRAKES THAT HOLD AND LAST One square Inch of braking surface to every twelve pounds of weight. That's more than most any other car gives to-day. Maxwell brakes are thoroughly dependable, enclosed and protected from dust and dirt, and have special anti-rattllng devices. Maxwell brakes are very easy to handle. The slightest pressure of the foot and your car comes to a dead stop. The Maxwell Company's Guarantee of Service to Maxwell Owners No other automobile is backed by a more reliable service than that guaranteed every Maxwell owner. More than 2,000 Maxwell dealers every part of this country are always ready to srive expert advice, to make adjustments, and to supply" new parts at reasonable mice. This splendid Maxwell dealer service organization is perfected and completed by the chain of Maxwell owned and Maxwell operated Service Branches. Sixteen great Maxwell Service Stations are so located throughout the country that a Maxwell dealer can supply any part for an owner within a few hours if not in his stock. Maxwell Service is one of the great advantages enjoyed by Maxwell owners. Order a Maxwell from us now, and when you want it delivered, we will give you your car not an excuse on delivery day "EVERY ROAD IS A MAXWELL ROAD" BURNS & PETERSON F.0.1 BECTMC ffCC DETiorr turns BOA Phone 46, 726 Cottonwood St. r.&a bjctuc tree MTtorr iTAiTu vjJ mu CROP ADVISES BEST III YEARS (Tuesday's Market.) PORTLAND, Ore. Special crop advices received by the Journal from various Pacific northwest points In dicate that not only Is winter wheat In excellent condition in the better land sections but in the light land districts the outlook is the most fa vorable in years. While the spring wheat acreage is less than normal, due to the fact that most sections were able to put the bulk of their crop in during the fall months, the spring wheat crop is growing unusu ally well and in some sections vies with the winter planting for suppre macy. Flour Selling price: Patent, $ 80; Willamette valley, 16.80; local straight, $8:30; bakers', $6.80; ex port, $5.605.75. Hay New crop, buying price: Willamette valley timothy, fancy, $12.5013; eastern Oregon-Idaho fancy timothy, $15; alfalfa, $11911. SO; vetch and' oats, $11; clover, $8 0 i per ton. Grain sacks 1915, nominal; No. 1 Calcutta, ( 8-4c. Mlllstuffs Selling price: Dran, $26.60; shorts, $28.60. Ilolled barley Selling price; $31 !1 per ton. Corn Whole, $35.60; oracked, $36.60 per ton. If a son doesn't tnke, after his fath er it Is usually because the old man left nothing to take!