TAGE TWO " DAILY EAST OREGOMAX. IENDLETON. OREGON. THURSDAY. MAY 6. 1915. EIGHT PAGES V V7 WW W Tsf w omens Suits 7, V Li at Bargain Prices This season's latest tailor made suits must go regard less of cost or former price. Every spring wool suit is in cluded in this sale. It is up to you to profit by these re markable prices. Don't wait, buy now. S20.00 Suits are Reduced to $11.90 $25.00 Suits are Reduced to $13.05 S30.00 Suits are Reduced to $15.S5 S37.50 Suits are Reduced to S19.S5 S 10.00 Suits are Reduced to 821.95 SPECIAL SALE OF SILK DRESSES The season's latest styles in poplin, taf feta and mescaline; full flare skirts, high waist and eaton jacket effects. Sand, rose, Russian grey, navy and black; sizes 18 to 42. Prices range from $15 to $35. Fri day and Saturday Special $12.75 CHIFFONS For waists and dresses. Comes in plain shades and figured; also stripes and dots; 42 inches. The yard $1.00 to $2.00 ARGAIN ASEMENT Here's where your dollar does the work of three. Up to $27.50 Men's Suits from S3.9S to $9.65 Sizes 34 to 40; good materials and choice patterns. $1.25 Women's Shirt Waists 59 $17.50 Women's SuiU $4.49 $10.75 Women's Dresses $1.98 Up to $6.00 Women's Shoes $1.98 Velvet calf, patent leather, suede and kid, button or lace. $1.50 Boys' Baseball Suits 79 Consists of cap, pants, shirt and belt.. $1.50 Baseball Outfit 79 Consists of mask, catchers mitt, ball, breast protector and pitcher's tip. WHITE CORDUROY A real genuine corduroy that washes. Comes in the wide and narrow wale for suits and' extra skirts. The yard 65 to $1.00. GOLDEN CROSS ORGANDIE Soon be time for your thin dresses. Gold en Cross Organdie is a silk finished wash fabric, especially for summer frocks, in lots of neat designs, patterns and stripes. The yard 20 argams Up to $17.00 Girls' Dresses only $2.29 Up to $3.50 Misses' Shoes only ... $1.29 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY WILL BE REMNANT DAYS. All our remnants are in our basement. Silks, woolens, draperies, domestics, oil cloth, mosquito bar; all are Va-price. 15c Shrimp, 9 per can, 3 cans for 25 40c Sweet Relish, Monopole high quality, per can 27 Fresh Mixed Nuts, 1 lb. packages.. 23 20c Fish Loaf, halibut and cod, can 11$ 20c Orange Marmalade, per jar 10 Soups, all kinds ...9 per can, 3 for 25 T. P. W. Pure Food Shop"3T If its from our Pure Food Shop, It's Clean" Strawberries We are receiving liberal shipments of Home Grown Berries now and assure you the choicest berries at reasonable prices. Today we quote the box r. 20 Prices will decline soon. Pickles We received today a complete assortment of pickles in 8-oz. jars, es pecially fine for family trade and pic nics. Fancy Sweet, the jar 15 Fancy Sour, the jar 12Vzt Fancy Sweet Chow Chow, jar.... 12Vtt Fancy Sweet Relish, jar 12y2? PHONE US YOUR ORDERS. Oranges Are now in theif prime, sweet, juicy navel oranges, dozen 30 to 50. Marshmallow Float Again in stock, the can 10 Used in a hundred ways. Jams & Jellies Pure fruit products, 8-oz. jars, speci al price 15 Fresh Fruits and Vegetables If its on the market you'll find it is our pure food shop. T. P. W. Coffees Our new blend T. P. W. Xtra grade packed in one pound foil lined bags, the best drink ing coffee on the market today, the pound 40 When you want better cof fee ask for T. P. W. Xtra grade. Blue Rose and Moonbeam Head Rice Extra fancy grades, 2 pounds 25 Don't buy a Coffee Percola tor until you read our next Saturday's ad. Something Extra Special. Pork & Beans Van Camps and Sniders, fresh supply at reduced prices: No. 1 cans, the can 10? No. 2 cans, 3 for 50? No. 3 cans, the can 25 Campbell's Pork and Beans Full one pound cans, 2 for 25? Dried Fruits We carry only one grade and that is the best. Apricots, lb 20 Peaches, 2 lbs 25 Prunes, 3 lbs 50 Black Figs, 2 lbs 25 White Figs, 2 lbs 25 Loganberries, lb 35 '"T L.. 1 m feenuM COUPCM Tlio Peoples UarohousQ Where It Pays to Trif'e. Save Your T. P W. Trading Stamps a 'V PRtfiiuM "Fourth I'stat" to Ifarn How. COLLMUIA, Mo., May 6. "Jour nalism week." to be devoted to shop tlk and entertainment of newspaper and magazine men of Miesourl and other states began here today. The ' -V will last five days. A HEW INTEREST will lie taken In your meal when the appetite "comes back" and you are Ho longer afraid of any after eating ttletreu. You ran help Nature In I'lit.giiiK about such a condition by the U (if HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters One of the principal speaker or the meeting will be Charles Gratsy, of the Baltimore Sun, formerly a Mis souri newspaper worker and known throughout the state to newspaper men. The program Is planned as a part of the education of the itudenU of the University's school of Journalism, which daily edits and publishes the University Mlssourlan, a four page newspaper. I Ix-wIhUmi Otrltrab Canal. MCWI.STON, Idaho. May 5. In hon or of the opening of the 8 1-2 mile ralles-C'elllo canal, which for the first time will permit uninterrupted navigation of the Columbia and Snake rivers from the Pacific ocean to Uw iton, a distance of 4S7 miles, and to the l'r.et ItHpids. in the upper Co lumbia. 450 mil-s, a huge celebra tion was held here. Thousands of visitors were here. A committee of cenators and congress men, representing the V. 8. govern ment, and the governors and com mittees from the legislatures of the Pacific northwestern states, added dignity to the occasion. Government to Allot Land. WASHINGTON, May 6. Several thousand acres In the Htandmg Rock Indian reservation In North and South Dakota will be allotted with appli cations filed beginning today as a basis. The applications will be re ceived at Timber Lake, 8. D., and Bis marck, N. D. Allottments will be made May 19th. C'arrnnza FYvlIng Good. WASHINGTON. D. C, May . Early recognition of his government will lie asked of the United fitatei goon by General Carranza. chief of the constitutionalist forces, according to unofficial advices received here. RECORD OF DEEDS AND OTHER INSTRUMENTS SatUfaclion of Mortgage. A mortgage executed by T. F. Boylen to the First National Bank of Pendleton, January IS, 1915 for JS500, Is paid and satisfied. Chattd Mortgage. S. Norton Pobo to Ralph A. Hotte. 150. 1 Overland roadster, 1911 mod el. H. E. Stubbs and C. L. Shutter ti J. W. Craik. $150, ! mares. Mortgage H. E Stubbs and Chas. L. Shutter to H. C. Swayze, 500. The SW 1-4 of NE 1-4 of sec. 5, T. 4 N., K. 28 E., W. M., containing 40 acres. W. Roy Black to S. H. Warfleld. $1000. All of block 1 of Black's ad dition to Milton. Deeds. Maxwell Land ft Irrigation Co., to Chas. L. Shutter. 810; 20 acres In sec. 5, T. 4 N.. R. 29 E W. M Maxwell Land & Irrigation Co., to Hurry E. Stubbs, 810; 20 acres In see. 5, T. 4 N., H. 29 E., W. M. B. K. Richards, ads., to Albert Ramsey, $39.50. Lot 1 In block 3, Kirk's addition to Athena. John II. King to Arthur L. Grover. $2000. All of my Interest in the NW 1-4 of sec. 11, T. 4 N., R. S3 E., W TVKSDAYS RECORDS. Satisfaction of Mortgage. A mortgage executed by E. W. Rhea to First National Bank of Pendleton. October SO. 1914, for f 7392, la paid and satisfied. Assignment of Mortgage. A mortgage executed by R. A. Hug to Canie Gulott March 11, 1915, as signed to Asa M. Evans for $423. Chattel Mortgage. C. A. Kenney to Baker-Boyer Nat. Bank, 8900. His Interest in the grain crop now growing or to be grown dur ing the season of 1915 on 100 acre of barley on sec. 22, T. ( N., R. 34 E. W. M. Mortgage. F. M. and W. A. Woods to Fred S. Ashley, $848 50. A tract of land in sec. S3, T. N., R. 35 E., W. M. Deed. Mary E. Hanna to H. M. Elder, $100. The south 20 feet of lot 6 and all of lots 7 and 8 and the south hall of lot 9 all in block 220, Rescrvatiol addition to Pendleton. Alice M. Tiderington and husband to Rose E. Barry, 810, a tract of land In sec. 23, T. N., R. 35 E., W. M. j Stories From the War Zone i i BY WILLIAM G. SHEPHERD. (United Press Staff Correspondent) PARIS, April 26. (By Mail to New York.) Within sixty or seventy miles Thoroughfares Kept Free. "The side streets are used for park ing automobiles, trucks and other wheeled conveyances, but the prlncl- of the capital are cities, filled with pal thoroughfares are kept free for rrencn people wno lor me past mui months have lived tinder German rule. What is life like in these towns When the kaiser's hordes swept southward last July on their gigiuitlc attempt against Parts the people of northeastern France heard them com ing and fled in vast numbers, scat tering to all parts of the country. movements of troops. "All shops and stores are open by order of the German commander. Practically no business is being done. Only the New Galerles, a large de partment store, seems to get any trade at all; the German officers do thelt shopping there. "The railway station Is reserved for troops. It Is always bustling. Citi zens out of work, station themselves Diseased Meat Is a deadly poison RESOLVE that YOUR home will always be FREE from impure, contaminated meats and lard by resolving to Always Buy Government Inspected Meat WE SELL IT IN FENDLETON, AND IT COSTS NO MORE THAN THE OTHER KIND. HAMS. Another shipment of those eastern corn-fed, mild cured, government inspected HAMS just received. Better phone for an order. OREGON MARKET TWO PHONES 600 AND 601 815 Main Street. J. S. Rogers, Prop. method of adevrtlslng open to them, tut that nothing compares with news paper spaco for getting results, and he believes that this applies with equal force to every other interest which depends on reaching the peo ple. He says that the man who Ib too modest to advertise, whether he Is selling Swiss cheese or Italian grand opera, is too modest to stay in business. Mnnv rnnM not flee manv more would not; so the colossal gray flood, aIon the rin separating the street swept over them and pinned them: fro t"e railway tracks and peep down and there they are to this day, I through at the passing troop trains. .h,ir aaliv live, ruled and reeulated , Others go to the St. Martin suburbs. by orders emanating from the local headquarters of the various German commanders. Here Is a picture of life In St. Quen tin under German rule, St. Quentln, a charming French city but little more than an hour's ride on a rail way train northward from Parts. The picture was drawn by a French citi zen of the place who succeeded In making his escape through the Ger man lines: "The city was never so bustling as now, ' the speaker tuld tne corres pondent. "Across the square in front of the city hall rapid autos filled with German officers dash In all directions, they are coming from La Fere, from Laon, from Vernand and from Cam- bral. Troops are leaving the train at the station, fifes and drums play ing; land wehr patrols come and go escorting small groups of prisoners, or relieving the guards in various quarters of the town; a group of townspeople stand reading a notice Just posted by German military au thorities purporting to quote a Paris newspaper begging for peace: the notice is headed: "WISE WORDS OF A FRENCH NEWSPAPER." "Under the gothlc arches of the city hall a detachment of landwehr stand sheltered. On the first floor, in the great gala hall a group of mu nicipal councllmen sit, night and day, Issuing billets for lodging soldiers and requisitions demanded by the German Invaders; the police commissary andj near the road to Ham, and listen to the cannon boom. Some days, when the wind is favorable, the cannons sound louder. Then there la much subdued joy for the people believe the French are advancing to deliver them from the German invader. In spite of the long months of waiting and the many times they have been deceived in this way, they are still confident. "In the very atmosphere, however, there is a load of sadness. An air of mourning hovera over the place. One I', oppressed by an agonising sense of calamity which has befallen the city, a feeling common to those living in all the cities of the Invaded portions of France. One rarely aees an Inhab itant of the town walking the streets for they appear to be hiding In their homes so sorrowful faces and tears may not be remarked by the enemy. CHAUTAUQUA IDEA IS GAINING IN THE WEST Few people realize what proportions the Chautauqua, as an Institution, has attained. Although the idea has reached Its largest development In the east, because such gatherings have been running there for a longer time, the west is fast catching up. The Ellison-White System reports a more rapid development of the Chautauqua spirit through the northwest and on the Pacific coast than they believed could be possible. DYSPEPSIAOVERCQME Ton Up the 8tomach with Hood' Sarsaparilla. When you have dys'pepsla your llf Is miserable. You have a bad taste In your mouth, a tenderness at the pit of your stomach, a feeling of puffy fulness, headache, heartburn, and sometimes nausea. Dyspepsia Is difficult digestion i that is what the word means and the only way to get rid of It is to give vigor and tone to the stomach ana the whole digestive system. Hood's Sarsaparilla, sold by all drug gists, la the one medicine which act on the stomach through the blood and also directly. Its beneficial ef fects are felt at one. Improvement begins Immediately. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies the blood, makes the rich red blood that Is needed for perfect digestion, and builds up the whole system. No other medicine can take Its place. Even figures that won't lie aro sometimes Incased In tailor mada gowns. iff&i iii xinv wiaco.Mr. AWAITS YOt IIKKK. The Shopper, the Business Man, Tourist, Commercial Traveler, Pleasure Seeker, find the best accommodations at the Multnomah. E.00 bedrooms. Rates to Yoa r,0 .ronmn, per day 9t 0l )O0 room with bath. pr dy 1 .V loo rooms ititn Imth. per day 2 OO 2oo Isrge outlrie rooms, htth, per da; 3 .VI Kiln permit) In room, ad ditions! 1 Oil This buerau supplies practically all his men, In civil attire, but with arm-1 the attractions for this whole terrl tands In St. Quentln colors, are heldjtory and has 110 chautauquas on at the disposition of the military The (icrman Headquarters. The German commander's head quarters are at the Credit Lyonnais, the city's largest banking establish ment, but part of his administration has headquarters at the second larg est bank, the Comptolr d'Escompt. "The theater houses a company of landwehr. Nearby the restaurant Algle-Nolr has become "The German Restaurant," and here the German non-commissioned officers have their mess. The commissioned officers fre quent the more Imposing cafes and restaurants, this being onei of their favorite occupations. At 5 o'clock the pastry shop, Ca veug become the rendezvous of the ekgants of the army. Bplk and span officers In monocles and full regi mentals, strut and gosBlp and devour cakes or group themselves around tiny tables and sip port or cherry with tartes and petitfours. "But the liveliest tables of all is that at which the kaiser's fourth son, Prince AugUHte, fraternises with his cronies and cracks Jokes with ' hii dapper staff-officers. "All these officers live In the pret ty villas bordering the aristocratic Itue Charlcs-Picard and the rich Champs-Elysees, up and down which streets every morning they caracole upon horses of great pride. The em peror himself when he visited St. Quentln, lived In the old Charles Bas quln home facing the Champs Elysees. This Is one of the most elegant pri vate houses In the country. "The Qlrls' Seminary has been transformed into a hospital. So has Fervacques Palace. The Henri Mar tin school also. They are all -overflowing with German wounded and ambulances arrive throughout the day and night. St. Hllalre Barracks are occupied hy landwehr. In the courtyard of this group of buildings all the citi zens of St, Quentln who are subject to mobilization, some 5000 In num ber, must present themselves once 0 week. These 'men were surprised by the German advance before their day of mobilization bad arrived. their list this season where last year they handled but sixty, and there were but sixty-nine on the coast, in cluding the Independents. This show ft great gain In the number of com munities taking up this welfare move ment. To Inform. Interest and attract the largest number of people to the.e week-long gatherings In 110 differ ent communities means a startling out put for advertising In one way and another. The advertising expense is far ahead of any other source of out lay except thetalent. The money this bureau will spent for talent will at most reach the 1200,000 mark the present season. J. R. Ellison, general manager of the Ellison-White Chautauqua System says they have tried about every ESOOTIlEns MOTOR CAR WITH THE JOY OF SPRING IN YOUR BLOOD, THERE IS A CONSTANT TEMPTATION TO BE AT THE WHEEL OF A CAR LIKE THIS. Its instantaneous responsiveness, the ease with which it gets underway, the abundance of power, the pronounc ed gliding sensation, the steadiness at high speed, the freedom from gear shifting, the soft, full leather cush ions, the sensitive springs these and other qualities en ables you to realize to the full the delights in motoring. F'cn Pay Homage to father's Frfsnd "I an not surprised to observe the number of men who como Into the store to purchase 'Mother's Friend,' " . remarked a leading druggist It Is a happy thought to send hubby to the dru( store. "Mother' Friend" Is applied externally over the abdominal muscles. It Is a gentle, soothing lubricant. penetrates to the finenetwork of nerve beneath the skin and has a marked tendency to relieve the muscular strain to which these brood, flat abdominal muscles are subjected. The cords, ten. dons and ligaments are thus permitted to stretch without the corresponding surface train so often Involved during the period of expectation. This in part accounts for the entire absence, In many cases reported, of nausea, morning sickness and other distresses, such m laeeratlon of the epl dermis so often the conn when tills gcntlt form of hihrlcntlon Is neglected. "Mothers Friend" ha been highly recommended by a host of women whe know from experience end by men whe know from observation. Write Bradfleld Regulator Co., SOS Inmar Dl'lir,, Atlanta Oa., and we will send yntt a valuable 1UU book to expectant mothers, The wheelbase is 110 inches. The price of the car com plete with extra tire, tube, tire chains and tire cover, de livered to you at Pendleton is $900. Pendleton Auto Co. Phone 541 812 Johnson Street ZEROLE iho Standard Oil for Moior Cors