DAILY FAST OIU'GOMAX. PENDLETON'. OREGON. TIU'RSPAY, JUNE 10, 1915. EIGHT PAGLS (r mm ciTHSTiny !.M!lli:i!ll!Illillllllil!lllllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllll!!lllll!l!llll!lllll!ll!ll!il!l!lll!llllllll'. IhUlM OllUrtllUil EHGLAKO AS SER 1 Everybody's Doing' It j 1 I IWCV. TWO r' f. n4 1 irf EXTRAORDINARY For Friday and Saturday WE OFFER FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY YOUR CHOICE OF ONE HUNDRED WOMEN'S CHOICE NEW SUITS AT THE ASTONISHINGLY LOW PRICE OF $10o98H They include regular and raised waist lines, full flare skirts. Colors include navy, sand, Bel gian blue, black, black and white checks and wisteria; sizes 16 to 44. MEN'S SUIT SALE OUR MEN'S SUIT SALE OFFERS YOU MORE THAN EVER FOR YOUR MONEY. Hart, Schaffner & Marx clothes always give a man a lot for his money, especially at prices such as we ask for them. Any dollars we subtract from the prices mean so many dollars added to the value you get. Getting value is the main business of any buyer; not to see how little you can pay, but how much you can get for what you do pay. That's why this sale should have the attention of every man who knows about it. Visit Our Bargain Baseme't where every day bar gains offer savings not to be found elsewhere. First quality, desirable merchandise at prices even below cost. New bargains are added every day. If you don't see what you want to day, come back tomor row. DRUG SUNDRIES Save money by buying your "vacation supplies" here. 50 Creme Elcaya 39 23 Peroxide Cream 19 23c Sanitol Cream v. 19d 50 LaBIache Face Powder 39 25? Sanitol Face Powder 19 25c Woodburys Face Powder 19r 50 Pebeco Tooth Paste 39 25 Colgates Dental Cream 19 25 Dr. Lyons Tooth Powder 19 25 Colgates Dental Powder 19 25c Cashmere Bouquet Soap 19 25 4711 Soap 19 20 Pears Soap 13 20c Sanitol Soap 15 75c Puinauds Toilet Water 65 50 Puinauds Hair Tonic 45? PIQUE A big shipment pique just in including all size wales and qualities. This being very popular now for dresses, skirts, Norfolks, collars, etc. Comes in white only. The yard 25 to 75 GOLFETTE CORDUROY In white only ; soft finish ; launders like linen ; in wide and narrow wales. For suits, capes and extra skirts. The yard 65 to ?1.50 WOOL CHALLIE In a big assortment, good patterns, all colors. A pure wool fabric. Dots, small figures, stripes, etc. Yard 50t KIMONA SILKS In a big variety of patterns and colors. Especially ad apted to the use of kimonas. Exclusive designs, and pat tern lengths; all silk. The yard 75 to $1.25 THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE Stories From the War Zone LONDoN. May .l. iby New Yurk j For the l.rst r.lslory of moving pictures, evidence of their universal Mail to lr. the film for years to eorne," the r.a- t.me In per concluded. concrete - The death of Bunny was a person- Influence a! loss to millions of tMDIr ' said t Times. "He wit the father of acting with- words and there was not one in last summer that the labor party con ducted an educational campaign against armaments. Well, some of this education has stuck, and the re sult is what is called the unpatriotic attitude of labsir in England today." Asked about the prohibition ques tion in England, Mr. Lasker said: "There Is not the slightest chance of compulsory total prohibition. There is nothing like the amount of prohi bition sentiment at home that I find in your country and what Is more to the point, the British workers cer tainly resent the idea of prohibition as being aimed directly against their freedom of action They understand clearly enough that the well-to-do classes are not likely to lie effected by any prohibition law and again the are made to realize that the burden of war f ills most heavily on them. "Although the question of intemper ance enters into the problem of in dustrialism largely, compulsoiy pro hibition as a solution is Impossible. The only thing to do in that direction is to create enough sentiment to make possible the enforcement of prohibi tion, or at least temperance, before any sweeping liquor statute is paised. "But apparently the public and the ' press of your country do not grasp I the fact that there Is an actual dearth j of labor In England today. I have re- I -II ---..I E ..I,, ...1 Women-mndo iH yons irom an cetwouo 01 r.iiRiuiiu women operated hospital Mrs Har-: telHng of the insufficiency of labor a few; ley'a staff consists of about flftv Fng T war ta rapidly draining labor, and weeks more he will march awav with llshwomen. including surnn. especially skilled labor, from the hi cosmopolitan comrades to shoot at Physicians, trained nurses and order, country. Why, things .uthoiuty ox ixnrsTKiAi.! DAXOEKOrs OXK. Compulsory ProhlbUon As Solutionis . to Problem Is ImpowMMo Public ScmlnK-nt MiHt He Turned to Make'E Possible tho Knrorxt-tiKUt of TVi pcrance In England. 5 much attention 1 BY LOWELL MELLETT. j (United Press Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON. June 10 "The dis location of labor is the biggest prob-i lem Pno-lar. K.. V I j- ' .. o --- iih wn nanus lifil 10 a successful conclusion of the war, and even now the labor situation receiving nearly as from the newspaper and thoughtful is public of England as the war.'" H This sentence la the summary of a! 5 long interview with Bruno Lasker of York, England, author of several. S works on labor problems, who la now s In this country making a thorough 5 study of the questions of industrial ei ftclency and public works for B. See- S bohm Rowntree. Mr. Lasker Is the 5 confidential secretary of Mr. Bound, tree and the latter la a very close uer- sonal friend and adviser of Chancellor E of the Exchequer Lloyd-Oeorge. Thus; 5 it will be seen that Mr. Lasker can speak with considerable certainty of,-; the labor situation in England today, S and of the attitude and purpose of 5 the liberal government with regard to the labor problem. Mr. Lasker and Mr. Rowntree were among economists and social reformers who recently won distinction in England for their work on the land Inquiry commission of the liberal party. This commission has published the most extensive and scientific study of the questions of land tenancy, housing conditions and rural labor problems ever put forth. j As a result of the recommendations made by this commission on the gov ernment was engaged In drafting leg- i islatlon which it was about to submit to parliament when the war broke . out, and which, Mr. Lasker said, will 1 very likely be presented as soon as possible at the conclusion of the war. But while looking to those measures , for substantial Improvements, those gentlemen see the Increased compllca I tlon of the labor problems which will I Immediately be felt when the war Is j over and they are farsighted enough to I begin now to study the question of i what shall be done In England when J peace has been declared. ! "You must not be surprised if yorj see Indications of what may seem to you a lack of patriotism among the ' British laboring men over this war,", ; said Mr. Lasker. "They realize pret-j I ty thoroughly that the employing class; ' la the only class that can possibly I i benefit by the war and that the bur- , den of hardships are falling, and will Demanding Gouornmcnt Inspected I MEAT AND LARD Use no other, when you can get government inspected lard at the following low prices: E 3 lb. Pail Government Inspected Lard, only. 50 ss 5 S lb. Pail Government Inspected Lard, only 75 - 10 lb. Pail Government Inspected Lard, only.... 91-50 s Another shipment just received of those famous east- ern, government inspected HAMS and New 5 York SHOULDERS. TRY AN ORDER I I OREGON MARKET I TWO PHONES 600 AND 601 815 Main Street. J. S. Rogers, Prop. rii!:iiiiiiniiiiiHi;iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir CHESTER FEE CHOSEN CAPTAIN Of 0, OF 0. TRACKTEAM FOR 1916 LOCAL BOY HfX FJVF.S ItECOGM TIOX rXHt ttOKK IX I'lLINU I P POINTS. klivtlon Not Only Tribute to His Val ue As an Athlete Hut Aim to Hli Popularity Among Ills FHIowr Stu dent!) He Has IKrn Valuable Member of Track Team for 3 Years JOOO KiwJans C'Hptured. MERLIN. June 8 In their flight from Przemysl. the Ruasluna huva withdrawn a third of the distance to Lemberir, the war "office announced. From Vienna, unofficial dispatches slated 7000 Russian prisoners wer ruptured at Priemytl. Only One Entirely KaU!acint7. "I have tried various colic nd di arrhoea remedies, but the only on ' that haa given me entire satisfaction and cured nie when I was afflicted l Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Di arrhoea Remedy. I recommend It t my friends at all times,'' writes 8. N. Galloway, Stewart, S. C. For sale by all dealers. Adv. Ili'iiiuliii of Man pound Near Kalania. K A LA MA, Wash., June 10. The remains of an unknown man were found on the farm of Dr. W. I), Hun t nuton. A worklngman's attention was attracted by an old shoe. It In believed that the man either died- or suicide in the Kprlme of In recognition of his work In piling j up points for the I'niversity of Oregon! tiaclt team for three years. Cheater i Fee, son of Judge and Mrs. James A. Fee of this city, has been elected cap-1 tain of the university track team for committed the 1916 season. The election Is not 1912. only a tribute to his value as a polntj winner but to his popularity amon1 Fur an Impaired Appetite, his fellow students. To Improve the appetite anl. Fee has been a valuable member of strengthen the dliestlan trv ft Hayward's track squad for three doses of Chamberlain's Tablets. Mr. continue to fall, on them. Peace prop- ' ur,e.o,.meni oas oeen j j h. i,eiia. ot Detroit, Mich., says: aganda has been carried on in Eng- a mny-slded one. When he entered : "They restored my appetlta when m. land for many years and It was only colleK' hr a8 a ,alr hlh "" "o01 Pol-' Paired, relieved me of a bloated feel- .u,,r,, mihii-jiiiiiit ouruier.jing anu causea a pleasant ana sail.-- Hayward has made him the leading factory movement of the bowels." For college pole-vaulter of the northwest, sale by all dealers. Adv. one of the most consistent performers' In the high sticks, and a sure point j Tlioiisnnds of Itiitl-li nd. winner In the jumps, the javelin throw CONSTANTINOPLE, June All ' and shot put. In almost every- meet . dispatches reaching hcr Indicate tie In w hich he has" participated, he has been the leading point winner and his points alone have decided more than' one meet. So many-sided Is he that Hayward Is figuring on entering hlm in the pentathalon at the San Fran-j i isco games. Every participant In this event enters 10 different contests ! allied losses In the recent nitcmpts to storm the Oalllpoll defense were much heavier than first reported Several thousand Rrl'.lsh dead ate declared to have been found on the field In front of the Turkish positions. The Turks also captured IT machlre guns and munitions. J are artists and painters. There Is a sculptor famed in London who is as signed to the "whitewash squad " Long hours each day this sculptor wields the brush on stables and bar racks. His annual income was thou sands of dollars per year. Today he pockets 12.66 a week. In up-to-date equipment In three weekj the women had installed elec tric lights, modern Stoves ArM filrnl. ture and ordered their first half hun dred hospital beds from England. u is distinctly a f.iit a thousand who had not learned known and admire him,'" says the L.n..n edition of the Manchester Guar'iian. Scores of other newspapers paid tnl.ute to the famous actor. Almost a!i printed photographs and several London i!!itrated ijnu-K 'Vnrea-r in his 'arnous (,os-s. i: t'l WSJ wen h-re when practically every British nes;-a;.er devoted riiu-"h Hate to e'IKiirlais and nn on the i.euth of John r.'wii.r,.. Kuiogie of this popular film a' tor tf k prominent e in British journals Hiotigssde of t'.e m important war lews Man)' -ditorial at ienifh jointed with pride to the fa.-t that Jnny was of Corcih paren'age and even fenerations of his ancestors ere Uritlfh naval men. Ail hiiied J im as the foremost moving picture actor in the world and expressed t' e I-"M)'i. May 2j ( ;y term( rgr.t over the ..i-s to th Vork.) Th democratic i- Yiirld's humor in the filtw. l"'ti within the p!u,t two months t" 'It i no exagireration to say thtt '"ri1 Kit hener's appeal for re-ruit.-millions of people throughout the iiljsiraied too.y in a report from world who have never seen IiIti in the - trainir.a; ' intp U-A far fiom London, flesh will hear with real regret of the Or.e ig.rrieiu tpj.al of others In ieath of John Hutmy. No cinemato-"'-' camp and other newly formed graph comedian has ever become fo .camps contain m-n of the civil rankJ vorld-fumous and It is literally cor-. 'rom millionaire and pa jper all w ork rect to ay that he was known from 're together In perfect a' cord. China to Peru." say the London' In this regiment the major was a Olobe. sthool teacher. The ,aptain, before "John Bunny is dead, the best enlistment, operated a moving picture known man In the world, the man theater. Three of the lieutenants arc whose feature weie familiar to nun- ( millionaires, tine cornea from a fatn ilreds of minimis of people In everj ' Hy operalng great cotton spinning l'rt of the world; the king of com-j rr.llls at Glasgow: another is a mem edlana," as the Umdun Evening: ber of the het known firm of Jam N tn a column article. The paperi makers in the 1'nited Kingdom and MN-alled llunny's Visit to Englar d the third tr of a family that for gen when plu.ong In films portraylr ( eratlons has made England's s.ife-i iHckena story, "PlrkwPk Paper."snd lot ks A si ore of minor officers and hla ilt to the English derby Injure well-to-do London business men. a dotike) rail garbed as a coitermor- A half hundred privates left Income? rr rur.nlr-g into four figures a ear to ac- '"IiralB will tiot dim his popularity ' 1 1 1 1 the king's shilling a day There the Germans. The school teacher-major of this regiment has presented his men with 'ija football. He himself referees the tjgame While nicked team r,mn..UAH , .-. . ...U...B, kvii,vnu of officers and privates alike snenj hours of spare time at play. LONDON, May 25 (Ky Mail to New i'ork.i While Sir John French l- conducting the British campaign againn the Germans in Northern France, his sister. Mrs. Harley, is val-i.-ntiv f ghting disease and sickness in Aux liary hospital No. 301 within a few o.iies of her famous brother. She is at the head of a British am bulance hospital at Koyaumont oper ated under the auspices of the Sot tish Women's hospital for foreign service. According to the story which somes to London today. Mrs. Harley with a valiant band of Engiixh nurses enter ed the old momentary at Royaumont! lasj winter, drove out the rats, the only occupants, and worked night and oay until tne ancient Building was converted Into a spick and span mili tary hospital. The monks and nuns had long be fore 'ieserted the place when'the Eng lish women happened along. Hun dreds of rats scurried along the dark, damp passageways, as they entered. Aided by the dim light of candlei they srubled the historic flags and walls, and finally requisitioned the only plumlier In the village who In Hailed a modem drainage system snd have come to lies. One of the orderlies i. . 'such a pass that the big manufactur er Sir John French. Rv rh oh.,'ers are going about trying to bribe lance chauffeurs are girls of on.l workmen away from the plants of English families. The French hIh not small concerns. Rather than drunk- like the Idea at first of young women inving motor cars about the country.! enness, the scarcity of war materials, land of all other supplies for that They issued them licenses with reluc- matter. Is due to the fact that Eng- tance. Now, however It la reoorted ,antl aa' Is forced to run her plants j they are quite reconciled to the smart wlth "nskiHed labor and not enough girls In khaki who pilot their cars as,'r tnat- Now of course, It Is impos- good as any Frenchman The surgi-!B,,),e ,0 ke'P "P nrmfl production on ! cal operations In this hospital are' '"at basis, much less talk of Increas- performed under the direction of one of the most famous women surgeons In the north of England, Over 200 beds are now Instaled In the old monaMary and every one is filled. Injurr Brian Weildiiig C ALDWELL, Idaho, June L Hurt Internally by a fall the day before he was to have been married. Austin Weatrope, a well-known Caldwell singer, lies In St. Luke's Hospital In Boise. The accident occurred when Mr. I Westrope missed his footing on the stairway at the store at which he L employed. MUs Elvira Clamber, of Caldwell. Is the young woman to whom Mr. Westrope was engaged. Canadian Casualties Total ftOOH. OTTAWA, Ont., June 10 The Ca nadian casualty list to date totals 8001 men, consisting of 1213 killed, 6230 wounded and 1366 missing, according to the records of the militia department. And every makes the ! lng the output of goods. I recruit added to the army situation worse. "But there la one way in which the employers of England have benefited temporarily hy the war. There were Indications that had this war not started there would have been a gi gantic strike of all transport workers that would have tied up the whole country. That, for the time being. has been avoided but when the war Is over things may come to a crisis.' Rnsnians Claim SacmMic. rtTHOURAD, June . The anni hilation of several Austro-Germnn regiments and the capture of a great number of Germans was reported. The Germans suffered extremely heavy losses In their advance on Lem berg, It was officially announced. British Low Hoi y. LONDON, June . The Week-end lists of casualties In the it.ltlsh rank are the heaviest published on any one day since the beginning of the war They Include more than EC00 names i Iff jfjreTEA I ILliiy SALE g GOLDEN GATe'tEA rT7I 7T li I J2i ONE W.E E K I b&rtt "'JSffltl AT GROCERS 1 I M I -.5! - Siw-'J I tftrr si.t: . HI I iT vvjxv u tai inn) i CCVLON-INOIA m" u . , . I INGUSH BREAKFAST rJattae . 1 1 curipowotn JL !ta 1 B , .1 li l"Tt" T0W tCLOW It these prices to con-'AyA vince, you that the A tea: isworth .the , KM 1 " ' regular price A.poundiof to l. this tea makes ft ,H , t . B 80c a pound, MsR f&, 1 the cost is one m iV. ' teL ' I cent for about WO 1 iiourcups. 1 1 I You can afford htMVT E to drink good tea. vy' I FOLGEa&CO.,''' 1 San Francisco f