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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1915)
KG I IT PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGLST 6, 1913. rAGSTiinr?: AUT01ST liEAIi 0 OF 2700 (IE TRIP THROUGH THE STATE Busy! Come in Blow! t 1 i li! AGENTS FOR 'A lilt HARRY C. HAYES IN PENDLETON; 0 nnn Si o) 12) uu w W I Ends Next Saturday Night, August 7th The best made clothes in America, altered to fit you perfectly by our own tailors and carrying our regular guarantee. THIS YEAR'S ROUND-UP DATES ARE SEPTEMBER 23, 24, 25. LET ER BUCK. Milady's Styles Hark Back to Simple and Primative Says Authority on Dress BY MARGARET MASON, (Written for the United Press.) Dolly of the dairy And Bridget who tiffin spuds, And Greta of the garden And Huslte of the audi. Have all been emulated By Fashion In her duds. 1 NEW YORK. Aug. 4 Madam 1 Mode has a perfect passion this sum mer for masquerading in rural ral mem and adopting to her perverse purpose all the quaint and primit ive sartorial device of the peasantry. In reckless manner she has Bhown that one touch of bodice makes prin cess and peasant kind. In fact this comic opera girdle of laced black vel Arrow Soft COLLARS Of iUln or fine White Striped Madras. 2 for 25c. n iTTT, rr a ortnv rn ir, m kfi s Wise Precaution will prevent the little illness of .today from becoming the big sickness of tomorrow and after. For troubles of the digestive organs you can rely on BEECHATil'S PILLS 5M vwrwW. la batM. 10 2S. Prevents roughness during the summer flYAL'S FACE CREAM A superior vanishing skill tone soon absorbed. LEAVES NO SHINE Price 50 cent Koeppen's The Drug Store That Serves You Best Buy Soda ncvni rrnj ivnmn rm rr.nwki.iwn haw wiw vvvvamu Lkn FIGifEER BOTTLING WORKS Paul llemmelgnrn, Prop. Telephone ITT. vet may he said to have struck a note of equality by being half way of a peeress and also half way of a peas ant and equally pleasing result!. Mot being confined to the upper, lower or middle classes exclusively It has con fined the middle of all. Many a last summers frock has been freshened up to 1915 standards by simply adding the peasant girdle or bodice with its cord or ribbon laces. Then there is the popular smock like the gardener and Greta the gard ener's girl wear when they go weed ing, sowing and spading, to say noth ing of the wide brimmed floppy gar den hats of loose woven straw that Miludy has snatched from their simple heads to perch on her own frivolous pate. Copying everything In the apron line fmm the gay little Inconsequen tial affair affected by the ladles' maid and the femme de chnmbre up to the more durable models displayed by the kitchen queen and presiding goddess of the laundry tubs she has converted them by grace of sheer fabrics and thread-like laces Into exquisite fin ishing touches on her smart Bummer frocks. The filmy fichu shouding hpr snowy bosom was Inspired by the kerchief of the simple dairy maid and to such extremes is her penchant for all things primitive taking her that they have even affected her eating and sleeping. She Insists on taking her food off the crude hand painted peas ant wares of Brittany, Bulgaria or the Black Forest while her bed and table linen is of unbleached peasant weaves stunningly monogrammed. For after all she prides herself as really getting next to nature and being truly of the people in her present peasant modes and yet though she wears an apron It Is ever of the finest lace and hand embroidered. If she cover her bed with unbleached muslin and drape her windows In cheesecloth and lay her table with coarse linen In natural WHAT TO DO FOR ITCHING SKINS Kezema, ringworm and other itching, burning akin eruptions are so easily mad worse by improper treatment that one has to be rery careful. There is one method, however, thst you need not hes itate to use, even on a baby's tender skin that is, the retinol treatment. Betinol it the prescription of a Balti more doctor, put up In the form of res Inol ointment and resinol soap. This proved to remarkably successful that thousands of other physicians have been prescribing it constantly for 20 years. Resinol stops itching instantly, and almost always heals the eruption quick ly and at little cost. Resinol ointment and resinol soap can be bought at any druggist's. CLEARS BLOTCHY SKIN Try resinol sosp for a week. You) will be surprised to see how It clears and freshens your complexion, even in that short time. Used for the sham poo, it removes dandruff and heaps the hair live, rich and lustrous. This is because it contains the toothing, heal ing retinol medication. in Bottles BECAUSE IT IS MORE SAX. ITARY THAN THE SODA AT FOUNTAINS. We bottle, sell and deliver to any part of the city, the purest sodas made from pure flavors and filtered water. Try an order from the follow ing list of delicious beverages: Cclro-Kola Cola Queen Hires Root Beer Grape Smack Ginger Ale Tru-Frult Pineapple ' Koda of all Flavor. ONLY $1.00 A CASE. Consisting of two dozen bottles, and delivered. nm dccd by the dozen OR BAR R ELL 221 E. Court St. m shade they are all exquisitely stitch ed and embroidered and monogramm ed in the height of art and artistry. Dame Fashion only plays at being primitive. Patch pockets are'nt the only patch on this season's vagaries of apparel. Indeed the whole scheme of a suc cessful toilette seems to be patchy. Three and even four different ma terlala and colors often go to make up a slni;ls frock and the more the merrier Is the mode. The tiny silken Jackets of a plain color worn over a bodice of striped material whose sleeves and front are of a transparent white or ecru chiffon with the striped skirt belted and banded with silk are the most prevalent phase of these versatile costumes. Some of them live up more closely to the patchwork Idea by having a combination of dot ted silk trimmed In striped organdie with plain transparent chiffon sleeves, a plain silken jacket effeet and a bell and garnishment of bead work. Patchwork seems a kindly term to designate some of these cre ations. To dub them simply a mess comes nearer to the verities. It's been a neck and neck race all summer between the stripes and the dots. Zebra girls will soon be turn ing dotty, however, as stripes are more dashing and noticeable and therefore you tire of them more eas ily than of the more conservative lit tle dot. Combining the stripes and the dots gives a result atartlngly rem iniscent of a 'words and music" effect. To be sure this striking costume of note is a bit loud, but It strikes the right keynote of the moment and never is the least bit flat So don't doff your stripes to don dots Just try a little of both. Fifty Against Two. It is not rea sonable to expect two weeks of out ing to overcome the effects of firty weeks of confinement. Take Hood's Sarsaparllla along with you. It re freshes the blood, improves the ap petite, makes sleep easy and restful. Adv. THINKS WE SHOULD GIVE IT PORT OF ALASK A SAX FRANCISCO, Cal., Aug. 2. "America should cede the Alaskan Panhandle to Canada and take over from Mexico the Lower California country." was one of the declarations of Prof. William E. Ritter, a well known biologist, in a lecture at the summer school of the University of California. According to Prof. Hitter, each country should own those pieces of territory which It can best use. He holds thut this is one of the most practical methods of preventing squabbles between nations, with the wars which frequently result. He proposes thut America should set the example by making the first move. "The Alaskan panhandle Is of no Possible use to the United States and will eventually breed . trouble," he said. "At the same time Mexico can derive no benefit from Lower Cali fornia, and that should be In the Pos session of this country, as It con trols the month of the Colorado river. "The country which can best use a territory should have It. The war In Europe Is caused by the Inequit able distribution of territory among the nations. And this is reaily but another aspect of the general prob lem of a more equltablo distribution of the world's wealth among all class es of society." Prof. Ritter is the author of a work which holds that not only com petition but co-operation is at the basis of evolution. He declares that the laying of too much stress on the Darwinian theory of struggle for ex istence has much to do with the pres ent war In Kurope. Snakes IniKTll Cattle. POMEROT, Wash., Aug. . Nu merous reports have come Into Pom- eroy from the ranchers that cattle on the range have been bitten by rattle snakes, which are numerous this year. Two ranchers, Jeff Bently and L. A. McNaught, while looking for cattle recently on a fork of Cummings creek, killed a rattler about three feet long. Mr. McN'aught is author ity for the statement that there is a den of reptiles in Mlebel Gulch, on the Tucannon. Many of the farmers report that rattlers have been found colled In shocks of hny and are causing the harvesters considerable trouble. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bean the Signature AFTER JOURNEY STARTED ON JULY l. finds Bad Roads in Southern Part of the HUiU) ami Is Now a Most De vout Advocate of Highway Ini prwvenifnt Every Interesting I"olnt In Oregon Vl-sto.i by Him. On his last lap of a 2700 mile awing around Oregon, Harry C Hayes, traveling agent for the How-! ard Automobile Co., of Portland, la In Pendleton and will leave In tho morning for Heppner and The Dalles.! He Is still traveling on Portland air( end expects to return with It still in his tires. Mr. Hayes declares that In the trip across the southern part of the state he struck some of the worst roads conceivable and Is now a most devout advocate of highway Improvement, j "I left Portland on Joly 13," he said this morning, "and followed the Pacific Highway to Medford. From that city I drove my Buick to Crater Lake and thence to Klamath Falls. From Klamath Falls I drove to Lakevlew over the famous Bly moun tains and started for Bend, a distance of 215 miles, which the car had no trouble In making In eight hours, In aplte of the fact that I came by way of Lopine, the road near which is' one of continuous high centers owing to truck traffic. Manager MeCutcheon accompanied me as far as Bend and from there I came on alone. "I went from Bend to Prlneville and thence to Burns, finding fairly good roads. The further I went, however, the worse the roads became and the more discouraging the re ports. From Burns to Canyon City and Prairie City, the roads reached their maximum of poor condition. The big storm In Grant and Baker counties reached Its height Just as I pulled out of Prairie City and I was Informed of the cheerful fact that I would be forced to return as the ascent of Dixie mountains was an impossibility inasmuch as the high centers and roughness made passage extremely difficult In dry weather, j "As I had to start some time and having great faith in .my Buick, I pulled out and had not gone 12 miles until I knew that the warnings had some Justification. The water ran down the roads in rivers In some pla ces, cutting ditches to a depth of three feet. By going carefully and doing great climbing, the car at last reached the summit. I dlscoered later that, while Dixie mountain had been given the big reputation, there were various and sundry" other moun tains fully as bad or worse. In some places rocks raised up half as big as the car and It took four hours of steady climbing to go 30 miles. How ever, after reaching Whitney, good roads prevailed Into Baker. From Baker I came to La Grande and drove from La Grande to Pendleton in two hours and a half, reaching here Just In time to be arrested and fined (25 for speeding. Thirty-six for 25 Cents. Dr. King's New Life Pills are now supplied in well-corked glass bottles, containing 36 sugar coated white pills, for 25c. One pill with a glass of water before retiring la an aver age dose. Easy and pleasant to take. Effective and positive In results. Cheap and economical to use. Get a bottle today, take a dose tonight your Constipation will be relieved in the morning. 36 for 25c, at all drug gists. Adv. PASSED BAD 115,000 CHECK ON TREASURER Man Accused of Having "Bninrht'' In ter in Hotel Itom California State Treasurer Without Funds. SAN" FRANCISCO, July 31. End ing a pursuit aeross the continent during which he la alleged to have emulated successfully the example of J. Rufus Walllngford of fiction, James Carrigan was lodged in the city Jail today by the, local police and will go to St. Louis,' Mo., where he will be tried on a charge of passing a fictitious check. Carrlgan's latest feat is said to be the passing of a fictitious check for 1 15.000 on former State Treasurer Roberts at Los Angeles. He is al leged to have "bought" an Interest In the Roanoke Hotel from Roberts with the worthless paper and to have have fled with Detective William E. Rundle of St Louis close on his heels. Arrested by the. sheriff of San Ber nardino comity, Carrigan induced 'he official to believe he had made a mis take. Carrigan then visited San Fran cisco, where he Is accused of having cashed a bogus check for $140. De tective Cnshel followed him to Lon? Reach. ,liHni cluvrou In Duma. LONDON, Aug. 3. The final sec tion of the speech mad by Foreign Minister Suzonoff at the opening of the Russian duma was received in London. Referring to the relations between Russia and Japan, the min ister said the press of both countries hud been discussing the advantages of a close political union between them and that the service rendered the entente allies by Japan had "cre ated an atmosphere In which solid political ties between nations are forged.'" "Ten years have gone by,' he add ed, "since the treaty of Portsmouth proved that peace nelghborllness be tween Japan and Russia was perfect ly possible and reciprocally advanta geous. Our relations of alliance with Japan today should be forerunners of a still closer alliance." This statement was received by members of the Duma with cheers. NOTE EXPRESS WATER WINGS, Popular Cask (Former Writer Finds Considerable Trouble in Efforts to Get Into the Italian War Zone NOTE This is the second story by Mr. Shepherd of his experiences In Italy following the declaration of war against Austria, In the next In stallment he geta to the front, in a manner so to speak. BY WILLIAM G, SHEPHERD. . (United Press Staff Correspondent.) ROME, July 2. (By Mail.) You've come to Rome to go to the Italian front. First you've got a lot of talking tr do with a sturdy, grizzled Ameri can. But that's a pleasure. His name is Thomas Nelson Page, and he Is the American ambassador to Rome. He comes from somewhere way down south, to Judge by hts soft accent and when you tell him that you have come to Rome to go to the Italian front he laughs a soft south ern laugh and says: "Well, young man, Ah'll do mah best foh you. but Ah'm afraid it won't do much good." His best, however, fills you with home. It's a letter to Zuppelli, the minister of war; it says you're trust worthy. Identifies you as an an Amer ican newspaperman and lifts you outside the possibility of being taken for a Oerman spy. Off to the war office with the let ter. It's a gigantic building. No one can understand your Italian, but at last you're led to the office of the war minister. A grizzled officer comes out to meet you. He is General Elia, the suh-seeretary of war. "We're not letting anybody go to the front." he says In good English. "Maybe we'll have some tours for correspondents after things get set-j tied down, but Just now there is no hope. I'm sorry but that Is the way mattes stand " Just as you're leaving, he adds. "You see the matter is entirely in the hands of General Cadorna who has- charge of field operations." So Cadorna is the man to seel And he's at the front. And you're not al lowed at the front. But the next day you buy a ticket' for Venice: Venice Is only 60 miles from the front, and that's something. You reach Venice at 11 o'clock at night. No traveler has ever seen Venice looking like this before. There! are no liKhts; the canals are silent I rnd deserted because of military or-i ders. For the half dozen travelcs who came in on the night train there i,n four gmmoias m tne orimant moonlight, you seem to be In a fairy land as your gondolier rovVs you through the silvery pathways that are called canals. This Is a part of your dash to the front. This nnfor getuble half hour In the deserted wa terways of Venice: th's little piece of moonlight night in this silent dream city lying on your pathway toward bloody war. Your sleep, that night. Is disturb ed by mosquitoes the huge, salt wa ter brothers of the New Jersey bird. The beautiful, silvery canals are full of the mosquito Itch; their romantic j charm loses Its power over you, as you duck your head under the sheets. But It's all part of going to the Ital ian front. The next morning you go to the police station, via boat. It Is the military law that you must report to the police and get from them a sign ed permission to remain In the town "What can I do for you, young ELASTINE REDUSO Ask for Number 703. FOR STOUT FIGURES WEAR-PROOF ELASTINE GORES AT BACK, GIVE COMFORT, REDUCING SUPERFLUOUS FLESHINESS OVER HIPS AND ABDOMEN. LOW BUST. FLEXI BLE BONING AT BOTTOM OF BACK WIRE. WEAR DEFYING REDUSO COUTIL, LACE TRIMMED. SUPPORTERS. ' OTHER W. B. CORSETS $2.50, $2.00 AND $1.50. SPLENDID LACE FRONT STYLE AT $2.00. SHIPMENT OF LADIES' BATHING SUITS, BATHING CAPS AND BATHING SHOES. Better Goods far Less Money. Wohlenberg Dept. Store Location.) t HI, lt feller?" asks a dark, mustacned man, sitting at a deek. He looks every Inch a detective. "I want a permit to stay in Ven ice. But where did yon learn Eng lish. "Why, I was born la New York end I lived there until seven years ago." says the policeman. "Why did you leaver' He Is working busily, filling In a blank with your name and descrip tion and he doesn't even look, up as he says: "I tried to get on the New York police department but I failed In my examination. So I came over hero and got on the Venice police force. Here's your paper. You're from New York, too. Well, If there's anything I can do for you here, give me the high sign. You know you reporters! are not supposed to- be allowed to stay in town." The only use you have for the paper is to present It at the railroad station when you buy a ticket for Udlne. Udine te the front, the head quarters. If you can get there you can throw yourself on the mercies of WOMAN IN BAD CONDITION Restored To Health by Lydia L Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Montpelier, Vt " We have reat faith in your remedies. I was very ir regular and was tired and sleepy ai! the time, would have cold chills, and my hauls and feet would bloat, lly stomach bothered me. I had pain In my side and a bad headache most of the time. Lydia E. Pinkham's Veire- table Compound has one me lota nf crnml and I now feel fine. I am regular, my stomach is better and my pains have ail left me. Yoa can nse my name if you like. I am proud of what your reme dies have done for me.' Mrs. Mary Gauthier, a Ridge St., Montpelier.Vt. An Honest Dependable Medicine It must be admitted by every fair minded, intelligent person, that a medi cine could not live and grow in popularity for nearly forty years, and to-day hold a record for thousands upon thousands of actual cures, as has Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, without possessing great virtue and actual worth. Such medicines must be looked upon and termed both standard and dependable by every thinking person. If you have tne slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound w 1 1 1 hel p you, w rl to to Lydia E.Plnkham Medicine Co, (confidential) Lynn, Massif or ad vice. Tour letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and beld la strict confidence. Stores I. II i lt lit Iti l.t i.'kuk -t t.i -Tlr Li' General Cadorna, chief of the Italian army and pour Into his ear the story of how America is longing to know, at first hand, all there is to know about the Italian army. WESTON-PENDLETON AUTO STAGE Scheaule. A. H. Going- WetL P. H. Lv. Weston 1:00 Lv. Weston 1:0 Lv. Athena 8:15 Lv. Athena 1:15 Lv. Adams 1:35 Lv. Adams 1:15 A. M. Going East P. at. Lv. Pend'n 10:00 Lv. Pend'n :0 Lv. Adams 10:50 Lv. Adams 4:50 Lv. Athena l.:15 Lv. Athena 1:11 Fares. Weston to Athena, 25c; Weston to Adams, 50c; Athena to Adams, 25c; Weston to Pendleton, SI. 04; Athena to Pendleton, 75c; Adams to Pendleton, 59c, Round trips. If made ia same day: Weston and Pendleton, 11.50; Athena and Pendleton. $1.25. Headquarters: Weston, at City Drug Store; Athena, St. Nichols Ho tel: Adams, Inland Mercantile Store; Pendleton. French Restaurant. A. M. Bo yd cm. Proprietor. Bathing ..... Cans 50c to $1.00 Plain and fancy styles; tight fitting models and flaring ef j fecta. Practical caps that pro j tect hair and ears. Suitable for bathing In ocean, lake, river, i tank or tub. Faultless quality i meaning the best SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY BEFORE BUYING. Tallman h Go. Leading Druts'Wls !IIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIllllllllltlllllllll j Now Open j Hong Kong Gaf el 5 AM) NOODLE PV1U.OIU I Noodles 1 AND (Chop Sueyf j Ovtntde Tray Orders a Socially. S S Boxes for ladles and gentlemen. 5 OPKN DAT AND ALL NIGHT E jEALSise A.N ! UP. Z Special Chicken Dinner E S Sunday a s 1 548 Main Street Next to E. O. Bids. Phone 101 iiiuiiiitiiiitiiimiiiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiHiitiiitk?