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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1915)
KKJ 1 IT PARES DAILY EAST 0REG0X1AN, PENDLETON, OREGOt TI'ESDAV, SEPTLM HER 7, 1013. PACK IWIVV : r- : FRENCH SOLDIERS ftf FRONT FIl'TIIIO !oyal Society Florsheim Shoes Pony Stockings for 5tcivBl.ch mped linens, . Fit Particular Feet. School Wear. Snarl Clothoj cs, Emb. Threads Try a Pair. 25c the Pair. $15.00 to S3C.00 "i o, n V am-ojiol jfuictN'rTl Acgc(aWe Prrparalion Gh-As-siinilaliiiOiheroodaniKipdiiia (ingUtcSioraadisaflilBwcisof Promotes Dtosaonfltfrntt ness and ItaljContalns attar Opiuiu.Muru!uDe norMiaal ffyntfwunf Kuwiaiknft A n pi fed Remedy for CoiHlbt tlon.SotrStDtMdi.Dlafrtua Worms Jl omulsioia Jnm ncssMvlLo ss or meek ricSiribSiJnatiw' Tue Centaur Com?3 NEW YORK. For Infantsand Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the , . ature Sign In Use For Over Thirty Years H f ) fev ! n. w ra u jfl Exact Copy of Wrapper. Tmc tiiriun c4urHV, rtrw von err. WOMEN COMPETING IN GOLF TOURNAMENT I.AKK FOREST, III, Sept. . A I'm list of wonipn golfers teed off today In the opening rounil of the western women's golf championship tournament, the first swinging swipe at the little white ball being taken promptly at 10 o'clock. The last will not 1m taken until, dark has put an end to the first day's sport. At the time the 32 women with the best In dividual scores will be declared the qualified contestant for five days' buttle royal. There will be no more medul play after today's eliminations, except that for a non-qualifiers con solation prize tomorrow. The first round of match play sturts at 1:30 tomorrow. Much Interest Is taken In the play of Misa Vera Ramsey, the English golfer who recently won the Massa chusetts title. Comparatively few eastern women are entered. More than two-thirds of the gold now In use In the world was discov ered within the last 60 years. The Round-up Dates are Sept. 23-24-25 Tell your friend. It's a Bear! This expression may pass when used in it's slang sense, but if intended for how it ac tually reads it would never fit the suit or coat worn by a man who buys Bond Clothes 115 to 30 No, for when Mr. Bruin gets his new coat he hibernates through the winter, while Mr. Wearer - of - Bond - Clothes is very conspicuous among the best dressed crowds looking most attractive and feeling en tirely at ease. They will make this remark in the slangy way when they see that new suit on you. It's here awaiting you. Bond Bros. Pendleton'i Leading1 Clothien PROCUREIUSEall UESI'ITK IXTKKIU ITIOV (.HUMAN KIIi:MS V.UDK VI1.I.K MKS ON. UY Troops ;lve Show Wltli'n Itange of the I urmy'K Artillery and Although tlx- I in Drum IH Scarcely 1 1 car 1 1 Above It'Hir of Battle, French Have iiHil TInie. UY WILLIAM BHILIP SIMMS. j (United l'ress Htaff Correspondent.), (Copyright liUS by the I'niled Press. I Copyrighted In Creat Britain ) "There Ins been a violent bom bardment of th Forest of Apre-' mont." From the French Communi que of August 5. i WITH THK FKKXCH ARMY AT THE FRONT. Aug. 5 (By Mall.), When the performances of Bernhardt, ! Irving, Duse and Mansfield cease to be anything but faint recollections Ij shall still remember quite vividly an unpretentious vaudeville show given! by soldiers to soldiers out here In the! open air 1500 yards back of a cer-j tain famous woods through which a most unhealthy part of the firing line; runs. The performers were soldiers., the stage Was built by soldiers with i scraps of lumber collected here and there; the curtain was painted by a' cavalryman on tarpaulins which serv-; ed In the beginning as covers for box-! es of ammunition; the sky and a few walnut trees played the part of roof, while that part of the reglmenta,' band not busy bearing wounded on stretchers off the battlefield, furnish-, ed the music, these men and a young, j stoutish surgeon-lieutenant who dou-j bled on the piano when not stage-, managing nets. The bill was the regular bill. It was not specially arranged for visit-! ors Since January H this "house"' has been playing to standing room only, two performances a day, at 2 p. m. anil at 6. Sometimes as often as possible the bill changes; sometimes" the headliner fails to be on hand for his cue; a shell or a bullet has Inter-1 fered. Hut always, rain or shine, j good bill or bad, the curtain "goes up- on time and the soldiers on their repose week (usually they have a week In and a week back of the; trenches) never miss a performance, i As 6 p. m drew nearer the plank benches in front were creaking un- der their maximum burden and hun-j dreds of other pollus the soldier's ! nickname for himself, meaning shag-' 1 gy were standing at the back and( ! on either side. A heavy rain began j to fall precisely at 6 o'clock but the fat surgeon, on opening the piano,' turned and shouted: "Pollus. you don't mind a little thing like a few drops of rain, do you ?" "No!" the pollus thunder back, and the surgeon, sitting down In a very wet chair began pounding out an astonished intermezzo, on a no doubt greatly outraged piano. For, being In ally sits, the piano as well as the pi anln was catching the full force of the young cloudburst. Every time a chubby finger struck a key there was a splash. As the curtains parted the Ger mans began to bombard the French positions a short distance away. The1 explosions of shells punctuated every, spoken line which followed and bent Shop in this Big and Busy "Real DAYLIGHT 'Store Where your every want can be supplied in new, clean and richt up to the min ute merchandise of highest quality only. Our time worn policy of allowing nothing to be carried over from one season to another keep our stocks spick and span. This is also the reason we show the new things first, because season clean-ups mean that we are in a position to buy new merchandise as soon as it is shown. We do not have a lot of left-overs to get rid of before buying the new. Today We Are Showing Newest fall styles in STEIN-BLOCH Smart Clothes in a great range of cloths and patterns. Suits that have a distinct style, making them stand out in a class by themselves. Styles that no other clohing makers have yet been able to obtain and which you can buy here for the same prices you pay for ordinary clothes elsewhere. PRICED $15.00 TO $30.00. Broadobtlis, Silks, Velvets and Corduroys Are the most 'talked of fabrics for the season now at hand, and as usual this store has complete stocks of these much wanted cloths in such shades as Nigger, Plum, Tobacco, Mouse, Elephant, Russian Green, Joffre Blue and London Fog. Fancy Marquisettes, Chiffons, Nets, Silver and Gold Laces, stripes, plaids and plain Silks, are here for your choosing. Hosiery to match any gown or suit. Courteous sales people to serve you properly. ' ALEXANDERS. Merchandise of Highest Quality Only I "f "-"" J SEPTEMBER 23, 24, 25 ROUND-UP DAYS. ROUND-UP DATES. The 1915 Round-up will be held on Sept, 23, 24, 25. around to the chorus his comrades In . Just a little rosebud fallen front Joined In. A captain of dra , goons, occupying a seat on a bench reserved for officers, sang and laugh ed with the others, freely and without l reserce, yet I recognized In this cap I tain a count and member of one of , the proudest families In the Faubourg nobility of Paris. J The clown with his identification I tag gave way amid applause to an i acrobatic soldier In peace times a ! professional wearing the pink tights of tradition. He. too. had a tag on : his wrist. A horizontal bar had been theplaee where the orchestra usu-i rKK(d up the stage and as the soldier in pink tights began to girate upon It. the "comic" partner came out and "comioked" in the way ev eryone who has ever seen a variety show knows Under his very much too large "comic" dress coat, on a very piuscular wrist, was his in-case-of-death tag never letting one forget that Just over the ridge a ways death was falling out of the skies at that time to the music as if Jealous of the! very mnute. The tags and the bom blg base drum. bardment made the war seem very A clown in costume and make-up near which only the Ingenuity of a French An imitator of Houdinl came next, siddier can account for, rushed ot. wriggling out of handcuffs, padlocks and began to sing and grimace. The nnd .,hains ropes and other queer It was clear 'hat j paraphernalia. No chains seemed too He was just back i gef ur.i., f,utened about him for him from her Roumanians Ordered Home. , Jla"1- JJf ' , v, LONDON, Sept. 6. All Rouman- But Cupid cuddled in It and with his! . v little lay I n kw'twrland have been order- Turned all things to golden, Ilka e1 t0 Tetu home to report to their Midas, in the land!" regiments Geneva dispatches todar said. Some circles believed thb means Roumanian participation In the war? Others thing it means th strengthening; of the border to pre vent an Austro-German Balkan coup. audience roared, he was a favorite. from the trenches and as he jabbered a comic patter song, with grimaces and antics like any Rarnum & Railey star, one caught sight of his matricu lation number hound by a steel chain to his wrist; for Identification in case he falls to dodge a bullet some day. The clown sang on and when he got CLEANSE THE BLOOD AND AV0ID DISEASE When yonr blood is impure, weak, thin'" and debilitated, your system becomes susceptible to any or all diseases. Put your blood in good condition. Hood's Sarsaparilla acts directly and peculiarly on the blood it puri fies, enriches and revitalizes it and builds tip the whole system. Hood's Sarsaparilla bas stood the test of forty years. Get it today. It is sure to help you. iimnm m i LEHMAN HOT SPRINGS FRANK L McNEIL, Manager. I THE BLUE MOUNTAINS MOST POPULAR HEALTH AND PLEASURE RESORT. I HOTEL RATES $11.00 and $12.00 Per Week FREE CAMPING GROUNDS MAIL AND PASSENGER AUTO STAGE Makes regular trips between Pendleton and Lehman Springs. MAIL AND PESSENGER AUTO STAGE g Leaves French Restaurant, Pendleton, 9:30 a, m. 3 every Monday, Wednesday, l"rlday, with round sl trip on Sundays. 14.00 one way; (7.00 round g trip. Hauls passengers, mail and freight 3 Sco II. Stubblcflcld at French Restaurant. 13 1 SWIMMING, DANCING, HUNTING, BOWLING, FISHING, HOT MINERAL WATER H IiaiiiiiuiiiiiB to free himself of It save the one which held the plaque which would Identify him if some day he and a shell get too well acquainted. After him a British Red Cross at tendant. In khaki, sang "Alexander's Rag Time Band" excruslatingly bad, to much applause from his allies. And when he completely broke down as to voice he laughed good naturedly and allowed his legs to do a not bad "Buzzard Lope." Last on the bill, save the movies they have movies at many points along the front now came a singer, an ordinary-looking soldier In an everyday, uniform considerably worst for trench wear. He was of !e9s than average height and not even his Bmall hlond mustache could lift his appear ance to one of very great dignity. I was told that In private life he was a cobbler, so as the surpeon splashed into a bar of a dreamy and rather pretty ballad, I feared the worse, feeling not a little kindly towards the Oermuns who were now making more noise than ever with their bombard ment. With the singer's first notes, however, I changed my mind. The notes were like pure gold. Boom! Boom! went the Prussian shells close by. "Twas just a tiny flower dropred besides my way!" snid the French soldier, payln,' no attention to the noise. He put all the artistic Inter pretation of a Caruso in his song B-a-a-a-ir-a m! went another shell "Just a lit- 1p rosebud fallen from her hand!" This Vnc came as an Incongruous tesponse to the terrific explosion. B-o-o-o-om: B-o-o-o-m! More high explosives seemed to make the leaves tremble but the tenor-warrior-shoemaker wl h his hand on his heart continued to tne end of his refrain and bowed before the tempest of ap plause he bd to take an encore and he ileseited It. every hand-clap of It. so again, with the piano, flute clarinet and the patter of rain ac companying him. he repeated the verse while the big guns chimed In, a good substitute for the band drum, now soaked and out of commission: " 'Twas Just i tiny flower dropped beside my way! ) Pi Rolled in Fresh Cigarettes the World Over "Bull" Durham introduced a distinctive form of tobacco enjoy ment to discrimiai-nsr smokers throucutout the world DODulanzed present smart fashion and now universally accepted custom of th. rolling one's own cigarettes with this pure, mellow tobacco, to meet individual requirements of taste that can be satisfied in no other way. 2) GENUINE UU DURHAM', SMOKING TOBACCO The millions of "Bull" Durham smokers are men of wide tobacco- experience. 1 hey have used tobacco in many forms. I hey preftr Durham in fresh, hand-made cigarettes Bull above all because of the supreme tobacco satisfaction and wholesome, lasting enjoyment insured by "rolling their own." "Bull" Durham is distinguished from all other tobaccos by its wonderfully pleasant, unique aroma. This fresh fragrance is combined in "Bull" Durham cigarettes with the most delightful mildness, mellowness and smooth nessa smoke of unusual character. An Illustrated Booklet, showing correct way to "Roll Your Own" Cij;rrrtes, ftnd a nackapr of riirrtt. nr,r will both be mailed, free, to any address in U. S. on request. Address "3ali" Duiham, Durham, N. C THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY Ah for FREE Pack age of "pap.rl" With oath St lack. ft . r i''"" ''i sr i V '