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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1915)
EIGHT PAGES r.-UiK TWO DAILY EAST OREGOXIAX. TENDLETON. OREGON. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1915. 3"f f" " ux u , w Goorf Clothes are as much a matter of cultivation as good crops 1j YOU'LL NEED A FRESH NEW WAIST before the Round-up is over. A dainty w aist of crepe de chine or Georgette crepe will be just what you want to wear during the next few days. We recently received a complete assortment of new fall styles in both of these practical materials. They all have long sleeves and while most of them have low nMMRP &k MM rr ' is ?Jlm necks, others have converted collars that can be worn high around the throat. The best colors this season are white and flesh pink, though a few dark colors are shown. The prices range from $2.95 up to $7.50 Other waists in voile, linen, organdy, taffeta and lace, in great variety. ROUND-UP JERSEYS All the boys are wearing 'em. The brighter the colors the better. We have a complete showing of the best col or combinations in Tendleton $2.50, $3.00, and $3.50 STETSON HATS We are headquarters for Stetson Round-up hats. Ex clusive blocks, styles that other stores don't have, $3.50, $4.00, $5.00 to $15.00. STORE NEWS For the benefit of those who depend on the deliver ies for their groceries, etc., we make this statement: On Friday and Saturday there will be the regular morning deliveries. But in the afternoon there will be only one delivery and that will be at 6 o'clock, so it wilf behoove you to order your goods early enough to get on the morning delivery if possible. CHILDREN'S SCHOOL HANDKERCHIEFS New lot of plain and cross tar dainty handkerchiefs, 2 for 5f Plain lawn school handkerchiefs, each of Fancy embroidered handkerchiefs, 15c quality, each or 3 for 25. 25c AND 35c NECKWEAR 19c One lot of organdie and lace neckwear, a variety of styles to choose from. Special price 19 DENTS $1.75 GLOVES $1.49 Dents .gloves in London tan and an excellent quality in grey mocha gloves. Special price $1.40 BROADCLOTHS A more suitable material cannot be had than Broad cloth for a one piece dress or suit, of finest grade yarns, permanent finish, 52 to 56 inches wide. Comes all wanted shades. The yard $1.50 to $2.50 . COATING Make the coat up to your "own fancy." A well se lected stock on hand. Best colorings, 56 inches wide, plaids, stripes, checks, etc. Exclusive lengths. The yard $1.50 to $5.00 FANCY SILKS A big assortment fancy silks for street or evening wear. Plaids, stripes and floral effects. Best of quality, latest styles, new lot just received. The yard $1.25 to $2.50. And the easiest way to dress well is to buy the necessary apparel at a store where you can be assured of the individual touch. When you come here for a shirt, a collar, some underwear, or what ever you need, you get more than merchandise alone. We make it our business to see that you look well in what you buy here that it fits you and the price is what you want to pay. Hart, Schaffner & Marx Suits and Over coats are the expression of good taste. Our fur nishings are correspond ingly correct. Come and see what we have for you. Hart, Schaffner & Marx Suits $20 to $30 Other good makes $10 to $20. Connieht Out ScluUm k Mi KIDDIE CLOTH and Kindergarten cloth, the wash fabric that's guaran teed not to fade. New stripes, checks, plaids and plain colors, 32 inches wide. All shades for house, street or school wear, also for rompers. The yard 20 THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE .r f whi mii i in, ".. The murrltiKe of Miss Helen Snyder to William Lowell of Holse, Iduho, wus sult-mnlscd lust evening nt 7:30 o'clock tit l he home of the bride's mother. Mm. J. M. P. Snyder. 60S Catherine street, by the liev. c. E. Tuke, rector of St. Paul's Episcopal church. The Impressive ceremony was wit. hv reliittveg nnd a few Intl. ! ... ..i....,!.. . tlitt twit fiinillluu I wedding- reception followed at j i,'clock nt which a large number were present. The bride was attended by her uls ter, Miss Teas Snyder, maid of honor, and MU-a Gwendolyn Knyder, brides maid, and Mis Margaret Lowell, sis tor of the groom, bridesmaid. Dr. Hockley of Holse, Idaho, wus beat num. The Snyder home was transformed Into a bower of ferns, vines and flow, era In the living room where the ceremony was performed was a pro fusion of roses, vines and a most ef fective decoration of the dainty ocean spray forming an Immense globe en veloping the chandelier. In the dln tng room were banks of gypsy datalet, other varieties of yellow flowers, fol iage, vines and ferns. The bride, who has spent most of her life In Walla Walla, has a large circle of friends here. The groom Is n sun of Stephen A. Lowell of Pen dleton, Oregon. He is engaged In the newspaper business at Boise, where the couple will make their home. Walla Walla Union. Judge and Mrs. Chester F Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Pettyjohn of Dayton. Washington, are guesU of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Mulllnlx during the Hound-up. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur a. Means came up yesterday from Umatilla to enjoy the opening of Happy Canyon and the Round-up. Mr. and Mra. Asa B. Thomson of Kcho are among the many visitors In the city. Mr. and Mrs. George Gillette of Kcho, are Round-up guests of Mrs. Gillette's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Is&aa Jay. Mr. and Mrs. Westbrooke Dickson have as their guest Neal Kendall of Portland who arrived this morning for the Round-up. Mrs. James Furnish has as her guests during the Round-up Mr. snl Mra. Henry T. Hill nd Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Hlbberd of La Grande. Washington Wigwags BY GEORGE MARTIN. CHESAPEAKE Bays "fish-net stakes" need regulating, thinks the war department Yes, we have eat en this variety; also the galvanized and India rubber kinds, and we favor the reform. A man in Brazil has asked the com merce department where he can buy 5,00 rasor blades. We'd like to see his whiskers. A Netherlander has written the commerce department for the address of whoever makes "a bandy folding egg boiler." We would like to glimpse the folding egg he's going to boil. Same Netherlander wants "a per fect noodle cutter. We fear he is doomed to disappointment ia this, as perfect noodle cutters nave for the most part given way to the hangman and the electric chair. Since the commerce department has so lamented the lack of Potash, we are reminded that there hasn't been much Perlmutter noticeable lately, either. An American motor-boat engine ran II hours on a Chinese river with out stopping, reports Mr. Consul Han eon at Kwatow. Brilliant tbosght Maybe the trouble with our "demon motorboat engines all along has been that we didn't run 'em in Chi nese. Come to think of it, they speak the lang-oac Prfectlr. The Ttighfof tKe Storlu Every normal person is interested in the arrival of the stork. It is ths greatest event in one's life. The expectant mother needs, shore everything- else, comfort and peace of mind. This she is sure to have if Mother's Friend, the safe, dependable external remedy, is used to sooth the network of nerves and to enable th muscles to expand naturally, thus re lieving undue strain. Mother's Friend, obtained at any drug store, is the one remedy used end recommended by thousands of , women everywhere, who testify as to j its wonderful merit. MOTHER GIVES 10 SONS TO FIGHT FOR ENGLAND 5 DEAD IV FRANCE, 1 PRISONER. 2 WOO'DED AND OXE STILL FIGHTING. BY WILBUR S. FORREST. (United Press Staff Correspondent) LONDON, Sept. 10. (By Mail.) The mother's record in this war Is held by Mrs. Mary Fury, of Doughrea, county Galway, Ireland. She has given ten sons to the Brit ish army. Five are dead in Francs. One lies in a hospital recovering from wounds. One is a prisoner in Germany. One remains fighting and another is nursing a right arm shat tered by a bullet. This is not all of Mrs. Fury's fight ing family. She has a daughter, Mrs. Mary Coscy, Romford, England. Mrs. Cosey's husband Is one of Romford's 100 fighting men at the front. Sev eral weeks ago, Mrs. Cosey supported her large family of small children with the aid of two brothers-in-law. Now they have gone to war and she Is struggling on alone. What Mrs. Mary Fury and Mrs.. Cosey have suffered In England's greatest crisis is the Btory of hun dreds of homes of the working clas4 es 1st the British Isles. A similar story can be told in a smaller way from the mansions of British aristoc racy and from the "castles" of the middle classes). But it does not leave the sting of poverty that confronts Mrs. Mary Fury of County Galway and her sisters of the lower classes. She will suffer until her body is planted in Irish soil and with her thousands of other women whose husbands have left the spade and shovel. If conscription comes in Great Britain it will not find the husbands, brothers and eons of the Mary Furys end Mary Coseys among the "slack ers." The laboring element is becoming gradually the scarcest element In Britain. Cities, towns and villages iiike have emptied their houses and strfets. These men are today in the majority in northern France, The Dardanelles and other theaters of war. The upper and middle classes are in the hopeless numerical minor ity. There is one obscure little street In Walworth, a suburb of South London Announcement Miss Harriet Young and Mra. Edgar Fischer will resume their Pendleton Class es Saturday, October 2nd. For terms and information address Miss Harriet Young, La Grande, Ore., or Mrs. Edgar Fischer, Fischer School of Music, Walla Walla, Washington. l that tells the tale. This street is in the heart of the "working' locality. It is called "Trafalgar street' and Is simply a two rows of 150 small brick buildings and shops built closely to gether. The war office has distrib uted cards of honor for every family that sends a man to the army. There are 195 cards of honor in the win dows of these little shops and houses. Children play with cocked hats and wooden guns in the narrow street About half of them will never see their fathers again. They will gT into the factories their fathers left as soon as their arms are strong enough. The war has brought all British classes together in the trenches. It has brought all classes at home down to the same place during the war. But what is to become of the Mrs. Furys and Mrs. Coseys after the war, is a question that is hard to answer. Biliousness and Constipation. It is certainly surprising that any woman will endure the, miserable feelings caused by biliousness and constipation, when relief la so easily had and at bo little expense. Mrs. Chas. Peck. Gates. N. V writea- "About a year ago I used two bottles of Chamberlain's Tablets snd thej cured me of biliousness and constipa tion." Obtainable everywhere. Adv. Man in Zcpclin Falls. LONDON, Sept. 23. One member of the crew of the Zeppelin concerned in the most recent raid on London either fell or was blown from the car and his body was mangled beyond recognition "somewhere In England," says the Daily Express. The paper asks whether this ex plains the reported death of Dr. Sticker, widely known in Germany for his researches in aeronautics A Silent Wedding. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. 23. William R. Lyons and Mary Hender. son presenting themselves to be mar- ried by Court Commissioner Bates, l said not a word. Neither did Bates, who sat down at a typewriter and typed the wedding ceremony. Spaces were left for the bride and groom, who filled In their parts of the cere mony. Then Bates'Wrote at the bot tom of the peculiar document, "I pronounce you man and wife." Mr. and Mra Lyons are deaf mutes, from Faribault, Mln. Diimba will Go Home. WASHINGTON, Sept. 22. Austrian Ambassador Dumba notified the state department that his government has informed him to return home- Be cause of this he asked the department to arrange for his safe conduct on "a leave of absence." Lumber Co, Destroyed. ALBANY, Sept. 22. A fire at Lebanon prnctlcally destroyed the plant of the Lebanon Lumber Com pany. The loss Is $100,000. The or igin of the fire Is not definitely known. Widow Adopts Minister. ASHLAND, Ore., Sept 23. Rev. Arthur R. Blackstone. pastor of the Baptist church here, has been adopt ed by a wealthy widow, Mrs. Aurella Ferguson and made her heir. His benefactress' estate Is reckoned at $100,000 or more. Miss Fannie Wilcox and Miss Delia Danner of Portland are visiting Miss Laura Mulr during the Round-up. Mr. and Mrs. Lee McAfee are en joying a visit from Mr. McAfee's brother, Fred McAtee of Nebraska, who stopped off here for the Round up while en route to the Panama-Pacific fair. Miss Ceclle Boyd, one of the high school teachers, has as her guest dur. ing the Round-up, her mother. Mrs. Fred Boyd of Athena. Edward 8. Taylor, formerly recla mation attorney at Hermiston, Is here today attending the Round-up. He bas headquarters In Salt Lake now. Mr. and Mra Orvllle Reeves Corvallla are Round-up guests. of ' V'-V".e ' . , ' l v.: : -., if, -r' f X ... ...... . v "-f j" After the Honeymoon The bride's first and nevei -ending problem is "What to Eat." .For breakfast, lunch, or supper what could one have more delicious than llswfcstie.il Ti ill New Post Toasties Miss Lulls Edward, Amorlcan Famous Soft Shoe Dnncer, with ths i ,t i Williams Dixie Jubilee Singers, nt the Cosy Theater. Famous These new flakes are made of choice Indian com, cooked and toast ed by a new method that brings out a wonderful new .flavour. In this new process, intense heat expands the interior moisture produc ing little pearl-like "puffs a distin guishing characteristic of the ' " " M4i ot Indian Cam. SutjSPtJ New Post Toasties For a flavour test, eat some dry. Then notice that these New Toasties have a body and firmness-don't mush down when cream or milk is added-- Your Grocer Has Them Now