DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1915.
EIGHT PAGES
For Your Baby.
The Signature of
GRAIN SHIPS TAKEN
AT SOARING TERMS
i STEAM FREIGHTS UP
is the only guarantee that you have the
Genuine
OWNERS ISKING MVCH
IIS SHILLINGS t OK STEAM -Kits
BARKS ClUAPKIt.
I'
ll.. uor l Takes iiriiisli Bark "'
Vprii leading t so SbHUm; i'""r
(.niin carrier to Portland
HurUir Waiting: Grata lot Europe
20.
took
prepared by him for over 30 years.
YOU'LL give YOUR baby the BEST
MOM
Your Physician Knows Fletcher's Castoria.
Sold only in one size bottle, never in bulk
or otherwise; to protect the
babies.
PORTLAND. Ore., Oct
. rvunnukv yesterday
" - .
Norwegian steamer Mfrrais.
net register, for December
avail. loading lere. The vessel was
last reported arriving at PtCtoU, N
S September 10, from Sydney. C. 1'
The terms are said to be private. The
vessel is to be loaded by the North
ern Orain & Warehouse Company.
M H Hoiiser chartered the Brit
ish bark inverted, to load grain here
shillings. bne is .,
ir St. Nazaire.
the
Amusements
What the press agents say
about Pendleton's pres
ent and, coming
attractions.
nt so
The Centaur Company,
4t Prut
BRAVES WAR PERILS
TO REACH SWEETHEART
Phe marriage Is the fruition of a
romance which began four years ago
in East Pourne. England. wher the
Parent! of both young people reside.
When Mr. Hunt left England and
came to ;he United States the acquain-
dangers. Miss Kathleen Price, of East tanee of the two was continued by
Hourne. Sussex County. England. lptter. A year ago Mr. Hunt return-
sale:
floating
mines
ind
it. II.-other
-Braving
wartime
in April
, i, m from Taltal I
having left the former harbor June
t The lnverlogie belongs to the
well known "Inver" fleet of which
Mr Houser already has under fixture
'the Invergarry. from Fernambuco.
nd the Inverlyon. from. Adelaide
The arrival In the harbor yester
day of the Norwegian bark LlndfleUl.
irom Algoa Bay increaseo. s..
riers to four. Captain Tiegen
.... riv comment he had
mat wir -
maka regarding the voyage
much fine weather."
M.wt of Lining 1X"U llt s,'n
in fact, he said, conditions were
such that more than two-thirds of
the lining had been done at sea. so
dy for wneai. won "
whlch there are
aid
to
was "too
she is read)
. ! nt an:ii'P
MOO tons of sand ballast. The vessel
1 ,,,.h.i ;,t the North Pacific
mill by the steamer Ocklahama. andl as butler in the Nettleton home, and
the ballast
crossed the Atlantic ocean to New
York, and then came to Salem, where
a few hours after her arrival today,
she was married to Ernest Harold
Hunt, well known Saem pianist. The
wedding took place in St. Paul's Epis
copal church. Rev. Robert S. Gill, rec
tor, officiating.
ed t.i England and it was then his
engagement to Miss Price was an
nouneed. The bride is a daughter of
Mrs. W. T. Price, of East Bourae.
When in New York Mrs. Hunt was
entertained for a few days at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hurst
ex-residents of Salem. Mr. and Mrs.
Hunt will make their home in Salem.
ICf TOW rapidly our ideas change. Take the
ri stoves, for instance, that I and every one
else used to think were such wonder
ful heaters.
"Why, they are nothing compared to one
I saw the other day. They call it
Cole's Original
Air-Tight
Wood Stove
'Talk about heat! I never saw anything to beat it
"It had thin, polished sides that smooth, shiny kind,
and how the heat came through it.
They had it in a great, big room must have been down to
freezing at least when they started the fire and in five minutes it
was fine to sit in.
Burns wood, you know. You can shut it' up tight and keep
the fire all night with dry wood.
''And it stays tight, too, when you close it one of the Air
right, Stay-Tight kind made by the Cole Mfg. Co.
"The combustion is to perfect that you only take out the ashes once lo
aix weeks.
"Greatest wood-stove, so they all ty, and just what I am going to have for
our nouse.
h rvidtnt thii man tmnxi a good unit luhen ht im
tnt. Come m and let ui ihoit; YOU what toot liu ant,
" CaiaV the Original Air Tight
Heater, is sold only by M
lira wa I n
'iri." J avra M. lui Vt TT HI V, W.
741 Main St., Pendleton, Oregon Agent and Distributors.
work of getting rid of
starts today.
Tt to thouzht she will b
five days for drydocking. and the
lining will be completed while she is
out fcf the water if necessary, so a
week from tomorrow she is expected
j to be alongside irwng uuc.
Mr Houser has her cargo ready, in?
Lindfleld was reported by her mast
er 'to be foul, and he said he could
not think of going to sea until she
had been cleaned and painted.
Pahrwohl Starts loading Today,
The British bark Dolbadarn Cas
tle finished loading at Irving Dock
late yesterday and was shifted to thn
stream to be cleared today, while
the Fahrwohl took her berth and
starts working grain today She
loads wheat stiffening, and the re
mainder will be barley.
The Norwegian ship Nordesee be
gan unloading ballast yesterday and
Is to work a full cargo for the I'nit
! ed Kingdom to be dispatched by
j Strauss & Company.
Mr. Houser said yesterday that
j there was no truth m reports thai
the French ship Andre. Theodore.
which left Brest for Portland June
18. was going to Puget Sound for
: grain, as her orders had not been
I changed. The Norwegian bark Sou-
veraln. which has been out from
Liverpool since June 10. is among
the next arrivals expected.
Steam freights continue high, and
it was reported yesterday that own
ers are asking 120 to Hi shillings.
WORD "MURDERED"
NOT PERMITTED IN USE
"A Pair of sho."
"A Pair of Sixes," the farce by Ed
ward Peple which ran an entire year
at the LongacTS thenter. New York,
will be the attraction al the opera
house Friday. Oct. 22, with Oscar
Figiuan and New York company. It
received a degree of praise from the
usually severe metropolitan critics In
terms th:it almost exhausted the su
perlatives. There has been no dis
senting opinion as to the ingenuity
of the fantastic Idea on which the
plot Is based and the swift move
ment and comic intensity of details
make an endless entertainment of
rarely enjoyable fun.
The story concerns George B. Net
tleton and T. Boggs John a manu
facturers of a digestive pill, who are
continually quarreling about their re
spective claims of being the brains of
their prosperous business. With a
burst of temper, each declares he
wants lo break the partnership This
is not easy to arrange, but wher.
their lawyer comes they dispute as
much about the details of the split
as they had previously done about
the details of the business. They fi
nally accept their lawyer's suggestion
to decide the dissolution by drawing
a hand at poker They agree that the
one who wins shall be the master ol
the business, and the other Is to be
his servant for a year. If either par
ty breaks this contract, he is to for
feit J5000 and his Interest in the
business. There are also numerous
cash fines and penalties. Also abso
lute secrecy is demanded. This
makes Boggs' position exceedingly
painful to him when he Is Installed
SPOR TS
WASHINGTON SCHOOL
PROVES TO MUCH FOR
HI6H SCHOOL "MIDGETS"
his
The first game of the grammar
football league was played yesterday
afternoon at the Round-up Park with
the high school Midgets lined up
against the Washington school.
Captain Ulrloh'a team of the Wash
ington school proved too much for
Captain Boylen's team and the score
resulted In a 6 to 0 defeat for the
Midget team.
More practice In team work was
largely responsible for the victory of
the east end team, although Captain
Boylen's squad has the better mate
rial and more experienced players.
Captain Boylen. though only a hun
dred pounder, made a fine showing I;,
calling the signals for his team.
Wide end runs netted most of the
yardage for the Washington team
I'lrlch and Pasco carrying the ball.
The next game will be played between
the west end and the north side
teams. October 2". Tomorrow the
west end team plays a practice game
with the Indians at the agency.
30C
COME men change their
tobacco brands as regular
as a woman changes her mind.
An' others smoke VELVET.
Li
3C
IOC
DC
It
EDISON AND BURBANK
MEET IN CALIFORNIA
sweetheart comes to visit them
guest. He dares not tell her hit
ready in i reason for his menial position. and!
his tribulations are made worst
through the insistent interest of an
eccentric English servant, who de
termines to capture him as a hus
band. This amazing complication
excites no end of amusing situations
and the fun is fast and furious until
his sweetheart takes hand In the
game and proves that a lone queen
of hearts can beat a pair of sixes.
SACRAMENTO. Cut. Oct. 21.
Two of the world's greatest wonder
workers met for the first time when '
Thomas A. Edison, the electrical
wizarji of the east, clasped hands with
l.uthur Burbank. the "plant wizard" j
of the west, at the Southern Pacific j
depottin this city.
Edison, who is en route to the ex
position, arrived here on the fast mail;
truin at 11:41, Burbank came from
Santa Bosa to meet Ihe great Inven
tor. Edison was standing on the rear '
Platform of his private car as the I
train pulled into Sacramento. When
the train stopped his Secretary help
ed him off the steps and presented
Burbank. Kdlson. being quite doaf.
held his hand to his right ear as the
secretary shouted Burbank's name.
Then the inventor's face broke Into a
radiant smile. He first slxed up the
"plant wizard" from hat to shoes, and
then, extending his hand, said:
"I.uther Burbank! Well, well! It Is
indeed n pleasure to meet you."
Imputlent cameru men Interrupted
further greetings, for Edison's time
In Sacramento was very limited.
When Kdlson was made to under
stand that pictures were wanted, hei
motioned to Burbank and said
"Come on, come on; they want to
'shoot' ua."
Edison's train remained in Sacra
mento only five minutes, and he gave
orders that his meal was not to be
Interrupted by newspaper men.
"I'm trying to get complete rest."
he said.
Burbank accompanied him to San
Francisco.
CONDITIONS BETTER
IN EAST THAN WEST
PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 21. I C,
Oilman, president of the Spokane.
Portland Seatttle railway, returned
today from a trip to St. Paul, where
he conferred with members of the
board of directors regnrdlng affairs
of the railroad. Mr. Oilman ex
pressed the belief that better times
are on their way westward, judging
from the decided Improvement in con
ditions now prevailing throughout
the east and the lake region.
"It usually takes several months for
corresponding conditions to reach
the northwsst," Mr. Oilman said,
"but I certainly found a confidence
around St. Paul that was most en
couraging. All lines seem to be af
fected." Mr. Oilman said that the Increase
In easthoiind traffic is now becoming
marked. Lumber and fruit are mov
ing in large quantities, though the
grain movement is rather slow. Soma
of the grain Is being held for better
prices and some Is not yet threshed
because of wet weather.
Summarizing his Impressions from
his eastern trip. Mr. Oilman said In
dications are better than they havs
been for some time for a return to
normal business conditions.
Shot Wife; Suicided.
SAN FRANCICCO, Calif., Oct. 19.
C. W. Foote, a former statesman,
shot and probably fatally wounded
his wife early today. The couple
quarreled over Foote's drinking, the
pol'ce believe. The tragedy occurred
In a room at the Hotel Oakwood
ItlTIt NWSFX DIM l ssi CS
FLORIA I V Tost A
Betty Nansen. the eminent trage
dienne, who has been seen In such
famous William Fox successes as "A
Woman's Resurrection-' and "Should
a Mother Tell." appears at the Pas
time theater today in her latest Wil
liam Fox photodrama. "The Song of
Hate." which Is based upon Victor
len Sardou's world-known "La Tos
ca ." Miss Nansen gave particular
study to the charaeter of Floria Tos
ca, as she met Sardou In Paris during
the time that he was writing this dra
ma in which Sarah Bernhardt cre
ated the role now played by Miss
en version.
character of
Interview, Miss
;ome critics have
of impulse, driv-
LONDON. Oct. 21. "The wail of a
church is not an appropriate place to
perpetrate hatred." was the reason
given by sir Philip Wilbraham, chan
cellor of the diocese of Chester, w'hen
refusing lo permit a memorial tablet
to a victim of the Lusitanla in a Holy
oke church to bear the Inscription.
"Who was murdered "fl the Lusitania
by the Cermans."
The chancellor then suggested that
the inscription should read. "Who
lost his life when the Lusitania waff
torpedoed hy the Oermans." This
was agreed to.
Vewspaper Assistance praised.
WASHINGTON', Oct. 21. "The I
smaller newspapers of the country!
have to their credit one of the really
great achievements or the last few
years I mean the supread of com
pulsory education." declared W.
Carson Ryan, Jr.. editor of the Unit
ed States bureau of education. In an
interview with the United Press.
"Two years ago there were six
states without compulsory education
laws; today there are but two. The
'hange is largely due to the smaller
newspapers.
"Here, In the bureau of education,
we have learned from years of ex-
Nansen in the Fox s
Speaking of tht
Floria In a recent
Nansen said:
"Floria is not, as
declared, a creature
en by every passing wave of passion
or inclination. She is a true woman
with the heart and Instincts of her
sex. But she Is brave enough, when
a deep love possesses her soul, to give
herself over to It, regardless of what
the world may say. She is a char
acter in whom I am deeply Interest
ed, because of her hnmanness. Faced
by the most trying climax that can
arise in a woman's life, when her
very soul is placed upon the rack of
self-sacrifice, the metal of her heart
rings true. At the cost of her hon
or, she still holds to her great love
and even at the las) hour, when the
dark shadows of fate envelop her.
her woman's nobler nature suves her
w.v. ..viii a iranui .,. riuiid ....
Tosca is the most Interesting part I
have ever played. I created the char
acter at the Royal Theater In Copen
hagen, at the special request of the
author." Adv.
Chronic Constipation.
"About two years ago when I be
gan using Chamberlain's Tablets I
had been suffering for some time with
stomach trouble and chronic consti
pation. My condition Improved rap
idlv through the uye of these tablets.
Since taking four or five bottles of
them my health has been fine,'
writes Mrs. John Newton, Irving, N
Y. Obtainable everywhere. Adv.
ADAMS BAND IMPROVING
THROUGH WEEKLY WORK
So Easily Lighted
are our fixtures A pull on the
chain, a snap of the button, and
the whole room is flooded in a
scintillating beautiful light. If
5 u ve never seen the line we
are now exhibiting. It will more
than repay you to step in. The
prices are exceptionally moder
ate considering the quality.
J. L. VAUGHAN
PSrienCS to depend upon the paper of
this type
"It is a glorious thing that mu'h
of the educational progress of today
is being made In the smaller towns.
The big city has the system, the or
ganization, the discipline; but the
smaller city is apt to have the Inde
pendence and spirit that makes for
progress.
"The smaller newspaper Is notable
for Its boosting of progressive Ideas.
It Is apt to be In closer touch with
its constituency."
PURE RICH BLOOD
PREVENTS DISEASE
Bad blood is responsible for more
ailments than anything else. It
causes catarrh, dyspepsia, rheuma
tism, weak, tired, languid feelings
and worse troubles.
Hood's- Sarsaparilla has been
wonderfully successful in purifying
and enriching the blood, removing
scrofula and other humors, and
building up the whole system. Take
it give it to all the family so as io
avoid illness. Get it today.
(Special Correspondence, i
ADAMS. Ore.. Oct. 21. Mr. and
Mrs. (!. W. Bentle) started for their
home in Wapata after spending a few
weeks visiting relatives and friends in
Adams and Pendleton.
The Adams hand met Monday night
lor their usual practice. They are
Improving very much
Mrs. Ed Wallen and Mrs. Ijiura
West were in town Monday.
Mrs. Carl Christen -, visitor at
Athena Monday.
Young Peoples meeting was led by
Jack Mayberry Sunday evening, the
lesson was on Responsibility for
I'nlons. It was a very interesting
subject.
Mrs. Annie Baker and daughter Al
ma from Portland are now visiting at
the home of her parents Mr. and Mrs.
Coffee.
Mr. and Mrs. Roe Ferguson and
Mr. and Mrs. O, Perlnger were up
visiting at the horn of T. A. Lleu-allen.
With steamy, dusty housework, or stuffy,
tiresome office work or any other toil?
Just reach for your package of WRIGLEYS
and take a fresh start!
It will soothe and cool your mouth and
throat, quench your thirst, steady your
stomach and nerves, help your appetite
and digestion.
It is pleasant, beneficial and economical
an ever-ready friend to thirsty, tired,
nervous people.
Two delicious, long-lasting flavors. ' Every package
-wrapped and sealed against aft imparity.
RO Trace of HoMkts.
SEATLE. Oct. 20 There Is n
trace of the two bandits who held up
and robbed the citizens' bank at
Henton of 11416 yesterday Severa
posses are searching for the robbers
Write Wm. WrifW Jr. Co.. 1220 Kener BUi.. Cakafo, tar "Writsry' MlW Cmm"
beak, ia tolars, for tht Umm, 521