PAGE TWO DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. MONDAY. MARCH 6, 1916. EIGHT PAGES lllllllllllllllillllllH I The Latest Spring Modes in Apparel for Men, Women, Boys, Misses, Girls and Babies Can be Seen at The Peoples Warehouse Where It Pays to Trade Mens New Spring Suits In Up-to-the Minute Styles Z3 1 Jjy What fashion has decreed correct for men to wear this Spring is relfected in the ex tensive line of new suits that we are now showing. These garments are cor rect in fabric, perfect in fit and workmanship and the wide range of styles affords the selection of a model to meet every individual re quirement. The variety of styles and materials show the utmost care that has been taken in their selection. If you are ready to buy a new Spring suit, or if you are only desirous of seeing the new Spring Styles. The Peo ples Warehouse bids you welcome. Priced from $15 to $30. THE FOR $15.00 SUITS MEN The men's suits which we are offering at $15.00 are the best values it is possible to obtain at the price and are unsurpassed in style, fit and quality of the materials. $15.00. Ladies New Neckwear Another express shipment ladies' neckwear received this morning, showing the very latest, of organdie and waxed voile, lace, etc. Neatly made and trimmed. Eco nomically priced at 50 to $1.50 Ruffling Ruffling are to be used quite extensively now and you will find a big assortment all kinds and widths, of net silk, chiffon and organdie. The yard 25c to 75o Georgette Crepe For your "dross up" waists be sure to use "Georgette Crepe." A more beautiful material cannot be found. Comes in a variety of colors for street and evening wear, such as ivory, tea rose, Copenhagen, navy, black. Nile, etc., 40 inches wide. The yard $1.50 to $2.00 "T. P. W Pure Food Shop" CLEANLINESS 3 PHONES 15. ECONOMY SERVICE DRIED PRUNES Extra select stock, 10 lb. box $1.50 WRIGHT'S SILVER CREAM POLISH Bottle 25c NEWLY LAID EGGS Dozen 30c SCOTTISSUE TOILET PAPER The best paper on the market, full count. Roll, each 10c PICNIC HAMS Well trimmed, sugar cured, pound 15c RIPE OLIVES Extra fancy large olives, pint 25c MACKEREL Fine fat fish, each 12V-C to 35c By express today New California Asparagus, fancy Cau liflower, Green Onions, Spinach, Egg Plant, Head Let ture. Ripe Tomatoes and Cucumbers. Special Announcement We received by this mornings express a ship ment of Women's SPRING COATS These coats are a part of the personal selection recently made by our buyer while in New York. The styles are distinctly new, cape coats, sport coats, full flare models and long belted styles especially suitable for trav eling and automobile wear. They come in silk taffeta and faille silk, heather mixtures, velour and sheppard checks, white and shadow plaid chinchilla and solid colors of wool poplin, gabardine and serge. Reasonably priced from $9.75 to $35.00 SPECIAL GABARDINE RAIN COATS, TAN AND GRAY, $13.75. Trimming Silks Lots of silks to be used as trimmings, and made in com bination, plaids, stripes, etc., 24 to ,'S6 inches wide. All colors. The yard $1.00 to $2.00 Golden Cross Batiste Permanent silk finish cotton batiste, for Spring and Summer dresses. Big assortment patterns, floral, plaids, small figures, etc., all colors. :?0 inches wide. Yard 20c i MORE SHOE BARGAINS FROM OUR BARGAIN BASEMENT I Women's Shoes For house wear. Soft kid uppers, low heel, and the easiest, softest sole. Made EEE wide. Sold for $2.75. Shoe Sale m $1.98 Women's Street Shoes Dull calf stock, medium heel, good welt soles and very pretty lasts. Sold at $4.00. Shoe Sale $2.23 Women's Patent Leather A very neat and tasty shoe for street or dress wear. Shoes seldom found on Bargain Counters. Shoe Sale : $2.39 Women's Patent Leather Cloth top. high heel. A little out of the ordinary, short vamp, no cap, and wide widths. This shoe sold regularly for $8.75. Others are selling same last in cheaper, poorer materials at $2.98. Ask to see this shoe. Shoe Sale $2.45 Closing out Satins, Suedes, Velvets and Poplins $1.98 Men's Shoes High finish calf on good comfortable lasts, sold readily at $3.50 and $4.00. Shoe Sale $2.37 Men's Shoes Heavy calf, genuine oak soles. The best work shoe you ever bought at $4.00. Shoe Sale 82.47 Men's Boots We have always sold the old plain toe low heel, full kip leather boots. We are discontinuing them now and have sent them all to the Basement. Sold reg ularly $3.50 to $4.50. Shoe Sale $2.13 Buy shoes that last longer and make your dollars go farther. Wednesday of this week 1b Ash Wednesday, the beginning of th Lenton season of which Raster Is the close Lent In Pendleton Is always marked by a cheek in the social sc. llvlty though by no means dues IC bring a complete suspension of festiv ities. During this period of denial a number of dancing and card clubs will remain Inactive and there will be but few formal affulri. The annual business meeting of the Current Literature Club will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock at the hyme of the president. Mrs A. C. Hampton, on High street, officers for the next year will b chosen and the work for the next season dis cussed. e Complimenting Mrs. Frank Fair banks, who is soon to leave for Itha ca, New York, to Join her husband, who has been there for several weeks. Mrs Charles K. Heard entertained a few friends Saturday arternoon at her home. The affair was In the nature of a traveling shower for the honor guest. Decorations and appointments were suggestive of St. Patrick's Day. The Fairbanks are to make their fu ture home in Ithaca. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Manning are re ceiving congratulations upon the birth of an eight and three quarters pound baby girl last Friday evening at 8t Anthony's hospital. Mrs .lames A. Fee Is entertaining the South Hill Hridge (JlUb this after noon at her holtlS of Post street Mr tad Mrs. Fraim Joseph Deebai h ( harmingh entertained the nclghbor hood club, "Our Crowd." at their home Saturday evening. Five Hun dred was the principal diversion lalnly refreshments were served the" guests. "A host of golden daffodils' played a part in the appointments of the dainty bridge lum heon presided over Saturday afternoon at one-thirty In Mrs Nesmlth Ankeny at her bono. on North Main street Covers were laid tor fourteen. Following the luncheon brldl was played, honors belli WOB by Mrs. Frank E Hoyden The guests included Mrs. W. I.. Thompson. Mrs John Vert. Mrs Frank Frazier, Mrs. A. J McAllister. Mrs Itenn Adams Mrs Wilson D McNary, Mrs Charles Hamilton. Mrs 0, M. Rlcs, Mrs. J rc Mulllnlx. Mrs Willard Hind. Mrs. Frederick K Judd. Mrs William F. Lowell ant Mrs Hoyden. This was the first of a series of such luncheons to be given b) Mrs Ankeny Mis. Lyman for Hood Hive 1 1 r tr visit her parents. ifillll! Pendleton's Greatest Department Store THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE Where It Pays To Trade FIRE IN MARSHFIELD Aid considerable damage, the extent of PLANT DOES DAMAGE which cannot yet be ascertained. The cause of the fire Is not known. MAP.SHFIELD. Ore. March . Fire in the electric plant of the Ore gon Power company In North Bend For an hour the Coos Bay cities were without lights. Armor-Plate Arrogance FOLGER WEEK March 6 to 11 Save ten cents a pound FOLGEjTS GOLDEN GATE COFFEE 4 AT ALL GROCERS To convince you by trial that it is better than other coffees, and to induce you to make the test, we reduce the price during FOLGER WEEK Grocer will celled the difference from at 45c Quality bfdsr SteOtS j Da Prt rict R 1 LB .46 ,36 2 " .86 .66 ' 2J4" 1.00 .76 ij 6 " 2.00 1 60 ij ' - li Surf r telephone your order to your dealer to day J. A. FOLGER & CO., San Francisco C. B: lliliiilJIiillllliJliJBIMSirf , There was no reason to anticpate quiet acquiescence in the proposition to establish a government armor pla'e plant In the minds of the great manufacturers such a suggestion was nothing less than revolutolnary. Private intersts had always hud th government by the throat: had always Charged the United States close to twice as much as they were willing I to accept from foreign purchasers Of I their product; had always had full, control at Washington, and they could not understand why they should be ! expected to let go their strangle-hold. I But the boldness of their threat to raise the price 1200 a ton If the gov ! eminent attempted to build a plant of Its own was an eye-opener to those who had paid no attention to the de- j velopment of the enormous combina tions In this and kindred lines, and who have treated all exposures of their methods as merely sensational, "muckraking." The present attempt to keep Brandels off the supreme bench Is In large measure due to the publication of his enlightening book on "ther People's Money," which details the operation and system ol the money trust. The prompt acceptance of the chal-lerc-e of the armor plate trust by Senator Tillman, chairman of the naval affairs committee, and his In troduction of a bill for the gnverr ment purchase anil operation of the private armor plate establishment until the government plant Is built, was a vigorous and proper method of dialing with the situation. Senator Tillman does not agree with the reported statement of the president that we should have the "glycates! navy In the world." but he believes we should have the second greatest In point of efficiency he admits that it would be futile to at tempt to rival Kng'nnd in nnvnl d -velopment, becstUW her verv existence depends upon her control of the sen deferring to the armor-plate's de' ance. The New York Times IMkM these Incisive comments: "Monopolistic arrogan c has never gone further than In this IfMtMM On' grmor-plate makers are th- chief beneficiaries of the traffic in mun' tions of war At the nper.se ol many friendships the irovernmerit Ku supported them In their legal rights. CATTLE ON WAY TO but there is no denial of the fact that they are coining money out of blood and hatred. The Jiands that they now raise menacingly against a nation by whose neutrality they have prof ited are filled with the gains of business that ignores the moralities and Is content to stand upon the strict letter of the law. "These are the men who have complicated the question of national defense by their gluttonous attempt to bend the whole movement in their own selfish Interest With pockets stuffed as a result of the agony of Europe, they have sought to make of the necessity for reasonable defense at home an opportunity to oppress a people at peace. They want govern-, ment to protect them, their property and their trade They even expert government to go to war in their be half Vet a suggestion of independ ence on the part of that government is met by the terrorism of monopolis tic prices today and of dismantled plants tomorrow." The manufacture or not only armor, plate but of all monitions of war In! government plants will do more than; anything else to muzzle the vicious agitators who cry for the profits to he made therefrom. To take th" profits out of warfare la the surest way to prepare for a lasting peace. , Keep your Bowels negator. As everyone knows, the bowels are the sewerage system of the body and; it is of the greatest Importance thai; they move once each day. If yourj bowels become constipated, tak V dose of Chamberlain's Tablets Just after supper and they will correct the; disorder. obtainable everywhere. ' Adv BECAUSE OF STORM EI) W l i t II ol1 MEACHAM LOSES mi riMi: i m ;i. HIS PLANS six 1 miles of snow covers Stating Lind- in Meacham District; Indica tions Are for More snow : Meacham Man KxchangcH Oilirornin Property for frregon Ijaml. Thursday on business, On Friday he was called to La Orande as a witness on a lawsuit trial. Mr. and Mrs. It Wilkinson went to I La Orande on Friday nigh to visit ; Saturday and Sunday. It. Fagan went to Portland on Frl- day night and from there to Wood burn. Ore., where he is exchanging i California property for Woodluirn I property. He expects to return Sunday. Mrs .1. It. Davis and friend, Miss Anline Davis, from Duncan, stopped Off here Snturday until No. is when they left for La tirande for a few days. UMattaat H'tiiiii a assured when there Is gooil blood in the vein.-. Hood's Sarsaparllla Is the medicine t' make good blood. Begin taking It now. II is Just whut the system neols at this time and will do you great good Sharpens the appetite, stead ies the nerves. Adv The directors of hygiene of New York's child board of health has de clared that since the organization be gnn work e ght years ago the deaili rate among babies has been reduced to 96 In lOfln In New York, while II Onn infants have been saved from the grave. Bangkok. Slam, is a pioneer in the Orient In electrical progress havni-.-r.ow two large light and power plants Baron Charles Heresfnrd. famous, Prltlsh naval leader, who led In Par Ha metll the f ght for a monster Prit-j ish navy, is 70 years old. Those who oxped to live until 2101 have cause for worry, scientists hay Ing found that by then the world's OgJNMttl as regards populat on wll' have been reached, a total of 6,000.- uoo, oon. Italy's national emblem Is the illy. (East Oregonlan Special.) MEACHAM, Ore.. March 6 Kd Welch had his cattle started from No lln to this place to turn on the ranges But, to his surprise, he awoke on Tuesday morning to see his ranges covered with six Inches of snow and still snowing. He was alarmed as to what to do. then made a trail as fasl as he oOUld to Meac ham, ran to the telephone, did not stop to say a word or ask If the line was busy, only said to Pendleton: "Head the herd off, tell them not to come this way ." He is now puzllng as to what to do. to hold his Cattle In PWdlttOD until win tor Is over or to call up the high man and dispose of them as he thinks win ter Is Just started Mrs. Willis Burchett and Mrs Her: Cttllcoal went lo La Orandc on Wed nesday. Mrs. Burchett hud suffered much with : tomhache and went to have It extracted. Herbert o'Farrell end Isiuis Clarl went to Wallowa on Tuesday to work in the logging ramps there. Mrs. Joe Hemic from North Fork Stopped off here on Huesday on her way to Kneerprlse, wnere she will vis It a few days with her mother. Mrs. Clint Davis was on the sick list but has recovered Snow has fallen lo the depth of (l Inches here during the past week, but Saturday II chinookoa. II Is still cloudy with Indications of more snow Jack D"ckwellT went to li ilrande on Wednesday to attend to business. Waller Marlln arrived back from Pendleton .01 Thursday hut did not slop nff ns he had Mislness In La 1 brands J. D. Casey went to Pendleton If stritlst'cs are to he believed' the birth rate In the I'nited State, In Oreat Britain and In most other civ ilized lands is being steadily, thouuh lowly, lowered each year. Oil o in ad- f lnlru,.nn r...lla.l ... , -.. ... l. n , . ,, ri.iiru i u .leu u-lll mnftmm , ,t mils Its removal from flesh painlessly. There are 8,817371 persons In thf United Stales whose mother tongut is Oerman. Svirie Vgnint folds. The nearest thing to a specific against colds Is a sleeping porch or open bed room and a cold sponge hnth every morning when you first get up. Even then you will occasionally tske a cold, especially when colds are epi demic, and when you to you will rind Chamberlain's Cough Itemedy a gre'rt help In enabling you to get rid ol It. Try It. Obtainable everywhere -Adv. EVERY THREE MINUTES ONE DIES IN THE U. S. '1 he Anti-Tuberculosis Society illus trates the frightful toll of consumption by extinguishing a light every three minutes, and shows that it is the man or woman, gill or boy, who neglects coltls, whose blond is impure, Who feels weak and languid, who is the very one to contract tuberculosis and none are immune. iJuring changing seasons, or after sickness, blood-quality is most impor tant, and if you and your family will take Scott's Emulsion after meals it will charge your blood wilh hruh li sustaining richness, quicken circulation, and streugtlu n both luniks ami throat Scott's is hw from alcohol- easy to take it cannot harm. Get a bottle to day. Soon ft Buwim. Muomfirid, N.J. 15-23 The rO.OtO waiters and kitchen at tendants of the New York hotels and restaurants are being licensed. To do so they must pass a ph steal ex. amlitatlon, IJi ITEA1 KPTIINfl l.W ITIVE. A good and time tried remedy Is Dr. King's New Life Pills The first dose will move the sluggish boWats, stimulate the liver and (dear the sys tem of waste mid blOOd InpUtitlH You owe It to yourseir to clear the system of body poisons, accumulated during the winter. Dr King's New Life Pills will do II. He at your Druggist. Adv. RuDBKR When you buy anything In rubber you hnve to rely on the druggist regarding Its quality. The only safeguard you have Is to buy your rtiblirr goods at a reliable store than carries only reliable makes. Buy your Bubher floods from ns we offer you 0. belter qual ity for less tttOttO Tallman & Co. Lending Druggiiti