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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1916)
TACZ ro 'DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1916. TWELVE PAGES REALTY TRANSFERS This Store is a Real SERVICE ORGANIZATION for Men Warranty J. J. Smith, et ux, to J. Humtleld, J10, 1-8 Interest in W 1-2. secUon 12, township 3 mirth, ranKe t8. T. D. Taylor. sheHK to B. U Smith, $1104.35. N. 1-2 8 1-2 Miction 85, township I north, range SO. C. 8. MudKfl. et ux, to C. J. 8tnb Jlnff, et ux, $10. NB 1-4 ioctlo 10. township 6 north, range SI. T. B. Wells, ot ux, to Ida M. Torlc, It.rA ma(a .Mil tmlnil riMU.rinHnn I. Want G incur ,,.. . -f.v.. .section 1, township 2 north, rang SI. UN I who rifid Clnfhp'& It YOU DON'T MAKE YOUR OWN CLOTHES; YOU MAKE THE MONEY WITH WHICH TO BUY THEM; SOMEBODY MUST SERVE YOU IN THE MATTER. WHO? Service mean more than telling something polite ly and delivering it promptly; it mean looking out for your interests when WE buy; long before YOU uy; it meant having ready the kind of clothes you rant and ought to have, the quality, the style, the workmanship that will represent full value for your money. And that means, from our experience Hart, Schaffner & Marx Suits and Overcoats ' You can be sure of the value in these clothes; you can be sure of satisfaction; we guarantee it, as part of the service. HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX SUITS. .. $20 to $35 HART SCHAFFNER & MARX OVERCOATS $17.50 to $35 Other good all-wool suits and overcoats $15.00 to $20.00. They are a good deal better than the other fellow will show you at the same price. New PARTY DRESSES in DESTINCTIVE A SELECTED ASSORTMENT OF DISTINCTIVE MODELS, DESIGNED ACCORDING TO FASH ION'S LATEST DICTATES AWAITS YOUR INSPECTION. GARMENTS INSPIRED BY THE MASTER MINDS OF THE GREAT PARISIAN DESIGNERS FEATURING HOOPED SKIRTS AND DOUBLE TU NIC EFFECTS. THEY ARE MADE OF SOFT, FLUFFY TULLE, GOLD AND SILVER CLOTH, LUS TROUS SATIN AND TAFFETA IN ALL THE DESIRABLE EVENING SHADES, INCLUDING WHITE. ONE MODEL CALLED THE RAINBOW IS MADE, WELL IT'S TOO BEAUTIFUL TO DE SCRIBE, SO WE'LL JUST SHOW IT TO YOU IN OUR NEW WINDOWS ON SUNDAY. DON'T FAIL TO SEE THESE FROCKS IN PREPARATION FOR THE COMING PARTIES. WOMEN'S UNION SUITS $1.25 Made of the best selected yarns," very elastic and a permanent finish. Shown in three styles, high neck, long sleeves, ankle length, Dutch neck, wing sleeve, ankle lengths, and low neck, no sleeve, ankle length. Each $1.25 When You Think of Making Clothes Come to Our Dry Goods Department "Where Quality at the Right Price" is the Pass Word PLAID WOOLENS We have received a new lot of Plaid Woolens 'for extra skirts and dresses. Shown mostly in the darker tones of fine quality French serge and wool velour; 40 to 56 inches wide. The yard 50? to $3.00 COLORED BORDERED DAMASK Have you seen it? It is .white Mercerized Darnask, beautiful satin floral effects with colored borders of pink, blue and gold. Good heavy weight and satisfaction guaranteed. The yard 75 hrii , .. II w?p c Mi , , i, li a: r r a m m mi i h i ii ma t M r 111 h n m V tsX 5v .r mmd i . nv I I ML I I fit m . w 'L-t-g j-i-i . Mj wa ill ma Si i if WLSZAT I 1 1 1 II A A til I 1 ' 1 lS&ffWMfM) fca 'J 1 WlN? 3 i I K a I n ii vi t . f m.. wjlv w avsr aLU "ts i i u rt im Transfer n WrrH w Raa. m i t irH i e o Copj-nghtHirtScha5ner&M nwimiiiiWmiBTii tt n iTBWM;.itlMlifi 'Jl hllf p g 111 El 13 " ' . fell e H styles imr-S- 1; . to T. M. Webb, 7(1 61, acreage la eo. 1, townchlp 1 HOtith. range SI. W. n. Willie, et ux, to A. T. Ken tuAA mtilA iinfl hound d mmt In. Itlon In oectlon IS, township ortb, I HERMISTON YOUNG FOLK ARE QUIETLY MARRIED jMta (proline NhotTcll and .Patrick IHtbPrty Wl OthY Kews of Pw. plt In That (Vinmnnltj. (Kant Orcgonlnn Special.) HEnMlSWN, Oct. 19. M!a Cr- ollne Hhotwell and Patrick Doherty were quietly married yeterday morn. Ing at the home of the- brldo a par- I nts, Mr. nnd Mre. 3. K. Shotwell, the Rev. T. A. Oraham performing the ; ceremony. The young couple left on the morning train for Portland where they will upend a short honeymoon before taking up their reeldence In t Hermlston. where the groom la ao I clnted !n the contracting buelneea with ' J. K. Hhotwell A Son. Xfr. Pohertv Ik the (h1f--t daughter ! of Mr. and Mr. J. K. Hhotwell, plo- nfmr riaMonla at Ihn nrrtlnft tih. , wn n memner or tne rim grsnu- i atlng clnna to be graduated from the Hermlston high echool, the clam of 1911. TTx-Ri'tmtor Chnrles W. rulton wan here Mond iy. havlnr (rtopped off for a lihort v'Jlt at the farm home of hi i son fred p. Fulton. eat of thla city. Mrj. J. H. Young and I'ttle dangh- ; tere. Iner. and l.oulje. returned home j 'ist evening lifter having spent a I week In Pendleton. ( Mr. F. Mnmma wan a Pendleton i visitor the first of the week. Miss Klhel nodgers of Pendleton, i former popular ohoo teacher hf tbr wttv. will lie a gue"t at the Wntion . home dur'ng the dairy show. T)r. J. A. ramnbell spent ftnnday at ; the Round-t'p Cty, Mrs. II. It. Newport has retarned l from a week's visit In Pendleton. Mrs. S. II. Wilson, of the Hermls- I j ton Hotel, was a county neat fMtor the first of the week. Pendletons Great est Dep't Store THE PEOPLES WAREHOUSE Where It Pays to Trade mwm CANADIAN TRAINMEN ORDERED 10 STRIKE WINNIPECl, Oct. 21. Canadian Pa ciflo tralnment from coaat to coast have been ordered to atrlke at five p. m. Wednesday. This la a sudden turn from the earlier optimistic reports. Urant Hall, the trainmen's represen tative, still hopes for an amicable settlement. CANDIDATE MAKK8 APPEAL KOIt VOTW IN 1ANUI AOI-S KAN8A8 CITT, Kan., Oct 21. Korelsn residents of thU city will be asked to vote for Joe Lunch, demo cratic candidate for register of deeds !n Wyandotte county. Lunch la learn ing enough of five different languages to ask in each of them for votes. He will say In Croatian, Polish. Ru-sian. Swedish and Greek the following: "My name is Joe Lunch. I would appreciate your vote for me as regis ter of deeds In the coming election." COSfKItNING WOMEN. The first sixteen years of this cen tury shows that the United States is leading the world with 1,400,000 di vorces. Several girl students of Temnle col lege, of Philadelphia, are running a hotel at one nf the Xpw Jersey re sorts. 1 Mips rharlotta Ilipley, typist for the Portland. Ore., chamber of commerce. is claimed to be the best typewriter In the United States. The new countess of Sandwich, formerly' Miss Alberta fiturgls, the daughter of a Chicago banker, is scarcely known in her native coun try. Ocrman women who have replaced the men called to the front are now paid the same rates of pay as the men received for the same work. The master bakers of Auckland, New Zealand, are now asking the courts to allow women and girls to work in any department of their trade. MAIDS IYHM 1 MON, DKMANI) 7 A VFEK AND 10-IIOL'lt DAY liOSTOX, Mass., Oct. 21. Mini mum wages for housemaids. S7 a I week; working time, ten hours a day. That Is the outcome of the organiza tion of the Plttsfleld Servant Oirls, union. Formerly housemaids in Pitts field could be hired for $5 a week. The housemaids also are seeking to affiliate with the washerwomen and scrub women, who are expected to de mand a minimum of i a day. HOAHD AT P.AKOA1N To ' CO-KDS STIHS K. II. TOWN LAWRENCE." W, Oct. 21 -As-sertlng that rertne - ' . nil O KITOn fi many of the hoarding houses at the Un-ver,ity of Kansas to pretty Vrti said to be valuable attractions to the men students In their choice of places to eat, the Lawrence papers have called the attention of the un'versltr authorities to the practice. The nroh ahte r..u w'H h abolition tn" -3S3SS5S3 found true The proprle, " erel hoarding houses have ohlerted to the "m'xed" clubs on the ground that the students board nt them more for the social side than for practical our-poses. AEP"PLANF UFn FOR DIWC HltVTINr, OUT OVER OCEAN Atlanta Coast. Rportsmsn Rtavta One side S-Mllei I,lmt to nsrafw Penalty. ATLANTIC CITT. Oct 11. B. I Kenneth Jaeqp'th has IntrVidneed Iduck shooting from his hvdro-aero. Plane. The snort has become popu lar among visitor" slnre cooler weth. er Interrupted the reeiiar flvlng schedule. It Is si Id to be the first t'me on record that nrtunl dnrk k('l Ings have been made from a flying boat In the north. Jacou'ih has Mw-H the snort tn the south durlmr the winter months. Tn order to nvoM the same laws, which mnke It unlawful to shoot game hlrd from s craft either by sail or endne. the running s done outside the three mile llm't over the ocean. Once before he trM shooting frorn his sernn'ane and wa brought be fore the federal smhorltlea, who class ed the hvdro-neronlnne as a "power boat" and Imposed a fine. FTSAL TO MAKE MrNTTION ...immiv. oct. 21.Tho Amster dam correspondent of the FTohnlf Telegraph company wires thn follow ing: "Three hundred workmen In a Ohent factory who refu,,j tn mnTy )n German munition factories In Bel glum have been arrested and sent to Oermnnv. Twelve who resisted were shot The OermaYis everywhere are forcing the Ttelglnn., to work for hem. ptrtlcnlarlv on the railroads, their own personnel hnving given out." FATAL FIGHT OVEK PET CAT. Death of Soldier Itoportcd to Have Hern ItenulU SAX FKANTISCO. Oct. 21. A board of inquiry headed by Captain F. W. Benteen of tho medical reserve corps was appointed at the San Fran cisco Presidio today to determine the cause of the death last Sunday at the I-ettcrman general himpital of Private Charles W. Blackburn. The authorities are guarding the proceedings with the utmost secrecy. but it was reported thut the. dead soldier had an altercation recently with Private John Wormley of the hospital, where both were employed with the medical corps, over a pet cat. Wormley, it was stated tonight, has been confined In the guardhouse since th'i disturbance. KAIL EARNINGS JUMP AHF-AD Hix'kfng Valley Gross Onrailiijf rimes Up 20 Per Cent. NEW YORK, Oct. 21 The Hock ing vnlley railway had gross operat ing revenues of 11 411, 000 for Its last fiscal year, an Increase of $1,230,000, or 20 per cent, according to a report Issued here last night. The compan' paid 4 per cent In dividends, leaving a balance at the end of the year of 1641,000. The Chicago & Alton railroad earn, ed for the year ended June SO last 116,325,000, an increase of 12,079,000 according to'a report' made public. LIGHTNING CAUSES JAP 3,000 LOSS FORT LIJPTON, Colo.. Oct 21. Lightning struck the barn of C. S. Furushlma, a Japanese farmer near here, causing a loss of not less than f 3,000. The barn, with its entire con tents, consisting of five head of irood horses, more than 1,000 bushels of v. heut, everal sets of hiirnens and two wagons, wero destroyed. The place was only partly Insured. LIVER ACTING POORLY TRY H 0 ST E ITER'S Stomach Bitters IT IS A SPLENDID TONIC