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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1916)
PACE FOra DAILY EAST OBSOOX1AN. rENPtCTON. G7C TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1916. TO PAGSS Pauline Frederick in Jail! Goes! tar- .--irTiii It ToniKlU will te a pila occasion In Artsun cir. le for Supreme Muster Ariimn H. 8 Hudson will be here and Will deliver a lecture at the regular season. Thi in but the second time Pendleton haw hail the honor of a visit from the lillnf;m.ht'd officer and freat prepnrat.ons are being made to entertain him. The ycuns; ieople of the Presbyteri an church are planning a social to be held In the church parlors on the evening of (xlober 30. It will bp in the nature of a Hallowe'en celebra tion ard a merry time Is anticipated. The Hawthorne Piirent -Teacher Circle will have charge of the child welfare exhibit at the library on Wedne day even'ns and will present the following musical program be ginning at S o'clock: Tiano solo, Hel en Koch; vocal solo. Mrs. Westbrooke Plckson; violin solo. Miss Kessi; nan0 duet Mrs. v. R. Wyrtck, Mrs. Omar Stephens. Mrs p. F. coble has returned from a visit with friends in Walla Walla. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Christensen returned Saturday from Spokane In s 1917 Overland car which they pur chased while in that city. Miss Olga I. Fontaine and Miss Claudine McMonies have returned from a week's v'sit with friends and relatives in Portland. Mr. and Mrs, Herman J, Anderson (Miss Iora, Myrlck), whose wedding Saturday evening was a surprise to their many friends, have returned from a brief trip to Walla Walla. They have leaded the 600 acre farm o" Fted Raymond near Helix and will taks up their residence there. Mr. Anderson is a comparative newcomer to Pendleton having been serving the Past few months as an operator at Rleth, but his wife has grown to wo manhood in this County and is very popular among a large circle of ac qua'ntanees. For the past five years she has been a very efficient sales, woman at the Alexander Department Store. The Miss onary Society of the Prea byterian church will hold their annu al missionary tea on Wednesday aft ernoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home o' Rev. and Mrs. j. B. Snyder on East A Ha street Mrs. W. D. Humphrey is anticipat. Ing- a visit from her aunt, Mrs. G. W Harper of Plainview, Neb., who is ex pected to arrive Thursday. Mrs Harper will spend a week here, en route to Portland where he will pas the winter. i j . I : I , 'y'J' I I . i v I V-;-;Vr'-( t: ;.;. 'V. 0 ' "J . r - w h 1 ! .j . I v ; . 1 : 4 I ' v ' f i - I'. 4-1 " ; . f M I' l r ($" , -v?v V f ' -i-""' fV V- J. 1.: ' . .. i : f a"'fc Mrs. George Brace of Gibbon Is a house guest of Mrs. w. D. Humphrey for a few days. Mr. and. Mrs. Edwin J. Burke of Pendleton, are registered ' at Hotel Portland, Portland, Oregon. In connection with the child wel fare exhibit in the aud torium of the library building, a program, begin Bing at 7:45 will be given this even ing. It will consist of a piano and violin duet by Misses Edna and Thel ma Baling, a vocal solo by Mrs. S. H. Forshaw, an Instrumental solo by Mrs. Maye Hager and a talk by Rev. J. E. Snyder on child welfare work. The hostesses for the evening have been selected from the parent-teach er association and we as follows: Mrs Jesse filling. Mrs. I. E. Young. Mrs. J. A. Be?t. Mrs. R. H. Wilcox and Mrs. T. R. Hampton. The public la Invited to attend. JALLINE FREDERICK, FAMOUS PLAYERS STAR IN PARAMOUNT PIC TURES. No, the i-ruel ;ensors have not placed the celebrated Famous Playnrs-Para. :vmt a'-ar l:i durance vile for playing "Zaia.'' and "Bella Donna," It was tha .i.ghtleBS scenario writer who placed her there for a scene in a recent Fa- ....i Players production on the Paramount Prof-rem. As Miss Frederick re irked when she inspected the cell, she was so glad it was in the studio tinj t in a real jail, because she could go ahead and weep without keeping one eye -en for rats. , CLD-TIME REMEDY CAKES PURE ELOC0 Pnrify yonr blood by takitis Hood's Sareapaiiila. This inedj ' eine has been and still is the people '; nedicine because of its reliable character and its wrnderful San- ill the treatment of tiie eommim i'5. eases and ailrtienti scrofula, ca tarrh, rhenmatifm, d.viT?a, f appetite, that tired fi-elit'.' general debility. Hood's Sawparilla lias h- tested forty vents. Get it t' di'v D. O. Howell of Joseph, spent last night in Pendleton. Iley Winn of Weston spent yes terday in Pendleton. Mr. and Mrs. c. H. Smith of' Enter, prise, are visitors in the city. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Smith of En. terprise, are visitors in the city, cratlc candidate for representative, is campaigning In Pendleton today. W. T. Reeves of Stanfleld, demo is campaigning In Pendleton today. Herbert Boylen, prominent Pilot Rock sheepman. Is in the city today. Mr. and Mrs. Henry J, Taylor will leave tomorrow for Portland on a visit A. Buckley, assistant superintend ent of the O.W. was over from La Grande yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Peterson of Walla Walla were guests of the Gol den Rule last evening. Joseph Rothlln, who farms on the south reservation, is transacting bus iness in the city today. W. F. Ferguson, well known Athe na resident, arrived this morning . from Portland where he had been : for a few days. Walter L. Tooze of Salem, repub- i lican eneaker for Hughes, who is . T. Cherrier of Helix is a Pendleton visitor today. John H. Lewis, state engineer, is registered at the St. George. Glen Ki Scott was in last evening from his ranch nortji of town. Circuit Judge G. W. Phelps is spending the day at Hernilston. J. R. Flynn of the Blake-McFall Paper Co., is over from Walla Walla. D. B. Clark, livestock man of the O.-W., iw paying Pendleton a visit to day. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ilynd of Ukiah were down from the south end town yesterday. County Supt. I. E. Young spent yes terday at the O'Hara school In Dis trict 65. Mrs. H. II. Hattery left yesterdaj for Chicago to visit with relatives She expects to be gone until the first of the year. Joseph Cronan, prominent Port land resident and owner of the Bank of lone, was in Pendleton this morn ing en route to Walla Walla. He is the father of Frank E. Cronan who was married to Mim .Muriel Baling re. cently. scheduled to make several addresses in this county, is at the Pendleton. lllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllMMIilHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIirr Specials You Need Plumber' Force Cup 25c Cocoa Door Mt, No. 1 $1.00 Cocoa Door Mat, No. 2 $1.35 60 ft Wire Clothes Line 25c Dover Egg Beater 15c Bristol Floor Brushes 75c Curtain Stretcher $1.50 Sheet Steel Roaster 35c Corner Main and Court St. Vijyamforilsok By Jacob II. Schiff Financier and Ph'danthropiil Member of Kuhn, Loeb Sf Co., New York Banker: President Wilson's administra tion has been almost throughout a constructive one. The enactment of a new and Just tariff law and ataVtliah- inK of th Fed- ff" Bank systeai are momentous achievements, from the bene fit of which the country should Erofit after the uropean war is over even more than at present But what 1 consider Presi dent Wilson's grestrst ae com Dlishment is that he has in a great Pleasure succeeded in bringing about a rap prochement between' the produc ing and the consuming classes, so that the great and hurtful an tagonism which, before the pres ent administrstion came into pow er, had made itself felt almost in every substantial interest, has now almost ceased. What,? Everything! Where? 0) 5) VJ r3 0 j L, JUL I better Hurry! Prices have been made to make our fire salvage move and it is going out our doors in a steady stream of bundles 70,000 Wiillll of the Finest to Select From Price is no object to us, we want to get rid of the goods and get back into our regular store. Come Curry It Away .rr mifm i-if - .Am, m limfu, s.,t-.mi .A--.;.Z- .1 why nKitftMUuyamm Huiiiiiiuiiiiimiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiuiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii