TEN PAGES DAILY EAST OREGOMAN, TENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1016. PAGE FOUR RICH DANISH GIRLS HERETO STUDY SHOP for Fletcher's c - POX, Ore., Oct. 2S. There was a quirt home wedding today at the home of Richard Gentry when his brother, Charles L, Gentry, and Miss ltasel Carli were muted In marri age. Rider G. tt K.ids, pastor of the Baptist church, officiated. Mr. Gentry Is a rancher of Cotton wood, Grant cointy, and the bride recently came to fox from Alhee in Umatilia county, where her many friends will shower the happy couple with pond wishes and congratulations. "v Mrs. Mary Boydvn rm,1 Mrs. P. .1. Heceman entertained delightfully yesterday afternoon honoring Mrs. rc. r-.. Unnsen who with her hus band, will leave shortly for an ex tended eastern trip. The guests in cluded the members of the spizzerink tum Club together with Mrs. H. J. ll.an of Salem and Mrs. Terpentine. An exceptionally interesting and well attended meeting of the three women's organizations of the Church of the Redeemer was held yesterday at the Rectory. The recent Episcn--n.-i,,n in stt Toiis was the J'tlll.lll (Vim i - , subject of a very able paper by Mrs. Xorhorne Berkeley. -Irs. A. 1. rait- save a talk on the "Armenians" and i Mrs. Charles Quiimey spoke of the women's united offering. A very nlensunt social hour followed the pro gram a,J dainty refreshments were Mrs. R. Alexander will entertain the members of the Current Litera ture tomorrow afternoon in the club room of the library. Mif Grace Bean of Salem, form erly a popular member of Pendleton s voting set- 'ho is spending a few davs in Pendleton with her parents Judge and Mrs. H. J. Bean, was the inspiration for a pretty little infor mal sewing party yesterday for which Mrs. James Johns Jr. was hostess. The guests Included many former college mates of Miss Bean and were as follows. Miss Jennie Perry. Miss Vincent. Miss Claire Raley, ui uiirtre.l Berkeley. Miss Edna! Mips Beth Smith vfo .TnmPS .lohllS. cumunu aiu.vir. - - men Sr., Mrs. Shanard. Mrs. Bean. Mrs.; II,,-,. ai.q MpHp Chessman.' "p 1.1 U'ir. in Ufa U aatnrfUlKP I Hl'riJMJll. . old Young, Mrs. Clarence Ash Mrs. Alwr Fee. T. r. Cilliland of Pilot Rock, is in ; the city today. i C. l). Gabr-eUon. Salem insurance' man. is in the city. Mr. and Mrs. J. n. French are in! from the south end of the county. I AKCIIItlMlOP UAXXA. I V4 Is 1 vivi? ,Alt r ;Vivv til I i ' v I " r I If 'iS" I .fe .. - i f Vi;'i-rrJAte: . " if riy . MunmMu. ...,aalB3gBi8 . , 1 " " !. i.i ivlili,li lina hferi lulauts ud CliUtlren-Kspericuee ugulust Lxpcruuwiw. What is CASTORIA ...) niinm Feverisliucss. 1 or moro tlmii thirty yra ic J ft?a ln stant use for tl.o r. lU-I M ..nsti.inUon. Flatulpiioy, Wind Colic ull TeetWnic Tro.ibl.-s and i) itr luva. It roKuUtlos the Stonm, h ... I llowr N. ,1Ssi...ilato the Food, plvlnfr henltliy and niiti nil oluvp. The V'liildrcu's rauacta-Tho Mother 8 neuu. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of MISSES, JKGER AND ELSE' IILUM NEW YOKK. Nov. 2. The spirit of the Vikings is not dead. Two Danish iiirls have followed in the wake of their Norseman ancestors anil sailed west to explore not new lands, but the American fashions and the methods of American department ARCHBJSHOP HAKXA Dr. Edward J. Hanna an hhishn, Mrs.."' l"e u.oeese ot .-iin M;ilHlsio was born in Rochester, v v on i,,i- .11 still es: ItiKer and kise iliuui, who arrived on the Frederick VIII. are the dau ghters of a wealthy Danish merchant who owns Copenhagen's largest de partment siire. The girls have long been intere'sted in the business of their lathers store. And now at the age whefi most girls are to seek out that which the aggressiveness and originality of the Americans have added to the science of running that maze of business, the modern de partment store. In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THI CINTAU WALLA WALLA HUNTER ! KILLS ELK IN OREGON Is Arrested in Washington for llav ing Elk Meat tn His possession ami Will Iater He Tried Here. entered the American college RjllflQ in IH7Q ,n.l . utn, nln,..J 1-1. -.- ..... v-, ivnipiciru ii'fc and, course mere in 1 ks. The next year, i he returned tn America and was giv- ! :en a place at the Rochester Cathedral in iks3 ne was appointed to chair of dogmatic theoloe w is the Kekuku s Hawaiian Quintet greeted by a good audience ai le . 7jernar.l Seminim- iut high school auditorium hist evening , and proved an " HH VMSIS I.AH.Y at opened. the I St. I IS lar lyceum numbers and proved as popular aa any that has been here this year. Judging from the way the Hawa;ians were encored. was 8 B. Sanderson of Freewater here last evening. Mrs. M. J. MoCann of Helix, .was a visitor in Pendleton yesterday. Joe Wilkins, popular hotel man of uonnnr hi nsvinir Pendleton a visit William McCorkle. pioneer BECOMING Mt.RF, CIS AVE I ! LON'LM'X, Nov. ;sis daily assumes mote formidaliie ' proportions." says the Times' Petro. grad correspondent. '"The-discussion at Wednesday's sitting i a normal school in this city. His ac tion came as a surprise to the Institute as it was entirely unsolicited. Prof. Klemme declared Pendleton an ideal site for a normal school and stated the experience of the Cheney normal shows the absolute need of l..rrA ,K11 ofhrwtla bneW of n normal school in order to make it a standard j institution. The second day of the teachers' in stitute is proving as successful as the first. The instructors gathered from over the northwest are very ante educators and they have more rtiaii one message for the teachers. The morning exercises were opened with ;,n invofjition bv Rev. Charles iQuinney of the Episcopal church ..r- I r,liin.i,in" U'llS ttlP ) r.. it'i mil o i" i c.ii.-i , 'subject upon which Fred C. Ayer of ! from Little Meadows to near Walla Lth T-niviruitv of Oregon talked. An-! Walla. They had a horseback ride o( POLICE INSPECTOlt DEFIES STRIKERS JUMiCTS IN B.VYONNK STRIKE. they have the support of the Aineri- j can Federation of Labor and lhat there Is no possibility or a settlement' until the oil companies grant their demands for an increase in wages. BASEIlAlJj tX).MMISSIO MAY l NIERi() ClIAN.i. S REALTY TRANSFERS Dave Warren, a woodhauler living ' in Walla Walla, was arrested yester day on a charge of having elk meat in his posse-'sion and will be tried Friday afternoon, says the Walla Walla Union. He is out. on 2 r bonds now. According to Game War den Bvitt Sanderson, of Freewater, Warren will be charged Inter with killing the animal In., Oregon. The arrest wa made yesterday by Game I Wurden A. Van Ausdle of this county who with Snnderson tracked him Klemine ! which was covered after the wagon During ' passed bv another snowfall. Vai ii,, ir,t..iptlnir address of the, 37 miles. The track led across -now the rood en- m,.ninir that of Prof. "Tho rmv of the Reserve. the morning exercises Miss Edna .Ausdle said last night that Warren beautiful finallv admitted the killing and told if the budget i .,i.... c- 11.111 niil mnin de- his be b:nl shot the animal hecnuse ojniiiinee leu inue uouot as to me gravity of the situation. The speak ers emphasized the imperative neces-1 n ., ,. ,.i ,; Dnnev and Karl F. town yesterday. sity of adopting ameliorative meas ures on behalf of the working class- ; Tho rirnrnm this afternoon farmer es. svr.ni 11-111 until noon de partmental work was conducted tiy Mrs. M. Fulkerson. J. C. Herbs man. 1.M-. i'ar it. Doney and Karl F. Kilpatrick. The program it had been eating his potatoes. Sanderson brought the meat in the city of Weston mountain today. Pmneis P.ebee of the H.-lix high school faculty is attending the institute here. Fted C. Ayer of the University ot f Oregon, is registered at the Pendle. t ton. Lyman G. Rjce arrived home last j night from a hunt on the Tom Gibson j place south of here. Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Taylor ar- rived home lat evening from port, land where they spent a week. Earl F. Kilpatrick of the t'niver sity of Oregon extension department. Is here for the teachers' institute. ' Irwin G. Rrooks of Athena left to- i clay for Eugene to see the Oregon Washington football game Saturday Mr. Brooks is a graduate of the uni lersity. . J. KLEMME GIVES FINEENDORSEMENT TONORMALSCHOOL this afternoon in- i elo.ios n address "Riley 'Mortal or ; mil n." '"" i-' 1 Tmnifirt ill " hv Mr. Herbsman. an ail- I rlrce "Slump Marks -of the Educated I .'. . -a-iiiim.: .SEATTLE. Nov. 2. Three TO PRKVENT IMHJZE SAI.IIS Mytlid Lay of Teacher's Proving Very .Suoi-ossfnl-Irogram Presented. IlL-titlltl- -Splendid In one of his talks before the teach ers of the county this morning K. J. Klemme. city superintendent of schools at Ellenslieitr, Wn.. and head of the training department of the Kl lensberg normal school, strongly en dorsed the amendment providing foi hun- ttM oiiiv.o-siiv. and address. I ne Teacher, an Indispensable Asset to the Community." by Rev. J. K. Snyder departmental work conducted by Mrs Fulkerson. Prof. Klemme. Supt, A. I. Park and Prof. Ayer, and vocal se. lections by Miss Mayree Snyder. An added number of the morning program was the twenty minute tall1 given by Miss Murphy. Palmer pen manship expert. This evening .1. .'. Herdsman will givo an enieriaining lecture and will lie iissi.-tfed by Waller Rose, tenor am! Miss I'.aynell Haldwin. violinist. dred and twenty-four out of 49S members of the Washington Stat-3 Pharmaceutical association repre senting approximately the entire drug trade voted In favor of the state law prohibiting pharmacists from selling intoxicating liquors for any purpose whatever. A referendum vote of the members was taken by mail and the result was announced by the state secretary today. A woman seldom listens to a man's expla nations, but it makes her angn If he refuses to offer one. FAIR CROWD HEARS REPUBLIC ANT ALKER k irnod crowd gathered last evening in the Oregoon theater to hear Col. I R. C. Washburn of Medford. who had 1 lieen advertised to Meak, but to them. instead was presented Arthur I. Moul ton, a young attorney of Portland who had lieen sent to fill Col. Washburn engagements. A band concert pre ceded Mr. Moulton's address and helped attract an audience that about half filled the theater. Mr. Moulton proved himself a good 'campaign talker as he told his hearen why they should vote for Hin-hes In preference to Wilson. He recited the ,.r iht. iliatuii ratio party and declared hard linn s had walked hand and hand with it. He devoted some of his time to a tribute to Judge Hughes, declaring his record as governor of New York stamped him as a statesman whose, efforts were in Whalf of the common iwople. in reply to the stat-r.ents made that the money barons are sup iw.rtlng Hughe, he referred his audi ence to the support which Tammany is giving Witaon. Mr Moulton. in speaking or tne Mexican situation, expressed a re gret that a policy of strength had not im fxhlblted. declaring the president should have taken step, to show the Mexicans e were not to be tampered with. . ... Mr MMilto"' was raised near Wes ton ... is not complete stranger here. He will si-k tonight at Freewater. tomorrow night at I n.apine and Hat unlay ninht at Weston. -- . - -it it i if i if ' - i in u:- 'I H i '? iv t. i I . it - ' i ! In Mli .1 I , t - i i t i f ' i ' I I ' I. I I i i at ' " I Si ' i ' l Ban Johnson In Statement Admit- Tliat There May Re SomeUiIng Doing. Warranty Uobv Geo IL lM'Mott, to F. D. Wet, il. lot 4. block 16, Haley's tlon to Pendleton. K t' HHlman. et ux. to W W Uc liade, tin, N 1-2 Nl-I 1-, SAV 1-4 and N 1-2 HE 1-4. NE 1-4 SW 1-4. ?ion J!i. township 5 north, range i J. H. Young, admlntstmior, to W. W. Kdmlsten. 700. lot 12, block IK, CHICAGO, Nov. 2. President II tl, jonnsoil OI cue iiioriouii tu--.. - - - , a statement last nigh, admitted , T auu. o o that there "prooamy win ne a cimns,- - . in the complexion of the national ',' ??::ttL baseball commission." The statement was issued after tun afternoon newspapers had iUoti'il Mr ! Johnson as saying that August Her man, chairman of the commission would he deposed. Immediate deni al of the statement was made. S. to Pendleton. C. H Renson to E. A. llentiev. Jl. S 12 NF,' 1-4, set. township I north, riingn 2X. K. S. Lundwall. et ux. to 1' W. Het kman, II. Stanfield i in hard nut. lots CM and I. IS. r-'tanfictd. nr'. ! Vlyla doubtless was a patriot, he did not take the ptecautlon kee p his patriotism in the icebox It soured. bill It sometimes happens that l man's conscience doesn't k'"-i fciiiniilaling a million ood -him fr i.sA jtAjjic&S it (V-'.'WMHWnWwn"'""" mr Anonymous notes threatening his life and three bullets whizzing past hsi head as be patrolled the strike zone in Payonue. N'. J.. have not frightened Inspector Daniel Cady. of the Hayonne Police force, who Is in charge of the patrolmen In the strike district. Cad has Issued orders to his men shoot to kill." More than 12,0U'i men employed In the oil works nt Payonne are out. The strikers declare Engagement Extraordinary TEMPLE -TAE 3 Days SSI Nov.5 The World's Greatest Feature "Civilization" The great Irx-e Triumph in 11 Reels with 1000 thrill. Brought direct in its entirety from a four weeks' e ngapp ment at the llelig Theatre, Portland. SPLENDID ORCHESTRA WONDERFUL EFFECTS A REVELATION Price 25c. 50c. HOUGH HIDING Get Acquainted Sale Friday and Saturday Thompsons' Drug Phone 520 ' Store !