East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, November 21, 1916, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
EIGHT PAGES
DAILY EAST OREGON. AN. PENDLET6N, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21. 1016.
With JiiKt.ir el ihc lvaee Joe H.
Parte offirintlns. Dorm-y K. Green.
nJ Wins IiIji l:rvlir, t.lh of Ad
ams, were married estei'd;iy after
noon in the o! f i "t Jmleo Parkes.
Mr. aril Mrs. James Johns, Jr., will
leave this ewninK for Spokane to re
main for the balance of the week.
The South Hill Bridge Club, which
meet on Monday afternoons, is pre
paring to resume play. Mrs. James
A. )f will be the first hostess.
Olsie Kinne and Krnest Hastings of
Watertown, New York, are visiting
Mrs. Davis of 91a West Alta. Mr.
Kinne la a nephew of Mrs. Davis.
They are en route to California where
they will pend the winter. The"
have been traveling through the
wheat belt of Cuiada but like Oregon
much better.
Announcements have been received
by Pendleton friends of the birth of a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lewie Appli-garth, Jr.. of 3507 North
Charles f treet, . Baltimore. The
mother was formerly Miss Sibyl Clop,
ton. The baby, who was born Octo
ber thirty-first, has been christene-l
Sibyl Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Judd have re
turned from a trip to Portuand and
Seattle.
Lovely bronie chrysanthemums
lent their charm to the pretty one
o'clock lancheon for which Mrs.
James Johns Jr., was hostess yester.
day, honoring Mrs. Cord Sengstake of
Portland, mother of Mrs. Harold
Toung. A yellow color motif was al
so observed in the place cards an 3
other apportionments. Following the
luncheon the afternoon was devoted
jto chatting and needlework. Mr.. !
j Johns" guests were Mrs. Sengstake.
Mrs. Harold Young. Mrs James John
Sr.. Mrs. c. S. Jerard. Mrs, e. p. coles
j worthy, Mrs. H. .1. Kavanatigh, Mr-.
I Merle Chessman, Mrs W'estbrooke
Dickson and Mrs. Melville Off.
ileorge i3 C'.l'iland (if I drande Is.
thf liowman.
1 W !,,vi (.f Xolln is a Kiuvt of
o St. tleorge.
Diaries l,ola uch is visitmg here to.
j ii.iv from Vuisycle.
Mrs. V, Has.- of Halfway, w..s in
1 lh.' tuy l..st evening.
! .V k. t'ommck of AUv na. suent
' yesterday in Pendleton. I
j Yiryil YV. .mith of Pilot Hock win I
' among the visitors in the city last '
j evening,
! J. D. Casey and J. H. liaker oi
came down from their ,
Meachaiu,
home this morning
F. T. Chamberlain i
down from the south
county yesterday.
f lTk:ah
end of
was I
the!
spent yester-
Fred Heft of Xolin
day in the city.
T. P. Vaugh of Pilot Hoik, was in over were Mrs. T. M. Henderson, Mrs
A large number of Pendleton music
lovers journeyed to V;Jla Walla last
evening to hear Madame Schumunn
Heink, who appeared in concert at
Keylor Grand. Among those goln,'
W i 1
a ...
it?
A. J. Owen, Mr
Vera Wells, Mis
j Mrs. Edgar F. Averill, Mrs. l. B. Hill.
Mrs. J. 15. McCook, Mrs. William
! Hanscom, Miss Harbara StanfieM.
Mr. and Mrs. James SUurgis, H. M.
! Warren and wife, John Dickson, Mrs,
W. P. Temple. Mrs. Westbrooke Dick,
son, Miss Edna Zimmerman. Will
Keams, Dr. and Mrs. F. W. Vincent,
Mr. and
James Hicks, traveling passenger
agent for the O.-W. R. & N. Co., Is
here today and announced a special
rate for students during the Christ
mas holidays.
from his home yesterday,
Mr. Charles Alspach of Helix, has
been visiting here today,
Harry o. Wormian of Medford is
registered at the Pendleton.
Mr. and Mrs. James Sturgis left last
night for a short trip to .Spokane.
D. B. Fuller, l"nited states deputy
marshal!, is in Pendleton today.
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Ward of Stan- I MLs8 K1'anor Vincent and
field were overnight visitor in tlx..". .Mciomas.
city.
Mr. and Mr. H. G. Casteel of Pilot
Rock, were in from their home yester.
day.
Lloyd Riches, editor of the Stan
field Standard, is spending today in
Pendleton.
Mrs. Robert N, Stanfield is spend
ing several days in Portland In com
pany with her husband.
Dr. J, D. lPamondon of Athena,
passed through the cky this morning
en route home from Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Griffin of Wal
lula, were passengers on the north
ern Pacific train this morning.
H. Shelly, who has been spending
the past week in the city, will return
to his home at Milton tomorrow.
Jeff Kelly, a government hunter of
Hay Creek, was here yesterday en
route home from a visit in eastern
Washington.
I, U. Temple, Miss
Dorothy Henderson,
Helen Holmes In scene from "The Manager of the B. A A." Mutual
Star Production from the Sianal studios.
PASTIME TODAY
PIVOIUH TIME NEAR,
KKNO (ilVKS A DANCK
New Yorkers (Webrate With Banquet
Approach of Period When Suits
May Be Filed
RENO, Xov. 21. To celebrate the
approach of the time when their
suits for divorce may be filed, a num
ber of New Yorkers were guests at 4
ball and banquet last evening at the
Riverside Hotel which was attended
by a large number of the divorce col
ony. 1
The affair was given under the di
rection of Mrs. YV. C. Randall, wife of
a nephew of former Speaker Samuel
J. Randall. Among the guests werj
Robert Hoe Jr., John Harsen
Rhoades, Mrs. Helen Deiches, Mr.).
Irene Wagner Phillips. Mrs. Elen
Faith. Mrs, YV. D. Loucks, Mrs. Eliza
beth Nichols, all of New York; Mrs.
Carrie Ridley Enslow, Brooklyn; Mrs
Helen Robinson, Albany; Mrs. C.nil
Hamilton, Wheeling, W. Va., and Dr.
W, C. Roller, Philadelphia.
Plans are being made for celebra
tions on Thanksgiving. Christmas and
New Tear's, when it is thought the
colony will be augmented by others
from the east.
S1UJ I'lAn AN'KIJCS PERVERT
JFSmOE SAYS JirtHiE
NEW YORK, Nov. 20. A battery
of femininesnorts and sniffs opened
up today upon Julge Louis Glbbs for
his declaration that "women lawyers
make an unprofessional appeal to
courtrooms and Juries" through the
turn of a silk-clad ankle and the
drooping of a tinselled eyelash. Plain
flirting it is on the part of some of
them. Judge Glbbs declared.
"We don't ask men to address us in
shirts and ribbons, why should e ad
dress them in trousers?" indignantly
asked Miss Anne Yerger of Phlladel-hia.
TN OUR great-great-grandfathers' time many
New England families , had a cask of rum
in the cellar.
It was freely offered to guests (except chil
dren) and freely partaken of, even as coffee is
today.
This old-time custom gradually passed out
of existence, for our forefathers recognized it
as harmful.
Another old-time custom coffee drinking
is slowly passing in the same fashion and for
the same reason.
The abandonment of coffee drinking is made
easy nowadays by the use of Instant Postum, the
pure cereal beverage with the coffee-like taste.
Unlike coffee, this purely American table
drink contains no "caffeine" or other harmful
substance.
Postum is now used daily in tens of thou
sands of the best of American homes where rea
son rules and health is valued.
ALEXANDER HAS
CROWD PUZZLED
POWERS OK TEIjEPATHY ALMOST
j TOO KEEN TO SlIT SOME
LISTENERS.
I
Large Throngs tirwt Mystic Who
Presents Very Interesting Prosram
at Oregon Theater.
Alexander the Mystic proved his
' powers of telepathy all too well last
evening to suit some of his question.
ers. He answered their question
! with considerable more detail than
they anticipated and his answers in
some instances proved rather embar
rassing. The questions were of course writ
ten down and sealed in envelopes.
Alexander nevpr touched them bui
left them on the btage while he re
mained down in the audience. Later
the questions were returned unopened.
Rgardless of this the mysic called
the name of one questioner after an
other, pronounced their questions an!
gave answers.
One man asked whether he should
keep his job. After advising him to
hold on to it, Alexander advised him
to leave bootlegger booze alone.
When the man showed resentment
Alexander declared he was carrying
a bottle in his hip pocket at the mo
ment and challenged the man to con-
tradict him. The man refused tho
challenge.
To a girl who had asked whether
or not a man was true to her, tho
mystic told her bluntly that the ma.i
w married and that she knew it
that he had promised to get a divorce
but knew that he couldn't. He advis
ed her to have nothing more to do
with him.
A man who had asked whether h
should marry a girl drew the answer
that he hadn't known how to treat one
wife who had divorced him. Alex
ander made the man admit h wa rti.
vorced.
Another woman was advised to lis.
ten more to her husband and less to
her mother. "You also listen too
much to advice from that woman sit
ting at your left," he said.
To a woman who had asked wheth.
er she would recover some lost fur,
he told her that her Spitz dog had
carried the furs under the
he stated his readiness to buy her a
new set If she didn't find them there
These questions and answers came
during his Simla Seance which was
the second half of his program. The
first half consisted of tricks of ma
gic, legerdemain and sleight of hand
of which Alexander is a past master.
His trunk mystery was superior to
the many trunk mysteries shown on
the stage and .altogether, the mystic,
who concludes his Pendleton engage
ment tonight, is quite the best enter
tainer of his kind who has ever been
in Pendleton,
LISTEN!
Our Prices Are Talking
Universal Food Chopper $1.25
Cobblers Outfit, family size 75c
Sheet Steel Roaster 35c
Set of 3 Mother Potts Sad Irons $1.25
Hot Cake Griddle 25c
Bread Raiser 35c
Strainer Milk Pail 50c
12 inch Bastard File 25c
15 inch Bastard File v. 35c
Chinee Main ami
Court Street.
HOW A DRUGCIST CURED
HIS HEY TROUBLE
For the past twenty-four years I
have been selling Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root with excellent satisfac.
tlon to my customers who have used
it. They are always pleased with the
results obtained and speak very fa
vorably regarding the preparation. It
cured me of a bad case of catarrhal
inflamation of the bladder eighteen
years ago, after two months treat
ment with pharmaceuticals recom
mended for the Inflammation of the
bladder. It Is undoubtedly a remedy
of great merit In the diseases for
which It is so highly recommended.
Very truly yours,
J. W. HANAN, Druggist
East Lynne, Mo.
November 3rd, 1J15.
IN BANKRUPTCY.
In the DlstrVt wirt of tho United
States for the nMrU of Oregon.
In the Matter of Charles Stanton,
a Bankrupt ,
To the Creditors of Charles Stanton
of Helix, in the County of Umatilla
and District aforesaid, Bankrupt.
Notice is hereby given that on the
17th day of November, A. D 1916, the
said CharleR Stanton was duy adjud.
Icated a Kankrupt and that the first
meeting of his creditors will be held
at the office of the undersigned Ref
eree In bankruptcy, at Pendleton,
Umatilla County, Oregon, on Decem
ber :nd A. r, 11, at 10 o'clock a.
m.. of said day, at which time and
place the creditors may attend, prove
and file their claims, examine the
Bankrupt, and transit such other
business a may properly come before
such meeting.
Done and dated at Pendleton, Ore.
gon, this 20th day of November, A.
D.. 1916.
THOP. PITZ GERALD,
Referee In Mankruptcy.
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer & Co.
tRingtiamton, N. T.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will DO
1 For YOU.
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer ft Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample sli
bottle. It will convince anyone. Ton
will also receive a booklet of valu
able information, telling about the
kidneys and bladder. When writing
be sure and mention the Pendleton
Dally East Oregonlan. Regular fifty
cent and one-dollar bottles for sals
at all drug stores.
HOT TEA BREAKS
A COLD TRY THIS
Get a small package of Hamburg
Breast Tea, or as the German folks
call it, "Hamburger Bruet Thee," at
any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful
of the tea, put a cup of boiling water
upon it, pour through a sieve and
drink a teacup full at any time. It Is
the most effective way to break a
cold and cure grip, as it opens the
pores, relieving congestion. Als0
loosens the bowels, thus breaking a
cold at once.
It Is Inexpensive and entirely vege
table, therefore harmless.
Expert repairing
of Watches
and Jewelry.
Satisfaction guarantMd
Wm. Hanscom
THE Jeweler.
Does
Not Rob
Off, LuU
4 Times as
Lonf at Otters,
Si Work.
Get a Can Today
MiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH
NOW is the
I Time to Order I
I Your
1 Winter
I COAL
Supply
Don't wait until the
last minute, untjl the
5 real winter weather
I seta in, when the
S streets are filled with
i snow, when deliveries
are uncertain.
Place your orders NOW and with us you will E
be safe.
OUR COAL NEVER DISAPPOINTS-thafs be- S
eause it's THOROUGHLY SCREENED, free from E
E slate and dirt
It's all coal get the best 'phone us YOUR OR-
5 DER today. E
E See u for
( ROCK SRINOS COAL
Lump or nut
s Good dry fir, yellow and black pine.
E Dry Slabwood that it dry. E
All wood comes either four foot or sawed.
I B. L. BURROUGHS (
Telephone 5 E
FiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii?
iig Double Combination Show! Something Different!
Something New!
The Marine Entertainers
CLEVER COMEDIANS
SPLENDID SINGERS
AMONG THE BEST IN THEIR PROFESSION.
0
(3
I lin-rl
WW
TRAVELING IN CONJUNCTION WITH
THE WONDERFUL PHOTO DRAMA
AFTER THE BALL.
A WONDERFUL PHOTO PRESENTATION OF CHAS. K. HARRIS' IMMORTAL BALAD
"AFTER THE BALL"
Ir. w'x reel. In con jurcticn with the Marine Entertainers, with Special Scenery and Cottume and Electrical Effects
nnr2 r rrr?
u Will Y ?
atinee I lit
fir
wmu d
pp hhb wm vhi
15c Afternoon 2:30. Night 8:30. Special Muic Score and Orchestra. Performance lasts two hours and a half 25c