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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1916)
TWELVE PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OPvEGON, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1916. PAGE ELEVEN ilfi;i''l;llt''liiiii'mum.iii!mimift-iiii;.,itmnm E 3 E 1 Would For Santa Claus to tell "him'1 that hia home would be healthier and happier if wash day (Blue Monday) were eliminated. t 1 C-.-3 Sr.- E.3 Ij Telephone 179 our wagon will call when you say. WE WILL DO YOUR WASHING Rough Dry for only 7c lb. Gentlemen's bundles carefully cared for. Troy Laundry Co. " We Wash Everything But the Baby" two posts or iMt w KILLKR OLIVER, AND 4 HIS LATEST WIFE. 1 SiiUiihiufiiuiiiuuUiUUiiiiliUiiiHMIum liiiUilUlllilUlMijiE PERSONAL NOTES OF THE WESTON COUNTRY WESTON, Dec. . Born, Dec. &, to the wife of U ft Davis, a on. Mrs. Dave Vansklver, who hu been visiting her Blater near La Grande. Oreron. during- the part two week, has returned home. ' Earl Klrkpatrick, who has' been visiting at AviaUon, Washington, re turned horn Wednesday. Mr. and lira. Frank Greer, Chance Rogers and Leonard Blomgren, who have been In Portland attending the fancy si or k ahow, have returned home. ' Mrs. John McRea and daughter Hilda, who have been III with a e vere attack of la grippe, are Improv. Inr. Jamn McDnnlel started Sunday for his old' home in Kentucky and will remain during the winter. William McKeniie has sold hit farm to a A. Nelson and will give possession the first of the year. Miss Odessa Klrkpatrick made a business trip to Walla Walla Friday. Mr. Albert CfHarra Is 111 with an attack of la grippe. Mrs. olive Navln has gone to Pen dleton to visit her daughter, Mrs. Lee McAtee. Earl Olson has gone to Portland He will be absent about a month. Word has been received here of the death of Henry Stamper at American Falls, Idaho. The body will be ship ped here for burial, as he was for merly a resident of Weston for manT years. , Miss Odessa Klrkpatrick entertain, ed the Bachelor Girls' club on last Monday evening. During courtship a man acquires a lot of good habits that he has no uo for after marriage. WILUAM MEDLOCH OF MILTON PASSES AWAY Pioneer Was 75 Team Old Funeral Services: Held in Christian church Interred in I. O. O. F. Cemetery. (East Oregonlan Special.) , MILTON, Dec, IS. William Med lock of Milton, died at the home of L. E. Wells Sunday, December 10, his age being 75 years, nine months, 2! days. Funeral services were held at the Church December 12 at 10 a. m and Interment was In I. O. O. F. cemetery. One of the things that dow n't come to the baldheaded man who waits is hnlr. The more a woman knows the easier it may be for her to hold her tongue. Nuxated Iron to make New Age of Beautiful Women and Vigorous Iron Men Say Physician! Quickly Puts Roses Into the Cheeks of Women and Most Astonishing- Youth ful Power Into the Veins of Men It Often Increses the Strength and Endurance of v Delicate, Nervous, "Rundown Folks 200 Per Cent in Two Weeks Time. A Wonderful Discovery Which Promises to Mark a New Era in Medical Science. NEW YORK, X. Y. Since the re niarkable discovery of organic iron. Nuxated Iron or "Fer Nuxtite," as tho French can It has tnken-the country by storm. It la conservatively estimated that over five million persona dally are taking It in this country alone. Most astonishing results are reported from Its use by both physicians and laymen. Bo much so that doctors pro diet that we shall soon have a new age of far more beautiful, rosy cheeked women and vigorous men. -Dr. King, a New York physician and author, when interviewed on the subject, said: "There can be no vig orous Iron men without Iron. Pallor means anemia. Anemia means iron deficiency. The skin of anemic men and women i P'e. The flosh flab, by. The muscles lack tone; the brain faga and the memory falls and often they tecome weak, nervous, Irrita ble, despondent and melancholy. When the Iron goes from the blood of women, the roses go from their cheeks. "fn the most common foods of America, the starches, sugars, table syrups, candles, polished rice, white bread, soda crackers, biscuits, maca roni, spaghetti, tapioca, sago farina, degermlnated cornmeal, no longer Is Iron to be found. Refining proceaies have removed the iron of Mother Earth from these Impoverished foods, and silly methods of home cookery, by throwing down the waste pipe the water in which our vegetables are cooked, are responsible for another grave Iron lose. "Therefore, if you wish to preserve your youthful vim and vigor to a rlpa old age, you must supply the Iron de. flclency In your food by using some form of organic Iron, Just as you would use aalt when your food has not enough salt." Dr. Bauer, who has studied abroad in great European medical Institu tions, laid: "As I have said a hun dred times over, organlo Iron li the greatest of all strength builders. If people woald only throw away patent medicines and nauseous concoction and take simple nuxated Iron, I am convinced that the lives of thousands of person might b saved who now die every year from pneumonia, grippe, consumption, kidney, liver, heart trouble, etc. The real and true cause which started their disea-se was nothing more nor less than a weak ened condition brought on by a lack of iron in the blood. "Not long ago a man came to me who was nearly half a century old and asked me to give him a prelimi nary examination for life insurance. 1 was astonished to find him with a blood pressure of a boy of twenty and as full of vigor, vim and vitality as a young man; in fact, a young man he really was, notwithstanding his age. The secret, he said, was taking Iron Nuxated Iron had filled him with renewed life. At thirty he was in bad health; at forty-six he was care worn and nearly an In. Now at fifty a mir acle of vitality and his face beaming with the buoyancy of youth. Iron is absolutely necessary to enable your blood to change food Into living tissue. Without It, no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely pass es through you without doing you any good. You don't get the strength out of It, and a a consequence you become weak, pale and sickly look ing, just like a plant trying to grow In a soil deficient In iron. If you are not strong or well, you owe It to your self to make the following test: Reo how long you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five grain tablets of ordinary nuxated Iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see how much you have gained. . I have seen dozens of nervous, run-down people who were ailing all the while double their strength and endurance and en tirely rid themselves of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days' time simply by taking Iron In the proper form. And this, after they had In some case been doctoring for months without obtaining any benefit. But don't take the old forma of reduced Iron. Iron acetate, or tincture of Iron simply to save a few cent. The Iron demanded by Mother Nature for the red coloring matter In the blood of her children Is, alas! not that kind of Iron. You must take iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and as similated to do you any good, other wise it may prove worse than useless. Many an athlete and prizefighter has won the day simply because he knew the secret of great strength and en durance and filled his blood with iron before he went lnt0 the affray; while many another has gone down In in glorious defeat simply for the lack of Iron." Dr. Schuyler C. Jaques, another New Tork physician, said: "I have never before given out any medical Information or advice for publication, as r ordinarily do not believe In It. But In the case of Nuxated iron 1 feel I would be remiss In my duty not to mention it. r have taken it mv self and given It to my patients wKh most surprising and satisfactory re sults. And those' who wish quickly to Increase their strength, power and endurance will find It a most remark able and wonderfully effective rem edy." NOTE! Nuxated Iron, which l prescribed and recommended above by physicians In such a great variety of cases, is not a patent medicine nor secret remedy, but one which Is well known to druggist and .whose Iron constituents are widely prescribed by eminent physicians both In Europe and America. Unlike the older Inor ganic iron products. It is easily assim ilated, does not Injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach: on the contrary, it Is a most potent remedy In nearly all forms of Indiges tion aa well as for nervous, run-down conditions. The manufacturers have such great confidence in nuxated Iron, that they offer to forfeit 100 to any charitable Institution if they can. not take any man or woman under o who lacks Iron, and Increase their strength iOO per cent or over In four weeks' time, provided they have no serious organlo trouble. They also offer to refund your money if it does not at least double your strenrth and endurance In ten riava' time T u Aim I penned in this city by A. C. Koeppea Bros, and all good druggists. LIVESTOCK COIilS UVE IE PORTLAND, Dec. 13. There con tinues a very strong tone in the sheep and lamb division of the North Tort land market. Only a very small run was shown during the day. Some of the receipts in the mutton division consisted of goats, but even for theee there was a good demand around 4 l-2c a pound", a very liberal price. General sheep and lamb pries range: Best lambs ..." iS.759.8' Yearling wethers ...t.... g.00&8.:0 Ewes 6.00 7.00 Goats -o.i; Feeder Cattle Crane. Day's arrivals In the cattle markei at North Portland consisted principal ly of stocker and feeder stuff, for which there remains a very favorable demand around former figure. Top quality of beef steers and cows are scarce, with the call excellent at full prices. General cattle market range: Rest beef steers 7.507.5"i Good beef steers 6 50 7.00 Best beef cows 5.75.2R Ordinary to good S.255.5 Best heifers $.00.2S Bulls 3.2505.00 Calves 5.00 & 7.00 Htockfeed steers 4.00 (ptM Stockfeed cows 3 00&5.50 Hog Market Is Steady. Market for hogs ruled steady to strong at North Portland with no ap parent change in prices from tho week's opening. There was a fair run, but It consisted principally of light shoata, which ruled aroun 1 18.25 for tho best General hog market price range: Prime light 19.5O0J.7r. Prime heavy 9 00 9.75 Mixed lots 8.25 0 9. B0 Mixed lots J.25 0 9.50 Bulk of sales 9 60 Tuesday JJveKtock Snipper. Hogs J. P. Hood, Kimberly, Idaho, 2 loads; O. E. Weed, Cottonwood. Cal., 1 load; J. J. Marcus, Heppner, 1 load; D. R. Neal, 1 load; Ned Hol land, Condon, 2 loads. Mixed stuff Lee Evans, Albany. 1 load cattle and hogs; O. E. Hughes, Washougal, Wash , 1 load cattle anl sheep. I : I e - ' j :J p. it ? ? X OUVF-R CO&ORNM MR5. OUVER OSBORNE Here are two views of "Oliver O borne," champion of the lady killers, who has at last been landed in jail with so many charges confronting him he might serve forty years if he got the limit for each, and his latent wife who was found with him in Chicago. He has admitted he made a business for several years of duping women anxious to get married to a large, flashy and flabby man. During 1915 the total road and bridge expenditures in the United States amounted to about J2S2.000,- 000, of which probably not over 115, 000,000 represented the value of the state and convict labor. Ui.liOER AKKS FOR "AUTO-SLEEPING CAR." "I I - I I A j I I ' 1 1 .,.1... 1 kzi LJ 1 JHN ARMSTRONG CHAICNERl John Armstrong Chaloner, brother of Bob ichaloner, and famous author of "Who' Looney Now?' has applied to the courts for an order to compel the committee of hia estate to pur chase him a "sleeping-car-automobile." 11 r. Chaloner, who was ad judged mentally Incompetent In New York state and sane in Virginia, com plain that because of an old Injury in his spine he cannot sit up for any length of time, or sleep In ordinary Pullman railroad coaches. Danger Signal. If the fire bell should ring would you run and stop it or go and help put out the fire? It is much the same way with a cough. A cough Is a dan. ger signal aa much as a fire bell. You should no more try to suppress it than to stop a fir bell when it Is ringing, but should cure the disease that causes the coughing. This can nearly always be done by taking Chamberlain's Congh Remedy. Many have used It with the most beneficial results. It 1 especially valuable for the persistent cough that ao often fol lows a bad cold or an attack of the grip. Mrs. Thomas Beaching, An. drew, Ind., writes: "During the winter my husband takes cold easily and coughs and coughs. chamber- Iain's Cough Remedy is the best med icine for breaking up these attacks and you cannot get him to take any other." Obtainable everywhere. Adv. The destruction of grasshopper eggs bv fall Dlowing. disking, and harrowt ing ia recommended when practicable. -SUB IK.HTS FOP. imhans. Ton fan t m.in( ha wh;!r th sm ' -r- v, , 5- 1 FLORE. NCC. ETMERIPCC Miss Florence Etherbridge, of the Indian Bureau, is Uncle 8am'a guar dian of the property of Indian heirs, and her keenness has discouraged many unscrupulous persons who prey on Indian credulity. Her specialty U to see that Indian heirs get justice. She is an expert On wills, a member of the bar of the District of Colum bia and of the United States supreme court. While corn culture under droughty conditions is largely a matter of tak ing chances with seasonal condition certain controllable conditions of soil and seed often determine the success or failure of the crop. NAUGHTY REBECCA KNOWN FOR IT'S STRENGTH THIRTY-FOUR YEARS OF UNBROKEN SUCCESS. THE GROWTH AND CON TINUOUS SERVICE OF THIS INSTITUTION ARE AT YOUR COMMAND. MAKE USE OF OUR FACI LITIES AND THE EXPERI ENCE OF OUR OFFICERS IN YOUR BUSINESS REQUIREMENTS. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL AND SURPLUS HALF A MILLION PENDLETON SECURITY I CLASSIFIED DIRECTOR Y I ""7"" " ' "i 1 1 ' 1 - 1 1 ' ' ' " ' t i . ii - ,:.-," Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with UKAU AITUCATH1N8, mm t-? (-nnot rrb tti sent of the disenne, 1 tarrb la livnl dli. tmttlf infiu!4 tr ronstltiitkmill rnn.lttlons, and In a(iM t cir It yo must taka ao Infernal remtdj. Flail Catarrh Cnrs la takes Intaruaiif and acta thru th blood on the morons ane-fa-e of the tyatem. Hatf'a Tatarr Cw was prescribed by me of the bt pkralct aria la this eosntry for r. It k op posed of some of the bait tonlr knows combined with some ef tho best Waaal porlflera. The prf-t combination a ta Ingredients la Hall's Catarrh Core Is prodnres sach wonderfol reanlta In catarrhal roadltlnoa Snd for tea tlmonlata, fraa, f. i. t HKNKt A CO., I'ropa., Toledo, k All DriiCTlata, 7V. Hall's Family lills for conatlpatla Notice of Bid for Concrete Side walk. Notice is hereby given that scale bids will be received at the of flea ot the City Recorder at the City Hall In. Pendleton, Oregon, up to December 1.1th. at S o'clock p. m., for the con struction of a concrete sidewalk an. the south side of lots 7 and 8, block 47f Reservation addition to City wf Pendleton, on the north side of Webfe street in said city. The Common. Council reserve the right to reject any and all bids. Dated this 2nd day of December.-. 111. THOa FITZ OBRALDi City Recorder- , IX POIND. The following described animal has been taken up by the Marshal of the City of Pendleton, to-wlt: One bay mare with suckling colt. weight about 1000 pounds, branded! on left shoulder, not vllble; ag about 11 years. If said animal Is not claimed by the owners or those entitled ta Its possession, costs and expense paid) and taken away within ten days frooa the date hereof, then at 2 o'clock p m. of the ISth day of December, isle, the said animal will be sold to the highest bidder, at public auction, for cash, at the City Pound, il "West Webb Street, in said City of Pendle ton, the proceeds of such sale to b applied to the payment of such coeta and expenses of making sale. 'Dater thi Ith day of December, 111. T. B. GCRDANE, City Harsh! Cod Dang Low CHOP SUEY NOODLES HOT TMMLES CHILLI GG.1 GMflE SPANISH STTLS LUNCHES COFFEE Bverythlng clean and up-to date. FIRST CLASS SERV1C3 TEA 5c Package Under State Hotel Cor. Webb and Cottonwood Sta. Phone (IT. Pendleton, Ore, a. mm I 5 ",VA-t J'-' U INSVJR-NCE AXD LAND BUSINESS BENTLET & MONTGOMERY, REAL estate, fire, life and accident Insur ance agents. 815 Main street Phone 404. AUCTIONEERS. COL. W. F. THNKA, ADCTTON eer, makes a spcialty of farmers stock and' machinery sales. "The man that gets you the money." Leave orders at East Oregonlan office. SFXOND HAND DEALERS. V. STROBLE. DEALER IN NEW and second hand goods. Cash paid for all second-hand goods bought. Cheapest place in Pendleton to buy household goods. Come and get our prices. SI E. Court street Phone 27 1W. ARCHITECT. RAYMOND W. HATCH, ARCHI tect. Pespaln Building. Phone 7. Pendleton, Oregon. DOCTORS. DR. S. A. ROB PRACTICE LIM Ited to the eye. ear, nose and throt Hours 9 to 12 and 2 to 5. and by ap pointment Suite 21, Judd Bldg. MISCELLAN EOt'S. LEGAL BLANKS OF EVERT DB scrtpttoa for county court, clrcui eanrL instlca eoart real estate, etc tor al at Bast Orwgoniaa efflca, ATTORNEYS. JOHN W. HUFF. ATTORNEY-AT-Law. Room i, American Nation al Bank bail ding. RALEY RALHY, ATTO RENTS AT law. Office in American National Bank Building. GEORGE W. CODTTS, ATTORNEY at law. Estates settled, wills, deeds, mortgages and contracts drawn. Collections made. Room 17, Schmidt block. FEB & FEE, ATTORENY9 AT LAW. Office In Deapain building. CARTER ft SMYTHS, ATTORNEYS at law. Office in rear of American National Bank boilding. JAMES B. PERRY, ATTORNEY AT law. Office over Taylor Hardware company. PETERSON ft BISHOP, ATTOR neys at law; rooms 3 and 4, Smith Crawford building. DOUGLAS W. BAILEY, ATTORNEY at law. Will practice tn all state and federal court Rooms, 1, I anJ . Dee pain bwlldlng. FREDERICK STETWBR. ATTOR ney at haw. Office In Smith-Crawford building. & A. LOWELL. ATTORNEY AND counsellor at law. Office la De spala busMtn. FUNERAL DIRECTORS. J. T. BROWN'S FURNITURE STORM Funeral director and licensed em balmer. Most modern funeral par lor, morgue and funeral cars. Call responded to day or night Corner Main and Water streets. Telephon 43. JOHN S. BAKER, FUNERAL Di rector and licensed embalmer. Op posite postofflce. Funeral parlois two funeral cars. Calls responded ta day or night Phone T5. MONTANA FARM LANDS. NORTHERN PACIPIC RAIYWAY Lands In eastern Montana at 11.6 to 18 per acre. Suitable for funning or grating. Easy terms. For infor mation write or see W. E. Holt, Mils City, Montana. MISCELLANEOUS. NOTICE) TO STOCKHOLDERS No tice Is hereby given that ther IU be an annual meeting of the stock holders of the East Oregoalaa Pub lishing company on Wednesday, De cember , Dii, n 4 o'clock p. m., a4 the office of aald company In Ptadl. ton, Oregon, for the purpose of elect ing officer for the ensuing year, a 8. Jackson, presidents I D. Drake, ecretary. 1 t 1