TEN PACKS DAILY r .r.T 0" "I4T!, j- r'Tr!, C"""n SATURDAY, DEC 16, 19IS. ttil GOOD TTH nip n pj If r i f r Santa Clap v Eleadouarters Oil Closing out all Toys and Dolls at big reduction ( JOSS OF YOUTH 111 CHICAGO CHIfAOO, Dec. 18. Thirty-seven unemployed "old men" long past the deadline of 40 years 'are In position offered by four business firm here today and all are making good. It la the first day of actual operation of the organization recently perfected by Chicago philanthropist and bus iness men to furnish employment for the man under the "ban." The In stantaneous success of the plan hat opened the door of hope to thousands of ether "old men" who have been Victims of the universal belief that youth must be served. Reports from the business houses which were the first actually to put the "old men'" to work uniformly stated that the thirty seven men were doing the same work as the younger employes and doing It equally as,well. Benjamin J. Rosen thal, announcing the membership of the committee, said: "This Is a move to restore men who have been bar fed1 from a living by modern business, which has erected an Impassable deadline at 45 years. The judgment of these older men la good and the shall not be cast aside." GLEN SCOTT BUILDS NEW H0L1E AT HELIX EaMcrn Star Elects Officers ltebekah Entertainment Postponed l rou After Holidays Other News and Social Notes. (East Oregonian Special.) HELIX. Dec. 15. Glen Scott is hauling lumber from here to build a house on the Iley Winn place miles west of town, also for a machine shed on another ranch he has In cnarge in that neighborhood. Mrs. Minnie Walker also purchased lumber here and Is remodeling and making her ranch house east or town like new. Oscar Piper came Sunday from his farm near Rexburg, Idaho. His fam him In September. They are repairing their house near the depot and will remain nere curing mo school year, Mrs. D. Kendall Is having Improve ments made In her home. The officers elect for the Eastern Star lodge are. Mrs. M. D, Smith, M.; J. 8. Norvell C; Miss 'Leila Norvell, A. M.; Mrs. J. . Anderson, secretary; Corner Mala and Court BtttwC. Pl'BE RICH BLOOD ' r PREVENTS DISEASE n.id blood is responsible for more tilinents than anything else. It ai;is catarrh, dyspepsia, rheuma-iL--.;. weak, tired, languid feelings i ! wor.se troubles. l.Ved's fcarsapnrilla has been woatlerf-tlly successful in purifying anJ eniieiiingr the blood, removing scrofula and other humors, and bnililing up the whole system. Take il-give it to all the family so as to avoid illness. Get it today. I will sell to the highest bidder, on the JAMES JOHNS PLACE, at the mouth of Birch Creek, about five mile west of Pendleton, the following described property to-wit: One Sorrel Horse, 9 yr. old,, wt. 1400 pounds. . One Gray Horse, 10 yrs. old, wt 1500 pounds. One Bay Mare, 6 yrs, old, wt. 1500 lbs. One Black Mare, 7 yrs, old, wt. 1200 lbs. One Roan Mare, 6 yrs. old, wt. 1200 lbs. One Black Mare, 3 yrs. old, wt. 1200 lbs. One Bay Gelding, 3 yrs. old, wt 1100 pounds. One Bay Mare, 3 yrs. old, wt. 1100 lbs. One Iron Gray Mare, 3 yrs. old, wt 1100 pounds. One Black Mare, 3 yrs. old, wt 1200 lbs. Eight Head Milch Cows and Calves. Two Head Full Blood Jersey Heifers. Three Head o' Sheep. Nine Head of Hogs. One Hay Stacking Outfit Complete. One 5 h. p. Gasoline Engine and Wood Saw on Truck. One Side Hill Plow. One Hay Rake. Two McCormick Mowing Machines. One Superior 10 ft Hoe Drill. One McSherry 10 ft. Disc Drill. One 5-Section Steel Harrow. One 3-Section Spring-Tooth Harrow. One Fairbanks-Morse Feed Grinder. One Feed Grinder Horsepower. One 14-inch Walking Plow. One 2-Bottom Disc Plow. One 2-bottor 16-inch Riding Plow. One 5-Tooth Cultivator. One Alfalfa Seeder. One 55-GalIon Drum. One 3V4-inch Fish Wagon with 16 ft. grain rack. One 3 V4-inch Moline Wagon with hay Vack. One 16-ft Feed Rack. One Hack. , Three Sets Double Harness. One Tank Pump. Other Articles too Numerous to Mention. SALE COMMENCES AT 10 O'CLOCK, A. M. FREE LUNCH AT NOON TERMS All sums under $25.00 cash ; over $25.00 time will be given untU Octo bet 1st, 1917, on approved notes. 2 per cent cash discount on all soma over $25.00. COL W. F. YOHNKA Auctioneer E. L. SMITH Clerk. Mrs. 3. B. Norvell, treasurer; Miss En no Potta, Con.; Mrs. H. W. Dred, A. Con.; T. M. Cook, G. W. Piper and Mrs. Iola Piper, trustees. A visit from Rebekahs from Pen dleton has been postponed on account of road conditions. Ed Saunders is employed in Smith Bros, store for the Holiday season. Stephen Taylor of Rexburg, Idaho, is Visiting over the holidays with his sister Anna, who is attending school here. Walter Planting of Adams was in town Tuesday. L. D. Owens was a Tuesday visitor from Wallula. Wm. Egger has returned from a few days visit with relatives In Walla Walla. Mrs. J. a Anderson spent Tuesday and Wednesday In Pendleton. Mrs. E. E. Geist and Mrs. W. H. Al bee were Pendleton shoppers Tues day. J. C. Prendergast of Juniper was here first of week. Mr. and Mrs. Allen McAlvy of Port land are guests at the Alf. McAlavj home south of town. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Oswald of My rick Station, spent Thursday here with friends. ' Mrs. Wm. Kissler of Welser, Idaho, came Wednesday to spend the holi days with Mrs. Wm. Piper east of town. Wm. Mills was a Juniper visitor here Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. A- L. Grover and Mrs Ira Scott were Walla Walla visitors Thursday. The Ladies of Maccabes have post poned their entertainment until af ter the holidays. Miss Neva Richeson of Cambridge, Idaho, is expected Tuesday to spend the winter with relatives. N. A. Brannln and Earl Spec, of Spokane, were in town Wednesday. The Frank Burke Players showed here Thursday night. ASKS SECOND WIFE FOR "RECOMMEND" TO THIRD This Proves PursfteB's Undoing, as He i Sentenced to prison for Bigamy. NEW YORK, Dec. 14 If Henry N. Purnell, who used to live in Esg Harbor, N. J., had not asked his sec ond wife to recommend him as a good husband for a third", he might still be plying his trade of electrician In stead of facing a four-year term in state prison. Purssell has a brother who Is a lawyer in Philadelphia. He married Miss Kate Damlger of Monroe, N, Y. in 1910, with whom he lived four years. Two children were bom to them. He deserted his fam ily while living on East Eighty fourth street, and Sept 15, 1915, mar- Look and Fee! Clean, Sweet and Fresh Every Day Drink a glass of real hot water before breakfast to wash out poisons. Utl SI , ' 1 f q n 20 head first-class P7 UW LI All well broken and from four to nine years old. Inquire at Maal I n 319 East Court Street ill 0. Telephone 518 ried Mtes Mary Quinn, who Uvea just around the corner, at No. 1381 Third avenue. News of the second marriage quick ly reached the first wife and purssell was arrested. He pleaded guilty to a charge of bigamy last February and was released on suspended sen tence after he had promised to sup port his first wife. Soo afterward his first wife's father, who had in sisted that hla son-in-law keep up bW payments, died, after being assault ed. Purssell, so the court was inform ed yesterday, then sought to marry a third wife. Her name Is held secret by order of Judge Mulqueen, but proof was offered the courtship was so brief that she said she did not know enough about him to marry him. "That's all right,' he said. "Just go to Mary Quinn and she will tell you that she knows me well and that I am a fine steady fellow. The woman went and word reach ed the court that Purssell had brok en his parole. Judge Mulqueen sentenced him to not less than eighteen months and not more than four years and six months In state's prison. WOILD BAR MAILS TO ALL LIQl'OR ADVERTISEMENTS WASHINGTON. Dec 1. The house post office committee voted in favor of orohibitinr the use of mails for liquor advertisements. ALL IN RAGS IN PARADE. Bosom Society Womoa Aked to join "High cost" procession. BOSTON, Dec. 14. The high coat of living is in for an awful wallop ing in Boston, Society women are be ing asked to join in a "famine", pa rade through the wholesale and food storage district. The marchers are to be garbed In rags. Mrs. Ida M. Hebbard, president of the Boston Housekeepers' League, is making the plans and will invite 1, 000 women to march. The plan is to parade to the state house and there tell the commission appointed by the Lgovernor to investigate high prices how to legislate to get "the nigger in the woodpile." e w. m'RTox erench to e WED NEW YORK GIRL Life is not merely to live, but to live well, eat well, digest well, wor'i well, sleep well, and look well. What a glorious condition to attain, and yet how very easy if one will only adopt the morning Inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, split ting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stom ach, can, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy by open'ing the sluices of tho system each morning and flushing out the whole of the Internal poisonous stagnant matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should each morning, before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate In It to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour bile and polisonoua toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food Into the stomach. The action of hot water and lime stone phosphate on an empty stom ach is wonderfully Invigorating. It cleans out all the aour fermentations, gasea, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast WhSle you are enjoying your break fast the water and phosphate Is quietly extracting a large volume ot water from the blood and retting ready for a thorough flushing of all the Inside organs. The millions of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble, rheumatism', others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexion am urged to get a quarter pound of lime stone phosphate from the drug store which wll cost very little, but is suf ficient to make anyone a pronounce! crank on the subject of Internal san i Itatlon. I ...-Mmmmmm, tti -t S I I h ., I ; w f" I "" " ; ': ' v u..-. ; r 'A i - YM 31 1 I . j J " 'J (' J MJSS J&AHNiE EMMET, NEWPORT. R. I, Dee. 15 W. Barton French, son of the late Setli Barton French, the financier, Is soon to wed Miss Jeannle Emmett, of New York, it was announced today. No date has been set for the wedding. Mr. French celebra'ed hla twenty, first birthday a few days ago when he came into possession of Barton lodge, the country home of his moth er at Hot Springs, Va. Mr. French has spent much ot his time In Parie His mother recently toured the Unit ed States lecturing for the Serbian Relief Fund. She is at present visit ing Mrs Lorrllard Spencer In this city. Miss Emmett is the second daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Coster Emmet of New York. mm REBECCA AGAIN let us remind ym, your friends can buy jknj thing you can give them ex cept your photograph, . If you have your portrait made Eight, both In lighting aa composition, you will realise the greatest pleasure In the giving of It to your friends as a Christmas token. . WHEELER STUDIO I' If 5 ONLY S DAYS VNT1L XMAS f in 1. i J X Come in now and let us show you Diamond Rings tl.&O to $500 Watches $1.00 to 15 Bracelet Watches (3.00 to 175 Cuff Links 75c to $-M Brooches, solid gold... (1.00 to (150 Pendants 75c to $300 ivory Pieces 23c to (6.00 Silver Sets (5.00 to $50 Set Rings $100 to $35 Fobs 75c to (25 Thimbles ' 25c to (5.00 Bracelets $1.00 to (50.00 Pearls $1.00 to (25 Lockets 75c to $50 And every thing elFe you can ask for In our line. Wm. L HANSGQH THE Jeweler Cld Postoffice Block. EXCURSION FARE; for the HOLIDAYS Dec. 21-25 In Washington, Idaho, Oregon Northern Pacific Railway Ask the Agent for Details W. Adams, Agent Pendleton, Orefoa J. M. McCoy T. P. A. Spokane, Wash. A. D. Charlton, A. G. P. A. Portland, Ore.