EIGHT PACr i DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10. 1917. rAGn nr.: ;t illlil!!llli!lllilimil!lllllll ilM!!l!:!!IS!!ini!!!!inill!!ll!!Ill!!l!I!!Hillli!!!L' t r ' 12 rcs m i do hi la mm n m wm ml mi - it. fi -2 S I 1.5 I 1 i 1 ii J 4 n rS 1 Why Pay More For APPLES When you can get first grade apple at these prices. The Reason Why We grow all the apples we sell in our own or chard. You can understand why our prices ar cheaper on all grades. Guaranteed Apples GOOD COOKERS, box 50c C GRADE, box $1.15 FANCY GRADE, box $1.25 EXTRA FANCY GRADE, box $1.40 STRICTLY FRESH RANCH EGGS ' Dozen 50c GRAY BROS. GROCERY CO. Two Phones, 28 "QUALITY" 823 Main St ajmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin i I I n f Commercial Club Meetiiiff. The postponed January meeting of the Commercial association will be held this evening in the club rooms and a full attendance is required. Stanfteida Buy Another Ranch. The Stanfteld brothers and W. H. Matha closed a deal today whereby the wirst named purchase 300 acres o land and 00 head of sheep from Ma tha for $15,000. The ranch is located on the Snake river near Huntington. The Stanfield brothers expect to op erate the ranch and to organize as a corporation. Baker Herald. New Draperies I n m ppy i ii it - t z. i hi HI El A SPECIAL DISPLAY We are Showing the New Fancy Cre tones, Fancy Repps, Curtain Nets, Satin Stripe Scrims, Marquisettes Etc. COME IN AND TALK OYER YOUR CURTAIN NEEDS. absence and who was expected back this month, has moved to Canada to remain permanently, it was reported by Supt. Park. 1 Harry Gray In Hospital. Harrv Gray, manager of Oray Bros grocery, underwent an operation this n.orning at St. Anthony' hospital, To Build Cottage. A. Zeuske this morning took out a permit to build a dwelling on Thomp son streeet between Alta and Webb at a cost of 800. : H. S. Students Register Friday. High school students will register for the second semester on Friday of this week, according to an announce ment made by Principal Drill this morning. The examinations wU be completed today and the teachers will be expected to finish grading their papers and completing their records tomorrow. Class work will com mence Monday morning. Experts to Make up Car. L. B. Tierney, traveling passenger agent f the Great Northern Railway, expects to be able to make up a spe cial car from Pendleton to St. Paul for the Midwinter Carnival the latter rart of this month. He has inter viewed quite a number of people who ere contemplating the trip and will re turn here next week to make an at tempt t sign them up. Alt Of fUvrs Re-elected. The American National Bank stock holders at their annual meeting last evening re-elected all of the old offi cers and directors. . Because they cut out the credits they cut out the deliveries they forget high priced fixtures they give this money back to us in better merchandise. They buy in quantity lots for 125 J. C. Penny Co. Stores all under one account and here they save us worlds of money. Wo notice it in better qualities and lower prices. Take it from me, you'll always do better in all your wants at The Golden Rule Store. ladies' Havana Brown Kid Boots $S.90 Udles Black Kid Boots, 8-ln. tops. $3.8, l.9tf ladles' Street Shoes 2.98, IS.60 ladles' Comfort Shoes $t.6. $1.8. $2.4 (ilris' ShS M9. $1.69. $1.98. $2.49. $2.98 Misses' English Walking Shoes $3.50. $3.98 Roys' Shoes $1.49, $1.69, $1.98, $2.49, $2.98 Men's Work Shoes. . . . $2.98. SS.M1, $3.98. $4.50 Men's Hress Shoes.... $2.98, $3.50, $3.98. $4.50 l adies' Rubbers i9c- M YOTJ CAN DO BETTER AT ladles New Voile Waists 98c, $I.9S Spring Dress Ginghams HkJ, IS I-2o Spring Percales lOo, 12 l-2o, 15o New Scrims 10c, 15c, 19c, ISO New Cretonnes 12 l-2 15o New Cheviot Hlili-tlngs 12 l-2o Bleached Muslins 8 l-c 10c, 12 l-2o line Cambrics 10c, 15c Iadlra' House Presses ! . . . 9Hc, $1,1$ Girl's Black Sateen Bloomers , 49o tVE LEAD, OTHERS FOLLOW Helix Boy in Hospital. Leland Morrison of Helix is at St. Anthony's hospital" recovering from an acute attack of appendicitis which necessitated an operation. Estate Is Appraised. W. E. Putnam. G. A. Cowl and T. C. Fraier. appraisers of the estate of Lewis Neace, have filed their re port estimating the estate worth MtU'. Body to be Sent to Spokane. The body of Louis Morone. who met death under a combine harvester at Havanna yesterday, will be taken U Spokane for Interment. The funer al will probably be held tomorrow some time at the Brown chapel. McCarroll to Meet Thye. Frank McCarroll, who meets Fred Crabbe tonight at the Oregon Theatre, and his brother Ray McCarroll went out to Pilot Rock last evening and gave an exhibition of boxing and wrestling before the Commercial Club of that town. The younger McCarroll will leave tomorrow for Heppner where on the evening of the 12th he will meet Ted Thye In a wrestling bout there. If he wins he expects to ar range a match with Eddie O'Connell of Portland. Two Marriage licenses. Two marriage licenses were Issued yesterday afternoon by Clerk R. T. Brown. William Charles O'Sulllvan of Pendleton and Deis Ruth Rice of Hermiston secured one and John W. Gish and Elizabeth V. Donahue of Pendleton received the other. New Teacher Employed. Miss Ullie Wattenburger of Echo, was last evening elected by the school board to teach In the grades for the balance of the year, succeed ing Miss Vesta Cutrforts, who has been granted a leave of absence to at tend the normal school. Miss Cuts forth will probably leave about the Hth. Miss Wattenburger graduates from the Monmouth normal January 27. Mra. Fay Dunham, one of the teachers who has been on a leave of ill ft G Bill MA ON HAND plllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Silver Plate And Foot. In Form of Rash. Skin Very Sore and Red. Burning So Intense Scratched. Cuticura Healed in LessThanThree Months. "My boy was troubled with eczema on liis left hand and foot, and it caused great hching, burning, and loss of sleep. It was in the form of a rash, and the skin was very sore and red. A change of stockings was necessary every day, and even the sheets on the bed aggravated him so he could not keep under cover. The eczema caused all the skin to drop in scales from the palm of his hand, and the burning was so intense that he scratched. 'Then we tried Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and in less than three months, and after using one box of Cuticura Oint ment and three bars of Cuticura Snip his hands were healed." (Signed) Mrc. C. T. Jones, General Delivery, Great Falls, Mont, Sept. 20, 1016. A little care, a little patience, tne u? cf Cuticura Soap, and no other, on the skin and for every-day unlet purpn?e, with touches of Cuticura Ointment to any pimples, rashes, or dandruff odea means a clear, healthy skin, clean scalp a?d good hair through life. For Free Samples by Return Mail address post-card: "Cuticura, Dept. K, Boston. Sold everywhere. it would be unjust to hold the city re sponsible for every such accident. Dare Dale of Schmelts is here to day. W. B. Hamilton of Echo is a Pen dleton visitor. E. L Cooper left today for Pasco on a business trip. D. B. Fuller of Portland. U. S. de puty marshal, is at the St. George. Dr. W. H. Lytle, state veterinarian, is here from Salem on offldul business. Mrs. John Anderson and mother, Mrs. Burroughs of Helix, came in this morning on a shopping expedition. Vmatilla Officials in Leslie's. ' In the Jan. 11 issue of Leslie's Weekly, which reached PeiAleton to day, are pictures of the newly-elected women officials of Umatilla who took office last night. The pictures were sent in from this city and were taken by C. S. Wheeler. Bought Farming Land. Through a trade: completed yester day by W. H. Morrison of Helix Joe Eagwell bought a quarter section of land from A. L. Grover Hnd the lease en 230 acres additional, together with the equipment, the entire transaction involving a consideration of over J20.000. The land sold adjoins the town of Helix on the south. Bootlegger Pleads Guilty. Tony Masters yesterday afternoon entered a plea of guilty In police court tc the charge of bootlegging entered against him and paldaa 1100 fine a' penalty. The $20 bail money of M Akrata and Joe Miller, arrested for fighting, was declared forfeited when they failed to appear In court. John Jurdles was assessed $10 this morning for imbibing too freely and Wilfrid Mlnthorn. an Indian, forfeited 115 nn the same offense. BOILING DEMANDS AN Mr, and Mrs. Sol Baum are now visiting In Portland. Louis Stifler of Wallula U a Pen dleton visitor. Mrs. Hazel Kennedy of Helix Is spending the day In the city. Lawrence Ringle of Stanton came in on the N. P. train this morning. Mrs. C. Heln of Freewater is here attending a daughter who is ill at the hospital. Mrs. E. T. Avison has returned to Pendleton after a holiday visit In Oregon City and Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence O. Frazler and baby daughter, Jean, left this morning for Portland for a short visit. W. H. Shepherd and H C. Means of Umatilla absented themselves from that town last evening while tho new woman council was taking pos session of the reins of government. They came to Pendleton. Mrs, W. J. Brown was a visitor from Pilot Rock yesterday. Sid A. Baylor, pioneer barber of Umatilla, is up for the day. Lon Lewis, editor of the Helix Ad- , vocate, Is in the city today. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hascall of Pins Grove are registered at the Golden Rule. J. B. Johnstone of Butte, Montana, who was here two years ugo, is back for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Spinkle ot White Salmon, Wash., came la this morning on the N. P. train, For Sale. Restaurant, confectionery and soda parlor, doing a good business. The best corner location In town. Rent reasonable. Fixtures new and one of most attractive on the coast. In good town of 8000 population near Portland. Apply F. L, East Oregon Ian office. Adv. Suit To Foreclose. The Farmers' Bank of Weston to day brought suit against F. G. Lucas and wife to foreclose a mortgage al Itged to have been given to secure a note upon which $724 and interest end $10u attorneys fees is due. J. It. D. Tenson, M. J. Yenson and husband, C. R. Bissett and W. D. Banister, all of whom claim an interest In the pro perty, are also made defendants. Fee &. Fee represent the plaintiff. Damage Suit Being Argued. Attorneys this afternoon are argu ing the Evans vs. City of Pendleton damage suit to the jury and the ca.e will be In the Jury's hands by 3:.1.i The taking of testimony was conclud ed this morning shortly after 10 o' clock. At the conclusion of the plain tiff's case last evening, the attorneys for the city made a motion for a non suit but this was overruled thlB morn lng. The city put but few witnesses on the stand. It is the city's conten tion that the sidewalk where Mrs. Evans fell was reasonably safe and PnwiuVnt'g UroUicr-in-Iaw Assorts Ho Was In No Way Connected With Wall Street Ik; Manager of News Bureau is Called to Stand. WASHINGTON, Jan. 10. R. W. Boiling, the president's brother-in-law, testified in the house rules com mittee leak probe. He demanded that Representative Wood apologize for mentioning his name. He denied all leak knowledge. Manager Crawford of the Central News' Washington bu reau, testified he got the state de partment's permission to send a con fidential telegram to the New York office, saying the note was forthcom ing. He declared the state department wanted the note published in ths morning papers, so it would not af fect the market during the day: Archie Jamleson, a Central News state department reporter, testified that Lansing told newspapermen he didn't want the note garbled, fearing it would injuriously effect the market. Representative Lenroot read Lansing's statement saying he "hadn't the mark et in mind" while conversing with re porters. The committee requested C. W. Ba ron, head of the Wall Street Journal to testify. The Journal supplies news to the Down, Jones ticker service, The ticker carried the advance no tice of the note. The committee also learned that the Hearst news service supplied information to tickers. Rep resentative Bennett asked that the Hearst representative be subpoenaed t OHt fRIEHD TUU AHOTHtB WHY W-S CUT TOBACCO IS Bf ST AMD CMISPtST J) m pouch or - cut tobacco UM'T AS tit AS VOU LOOSC PAPCR SACK, BUT IT SCTTf R AND CHEAPER, BECAUSE IT Cf ST1SFIE AMD LAiTS 10N6ER itUMC.TMT HLL01I HAS TO IT ALL HERE'S something curious about W-B CUT Chew ing it takes less out of your pocket and puts better chew into your mouth. No big plug sagging your pocket, no big wad sagging your cheek. Half as much of this rick tobocco goes twice as far as ordinary plug. W-B saves your silver and gives you a silver-lining feel ing of happiness all over. You can't help from telling your friends about W-B. Midi tr WETMAN-BRVT0N COMPANY, S tmm Sfun, Htm Twk City President Wilson's peace note at least had the effect of muking th world think and talk about peace dur ing the peace season. FOR SHE EXCHANGE 1T40 acres. 350 in cultivation; good soil, raises all kinJs t ndor vegetables: big orchard; house has forty thousand feet of clear lum ber In it; barn holds 500 tons of hay, another barn shelters 200 head of cattle; other buildings all good; 'water piped Into house and barns; 85 head of cattle and 26 horses and mules, all good stuff. Every thing from a threshing machine down in the way of Implements, and all new. This ranch is close to the Government Reserve, with a grazing right thereon for 150 head of cattle. It can be bought with all the personal property mentioned, for J30.000, half cash, 4 per cent on balance. E. T, WADE, Pendleton, Oregon. 1 Silver plated ware of the better kind has completely established it self in homes of refinement and good taste, and as much care is taken in selecting the pattern as in the choosing of solid silver. Queen Ann Pattern is a simple, Ktrong pattern which makes a dis tinct appeal to people who desire the best. Let us show you this pattern. Royal M. Sawtelle Since '87 Pendleton, Oregon E 1 1 : f i iiiiiniiiiiniiniiniiiHiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii.-fi T.P.W. PURE FOOD SHOP 3 MAIN PHONES ALL 15. CLEANLINESS ECONOMY SERVICE "SUNKIST ORANGES" Full of sunshine and sweetness; ' absolutely free from frost, dozen 35, 40tf, 50 RIPE OLIVES Cans 10 to75 SANDWICHOLA "Minced Ripe Olives and Tuna Fish make delicious sandwiches, the can 20 FRESH GRATED COCOANUT-With the milk, can 15 CANNED FISH. SOUSED MACKEREL, can 25 SMALL MACKEREL, can 20 FAT HERRING in Tomato Sauce, can 20 KIPPERED HERRING, cans 15, 20$ and 35 SALMON STEAKS, large can 35 JAPANESE CRAB MEAT, can 35 and 45 MINCED ABALONES, make delicious salad' can 20 and 35. 1 CALIF. BONELESS SARDINES, can 2o FIG BUTTER and FIG JAM, 2 cans 25 IMPORTED MIXED VEGETABLES, for salad, can.. 25 CANNED BABY BEETS, the can 25 Pendleton' Greatest Department Store The Peoples Warehouse Where It Pays To Trade (lard of Thanks. We wish to thank the many friends End neighbors for the kind assistance given us during the recent Illness and bereavement of our beloved son and to especially thank the Odd Fellow. Brotherhood of Trainmen, Artisans and the Circles. MR. AND MRS. JOHN KNIGHT. (Adv.) Notice of payment of City of Pcndle. ton Iminxyvement Bonds. Notice Is hereby given that City of Pendleton Improvement Bond No. 1 Series J, and No. 1, Series Q, will be paid upon presentation thereof to the undersigned at the American Nation al Bank, Pendleton, Umatilla County, Oregon. Interest on said bonds cease February 1, 1917. Dated Jan. 5 1917. LT5B MOORHOTTSE. Treasurer, City of Pendleton By Wm Mlckelsen, Deputy. APPLICATIONS FOB, GRAZING PERMITS. Notice Is hereby given that all ap Plications for permits to graze cattle, horses and sheep within the UMA TILLA NATIONAL FOREST during th P!ir,n 1917. must be filed In my office at Pendleton, Oregon, on or be fore January 31, 1917. Full informa tion In regard to the grazing rees io be charged and blank forms to be used In making applications will furnished upon request. W. W. CRYDER, Supervisor. Horsm Lost or Strayed. Lost or strayed, one bay mare, age about 10 years, branded F- H. on rlgh1 shoulder and J. W. on left hip; one brown gelding-, five years old. weight about 1200 pounds, branded F H. on right shoulder. Will pay reasonab'r reward for return or Information lead ing to recovery of above described an imals. It. B. McF,wen, Athena( Or on. Adv. I THE UNIVERSAL CAR I III I I III I II II iiiii & sv jrvfir i i I I " 111!' IIIII II Service Station Our repair shop is in charge of E. E. Hall, Ford factory mechanic, assuring you quick and efficient service. Ill All wnrlr nrnaranfaail I! I I Large stock of parts and accessories al- I I I I wavs on hand. I I - . .. in ford oils and lubricants. Air, gas and water. Remember the place. Round-Up City Auto Co. 812 Garden St.