Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Weston leader. (Weston, Umatilla County, Or.) 189?-1946 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 16, 1917)
Y a ............................... A' V y y YOUR SPRING SUIT TO YOUR KEASURE There's a difference between the ready made suit and the tailored suit just as there's a difference, ordinarily, between the house you rent and the home you build. When you rent you take what you can get and try to be content. When you build a home you put into it your individuality, your taste, your pride, and all become a part of it. Your neighbors and friends recog nize this. Both are houses. The same with. a suit. The ready jl made suit is just a suit; the tailored suit js the home you build, $ showing your taste, your pride, and giving you the satisfaction of wearing well made and becoming garments. t y y y y y y US-MOB t FRfiS' V y y y y y t y. y y y y y We have the famous M. Born & Co.'agency, showing more than 400 samples made in the style you wish. The prices are but little more than of ready made suits and the garments are better. Let us show you the large samples now on display. I The egg season is just starting. Are you prepared to meet the reuuiremcnts of the laving hen? She will demand the projvr foods and shell making materials to produce the eggs' for market or for home consumption. She will demand a clean nest anil that you nun ki t her eggs before they are too strong for use. Some other things she will demand will le: Fine Ground Bone Coarse Ground Eone Re-washed Ovslersbell Clam Shell Small Grit Large Grit Fish Scraps Blood Meal We will take all eggs offered at current market price. Meat Scraps Glass Kest Eggs Men's Fumisliigs Specials The continual warm weather has made it necessary for us to make sj)ecial prices on many of our winter lines in order to avoid carrying them over until next season. SHEEP-LINED COATS-A11 sheep-Hned coats that formerly sold for $5.50 are now priced at... . ? $4.50 All.coats priced at $4.00 to $4.50 will now go at T $3.50 MEN'S SOX Just as a special, an assortment of sox worth 35c, now .....5 pr. $1.00 (Only one dollar's worth to a enstomer.) 1 V f f y Still selling matches at six boxes for 25e. l SHOES SHOES SHOES To make room for the upring line much of which luui been received we are closing out many odds and fiul that are excep tional values; good style., but just a few of each; iminy tw high as three dollars now at K SMA! $1.98 4& Mile t COMPLETE PROGRAM OF WESTON'S CHAUTAUQUA Plymouth Rock roosters for Mrs. H. N. Greer. Another tractor on the road. Watts & Rogers. sale. Geo. B. Carmiehacl, soul's by Mrs. t . M. Smith and Mrs. C. H. Smith, and a piano duet by Mrs. J. Wurzer and Mrs. F. Graham. A delectable J two course luncheon was served by Mrs. A. J. Mclntyre and Mrs. VV. A. Graham, assisted by the hostess. rimx ami wniie carnations mioeo Community Festival February 17, much to the beauty of the table. 19 a,j 20 "Three Joyous Days." p w Knot. ,.ir,.-ri i -r beginning tomorrow. Season tick- and $1.50 for his potatoes last fall UPLAND IdXIS NOTES Five-year-old work mare, weight and his neighbors thought it rather 1400, for sale. Dr. S. L. Kennard. Watts & Rogers are planning for a tractor demonstration as soon as )Hssible. ' . "Pody" Duncan was up from Prospect farm for a few days dur ing the week. Iloljort Wheeler, former Weston boy, again has a clerical position at the court house. The Bachelor CSirls were enter tainol Monday evening at the home of M iss Josie Lavender. Dr. Kennard disposed of four head of work mules Tuesday to Ralph "McEwen of Athena for 5750. , . queer that he diun t sell. He now feels like shaking hands with him self, having sold about CO sacks at Pendleton last week for $3 to $3.25 per hundred weight. Two weeks ago he sold 64 sacks at Milton for $2.50. Mr. Boyts now claims to be able to gui-ss right on the potato market once in awhile. Thomas J. Bulfineh, 75 years old, a brother of C. F. Bulfinch, died January 29 at Sawlelle, Calif. He w;w a naval veteran of the civil war, having served under Admiral Farra gut at the battle of New Orleans, and his immediate superior was the late Admiral Dewey, then a lieu- Below is the program of Wes ton's First Annual (liautauqua and are visiting relatives here for a few days. They go from here to Mon tana, where they intend locating. Mr. and Mrs. Tom liooher and daughter of Athena are visiting Mrs. Booher's parents, Mr. and Mrs. diaries Schneider. Cleve Denny of Tekoa, Wa-li will move the lust of this weyk the U Glow farm. . Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Beathe and daughter visited Mr. and Mrs. K. Weston Uplands, Feb. 15. Cyril B. Kngllsh a couple of days this Hyatt and wife of Colfax. Wash., week. Zoological Reflections ets may yet be had for $1.50 each, if bought before the noon hour Sat unlay; FIRST DAy- A FTEKNOON Opening Exercises and Announce- visiting friends here this week. ments. Dolf Thompson of Gibbon visited Concert -Middltton Concert Trio here a few days this week, "Favorite Chautauqua Entertain- j. o. MiK'arty, a livestock deal trs; , er of Caldwell, Idaho, is visiting Admittance 35c. his brother, Tom McCarty. EVENING Miss Bertha Walden of Weston is Concert Middteton Concert Trio the gut of Agnes Schneider. - Featuring Daise Beckett Middle-' Joe Cannon and (lias. Schneider ton. Mezzo Contralto. made a husimwa trih to Pemlleton Popular Lecture-"Worlds in the Tuwlay. Making --Arthur I). Carpenter. Admittance 50c. StX;ONl) DAV- AFrERNOON EnUrtainment- Miss Orah Hark- Mr. and Mrs. Beathe. Music, danc ing and refreshments filled up the evening. Wednesday night Mr. and Mrs. R. E. English entertained a number of young people at a Valentine party. Those present were Bertha Walden, tenant. He left a small estate. and his Weston brother has iror.e ne "Chautauqua's Clever Imner- Frank J. Beale, now an extensive to Sawtelle to take this in charge, sonator." rancher of Alberta, was in town The Wegton ., are bflck from Admittance 35c. VVednesday attending the local lodge at g were they earn. EVENING o ryt lans. aj, about caterpillars not the Entertainment--Miss Orah Hark- Weston High was defeated by fuzzy kind, but the kind that is ne. Touchet High ina double header gradua ly working the honest and Sir Douglas Mawson's Antarctic Ruth Dowd, Agnes Schneider. Pearl haeliot Kail cranio Rafnrliiii .in inr faithful m.ila nut ft kia Jok 1 I:.. mr-.lt-.j-.Lii..... " '. "" n.lllM.luci , 1 lri j--". a i.vuit.-B. viociniiy auopiea Dy IV a- haps Hey Winn or Sim Culley cr tional Geographic Society. Scott Banister could qualify now Sir Douglas Mawson's own at a pinch as gas engineer at the told by sunerintendent. Leader shop. - Admittance 75c. Clarence Wright and family have , THIRD DAY AFTERNOON been visiting at the home of Mrs. pnla- ri.Ti.- t...i. from their ""-. . . .aer, wone About Mexico." W., L. Mellinger T ili Kdilr: 1 he dog li.ih shark u. l for labor atory puriNim-s is of the low-r order of luJies, having a bKeleton of car is tihige instead of bone. The fish is about three feet long ami four inches through at the widest part. The only thing pleasant about it is that it ban a perfume rivalling the essence of skunk or of limbtirgi-r cheese. For this reason it is hard to swallow a comparison of a human to a shark even though intemlwd as a compliment. The aforesaid zoology sharks (meaning students) having been compared to babies in their eon- Monday night several families duct, certain people have come to took a four horse team and drove the conclusion that 'the bottle of to the Clarence Beathe ranch - their milk on the school house stens is for Iwing a. complete surprise to their nourishment. Weston Meat Market visit A STUDENT. Incralng the Penalty. "I'd linve liei-ii ti-iiipuil iu prouvt Kiilnt Hint iiixlciio faro." , "it was cluuper to pny. Tlio driver would have kept the oiuntlog unit hint' running nil tlio time wo wcro nnoiliiu." in the local court. Joe Clodius has returned from a tour of the upper country, having visited relatives at Spokane, Ritz ville, Sprague and Waitsburg. J. B. Hart and family were here Friday and Saturday story farm near Walla Walla. They were guests of the J. M. Ashworths. their way irom enterprise to Alberta to reside. Their little dauirhtpr Vircinia in ill with thi Good interest and large congrega- measles, tions continue each evening at the . .... . M. E. Church, South, revival .'. 0wm thc hlt'h " of whieh 4.owev.-r will be fliwod em. line, wooo sawyers 01 Weston ana pyarily during the Weston Chau tauqua. Pastor Smith has thc ca- . pabie assistance of Mr. Roy Sims, . a theological student of Columbia college, whose sermons have met wth much favor. The Saturady Afternoon Club was pleasantly entertained at the home of the president, Mrs. E. O. DeMoss, Saturday, February 10. Music was the subject of the after noon, and each memln-r responded to roll call by naming her favorite sonir and its author. The program includ. a paper on JIusic by Mrs. from Walla Walla. Athena have entered into an agree ment to raise their rates. Because of illness, Mrs. Laura Shanks has returned from near Walla Walla to her home in this city. v Virgil, thc littleson of J. E. Wal den, is recovering from an attack of pneumonia. T. A. Lieualk-n was up from Adams Monday for a visit with his mother. J. T. Lieuallen was in town today t A first hand story from across the border. - Admittance 50c. EVENING , , .... Grand Concert "An Evening in Hawaii." The Hawaiian Waikiki tjuintct. Admittance 50c Dark Ways Darkness. , Mlit Is proverbially Hie time for crlinlniil activity, nnd Kpuniiirds say: The false coin pasties at night." Too often successful men Ignore old friends, or. as Ihe Spaniards my: "Willi th Clorlas they forcer Hie mcmoi-las." HhrrwdncM tins worked on undcslr aldfi articles. -iilii lolls Ihnt "Tim saddle snd innne make Hie liin sell." Waste lulmr Is "To carry Iron to Ylzc-nya." A man born (o good fortune U "tli va sl wwte tea," Dowd, Alice Dowd, Miss Mayberry, Susie Beathe, tCarl Brutscher, Gus Olson, Ralph and Henry Dowd, Max and Dale Neil, Raymond, Ches ter and Nerval Ferguson Terrence Tcrhune, Clarence Beathe. Dick English purchased a small band of cattle this week. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Jones enter tained a number of friends at a lit tle dance Thursday night. a Mrs. Couey and family of"Pa limse, Wash., are visiting her sisl( r,' Mrs. Joe Hyatt. Edna ami Kay Jones are visiting friends in Weston for a few days. Herm Henderson and wife of the Blue Mountain sawmill are visiting Tiere at the home of Mark Hen derson. Miss Mayberry has returned to the Uplands after spending a few days with her mother at Milton. tSeth Hyatt sient a couple of days in the vicinity of GiblNin last week while looking after his cattle interests there. Tom McCarty and family, who are living or) the Shod Price plucc, Dr. Alfred KSempert Graduate and Registered DENTIST OFFICIC HOURS 0:00 to 12.O0 A. M. 1:00 to 6;00 P. M. WATTS IS.D; IJpHtllilS Prime Beef Pork, Motion, Veal Dmsed Poultry I ISH Monday and Thursday Get Our Prices I Ihjiiu No. Ord- id ttik. il l.y plmitu Ut ninil rt'iilcfl. Toil crcent interest u all e cninU after 30 tiny. A. P. Perry ;: Dr. O. S. NKVVSOiH I'liysicltin and Surgeon '".V, ;; l'ot liulMing (lir. Htono'a fur ., mer ollicc) Alliens, Oreg. f $500,000 to loan on good wheat land at S 6. F. G. 1V.V.V, 4 LursAR Itcul l'itiity and ,im Wi-Mton, Oregon NOW'S THE TIME to my your Wv.lon U-adur "sub' Warm Rooms 1 CLEAN BEDS I Day or Week. I Dorniitoi-y IhiilflinjT, Mrs. J. W. Porter i'hoae 2.9 Painless Dentistry DR. R. B. ROBBINS Jlltltl lillilllillK ' Ceutt snd Mtiiu N( reels I'KNDl.KTON, OREtJON I ? ? y y y x y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y x x y y x y t y x x x y y x x y x y y y y x y y y y y x y y y y y