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PAGE SIX EIGHT PAGES Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind You Have. Always Bonght, and which has been lo use for over 30 years, has borne the signature at r aim nas oeen nuule under his per- (6wt- supervision since its Infancy. 6CCA4U Allow no one to deceive von in thi. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good " are but Experiments Unit triiie with and endanger tlie health of Infante and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA ( istoria i a harmless substitute for Castor OH, Pare goric, lro)s and Soothing S.vrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine) nor other ISareotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroy! Worms and nlla 1 crishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Hiarrlnva. It regelates the Stomach and lion e ls, MSimikkte the FoimI. giving healthy and natural sleep. 1 lie Children's ranaeea-The Mothers Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of L AT CLOSES AT END OF A SUCCESSFUL YEAR W I : ATI IKK SHOWS SKiNS OR WARMING UP; fold II As 1KLAYKI CROPS. INNOCENT MAN BARELY ESCAPES SENTENCE Enjoyable MoftlO is Hold at the School House on Sunday Willi Sev eral Otuslde ;uesU AM illHi Work on Telephone Line Is Items Held Back. In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought I COM N V NtW VOMK C ITV Active In Egypt. LONDON, May 31 A British offi cial communication concerning the iper.it ton In Egypt says: "Si, the enemy air attack on Port Said the Royal Flying Corps In Erypt has given the enemy little rest. Four Jiiitish machines have heavily bombarded enemy advanced posts Forte tiombs were dropped, resulting in buildings and a plant at El Ham ma being seriously damaged and the i I Refinery I Gas not H a mixture Dealers every where and at Service Stations H I Standard OH Company Pen-ile'.on MM 25 water tanks at Rodhsalesn bein? smashed. "This will upset the whole plan of the enemy as, since the destruction of his drilling pfaht at Jlfjaffa by oar patrols, he had set great store on the Rodhsalem water works. "It has now been learned that the column of troops which suffered bj our booming attack at El Arlsh, the ISth. were Germans. This probably explains their hasty retaliation by dropping bombs on Port 9ald civili ans. "Further details show that two British monitors and a sloop fired 34 heavy pr.ijectilea In the attack on El Aii.-h, causing the enemy to scatter in all directions among the palm groves along the shore, which after ward wer,i thoroughly searched by salvos of medium sheila. The bom bardmmt lasted two hours and the strongly fortified town was reduced to ruins. The enemy, complete de moralised, gave no reply to our fire." (Bast Oregonian Special.) DUNCAN, Ore., June 1. The Dun can school closed last Friday after a successful term. , The weather has been cold and dis agreeable for the last week. It seem to show some signs of warming up. t is hoped that it will on account of the hay crop. A very enjoyable picnic wf held at the school house last Sunday. Am ong the outside visitors attending were: Mrs. S. A. Bryson, Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Craves. Miss Helen Candlsh. Mrs. J. S. Mcl-eod and son John from Pendleton. Mrs. Oal dentins of Burns and Walter Bonifer of Oibbon. Miss Velma Marple. who taught the last term of school here, remained for the picnic, leaving for her home in Nolln. yesterday, K. A. Bottcher, local forest ranger, was In Huron Sunday, looking after business. S. J. Stearns of Gibbon, was a Dun can isttor last Sunday. Mrs. Ida Wilbur and Mrs. J. F. McLaughlin are spending Decoration day in La Grande. The work on the telephone line has been suspended indefinitely on ac count of being unable to secure "split tree" insulators. The factories are filling war orders. Ed Baker of Pendleton, spent Sun day in Duncan on a Ashing trip. FOUR PERSONS KILLED AS PARADE GOES PAST WOODEN AWNING FMd.s, ON CROWD ON SIDEWALK AT DALLAS, TEXAS. DALLAS, Tex . May 31. Four or more persons were Killed and 18 in jured when the wooden awning over the sidewalk of a oulldlng on Main street collapsed. The persons killed and injured were part of a throng watching a preparedness parade. The bodies of four dead were taken from under the awning and it was re ported another person had been kill ed. The list of injured was reported to number lg. 2 Hurled Through IKior. SAND POINT, Idaho. May 31. Three men were burned, two of them seriously, here in an explosion of sew er gas, caused, it is believed, by a lighted candle. Fred Helverson, employed at the city's septic tank pump station, was hurled ten feet through a narrow trap door in a shoot of flame. Ole Ben dlxon, although stunned at first and with his clothing on Are. managed to climb a ladder and was lifted out by Helverson. J. K Ashley) Jr., city en gineer, sustained minor Injuries and burns by being blown through an op en door way. Chamberlain's Colic, cholera and Di arrhea Remedy. This is a remedy that every family should be provided with, and especial ly during the summer months. Think of the pain and surrering that must be endured when medicine must be t,ent for before relief can be obtained. This remedy is thoroughly reliable Art anyone who has used It. Obtain r bel everywhere. Adv. Prisoner, In Jail, Robbed. CHESTER, Pa.. May 31 Posing as a "janitor," a stranger walked into the lockup here and fllmflamed C. L. Bennett, a prisoner, out of $15 and made a safe getaway He told the prisoner the chief wanted the money for safe keeping. Bennett discovered hla loss when he found the real jani tor Is a negro, while the fllmflammer was a white man. Court O. K.'s First Fiht. BATON ROGUE, May 31. Adjutant-General McNeese and A D. Stew art, a prominent New Orleans hotel man each paid a J 150 fine In city court for their pre-arranged fist flgh' on the capltol lawn which they des ignated as "an affair of honor." Judge odorn in imposing the 'fines said: "Personally. I approve of this meth od of settling differences between gentlemen, but it 1b against the law and I will have to fine yoa." Greatly Reni-ritcd by Chamberlain's Liniment. "I have used Chamberlain's Lini ment for sprains, bruises and rheuma tic pains, and the great benefit 1 have received jiijstifies my recommending it in the highest terms," writes Mrs. Florence Silfe. Dabash. Ind. If you are troubled wlth r heumatic pains you will certainly be pleased with the prompt relief which Chamberlains Liniment affords Obtainable every where Adv. K ink 2rf -mJmM , .J&cJSa. ? Ml" jfSfii iib ' TaaaifliaiflU .JpwMfcsKlsaa lav. St A JH ALTA THEATRE DAYS 0 STARTING "Thursday j UNE1 THE LA SALLE CO. in repertoire of standard musical comedy successes, opening Thursday with ROWLAND, GIQLY TANGO HIT! BIG (QHIQKiO) m sm mm. a m.m mmmmwMAW mm saw tw Ami -am la mB BaaawaaBBBBBBai i mm mm w mw .ii n VJQplLXNNCTT If9 9 9 F&MTANMUm GRAT TANGOBSQV& VWVAZ, QOSTUMeS A WOT tt QOLOQ5 ENVIRONMCNQ SUPtROO ' KUGAWj REPERTOIRE Thursday "September Morn." Friday "The Time the Place and the Girl." Saturday, Mat. and Night "My Best Girl." s shows Dally, 8: IS and ::10. Rent' picture program : to lilt. TOKIO REPORT DENIED BY CHINESE' LEGATION STATEMENT says Vliv sii l K l Is NOT GRAVELY ILL s SAID. WASHINGTON. June 1. The Chi nese legation Issued the following sOitetnent "The Chinese legation at Washington denies the Toklo report that Yuan Shal Kal, president of the republic of china was gravely 111. in a cablegram received this morning rlHb E C DCVWE & DAUGHTER CKCl) RICHARD f ftRKK- ! HARVARD BOXING CHAMP Ml FJVTKR itivt. o ' CHICAGO. June 1 For a crime committed by a double he had never seen until recently, Ernest C. Divine, now wealthy and head of a theater corporation here almost went to pris on as a forger. His case is one of the strangest on record and the details have just come to light through Mr. Divine, who visited his convict double in the state penitentiary' at Charles town. Mass. Late in the summer of 1908. Rich ard F. Parker (one of the aliases as sumed by the "double") opened an office In Worcester, Mass. He closed a bond deal Involving 130,000 with A. B. Turner, a Boston broker Turner subsequently found that the check handed him by Parker was a pure for gery. About a month later a Boston de tective walked into the office of Ed ward M. Deane and Co.. bankers of Chicago, where Divine w;is employed j and arrested him He answered thai description of Parker to the minutest! detail Their physical features were the same. Iloth had brown hair, which grew back from the forehead, and each had a tiny dimple in the end! of his nose Mr. Turner was summon-! ed from Boston. He positively identl- J fied Divine as Parker. Severn of the Turner firm also declared the inno ent man the person who robbed th company of 330,000 by the bad check Divine was hurried out and put through the third degree. He was beat, kicked and Insulted, but could give the detectives no satisfaction. Ex tradition papers were signed, allowing the police to send Drvlne to Boston for trial. The Innocent man's attorney immediately asked for a writ of ha beas corpus and a hearing was order ed. Divine was asked to write his name so that it could be compared with Parker's on the check. The signatures tallied exactly. Finally Divine was able to prove an alibi. He had been with A. K Brown, president of the Kenwood Trust Com pany In Chicago at the very hour the forged check was handed to Turner in Boston. Although Divine was Immediately freed of the charge he was a marked man for several years and lost one po sition after another when his employ ers learned that he had once been trie, I for forgery. However, he persisted and today is prosperous. Parker, the real forger, was not ar rested until 19M.at Atlantic City. He was wanted for passing a forged c heck on a Philadelphia firm. Other forger ies were traced to him and finally Mr. Turner identified him as the man who gave him the worthless check for which Divine almost went to prison j .. i c , nd fk II - - v v : tl V. H ,'V I ; tha New Edison It talks, sings, plays; and j even breathes with natural human expression. EDISON DISC With all the new records. We have them in all styles ana sizes at a very wide range of prices. EASY TERMS. Call mid hear this wonderful machine that you have been reading about. WJWS MUSIC HOUSE MIMA Eli 1-1 Aim m o a xiHKinwcK. one. sensible -Mm m I j professional prist nog t ; Kirk-1 ugarette j Patrick put himself under John L's management for from three to five months, after which the old gladiator thinks the collegian will be ready to give battle to Frank Moran. With Moran disposed of, Wlllard would he challenged. Sullivan believes thai Wlllard has but one or two good fights left in him and that Kirkpatrick could bundle him whi n the time came Kirkpatrick halls from Texas. (,'AMUKID'iE, Mas , June 1. Har vard may soon be represented In the UHlfalnnal prljte ring. o. O. Klrk patrlrk, Harvard's strong man In 1914, tar foot nail player and heavyweight boxing ( hamplon of the University, is consi'lering an offer from John L. Hul llviii to turn professional. Kirkpatrick made a trip to Sulli van's home at Abingdon, where the former champion proposed that Klrk- licmiftH Kcady for War. CHICAGO, May 31. Preliminary reports to the Illinois committee of the nival consulting board, made public recently, indicate that the chemists In the state will make a good account of themselves In event of war against the I'nited States. The state survey shows that 10 per cent of all the chemists In the coun try are residents of Illinois and that chemical resources of the state for production of war materials are far greater thnn was estimated When the committee was created. The chemical end of the investlgu- ti to Mctermine what Illinois c an no in aJrt of National defense has been directed by William Hoskins, of Mar iner & Hoskins, representing the Am erican Chemical Society on the Illi nois committee. Mr. Hoskins reported that chemical expe rts and producers In the state have enthusiastically aided In the surrey. "The present w:ir ts a chemists' war," said Mr. Hoskins. "That fact la recognized unanimously by the chem ists of HIInolB, who are now studying how to so fortify Industry against de iwndence on Imports that America can at all times supply Its chemical needs. Having that, no foe may dare to strike us. x "As to armament, ordnance and rifles, the special tools for their man ufacture, as well as the materials used In them, must be manufactured under the most watchful care of the chem ist. As to explosives, It is obviously the work of the chemist to produce them. Sulphuric, nitric and carbonic acid, benzol, napthalene and ammo nia can be produced only under most scrupulous chemical Inspection "Without a continuous supply of such chemicals and many others, artil lery is valueless and armies mere ag gregations of men. In case of a short age of any of these vital substances. It is up to the chemists to provide new sources of supply." SUPERVISOR OF THE WHITMAN FOREST DIES BAKER, Ore., June 1. Henry Ire land, supervisor of the Whitman Na tional Forest, died suddenly at his Pome at Sumpter of neart failure. Mr. Ireland was about B years old and leaves a wife and two children To aid persons to sleep In daylight, an opaque mask to be worn over the eyes has been Invented. PURE RICH BLOOD PREVENTS DISEASE Bad blood is responsible for more ailments tlinn anything else. it causes catarrh, dttpeptU. iheunin tism, weak, tired, lanjruid fueling! and worse troubles. Hood's Baruparilla has been wonderfully raMMtfu in purifying and tnricluhf the blood, removi;. scrofula nd other humors, and building up the whole trite m. Tube it (jive it to all the family so as to avoid illucsa. Get it today. from Peking In reply to the legation's ((Mry, it Is stated that the Tokl.l news reporting the Illness of Presi dent Yuan Shal Kal was untrue.' Doth the legation and the state de partment claimed to be without In formation concerning the conference at XunkiiiK. called lor the purpose of deciding whether Yuan Shal Kit Should continue in the presidency. Following recent discoveries of 4e pocjta an American syndicate haa oP enef a manganese mine In Panama Thankful For Relief Remedy Brought Her SAYS FTtTTrOI.A A1 TOAXO POS SESS Aid, THE MKKIT THAT IS CLATMKD FOR IT. After completing the necessary treatmept, Mrs. S. 8. Cole, Lampasas, Texas, was so well pleased with the results that she wrote the Plnus lab oratories as follows: "FVultola and Traxo are all you claim. It removed a quantity of gall-stones and I feel sure It saved my life. I am well now and thankful to you for the great good your medicine has done me. Frultola is a powerful lubricant for the Intestinal organs and one dose is usually sufficient to clearly demon strate its efficacy. It softens the con gested masses, disintegrates the hardened particles that occasion so much suffering and expels the accum ulated waste to the great relief of the patient. Following a dose of Frultola. Traxo should be taken three or four times a day In order to rebuild restore the system that has become weakened and run down from constaat suffering It is a splendid tonic, acting on the liver and stomach most beneficially. Frultola and Traxo are prepared n the Plnus laboratories at MonticeMo. III . and arrangements have been made to supply them through represen tative druggists. In Pendleton they be obtained at Tallman Co. a, U Main street. 51 FRIEMHrHOPHIL COURTEOUS We believe that there is no reason for ser vice of any other kind. And we put this be lief into operation in all transactions, to the complete satisfaction of our patrons. Open an "American National" account Checking j Savings in any amount. Consult us about Farm loans, or Trust or Investment matters our service is complete. 5gj tiBpiii it lift j( ik i 'jiplllH - -' ' Pemeco Meats Prepared In Pendleton We will buy your eggs, chicken and-veal CENTRAL MARKET Phone 4r" I0S M Aita