Wednesday, Ausrust 20, 1930
LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE, ORE.
Page Three
scenery newjt
Bridal Shower Is
'Complimentary To
Miss Emma Wurl
- ,
. August as a month doesn't rate so ;
,n ,i(i, .,, ., ...... ;
well w.th cupm us the periods both
preceding and following It, for July !
and September are : usually popular
times for wedding.' However August ,
1r R PnoH nrnRCI ctatil: 'mnnlh fnr Unn.
tcmber, with brides, for the earning
o - i ui ;
jail aays Dtmj announced and en
tertained. . - ' . ..
The weddinti of Miss Emma Wurl
mRbe'rpl V'P'" 'nfSp !
pretty bridal shower to Misi Wurt last
night when Miss Tfclle Olscn was l
hostess at her home on Second street
with M13S Elizabeth Wllwors agisting.
tne.prodommatins .Solor in the dec-
.rations which included bouquets or
ummer-flowers. Cards were a diver- ,
eion of the evening and later dainty
refreshments were, served.
Those present 'wera: Miss Emma
Wurl, Misses Mathilda Wilwers, Doro
thy Wilwers, Mrs.'-. -John Wilwers.
Misses Claudia .Suydam, Myrtio
Shultz, Mrs. Herbert Rehcr, Mrs. How
ard Evans, Misses Helen Jensen, Edna
Jensen. Mrs. Clifton Stngletary. Mrs.
Frank Hoover, Mrs. Fred Mathls. Sr.,
Miss Helen Hughes.. Mrs. Hanna Ol
son. Miss, Elizabeth Wilwers and Miss
Tilllc Olson. -
CAMPUS
Are Coming!
- find
M
''.s-r-
Mean
Swanky
ses
for
Autumn
i
We are- showing- :in- as--sbrtnient
of 1 girl's and
junior's -s rhi art travel
tweeds uncorap arable
when workmanship, de
sign, and materials are
concerned.
We Cordially Invite
Your Inspection '
THE
A New and
(!.& V-V
- " Announcements j
HIGHEST GRADE
SHOE REPAIRING
'. DONE WHILE YOU WAIT
Here is a modern, electrically equipped shop,
ready for any shoe, repair job. Expert work
manship. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Tanner Shoe Shop
Foley Hotel Hid?:.
Tuesday Club In
Enjoyable Party
At n pleasant alternoon of brldga. '
r.r3. jonn Miner was nosiess tno
Tuesday club yesterday at her home .
with two tables at play. Snapdragons,
phlox were tn (f0Wers used In .
nUruetive decoration. Honors at !
brides were won by Mrs. L. M. Hoyt,
Tho hostess served dainty refresh- i
'
menu.
The next meeting of the -lub will I
Charles Playle.
Make - Arrangements
TTm' Annual PlpmP
. c ul -rl.lHll.iai lvlllt
:
Final arrangements for the annual
JStXSi
j - considered. A basket supper will
t, Jl: nnt, in th iiii
I be served at 6 o'clock In tho evening
I after an afternoon of swimming ana
J social hours. All firemen and their
: families are invited to attend.
I Mrs. Fred Williams was appointed
t chairman with Mrs. John Ward, Mrs.
Earl Courtney, Mrs. W. D. McDonald.
( Mrs. Bay Cook, and Mrs. Bill Pidcock
' assisting. Mrs. Pidcock was elected
! musician to fill the vacancy left by
Mrs. Ernest Root who has moved from
La Grande.
The meeting of the Good Will club
of the W. R. C. has been postponed
until the third Thursday In Septem
ber when It will meet with Mrc Laura
Bradcn.
Road Widening
Work Is Going
Ahead Rapidly
By v. V. Connor
(Observer Correspondent)
UNION, Ore. (Special) F. M.
Sturgill and tho3e connected with
him in the Union Construction com
pany arc progressing rapidly on the
work of widening: the state highway
between Hot Lake and La Grande.
The grade is being extended five feet
on each side making the road ten
feet wider on this straight stretch-
Among the visitors who participat
ed in the tennis playing at the city
courts Sunday were Messrs. Lyle, Ray
and Clive Wilson from Imbler and
iwo young men-i rem rxortn fowaer.
, . The local weekly-paper, Tho East-(.
ern Oregon Republican, has changed
its ctote- of ; printing, the paper com
ing out on Thursday instead of Fri
day as formerly.
Local business houses had their
Xlags. out thei three last days, o? . the
wees in uonor ui me niueriuuii w
Bion boys vho wero going througlj ,on
their way to Baker. , ,.
A contest In attendance' and other
points between two Sunday school
cln.isos'at aire ;Methbdlstr.church closed
Sunday with the girls In Miss Susan
Chadwjck's class winning by a close
-nicraln. ' I
Miss Dorris "Sturgill. who has been
visiting with her uncle and aunt, Mr.
and- Mrs. Wftltsr.-Strlri&oanvliv BlgUu
arrived home Tuesday.
Lcighton Cox Is here for a '"visit
with friends and relatives. He for-
SKSasw--
r
LOS ANlifcl.fcS . aj
fc
5
, Convenience
Gomfort Hospitality
Yon will appreciate the excellent
service and moderate rates. The
city's most centrally located hotel.
One block from Pcrshir.g Square
convenient, to all leading shops,
thearres, financial institutions and
electric depots for all resorts.
Garage adjoining.
All OuniJr Room Hach With Bath
IHb 1'cr.nti - - fS. tl
reruns - - J.' iu. 61. J3
Unexcelled Food Friendly Prh w
TraNK SiMPSOIl, Jr., Director
Sixth O Grand
Finer Service
1 ' 1
Woman Fprester
Associated Preaf Photo-
Margaret Stoughton of Osage
Iowa, is the first junior womar
'orester In the United States. She
s stationed at the Appalachian for
!6t experiment station in Ashevllle.
N. C. ' -
Granted Divorce
Assoointcd I'resa t'huto
Mrs. Huguette Clark Gower,
daughter ot the late Senator W. A.
Clark of Montana, was granted a
divorce from William MacDonatd
Gower. In Reno. Nev., on arounds
0f desertion. .-'o1-'
. . ' - ti;.
mcrly lived ihere but moved' ti Her
mlston a few montlut ago. ' .
This vicinity received but little rain
from the electric fltnrmR which hnnKed
over Monday. The rain Iastor hbre
, only a few minutes and was mixed
with- hall. As far .as. Is known nb
damage was done by the hall: !..
ii Carr Lcdont who ' has been ' living
' m Union for the past few days Is
!rnoving his family to La Grande this
:.Vnelc. Mr. LeCont 16 one of th con.
tractors who have charge of the high
way work between Hot Lake, and La
Grande.
Latest reports from Hot Lake are
that James -Webb who has been criti
cally, ill for several weeks, 4s slightly
Improved and there is some hope .'for
his final recovery, and that Ed 311ne
is. itill improving - and -will soon bo
ablo to return home.
E. A. Sayre, county school super
intendent, and Mrs. Sayre were In
Union a short time Friday afternoon
and stopped for a visit with the girls
of the cooking club at Mrs. Greens.
C. L. Cadwell was called to British
Columbia the latter part of the week
I to attend the funeral of a nephew.
t A slight collision occurred in front
of the Union meat market. In Nqrth
Union Sunday morning. Rulan Edyal-
jBon had stopped at the market and
was just starting to turn on the
I highway when a tourist car came
around the turn Just to the north.
the second car and the Edvaison car
collided right in tho middle of. the
road, with mashed fenders on both
machines resulting and the Edvaison
machine having the bumper broken.
No one was injured. The tourists wero
driving a California cwv
BEAX SHIPMENT REFRIGERATED
BELHAVEK. N. C. VP1 The first re
r,nnrStH nnrlnnd of lima beans ever
sent out from this ' section was
Bhinned from here recently. Nineteen
farmers cooperated in the shipment.
TRY HYE AS CHICKEN FEED
' DUSSELDORP. Germany (P) Man
ufacturers -of concentrated feed are
experimenting with a process which
they expect .to enable the use of ryo
as a cnicKen leea.
frvj i4?? K if!
1
ON THE BASIS of its ability to earn large dividends
on the money invested, the Iron Fireman deserves
your immediate and very serious consideration.
FORGET for the moment that Iron Fireman pre
vents smoke, gives uniform, even heat, and pro
duces firebox temperatures from 500 to 1000 degrees
hotter than are possible with hand firing.
THE important things are that Iron Fireman burns
cheaper coal and burns less coal. It saves from
15 to 50 of your present fuel bill, and thus pays
for itself in a very short time.
FRED SPAETH
IRON FIREMAN AUTOMATIC COAL BURNER
1105 Washington - . Phone Main 586
Sleeves Run Wild
Above Elbows
In Fall Fashions
(Associated Press Fashion Editor)
PARIS (A) Sleeves have departed
from the straight and narrow. 1
On many of the autumn dresses lor
afternoon wear sleeves bear the brunt
of dressmakers' Innovations. I
Most of the change Is above the J
elbow, foresleeves retaining thr
conservative, close-fitting lines which
women have found most practical
(or general wear, t
Above the elbow things begin to
happen. ' '' ' j
. Paris dressmakers add narrow bias
tiers which recall the movement of t
tiered skirts Or a flat band of fur, I
similar -to trimming bands on the I
eklrt, may simulate a cap-sleeve. 1
Occasionally bodices are broadened ;
at the shoulder to include caps which ,
fall Just over the top of the sleeve, i
reminding that not so long ago capes ,
were smarter than they are today. I
These vestiges of departed cape j
sleeves appear also In coats, even lur
coats, providing the fur Is short and 1
slick like galllac or broadtail. j
Among the most sensational sleeve ,
treatments is one wmcn puns above
the elbow and Is tight below. The
fullness disappears ' at tho shoulder .
where the sleeve fits smoothly with
out shirring or pleats.
Menus Of The
Day
By Mm. Alexander George
A LUNCHEON MENU
Halves of Cantaloupe. Iced
... Ham and Egg Patties
, : Prozen Fear Salad
Hot Rolls Currant Jelly.
Caramel Ico Cream Cocoanut Cakes
Coffee
Salted Nuts .
Hani and Egg Patties, Serving 0
0 patty shells. '
8 tablespoons, butter. .
6 tablespoon flour.
3 cups milk.' .
li cups diced, cooked ham.
3 hard. cooked 'eees,' diced.
4 tablespoons chopped cooked eel-
cry. - i
3 tablespoons chopped cooked green
peppers.
l teaspoon salt.
wwjpuuu pcpiwi.
2 tablcsnoons chonned narslev. e
S thin strips plmlentos.' )
Melt butter, add flour. Blend and
add milk; and cook until creamy
sauco- forms.' Stir constantly. Add
ham, eggs, celery, green peppers. Bait,
r'. iu
patty shells. Sprinkle with parsley
ana garnisn witn pimiento.
; unrainei ice uream
2 cups sugar.
1 cup water.
? eggi..
. 4 tablespoons flour.;
teaspoon salt. '
2. cups rallk.c 1 ; ,
2 cups cream., ,
!: t tablesDoon, vanilla.
I
Sprinkle 1 cup sugar In frying pan.
Cook slowly, stirring constantly, un-
til sugar , forms light brown syrup.
Add water and boll a minutes. Cool,
oeat eggs nd add other cup or sugar,
flour, ..salt,,, milk.. , Cook , in doublq
wviier uuni. miayg), uucksim. ; out
frequently. , Add syrup mmture. Cool.
Add, other Ingredients and freeze.
., .-. i uooqauut unites 1
1-3 oup fat...;' , j., i;. , ; .
1 cup sugar. i. ' i
2. eggS..; i -.f.r.'r -.w
U-3 oup milk. '. i , j
1 teaspoon yanllla,,.,, . .
14 : teaspoon .salt. 5 .
2 . cups .flour. , . j ' . ; . . J '
2 , teaspoons baking powder. !
2,-3 pup cacoanut. i . "-
milk, vanilla, salt; flour, baking pow- . uVe at Waldport, to pay her a .visit
dor. Boat 3 minutes.' ,Hail fHl 'iate' in August. '
greased muffin pans and sprinkle Mrs. Mary Vincent and throe chil
wlth CQcqanut. Bake 15 minutes in clren who spent ten days among their
moderate oven. - relatives here and were entertained
ion several occasions, left Sunday
To get blue color In wash goods, evening for their home in Newberg.
soak them 3 hours In 1 gallon of Doris, the eldest daughter, has been
water to which 1 ounce of sugar of nero Bn summer with her aunt, Mrs.
lead has. been added. Let drip dry Everett Powell.
In shade and wash out In warm soap , Mr. and Mrs. Herman Lund and
suds. two daughters. Marguret May and
' Phyllis, who have beon spending the
After washing golf hose, babies' summer at tho home rheir parents.
sweaters and stockings, place them on
wooqen irames. ine arucies win ary
evenly without shrinking and will
not requiro pressing.
, .. .
rtnn nniinrl -if Innf Oilnof la sllffl-
clcnt for jservlng 25 persons.
. ...... ab'bao roR DBIW,?'""'"
PARIS fPj tulle and taffeta rib
bon combined - make some of the
crWp Oaucc drasses debutantes witl
, wear next winter,
it rnrw uu iw
.way.
One such model has triple flounces
banded diagonally with tafetta. The
bodice and unner skirt are strlncd
with blaok taffeta on tulle worn over
a flesh satin foundation.
:
a' 'lUntnfi.f- wn. .nniM.,i ,n Pnii
A motorist was convicted in Call -
f Dfrtni , i ,.iri
tgra'rhentrucn'nngthe0 SL?,
What Other
Investment
will earn you
Half as Much?
Seeks Balm
ASaoclnled I'retia I'tiolo
Alleging her love for William N.
Ptelschmann. cousin of Maj. Max
Flelschmann, yeaot magnate, Madge
Mitchell, film actress, filed suit In
Leo Angeles for $100,003vcharglng
breach of promise.
Cove Gym Will
Be Complete By
September First
liy Mrs. A. (J. Conkltn
(Observer Correspondent)
COVE. Ore. (Sneclali The school
irvm will hn mirintatorl htifnrn the first
of September. Tho color of the paint
Is attractive, being light brown with
a green root, rno painting msicie is
not yet completed.
Ab the Rov. N. E. Hershey was un
able to carry out the proposed trip
to Wallowa Lake with the Boy Scouts,
L. E. Anderson, the postmaster,- went
with them to tne Minam. rney ieit
Saturday morning, planning to stay
until Tuesday. Walter Hershey who
had an operation on his eye last week
is reported to be recovering nicely.
The Rev. and Mrs. N. E. Hersney
and their two sons, Wesley and Stan-I
ley will leave Tuesday morning ior
wereer w utiuuu uiattiu. uwuci-
The Ladles Aid of the Methodist
Episcopal church will bo entertained
at tho home of Mrs. A. Q. Sills Wed-
nesday afternoon.- They will - tie
comfort for Mrs. V, K. Robinson, who
laiciy nm mi umr uuuaeuvKu
In the flro that burned her home at
the time tho Maccabee hall burned.
The Ladles Guild will meet at the
home of Mrs. J. E. Mills Thursday
aftornoon. The hostesses will be Mrs.
Mills, Mrs. A. a. Conklln, Mrs, T. B.
Conklln, Mrs. L. M. Laird arid Mrs.
T. O. Hetty. -1
John Valentine left Friday' for
Wclsor, called by tho critical Illness
of his sister, Mrs Jim Nelson.
Th. Eastern star will alve a'shower
Tuesday afternoon -at the home of
Mrs. J. B. Breshcars, honoring Mrs.
i,ee McClaln and her baby daughter,
Ella Oneida.
i... Mrs. Karln Haag .Is visiting . her
daughter, Mrs. . van minus.., "".knows where one 'can find bargains
Proemont. . ' . in drcSBes. . j ! 'r s i. :'f 'jt;; . T't i :
Mrs. T. C. Hefty will entertain a
sister, Mrs. Wlllard Eamea, of Comp
ton, Cal.. late in August .
Prof, and Mrs. O. a. Springer, who
have been spending the summer at
Philomath, will arrive here Wednes-
Iday or Thursday of noxt weok. - -(
Mr. springer unaerwent an
dlx operation early In Juno ..but at
this time la quite recovered. ' '
,Mrs. John . Valentine expects her
son. Desmond Pulp and his wife, who
wm leave in a few daVs for their
home m Phoenix, Ariz. Mr. Lund's
health will not bear the rigors of the
northern climate in winter, and they
therefore make their homo in the
' .
Mlsri Tholina Anderson, guardian of
the NlKslka Camp Klro group will go
with the girls today for a two-day
Mr. and Mrs. Ren Lloyd, who are
the keopers of the Forbay, are enjoy
Ing their vacation.
Mrs. o. E. Barker was hostess to tne
Pun antl Joy Bridge club Friday Aug,
15. Bridge was played at throe tables,
!Mrs. Thos. Hefty winning high score
and Miss Clarice Conklln low. A
dainty two-course luncheon was serv
ed. Club members present were Mrs,
John Miller, Mrs. Bcrnlce Miller, Miss
iBess Kelley, Mrs.. Thos. Hefty, Miss
Vina Conley, Mrs. W. J. , Hallmark.
Oucstti were Mrs. Lee Miller, of Burns,
' . w.u f.inI,.fl nnu
Miss Dorothy Mills, Miss Clarice uonK-
, Wa.ia; Wash., ahd Mrs.
Tho Dorcas Bocicty was entertained
bv Mrs. Walter Piatt at her homo
M Thursday afternoon. Owing ' to," the
Duay season oniy ten mviiiuuio
oresent.
Lee and Theodore Mcuiain are leav-
intr todav for Milton to work In the
prune harvest. Eldon Southwlck and
Harold Blank left last Saturday for
the same destination;
E. F. Roberts and daughter. Miss
Clair, left Monday morning to .visit a
brother, Oliver Roberts, at Walla
Walla. They wilj be flway only a
couple of days. ;
Over Night News
(Hy The AsMR-iuted Pre) 1
Domestic j
New York Search for body of Van
Black, lost from yacht, fruitless.
Los Angtfca Alinee McPherson's
mother says her daughter struck her,
fracturing her nose; Almee on verge
of nervous breakdown.
Cheyenne Former Governor Rob
ert D. Carey leads in Wyoming sena
torial primaries.
Chicago Bamberger-Watkins par
ents exchange babies.
Chicago Executive committee of
bar association decides to go ahead
with prohibition referendum among
members despite some opposition.
Albany. N. Y. Governor Roosevelt
orders Attorney General Ward, a re
publican, to Investigate Ewald case.
Iron Ridge, Wis. Pastor who bar
red American Legion members from
communion ordered by church to re
cant or resign.
Washington Seven held In connec
tion with huge alcohol ring.
It's News When
Man Telephones
To Dog, Boysie
Bv Robbln Coons
(Associated Preas Staff Writer)
HOLLYWOOD m When a man
telephones his dog that's news. too.
Especially when the man is a movie
actor in Hollywood and the dog is
back home in Korwalk, Conn., a con
tinent's width away.
Frederick Burton, who came from
the Broadway stage to play In a Hol
lywood talkie, got In the habit of
I phoning Boysie, his two-year-old Irish
i terrier, from the Lambs' club in New
(York.
( When he came west he couldn't re-
jsist the urge to have more "barkle"
conversations, although the high tolls
prohibited as frequent calls as before.
I Mr. Burton and his wife, who re
mained in Norwalk during his sojourn
there, adopted Boysie, a foundling, Just
IMrorf ny pwvea irom a new mm
apartment' to "the country" In Con
necticut. Boysie, says Burton, Is not a real
Irish terrier "but he thinks ho Is."
With Mrs. Burton as Bovsie's as-
' slBtant In , telephoning back home,
Burton and tils pot have had many a
oinnsnnt chat. Tho dOK. aftaf the
liirst few calls, soon began running
to the telephone whenever it rang,
thinking the can was ior mm.
Their conversation, eays Burton,
usually runs like this:
"Hello, Boysie 1"
"Woof -woof I"
"Been getting your rations all right,
boy?"
" Woof -woof M"
"And how's Otacho?"
"Gr-r-r-rl"
Otache, Burton explains. Is tho
terror of BoyBle's existence a big
police dog in the neighborhood.
After more such small talk. Mrs.
Burton takes the phone again.
And
ur ton. a tall. Bfinlal fellow, admits
he probably gets more tun out of it
than Boysie docs
FEMININE TYPE
BEST LEADER,
WOMEN STATE
WASHINGTON P) Women, It
Mema ttrefcr the feminine tvoe of
woman leader.
MrH - vTank Dodson. who Is urged
by rer,ubllcan committee womon to
rocon8lti(!l. ner resignation as director
0f ho women's division of the party,
Is that sort.
She Inclines to floating chit tons
and wide-brimmed hats rather than
severe garments.
Sho frowns upon tno woman who
h- .v nnnnnl tn not nhenil in
ln q'tholr merit
d0 it cs. She boiloves women should
Vat hnr - fffmltilnn . chnrnoterlstles. '
her gentle manner, her low voice j
and gracious smile, republican com- I
mltteewomen say, have helped make i
her a leader. i . j
Eyori -pn' a hot August day Mrs.
Dcdson looks' cool; and uhruffjed In.
blue chiffon and long strands of ,
pearl boads as she sits at her dosk. j
, S,ho has little to' say about Iter re- !
?lgpatilor bri'futuri plans. j' 'I '")
' 8h'o''turrs theconvcrsatlon' Into
Mt0 channels about kitohons and
olothcSi Sn0 re00ntly moved Into a
kitchenette apartmont whore sho can
, have-some of. her-pwn cooking and
Before September ' 1 she ' Slopes to
get away to her-mountain home In
Shlckshlnny, Pa., whero it . la nulot
and cool. . . ..;. ''' : :
FISH EAT OUT OP HANDj :
. HUT NOT FROM ANGLER'S
HAOERSTOWN.. Md. (Rainbow.
brook and ; brown trout, some of tho
most elusive ; quarry known to the
angler, eat out or the hands or miss
Mary Cushwa,. 1 ' . , ,
She Is caretaker of ' the trout ponds
near Clear-Spring, maintained by tho
state conservation department.
By tho hundreds they follow her as
she walks on the edge of the ponds.
The older ones, which wouldn't sniff
at a bait-hidden hook, actually let
her lift them out of the water.
Tho trout, 13,000 of them, got that
way from Miss Cushwa 's habit of
feeding them. Sho to3ses mixtures of
beef liver and beef hearts to them,
every now and then enticing the
bolder ones to nibblo from her hand.
"I never fished with a hook in my
life and I don't expect to begin now,"
sho said. .
POULTRY HOUSE OF (!J,OTII
KAIKKH FARMER'S PROFITS
CHARLOTTE, N. C. (P) By using
materials that most farmers and
poultrymen would throw away, W. F,
Spanglcr, ' of Charlotte, has built a
houso for 1.000 laying hens at a cost
of less than $30.
The plan Is simple. Spanglcr saves
the cotton bags In which he receives
chicken feed, cuts pine poles from
his own woodlot for tho frame work,
and stretches the bags over the poles.
Three coata of tar and lime are ap
plied to the cloth and the house is
water anci weather proof.
This method has enabled Spanglcr
to build up his profits on each hen
an average of 92 annually per bird.
Ho says tho cloth houso Is practical
for use In any part of the United
States.
CM'!! WEEKS BETTER IIORKES
LEXINOTON, Ky. (AO A Pcrchcron
unrum illH r An m.mh.,. v,n
Drmed in Fayi!ttb county to promote
tne brecdtng of bctter drnft horaes.
,m
' "
SB
Tenth Suffrage Year Stirring Up
Militant Memories of Year 1920
WASHINGTON (VP) "Votes for .
Women" . . . the banners . . . parades
. . , "Woman's place is In the homo"
. . . picketing tho White House . . ,
"Votes for Women" . . . bitter speech
es .. . they seem long gone, thoso
stormy suffraget yesteryears.
Ten years now women have been
marking balots. On August 26 they
, will cast an eye in retrospect over ,
their day of struggle i
That day marks the tenth annl-)
vcrsary of the granting of suffrage, !
tho day the proclamation was signed, i
While no particular celebration
will mark the day. organizations of
women from one coast to the other i
have been observing the anniversary
year since January 1. j
Secure now In benefits the ballot
has brought, they can smile a little
at the fervor of those militant groups
picketing the White House, the suf
frages, clad in sombre brown Pll
giim's hats and cloaks marching In
winter snows tiie 250 miles from New
York to Washington. j
"General" Rosalie Jones, now Mrs. I
C. C. Dill, wife of the senator from ,
Washington state, led that specta- ,
cular demonstration. I
A paper of that day describes the
procession: i
"Tho plucky, disheveled band of
suffrage pilgrims swunt? wearily
around the Peace monument for tho
final marching for their cause. In
coming Presidents have not received
more clamorous applause than did
; the company of brown-clad women. -
huddled in 'a little group, rorcea to (
flcht their way through veritable
walls of shouting humanity for more
than a mile.'
The organized movement for wom
en suffrage began In 1848.
Now women are concentrating,
through tho lcaguo of womon vot
ors, in getting all women to use tho
ballot.
A cannon more than 100 years old
waJ found near watBonvllle, Uttl.
-
A Real Bargain in Paints
Lowe Brothers high standard first quality FlooiS
Paints Tile Red , Oak Tan and Walnut Brown I
and por ch drab. . " v f
Oil Stain's," tine
$2.25
Slender and Shapely
. . . fastidiously light and flaky in ex-1
lure . . . yet baked to a rich, creamy,
flavor-enhancing hickory nut brown
tell your grocer to bring ' i
TRU-BAKES
One of
famous
TRU-BLU BISCUIT CO.
NOW PLAYING
OAIW
HE WROTE HIS BIGGEST SONG HITS
Out of Broken Hearts
with
CHARLES KALEY, KTHEI.IND TERRY
CLIFF EDWARDS, MARION SHILLING
Winter
And The .
Unmarked Grave
The graves of your departed
loved ones should not be un
marked through another win
ter. Orders taken now can be
finished and erected before
winter sets in. We welcome
your Investigation . you are
not obligated in any way.
Cemetery
Memorial
Works
C. H. McClure
'gallon' cans only '.4? Vj.
1?
cachs
IPraekers
the eTflany ;
Qrackers
Spokane, Portland, Seattle
1
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