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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1933)
Page Three Tuesday, July 11, !933 LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER. LA GRANDE. ORE. WW' 'in SOGIETY NOTES Wednesday To Be Busy Day Socially, With Several Important Activities Planned , Tomorrow will be the busiest day of the week If the social calendar Is any Indication, with Important ac tivities planned by several organiza tions. The winners In the team match play at the La Grande country club will be feted by the losers at 7 o'clock at the club house, ono of the leading events of the, day. Several church organizations also are to hold meetings, among them thp Women's Home'and the Women's For eign Missionary societies of the Methodist church which will gather ut a. o'clock at Riverside park. The Christian Missionary society will meet at the same hour with Mrs. A. L. Voelz, while a special meeting of the Presbyterian Ladles Aid has been call ed at 3:80 at the church. Parkdale Club To Meet at Park . . Tha Parkdale club will meet tomor row afternoon at 2 o'clock at River side park and the club will furnish the refreshments, it Is enounced to day. Activities for the afternoon will be informal with no special program planned! Eagles Summer Picnic on July 16 " Members of the Eagles lodge and their families will gather on Sunday, July 16, at the Cove picnic grounds for their annual mid-summer picnic, ' .Members of the committee from the auxiliary are Mesdames May Parker, . : Prank Seward, Pearl Putt, Mabel Hur - rla and Oscar Hobson, while repre sentatives on the committee from the lodge are John Hopkins, W. P. Blan- chard, Oscar Bobson, J. H, Proffltt, Charles HUdebrand. . A bosket lunch will be served with ' each one furnishing his own baaket, ' while the lodge will furnish' coffee, cream, sugar, ice cream and lemon ade. The picnic Is planned for members of the lodge, the auxiliary and their families. Riverside Ladies Aid Plans Dinner ' A potluck dinner will opon the . Thursday meeting of the Riverside . Ladies Aid at Riverside park. Din ner will be served at 12 o'clock and will be followed by the regular busi ness session and an Informal after noon of conversation and sewing. " Royal Neighbors - Planning Event , " Mrs. Bethel St. Johns, vie oracle -of the Royal Neighbors of America, :. presided at a, meeting last night at 8 ', . o'clock at the Odd Fellows hall. Plans .. are under way for the home-coming ; -In September, the next major activity : of the group. . Refreshments were served by Mrs. : - Bessie 'McManus and Mrs. Lucille .Price. . The next meeting will bo hold on Aug. 14 at the hall. SfifTTAT. f! A f.F.Nn AH Tuesday, July 11 7:30 Women of the Mooee, at the Odd Fellows hall, Wednesday, July 13 , 3:00 K. D. club, at Pino Cono, 2:00 So-No-Ho club, at River side pork. . 'v 3:00 Women's Home and For eign Missionary societies, Metho dist ehuroh, at Riverside park. 3:00 Christian Missionary So ciety, with Mrs. A. L. Voelz. 3:00 Parkdale club, at River side park. 3:30 Presbyterian Ladles Aid at the church. 3:00 Englo Sowing club at tho Riverside park. 7:00 Team match dinner, La Grande country club. 8:00 Rcbekah ladgo, I. O. O. F. hall. 8:00 American Legion auxiliary. Sacajawea Inn. Thursday, July 13 Women's day at tho La Ornndo country club. Sweepstakes and second round, handicap tourna ment. 13:00 Rlvcrsldo Ladles Aid ut Riverside pork. 3:00 Lutheran Ladles Aid, with Mrs. James Schilling. Frldoy, July 14 4:00 E. O. N. Picnic, at Pino Cono. 7:30 "Tom Thumb" wedding, First Ward L. D. 8. church. ... Tuesday. July 18 8:00 Neighbors of Woodcraft, at tha Odd Fellows hall. FINED $20 IN JUSTICE COURT THIS MORNING Melvln Quhleman, 803 Third street, pleaded guilty to a charge of assault and battery this morning before Judge L. Dcnham, Justice of the peace, and woe fined 20 which is ex pected to be paid, Guhlemau was charged with assault of Joe Worden, Mrs. Worden bringing the accusation against him. COUPLE GIVEN LICENSE TO WED A marriage license was issued yce todny to Calvin Chrlntman, of North Powder, and Esther Coffee, of Baker, by County Clerk O. K. McCormlck at the court house. CA LIFORNIA NS VISITING HERE Mrs. Turner Ollvor, 1007 Fourth street, has as her guests, her ncphow, Williams Reasoncr, Mrs. Reasoncr and their sons. Bobby and Allen, of To malcs, Cal., who oro on a months tour of the Northwest, going as for oast as Flathead Lake, Mont. They will be here visiting the several Mc Donald families until Thursday. Mr. Rrosoncr, who lived In this valley when he was a small boy, Is Instruc tor of vocational agriculture In the Tomalos High school and on this trip has visited the Washington State college, where his brother Is an In structor In agriculture and will visit tho Oregon State college. It will be remembered that two or three years ago a team In Mr, Reasoner's department made signal honors In California and represented that sec tion of the west at a Judging contest at St. Louis. PLAN MEET AT LA URELHURST Former Union county residents who now make their homes In Portland will gather for their 11th annual meeting, Sunday, June 10, according to word received here by J. E. Reyn olds from his son, Ralph, who Is proaldent of the group. Tho plcnlo will be held In Laurelhurst park near the entrance at East Ankeny and 35th street. ' ' Anyone who plans to attend the meeting is asked to notify J. E. Reyn olds here. First Home Grown , Apples Sold; Price Of Sugar U p Today PORTLAND, July- 11 W) First home grown apples of the new crop were offered on the east side farmers' market today. Two growers brought In supplies. Announcement of another dime ad vance In tho price of all grmies of refined sugar was made. The. new selling price hero on best cane granu lated was $5 with beet (4.76. DANIELS WILL STAY IN EAST ANOTHER YEAR Edward O. Daniels, professor of social solence alt the Eastern Oregon, Normal school who is on" wave 01 absence, wilt contlntio his work at Harvard for another oar. Ho has Improved sufficiently from on oper ation which ho underwent last winter that he plans tq continue hlistudios. Mrs. Daniels, tho former MISs Ca Itno Williams who was head of the Nonnal (School art fcpartment,, hns accepted a part-time teaching posi tion near Cambridge. . Q . MAKE REPORT OF PROGRESS ON PROJECT (Continued from Page One) work has been done on both already. Reporting on the Meadowbrooy dam, an shuu.uuu project to do pusncu as a free grant proposition for flood control, nnd which Is regarded as tho first step in a complete floodi control scheme, with life Catherine Creek dam as a final step, George Cochran r!ittjri what has been dono already. Briefs have been subtted to tho board of army engineers for lnvl gntlon. Ot'..or briefs aro being pre pared to forwordO to other sources within tho next few anyts Mr. uocii- rnn said that the latest ports avt. oblo to mm indicate thnt tho out look for such a project Is oncourag Ing. Raymond O. Williams reported lor tho training school buliulng, poUitlng out that tlio scnooi msirici aim unu Jointly havo subml&d briers, since bonds already have Obeen approved 1 for this, there3 bccius no mnjor ob-T stocles likely to pient Its final npoval. This would come under a 30 per cent grant, which would mean that the school distort, would event ually pay J56.Q0O ItiHtead of B0,00O, and tho state $36,000 instead g $r 0,000. City Manager McAllister reported on tho Beaver Creek pipeline project, slating that tho city was fortunate In being able to include tho bnds on the regular ballot, which avuidedj expense of printing extra ballots aniV providing illtlonnl ballot boxes. En gineer's estimates of tho project were completed! some time ago and all that can be done at present hns been ac complished. Col. Ralph U. Huron reported on tho armory project. It this were flp ally approved, it olso would come under the free grant section of the public works bill. He said thnt Ma jor Cleneral George A. White hod rec ommended several armories In Ore gon. Including the La Grande project. Harold O. Boot reported on the airport project, Mating that It is estimated It would cost $37,300 to put in n modern airport, with two graveled rumvaya nml a hangar cop able of hnntUlng airplanes. If this should be allowed under the public works bill. It also would come under the free grant aectlon. Others in attend once at the meet in included the chairman, Charles H. Reynolds; J. II. Peare. who spoke briefly of the C. C. C. camp at Jrog Heaven; County Judge U. a. Couch; Pred E. Kiddle, president of the stnto senate; Hurley Itlchardson; and David I. StoddartK In general, everything is being done that can be accomplished at present, but much remains In doubt because of the changes being made In the ) public works program lu Washington, MlM Bch Uuke, Society Kdltor Telephone Main 800 Until 9:10 . m. LUMBERMEN FILE CODE IN CAPITAL WASHINGTON, July 11 W) - The National Lumber Manufacturers' as sociation ha filed with the recovery administration a code of fair com petition for the entire lumber Indus try. Public hearings will be held ten days hence. The Industry thus becomes the sec ond major group to enter the govern ment wage raising and hour limiting program. The cotton textile industry was the first, and lta code has been approved by President Roosevelt. It was authoritatively Indicated that tho lumber code proposed a na tlonal maximum of 48 working hours a week, this however to be scaled down as low as 40 In certain regions, The wage scales also were adjusted on a regional basis, with the profess ed intention on the port of the In dustry of raising the average pur chasing power of their workers tu the 1020 ievol. INSTITUTE AT LAKE OPENS ON JULY 17 (Continued from Page One) Ounn, William Hesse, Keith Patten. Fred Hertzog, Frank Tyler, Everett Hyde, Warren Lyle, Jack McClay, Or vlllo Sailor, Robert Bolton, Estello Lyle, Barbara Fines, Adelaide Zwel fel, Louise Whltnoy, Georgeanna Lockwood, Evelyn Ballard, Oenevlcve Choate, Jeannette Blanchard, Mar garet Dixon, Gwendolyn Hertzog, Clarice Taylor, Fern Broomfleld, Jean McKennon, Jean Hyde, Verna Lee Hanford, Ruth Froser, Mary Julie Heassler; Mrs. Arthur Dahl and Mrs. Mary Heassler, cooks: Mrs. . R, F. Tyler, chaperone; and M. L. Whitney, "p Members of the faculty will Include Rev. W. H. Hertzog, denn; Mrs. Ed gar A. Pollock, dean of women, Wal lowa; Ploydj White, business man ager, Nyssn; Edgar A. Pollock, man ager commissary, Wallowa; H. G. Mc-. Cal lister, district supc0itendent. Boise; Rev. A. B. Parrett, Caldwell; Rev. L. B. Bniley, Prairie City; Rev. H. S. Hamilton, Nampgj Rev. C. O. Hoath, Payette; Rev. Dallas McNeil, Kuna, Idaho; Mrs. It. F. Tyty-,Qnmp Fire Girls and young people's work er, LaGrande; Rev. I. 8. Motz, mis sionary from Malaysia and Aw pas tor at Meridian, Idaho; Dr. Andrew Wnrner, Portland area director of 1 Ui religious education, Hugh B. Fouke, Boise; Rev. C. E. Deal, Emj;tt, flabo; Rev. Johg)J urcsnane uoiso. Dully Ahediilc rThe dally schedule -fori the confer ence wilt open" at '6 TTClbck' With the buglo rind; 9111 be as fo)lov? 0:30-7:16 Morngg watch, Mr. Ham ilton. -9 7:30 Breakfast. 0 8:30-0:15 Bible, jl Testament, Mr, McNeil. Bible, New Testament. Mr. McCnlllsr. Younglk's problems, Mrs. 'ler. 0:2O-10:( Life Service. Mr. Pnrrett. dMlslpns, -MJi Motn. nmg Folkta prooicms, Mrs-.iier. . 10:05-10:26 Recreation. - A:fi5-ll:10 Life service Mr. Parrott., Cltlzcnslfij), Mr. Hamilton. Oeneral .Hhods, Mr. Wa:cr. HymnolSfey. Mr. Heath. u 11:15-12:00 InterSutional Relations, Mr. Fouko. Stewtfetshlp, Mr. Deal. What May I Believe, Mr Grcsham. Other couAif) whlchQrc offered In place of the regular program are "Mpdcrn Problems of Family Life", "Modern Missioned '"Tho Epworth League" "Evangelism", "Modefii Business nd Indiry", 'Using Lay men In Evangelism". '"The Church and South", "TeKtHer ""Training BWork". "The Oxford Movement.' Tho Sunday services will include $ communion servlceQat 70 m the!) morning conducted by Dr. Hamilton, public worship Ad prealng ser-, rvlce, business meeting of the cam ground OKHiiitlon, the Epworth Lcnguo fi'vlce with 0,he Pjette League ln charge, fnrewell service, and taps, 1) after no... will bo devotcdj to recrcnjn and In 'theevenlng ser- vices will B-uln 1 arVJOflli speakers selected from the facultj0 0 - Vf-ta'aSHnf fi A id 4 'Commission May Not Stand r.rnsx t 00 ' SALEM, rc. A continuation of inflation, as experienced during tho past two mo01is, may enable the World Sr votoraitfjjaii old 0m mission to dispose of 1& repossessed properties without any material fi nancial loss to tho sRte, Jorrold On. secretary, predicted, Wven snQ that If theso properties wero sold ut fjhclr present appraisal tho conunlsalon would loso approxl mntely i)o.ooo. Aflfcjtul of a.60O,0OO of thpso properties ha-o been re possosscxi brtho commission. The ris ing market, coupled, with Interest ro celvNt by tho suite, may wipo out this O0.O0O loss. Owen declared o A rrgu.viy scheduled game of a WU uko City amntcur boseboll league was cancelled bo members of tho teams could ro flshtnff. New 50 ize LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S TABLfrSIlR WOMEN They relieve and prevent periodic pain and associated disorders. No narcotics. Not just a pain killer but a modern medicine which acts upon the CAUSE of your trouble. Per sistent use brings permanent relief. SuU by all druggists; Adv. MATTERN LIVES LIKE CRUSOE IN RUSSIAN WILDS By Stanley p. Richardson MOSCOW,. July 11 m Jimmle Matte rn lived the 18 days he was lost In the wilds of Northern 61 be rla In the best Robinson Crusoe tradi tion. The plane he was flying around the world crashed in a hilly spot near the Anadyr river; he suffered cuts and bruiues; when his chocolate and biscuits gave out, he shot small game, and, while he awaited a boat to take him down stream, built a crude hub for protection against cold winds. , The story was told today In a dis patch to the newspaper Izvestia from Khabarovsk, Siberia, whence the Am- i ciican aviator took off on June 14 ' for Nome, Alaska. This Is the tale! Izvestla related: I Mattem was only 14 hours out of Khabarovsk when his motor began j to snutter. ! He found no place to land his I "Century of Progress" in the wild ter-1 rain, and he pressed on, finally the engine failed and the plane crashed three miles from the' river, on which Anadry village la situated. Its propellor was bent; the right wing smashed; the fuselage and mo tor damaged. Mattern was nurt, painfully but not seriously. Hoping to get aid, he started for the river. The Journey, made diffi cult by the hilly countryside and his ignorance of his bearings, took eight- days. His food gave out after three' days. Then, apparently, he made good use of the fishing tackle and rifle he had with him. He built a house of scrub growth. for the weathert was cold, and waited by the river six days until on June! 29 llshermen In two boots passed. They heard his shouts and took him w meir uump 11 miles irum Anaayr. Shortly afterwards he went to the coast, and a soviet guard went to his ' assistance. 1 j Mattern asked the guard to procure the motor and Instruments from the ; plane. This was done, for the Am- erlcan decided to abandon it. It was reported today that matArn 1 would be taken to Nome by Pilot , Levanovsky, Russian flier ordered fiy from Khabarovsk to nadyr. (An African relief expedition, ' Cut:u Uy n...lluJl fliCuUu, urnvcu 111. ilUllltJ it LOU lllglll, 11U1U U U11C11U ) . JAMES M. HOLMES PASSES AT UNION James MQ Holmes cld last i$ght ink hie hnmA nt fTnlnn at: I-OO n'ilnnV Portland; Rev.Vfp rtf fhB Ho u9d born ta iflplne, Utah ln 1855, going to Mont pel ler, Ida., with his parents. There he met Sarah Bingham and (they :re married. ! They moved! to Union In '1667'whero ' m rcsiaea iucu penn. MSl Holmes, iS was anQeamest worker ln the L. D. f-L church, Is sur vived by his widow, a daughter and three sons, Erma &lman, of Venice, Cn Augustus HolmcB. of Anrican Fork. Utah; O. M. Holmes, of La Grande; B. Holmes, of PBurleP Idaho; also three sisters and two brothers0 , Funera arrangements will be made later, after' word Is received from rnlatlvtQ 8' PLAN MEET A Pl&NEER PARK ( The former r0dents of Perry will hold their annual picnic Sunday, July IB, at Pioneer park on Cather ine creek. All forifer residents and their friends nr? Invite KNIQHTS WIL0 ( HOLD MEETING e Initiatory $-grk8i the .nk of (Rige i, I whiw uuuuuumi ut, a regular meet- -ilng of tl8 Knlghtsoat Pjfhlas on T Wednesday evening, at Bpo'clock at tl hall, It wiQannounced this morn ing. . ' , j;,iti Dixie Roberts lisj been named thel lost (jiluablo athlete at Vanderblltf mosc nouaoie athlete University, Nashville, Tenn. Don't Expect a gfenographer to do Neat Wo i0 on a Worn-out. Bifctcn-Down BTYPEWRITEf Trade ln Your Old Machine on a New - Noiseless StaMd or Portable or Lot Us Repair It at RAsonable Cost Tuckcy Typewriter Co. 100 Depot Phono 303 JESTER'S SHOE SHOP lllRll Ornde Shoe Hrpnlrlnf At Itoek lloin Prices . . , Shoes D)cd 25c, sfc: We pick out the old stltcKes 1st Class or Mn Pnvl IZli Adams . Nut to nirnle's TJIEY GLEAMT" (BeadspreadR and Pillows silk, rayon, or celanese retain their original lus tre, shape and smartness when ary-clcanod at the ODORLESS CLEANERS 1107 Washlngtoa Main 701 re FOTTT HOW Pill ILCCAIL To Visit Here' Bonita Strauss, of Portland, return ed' to La. Orando with her aunt, Mrs. M. B. Geller, yesterday and will spend a week visiting here. In Pendleton Quests of Mrs. Anna Furnish re cently In Pendleton' were Mrs. Russell Parle tt and daughter, Jean, of La Orande; Mrs. William E. Hanacom, daughter, Meredith. June, and Miss Margaret Crow, all of Portland. Returns Home . Mrs. James Quinland, after receiv ing medical attention at tho Orunde Ronde hospital for several day, has returned to her home. Returns Home Robert Lockwood has returned to La Grande after spending a week at Welser, Ida. visiting his aunt, Mrs. B. F. Edlln. , r Fire Meeting The July meeting of the fire do partment was held at 7:30 o'clock last evening at the fire station. Only rou tine business was discussed. Return to Portland Mrs. Lyman Huff returned to Port land last night aftera week spent in La Grando with Mr. Huff and her mother, Mrs. A. Neukirshner. During her visit Mr. and Mrs. Huff, Mrs. Neukirshner and Miss Mario Sams, of Pendleton, enjoyed; a camping trip to Leaman Springs. . Mrs .1 k. WrUrht nnd trranddaui-h. ter, Jerry Lou, returned Sunday night for a trip to Oakland, Cal. Improving Ufra Mnrif Uoncalnr nrVtn Vtne VioAtl , , .. A,. .mi',iv i r,mrt. , k imnl.,in Rh i. -t. th j , her brotheI. Vernon m Hal6i 1813 Adams avenue. Ends Vacation Miss Julia Marvin, wmrglcal iurs3 L, Tlft rtr.,i tj,iT i,nUnuni rAtllrni to 1. nrnnrin nftfr finnd- lnD. n. ir-a vn,flt.inn ln Fninri. if,. turn Mp nnri Mr. Pfitlirned w. night from Portland where they tr&sacted busines? during the. last W(fcpnrt. Mr. Tvier is owmr nT th B;ue Mountain 'creamery. & Oneratlon PerfonScd CiTiv Ol ver of WnllowfL Is StnctiVl tobe able to retn to his home ln the next few days after an operation performed at the Bouvy hospital. Mr. Ollver'seye wfe injured im a dyna- riove fatal. IincMaimarrmff"fMr""iuaiiH iiiiiiiiiiiiiijnuejTOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii inn miiiiiiii n1 mm iiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiii'ii i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiii'ii"i' h' ii'wiiiin ii'Miiii ifimii imi ii'iiniiiiiiiiiii mi urn hi'iiiiiiiiiin n i n m iimi nnnii mi ! J q o 4 k. ms With me . . . my cigarette is a personal, intimate thing I suppose, men would call my reason for liking Luckies just a feminine whim. Maybe it is, but it's a whim that ve to indulge ... for I am always conscious of the intimate relationship between my cigarette and my lips. And if there's anything Fm sensitive about, it's that feeling EKOIELTJr mite blast about five years ago. Kecenti VWiltore Recent Visitors in La Grande were Mr. and Mrs. Thorsen Bennett and daughter, Nancy Ann, who were the guests of Mrs. Bennett's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Ager. Mr. Bennett Is former coach in the La Grande High school, but la now teaching at Bear Creek, Montana, but during the summer Is attending sum mer school at Washington State col lege. They were accompanied from Pendleton by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bennett. Operatlon Mrs. Matilda Sally underwent an nnnrnt. VAtrtjirrlnv Tnnrrtrtr at. t.Uf Orando Ronde hospital. At Hospital Among the patients at tho Grande Ronde hospital Is Mrs. S, H. Fogil qulst who underwent an operation this morning, r Returns Home Mrs. John Garlty was able to re turn to her home today following a minor operation at the Grande Ronde hospital recently. Visiting Hero Mr. , and Mrs. Albert Vogeleln, of San Francisco, who are on a motor trip of the northwest, are in La Grande visiting with her sister, Mrs. Kate 3. Hall, librarian at the La Grande High school. From! Union Miss Eunice Buslck, of Union, was a business visitor In La Orande last night, returning to her home today. Operation Miss Yvonne Newman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A, C. Newman, and a student at the Ackerman Training school, had her tonsils and adenoids removed yesterday at the Grande Ronde' hospital. AUGUST LUER, OF ILLINOIS, IS ABDUfTED (Continued trom Page qys) Relatives, nrofesstne no knowledge of io Identity of trie klilnapers, to-9 day anxiously awaited receipt of ran soA denfinds. They feared for the raptives life, even if., money payment lis oanged. 'r Hn has hiunWn narflal mMromMf because of frequent heart attacks, A recurrence, without the aid of Kedl cine he hnbltuolly uses, might easily, His life had been prevl- of feminine daintiness. Certainly, Luckies Please! I can well under stand why men praise Luckies' fine tobacco character and mellow-mild-, ness but as for me I value particu larly the assurance of purity which "Toasting" brings for.with me. . . my cigarette is a personal, intimate thing. because M If $5000 was not X'ahk nbvv intekmkdivriks ALBANY. N. Y., July 11 (A) Break lug a three-day silence, the kidnapers of "Young jonn uimncii, old nephew of the up-stato Demo cratic leaders, Dan and Ed O'Connell, today sent Dan O'Connell a new note calling for a new coded list of men who might serve as go be twee ns for them and the O'Connell family. - The belief that O'Connell held un der threat of death for $250,000 ran som, was kidnaped in an act of re venge against his uncles, was express ed, in sources close to the family to day. . 9 ' 'kidnaped man unharmed JIALEIGH, N. C, July 11 m Un- harmed arter a wna nu u" "aies " 7 " V " UUIUI v. i. rural mall carrier, checked his mail pouch toCjay, found It had not been opened, and prepared to return to his Georgia home. . Lyle came to Kalelgh early today from Wake Forest, 1 miles from hero, where three escaped Georgia convicts, who have kidnaped four men In their flight, released him last night. JOSKI'll 1'KltSONALS Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Claycomb. Mrs. Anna Leslie and Joanna Leslie, of La Grande, Mrs. Daisy Rumble and Mrs. Malda Stevenson were guests of Mr. and Mrs! Edward Eben at their cot tage "Hill Crest" at tho lake over the 4th. Mrs. Leslie remained over for a longer visit. Mr. and Mrs. llcn Rhinehart, of Portland, were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. T. D. McCulley and Prank Jr. Mrs. Rhinehart is a niece of Mrs. McCulley and was June Hudson, of Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Prank Baulke were happy over the 4th to have their phlldren all home. Mr. and Mrs. M. L.' Persing and daughter, of Tacoma. Mr. 0na Mrs. Sewius Gaulke, of Grandvlew, Wash.; Ind Mr. and Mrs. Selwyn Gaulke.o Mr. and Mrs. Oce Hartsock of Wal la Walla, came tt'ednesduy to spend a few days at the lake, and to visit relatives and friends. Their daugh ter, Allegra, came 1 earlier and is in charge of the office at the lake for Harley Hamilton, who has a string of saddle horses. Mr. Hartsock, Is superintendent of agriculture at tho penltenth atWaffa, Walla. Mrs. Addle Pleener, who has DTen ytoying at the Marks home on Prairie Creek, has gone to live with her son, Earl Pleener, west of town. Mr. - and Mrs. Bert Logsdon and daughter. Donna mn, left Tuesday fqr their home at Athena. They spent several days the -!ak gueiAk of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Hamilton. Mr.' and Mrs. Clarence Graves and ously threatened forthcoming. tocttted daughter, Phyllis, of Pullman, Wash., aro visiting Mrs. Graves' parents, Mr, and Mrs. T. H. Green, and sister, Mrs. Floyd Green, and brothera, Tom ' and Fred Green. : Miss Anna Mary McKlnloy left Sat urday for Ontario and will be Joined there by o girl friend and they will go on to Chicago to visit the fair. - Mr. and Mrs. John Searcy are' at Suthcrlln, Ore., for a month where Mr. Searcy Is ln charge of the liquida tion of tt bank. Mr, and Mrs. Maurice Eben and Eddie Jr., of Portland, and Mrs. Rus sell Vaughan (Esther Eben) of Log Angeles, are visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Eben. They will remain hero until July 15. Film Stars Will Visit Pendleton To Take Pictures PENDLETON, Ore. (Special) The "Golden Harvest" company which will film a talking picture for the Charles R. Rogers Co., Paramount Studios, will arrive here Wednesday, July 12, by special train. Besides director and others, the prominent members of the cast will Include Richard Arlen, Genevieve Tobln, Chester Morris, Julia Hayden, Roscoe Yates, Elizabeth Patterson and Charles Salon. The filming will take place on tho Henry Collins ranch. How you feel depends or what you eat 4 m&J Opnirti.im, o O o