EIGHT PAGES PAGE FOUR DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. MONDAY, AUGUST 20. 1917 q ini irti in OB3QI ipcaoi 3Q SOI Social and Personal ion ioe o D ioco i HEAVY RAINSTORM STRIKES MEACHAM IHNItM It IS Mini WKLAXMIKD AS CiltASS IS IHtV AI KOAlMt IHSTY. Mr. and Mm. William U Thompson, of Pendleton, who are sojourning at the Hotel Mmr. S.-asid fUH'i trtim-tl with a dcllirhtful dinner f.trty Tues day niEht. their pin-sts inHudinn M r. weekend. and Mrs. Clarke Nelson Mrs. Henr I fnlllnm Mrs. James Sturuis. Mrs Newton Huruess, Hrooke lurkson. Mr. rnmmelin, all of IVmllelon. and t'harles Sharpsten of Walla Walla. Portland Oreynnian. Deputy Sheriff A. Funk spent yesterday at Hin.cham springs. Ollie Bussear was in from the Sturpis ranch at Harnhart for Many IliiiiK-rx sp"areli mils for Fv tivo t.rou-e hut With only Imllf roreiu StK"tfw: Ilucklfbil-rici Plen liful Arouuil Mountain Town. Mr. and Mrs. It W. family are spending a ham Springs. Fleieher and A-eek .it Hinir- F. K. T Brown and W. O. Hujes of Herpner. were at the Pendleton yesterday. R. E. Manning, proprietor of leh man Springs, is down on a short business trip. .1. T. I-ambert. teller at the First National Hank, has returned from a vacation spent at Seaside. Judsre J. W. Maloney ond E R Aldrich left last evening on a short Miss Cladvs 1. Prownfield of Pen dleton, who Is spending the summer , shooting expedition into the hills i.. I'.irilAnJ mid at coast resorts, nas returned fro ma motor trip with Mrs K. Campbell, during which they vis ited Seaside. Astoria. Ti lainook and other beaches Miss Brownfield will go to Canny to visit Mrs. Walter C. Clark for a few days and will return to Pendleton in time for the Konnd l'p. Portland Journal. C H. P.hea of Echo spent Sunday in the city Robert H. Hunch of Hermiston is in the city today. Ad A. Gripes was down from nib bon for Sunday. W. J. Furnish is up from Port land for a few days. J E. Tourtelotte. Porttan.1 archi tect, is at the Pendleton. G. Cornstock of Rtanfield was a Sunday visitor In the city. Kelly Clark of Albee was among the weekend visitors in the city. R. H. Thorn of Echo was at the Powman during the weekend. W. P. Smith of Stanfield was up from the west end of the county yes terday. Enoch Pearson and family spent Saturday and Sunday at Lehman spring. Alfred Dorn and Gail Sherman of Echo were weekend visitors in Pen dleton. Judge and Mrs. T. P. Gililand of Pi lot Rock were Sunday cuests at the St. George. Arthur Johnson has returned to Pendleton after a visit to his home at Echo. KOItMKIt PKKSIIKNT TAPT RKPor.TKW sKiiiorsi.y William Howard Ta't, former'y president of the I'nited States, is re ported quite seriously il at a hotel ot 'lay ('enter. Kan. His form of ill neis i reported by the phyn cianF in attendance a an intetina. oomp'l- at ion. Mr. Taft wan on a speaking tour when taken ill. but now- has fanc.eled all upeaki ng date s&!- immM -W ism.- Canning Season Is Here Phone 520 WIlol.E SPICKS l III lK. 6 Cloger Kot. 'IT- 4 CIa k IVpper '2'n- ; ..z. .MIkj.c- ... 2."h- 0 oz lill Se d. . - . 2-V' fi.-d I'epper i'odf rz. .V ti ox, Must::rd Seed 4 in. 4 'nv' .... 25. 4 fix. Cin:ti:i-n Hurk 2ftc 4 ox. rurmrir. . . 2.ro 1 Mac- ... ! Full hin of Siuitbi .uWi:ir.-(l ri:.i. n T DRUG STORE ProtKpt tit liverie?. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Nelson arrived home this morninp from Seaside where they hud been for an outinp. Charles H. Carter and Le D Drake are upending a few days irrouse shooting out from Bingham Springs. Carl Cooley, bookkeeper at Alex anders, has returned from a two weeks visit in Brownville and Port land. W. L Thompson, president of the American National Hank, is home after spending several days at Oear hart. Oeorg J. Stangier has returned from Seaside where his family is spending the summer. He will join them in a few days again. R. L. Roberts, an Idaho guardsman stationed at Pasco, and his wife, were here over Sunday en route to Boise during a short furlough. A. T. Shaver of Bend and Oscar 1 Black and Jake Bock ot Hampton, Ore., composed an auto party that registered at the Golden Rule yesterday. AKKHAX NAVAli rRTVK. 8? r.JWIWivi 1 r i !' ? 5 r, rmmmv urn i mrti r nfft-Mi mmm' M iltok Kiist Oregonian Special. ) MEACHAM, Aug. l!0j All day the j Wednesday and even on Tuesday I' M. hunters and dogs were arriving here, for hunting. Not many had good success, for the long winter has made late birds. However, some did get the limit. Huckleberries were plentiful during the past week. The Indians havo been going through here to their spots of previous years. Miss Rhoda Mangers went to Port land last Sunday to reside, after mak- ! ing her home here for the past two years. ! Mr. and Mrs. P Riddle and chil- ; dren went to Iai Grande on Tuesday , to visit with relatives until Friday. j C'arence Hawes went to Ia Grand. ! on Wednesday to visit with his sis- j ter. Mrs. J. Larson. j Mrs. F, H. Fair and children re- ' turned to their home in La Grande j on Thursday after spending ten days ; with Mrs H. Fagan. Mrs. W. Chelf and Mrs. TV Black burn went to Kamola mi Thursday to j cet huckleberries. I J. r. Casey went to Pendleton on j Thursday to get some alterations on his new auto truck which he is us ing in hauling lumber in from the mill. To Attend Picnic. Miss Genevieve I 'helps went to La Grande on Friday tn be on hand for R R, picnic at Wallowa. On Friday P. M. we had a bad thunder and lightning storm, follow ed by a heavy downpour of rain. The rain was much needed as th arrns was so dry, someth'ng so unusual for here. The mads were a'so in a very dusty condition. j Mrs. Dick Hilyard returned home from Telocaset on Saturday aftftr spending a week there, where her husband is farming. Miss Ruby Hil yard and Miss Thelma Ernhardr ac com panied her home. Several from here went to the dance at Kamela on Saturday. Black among whom were Mrs. F. Black burn and Miss Ruby Hilyard. rnd Mr. and Mrs. O. Merra. Ed Welch went to La Grnnde on Saturday P. M.. tn visit with his wife, who has been there for several weeks Breaks Shoulder Ilia I Boyd pidenck passed through here on Saturday p. M. to his hom in Iji Grande. He was carrying his arm in a sling, having bad an accident while working with a brakp on a freight train. He is a brakeman and in adjusting the brake. it spr ing threw him from the car. breaking hi shoulder. He was well known htre as a telegraph operator several years ago. R. Wilkerson. teacher and principal of Greenwood school in La Grande, spent Sunday hfre. O P. A. Lonergan and family were up from Pendleton on Sunday. mmmsm if See Our Big Window Display GUARANTEED WARE To insure you against skimpy thin Aluminum al- . ways look on the bottom of Only One Set to a Member '"S,, IoTa BRAND.) our uppoirran: to become the proud owner of this MICH GRAPE 7-PIECE SET OF ALUMINUM FOR $1.00 cash and SO cents a week on our Sequoia Brand Aluminum Club The Manufacturer of this FAMOUS "SEOUOiA BRAND" WARE has given us permission to offer only eighteen (IS) 7-Piece Sets, (exactly as pictured, heavy weight and full cap acity) on the attractive Club Plan Terms of $1.00 cash and 50 ceuts ji week, complete set delivered to you upon first payment Biggest Selling Event in History Never before in the history of merchandising has such HIGH GRADE ALUMINUM ever been offered on more attractive terms, now made possible by taking advantage of our Easy Payment Llnb Plan. No kitchen is complete without this Guaranteed 7-Pieee Set con sisting of the most useful Utensils at a GREAT SAVING. YOU WILL NEVER MISS 50 cents a week, and in a few weeks the Set will be entirely paid for. Also the FACT that you ran use the complete set while paying makes this offer even more attractive. You Must Act Quick As soon as we have 18 members our Chib will be closed, then we can not furnish you a single set on tlie Club terms, and the vjreat numbers of people that will read this announcement makes it cer tain that our supply will be exhausted early. Therefore, to make double sure that you will not be too late we sugebt that yuu Tall at Our Store K;irty or phone Your Reservation. CRAWFORD & HEDGES Court and Main Phone 496. JnXiK WHjU ixvkstiuate VF:STHKN- TKOl'MI.KK. SARVICE BERRIES WILL SOLVE FOOD PROBLEM HE SAYS A new- picture of Prince Adelbert, third son of the kaiser, and often railed "The Navy Prince." berause he is the only son of the kaiser in the U' rni::n navy. At present he is with the landed naval forces doing coast Jefense work on the coast of Flanders. Iwl. Howard A. Frick et ux to J. J. I-und. 10. lots 4 and s. block . -Newport's Add to Hermiston yinthia A. Koontz to Viva S Homeland et ux 3"0. Ix.ts 1, 2. 3. 4. Id. .i k J. Koontz Second Add. to Echo. UVE EPCAL li'ff for Insanity. Frd Kitzman, a S'-ction hand at i'h uk, hm been taken in custody by the Mhf-nff t an insantiy charge. j Mif-riff Kills Itattlrr. j ht-nff T. I. Taylor yesterday, j while t-iii oute to Hingham SprincH, jMli.-l a rattlesnake with ten rattles and a hutton. V.-..-' . . . ; -:: v'-ijl If the people of L'mutillu, c unity will listen to M. D. rane of Pilot Itoi k, Herbert Hoover's Job Is ffuuiK to be made easier in these partn. as a solution ti the food problem, he tie. dares he has located enough sarvice berries to feed the allied army, in a letter to the east Oregonian this morning, he writes as follows Bast Oregonian, Pendleton, Ore. Gentlemen: Some people are talk ing of the high cost of living and the high cost of fruit. I have just come back from my fall grout--? hunt and I have decided that there is enough sarvice berries up in south canyon to fill every empty jar in Umatilla county. One canyon I was up will afford pickers $6 4-6.872 for war work since Jan uary 1. i;M7. it was announced today This includes the unconditional gift to the American Red t'ross of $&, 000.000 An appropriation of $300. 000 was made to build and maintain a hospital to teach new methods of war surgery, and a like amount giv en to the y. M C A. international committee for foreign military an) prisoners-of-war work. As a special session the trustees voted that for the present year "in addition to the income the principal of the funds of the foundation, to the amount of $ 1 0,000,000, may be dis tributed from time to time by a vote of a majority of the corporation or of the executive committee." - liOWKK flAKK T POItKHi.N' SHIP lrotNl .lotto.- Amrndnioot Would Amort 'an I ntrwtM. WASHINGTON. Aug- 20 .Senator week's job- and not j j,,n,.s today introduced un aim nd- e very thing from acting as an emetic to giving you hydrophobia bu'. if so. all our grouse would be dead a long time ago. I picked a gallon and brought home and had them made up into butter according to a recipe of one of our old neighbors and I claim there is no better berries grown. I believe there is enough berri. Chief Justice J. Harry Covington growing on these slopes that can be of the supreme court of the District of . gotten at with a car to (fori the nt Columbia has been asked v the pres- ties even though we are short on go a, quarter or a mile. ; meat to the Fletcher bill, whi h pro I-ots of people are superstitious of pones to admit the foreign ships to this berry and some hunters claim coastwise traffic The Jones' amend that if you eat ton many (he will do nient wou'd bur them absolutely ' CUDGE J. M. COVINGTON .ISHOP ftLrORIKCX NEAR DEATH Little Hope Held ut For Kerovrr of Idaho Prelate. ident to make an investigation of la bor troubles and the I. W. W, dem onstrations in the western mining camps. The department of justice, which would in the usual order of events handle the situation, is so busy that no one fan be spared for the work. l'ORTMND, Ore.. Aug. 20 Bishop Alphonsus Joseph Olorieux of Hoise. one of the best known Catholic cler-L'vmt-.n in the west, is ill at St. Vin cent's hospital, his condition being WI'IIR KXIOUT IUMj IS regarded as serious. He !s 73 years old. Pishop Olorieux was brought to the PortUind hospital two weeks ago WASHINGTON, to receive treatment for a complies- Webb export bill Hon of diseases. H- hup gradually ( nations of busine grown weaker. Portland physicians who are in con stant attendance said tonight that lit tle hope for the recovery of the dis tinguished patient can be held out. REPORTED TO KENATT: Aug. 2 0. Th permitting com hi - interests to en gage in foreign trade was reported today with minor amendment, to the senate by the interstate commerce committee It already has passed the house. wheat. These berries must re picked in the next week to be saved. If anybody wants to enme up I will direet them to the proper place and if the en tire Pend'eton population conies T ran send them in one c-inyon and give them a week's job and then have enough I erries left to feed th birds. A prson can gather about f!o gal Ions in one day. Yours truly, M. F. OKA NOR. EorXDATIOX AIIS AVAR WORK. Rox-kefcllcT Give 4tA.oofl.000 sinv pirxt of Year. NEW YORK, Aug. 20. The Rock efelter foundation has appropriated AMERICAN AIRMAN FAILS THROUGH ROOF WITHOUT A SCRATCH from the Alaska trade and would re iiuire that a foreign ship could enter the oather coastwise trade only when it was owned, leaser! or chartered by American citizens or corporations; in the case of corporaeions that corpor ation's capital stork to the extent of 7 5 per cent rmiHt be owned by A men cans, and the president aid managing director must be Americans. NotW of OHintv Rotird of KiiiulfxA Uen. Pendleton, Ore;, Aug 17. 1917. Notice is heroby given that the Hoard of KqualinUlon of Umatilla County, State of Oregon, will meet at the county court house In Pendleton, In said county and wtate, on the sec ond Monday In September, being Sep tember 10, continuing for 15 day, and publicly examine the iimwimrnt rolls, correct all errors in valuation, description or quality of lands, lots or oiher property assessed by me It shall be the duty of persons in terested to npepar at the time rind place hereby appointed. C. P- STRAIN Assessor for Cmatilia County $ ? Farm Rii.vctn. Attention. We have a choice lot of farnip in vicinity of I-ewlston. Idnh ond you can't afford to buy without first looking them over. If you are inter ested send for our list at once, giving us some tden of about what you want. PKNTON AND DAY. I'Wiston. Idnho n-IStf He's telling her that nothing he received from home brought more jov. longer-lasting Pleasure, greater relief from thirst and fatigue, than v TP V'' ' ' New MilHner Arrive. St irs li- ll Patterson of Seattle, an xj'-rn ii' ed iii ilhner. has arrived to take "ham of th- millinery depart ment of Th'- liee Hive. RIth .lap lloMx-d. W'a' irnaio. a J;tpMnes- laborer em-Pbtv-d ;tt li"th. has reported to the sheriff h.- th.ft .f t'O in ah a pay check for fvk.TT, a ladiep watch, tie Pin and other articles. Mitnlotf-k WAS'If TNOT'fN. nofri Irn t i f f VS r,er I ir-' la'nf I rrr ' ;;d-r ' : v ' 1 tv r- p' 'e ! Aug. 2. The .r M urdork, for- 'f'-m Kansas an-! t'i hf a member rr..Fiin. was t-!.'iv bv 'he fen fr. . committee. -,2 y"' i . r 1 1 X '"-S " of th where France. ha had the m'.p-t wonrlerful .canlon was Been to fall. The youn Kap- on recrd at a retain frem-n Arnf.r)can wno ha() cmr(ed from the camo for tra.ninir aviatom While flving In Nieuport his machine got debris without a snatch, wa- ordered beyond his control and fell r00 fet when the capta n csrne up. to hurry to the ground, cmyhfng through the into the bakery and help the pilot roof t the c..mp lakery. i who had fallen, if he was -sti I aliv? "Hed' Scanlon. sometimee of the : The captain in command S. A. and the Foreign Iegion of coirs and others rushed t ficanlon -minted the captain, say ing, "He's all right." "Who was it that fell?" asked the captain. fVtan lon again saluted; "C'etait moe, mon sieur le capital n. ( "It was I.") Tim next day Sanlon- went up attain t" wh;it 'he hob- in the bnkery ro t looked I i k fr'im above. ' THE FLAVOR LASTS She slipped a stick in every letter and mailed him a box now and then. Naturally he loves her. she loves him. and they both love WRIGLEY'S. CHEW IT AFTER EVERY MEAL "ftree pf a Hind fteep them In mind WRAPPtO IN .raa