East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, August 23, 1917, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY. AUGUST 23, 1917.
EIGHT PAGES
00000000000000090000000000
o
3
DO YOU GET OP EARLY THESE
PAGE EIGHT
1
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
&
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Salt Fish
Our Stock is Always Complete, We Carry
Salt Salmon, Columbia River, lb 20
Irish Mackerel, each 15
Holland Herring, best grade, 4 for 25
Pickled Herring, 6 for 25
Cod Fish, 2 lb. brick 35?
All Ready Cod Fish in cans 25?
Shredded Cod Fish in cans, each 15f
Columbia River Salmon, Gillnetters, large 40?
Small 25?.
Complete Line of Canned Fish; Prices Always
Right, Considering Quality.
GRAY BROS. GROCERY CO.
o
o
o
e
o
e
G
JutUiiff l'p Hound-l'p Slpivs.
The big Hound-Up symbols which
last year decorated the lawn at De
pot Park, are being: again put up to
day. The four figures, representa
tive of the events at the show, have
been freshly painted and will attract
much attention from tourists passing
through on the trains.
men being: able to communicate with
prisoners. Ho was instructed to draw
up an ordinance covering; the case.
Porter was convicted of vagrancy
yesterday afternoon and given a son
tence of IB day a in Jail in order that
he may communicate his fill with
Walker.
"QUALITY"
823 Main St.
oooooooooooooooooooooooo
Two Phones 28
Hand Injured On Combine.
John Johnson, who formerly work
ed at the Eastern Oregon State Hos
pital. is wearinjr his right hand in
bantiajres as a result of an accident
on the combine of Georsre Hess a few
days auo. Hia hand was caught in
the coks of a wheel and the fingers
were badly lacerated and mashed.
j Wilt Repair IiOvee.
! The city council has decided to
make some needed repairs to- the
levee during the low water period.
llratiiiK l'p Again.
The mercury today made another
attitude climb, jumping nine desjrsos
from the top mnrk yt'stcrday. The
maximum today is 99.
S
IS
Can't you feel that Fall is in the air? It wont be fong now before y6u will need that
Fall Suit and Coat. We certainly have some beauties this season. Every day sees
quite a number disappear and also sees quite a number of new arrivals. Now don't
wait too long. Come in and look then over. If you are not able to take it today pay
a small deposit and we will hold it awhile for you.
Beautiful Plush Coats (in stock at present) plain and fur trimmed $17.50 to $49.50
The Newest Ideas in Cloth Coats, Wool Velours and Fancy Mixtures, plain and fur
trimmed $12.50 to $19.50.
A Wonderful Line of New, Snappy Fall Suits $12.50 to $37.50.
Taffeta and Satin Finished Dresses are all the rage. We have them from $9.90 to
$22.50.
TOll CAN
IX) IIKTTKK
JT J I tic UUL.DEN RULE J
K LRA
lr. Waffle In Hospital Corps.
Dr. Eldred B. Waffle of Astoria,
who was raised In th:s city, has Join
ed the "Rainbow" hospital corps
r.rotlK-r Pays Fine
Jack Walker, wiu recently was
convicted of lootU'ji$;iug and sentenc
ed to pay a $lt0 fine, was released
raised nt Iji Orande and has been!""om Jail last night when his brother
given the commission of first lieuten- - laid his fine.
ant. He win report at one? at uiacK-
amas. This unit is expected to leave
next week for New York from where
It will proceed at once to France. Mrs.
B. S Waffle and Mrs. Ida Fowler,
mother and sister of Dr. Waffle, will
go down to Clackamas before the unit
leaves. This is the same unit with
which Dr. J. D. Ptamondon of this
city is connected.
' To Meet In Portland.
1 Local members of the G A. H are
today much gratified over the fact
I hat the next national encampment of
the a. A. R. will be held in Portland.
Civil Seriine Exnma.
The TJ. 8. civil service commission
announces that an examination for
ijmiiMiiiiiiii!iiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiMiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii:
g WFAtlnTTlfr,... iim .i .... .m j 1 ...rW-rT.T, ,.,r--f5T , announces mat an examinauor
g gytMwasftSJH stenographer and typewriter for men j orfltvr Oranted
11 -j- nuiy weneer.
; I'lulerjeoes Serious Owratkm.
I Mrs. Frank O'Hnra yesterday morn
j ing underwent a serious operation at
I St. Anthony's Hospital. She hail been
;' spending the summer at Lehman
j Springs but recently became quite ill
and was brought here for treatment.
against J. 11. StrniKbt and toward the
latter end of the course he made u
hole in three. While teeing off for
the next hoI he discovered tltat his
caddy had led him t' another play
er's ball which had fallen close to
his own in the approach to the hole,
instead of taking advantage of his
mistake, he played his own ball over
and made only a four. Had he taken
the three score he would have won
the match on the ixth hole and thus
have qualified for the finals. Mr.
Hartman arrived homo this morning
from the beach. Mm. Hartman will
not return until Hept. 1.
mites, being burned out in our heav
ier atmosphere. It ts my guess then
that these strange heavenly lights ob
served by several recently, nil in the
month of August, as they should be.
are the annual shower of Perselds
when their orbit cuts across the orbit
of the earth. They are supposed to be
the debris of an ancient comet which
traveled the same path.
w
E bring to Pendleton
the good taste of Pans
and other style centers.
C il 1JJJ A
Cm
TJ
ft
)vT
Right here in your own
town, in this store your
store you have garments
that are identical with the
vogue in those big cities that
are acknowledged leaders in
fashions. And the assort
ment is thoroughly repre
sentative. And you'll prob
ably pay less than you'd pay
in some big store in a bigger
city.
SUITS that are suggestive
of Parisian influence.
COATS that have a de
lightfully attractive air of
utility.
and women and for
for men atfcl women
45 different cities in the Northwest on
! August 31. 1917.
Z The usual entrance salaries are
iE j from 1900 to $1200 per annum. All
umii.u oitjuug, n-H'"- a miu i.yjc. ti
ers are urged to apply for and take
the coming examination, as a suffi
cient number of stenographers and
typewriters have not been reached to
meet the needs of the government
service.
For application and full inforcation
apply to Herbert F. Ward, District
2 ' secretary. 303 Postoffice bui.'dlng. Se-
; attle. Wash.
typewriter only Billy Senear, veteran member c.:'
will be held in i the police force, has been granted
two weeks vacation dating from next
Monday. Joe Coffman of the fire de
partment, was a so 'granted two
weeks.
S i 15ttT Ijcave Prisoners Alone.
A drastic ordinance aimed at men
, who try to communicate wtth prison-
ers in the city Jail will be passed by
HZ , the city council. Tt was suggested by
City Attorney Fee last evening as
f result of the arrest of Charles Porter
while he was communicating with
! Jack Walker, convicted bootlegser,
5j through the outside bars. Judge Fee
cal ed attention to tne danger to ine
officers and to the city property
Kilpack to Ixve.
J. G Kilpack, re prase ntiti .e nf the
Koys & oirls1 Aid Society, is here to
1i y on his last trip in behalf -f rhe
society. He has resigned h:s position
end expects to enter the government
service in the children ." w ili'are bureau.
Buys New Car.
John Arkell has purchased
Six of the City Auto Co.
I iitlersoes ertlon.
Mrs. J. W. Spencer of Adams un
derwent an operation for the removal
of her tonsils at the honpitnl tins
morning.
Behind the wholly admirable stvles is an hon
esty of workmanship pledging both excellence
of fit and long wearing satisfaction.
The Store of Quality
;niiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiinMiMiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiMiiiiiiiMMiiiiiiiriMiTiiiiTM..,..-
Some Very Excellent
Values in
Second Hand Cars
FROM
8250 to S475
BILLY S BRAN-NEW
PHILOSOPHY
Ms
(film
PENDLETON
AUTO COMPANY
tVKS OK MFJilT"
Lb:
"A film cocaiJ Is th?
kird that wakes you
see moving pictures"
While we have no film
cock tails, we have a line E
of drinks that impart vi-
gor to the tired, and re-
newed energy
to the
thirsty these hot days.
S e
BRAN-NEW
.H AI'K-O
KVTIU in: V
IIY-B.lLf.
inxyr iikvh
I Wm. Roescli Bottling Co. j
Pendleton
I Oregon
Itr. Smith Hvrt.
Ir. C J. Smith, former prominent
Pendleton physician, spent the morn
inir in tin city, leaviiiK fur his hunn
in Portland on So. 17. He had been
inspecting his wheat fields In Idaho
and in this county. He found some
extraordinarily guod wheat and a very
Kood avfraye crop on the whole.
Lost. Knd of Mnatnr,
William Shea, employed at the
Blewett Harvester factory, lost th
end of the little finder of his riitht
hand yesterday afternoon when it
cat.c in contact with a saw.
KIItKS ON
Rlazen Were
SOl'Nl C.THUJif3
Oowltd
In Clallam.
and King OvuntieH.
SEATTUK, Auk. 23. Forest fires
in the Hood Canal region in Cal lam
county along the Htrait of Juan de
ruca. In Cowitz county along the Co
lumbia, and in eastern King county
are all under control, according- to
reports received by the Washington
Fire association today.
Strong Man Here.
V ra n k A t k i ns, i ns ;i ra n ce man with
the l-iiverpool, Itndon- & ( Mobe, is in
the city today. Mr. Atkins served in
the Fhillipines in 1S0S and had the
reputation of being the strongest man
in the islands while there.
DALJ5 ROTirWKXL
Optometrist and Optician
Eyes sdentlfical-
ty examined,,
Qlassee ground
to fit.
American National Bank Building
Pendleton.
BIG
DANCE
TONIGHT
Given by
WOODMEN OF WORLD
Sawyer's Orctatia
EAGLE-WOODMEN HALL
4IIIIIttf IlllllllllltlelllllfltlfllflllllllllltllllllflllJffiiifiiiintlfllllf milMtlltl
War l;jt'Ud fjBHt Sprlnx-
-Mrs. Cora K. Geiss, reported yes
terday u-s just having been re-elected
as teacher In the grades, was in re
ality re-elected at the meeting of
April 16. Her contract, however,
mysteriously disappeared and she did
not sisn one until she returned from
her summer vacation in the e;iM.
Farewell to r Jen tenant.
Senator C. A. Karrett. Henry A
Barrett and York De l nf Athena
drove down this morning o bid fare
well to Dr. J. D. Plamondon. foi mer
ly of Athf -na and now a lieutenant In
the 1a Grande hospital corps. Dr.
I'lamondon spent lat night and this
morning at La Grande and is return
ing to camp on No. 17.
iwen though a distillery is con
verted into a manufactory of innoce
commodities, it will be a long 'JTi
before it loses its own and ac-iuir
ine odor of sanctity.
ITS
-I W
U E
r?
ie
STRANGE LIGHTS ARE
SAID TO BELONG TO
THE METEOR FAMILY
Holding Hay for $20.
Hay at Stanfield has sold this sea
son as high as $16.50 a ton, aecordiiiK
to lion r'ruitt, secretary for Stanfield
I'ruM.. who is up from the west end
t.',day. Kven the third crop ha.s been
;l whopper. -he says, and with prices
soaring Stanfield bids fair to attain
in unequnlcd prosperity. Many of the
farmers are holding their hny for $-U
he states.
I'Might Two Quarters.
In addition to the iiarttr section
f land bought yeter. iv by H. II.
VWssel from James Johns tr., .Mr.
W easel has al.--o pur:haEe :tift acres
fr tn J S. MeLeod in th same re-
sion. A price of $800 w.is n.tld for
the MeLeod land. Mr. Wessel now has
Soon acres of wh-
of the county.
nt l;ind n mat I r
(;ai(P n Ile stolen.
rfctors nr" not immune from dis
fle and police judges are not siife
fmm thieves. Judge Thomas Fitz
Gerald discovered the latter to be
trtit when, on his return from Ih-
man Springs, he found that some
thief had made away with his 1 00
feet of garden hose. Dr. T. M. Hen
derson also lost his hoso while absent
on a vacation.
Insurance Men to fi Et. '
K. Nelson, assistant state man- .
ager. Charles R Heard, district man
ager and Carl Kupers and Powell
lant. local agents of the Kquitahle
TJfe Assurance Society, expect to
leave soon for Mackinac island. N. T-. j
to attend the nnnual conventi n .f ;
the Quarter Mil inn and Century
Clubs. Mr. Heard will be the first to
leave. He expeoU to go Saturday. Mr.
Kupers fa the Hel x agent and Mr.
P'ant the Milton ngent.
V.ntr and THer Thlelc.
T. B. flurdanc, who in dawn 'rom
the Smythe-Roylen sheep camp nea"
Meacham. reports bear thi-k in the
mountains this year. Beside th"
three recently killed there, he re
ports having come upon another just
above a herd of shoep last week. He
ine unarmed he coulri not five chase
Tie has seen many deer In the moun- i 8ell'om come closer than 60 to
ta rs during' the past few weks and
ratrlesnakes thicker than h has ever
Keen them, he state.
Ki-. J. Mf. Cornefto.,n rjve Very
Plausible Hxplmiatbni of Ph'tHni
entt Hound Muaclium.
Another explanation of the strange
lights In the heavens above Meacham
and Kamela is furnished by Kev. J.
M Corne:ison of Tutuilla and it is a
very plausible one. The lights belong
to the meteor family and are astro
nomical y known as 1'erseids and tra-
d it ion ally as "the tears of St. L.n w
: rence," he states.
! Writing to the Kast Oregonian,
I Hev. t'ornellson says:
j "r have rt ad with interest an I
I some amusement the various an -j
uniinc omen ts of strange lights, air
; ship.-) and whatnot in the local heav
I ens. I have seen them, too, most
i every year, especially in the month
j of July and August, say from the
nil-Idle of Ju y to August 22. Being
somewhat of a star-gazer myself. I
took the trouble to look up thee
heavenly visitors for they are very
beautiful and a little different from
the ordinary meteor, though of cours
they belong to the meteor class.
"Those appearing on or around
these dates are known as I'erseids and
derive their name from the eonste
tion of Perseus where their radiant
point Is situated. When any of this
swarm strike our atmosphere their
rapid motion soon burns them out
but their trails often persist for a
minute or two before they are dis-
seminated, or burst, into a shower.
Their habit to burst into a shower has
given them a traditional name as thev
frequently appear on or near the Jrtth
of August, which is known in some
church calenders as the day of Sa'nt
I-awrence, so they are called the
"tears of St Lawrence."
"Two years ago Just at that date
I was camped in the mounta'ns about
half way between Meacham and Ka
mela getting some 'ple dope" known
as huckleberries. One dark nlffht one
of these Perseids broke across the
sky, while I was out hobhling my
horses. It fried. st7JEled and crackled
In Its courfee across the heavens, and
I Instinctively ducked my head for
safety first reasons. for I was sure It
was singeing the tops of the pine
trees. But as I watched the trail of
beautiful fire I came to my senses to
remember that the highest astronomi
cal authority assurer? us that they
100
ii
We make a specialty of fuel i
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR 1
33
jiiiimimiiiiMiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiuifii
f-'Hmlnalnf br Honesty.
Too much h'-nestv robbbed Gearg
A. Hartman of a rhanc to compete
in the finals nf the championship
folf to'irnam-iit nt fJpfirhart recent
ly. He was playing in the semi-f fnalf
Dr. I K B akesle. -ho i nlun-il
to Pendleton a few days o, has
IrdllKflfSfcl (L
Most Heat Units, Thats the Reason
ALL KINDS OF
Cord and Slab Wood f
The Best on the Market
Phone 179 I
SMYTHE-LONERGAN CO. (
Quality Quantity Service I
riitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ?
"MinuHitiiMHiiiiMiii iimmiiimiiimuiiiiimiiiiiiiiuniniii!
DENBY TRUCKS
Go in the Field to Load the Wheat, Operate on
Distil ate.
Durable Economical Reasonable
Highest Clearance on the Market (131s inches
from lowest point to ground). Lowest Deck on
Market Makes Easy Loading.
SIMPLICITY
Propelled just the same as your tractor. All gears
enclosed, dust and mud proof housing.
Our Last Carload at the Old Price. Buy Now and
Save the Advance.
Factory Man Here to Demonstrate.
E'2
"The U. S, Government is placing orders now
with truck manufacturers and on account of short
age of materials prices may advance at any time.
We are in a position to protect purchasers at the
present prices for a limited time.
"First Cost Not Prohibitive."
Oregon Motor Garage
leaiwvl thff office In th Ttettn blook i
formerly occupied Dr K. K. rtln- 5
ffo and recently by Or. J. D. I'lnmon- J 3
d'tn He took pfH-fiion to Iny inl I fc
will resume act ve pmrt'c. 1 :
117. 119. 121
Incorpora
1 23 WM Court St.
ted.
Telephmw 464
l'fl!m!nll!!5tr"'!!!'n!!"'r!'l!!,:il'
iiitiiiiiuiriiiir.uiuiii 'iii oihik