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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1917)
TEN PAGES PACK TEN f. IMItlllllllllliniillllllllllllllllllllUllllllltlllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllillllll IIIIIMIIIIIIIIH The Chain Store Is the Greatest Success S This Is etmeeUrd to be true by practically all commercial und financial exiertH. It elves the mh1 j E an opportunity to trade with an establishment doing an Immense volume of business and buying In large quantities, thus enabling them to sell at a nineh closer nwrgln tlmn the tine store merchant. We 2 arc the largest lry tJomix chain In the United (States oH'ratlng 175 stores III 22 slates. Our buying ea- 2 paclly is unequaled anywhere in our lino.. This buying power permits us to quote such reasonable prl- H c as you see below. if? Housekeeping Is Not the Task It Used to Be M' fODERN invention has done away with much of the hard work. PVtr Inct-jnr thm trlMniriiT andl polishing of hardwood floors, the dusting .C m-J.nsv rk fnne rf Kio-h fiirn.tlini"r Acadttwjr Opens Sept. 4. St. Joseph's Academy will open ita doors for the fall term on September 4 it was announced" today. sheep which was v.ctim to the old bear. Ita tal had been cut off as tleanly as with a knife by on swipe of its long claws. He brought some of the bear's claws back with him. Iloudolr Cap Site, 49a, 8e, 11.18 Ididies Handkerchiefs S for 5c, 5c, 3 for 25c, 3 for S5ft Tatting and Crochet Silk,' a for 45o "Coats" Crochet Cotton, all sixes. too Beautiful Yd. Wide Fancy Taffeta Silks, yd. SI.0V 28 In. Fancy Taffetas, yard . SI. 25 New Georgette Crepes, yard Sl.ttO All Sliades of Crepe, de Chine, yd. 98c, $1.25, l.l 26 In. Satin Finished Silks, yd 89o New Waists In Htrlix-d Silks tl.DS, $2.lH Taffeta Flounce lcttlcints tl.DM All Taffeta IVtticoaUt to M.M New House Dresses 98c, l.tl Ijirge Itungalow Aprons 59c, 89c 3 IMeee Hn-akrast Suits $1.19 Fall t.inghnms, yard 12e, 15c New Percales, yard 10c, I Be, 17o Outing Flannel, yard IOC, 12 '4c 15o Vi IIIVJUU1KI UIV WfW v m the stairs, unoer the radiator, etc. These back-breaking tasks. ; now made easy witn tne , ti t rr To sue About Troop, ix H. W. Collins left on No. 17 fot Portland today to give his Individual attention to the matter of bringing Troop I back here for the Kound -Up. Sorvico Hour chunKed. Sunday evening service at the Christian church will change from s p. m. to 7:30 p. m., beginning tomorrow. DAILY EAST OKEGONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 1. 1917. !i ft With it ma run dust, clean and polish a hardwood floor in the time it formerly took you to get ready to do it. Besides, you do not have to pet down on your hands and knees to dust under the bed or other hard-to-grt-at puces, or to stand on a chair to dust the top of the high furniture. Ail of the hard work is now made easy with the O-Cedar Polish Mop. It fathers mil the dna or din from eigo.Uic mud hcida k. Tbe mop H uJt .-!.-ord br vubinr and tben learned br poariaf oa tew drop of 0-Cedt Polish. . r. Try k two wbole dwi witb Tt7 It at (JUT KlSK iwormuKluir-. U r do oat find X MmfietoCT i. WT iwpt w wUI nm yoor ey. Toe price ( ocJtr SJ-v 04 . wm oiiw mm orm mmttw imllllknitM. Gray Bros Grocery Co. "QUALITY" Two Phones 28 823 Main St. ctt(iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu All the distinction that an expensive tailor can express in clothes. Is exhibited in our assort ment of fall Coats and Suits. For they are the creations of highly paid designers, leaders in their line whose salaries only the largest makers could afford to pay. They give the style, the unquestionable lightness of effect, while the makers have seen to it that fabrics are rightly woven and right ly dyed and that the work manship is faultless in line and detail. Furnish Funeral Tomorrow. The funeral of the lute William O. Furnish, who diet: yesterday morn ing, will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock at the Christian church Otptn'n Grbwold Here. Captain Lyman Grlswold of the Oregon Kngineers and his wife, ar rived this morning for a short visit with his parents. Dr. and Mrs. J. Oriswo'd of Helix. Captain Griswold is a civil engineer and before enlist ing was with the Oregon highway department- t ltancc Getting Very iwy. The range is getting extremely dry, both the streams and the grass be ing affected by the long drouth, ac cording to Dan P. Smythe, who has just returned from a three day trip to Black Mountain, where he was getting some of his sheep ready for shipment. Has New Saleslady. Mrs M. Florence Spere. formerly of Gages, Cicago. has accepted a po sition as head saleslady at the Camp bell Millinery. Itecoverina From Injury. Glen Storie, who Injured his hip recently wh:le working on his corn bine and who has been quite ill since, is reported better today. More OaklumN Arrive. Having sold nine Oakland autos durintr the past 20 days, X. I. McLean has another carload of cars enroute and has already sold two of the cars of this shipment. rov can 7 C7 WE LKA THE GOLDEN RULE V iinniiiiiiMMMnnniiMMiiiiiiiiiiMiiHiiiiiiMiiMiiiiiiMMiiniiMiiMinnMiiiiiiiMiiiiHMiiiMiMiiiMiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiMiniiiiiiiMiiii.- The Store of Quality ffi I S f y fc ; m i Kev. Snyder IIme. Rev. J. E. Snyder of the Presby terian church and his family arrive! home th;s morning in their auto aft- ; er spending the summer at Tilta : ! mo ok. They had an enjoyable out- ing. Rev. Snyder was fortunate in :' killing a four point buck on the 20th ; j of August. He will occupy his pulpit ; tomorrow. : Indian Soh xl cens Sept. 3. j St. Andrew's Indian School will t open Monday. Sept. 3. Edward O - ! Hara, formerly captain in the state f ! militia of California, will be in charge j ' of the boys and the higher grades j , will be taught by G. V. Himmerer un I ' til the new teacher arrives. Florian Hauber. who had charge uf the boys : ; last year, has enlisted in the engi ; , neers corps an,1 is en route to I ! France. Or. Henderson Returns. Dr. T. M. Henderson and family have returned from a long auto trip through the state. They went to southern Oregon by the Bend rout and visited Crater Lake during the K of P. convention. They returned bv way of Portlnnd. Tournament Postponed. It Is announced by I A. Ueinemun, president of the local tennis club, that the tournament planned for the courts at the Round-Up grounds has been postponed. The tournament may be held after the Hoiind-Lp but definite plana have not yet been adopted. lluffnlo Vernon May Com. Buffalo Vernon, well known cow boy. hopes to be present at the 1917 show. acc rding to a better received from him by Major Lee Moorhouse. He declares he Is in better shape than he has been since 1910 and 1911. He won a first and a second in the Cheyenne bulMogging contest. He is now at Fort Morgan, Colo., where a frontier show is soon to bt held. Six Trains of Sheep, Mny the Bros, have just sold five trainlnudH of sheep and the Pendle ton Sheep Co. one trainlnad. A train of mutton lambs was shipped yester day from Lyle, W'n.. to Chicago, und oik is being shipped today to Mea cham for the firm of Steiwer Hoh kins. Three trninloads are being pre pared in Idaho fur shipment to Chi cago and another at Okanogan. Shines May Ito 15 Cts. a ninvtmpnt has been started by some of the bootblucks of the city to jump the price of shines from 10 cents to 15 in order to keep pace with other prices. New Man at Rank. F. O. Dohnert. formerly connected with one of the Albany banks, hn accepted a position in the First Na tional Bank of this city. He and hU wife have already arrived. Round-l'p I law Appear. Round-Cp hats made their appeur ance in large numbers today, the da officially set for their introduction. Not a few who appeared in straw hats had them mashed. A number of ladies appeared on the streets in big sombreros. 1TA1JAX OFFKNKIVK IS OKKATKST ACTION OF WAIt LONDON, Kept. 1. -The Italian offensive mtuiuci In full force on a 70 mile front, atvordlng to iconic cable. The battle of the last eleven dayft In the greatest war action developed on any Ku roean front. The Austrian fleet In trapped In Itole. DKPl'TV COMMISSIONER IS NAM ion for ri:i CltOSM WASHINGTON, Sept. 1. Henry Davidson, chairman of the lied Cross war council, announced the appoint inent of Edgar Wells of Cleveland, formerly dean of Harvard college, as deputy I ted Cross commissioner for Europe. Wells will be stationed in London. Only Two of 101 Mining. Of the 161 men called by the local exemption board, all but two have ei ther reported or been transferred. They missing two are Solomon Solami of Echo, and Ernest Karl Krupper of Pilot Rock. Thorn A. Oranbeck has been transferred to Burke, Idaho. R. Karl Simonton of Adams is the only one of the last group certified to the district board who has yet filed an appeal. Hoys llu: V .iVtney. Robert Simpson. Jr., son of Robert Simpson of the Simpson Auto Co., has completed putting togetner his second automobile ma'le from stray parts about his father's shop. His ! new car is of the var'ety known as a "bug.'1 and is little more than the i skeleton of a car on wheels. How- ever, it has plenty of power and runs as smoothly as a billiard ball. He was assisted in putting the car to gether by Wesley Fletcher and the two boys left this morning in their creation for Bingham Springs :jTnriiiiiini"""NnMiiiiiiinnHiiiiniinniiiiiinMnniniiiiiMiiiiMHinnniiiiiiuinir; GONE! One of the Best Val ues We Had There are three more of these good buys in used cars left. PENDLETON AUTO COMPANY "CARiS OF MTJ.fT" Swiped Sheep'B Tail Off. "Old Clubfoot," the huge grizzly bear killed recently in northern Ida ho by Pat Farley of this city, hal been following the Pendleton Sheep Company's band of sheep for som? time before he was killed, according to Tom Boylen, Jr., who returned a few days ago. He saw one of the Bertha Pla.neett Iteturns. Pert ha Blancett champion cowgirl, returned last eveninc from flood River where she we tit to deliver an invitation to Rev. Billy Sunday and wife to com' to t he Round -I'D Though they were unable to accept owing to a previous engagement, they appreciated the Invitation very much, she reports, and expect to at'end some future Uound-Cp. Big Cattle Shipment. Forty carloads of cattle, said to be the largest cattle shipment ever made at one time from this section, is goinR east today from Pilot Hock to Omaha and Kansas City. The beef are being loaded at Pilot Kock today and con sfst of stuff from the ranches of Henry La ZInka, Tim Loner-ran and the John Day Livestock Company. Can Irrigate Tonight. AH local people may Irrigate this evening between the hours of 4 and 7:30 but hereafter householders may irrigate only on alternate days. The even street numbers. facing north and west, may Irrigate on th even dates of the month, between 5:30 and 8 p. m. while the odd numbers, facing south and east, mav irrigate the same hours on the odd days of the month Tomorrow being Sept. 2 tn even date, will belong to the even street numbers. HIS COSTUME RATIONAL; WHAT'S THE LADY'S t vpTff j-tE, , 7 idr- wei- -? -'kP ix&k-, " "-tfv - e r,- "MX 1 Is Fined $5U. On a charge of having violated the labor law by working female help more than 60 hours in one week. Suey, the Chinese proprietor of the Hong Kong cafe was fined SfiO by Justice of the Peace Parkes. the fine of $5 being imposed on each of two complaints The charge against Sue., was made by M. H- Allen, deputy la bor commissioner on information fur nished him by piirtk-s who have hen complaining of the Hong Kong cafe working hours. 50,000 ACRES FOR SALE I have land listed from the Columbia to the Middle Fork of the John Day river. Wheat land, diversified farms and Stock Ranches. Residence and business property. I have sold close to three million dollars worth of property in Umatilla County. My clients are all satis fied. Come in and tell me what you want. E. T. WADE, Pendleton, Ore. NEW DOMESTIC ART TEACHER IS NAMED MISS K.YTHKRINR V. IIOAG OF CLK 10LV-M. WASH., KIJ-XTKD TO POSITION IN SCHOOL Lupino I-une, an English actor, paraded In a "rational" costume for men at the Chiswlek open air bath in l-.jnd.it. He paraded with Mis Violet Blyth, also un actress. He ad mitted his costume was not very pretty, but he insisted It was "ra tional." Miss Blyth insisted her cos tume was becoming. Shp didn't caro whether it was "rational" or not. Mu-b Katheiine V. Hoag, who haa been head of the domestic sc.ence de partment at Cle Elum, Wash, wm iasc night elected to a similar posi tiou in the Pend eton schools to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Mrs. Charles H. Marsh (Miss Al ice Butler). Miss Hoag is a graduate of the University of Minnesota and U highly recommended. Her salary will be $loo a month Miss Hazel S. McHeth. a graduate of Belltngham normal school, was elected to the grades. The resimtation of Mrs. Beuluh Kerrick. who was elected to the grades, was accepted .She wi.l retain her school at Cayuse. A contract was authorized for equipping all windows of all Behind buildings with Monarch weather strips at a cost of J 1 464. The salnrv of the janitor of the Field school wai fixed at $25 per month and a num ber of other routine matters attend ed to preparatory to the opening of the .schools. says mo c wt i:i:mi;mhi it CONFESSING TO Ml BULKS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiuiiiriifiiiitfitiiiiitfiiiiiiir- (SAND j GRAVEL I CEMENT) Our pit run gravel just right for concrete 2 containing proper amount of sand and requir- 2 ing minimum amount of cement. Used almost 2 exclusively on big jobs where efficiency and economy is considered. 2 Phone 179 I SMYTHE-LONERGAN CO. Quality Quantity Service ;miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin rXIAN, l.uva, Kept. I. R'V. Lynn 'Jrortf Kflly this nftornion thruuKh hla wife sujil he didn't rcmprnbrr itifdv in; the rnnfrHsIon th( etfitp nuthori- aay he made, admitting tht-ViHijr-a axo murdf-rH. kilik:i!.s vn,i, picotkst. (Continued from Page 1.) Turkey red Cradu hard red win ter, basia S2.20. Hluestem Karly Part, Allen. Oal alra, white Martin, Amber, hauls J2.20. Fortyfold White HuKKlan. Ctdd Coin, grade (Mtft white wheat, baals 12.18. Red Fife flrade noft red winter ba-ls J2.1S. White club All varlntlrs) hybrid' and club., basis 12.16.. Ited Hurailan (Irade red Wallo Walla. baslB $2.13. Thewe prices are for No. 1 (trade, de livered ChlraKo. No. 2 wheat will be reduced 3c. No. 3 6c, and No. 4, wheat 10c a bushel from these prices. DAIK ROTHWKIiI, Optomed and ornirsan Eyes Scientifical ly examined. Glasses ground to fit. National Hank Knild n?. I'endlf ton. The Price Will Raise on October 1st SUPER-SIX AMERICA'S GREATEST ENDURANCE CAR HUDSONS now on our floor rt-ady for immediate delivery, and at the old price. Shipment of HUDSON SUPER SIX SPEEDSTERS now on the road all to go at the old price. Get your order in now for a HUDSON and save the advance in price. Oregon Motor Garage Incorporated. 117. 119. 121. 113 Wet Court St. Telephoo. M