Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1918)
s- DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21), 1918 EIGHT PAGES TACE SIX V'H ''v ! V w I, nl't-ctiilh wdifc In cconbtutt-!, commerce, Way will lit lionolHl waw rendered to typography and Journalism toi .-.nin.'j his tubuitjry In tlwj ( iTbtllpplm'S in stltllte A full 1 professional 1 'ifri;iVa.jyeaii ago' t hen uk .'captain In the tlon. '.... JTliliiy-thlrd Infantry he displayed ex- Th flrtst term of the' work wWii rt norrtluuvy aklll In extricating ,hl devoted to tho psychology of mHioiiimml from an ambush In the Using, under the direction of lr. JO. S. 'netton he was shot through the lungs. Among the ninny dinners which marked Thanksgiving fcntixlry In Pen dleton homes yesterday was a de lightful one, given by Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Miflxtrom at their home, tl Jackson street. In honor of Mrs. Mol Ktrom'd sister. Mm. -Charles Dunn, who In her from Idaho. Encircling the table were, besides Mrs- Dunn and the hosts. Mrs. Amy I.ee, Mr. and Mrs. tleorge Christy, Mr. and Mm William Bowman. Miss Daplma Molslrom. Hay Dunn and Frank Mol Mrunv ,' and Mrs. Baumister. ' 1 ' ftorgennt Koy Alexander, of Pen dleton, has come down from Camp lewis to spend the holiday with his parents. The sergeant is bewailing his fate that the war ended before he could go across. Oregontan. OR Dim KAftr, TO l.RUT. j OOPKXHAtJKV, Xov. 2!. Austria lias ordcrvl Iitokt Kmporor Karl lo loavo tlm country because, of antl revolutionary agitation by conscrva llxess a 1jpJJk dispatch today says. Wins Ijella. Ttuoy left 'Wednesday afternoon for her home In Portland i to mend Thanksgiving vacation. Shell will remain In the city over the week OVER THE NORTHWEST end with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. : Apples Sent to President. A. C. Ruby. Mis Huhy s attendins ! hood K1VEK, ore., Nov. 29. Willamette university. Salem State- iv-hen President Wilson leaves for inaft;- -'' lEurope, to participate in the peace t. ! negotiations he will find aboard his f Hiss Jane Murphy, who is attending steamer nvvaitinK him a box of select trie Cniverslty 'f Oregon, is spending ed n00a niver apples. The apples the weekend in Tortland with Sliss especially prepared, are en route Annamay Hronaugh, who war a guest east tne gift of K jfhaknwa, a Jan et the Murphy home during the anese orehardist of the Odell district. Round-up. Troon Movement Planned. Miss Vera Temple went te Portland PORTLAND, Nov. 29. llallroad of- Wednesday evening from Kugene, to f are preparing to move the sol tw the. Kuest over Thanksgiving of ,ijei-s to their homes as soon as they Mfca Theodora Sioppenliach. are released from service at canton". ments and barracks. A special infor- Mr. and Mrs. Dale Plusher, of Nolin. 'matin office has been opt-ned at were hosts yesterday at a Thanks- camp i.W(S t adviiie the men as to iving dinner. The guests were Mr: roule!i anii rates, and ticket clerks ml Mrs. Henry Collins. Mr. and Mrs. wili be added to issue transportation. Ben Ia. nurroughs and Mr. and Mrs. rt jg expected that the first troops to Clarke E. Nelson. leave American Lake will lake trains t- ,: - : " 'Sunday. The class in home nursing being, The intention is to release the men Conducted for the Hed Cross by Mrs. at t(le rate of SOU to SOU daily as soon Kenneth Geodale hi. hereafter, to meet as the necessary blanks are received tn the club room of the library. The aIKj official- machinery of discharge if Inembers have been assembling at the Ket ;n oiemtion. city hall but, 'beginning with this even tna's -meeting, art to bi in the new tiwarters. latLts Jnt Off JleetUiff. rORTlAND. Nov. 29. The Oregon Baptist State Convention, which was i J. I Roger of Ontario, is a busi- scheduled to meet at the East Side Bess visitor in the city for the day., (Baptist church last month, has been B. S. Talbott is in 1'emlleton today postponed until October, 1919. Tost from McMinnville. ponement was voted because of the J. W. Latimer is here today from lateness of the season and the con Goldendale, ,tinued presence of influenza. i. 6. Sinod is here today from Wes- , Rev. O. C. Wright, superintendent of ton. T?aptist Missions for Oregon, submit- W. C. Akins is in the city today from ted a report to the board Tuesday Enterprise. showing that during the present year H. p. Stakes of Spokane Is in the approximately 2H.('CI0 had been dis city today- tributcd by the treasurer, James F. t Frank Hoge is in the city on bust- Faling, with a balance of mere than ness from Koise, Idaho. '$2500 in the treasury. The churches W. C. Clarke of Meacham is here (have made an increase In offerings today. , -for benevolence of more than $10,ou0 . George Peterson is 'in the city from ,ovcr the previous year. Meacham today. - - - I ' . ' F. M. Horner, I'ilot Hook. ls Pen-. Devil Doss IVat Dongliboys. dkton Tisitor today,.6iot'Ping at the i TACOMA, Wash., Nov. 29. Resort- BL George Hotel. . ing mainly to good, old-faahioned E. D. and E. F. Vdrburg.W, C. Ak-piungjnB football, the undefeated tna ThfrtL Graves,' W. A. lawn. Frank ' f.ra Tsland Marines thundered Couch comprised a party from Enter-Through the Camp Lewis eleven in the orlse spending the piKht in Peniile-t-pac(ln,a stadium yesterday for a 15 ton a!s guests at the Hotel St. George. to-0 victory. Although the game was Mr. "and Mrs. A. f. May hae moved bitterly contested, the Marines held to the city tor the winter after hav-jthe upper hand throughout and won Ing been upon their ranch in Cold :strictly on merits. A heavy, plunging Springs section ior some months fast- backfield that ran perfect interfer ed Bentley returned yesterday ence for the man carrying the oval, from a trip to Huntington. 'He ol- ;aiaed by an equally well-balanced line talned his discharge . from railroad j proved too much for the Army contin work and will be in Pendleton per- pent, and, once the '-Devil Dogs" got mamentlv. ' . ', ", . '.'junder way, the soldiers faced the in- Mr. ajid ILrs. C. R. Slaughter of -ievitable defeat. , .' Walla Walla, were Pendleton visitors TROOP LOSS AT SEA LESS T TWO PER CENT TOLL ONLY 2391 OF 21,500,000 Allied Vessels Transport Over 2,000,000 Animals. LONDON, Nov. 29 From the beginning of the war 2t,6t)0.- 00 troops of all the allied na- tlons weer transported by sea, by the allied navies, and only 4,- 891 men or .020 per cent lost at sea. More than 86.000,006 tons of suppliesrere transported for the use of the British naval and military forces and more than 4.000.000 tons additional taken across for other allies. In addition the allied vessels transported more than 2,000,-' 000 animals. Since the beginning of convoys in March. 1917. the sailings of all the addles have totaled 75.- 029 and losses numbered only a few hundred ships despite the frnf hies submarine warfare. The percentage of losses was highest in local Mediterranean traffic. , The British fleet (including auxiliaries) grew front 2.500,- displacement tons of 0.500.- .001) tons during the war. and the personnel bf the British navy ' from 146,00 to 406,000 men. Conkltn, professor of psychology, and the spring term will be devoted to practical advertising under W. F. a. Thaoher, professor of rhetoric. A si milar course In advertising has been offered at the University formerly, but was crowded out for the first term of this year by necessary arrangements for claes accommodations for the S. A. T. C. students. Lieutenant-Colonel Peyton C. March, now chief of stuff of the army, was commanding the regiment. Having licked Germany, the demo cratic ' natons will proceed to feed Germany, instead of adopting the typ ical Junker plan of permitting the conquered to starve to make room a "superior" race. JLaa COU VAX WAY ETS CltOSS. Bravery tn Philippines Klghtocn Years Ago Now Honored. PORTLAND, Nov." 29. Colonel Vun Way, commandunt at Vancouver Barracks, will be decorated with the distinguished service cross this after-' noon by Brigadier-General Plsoue, at the. direction of the secretary of war. The service for which Colonel Van AVOID COUGHS AND COUGHERS Ybtlr health and society demand that you take something for that cbtighi Cbughlng Spreads disease. Good, old, reliable SHILOH Is guar anteed to relieve tlie Worst cotigh In 4 hours. SHILOH Stops Coughs OLD FAVORITE a TONIC LAXATIVE Whrn yftu ict m mbr constlpntlori bothers yoij apd JVveriuh nml out of poHs re that 'old reliable vKtnblo' CELERY KING Is sold In every drug store In the land. It's fine for Indigestion too sad Cor revers and cold. Sumo old remedy that thousands swear by. ,. SOLDIERS TO BE ......... TAUGHT TRADES 50 U. S. INSTRUCTORS BUSY IN BRITAIN Y. M. C. A. Plans to Instruct All Men. in Industries. . yesterday. Mrs. Slaughter will be re membered as Mrs. Gertrude Ferguson. Mr. Slaughter is auditor for the Tum-a-lnm Lumber company. An eminent authority on pumpkin prt-s observes that the pallor recent ly noticeable in the face of the com mercial pie. due. perhaps, to a short ' Mr. and Mrs. E. Eaumister or ape Df molasses sweetening ,1s now De. Asotin, Washington, spent Thanksglv- inK replaced by a healthy brown tint. Ing at the W. L. Thompson home. Thus in one more way Is the world Irs. Thompson is the daughter of Mr. being made safe for democracy. JLatest Picture of Bill-Be-Damned (NOTICE HIS WITHERED ARM) f f 7 ' M , - . 1 , 7 J " , ' v ft PATRIOTIC Have' you put in your winter's fuc!7 ! It t in a DUTY coal To aivoid a repetition of last winter's : ' ' 1 ,;vi.. Shortage, the consumer must put in the fuel now. Let lis quote ybu on S3 LONDON', Nov. 28. Thousands of American , soldiers who hav.e- never had any. trade are going to -have a chance to learn, ohe under the tutel age of T. M. C. A. Instructors before they return to America. It is hoped by this plan that the soldiers, no mat ter what their vocation before- the war, will go back home better equip ped than before they enlisted. Fifty instructors from the United States already are "busy with classes of American soldiers in the United Kingdom and at least fifty more are needed before January 1, 1919. It Is estimated- that for each of the one hundred Y. M. C. A. secretaries en listed in this work five volunteer In structors can be obtained from the ranks of the soldiers. This would give a "faculty" in the British Isles of six hundred men capable of teach ing 10,000 men In actual class work; between 10.000 and 20,000 in corre spondence studies and of giving lec tures every week to from 25,o00: to 50,000 troops. On New Zealand Plan. The work in France is much great er; of course, and there the Y. M. C A. Is receiving the cooperation of the military forces in fitting the Ameri can soldier for a useful occupation when he has finished the Job unjler ( g Generals Focta and Pershing. I This great Y. M. C. A. plan is basea J upon the work the New Zealand Y. M. C. A, has done In England which has challenged - American " amerlcan. American workers have visited the New Zealand camps for convalescent troops In the southeast of England where tne New Siealanders are culti vating Intensively a 40 acre farm anu where the New Zealand troops ar learning td be better farmers than ever. Technical Instruction for American soldiers Is to Include the study of au tomobile gas engines and aircraft en gines; mathematics, from arithmetic to trigonometry; mechanical drawing, agricultural drawing and topographi cal draughting; plan reading and es timating; principles Of mechanics; principles of electricity; arts and crafts; general principles of agricul ture, which will Include model farms and demnostratlon In truck gardening and the 'raising of poultry, hogs, cat tle, etc., with courses In dairying and every other branch of farm work. PHONE 5 ui roughs 121 East Webb and College Streets. we advertise- and offer War .Savings stamps for sale with every " ' purchase ' lies Slippers Ladies Felt House slippers with leather roIpss and VippIs trim med with fur or ribbons, various colors, priced at ....... i . ; n . $1.45 and $1.65 Ladies' Fancy House Slippers with padded soles, in blue, pink and old rose, priced at $1.95 Children's Felt House Slippers trimmed with fur In red colors only, price. $1.25, $1.45 Men's Felt House Slippers with padded or lea ther soles, also felt soles;. . 95c, $1.65 and $1.85 Men's Leather Romeo with kid uppers and leather soles, priced at ............ s . . 4 $2.25 The Hub' 32 Sample Stores. 745 Main St EMERGENCY MEDICINES , From THE PENDLETON CO.:- During Closing Hours This store has four residence phones con nected with store. 464' will 'get one of them for you in; j emer gencies during jlclosihg hours. '. The Pendleton Drug Co. .... ,"" ' g - - Or Other p g Emergency Drugs 4 ., 2 may be had after C:S0 5 i 1 P. M. by calling resi- ! j dence phones y 'A Taltmah ) Co. j ) Leading Drug(lKla. , A 5 3 DENTISTRY Dr. David Bennett Hill Dr. Tom O.Bailey . Iitdd llnlldlns, Pendleton, Ormon- II- i i "in !. (. . - III ! -' - - - i i I i-i 1 ' . i ' i giniiiiiiBiii University to Resume fmiMa in Arlicrlielnir VXIVERSITY OP OREOOX, Kl- gene, No. JS. A profession course In .advertising will be given in the I'ni versity beginning with the second jterm of work opening after Christ mas. For persons who wish to be come professional advertising agents ithe new course will be combined with ' J -""" " ' v T JO j. . THE UNIVERSAL GAR Si I Ei3 m m Portland organ IT affords us a great deal of pleasure to announce that the pro- duction of FORD CARS has been resumed in a limited way, and as soon as possible the factory will release themselves from such war work as they, have undertaken and again concen trate on production of he staple FORD, "The Universal Car." Cars at first will come from the, Detroit factory direct. Within a couple of months the Hand assembling. Jactory.wiilibe in. operation, but it will take four or five months to fully ir.ize and again get back to the quantity production of before the war. ; Z ' "1 0' ' tC.) I'res IU. SerTice.v ? - ' WILLIAM HOHENZOLLERn". This picture, the only one of the former kaiser to reach the United Stales since America entered the war. was rushed from Holland by a special courier. It shows William Hohenzollern as be looks after four years of war his hair entirely gray, his face drawn and thinner, liis face much wrinkled. It also shows, in a remarkable way. his withered arm and deformed left hand never before have these defects ,tMn eeeo ao clearly in a photograph. The picture was taken in the doorway ot one of the M-kaiter toiuar paiaccs, ia a nomeot when was oB bio guard. There's a regular" meal in POST -TOASTIES Mea-ty .Good 1 the Detroit factory to make a just and equitable " J ' distribution it is necessary to have an -idea of each territory's im- ' mediate needs so that shipments may 'come forward. Therefore WE URGE ANY ONE 'DE&IUNG TO OBTAIN A FORD TO PLACE THEIR ORDER WITH v .. v.. US IMMEDIATELY. sU.. - . a ; ' !f-l E 1 ; t: SilVIPSOrJ AUTO COV1PAI3Y Distributors for Umatilla County. PENDLETON, OREGON r". "3 s !iilmtm!i!liHilmiiitt-iii'it,f''!'tM''jti: Pf7ili nhlllUliiUlL.iiiiiiUi.i.i.liilli(itliiiiltii lliilftl itmltMntiiinM!iifH"imt!lt' a!!ill!iilli!liiiil!iiiiiii!!uii:iiiii!ii!. Ill !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!! I!!!!!!!! IHIIimi!nnUlU!iI!IHUnmiUU!HII!!HU!:!n!in3I1!lfU! I!l!!!!!!!i!l!!i!!!l!!!ffl!!!!;!!!!