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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1919)
5 frff- DAILY EAST jOREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, 'MONDAY, JANUARY in, 1010. EIGTTT PAGE?? ' rAOE SIS GLAD 'TO SNK WOMAN AND BABIES" SAYS HUN n .ah s. 1 1 a 1 iv 11 1 lui wi ,i w:? 1 -H '' Mr. unit Mrs. H. S Kudd have been Ireland 1h the widow of Elmnn Inion a business vMI. "tnloy'ln a vIMt from Mr. and Mrs. (man, a. wrnllhy contractor who mads) Mr. and Mrs. Frank KllHan aro In T. dram r I'ortland who arrived htn home In this city for a ntimbeTr of j Pendleton today from Spokane. Katurdar' moraine fr the week end. years previous to his death. Since, that: Mr. nnd Mrs. 1!. I. Keator motored kMr. Oram 1h iendinir today In 1a time Mrs.- Ireland has been llvlngai; over to Walla Walla today. They "will Wtainilu but will Join his wife here to-j 135 Thorn avenue, near the home'ofj return this evening. He la & brother at Mrs. ner nephew. Attorney s, n. iviiiK. A. i. "". -. " jA. Kmg, cashl.-r of the Farmers' Sivj Palmer, and S. Harrison are Portland , j ings hank. Is also a nennew. " iwotu "" . ruuirum. - J it,.,,. ireinnd was for many yearel J- p- Thompson, prominent stock- Friends of Mrs. J. F. Uol.lnson are ;conm,ct)fl wilh th x,etro,,0n,a n. mn of Gibbon is a business visitor in ruicintr in ner r.-.i..o , u.u ... i -- walla md J'enmeion toaay tmwrdw. Hnild. - at present Is in charge of the business where she has undergone successful .wnir . , Tt that company in Pendleton. He Mrs. Kob.nson arrived home V -j Jn hav flay and her condrtlon Is much lm-j secretary of the proved. Hhe expect, to Artisans, and having- held Important Portland ?n VK,ut month to have offipps , ,he tM Fellows, both In classes fitted and that she can then , WaUa lendleton Mr . enjoy rood use of her eyes is declared , Mrjt ltvhmi ,eft t, (h6 , m Q .w a certainty. j frtr iendleton, where they will occupy i furnished apartments for the winter. The following Item appearing In ' Mrs. Ireland has leased her home fur vesterdav s Walla Walla Union tells of , nished with the probability of a return the marrtase of Rev. J. K. Ireland, jto this city to reside. 1'endleton Insurance man and lodge "' worker., to a well known matron of! Henry Dixon Jones and Lieu- Walla Walla- 'tenant and Mrs. Harold Warner are Mrs, Laura A. lnman and Rev. J, kxefted, -ive Wednesday from K. Ireland were married yesterday at f """ .-. " " mi' IhA nnat f. u- mnniha ,v K U T .ian one o'clock sharp by ur. jewett f Pray of the Marvin M. B. church, at ,he home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles SprlnRer. 605 Division street. The wedding was a very quiet one. those present at the ceremony beside the contracting parties being Dr. Pray. Mrs. Ellen Whitley and Mr. and Mrs, Charles Springer. An elaborate wed artlnr dinner was served by Mrs. Spring er Immediately following the cere-1 . mony. ! Rev. and Mrs. Ireland are both ".very well known in Walla Walla, Mrs. ing the past few months while Lieu tenant Warner was. stationed In the offices of the spruce production divis ion of the army. He lias recently re ceived his discharge from service. Mrs. Frank Frailer, who left Sat urday evening for La Grande, plans to visit there with her sister. Mrs. Jasper Stevens and her father, "Uncle" George Webb, during the next two or i three weeks. Miss Marjory Williams, nurse at St. Anthony's hospital, returned 1 last liiuht from a visit to I'ortland. U. C. "Wilson Is here for tho day from I'ortland. Mr. Wilson Is claim agent for the O W. Co. Charles Alspath, M. IX Smith, M. Z. Morrison formed a party of Helix ci tizens in Pendleton today. Mrs. Homer Kendall and Mrs. Ker-: ley were Pendleton visitors today from gelix. Frank Saling -left this morning on No. S for Buker where he will be for a few days looking after business In terests. H. L. Frazier. former county com missioner, and T. C. Frazier, both of Milton are transacting business' in Pendleton today. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Judd have re turned from a short motor trip to Walla Walla whore they enjoyed the appearance at the Keylor Grand the atre of '.'Daddy Longlegs." Mrs. Jesse Sating has returned from Milton accompanied by her daughter Miss Edna Saling, who has recovered ' from a recent attack of influenza, and by -Miss Felissa Dickerson a special teacher at Columbia . College where Miss Saling has been a student. Miss ! Dickerson's home is jn Richmond, i Virginia. j - WEN'S h - : FINE ljjj ' ON .SALE AT 11 Voxuig Men's ! Men's, ltctrularK. Stouts and Lungs .lllue Serges included. Wonderful values to $35.00. Guaranteed all-wool fabrics. ilncst rkniaiif-liii. Alt-ra(ioiiH IVce. " Huh' Marts Monday. Jan. Ijids (Saturday niijlit, Jan. lSth. BOND BROTHERS IVndlcton's lx-Jln C'lolliK'rs Motor parties from Pendleton to Walla Walla attracted by the concert thfcre of Mine. Pchumnnn-Heink at the Keylor Grand this evening? include a Kroup composed of Mr. and Mrs. Tul- QIDrjE J fj? A T?IPJf lock. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Rinehart. Mr. ! IvIIC nCiiHAiiVU and Mrs. H. S. Rudd, their houseguest Mrs. S. T. Gram (Portland), Kenneth Tullock and Claude Snow, while a party in the F. I Ingram ear will in clude Dr. and Mrs. Ingram, Mr. and Mrs. R. Sim is. Mrs. Geoire yaslett. and Mrs. Fugit; and Mrs. Claud Hampton will drive another car. the party including' also Mrs. I D. Idle man, Mrs. William Gultiford, Mrs. Carl Stamey, Miss Helen Idleman and Miss Gladys Bed well. A number of other parties will doubtless be formed for the attraction. THIS AFTERNOON Si:Y YORK, ?un. 13. ClnUr iiiiui Taft of the war lubor board today aniioiimiHl a coniniittcp of four will meet late tltis afternoon Ut licud evidence In tlic wages and lionrs dispute lictwecn New York harNr boat owners and marine workers- Mrs. R. J. Woodjs is in the city to day from Koi8e Idaho. J. H. Stanton is a business visitor here from Portland. Earl Lynn, of Spokane, is in the city todav. rtf urwl fi-tt V V. r.l ff Tnonmn 1 ; Washington, are in the city today. ' J.. H. Caridye Is here today from Portland. Fred W. Lnmpkin is a visitor in Walla Walla today. H. Cronin Is in Pendleton today, , stopping at the Hotel t. Georere- P. J. Notion of Echo is spending the dav at the ft. George. Edron Cornfield is spending the day' ' in Pendleton from Echo. I C. Mollsteet Is in Pendleton today from Juniper. Mayor Gray of Helix transacted bus iness in Pendleton today. 1 ' James Rlngle of La Crosse, is in Pendleton today on his way to Helix BULLET HITS PADEREWSKI, 20 ARRESTED FOOT POWER LATHE , FOR SALE Just the thing for farm work. Good for turning Iron, brass or wood. Price very reasonable. THIN, IRRITABLE CHILD Gulncd T1e 1 1. Strciurth and Good Xature by Taking- Vinol. Middleton, Conn. "j used Vlnoi for my little girl 5 years old for a run-down, nervous condlton. She was thin, irritable all the time ana had no appetite. In a week I no ticed an Improvement and now she has a good appetite, has gained In flesh and utreogth and is much pleas anter to live with." Mrs. C. B. Wil kinson. ' There Is no secret about Vlnol. Tt owes Its success In such cases to beef and cod liver peptones, irn and manganese -peptonates and Klycero. phosphates, the oldent and mwt fa mouB body-building tonics known. Koeppns Drug Store and Druggists Everywhere. " , I- S. -Our axI J-'alve PtojB itching and begins healing at once. CEXCT'A, ami. 13. tenure Pader ewnkt was slightly wounded wlien sev eral shots were fired Into his hotel room at Warsaw, it is reported today. Twenty boli-lievikiM are said Ut have lcxn arreted connected with the sltooting. ATTORNEY GENERAL WILL RETIRE FROM CABINET MARCH 4 723 Cottonwood St. BOSTON Restaurant I7 Main filrM-t Meals At All Hours MAY AMI MtillT " Regular Meals 30c M-l Ti-att! 21 Mnl for So.oo Highest cash price paid for chickens . and fresh eg:gs. KXG YUKE, Prop. l irt (law Kt ttf ratrr in ll'P Wim-WUibiiwm. ELY'S SELF - RISING PASTRY FLOUR No' More Substitutes, Better Than Ever. TRY IT FWlt THIS CAKE 1 cups BLY'8 SclNRising Pastry FlOUT, 'A cup Bhortenint;. 2 egcn, t cup sugar, little ov?r of water or milk; bake' in a medium oven. Use any cake recipe, use less eK(?s and shortening and NO SALT, SODA Olt BAKING I'OWpEK. Tr' It for UuiCuits, the lest you ever ate. Try ft for TIoleke. you never , tasted anything like it. Also for baffles, or any kind of Hotbreads. Bly's Prepared Dietary Flour. ' Bly's Dietary Mush. Blv's Special Graham Flour Ely 's Farina. st Your Grocer. Static by Bljnsleln X Co. Pendleton, Ovegon VA SH I XGTO .V, J;i n. 13 . A 1 1 or ney General Thomas W. Gregory has tendered his resignation to take effect on March 4. President Wilson haa ac cepted the resignation and will an nounce Mr. Gregory's successor soon after his return from abroad. Mr. Gregory sent hi resignation to the president last Thursday, tho presi dent's acceptance being sent to the United States Friday. It is understood that Mr. Gregory" action was decided upon at a confer ence -between himself and tho presi dent shortly before the latter went abroad. "in his letter of resignation, Mr. Gregory says that for pecuniary rea sons it is essential that he leave the public service- Ajso for some month i"r. ;re?orys noaun nas nut ocen o tho best. ' Assistant May Suocfed. (; Already there is considerable specu lation as to his successor. Many namot are being mentioned, chief among r them being Saniunt ,T. Graham of ; I'lttsburg, one of the five assistant at torneys general who have been in i trusted In large measure with admln 1 Istrative functions In the department i of justice, j In Mine quarters tier the predic tion rs made that other memhers of the cabinet may resign and resume : more remunerative careers In civil Ufa The cabinet members received only ! f 12.000 a year and when the social j til-ties of a cabinet member are com I P'fed with he finds It no simple mat ! ter to meet the expenses necessary to ! position In official life in Washington. In Ir. Gregory's letter of reslgna j 'Jon he says: ... , ) "Xo man ever served a leader who i v, as more uniformly considerate, mors i kindly helpful -and more generously I appreviatlve. No Subordinate was ; 'ever more deeply grateful for the ' riumberb'KS friendly words and Acts of his superior." Wilson rays Wuh Tribute The reply of President Wilson, writ ten m Paris. January 10. declares: i 5 t Is with profound reluctance and ! gT. rerret thut T aceept your resignation. I do so only because you have con- vind rne that It Is necessary In yoiifjp?;. own Interest for you to retire. There j ha been no one with whom I havei been associated In Washington whom T have learned more to trust nor to wbo-t conn' f have attached more valno and Importance. J "My tet w ish es not o n 1 y. but m y I nf fecttonnte friendHlilp will follow 1 E you into r-liremerit, and I hope with g-.-:ili my hart that in sme w;iy and at Z - liiw tiin I shall againr fefjvt the I r iv i I ? untl benefit ft Ih'Iiiic asmo- by hdwin iit:M-isaim (United "press Staff Correspondent.) If A RWFtMt, Kng., fec. 18. (Ily mall.) What 'I. md of fellows persnn- Hy arc 'these 'German subinarlnot ftttilnrs they who used to go about! sinking passenger and hospital ships1 Ijwlthout warning? J This Is a question every American! has asked himself at some time. j From a Iliitlsh launch today T saw hundreds of them standing In gro- testme groups on the XT-boats' decks tumbling from the submarine Into the launch, and leaning with their kits aaj the launch hurried them back to theirj transport and I talked personally 1 with dozens of them. The first personal impression as your launch draws up beside a sub marine Is the boyishness of the faces before you. Many seemed from 15 to 16. Several admitted they were IS, on 17. Faces Ohsoltito Musk. The, next. Is the remarkable ejepres slonlessness! of their features. Yon had expected to find sullennoss, -or dejection, or ppite- Instead you find yourself looking into a, group of absolute-masks, 'registering neither joy nor sorrow, relief or strain, pleasure nor hate absolutely nothing giving the faintest hint e to what Is going on behind. You never realized before the capacity of the German physiog nomy to conceal feeling. ' You came to find desperate men. You found strange-looking boys, in grotesque nondescript uniforms. Some wore -the conventional gray ish jacket worn by locomotive and stationary englnemen in the States. Others combined the regular blue iacloet- of the German navy with ft pair of olive khaki trousers. Still others had their engineer's jacket rtver an ordinary dark brown or black pair . of civilian's trousers. All had the little round b!ue cap of the Gor man Jackie. As the crew swarmed off tho sub marine into the launch-It became ap parent all were not boys. Here andj there was a man of 30, bristling in a four or five days growth of whiskers.! Here was a chap of 26, rooking as if j he had just come out of a machine- i shop, I Once aboard, the masks dropped! from their fiices, and I was soon sur-j rounded by a ring of eager, smiling j German boys, with fat cheeks and friendly blue eyes, all trying to answer: all questions at nce. , ' The element jsf bitterness seemed to: b; gone from the sltuaUon front their point of view. Tho surrender had "wiped that out," And- now they wanted to begin over wffaln and be friends, - They know nothing, of the traditions of the sea. Several years ago they had never seen suit water. Which prolably partly explains the absence of depression. They were not so much concerned with tho fact that the German navy had been tho -first navy in histbry to deliver Itself Almost intact to an enemy in surrender; as they were concerned that this was the final act necessary to end the war. Occasionally, of course, a sober face told a different story. It seemed such an incongruous pic turethat of these youngsters scur rying down the steel ladders, snapplnji shut the hatches and rushing to the torpedo tonnes to commit murder. of the worst kind. Standing there right at your elbow, they looked so harm less. ' t ; Officers lirfornt. j The off leers. however, "were of a: different 'stamp. There was one In particular, a 20-yearold lieutenant, j from Hanover. He was a fine looking chap, light hair, clean features, friend ! ly blue eyes nd an easy smile -which served to accentuate the perversion and bitterness of his point of view- How incredible it sounded when he replied, with a smile, "Certainly, sub marine commanders willingly carried out orders to sink passenger ships with women and children aboard. They were glad to do It. That is war!" It seemed so incredible, from a fel low like this, I asked him to repeat. He said the . same thing over again slowly with the same smile. andj seemed to see nothing odd In It- He rather appeared a bit amused that thoj question should arise. 1 There were Very few officers, how-! ever. Most of the captains and lieu-1 tenants had preferred to let their sub-i ordinals do the surrendering. More than one Ubont was surrendered by a petty officer,, or a Junior grade lieutenant. Kven if a newspaper's columns ad mitted such matter, it would not PAY a merchant In this city to publish a misleading vf vertlsement. 'JrT (fact. It would be an ''attempt at suicide," in a business way. Somebody1 asks how o clean Ivory. In many Instances a good shampoo Is best. Flavor x$r0 m J LOOKforthe sealed achae. but have eye out also for the name That name Is your pro tection zaalnst Inferior Imitations. Just as the sealed package is pro tection against impurity. The Createst Name tn Goody-Land mm. That Advertiser-- It Is Important to tlie Hi; Should Be a Good But It Is Also Very -Important to His Patrons That He Should Be! A' 1 j. . ... 1 , ' . . .!! S U u - i ' I ; 11 j T HE BUYING PUBLIC has a disfinct in tcrcst in whatever or not a merchant ad vertises. "-f-.tr''. For it is an economic truth that only the mer chant who advertises can afford to offer actual values to make price-concessions that are re ally competitive to do business on the smallest possible pcr-sale profit. The buying public has come to know this to know that the buyer has a direct interest in the question of whether the seller advertises. The buying public has tome to know that the buyer pays the penalty of patronizing the non progressive store, where small volume of sales makes large per-sale profits. inevitable. - It-has come, therefore, to be a matter of per sonal interest to a prospective buyer as to whe ther he or she is dealing with a progressive or with a non-progressive merchant. This per sonal interest is a purse-interest; and therefore comes nearer home than the mere matter of pride in preferring to by at a LIVE STORE. Although that sort of pride, somewhat gener ally held by the people of a city, is what makes the town worth living, in worth doing business in worth believing in 1. I - ' ' I -i . ; " : hi ' 'i'. 'n : ' ( : i ' ! ' I j " I j ; "j . 1: I II i fi 1 m - - - - -III;:", llliiliiiil "liliillillSilliiiiii!;:!!1!!!!!!!!!;!!!!- l!l!irit:NMl!!i"U"'"JM:,IWI'!MHIjH"l !' t:.'ii-ii;HMiMiniim.itMtiMt r-';;.'; 'riun-ii n- i n i n - i " . . I'.i.t i-im.i..i n. i,HI4MMij 1 h i;. t!ii,iii!im;ir!iiu,;i:iiH!Mumi r llOiirHiiSii.ii'i'lSi:!! i!i;i!l!!iiil!iillllli!llllll!lil!llliiilii in - r- Elia - r;i1 - ?K3 iiillii Ill IlillilillilllllliliiiillillillllilillllllliilW