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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1919)
Section Two Pages 7 to 12 Section Two Pages 7 to 1 2 oman i ( : jisrfrx fmuwffkiy a rN,vv u i rr JPLLY EAgI29PNIAN' PENDLETON, OREGON. WEDNESDAY. MAY 21. 1919. $150,000 HOSPITAL WING PROVIDED IN BILL IS VITALLY NEEDED SA YS SUPT. W. D. M'NARY e . ". : : SALEM BADLY With New Wing Constructed State's Insane Patients Could Be More Evenly Di vided. ; ' CEMETERY MEN GET PAY RAISED. STRIKE ENDED Provision for a 1150.000 addftlon to tha Eastern Oregon Slate Hospital here la contained In the 15,000 000 bonding hill which will come before he peoplo June 3. . This addition would form the went wing to the pres ent hospital, and would he similar to the eftt wing, which now stands. Dr. W. D. MeNary, superintendent, soya that the new wing Is made ab solutely necessary hrcauso of the fact that the Hulem Institution is crowd nnd patients are constantly being! moved here. Facilities for houxtng more patients n Katrtcrn Oregon would make It possible to more even ly divide the patlenln between the Palem hospital and the Knstern Ore gon hospital. BAN FltANCIHCO, May 21. The strike members of the Cemetery Workers' Union which haa been In progress for the fust five weeks, end ed when the employers granted the men m demand for a wage Increase from tt tu S a duy. The end of the strike came at a conference In the office of John A. O'Connell, secretary of the San Fran cisco Labor Council, -between O'Con nell and a committee representing the five cemetery associations. j The strike was niarked by three rl- ois, at which several persons were Injured. WHEAT OFFICIALS ASK FOR CHANGES I nlfonn - Cl-riinliijr C'lmr Among Oilier KotJOiiimeiiuaU-ui Former Agrgieoach Will Direct Eleven in Interallied Games Word was received at Portland Monday Unit JoHcph A. IMpal, former foutljall athlftto cMKieh at Oregon Ak- rlcultiirul College and Occidental Col lege of Southern California, haft been ehowen coach of the United Ktutc ar my team which la to uphold tho honor of this country In the inter-allied Kamea at I'urfa during the lutter part Federal grain inspection ruloa now followed by the laws of Oregon, Washington and Idaho, may be changed materially If the plana for mulated at a conference of officials of the three states held yestedday In Portland with the district federal de partment of agriculture, are aproved hy the fwjeretary of the Interior. Local grain men are especially In terested in the proposed change be cause It affects not only the last three states, but In the whole nation The new Idaho law provides that the commissioner of agriculture may make rules on Inspection and grad ing to conform with those of the fed eral government. The law soys that negotiable receipts shall be issued to Tarn. era upon delivery of grain l bonded warehouses, and makes ware houMe nublla utilities. Insurance ! ! lcies will be Issurd with negotiable receipts under the law, giving the re-' They ttt no vt mnnlh c..noh ii..i r..!.ni from Orpmn ! ceipta an Indestructible value, Aitrlculliiral College alout two yearslan oe som in any siaie ior xnm Will I'rooao I try Ijnr ltiti WAHHIXOTON. May 21. Repeat !Ko to become physical director for value of the products they represent of the war-time prohibition law that , tho Younii Men's Christian association I Th secretary or tne interior was Is to become effective July 1 will be at Camp Kenrneyln Southern Call-1 also asked to approve the Harvard proposed In a bill to be Introduced fornla. He went overseas In that ca;Crowe patent grain tester, the Inven- In congress next week by Tteprewnta- poclty a few months Hack, after! tors of which. Hpokane men, were at tive Oalllvan of Massachusetts,- Dem. spending a year In various army the conference. The tester, accord- ocrat. camps. I to conferees, will do the work of The Best Test for Baking Powder Xf you' are using some other baking ftowder be cause it costs less than Royal, get a can of Royal Baking Powder from your grocer, make cake or biscuits with it, and compare them with those made from the cheaper powder. The food will be lighter, of finer flavor and more wholesome when made with Baking Powder Absolutely Pure Made from Cream of Tartar derived from grapes Royal Contains No Alum Leaves No Bitter Taste Piesent official teater and cunts only about one eighth as much. ' Jjfwuring I'nlform. One benefit a state derives from adopting the federal grain Inspection and grading rules is that grain in spec thm and grading ruln Is that grain inspectors who o.uaIify will be li censed by the government and their certification will be good anywhere in the country. If a farmer's product is inspected -and tested In Idaho and shipped to Chleago or Minneapolis or Portland It will not "change Its grade" in transit. The most important change In fefl- erjil rules asked by the conference tsi oho which would cause the negotia ble receipts to cover grading by com posite sample. By this provision a farmer might have hi grain sampled! by the wagon or truck load and all tho samples placed In the tester to gether at the close of the harvest sea son, when the grade of his entire crop would he determined. Irl. Xiwr Variable, A uniform charge for cleaning smut will nlso be asked. At present the charge for cleaning smut, which is done at mills, varies. The conference HHked In its resolutions that a charge of 35 cents a ton on bulk grain and 65 cents a ton on sacked grain be set as the legal price in all parts of the country. Grain inspectors under present fed eral rules, which are being made law by state legislatures, are being re moved from political Influence, ac cording to Miles Cannon of Boise. They must qualify In federal exami nations nd may not be removed from office without proof of sufficient cause. Grain treating In Idaho Is done at the university of Moscow under su pervision of the dean of the experi mental station. State university test In is part of the federal rules. Ore gon and Washington state- rules con They Are Always Grateful ror Cubcura Soap Uecause it means skin and skin health. For shaving, bath ing and shampooing it is wonderful. Its pore -clean sine-, sterilizintr oroo- erties will prove a revelation to those who use it for the first time. Assisted by touches of Cut i cur a Ointment, it does much tn rlcar the skin of pimples, rashes, eczemas and irritations and the scaln of dandruff and itching. r- Coticora Toilet Trio Consisting of Soap. Ointment and Talcum are indispensable adjuncts of the daily loi Jet in maintaining skin purity and skin health. By bringing these delicately medi cated emollients in frequent contact with your skin as in ue for all toilet purpose. VOU kttMl th Klein Bj-atii h,r mnA k. clear, tweet and healthy. The Soap. Oint ment and Talcum 25c. each everywhere. IMVKKKITY IXSTKCCTWt IS OU. TO RI SKI. UNIVERSITY OP OREGON, Eu-J gene. May 21. Miss Gladys Gorman,! instructor In physical training at the t'nlversity, has accepted an offei from the Y. W. O. A. to engage In physical training work In Russia. Due to the political unrest In Russia,, the date of her sailing is indefinite. Miss Gorman, whose home is In Montclalr, New Jersey, came to the university last fall. Phe received her Charles Milne 9 J-.h-clrlc Contractor 1 . Peadli-ton, Ore. " " T L'111 -'I'jL 1111n11m111.su .iifcsWHWai try-mi- MMir jsSs" tJIS;- ' 1 , L-mm..itiA.,i .11. , i i i-,...-, .... u m J I . fs .1 i fat , 5' 7 m to?' yj (if BETTER AND i. SOFTER LIGHT la asm u red by the see of of tbese beautiful fixtures of ours. They give a light Illuminates the room perfectly,, but tba does not tire or strsJ the eyes. They a aot oap stve eoastdertns taetr extra otV flcleocy ud ertrm beaaty. Wsl aot at least see Utesat J. L. VAUGDAN IB. A. at Wellesley college In 1914 and form in nearly all respects with tn jgrauated from the hygiene and physl- natlonal rules. : col education department at Welles- The ""conference sought approval by;iey In 1915, federal department heads of the plan to guarantee -negotiable receipts by Insurance and bond of the warehouses. Oregon I At footed. The change In federal rules will af fect Oregon as well as Washington. Idaho and other states. Miles Cannon, Idaho state commis sioner of a-grlculture. called the meet. in In order to pave the way for ben ef:ts under the new .bonded ware house act. which goes Into effect la that state July I. Shipments of grain from one state to another wfll not "cause its gradeto change." when the rules have been harmonized, Mr. Can non said. Both Oregon and Washing ton already have bonded waresouses nnd settled grading rules. Negotia blereeetpts are Issued to the farmer who sells his gra:n to the bonded ele vator. The receipt represents the grnln In much the same manner that a deed represents a house, nnd may be sold anywhere at the full value of ths grain- but expects to return to the campuSl was the punishment for the ' kaiser She has had charge of next fall. Miss Tirza, linsdaleF cam-j recommended here Monday by Dr summer camps In New Hampshire; pus Y-. W, C. A. secretary, and Vermont and has done physical April for Prance. education work In other colleges, sum- mer schools and private schools. jUrE IMP15ISOVMKXT FOR Miss Gorman is the third woman to j - KX-KAISK16 SI GOE8TED leave the campus ror overseas x. w. C. A. work. Miss Elizabeth Fox, for. sailed in Henry Van Dyke, former minister to Holland. "A sentence of death only would satisfy the demands of jus tice." said Van Dyke. "But .life- Im prisonment would afford opportunity - - j ror tne effect of ine sentence to lm CHICAGO, May 51. The death sen- press itself on what conscience Is left mer dean of women, is now in Franca. I tence, commuted to life imprisonment j in the culprits of his murder clique.? Sacred Harmony, "There may be union sacree, or sacred harmony, In the Reichstag." said Senator Vardaman, "but when a minority Socialist talks to a Panger man, or when a Catholic Centrist talks to a Conservative, the dialogue re minds me of Mrs. Fpink. 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