PAGE NINE TWELVE FAGES DAILY EAST OKEGONIAN. PENDLETON, OKECON. TIIURSDAYJULY 3, 1910. Noted Violinist Coming Ferdinand Fillion Head Concert Company at Chautauqua HJHE general use of Mazola is :: -"A 'E:3 II remarkable: IKllU SALAD 7 L Your can of Mazola give! you a fat for shortening, cake making, deep fat frying, sauteing, And for salad dressings, either mayonnaise, cooked mayonnaise, or French dressing Mazola is matchless. And remember Mazola is equal to for cooking Better thao Olive salads, at half the price of either. Better, more Whole- . some and Economical than lard or compounds. FREE Writ Wonderful Cook Book. to-day (or it. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING CO. P. 0. Bog ISl New York Butter ra rm Mteorl. j Wushln;; Ciirtuuis. Dlsaatiftflpd Householder Do you, .... ... . , , mean to Bay that thi. mMiir meruit-. I VS hpn ,he ,uce curtain, are ready In the arnount of (jaa wa burn? 1 1,0 washed bato a narrow .trip of Cum Collator I will enter Into no '"UBlin along each outer edBo and let controversy, ilr; hut I may say that It remain until the washing and drying tho meter nieasurea the amount of prooeHH ha. been completed, and you rum you will have to pay for. 7ndon will find that your curtain, hang Tlt-Hli. Istruluht and do not sag a. usual. BUCKHECHT Rio. u.s. pat. orw. amy shoe; Fo the man who it on bit feet .11 day . more comfortable thoe wat never made. Hence the widespread popularity of the Bucihicht Army Shoe among business and professional men, sportsmen, outdoor work era, miners, farmers, mechanics, etc. A good, practical Shoe for tf fry Jay wear! Built for comfort and aervice built for youl Remember the name Buckhecht . tamped on every thoe fur your protection. Get pair today ! FOB BALE lit HOXD nnos. JlHsflli rr vav" E3 dm EAST OREGONIAN SPECIAL NEWS OF UMATILLA CO. One of the rare mimical treat, of the coming Chautauqua week win o the appearance here of the FIJllou Concert Party, headed by Ferdinand Fllllon, the famous French vlollulBt. Fern Goltra, lyric soprano, one of the member, of till, splendid company, wa. formerly with the Chicago Grand Opera Co. commence heading his grain soon after July 4th. Mrs. A. Longwell and Mrs. Frank Irvine were l'endleton visitor, on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Brierly of Stanfield. were Echo visitors tho first of the week. It. F. Wiglesworth of Butter creek was an Echo visitor on Tuesday. Mrs. Roy Concer, and Mrs. J. J. Chisholm returned to Pendleton on Monday after visiting relatives at Echo and Butter creek. Charlie Bowman wa. a Pendleton visitor on Monday. Athena Sees Circus; rival of Jake Rooher and Joe Payne Visiting Season Now On Mr. Laken la visiting at the home of - hi. daughter. Mrs. Frank Jackson. and BLACK GUNMETAL, MAHOGANY CALF OR INDIAN TAN CALF BUCKINGHAM & HECHT San F ran cue o (East Oregonlan Special.) ATMKXA. July 3- Mm. Bob v.as an Athena visitor Saturday. JJert Ilamsey spent Saturday Sunday In Athena from Helix. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Clark and fam ily came over from Helix Saturday nlBht. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Clarke and fam ily came over from HeUx Saturday niKht. . Mr. and Mrs. George Chirking and daughters, Lillian and IHanche, ac rumpaliJed by Mm Jako Nelson, at tended tho ChrlHtlan church conven tion in Milton. Mr.. Walter Jtoohcr van a Pendle ton visitor Monday. Mrs. J. H. Mansfield of Walla Walla- Ih visiting at the home of her daughter, Mrs. A, H. Jxtgsden. Mr. and Mrs. Gt-rald Kilgore were up from their Cold Springs ranch. Mrs. M. 1. Watts was up from Port land last week for a few days. Mr. nnd Mrs. Herds, Mrs. Israel passed through Athena Lee Baseball Will Feature Fourth at Umatilla day on their way from Dayton to Kchn shearers. (Kast Oregonian. Special.) I'M ATrLlA, July 3. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Stephens made a business trip to Pendleton last Monday. Bruce Wrlder went to Pendleton to take a physical examination for hos tler at the fmatilla round house. Mrs. E. K. Shaw went to Ban don. Ore., to visit her folks and stay dur ing hot weather. Mrs, Stewart and daughter of Cam hriifffff, Idaho are here visiting Mr. and Mrs. James Atchison and family. Misses Agnes and Lillian Van Nice, are expected to visit relatives here on the Fourth. Two big ball games are expected to be played nt I'matitla during Chan taiKpia week, Hermiston vs. T'matilla, Julv 4. and Heppner vs. ITmatf Ha. Anna July 6. Three weeka ago t'matilla Tues- lst a game to the Heppner sheep Two Umapine Residents ITALY HULL HOUSE LOCATED AT SE2ZE Social Instution Under American Direction, Italian Funds. Hjbrnig.nemi-rosurrenop'sk. a ROMB, July 1. The "Hull House of Italy." emulating Chicago', famous example of social work, has been es- Are New Auto Owners !tabllshed at Seizeva'hick,ypu,ated (East Oregonian Special.) UMAPINE, July 3. Among the new auto owners in the Umapine vi cinity the last two weeks are Kyle; McDanlel with a Dpdge car and Phil Murphy with a new Essex. Gene Labadie has sold' his residence in Walla Walla and has moved onto his ranch near the Walla Walla river on the macadam road. R. K. Brdy is vlsitinry at Athena t this week. Rebekah Kirk and Vera Yox cele 14,000 inhabitants there. Under American direction Sezze has established a settlement house, two or phan asylums for orphans of the war. hospital and a system of visiting nurses. The money has been contrib uted by the inhabitants of the town. 4 All the institutions are being supported jby voluntary contributions. I The new social institutions have been operating under the direction of jMiss Fraser, a former social worker jin Chicago and Cincinnati. Miss Fra ser is an American Red Cross worker. but has called for little in the war of brated their twelfth birthdays on TueKday July 1. by entertaining : their fiancia, support from her organiza- bekah Kirk. The afternoon was a jiajii uiif iinj Jiif, fgn-uics uuu 1110 it fund iresnmenis were or ice cream ana cake. Those Invited were Dottie it- "'" it. i ii 1 F Get Our Big PLAN BOOK Send 6c Today for our Bigr Plan Book Complete plans for a largp niim lor of iiKMlorn, convenient llOlllf!. labor anil money In liullclln? by the- use of ready-cut liiinlx-r. Hlilpixtl llre-t to yon. 1-iieli w or IiiiiiImt ts plainly marked to i-orroMxmd with ll" "il complele ma. UtIbi list, which tell, what each lece Is anil where it tties. Ilulld iM-foro prices en up! We giiaranti-o satlsfecllon and saving. 1MX'T KX I'Kltl.M I:XT buy from too out rennoio concern that has built IiiiikIi-mIs of rcaly-cut homes hi Ore gon. FENNER MANUFACTURING COMPANY ai!.t Ship St., l'orllaiid. Ort'Boli. where they will visit Mr. snd Mrs. U. S. Oleiser. Ed Sebasky. Harry Keller nnd Hel lie Piersol have returned home from service overseas. Bay and Will Shirk of Walla Walla are visiting friends in Athena. The Misses Martha and Ruth Hutt. returned home Monday from Dayton. Tho Sanger Circus was in Athena Monday. v Miss Edna Plnkerton has accepted a position in the St. Nicholas Hotel. . Mr. nnd Mrs. Charles May and chil dren were Athena visitors Tuesday. Mr. Desper, Mrs. Nelson and George T.ieuallen ' were Pendleton visitors Tuesday. Mrs. Minnie De Peat arrived home Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. John Pierre nnd chil dren were in Athena Tuesday from then home on the Umatilla reserva tion. Mrs. Jess Myrlck has gone to Bing ham Springs for a two weeks stny. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Thompson have returned home from Weiser Idaho, Where they have been visiting. Bert Taylor made a business trip to Walla Walla Sunday evening and returned Monday evening. Word has been received of the ar- Misses Kathryn and Feme Steph ens. Mrs. J. J. Cnrtin, Mrs. A. B. Stephens and Mrs. Ann O'Connell toured the Umatilla. Hermiston and Stanfield projects Sunday afternoon. Many Umatilla people attended a picnic given at Stanfield Creamery at Stanfield park last week. C. r. Sutton, who has been In the Portland hospital, is Improving grad ually. He experts to be able to he home about July 12 or 14. He Is now able to sit up slightly on the edge of the bed. Mr. and Mrs. f. C. Burchett have taken over a small restaurant and lunch counter here. Leslie Blakley has resigned his po sition as night agent at Umatilla de pot. Floyd Gentry and Wayne Harbofer leturned from a visit in the Eait Sun day last. Miss From Yakima Is Entertained at Echo 35 A V THRESHERS 9 sizes AVERY THRESHERS have guaranteed for life cylinder teeth. Hyatt roller bearing cylinder and blower ' and a guarantee with each . machine to take 99 9-10 per cent of the grain out of the straw and put it clean in the sack. IKY TRACTORS 7 sizes AVERY TRACTORS come in 7 sizes and 7 patents owned by the Avery Co. Sliding frame transmission which means less parts and less trouble. Round Radiator which lets the exhaust cool the engine. Adjustable Bearings, saves time. Lubrication that is positive. Gasifier, perfect combustion. Removable Cylinder Wall, eco- nomy. Universal Lust, to crip the Luer. to crip ground. F. E. Ranncy, Mgr., American Nationa I Bank Bid?. Stanfield Office, Phone 12F22. Pendleton Phone 318-J I (East Oregonian Special.) ECHO, July 2. Miss Elna Thomp son entertained at an informal tea at her home on Difpont street, on Friday lafternoon In honon of her house guest iMIks Vivian La Praire, of North Yakl ma. Miss La Praire left for her home on Saturday morning. I John Mudge, of Portland is expected 'to arrive on Friday morning to spend the fourth with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Mudge. Earl and Rodney Essolstyn left Mon 'day morning to visit a few. days with .relatives in Walla Wall. ; Mrs. Genevieve Guynne was a Pen dleton visitor on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. L M. Hills and fam ily, left Friday morning for a months outing at Hidaway Springs. They were accompained by the Starkweather fam ily of Stanfield. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Equals, and . children, left Tuesday morning to spend the fourth with relatives ,in Eugene. J. 1 Hoffnagle went to Pendleton on Monday to get some repairs for his header and thrasher. He expects Hoon, Alma Gentry, Christian Wisnor, Christina Lawson, Frankie Hodgen, Gladys Yox. Mearl Yox, Dorothy Kel ly, Francis Fehrnbacher, Agnes and Helen Holm, Florence Rice. Jamie Block, June Carpenter, Fern Tull. Clytie Phillips, Audrey Williams, and Esther Musty. On Thursday, June 26. a baby girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Workman. . Friends of Mrs. Helen Severance and Miss Elizabeth Severance will re gret to learn of the death of their sis ter, Mrs. Theo Woodworth, wife of Lieutenant Woodworth of Berkeley. California. Mrs. Woodworths death followed that of her newly born baby. During the spring months Mrs. Wood worth visited at Umapine with her husband. rxivirusiTY summkr SUHOOIi KXKOILMENT LARGEST IX YEARS UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu gene. July 2. With the heaviest en rollment for three years now regis tered, the university summer session Is now fully under way. The total registration to date Is 257, 70 mors than the total registration for 1918. More than L'OO are also enrolled In Portland and 4 0 registered as spe cial students in the school of music bringing the total to approximately 500. Dr. J. Duncan Spneht 1s drawing good crowds of townspeople as well as students to his daily lectures In VII lard hall in connection with the daily assembly hour. Regular class wrk Is now being conducted. One class convened to find that the only ones registered in that particular subject were Professor C. A. Howard, principal of the Eugene high school, and two of his former pupils. Miss Violet Robinson nnd Miss Beatrice Fralpy. J tion. She has skillfully aroused the j interest of the residents In ber projects they have supported her with money and time in a remarkable ex tent. The hospital has already done enor mous work for the people of the town. In the two orphan asylums are bath rooms, sewing rooms, playground, car" penter shops and machine shops. The boys' institution has a three-acre farm where they attend to the breeding of rabbits, hogs and chickens, and grow all the vegetables used in the Institu tions. The girls are given secial work in embroidering, where they design and make all the linen for the home. NKAV FRENCH TAXES VIRLD $126,000,000 PA RIS. July 3. Xew taxation proposals, estimated to yield nearly r. 50. 000,000 franca (approximately $126,000,000) were presented to the Chamber of Deputies today y Louis Klots, the Minister of Finance. The proposals include an increase In the inheritance tax of 3 per cent on legacies of 10,000 to 50,000 francs and 7 1-2 per cent on legacies of 10, 000.000 francs and upward. Other duties will remain the same, while le gacies under 200 francs will not be taxed. It is proposed that hereditary rights to intestate estates be sup pressed for relatives beyond the fourth degree. The increase In inheritance taes It Is estimated, will yield 95.000, 000 francs. A tax of 5 per cent on Incomes that have increased as compared with 1918, the finance minister said, will yield 100.000,000 francs. The min ister expects that a super-tax of 15 per cent on war profits will bring In 350,000.000 francs. PIRLISIIFD FOUND GUILTY HE1,EXA, Mont., July 1. The jury in the case of R. B. Smith, general manager of the Butte Bulletin a daily newspaper at Butte-, late Saturday aft ernoon found him guilty of sedition and left the penalty to the court. Judge U. Lee Word set next Tuesday morning for pronouncing sentence . Smith, with V F. Dunn and Leo Daly, all connected with the Bulletin, "SEAM SQUIRREL NEW NAME IX) I FAMOUS 'COOTIE' OF A. E. F. PORTLAND, July 3 It took Rev. Charles T. Wheeler of Chicago to bring to the Progressive- Business Business Men's club at the Benson Hotel Thursday afternoon a new nam for tho "army on the army. He brought the name from the front, where he spent many months during tho war. "Seam squirrels," he called them, and "'seam squirrel" hunting for sol diers he described as more of a ne cessity than a sport. Dr. Wheeler pleaded with the cluh men for support of the Salvation Army drive, saying. "The Salvation Army. Not A Blem mars tht perfect Appearance of her com' nlexton. Permanent and temporary skin troubles are effectively concealed. Reduces un natural color and corrects iircasv skins. Hichlv antiscpnc icd with benchciat results as curative agent for 70 years. a-o, a nhari'o.i with t rsfn In I inn in thta count v of a copy of the paper attack-! in its work 1 sacrifice was true to to ling the state council of defense and! home, country and God. You can t do jfined. In August. 1917. Dunn was tried less than support work, 4 St la ygiijWflMi)'' wiTwrmm ims K, w-?4. hi' ' ii ti n'n some months ago, convicted and fined $5000. His npeal is pending in the su preme court. The defense was that Dunn, not Smith, wrote the offensive article and that Smith had not seen it before it appeared In the Bulletin. WAR VETERANS MEET. MALTA. Mont.. July 1. The state convention of World War Veterans opened here yesterday. One of the Important matters booked fur con sideration is the proposal to have the state pay National Guardsmen fur time spent at drilling. A barking dog uccasiooully bites the dust. Dr. Edward T. Devine, rrofessnrof political economy at Columbia univer sity. New York, traced for the bene fit of the same audience the chunKing relations between capital and labor. During the past five years, he said, there has been a vat change In the attitude of employers toward the eight hour day and the 4 four week and In the same period organized la bor has ndded 2.000.000 to its mem bership. J A. It. Gephart. president of the So cial Workers' club, which is conduct ing the social work conference in Portland, presided. Every lime a man's neighbors kick It makes him loia. Diamond Tires Start You with Big Mileage! Fabrics 6,000 Miles Cords 8,000 Miles When you buy a Diamond Tire you can put it right clown in your book that with fair and square usage it will render you 6 000 miles if it's a Fabric, or 8,000 if it's a Cord. That's ths new mileage basis on which Diamond dealers are au thorized to . sell Diamond Tires. The increased ad justment covers all Diamond Tires, old and new, in hands of dealers, or in use on your car. Add this plus ad justment mileage to the prestige Diamonds have already estab lished with users and you will rea lize why it costs you money if you fail to drive Dia mond Tires. Pendleton Rubber & Supply Cd. SOS Rast Court Street Telephone 133 Pvndirtob, Oregoo 3 An