East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, August 11, 1919, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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TWELVE PAGES,
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST If, ,1919.
rAurc Four?
BIGGEST AND LITTLEST GIANTS
MAIL ORDFMS SENT POSTPAID
i - . .
;
1
Putllah4 Dally and Semi-Weekly,
prnnluni, Orison by tha
EAST ORKUONIA I I Ht.lSHlNfl CX
r.ntrtHi at th toi'ric t Pa die
ton, Orcoa, a second-class mall
matter.
AM INTMCrENDKNT NRWSPAPER. ,
Bt.'nscntvTioN pates
"4
ilN ADVANCE)
Telephone
Dally, c.e year, by
- Daily, alT month by niall...
1 1 Daily, three months by mall.
..5.0
fiNl SAI.R IV OT1IFR CITIES.
Jrrtrial Hotl NVwl Stand. Portland
fjowman Nrwa Co., Portland. Oregon
OS FILE AT
Chicago Bureau, DO Security Build-in.
Washington. D. C Bureau Ml Four- S.mi-vk!y,
Inntli Street. N. W.
1.11
Pally, one month by mail ...., .50
Daliv. dm -ear bv carrier .. ?.fio
Daily, aix niontha by arrlf , ,,, $.?sj
n&lly, three mooUil by carrier.... 1.95
Daily, one month, by carrier..- .65
Sonil-Weekly, one year, by matt.... 1.60
six months, by mall .75
I Semi-Weekly, four month by mail' .60
:
':
'
T
NO TR1IHTE.
county commissioners delibe
rated for a month before mak-
wiih any groans of mine, sumea mat, mev arrwi on tne
Nor dim with shadows of despair lead of other counties. On the
The find sun' golden shine.
I shall not add a note of woe
To any stormy dny,
Bui rather seek with laughter's
Clow
To drive th storm away.
So whotsoe'er the weather he,
Clear day or dark with rain.
Old Master Oare will ask of
me
A tribute all In vain.
(other hand, a graduated scale
J of increases, based on responsi
, l bility, nature and hours of work
land personal qualifications
(would have suited the petition
ers better.
SHOES.
American Ace Will '
Train Air Force For
Army of Bolivians
WASHINGTON, AuR. 11. Capt.
Donald Hudson, formerly a member
w
HITTIEIVS famous lines:
jnf the famous First Pursuit Group
of the American Expeditionary Forces
; In LVinoA hno Kuan AmnlAVavl V Tti.
'Blessings on thee, little livia to organize and instruct a flying:
man; barefoot boy With001"!1 ,n ita army. It was said here
today that liouvia naa aeciaed to on-
face of tan," may soon be para
phrased to fit the grown men,
and women too., Bare feet,
which have since time immem
orial been a luxury for the
small boy, may soon be a neces
sity for small boy and his pa
rents, with the price of leather
going as it is, up, up and up. .
Shoe manufacturers do not
blush when they tell us that
IOOt wear tui.S Winter Will, cost German planes in fiva minutes and
from $ 16 to $20 for the article 'where Miss Livingston was a nurses'
wftich now costs from $10 to 12 1
ana two years ago cost half
those sums. It is not the stock
raiser who is responsible, for
he sells a hide at half what a
pair of shoes costs today.
Tanners, packers and leather
good3 middlemen are doing
HFTFXTIVE PI.AYS ITUEST
NEW YORK. Auff.,11. Meier Stein-
brink, acting as his own attorney in an
action which he has beRim to have the
license of William J. Burns intorna-
their share to run lin th nrirpa tional detective agency revoked, nsk
tnin Instruction for its army by dis
charged American officers.
Before the European, war tho Bo
livian and most other South Ameri
can armies were trained largely after
German methods.
Capt. Hudson, who formerly lived
in Kansas City, was nuirried to Miss
Lorraine .Livingston, daughter or Mr.
and Mrs. John B. Livingston, 40
Kingsbury place, July 5. They met
in France, where Capt. Hudson won
his title as an "ace by downing three
He is 25 years old. His Parents Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Hudson, reside in
Washington, D. C. , , . ' .
of shoes. The manufacturer
adds the finishing touches and
then the shoe dealers, middle
man and retailer, have their
profit to add, which makes a
shoe increase some " little bit
from the time the hide leaves Ither.
the far muntil it 18 fitted on a ' "I did not know about it until later
nair nf feet in the form nf and then 1 sent a telegram to tne wen
shoes.
ed Mr. Burns in a hearing before Wil
liam Broadman, Deputy State Control
ler, If he knew that one of his opera
tives in Denver. Cal., has disguised
himself as a priest in an e.ffort to ob
tain a confession from an ill man,
which might free another who stood
accused of murdering his wealthy fa-
condemning it," Mr.
;ver manager
'. Local dealers Will tell you Replying- to other questions. Mr.
that advance Orders are Costing jums declared he did not permit his
them as much as they are now .operatives to get a man n"!t'ed
able to sell goods in ' their S-TS.
Stocks. SODie , Of the more :not object to an operative drinking at
shrewd persons will see the in-ja bar.
evitable and step in ahead ot
the hieher prices. With calf-
1
N'
John McGraw always gathers about him an aggregation of
giants to make up the team known throughout the baseball world
as the 'Giants.' He doeent pick runts. Bennie Kauft Is about the
nearest thing to a ru Muggsy has had recently, Bennie U Ave,
feet seven and a half Inches and weighs 160. Shuffling Phil
Douglas, latest acquisition vis the Cut) route, stands six feet, four
and a halt and weighs close to 215. Jack Dempsey, our leading
heavyweight, would be a kid m the Giant ranks. The outfit looks
like one of those old fashioned football machines from Noire-Dame.
THE FUNNYBONE
FLAG SINKS LOW III
GERMAN ESTIMATION
Not Enough New Banners
Made to ;s Supply Public
Buildings of Berlin.'
How Anont It?
At a recent meeting of the Lowell
centenary in Cambridge, Prof; William
li. Thayer told this one:
. "At the time Cornell university was
founded, there was bitter rivalry Be
tween Ithaca and Ovid as to which
would secure the college. Finally Ith
aca won out and later, as a sop to BERLIN, Aug. 11. Symbolic of
Ovid's injured feelings, she was given Germany' low-sunk ' state, the flag
an insane asylum. . ! means, absolutely nothing to the av.
For a time every one was satisfied ierage German today. ' Germany is
but at length the good people of Ovid virtually a nation without flag as far
began to wonder. If, after all, they still ias patriotic sentiments attaching to the
did not have the worst of it. , 'national colors are concerned. This
"Finally, at a mass meeting, ona old iv.Ss curiously shown whon the Govern-
gentleman voiced the growing feeling intent decreed that flags should be
skins being bought from the
stock raisers for 80 cents a
pound, th possibility of the
coming prices being sky high
looks certain.
r D DRESSING a
5L mg of Government em
ployees on the subject of
the League of Nations, Frank
lin K.Lane, Secretary of the in
Tt a Massacre
"I was a-layin' down behind the
breastworks one day." said the veteran
prevaricator, "a-firin' at the henemy
ian" a-'ittin of 'em Bevery time. ,
i'eara the patter of a. 'orse's 'oofs be-ind
!me. Then a voice said:
I "Hi, there, you with the deadly
lT,!m! Jist come 'ere half a mo!"
ri.fi THFY RE CHEATED? ! "I turned round an' salooted an
CA . TH t,HtA'L"t who should It be but the general. -E
mass-meet-, .' J !1 T
(IV O juut '
"Logan, general." sez I
"Your first name?" sez 'e.
Dan. sir." sez T'Dan Logan."
Well, Dan" sez 'e, "go 'ome. You're
men Tt. don't seem
terior; expressed the belief that '
hardly fair. It's niassycre, that' wot
"never before have SO many Of is. An' look 'ere. Dan. don't call me
in the community when he said:
"I been figgering this thing out and
I've decided that one college is as good
as at least two insane asylums."
Ovblous Enoush
the SO-Called Wise men Of many j general-call me Herbert,'
nations and so many of the peo
ple behind them unifed in favor
of any one thing." , '
This statement can hardly be
challenged outside of . certain
groups in the United States Se
nate and certain reactionary
supporters of these groups.
Year after year the embattled
peoples of the world were told
that this was a war to end war
and that the League of Nations
ta he the means of fulfill
ing the pledge. It. was only
after the war was won and the
cause was gained that politi
cians began to insist that the
u nri.l must co back to the old
kind of international relations
and the old order of diplomacy
whose breakdown had all but
destroyed civilization itself.
There can be no doubt that
atatPHmen and more peo-
io unreservedly in favor
of this League of Nations than
ever before supported any
other undertaking in human
Viw , The nuestion now IS
...i.niv. .Vipv ran be cheated
Aafrnuripri 1)V a BTOUD of
cnoinr in-Vin are Dlaving ward
litirna with the destinies of
mankind. New York World.
GIRL?
WILSON'S PHONE
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F istti'
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raised on Berlin's public buildings to
celebrate the adoption of the Constitu
tion, It was the first time Berlin offi
cially flagged since the -'last military
victory. The black, red and gold flag
msnrlhfiH hv tha new Pnnalitntlnn
A young lawyer whose love of flow- wa3 rnjSe(i on the r.elchstag. the Chart
ers and all things green caused him to,cenOI..s paiace and the Foreign Office,
settle down in a distant suburb Invited fbut tt developed that not enough new
his old friend to spend the week end jfiugs had been manufactured to go
with hm. around, so that many public buildings
Brown was received with appro- were forced to raisevthe old Prussian
priate honor and all the attractions fafr of the black eagle, on a white
were displayed to his polite but not ground, with an iron cross in the tip
overkeen gaze. - jper corner, hile the Republican
At each meal he listened courteously , troops were entirely tmsupplied with
to eulogies of "our own make" viands. jnew colors.
He bore patiently "our own milk," J a correspondent recently saw troops
'lettuce from that frame you saw," parading around Berlin with the old
"peas from the vegetable garden" and. imperial flag of black, white and red.
so on. But at last it got to this: '. : Nobody seemed to give a rap about the
"Harry, I can recommend this chic- new flag fiasco,
ken especially. I raised it myself." . . . '. ''
Then the VctJm J",!" 'IT, .11 ! Four Canaries Are
Iirsi niommui ut uuvmii, ......
sad smile, remarked:
"No, Will. I can't -believe , mat.
You've only been here a little over
two years." . V '
No Exchange
. No Rcjundt
cd&j (so.
9 f
l PORTLAND. OREGON
NoX. o. d:,
Without Dtpout
7 Facts Worth Remembering About the
Annual Suiiniier Sale
" ... i . , .
of Liebes FURS
t. Not clearance of fur ; Ine vast majority i
of the fur on tale are in ityle authentically '
correct for next fall and winter.
2. All the fun are of 11. ' Licbei tt Co. ex
quisite quality and beauty. -
3. Furrier are pavinfi 75 per cent to 100 per
cent more for raw pelti than they did last year.
Soon retail fur price mutt take a very large .
advance. you, ait you will have lo pay
more much more for your furs.
, 4. 'Thit tale offert the bett fur-buying oppor
lunitiet that will come lo you during 1919;
5. By paying a tmall Jepotil'. you may reserve
any tale fur for delivery in, October. Fun
to reterved will be kept in, our Cold Storage
Vaults without charge. t .)f
6. - Those who make their selection now, during
the early days of the tale, will have the-advantage
of selecting from undiminished assortments.
7. Our entire stock of made-up fun u on sale at
20? to 50 Off .
. - , -OUR REGULAR PRICES .. . . f
Here Arm a Few of the T houianjo of Furt on Sml
Scarfs; Throws, Capes, Coatees and Goats'
Natural and Taupe Marmot Coats
Prices after August. . . ... $1 70 to $265
Sale prices ....... $136 to $212
$225 Nutria and Hudson Seal' Nov
elty Set ....$115.00
$150 Kolinsky Neckpiece and Muff
(Set)... .... $75.00
Squirrel Neckpieces .,.
Prices after August $25 to $250
Sale prices .$20 to $200
$75 Mole and Skunk Cape, Collar
and Muff (Set)..... $45.00
$75 Fitch Cape Collar $37.50
$85 Kolinsky and Ermine Collarette. .$45.00
Hudson Seal Coatees , ; ;
" Prices after August. . . . $200 to $525.00
v Sale prices. . . . $150 to $393.75
$350 Leopard Boblty Coat (Trimmed
Hudson Seal). ....$215.00
$35 Hudson Seal and Georgette
Cape .-. $17.50
$35 Kolinsky and Georgette Cape... $17.50
Black, Taupe and Blue Lynx Scarfs
Prices after August. .....,. $25 to $215
Sale prices ; $20 to $172
$65 Leopard and. Hudson Seal Nov
elty Scarf $35.00
$35 Civet and Sealine Neckpiece ...$ 1 7.50
Taupe and Silver Coney Scarfs
V. Prices after August,. . . . $7.25 to $37.50
Sale prices $5.85 to $35.00
$45 Hudson Seal and Ermine .Cape .
Collar.... $22.50
$50 Civet Skunk Throw Scarf, ... . .$27.50
Fox Scarfs of all kinds'; Wolf Scarfs in every wanted shade; Lynx Scarfs. Mink? Marten and
Sable. Small Animal Neckwear: Stoles, Coatees, Capes and Coats in fall stylet included in the sale.
ever is not forbidden by law may
legally- be done. Although- the law
states that the passing driver must
sound his horn, it does not state that
one atitoy ma not pass another with
out' giving warning. - The point wa
sufficient to halt the case. ' . .
did not comply. He secured a nag con-'
tainittg $140 and escaped. ,r ;
Food for Soviets From
American Ships is Big
Surprise to Officials
GIRL CASHTFn TtfmnKTI
AT TIISEATRK WIVOOW
8 TC ASIDE. Ore., Aug. 11. While
hundreds ot persons strolled on the
main street here Wednesday night .
robber appeared at the box office of
the ohlef moving picture theater and
commanded M1ss Helen Callahan, the
cashier, to hand over the day's receipts
which she had- just checked up. He
held over her head a bottle which he
said contained nitric acid and threat
ened to throw it in her eyes if she
: WASHINGTON. Aug. 11. Officials
in Washington today were greatly
surprised on reading dispatches from
Helslngfnrs and Stockholm, telling of
the arrival at Petrograd of two Am
erican ships, with food far the soviet
government. Kmphatlc denial was
mnde immediately at the war trade
hoard, that the blockade of soviet
Russia, which has been In effect since
the birth of the Bolshevlkl, had been
lifted. Neither could the state depart
ment show any light on the report. .
Four Hunters Kill . it
One Hojr, Thought '
It Wild; Costs $25
REDDING. Aug. 11. Four Pnc .
ramento hunters who killed a hog be
longing to Robert ESdei- agreed to nny
25 for the animal and no complaint
was Issued for their arrest. They be
lieved It was a wild hog. The hnnt
rrs were Mr. and Mrs. Raymond I
Cranshaw and F. C. Hoffman an Mr.
Winifred Purklss. 1-
Royalistic ItMle. , .': .
Archduke Joseph's movement orlg
lnnted chiefly in the aristocratic and
official circles without reference to
organised labor or the peasantry. It ;
evidently is ot a strongly royalist '
character. ' .-J '
Ten dollars a month is the
increase which employed offi
cials of the county -received.
Some of them are satisfied and
some are not. A flat increase
to all alike can hardly be ex
pected to please every one. for
their tasks are widely diver
gent. Some of the officials are
now receiving a wage compar
oi.i ih that thev could com
mand elsewhere and others are! 'business to volunteer tor teie
dmittedly underpaid. The obone servics abcoaJ-
,VrASmxnTOY. ; Teltfphooo
oVaso- t the Aorkn linea l
Paris during the war. then Presl
dent Wilson s private chief opera
'tor. on the switchboard In the
Murat mansion in 'Paris, Miss
Beatrice Franclort ts new back in
h rnited States., one f
REALTY TRANSFERS
DF.I3DS.
' T. D- Tayler, sheriff, to J. H. Reid
SG1.S5,"N' 1-2 -arc 1-4 NB 1-4 section
4, township'4 north, range 28.
' Ann Matlock to W. B. Hanscom,
$40i0. Lot 8, block ', Houser's Add.
Pendleton?
Kenneth A. J. McKenzie to Jennie
Albon $250. Stanfield Orchard Out
lot No. 158 Stanfield.
B. B. Richard3 to H. II. Hill, S800.
Lots 1 and 2 In block 3, Richards
Add. Athena.-
Oeorg'o Lydell to Sydney Owenby,
1175(". 10' acres 'in NW 1-4 SW 1-4
section 36. township 6, north range 35
Oilman Folsom to J. B. Marshall,
S500. NB 1-4 SW 1- section ; 2.
township. 1, S. R. 34.
Oeorge F. Melville to J. T. Hinkle.
12Ji. SW 1-4 section 28, Township
3 N. R. 20.
John B. Fraeneck to Mathilda
Schmidt, 1. Its 18, 19 and
block 62, Freewater..
rt. ICaton to C. H. Dakin, SB0.
9 and 10 in bloirk BS, Btout's , Add.
Milton.
Cmis. Hamlllon to Furnish Ira. Co.
$1,110 Lots Jtnd 10 in block 68,
Stanfield. '
Chas. H. Relmnn to John T. Walk.
wr, $400. Lots '.. and 9, block 27,
Res. Add Pendleton.
Albert F. M.chael to Chas. iA,
Michael, $1. Sri 1-4 BH 1-4 section
"4 township 2, S. R, 33. ' ,
. C. It. Samuel Jr., to Eliabeth
Schubert. $10. N 1-2 KI3 1-4 section
5, township 5, N. R. 34.
Charlotte Baker to Morris A. Ba-
ker. $50. S 1-2 Lot . diock 7, au
i ams.
I J B Pwltxler to James Atchison,
I.. '- .. .., Vc , 1
11.00. 11.25 acres in .n 1-1 . r.
section 16, townnhfp 5, X. R.
Registered at San Jose
Hotel for the Night
SAX JOSE, Aug. 11. Four queer
guests "checked out" at- the Hotel
Montgomery in this city today after
spending the night all in one room.
They are tiny and feathered and
were up before the sun; announcing
their awakening with a burst of song.
To be explicit they were four canaries.
Mrs. Lillian Booth., said to be a
lecturer from San Francisco, arrived
at the hotel last night, placed on the
counter a cage containing the four
feathered pets and stated that she
wished a room for them for the night.
The clerk handed her a pen and' on
the book -she wrote, "Fannie, Tessle,
Ted and Harry."
The birds were given Into the cus
tody nf the bellboy, and placed in
one of the hostelry's rooms-. Mrs.
Booth then departed to spend the
night as a guet of some friends.
Early today Bhe called, paid her pets'
hotel bill and departed with them..
Autoists Failure to
Sound Horn Becomes
Point of Discussion
20,
SALEM. Auk. 11. Whether an
automobile driver ca-n -be prosecuted
for falling to sound his horn or siren
T.t before passing another automobile Is
a question mat is nt'iii i"um:u if
here by District Attorney Mrx Ohel
har. E. W. Hf-ckart was haled before
Justice court on that charge, and his
lawyer took tho position that what-
I
2S.
Silence sometime gives consent and
ouBStiiues K '' otXene, .. ' .
BKJGCS AUTO WOOD-SAW AttacW
Oaaataacot ttcardaj 2aa.3S uraW
Cses Aavwhere Aoy nlo..
BRIGCS t mm CO, he, Ma-sfsrJoitri
f7 Hawthoma A.. Portland.
Sao tm laiaaaatiM aarf INrata4 Clrealar
,1 - M
tr.
-THUGKS
1
Almost 60J)0(yin use-mdre tli'idn'any other make.
Backed by the reputation and position of the larg
est manufacturers of trucks exclusively in the world.
And our own reputation here for square-dealing
and honest value. ; ' . I
"There is"af' Republic Truck to meet every hauling
neea.
Pendleton Auto Go.
Established 1907