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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1920)
.,-..., .imiiaaft. DAILY EA8 YREOONSAN. PliXHUWDSl. (HftBOOI. "MTKSD ' VKNIWG, MAV 4, l2v TWELVE PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 4, 1 920, PA0Z TWT,LVT? JTCHeylSoNi mmmmmmmmmmmmmmi outbursts of everett true f - . MAM UMCKINQ I jt.' ' Canipfire White Marshmallows Something- new extra quality large box 25c Imperial Marshmallow Desert, jar 35c Exclusive selling agency for Little Polly Brooms, each $1.65 Ranch Butter. 2 pounds $1.15 Ranch Eggs, dozen 40c Oregon Cheese, full cream, 2 pounds 75c Country Shoulders, Bacon and Lard. Weston Mountain Potatoes, fine quality. New shipment Wine Sap Apples just in by express. Extra fancy wrapped and packed, box $3.75 Gray Jros. (grocery Qo. ; KLWd'- J r" THREE PHONES QUALITY " jS 5lilliillltllilllllll!il!ll!i rrtt.r fT sZTT-- - - - i . g- J J 3 7" ff f-" I TV COBB I j jf- Sgl . j Mentioning the name .f Ty Cobb, moans liasehull. erf SB ' 400 I nmrse. It means achievement. II means . finishing r r what is xtarteil. Ty as a matter of luibit coukl not H v i VX I slay .Hit liMBSPil. .'t tlie habit or finishing nliH you start out to do. It win amaac tile world what you eaji aeeoanpUsli. SUin iinI.iv Ite-in hr urliw n riil iwirt ..T iyiu. In come every day and deposit it In this slrorur bank. IB;! lb ' ' ' ' 1 'I) IB j The following prices are the prices IS I eing paid to producers by Pendleton SWIMM DEPARTMENT. business housea. Wherever retail IB I prices are given the tact win oa spa- ers steady to strong, in Mlclallv mentioned. Sheep, receipts 20,000: fat lambs J THF AMFPIfnN MUMM MM II .r ri'CnK I I mil ru iLiuunti imninru. uniin w Hens. 26 cents. 131 Chickens, 28 cents a pound. PENDLETON, OREGON Country Ham. KU. Ham. beat quality, 28c "Tte Strongest Bank In Eastern Oregon.'' ISI Bacon, best quality, 40c. Better Fat and Butter Butter, ll.H. i - DAILY MARKET NEWS, LOCAL AND GENERAL Including Pendleton Prices and Associated Press Eeports stock steady to weak; veals and calves steady; bulk good to choice vealors 1 1.00 12.00. top 12.50; stock ers steady to strong. Sheep, receipts 20,000; fat lambs weak; best wooled lambs 10.00; clip ped 17.20; sheep 75 to i lower; 5 pound shorn Texas wethers 10.50. flievorM 50 s Now on the floor and ready for de livery. A large roomy car, economical to operate, 1500, F. O. B. Pendleton. $500 down, balance easy terms. Eastern Oregon Motor Co. 616 Garden St., Near P. O. Phone 1027 Hons Firm: Hides and Wools Inetianged- N'EW YORK, May 4 state medium to choice Kplnners Buy Merinos and Neglect Inferior Wools. LONDON, May 4. At the wool auc tion sales today 10.300 bales were of fered. Spinners bought good merinos and cross breds freely. Inferiors were neglected with prices easy. Hops, 1919. Pacific $1.05: 1918. 5c90c; 1919. 95c $1.10; 1919. 90c95e Hides and wool unchanged.' firm; 95c coast ; Coarse Grains and l?ed i Hold I'p on Sound. (By Associated t'ress. ) SEATTLE. Wash.. May 4. City de livery: Feed mill $48$50 per ton: scratch feed $86; feed wheat $90; all grain shop 75; oats 172; sprouting oats $7 7; rolled oats $7 4; whole corn $77; cracked corn $80; rolled barley $76: clipped barley $81. Wax- Tntern Washington timothy mixed $43 per ton; double compressed country were $50: alfalfa $42; stray $18; Puget Sound $38. Wheat Kr ports Are bras Than for Year Ago. (By Associated Press. NEW YORK. May 4.Bxports of wheat and flour from July 1, 1919, to April 23. 1920. amounted to an equiv alent of 160,613,000 bushels of wheat a decrease of Sp. 580, 000 bushels for the same period the year previous, ac cording to a report published today by the United States grain corporation. Many shipments of flour last year were made to the American expedi tionary forces and to the American re lief administration. Total stocks of wheat on hand April 23 last in elevators and mills in the 141.842 000 bushels, ii decrease of 7.410,000 from the pre vious week, but an increase of 20,951, 000 over the same week last year. rKNWirJTON. ORKOON opposrrB hotel promi.ETOfr Mens Blue Chambray Work Shirts $1.25 The same reliable quality of chambray shirts we have always sold, always come out of the tub the same true blue, Sizes 14y2 to 17 $1.25 MEN'S KHAKI COLOR WORK SHIRTS . Made of tightly woven durable fast color cloth, regulation collar, one pocket, double stitched seams, full cut 98c Boy's Coat Shirts of blue chambray and striped shirtings, one pocket, regulation collar, sizes 12 to 15 iafS Men's good quality black sateen shirts, sizes 14' to 16V-J $1.49 PAY DAY OVERALLS $2.25 PAIR Pay Day Overalls of good quality heavy blue denjm, made, either bib or waist style; a range of sizes to properly tall man or the short man. You save on every pair at Jumpers of same heavy denim Boys' Overalls, good quality denim, bib style, ages 4 to 7 Ages 8 to 17 MEN'S SLIP-ALLS $2.98 SUIT Men's work suits of medium weight khaki cloth Men's heavy khaki work suits Men's medium blue denim work suits Men's heavy blue denim work suits . union fit the . $2.25 . $2.25 . $1.39 $1.59 . $2.98 $3.98 , $2.69 $3.98 Teamsters and Carpenters Aprons of heavy brown duck $1.49 Painter's White Overalls $1.69 Carpenter's Heavy White Duck Overalls $1.98 "Corduroy Buck Gloves" for comfort and long wear. . $2.25 and $2.49 "Asbestal" Tanned Horsehide Gloves, gauntlet or wrist styles. . $1.69 Calfskin Gauntlet Gloves with imitation leather cuff, pair $1.25 Knit Wrist Canvas Gloves, pair 15c Knit Wrist Canvas Gloves, leather faced, pair 29c and 35c Leather Faced Gauntlet Gloves, "Union Special" 3 pairs $1.00 "TTCrPenney Co, A NaUonwide Institution fluencea governing the corn market. Demand for provisions was confined almost entirely to lard. Steers at Seattle Still Command f 1.1 for Top. ( By Associated Press. ) SEATTLE, Wash., May 3. Hogs, receipts 70, steady. Prime $16.50ifi 17.00; medium to choice $15.50(ft 16.50; rough heavies $14. 50i 15.50; pigs 13.004J14.00 Cattle, receipts 289, steady. ueei steers $12.50 13.00; medium to choice 10. 00f 1 2.00; common to good $7.50 St 10.00; cows and heifers $10.25 10.75; common to good $7,000? 10.00; hulls $7.508.50; calves $7.50 16.00. Grain Prices Go to New llooenl Height (By Associated Press.) CHICAGO. May 4. Grain prices jumped lo record heights today. Un easiness in regard to the lateness of ithe 1920 drop season together with Oofftw Future Mnrknt Higher for Monday, (By Associated Press.) NEW YORK. May 4. The market coffee futures was higher today owing to firmer Brazilian cables and a some. what optimistic v,iew of European cables teeause of the passing of May Oay without any sensatlonad distur bances. The opening was 10 to IS points higher and active positions sold about 12 to 17 points above the clos ing of last Friday witlt July touching 14.95 and December 14.82. Last prices were, within a point or two of the best with the market closing at a net advance of 12 to 16 points. May 14.70; July 14.94; September 14.62: October 14.61; December, January and March 14. S9. Spot coffee, quiet; Rio 7' IS l-: Santos 4's 23 3-4 '. 24. 'statement by trade leaders calling at tention to shortage of farm labor and of world supplies were largely respon sible. Corn closed nervous at 2 3-4 to 4 l-8c net advance, with July 1.68 1-4 fil.es 1-2 and September 1.60 1-2 ep 1.60 7-8. Oats gained 1 1-4 to 4 l-4c. In "provisions, the outcome varied from 20c decline to a rise of 7 l-2c. I'rsent buying on the part of the Cattle I shorts began to hoist the corn market steers las soon as trading opened, and there was at no time any Important reac- Beef at Kansas City Has Tendency to Drop. (By Associated Press.) KANSAS-CITY, Mo, May 4.- rooiots 17.000: heavy neet .... inw... iMtlk 1 1 50 (ft 12.25: yearlings 15 to sr.c'lower few sold; fat'tion. Oats responded to the same In- REPUBLIC Trucks Your own transportation need may indeed be But they are. hardly so different that we cannot point a parallel problem that hag been satisfactor ily met by a Republic Truck. Besides our own wide experience, we have the per formance and cost data of 60,000 Republics the world over, in every imaginable line of hauling. Pendleton Auto Co. Established 1907 "PEACOCK A BIRD OF A COAL isx'liaawa- Little Ash No Soot No Clinkers Enormous Heat Phone 178 NOW Hoes and Cattle) Open Wenker for Week. Hoga and cattle arere weaker and lower, while sheep showed a dipping disposition in the North Portland trada for the week's opening. Arrivals to taled 82 cars, and of these 16 cars did not stdp here. Cows and heifers and the bull divi sion showed a fairly steady tone, with no price change for the week's open ing.; General cattle range: Pest beef steers $12. 00f 13.00 Choice steers 1 1.00 1 2.00 Choice cows and heifers 11. 00 15.50 Good to choice cows and heifers 10.25(11.00 Canners . . . , 5.r.o 7.50 Bulls i C.50 9.00 Best light calves 1 Voo fi 1 T on Medium calves lO.OOfii 15.00 stockers and feeders ... 8.00 8.50 Swine values were hit fractionally at North Portland during the day. Top hogs were 15 to 25c lower for the day. There was a weaker tone again In the eastern hog trade, with values off for the day. General hog range: Prime mixed $16.60Si 16.35 Medium mixed . ID. BOff?) 16.00 Rough heavies ; . . 11.(0015.00 Pigs , . . 12.00 14.50 Mutton and lamb market showed weaker tone. Receipts' totaled 2738 head. There was practically no early trading In this division nnd prices, while weak, were Inclined to rule low er. General sheep and lamb range: Spring lambs $15. 00W 16.00 East of mountains lambs 16. SOW 17.00 Best valley lambs 14.75 rn ic.no Best heavy valley lambs 13.2514.76 Common to medium val- Uy lambs 10.SO13.50 Yearlings 14. 00f 16.00 Rwes 8.00 iff 12.00 Wethers 14.50 15.50 Shorn stocks, $3 less. lie; Hawaiian lOe 12c per pound; Pineapples $3.00 5.00 per dor. to their recent high level with the new I month and new week under way. Oats are bid at $.50 a ton, barley $66.50 land corn $61.50. Mill feed Is bid $48 and soma arc asking as high as $60 f. o. b. mills. Grain bags are still FOed and Xiarsi Grains at Portland Holding in. Bids for coarse grains and mill stuffs at Portland continue to hold up selling to the retail trade at 2$ cents. Olive r Chilled Plows Plow Makers for the World Stutgis & Storie Pendleton. Or. Walla Walla. Wash. SMYTHE -LONERG AN CO Quality Quantity Service Marker at San Francisco I or Opening of Week (By Associated Press.) SAN FRANCISCO. Muy 4. Re ceipts: Flour 13.360 qrs; wheat 6.- fv0 ctls; oats 1.600 ells; beans 2,891 aax: corn 925 ctls; potatoes 684 sax; onions 14 sax; hay 0 tons; eggs 93. 000 dox: hides 635 rolls; livestock 750 nend; oranges 6,oo boxss. Hay: Fancy wheat hay, lige. five wire bales $38.004l.oo (per ton); choice tnma oat hay, $17.00 40.00;. other tame oat hay $33.0O$7.00; wild oat hay nominal; barley had nominal; alfalfa hay $12.00 J7. 00; "nek hay $29. 004r 32.00; Oregon wheat and oat mixed $29.00 32.00; No. 1 barley straw 70c $1.00 per halo. drain: Barley, spot feed . $8.20 Srtl: wheat, hard whlto No. I. :-5 ctl; oats red feed $3.15 J.JO; corn, yellow $3.26..- J. 3.66 Acason Trucks Ar.ison Motor Trucks have never been built to meet a popular price. Quality construction in stead of quantity production has always been the basis of Acason manufacture, and personal inter est in the welfare -of every Acason owner is the dominant thought of the entire Acason organiza tion. The selection of every unit is based upon its proven ability and reputation for service. The per fect balance and combination of the units used have been developed from the "Owner First" point of view. tt is due to this fact that the new series Acason Motor Trucks are today "The Most Powerful Trucks in America." Oregon Motor Garage JrJCOHPOHATRD Distributor CADILLAC, HUDSON, BUICK, ESSEX AND ACASON TRUCKS Phono 468 19-121 W Court Bananas: Central American 9c