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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1920)
.'V S ii ' ' f ' i A "f . , f PAOK TWO i DAILY EAST ORECONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY EVENING, JUNE 5, 1020. TEN PAGES Our emi- a x . t . -, .r. v, Annual Silk r Sale of R emriants. Begins Tuesday Morning, July 6th LK AND COTTON .FIBRES. All short lengths of materials that have accumulated as the result of a 'busy season. Many splendid opportunities. mis who would like materials of desirable quality for waists, skirts, dresses, underwear, etc., such as Percales, 'Ginghams, Mulslins, Lawns, yoiles, WOOL,SIL await patrons Silks, Dress Goods, White Goods, Linings, and All Wash Goods; Those who come early will naturally have best choice. Remember! these Remnants will be marked 1-3 to 1-2 Or T11L ORIGINAL 1'KICES. Note other specials throughout the store while attending the REMNANT SALE. REiAINANTS OF RIBBONS AND LACES r- Hundreds of them, all lengths and w idths for every imaginable purpose. They are all marked at about ONE HALF THE FORMER PRICE. : THINK OF IT! GEORGETTE CREPES The All Silk Kind, 40 inches wide in over 65 colors to choose from. No fabric is so suitable for blouses or cool summer wear. Values to $3.00 during Remnant Sale at yard. .... $1.89 THIS SALE WILL BE A WONDERFUL - BARGAIN FEST. During the Remnant Sale We Offer a Choice Lot of SUMMER WASH GOODS AT 95c THE YARD. Beautiful voiles of fine quality and color- ings suitable for summer frocks. The regular prices of these voiles -were $1.25, $1.35 and $1.50. Your 'choice from this lot, yd. . . . 95c PONGEE SILK Extraordinary quality in a $2.25 value that will be on sale during the Remnant Sale at the yard . $1.39 FENDLETONS greatest department store BLACK MESSALINE V : 36 inches wide in a very good quality, spe cial during Remnant Sale ax the. yard. . $1.95 NAVY BLUE TAFFETA SILK A soft finish, high grade, quality ( regular $3.50 value, during the Remnant 'Sale at the yard $2.49 BLACK TAFFETA ' 36 inches wide, sofe chiffon finish, fine quality $3.50 quality, during Remnant Sale at -the yard. .$2.39 rrtf : T eopies warenous WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE my BUY ALL YOU CAN AT THIS GREAT REMNANT SALE. " UKIAH VILL CELEBRATE JOURTH WITH PROGRAM l (Knot -Oreponlan Special.) 'VKIAK. July 3.- Almost at the last minute, Ukiab has decided to cele brate the Fourth of July, beginning with horse races Saturday afternoon. Saturday ntaht there 'will be a. danc at the Monarch hall and sandwiches, furnished by the ladies and coffee fur nished by the boys will be served at tnidnieht, Sunday there will be a bas lvt dinner followed by a base - ball g-drue between the single men and the married men. Last Sunday a lively game was played, the married men Billte Anderson and his brother-Inlay Mrs.. Tefft left Tuesday for BIB Cree on a fishing trip, returning Thursday, bringing back many nice fish. J. T. Huston, Alber and Cirril Peter son left Wednesday for Pendleton on business returning: Thursday, Mr. and Mrs. .Surface who have been visiting at Ritter for the last week returned Wednesday evening. William Allison who has been visit ing his daughter In Portland for the last month, returned to. Ukiah Wed nesday evening going on to his home at Oriental Thursday. Mrs. Parrazo and daughter who have been visiting at the Sturdivant Bros, ranch for the last week returned to her home In Pendleton Wednesday, IN PALESTINE LAUDED carrying -off the honors. There are j Mrs j. H. Constants left Monday many who cannot go to the springs, so j morning for Pendleton where she will they decided to nave a lew sports at j remain a month and take treatment, home. i Frank GUliland of Butter Creek Mr. and Mrs. lowell Ganger and son canie in Wednesday to look af ter ' his Garland, left for Pendleton Friday morning for a few days visit with relatives. Weorge Anderson of Heppner passed sheep, which are 'on the range near Ukiah. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday have fceen extremely warm days and through Ukiah the first of the week j tbe nM.t is felt severely as the weather on his way to the mountains with j has been cold and cloudy up to Tues- Hynds Bros, sheep. Kay and 14-nn Clark and wives of Cqile Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Ganger and son Place who have been visiting ; returned from Pendleton Tuesday aft- retatlves in Camas Prairie for a week or. ten days left for their homes Fri day. Louis Hansen Jr.. and wifo of Pen dleton. -visited a few davs Iwt week at S. J, the Kess ranch with Mr. end Mrs. George Mess. James Mossle attended the telephone meeting at Pilot Rook last Saturday. Mrs. Jennie Moore left Saturday for Flint Rock to visit with her daughter Mrs. .William Selby for short time. er visiting several days there. Jinks Howard has moved his fam ily to L'kiah and they are living in the Ledgerwood residence. J. H. Wagner, J. H. Constants and Frank Chamberlin made a business trip to Pendleton the first of the weak returning Thursday. . Stanley Evans of Monmouth, arriv ed a few days ago and is visiting at the Charley Metiers and mother were, home of Mr. and Mrs. 3. H. Mettio for in l.mn Hsrurdav shonoin. time arter wnicn n win k" iialph Justice of Heppn.r. passed through town the first of -the week with the Justice sheep, taking them in to the mountains. Judge C H- Marsh, commissioners. B. IS. Anderson, X. I .Dunning and lUjadmaxtec R. E. Phelps, returned to Pendleton a few days ago, afwr care fully looking over the road from Ukiah to the John DRy bridge. Harley Kirk returned from Bridge Creek Tuesday after visiting several days with his sister, Mrs. Chilton. a position at the Mossie farm for the summer. Mrs. Jinks Howard .left Thursday morning for Pilot Rock with her three year old son, who is ill, to consult a physician. Fonda Helmick. the small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Helmick, is ill at their home near Ukiah with meas les. ' The small children of Roscoe Dick enson and J. H. Moore have the whooping cough. ' LO.N'DON, July 6. Nathan Straus, of New York, told the International Zionist Conference here yesterday that the Straus health bureau in Pal estine had supplied a need that haa been ignored -for hundreds of years by a ''criminally indifferent govern ment'' and that it had become k "stronghold in the life of the Holy Land." The bureau was established by Mr. Straus in 1912. The only problem which took pre cedence over the health question was the feeding of the hungry for which he said he established a free soup kitchen in JersaJem which up to now, has been feeding 700 to 1,00 per sons daily. Members of committees returning from Palestine, he saidi had told him that his soup kitchen was "the brightest spot in the Holy city." The health bureau, Mr. Stra us said, was established to improve health conditions generally and parti cularly to eradicate malaria and tra choma, the two diseases which were endemio there. It was intended to strve all inhabitants of Palestine ir respective of creed, race or color and, since the Jews number less than one sixtn of the total population, its work had accrued largely to the benefit of non-Jews. Fight Is Revived Mr. Straus revived the fight con ducted against malaria by the Mealth bureau in and around Jedusalem in 1916 and 1917, which he said "nipped the cholera epidemic in the bud." Clinics were opened in five districts and injections of antl-malarla lymph were given to all comers, while school children were Inoculated by nudses sent by the health bureau into dis tricts. In all 30,750 persons were given preventive injections against cholera. Typhus lymph also was pre pared and administrated. More than 38,000 persons were ex amined to ascertain If they were in fected with malaria and where tho reaction was positive, quinine was given free of cost. The water in cisterns used for drinking pudposes was examined and a museum of hy Flene was established. MICHIGAN MAS WHO IS WOXDMU'ClATIrtjETE AS WEUi AS GOOD STUDENT IRISH PICKETS BURN BRITISH FLAG IN WASHINGTON 1 f j - , 1 M ! . i-. K i -.si' I s ..- w I'i4 i ''VTnw- t mi I P y r, - j J '0 -'A w I i--4 -1 If it. The university of Michigan has turned out a wonderful athlete, as well as a good student, in Carl B. Johnson. Children Examined In conibattinjr trachoma, Mr. Stra u eaid, the health Imreau treated 4 41,874 cases and an attempt was made to examine the eyes of aU children woh could be reached teo ajs to identfiy that disease which was prevalent in Palestine. A hospital for eye diseases was opened and the cam pain was extended into the town and colonies outside; of Jerusalem, nudeses being sent to various places. Aid was also given to refugees when the Jewish population was expelled Irom Jaffa. Mr.; Straus said that the health bureau had proved Us efficacy and that ho hoped its services would increase and become greater to the people irrespective of race, color or religion. GREATEST ZEPPELIN, BUILT TO BOiViB N. Y., IS TURNED TO ALLIES -.autvoTOKA rwip f vostra 'o here been "plekeUdg" the White House and Capitol. STHN OTON AgTJiP 2 BriUfli flag la front U U- U-d bUU (Hy Associated Press.) U)NDON, July 2. The great est Zeppelin ever constrorted, the built in 118 by the Germans for the purpose of bombing New York, was surrendered to tho Pul ham airdrome yesterday. TEACH KIM . I OSK KIGITT (Hy AMS'rCisted. Presw) HONOU'LU, T. H.f July 2- Prhool teachers of Hawaii have lost their fight againnt the commission of public in teraction's decision to add half an hour To the school day. The teachers re- ently protested to fjovernor McCarthy who has upheld 'the commuMrion and 'Ibml lowed the teachers' objections. Th pedagogues now are threatening to rewsurrect the question At the next ession of the territorial legislature. IS PICKED UP IN PARK (By Associated Press) PARIS, July 5. lUiggod, hatless and practically shoeless, and already man was sitting in a park on the south side of the Seine a few nights since, muttering to himself, E0, 6o, 70 while stacking the thin little slips of paper one upon the other He attracted the attention of two gend armes for he had apparently been drinking too much wine. He was tak en tothe station. The desk sergeant was bewildered when the ragged man explained that the little slips of paper he was count--ing were good bills of the Bank of France and that the figures he was mumbling represented their amount. He had 115, 0S0 francs. "I won this money at the races," explained the denizen of thexpark, It developed that the man was one Billigot, a former colonial soldier, at times newspaper vendor, known to the citizens of Orenclle ward in Paris os "Farther of Luck" of "Farther Cherry" (the little fruit being known in the parlance of the Paris gambling cidcles as the emblem of luck.) He had run up 140 francs, the amount of his pension paid to him as an ex-soldier, into 115,080 francs. The police released him, after giving him a little advice about counting his wealth In public parks while slightly under tho influence of red wine. Billigot invested 80,000 francs In a life annuity the next morning, bought a suit of cloths, shoes, et cetera, and before departing for Saint Cloud race track called on the friendly polios. sergeant and gave him a tip on the races .for that afternoon. The honw won. The newspaper LECLAIK has offered him 100 francs per day for his racing selections until tho end" of the sesmon. CALVIN C00LWGE AND HIS FAMILY ZZ 1 "I : (." V. ni:.'. rt -;i t V, ? 1 V It . I 4 Si f "One of tbe latest pictures of Governor. Calvin OWIMKWof Massa chuaetts and hla family taken a short time before bis nomination lor Vice President at tbe Kepubllcau National Conventloa ti CbKago. EVERY ATTEMPT AT -AMENDMENT FUTILE (By Associated Press.) fAN FUANCI8CO. July 3. In ijuick and successive votes the demoemtic national convention yesterday voted down by heavy majorities all attempts to amend the report of th pisiform committee and thrrew out air substi tute proposals, including the 'bono dry plank by William J. Bryan and the wet plank offertxl by W. Bourse Coch ran. The administration's league of nations plank as repoilcd by the com mittee was sustained against all at t ticks. The udniiniMtration supporters were in control by heavy majorities all along the Jin e. . , The Bryan prohibition plank reject ed by the convention wns as follows: "We heartily congratulate the dem ocratic party on Its splendid leader ship in the utibjniKsion and ratification T the prohibition ninendment to the . federal constitution and we pledge th party to the effpctivelenforcement of the present enforcement 'law, honest-t ty und in good; ftjith; without any increase in the-Alcoholic content of permitted beverages And NHthout any weakening of other o lis pro visions." JilG JXA. JXnt SWTZKRIiAM (By Associated Press.) XKW VORIv! July 2. A. $J50,000.r. OOij loan to Sw:L.orl;ind wilt be raised ' in the United States as a result of ne gotiations concluded between the Hwlsa government and American bankers, it wrts onnouneed hore tuiiuy. The mon ey wilt be raimnj through .the sale of twenty or twenty five year sinkln. fupd bonds, it was stated, which prob ably will be offered next Tuesday. The interest rate wes not disclosed. A NEW TARZAN IS BRONZE-MUSCLED COAST STAR When Jie Merchant, Unlror iltv of California athlete, came out of tbe west to meet the east ern cracks be got new title He came hpralded aa California's greatest all-round star. No sooner had Xawson Robertson, Penn coach, set eyea n the bronze muscles of the Golden Gate youth thaa he remarked: "Tarzan he la my Idea of iT&nan." i At ' the Intercollegiate track championship event, In Philadel phia, handicapped by torn ligaments- In his right leg. he easily distanced -the field in the hammer throw. His fling was 159 feet 2 i-4 Inches. Be haa done around J34 font in coast - meets this spring.'. r jit , : J t St - -A 11. V ' 4xr if; J JzMKy, 1 f 111 1 11,11 . - ' - '.l"tJ 1 "" 1 ""ff III 1 Ill ' - . t , , - - ' I