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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1920)
fJLCS TWO DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 27, 1920. TWELVE PAGES - Itenieniber! . ' Purchases made tomorrow and balance of this month go on your August bill pay able Sept 1st. .. Carter's Knitted Silk - Top Union Suits ' - f l n j. ; Very fine lisle suits, low neck, no sleeve, with knitted silk tops, qolor flesh. A pop ular all the year around uni on suit at. . $3.50 and $3.75 ; Pure'Silk Knitted V . ' : 'Vests-' " : made by theJWnv. Carter Go. an ideal summer weight gar ment priced at $4.75 to $5.50 Sale of Gingham . , Dresses . i Pretty and Practical for " ' ' Smart Wear. We "want to emphasize particularly every model ' on sale is from our own spe cialized stock and bears a reduction in price, due to "our twice a year policy of quick clearance. A- mere glance will reveal how taste fully they are modeled, and how different from the gen eral run of garments offer ed in sales. . $3.98 to $22.50 " jp"' m"m " We are offering our Men's Palm Beach Mohair and Dixie Weave Suits at greatly reduced prices. Oursstock includes every desirable style and material a good assortment of sizes still remains. COME EARLY AND CHOOSE FROM THE GREATEST BARGAINS OF THE YEAR. . ! .. - ' ... , , $12.50 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to. $8.95 $15.00 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $10.85 $17.50 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $J 85 $20.00 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $13.60 $22.50 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $14.95 $25.00 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $16.95 $27.50 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $28.50 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $35.00 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $45.00 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $50.00 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $65.00 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $75.00 Palm Beach Suits are Reduced to $47.85 s a ( r $17.80 $19.85 $23.65 $26.85 $33.75 $42.80 Many Midsummer Delineators have not been called for by subscribers. Please get your copy. Bodice Top Vests' ; White cotton- .and. lisle thread in the; famous Kay- 4 ser tiualities at . 50c to' $L75 . ; Women's Silk Sox -: are proving very, popular for summer wear.; Colors are brown, white and black. At, pair $2.00 to $2.65 ' T. P. W. Pure Food ; ; Shop' ; , j In Our Model Sanitary ''.':" Basement. ,, , ' If. Cleanliness 1 it Economy Service 3 Main Line Phones, all 15. All Other Depts. Call 22; ; Ripe Olive Special Curtis Extra Quality Ripe Olives, 9 oz. cans, 3 for 65c , 6 for $1.25. : ', ,Fincy Comb Honey, ea. 30c Pure Extracted Honey, " jars... 50c, 90c and $1.70 Freshly Grated Horseradish jars 40c and 75c Carolene Milk (it will whip) ' can . ............... 15c Fresh, Crisp Ginger Snaps, pound . . . . ; 25c Every Thing in Season in Fresh Fruits' and Vege tables. ."' -v MEN'S STRAWS AND PANAMAS AT t., j 1 t CLEANUP PRICES. PENBLETONS greatest department store I '' ' - - . U ''li1-' VM'mM IT PAYS ,TO TRADE lllWq . , j housa VIAKE THIS STORE YOUR STORE. GOV. COOMIKIE IS TOIJ OF .KOSOXATIOX -. . (Continued from page 1.) . . . . j Kovernment, foment discord, aggravate industrial strife, strifle production and ultimately stir tip revolution The first duty of the government is to re tirees them. - "To a free people the m'ost reaction ary experience, short of revolutionary, is war. Tbe greatest need ot the na tion at the present time ie to be res Cued from abV the reaction of the war. i "The property of the nation is in the hands of the people when it is un Oer their ownership and control. It is true that the control of a part of the property taken for war purposes has been -returned, but there bangs over private enterprise still the menace of seizure, blighting- in its effect, paralyz ing in its result, to the public detri ment. But it matters not whether property be taken by seizure or through the process of taxation for ex travagant and unnecessary expendi tures, there should be an nd to both pe rations, r "Either the people must mi the government or the g'overn-juent-wfll own the peopl. '-, ; ' , (Ian iMsnkros ' "Another source of the frrafceet pub He corcern has been the reactionary tendency to substitute private will for the public wUU ' The observance of lb law is the greatest solvent of public must reduce the amount of money as ilia "There is yet another manifest dis position which has preyed on the weakness of the race from its infancy. the attempt to create class distinctions. There are no classes here. The gov ernment must look at the part in the light- of the whole, that legislation must te d.rected not for private inter est but for public welfare..- "The mounting prices of all sorts of commodities has put a wellnlgh un 'bearable -burden on every home. Much of this iS beyond relief from law, but the forces of the government can and must afford a considerable remedy. ' "The most obvious place to begin retrenchment is by eliminating the ex travagance of the government itself. The extravagant standards bred of re cent years must be eliminated. " This should show immediately in reduced taxation. That great breeder of pub lic and private extravagance, the ex cess profits tax, should be revised and recourse had to customs taxes, on im ports, one of the most wholesome of all means of raising revenue. "There has been profiteering. It should be punished because it is wrong. But It Is idle to look to such action for relief. .. "As everyone knows now, the diffi culty is caused by a scarcity of ma-i terial, an absence of money and insuf ficient production. The government - ! I fast as possible, (without curtailing necessary credits. Production must be increased. dependents, relief from distress, res toration from infirmity, provision for education, honorable preferment in the publio service, a helping hand every One of the chief hindrances to Dro- ! where are theirs, not as a favor,, but duction is lack of adequate railroad b' f'sht. facilities. Transportation must be re- LEARNING TO SMASH "MASHERS" "O : ' -1 . - - 1 v " j. i t : i N I. !! ! I. Ill.lj ' " ' i . ' -Dti-a- Ht ft B t PT established. A few glaring instances in the past of improper management, joined with an improper public atti tude thereby created, wrought great harm to our railroads. Government operation left them disintegrated, dis organized and demoralized. ' They must 'be provided with credit and capital and given the power to serve. Their employes must bo compensated in accordance with the great import ance of the service they render. "There must too a, -different public attitude toward industry, a larger comprehension of the inter-depend-ence of capital, management and labor and better facilities for the prompt and reasonable adjustment of industrial disputes. Thfr farmers need an en larged power of organization whereby the original producer may profit to a larger degree by the high prices paid for his produce -by the ultimate con sumer, and at the same time decrease the cost of food. The economic j strength of the country rests on the farm. - 1914 Is Gone "Of all things a return to a peace basis, doe not mean the basis of 1914. That day in gone. It is a peace basis of the present, higher, nobler, becaue of the sacrifice made and the duties as sumed. It ia not a retreat. It is a new summons to advance. "Diminishing resources warn us of the necessity of conservation. The public domain is the property of the public, it is held in trust for present and future generations. The material resources of our country , are very great, but they are not inexhaustible. "Whenever in the future this nation undertakes to asses its strength and resources, the target item will be the roll of those who served her In every patriotic capacity In the world, war. The presence of the living example of the dead will ever stand guaranty of the stability of our republic. Duty compels that those promises so freely made, -be speedily redeemed. . Care of DOLL, THROBBING OR KrvTARIC. N. J. -To teach f.ir women employe, the girlish LL ieron. ' boxer. The .tor. believe, that little know). vTt K Plurin.rma.b1wUI reduce .-ma.hln. Dr. JamoT Headache Powders lnr Your Head snd.Htop Neuralgia Iu(n At Once 1 OmW a Pa;ksKe. Tou take a Dr. James Headache Powdr and in Just a few moments your head clears and all neuralgia and pain fades sway. It's the quickest and surest relief for headache, wheth er dull, throbbing, splitting or nerve racking. Hend someone to the drug store and get a dime package now. Quit suffering it's so needln. fie sure you get Dr. James Headache Powders -then there will toe no disap pointment . . rd of Tl tanks " We take this opportunity to thank the many friends for acts of kindnfsa 1 during the (line of our little son, Wil liam Jckiward and for generous sym pathy extended following hfs death and for the floral tributes given. : Mr. and Mrs, Edward j. dark i Kducation "AVipIe opportunity for education at public expense, reasonable hours of employment, always under sanitary conditions, a fair and always a living wago for faithful work, healthful liv ing condition, childhood ancl mother hood cherish'!, honored, rescued from the graf if all selfishness! and re- dedicated to the. noblest aspiration of the race, these nro not socialist vagar ies, btit the mark of an advancing Am erican civilization, revealed in larger social justice, tempered with . an abounding mercy. For Colored RigJit "There Is especially due to the color ed race a more general recognition of their constitutional rights. Burely they hold the double title of citizen ship, by birth and by conquest, to be relieved from all Imposition, to he de fended from lynching and to 1e freely granted equal opportunities. 'Jftiual suffrage, tor which 1 have ahvays voted, is coming. The party stands pledged to use its endeavors to hasten ratification. "The foreign relations of our coun try ought not to bo partisan, but American. , For I in media to Pence "The country cannot be securely re stored to a peace basis in anythin until a peace is first made with those with whom we have been at war. Ou party stands pledged to make an im mediate peace as soon as it Is given power by the people. "The proposed lcagua of nations. without reservations, as submitted by the president to the senate, met with deserved opposition from the Kepub lican senators. "We shall search In vain in legisla tive halls, executive masions and chambers of Judiciary for the great ness of the government of our country. We shall behold there but a reflection. not a reality; successful in proportion to accuracy. In a free republic a great government is the product of a great ! people. The destiny, the greatness of America lies around the hearthstone. IX thrift and Industry are taught there and the example of self sacrifice oft appears, if honor abide there, and high ideals, if there the building of fortune be subordinate to the 'building of char acter, America will live in security, re joicing In an abundant prosperity and good government at home, and In peace, respect and confidence abroad. If these virtues be absent, there is io power that can supply these blessings. lok we lit then to the. hearthstone, therein all hope of America lies.'1 half cent a mile to each passenger ticket sold and putting a little moro on the Pullman service, $300,000, 000 of the 1600,000,000 can be raised. The other $300,000,000 would comet from freight charges, involving an ln- Unlnn to review the Labor Day, It Is considered extremely doubtful that ha will do so. In the first place, 900 of the olitijKtTin policemen who went on Ktrike Till have the right of tho line and again the members of the Teta- i if Gov. Coolidg is to review the pa ratio they will not participate. ov. Cool Iflge is still In Vermont, but it Is said that a way will be found out of the difficulty, probably hy saying that he has an impnrtant engagement else where. The situation is a peculiar one inas much as the labor leaders are In a 'Pinndary Just what to do. They feel that they can hardly withdraw tho In vitation extended to the Governor and at the same time they do nnt want to antagonize the telephone operators, ho have a very strong organization. ROADS DRAFT WAYS TO RAISE THE CASH crease of about 8 per cent, this befog) phone operator's Union have said that in auuiLion to mo 2 per cent aireaiy requested under the provisions of the Transportation Act. Traffic, accounting and legal ex perts representing the Kastern, West ern and Southern roads have been in session here all day, working on the proposition to he submit bed by Air. Thorn. Tho Transportation Act "permits the carriers to have a certain amount over and above their' operating ex penses. The roads have asked Cor an increase of $1,017,000,000 in revenues to make up their legal income. To take In that amount the roads would have to add 28 per cent to their freight charges. This proposition is now under consideration by tho In terstate Commerce Commission, and the. general impression is that tho re quest will he granted. t To this must be added about 16 per cent more to cover the increases pro vided for by the Iahor Hoard. The roads do not want to collect the ad ditional 44 per cent from freight rats but would make passengers pay . t leant 8 per cent of it, leaving 3fi per cent to come from freight. There was a proposition to take the passenger increase from the Kastern and Southern roads and not touch tlio.se of the West, but a later plan is to make an even increase of one-half cent per mile. Grow Your Hair USE KOTALKQ ;: If vu hsvs SMSfuff, of If your hsir hi IsttV Ins out or if you hv a bats apot, you should know that legion of paraooa bawa vwreesma , then tr'iiihl.-s through nuiiM Indians ellatr, KOTAi.KO. ohtainahla at dnqmiau'. Or a proof bnx of th wenaartuthyaHisaataws , Kotalkotor thnfaair will be tnailtei yew aebd only 10 atau. Iver or stanipa) t 4 U.BHlikBH4HvSia.F,TwYrk MAJOR iVIOORHOUSE IS - INVITED TO PAGEANT Major lp. MoorhouKft today nv-plv-efl an Invitation from' Mrs. Ada lxsh Kofe to nwiHt In the cnntmiitnff and tiuininpr of character in the lrwin & Clark .htHtoHcat pageant which will bo HtagTd at Sejutldo on AuguHt 13 and 14. Sea-sido la at the end of the Irfwts & Clurk trail and the city prenervea tho original salt culrn where the explores made Milt from Pacific ocean water In IS 5. IUNK OPRRATOR. itKFTRB The piiKcant Is to bo aomcwhat slml- TO I'AIUDK PAST XM)LIrK;K lar to that which was put on at Iaurcl BOSTON, July 27. While Gov. Cool, hurst In Portland lawt sear, at which Jdne has said nothing In regard to the Major Moorhouse assisted. Thousands invitation of the Hoston Central Labor of jwople are expected to "he at tho hioch resort for tho celebration and the assistance of the local authority la souirht to make the Indian' and pioneer details correct. Major Moorhouse ha, not decided whether he will be able at that time to attend. ES . " REPRIEVE FOR BUTLER SALEM, Or., July 27. William IX Butler of Jackaou county must bs committed to tho state penitentiary for tho kflltnj? of McDonald Stewart without further reprieve. A month affo Governor Olcott granted a ' re ' pricVR of SO dnys pending fnvestlga tlon of further possible evidence. To-"5 day he telegraphed Jackson county authorities that the reprieve would not be extended and also refused to grant a petition for Butler's pardon. The sentence t from one to 15 years. FAMOUS DANISH ARTIST PORTRAYS ANGUISH OF RUSSIA WASHINGTON, July 27. Alfred P. Thorn, representing, the railroad ex ecutives, will go before the Interstate Commerce Commission tomorrow next rtsy with a proposition as to how the 9tfOO.000.000 additional revenue is to be raised to meet the wage In creases granted by the Labor Hoard. The public will have to make up the extra tax on the carriers by paying highor freight, passenger and sleep ing car bills. It looks now as If the levy would be divided on a fifty-fifty basin be tween freight and passenger patrons. It Is estimated that by adding on- 1 ft to Jul iff . , . $jlf, . ' ) ' ' ' , ' , hlrrj ' 1 LONDON-AnxJoui to e what BolaheTlk Russia la really like, London baa been flock inc to Hi exhibition of paintings by the famous Danish artlat, Edward Saltoft, who waa chief of the Danish Red Cross in Petrograd from 191 to 1919. Photos of two Saltoft paintings, printed by eourtesy of Ernest frown and Phillips of the Leicester Art Galleries, London, portray: Left A Prison Scene; ElhtfTU Cry of the Reroltitloo. Ioset Is 8Jtott.