Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1920)
riC2E3.' PAILT EAST OUSSOmS,1 rgyDLETO.-QESSON,' ;TIHtKSDAY EVENING, NQVEMBifc. 4j 1920. TWVE PAGES - mm i I Social and Club News ENTERTAINMENT PLKASKfl. ?njoyed a "Hallowe'en Room of ThankHRlvlnir lime and Hallowe'en Jokes," managed by Clifford Krown. A cnniuini'ii u iiuniru tni.-iii im- aignosi ftuido beckoned each Miccest-riii entertainment given ai who was Introduced (imi canyon ny me pupns or si-nmii anna a maze of Jack n- Inniern. i,n, dlHtrlct No. 4S .Siituri-.nyrvenlr.fr. Mrs. a great owl darted overhead frnm it- comer, to the mysteries Xnry Itamlrcs Id teacher of the dis trict. The following program was en- Sonp, "He Thankful".. Hy the School KeadltW, "In November" Clifford Drown Reading "Ootng to Ornndpa's". , . Margtm-t OarftiH Reading;, "Dressmaking" , Minnie Arthur Sonic, "Hallowe en Ftod" Mrs. Ilamlren Reading -Mrs. Rashnr Reading;, "Witches" i ...Alice Ptamont and May Catterall j Sonic. "Pussy's in the Well" . . .School Keading- Dorothy Newqulst Reading-, "S'pORln' " Oren Arthur Reading-, "Landing of the PilRTims" , Mrs. Raniire Reading-, "Mr. Turkey Gobbler". . . Olen Newqulst, Prank Newqtiiat. Edwin. Hoeft and Ieonnrd Car- t mil After Informal and delightful accor dion miiKlc hy Cap. Gliti, the guests piaeo near the ceillnt. The affair af-- lorded scores of folk an Interesting evening. VISIT IS ANTICIPATED Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Anderson and daughter of Uklah will leave next Aionday for Garnett, Kansas, to visit intil spring with relatives whom they have not seen for It years. Gl'lLD YVIU4 INITIATk The Catholic Ladles Guild la plan r.lng for initiation to be held before the S o'clock mass at St. Mary's Catholic Church Sunday morning. CLt B MKCTINQ SOHEDl'LKD Thhe Sptxzerlnktum Club is to meet tomorrow arternoon with Mra. Alice Monro at nor home, S0& Perkins av. r.ue. DELPHIAN CLUB TO MEET A meeting of the Delphian Club is scheduled for tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. L. L. Rogers, 111 North Main strerot. Mrs. Rogers and Mrs. Slyvan Cohn are to be tomorrow's hostesses. G. A. R. UDlfS TO MEET. Ladies of thd 7. A. U. will meet In a business pension in the club room of the library tomorrow, the meeting be ing set for 2; 30 o'clock. VOTE FOR HARTMAN IS HOPF'S TPSTAIRS SHOP FOll WOMEN NOW! IS THE TIME TO SELECT YOUR WINTER COAT AT A SPECIAL PRICE. Fur Fabric Coats Cloth Coats Long Coats: Short Coats from $25.00 on up to $115.00. 1680; OPPONENT'S 755 George A. Hurtman polled 16Si votes to 765 for A. V. Rugg in the Pendleton mayoralty race, , complete returns from the IS city precincts to day showed. Every precinct in the city returned a majority for Mr. Hart man. The mayor elect carried his own precinct, No. 4S, by the big margin of ISI to 74, or three to one. in Mr. Rugg's precinct, No. 44, on the north Ride,, he ran the closest race, the vote standing 1S8 for Mr, Hart man to 115 tor mr. Kugg. -ine result by pre cincts were as louows: ' , i Hartman, 145; Burst, 50. 31 Hartman, 141; Rugg, '13. 34 Hartman, T4r Rugg, 40 3&--Hartman, 207; Rugg, 74. 36 Hartman, 106; Rugg, 27." J7 'Hartman, 130; Rugg. Js. 38 Hartman, 114; Rugg; 'J7. 39 Hartman, 95; Rugg, 67. 40 Hartman, 84; Rugg, 88. 41. Hartman, 117; Ruga;, 1.; 4J Hartman, 89; Rugg, 6. 43 Hartman, 281; Rugg, f4. '"' 44 Hartman, 138; Rugg, il6. A (1 VER TAVIOR. HARD WARK S TORE Our Stock of Books Will Furnish You With a Maximum of Entertainment at ! ' a Minim u mof Expense. READ : "A DAUGHTER OF THE LAND" fey Gene Stratton-Porter. ."THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS" V ', by Booth Tar kin gt on. - .."THE VALLEY OF THE GIANTS' , , , by Peter B. Kyne. ; ;. , 'NOMADS OF THE NORTH" v by James Oliver Curwood. , , "'MAM'SFl.I F. JO" 1 by Harriet T. Comstock. ' ' .' -"THE LURE OF THE NORTH" : . by Harold Bindloss. ' . THE ROUGH ROAD . ' " t ' by William J. Locke. ' ,"THE ISLAND OF INTRIGUE" ; ' by Isabel Ostrander. ; "THE HEARTS KINGDOM" . by M. Thompson Daviess. We hare1 hundreds of the latest popular fiction. All are ; '' priced at $1.00 THOMPSONS' DRUG STORE Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. WE HAVE DECIDED TO START NOVEMBER THE FIRST TO SELL FOR CASH ONLY. If. credit is wanted we will give same after com ing to a thorough understanding. . We can also reduce the price of our goods consid erably on account of going on a cash basis, which will benefit you also. UMATILLA FLOUR & GRAIN CO. 220 E. Court Street l-00 W. Alta Street Phone 351-1014-475 3 S X Rev. and Mrs. John H. Secor will be honor gueats at a reception to be given tonight by the members of the Meth odist Episcopal church for their new pastor. The reception will take place in the reception rooms of the church at S o'clock and memberrs of all the churches in the city have been invited to take part. , Rev. Mr. Secor came here just re cently to succeed Rev. Robert B. Oor, nail, who resigned to accept a staff position with the Methodist church in the northwest district. The recep tion to him and Mrs. Secor tonight will be the first public function held in their honor. '. - . ' 'A program, or music 'and addresses will feature the reception tonight and refreshments will be served. The af fair is in charge of the Ladles Aid of the Methodist church. .- - C. E. Waileg has been aslted to rep resent the businessmen of Pendleton in welcoming the new pastor. . Rv; Alfred Lockwood, of the Church of the Redeemer, will speak on behalf of the Ministerial Association. A. J. Owen will speak for the men of the church Mrs. . V. Robinson will play a violin solo, Mrs. H. 13. Inlow will give a vocal solo, Mrs. A. J. Owen and Miss Ruth Renjamin will play a piano duet and Cash Wood will sing a vocal solo. ' .r,'v Hrsheys Bulk GbbojK Pound 35p ! I" Hersliey's Cocoi: 1-2 bound tin v.....-. , ttuiUnrd's Par-Ex Vanilla Chocolate, bar Baker's Unsweetened Chocolate, bar ...; v; A .r35c .j40c: GhiradelU'8 Sweet Chocolate 'lartrp War . RS ' JLipton's Gocoa, :tin .L:.i :..:.....'........;..'..,U..".?5c ' ; Baker's Coc6,g.;.;;.....v..:.V....l;v.,,.-i'..b..40c 'lilKh lrado (.NiTrt'e In Riilk'nm tlirotigh our ooffee refliATf takes "tit all .the chatf; po'tmda AJl the host, known, bran'ds -ot hirh 'grade Cora-wt. His aii.Vft ' uuiA..'. a .-vl...; : : ..... .. - . , . ; sweet Alptopdfvhonn mudo, 'gulliur . A. I.-Ahiionils Nm croi, pound ..!.... v ,, Fin.ianHiidillvs,J Kippered J-'almon and' Oysters, (fesh . every Vetk, ,.' ., . ' (Mill . . IWu' Kastein , . , I ijray Jfbs. , (jroccry fa THREE PHONES QUAU1Y v THE THOMAS , , ' ' i J -l . 11 I : i ft ' . ' -n. t. .-., ,'i , n I ' . H '! v. i.j UfJG Tft ib the Vre'atl llU 1U lhuvo and tli V- Some ProKresH. ! "Georgette is engaged to a beach guard. She has only been at the beach two days. . . "What is his name?" "She doesn't know his name. His number is 20." Louisville Cqurjer Journal. JfEIIi HART Wni HAXG . (Continued from page 1.) sheriff, accompanied under the late him. Iwul Men to Attend. ' ' Among those who left on various trains today for Salem were F. S. Le Grow, of' Athena, long, a friend of the Taylor family; N, ,D, Swearingen, brother-in-law of the late sheriff: Olenn Bushes, deputy sheriff; Will M. Peterson and Elmer Moore. Carl Per- inger, who is in Portland, has an in vitation to the hanging .and will fit- tend. George Strand, a former deputy tinder Sheriff Taylor, was invited, as was J. C. Marin, who was deputy on duty the day of the Jail break. Hart's accomplices in the Jail break two of whom were convicted after a Jury trial of first degree murder, were sentenced to hang four weeks' from tomorrow, on December 1. The appeal taken fbr these, two, Elvie D. Kerby and John I. Rathie, however, resulted in a stay of execution, and their deatn sentences may or may not be commut ed, as the supreme court decides, Hart is ready to go to his death trap tAnorrow a repentant man, say re ports from Salem. Since his arrest i and conviction on the charge' of mur 1 der he has accepted spiritual guidance j with more faith than his four com irades and he has frequently been vis ited by ministers of the gospel and by members of the Salvation Army. It was Miss Jennie Conrad, captain of the Salvaticn Army post here, who first carried The word to Hart and she also got in touch with his father to tell him of his eon's fate. ; MANILA,- Pi I.,'Nov.f4.'4--VA:'P.) Opium smuggling into the 'Philippine Islands frnm China. Japan and .'Brit ten North Borneo, has KrtwVt'i to such proportions that CMstOms-'orflilii.s. of the Philippine government have ' be come alarmed. .Dnrlnir ; the last six months secret service, agents . have seised opium, valued nt approximately ly 2ni,0O; and 'they say-this Is only a small portlonof-tha drug which has been brought- into tho Islands lllegalltf at the ports .of Mafilla,, Hollo, "Cebu, Zamboanga and' Joo. ' V .' Secret sefyice' operatives': 'declare they are unable' -to, elpp'. Ihel llliigal traffic in cplum, morphine and other drugs with, present facilities at 'their dlspotal. , "A submarine chaser "..built for the United States Sovernmcnt,lur Ing the War. "was: recently , ' brought here on'board,a tsnnsport and turned over to the Philippine government. It is the intention of the customs s'l-vico to', use th speedy craft In, 'jiutr'olllng the coast' of .-the Island . loff f LTon northward from Jfan'.lfi' tfay.'.an'soon as the legislature p'rovldes monpyf or Its operation.- ,, -t ';.' 't V- 'v- ' : v , Nearly every veagel arriving-', from Chlim'and 4arat Is rl.oscly WAtcjied by customs offitfals. A. tilg'is ' kept- In service constantly to mwt these ships off Correxidor Island, jif the entrance to Manila Bay, 111 nrdar to prevent the smugglers from throwing overboard their contraband goods, which- can be easily picked up -by small craft and transported "to the. mainland. While Manila is the most, adiapta i geous port at which to cul'r.y:rti the (11 legal, traffic- the vlgilahcerof h offj- ; clals here h'as. d.rivca , many ;- 'of the i smugglers to. the . :Bouthcrn,. krands I where fojnparativeily iiltie Ulifieulty is -experioncjed in lartdfn the drug.' Only a single- coast guard ' cut'er,' ' The "Mlndoro," patrols the entire group of islands from Sornpgon to Kritish North j Borneo from which Island the traffic largely originates. . " , -; . Numerous vintas; small aniline; -craft take shelter in the -bay and rivers along the North Borneo coast, out of reach of the coast guard cutter which I can not operate within the threo mile limit When a favorable wind comes and the ''Mlndoro' 'is out of sight, the vintas with their opium or? board; set sail for Jolo or the island of Tawltawl where they land the drug without de tection. , ' ,TIIY. HAPPY WIPK est Inspiration a' mun tain the life of the family, yet how many bonus In-this fair land are blighted hy the ill health of wife and mother; ' -' " It may be backaches, heodarhes, the tortures 'of a dUn)l4remcnt r some ailment peculiar to 'her r;:; which makes life a burden.. Kv.ry woman In this condition should rely updo I.Ttln - R. rinkham's Vegetable ont. pound,' mado from roots and 'herlm,, to restore her to helnth and happiness.' ; Prtiniirictit StiMh-itt-Iacs.f-!. Ro., hnd .Morrisorf, a 'proinlnent- mertibcir Vf the sophomore clase . and John: Hales left yesterday with Mr. and Mrs. Jess Hales by, auto - for Long Roach, Cnllforniai Mr. Morrison's sis ter Geraldine a senior in the school,' expects to' leave with her parents for Long Reach soon.' None twill return to this city until the winter Is over. WILL LEARN FISHERY will be offered tomorrow and saturday cloth; awd plush '-, - , :- i-" " ;. COATS suits :.: ' :' ' v DRESSES SKIRTS BLOUSES - SWEATERS ' AND ( , : , ' furs. ' comparison especially . INVITED. H 1- ' rt' SKATTLE,' W'ash'.. Nov.'. (L P.) Progressive Indians of southeastern Alaska want to learn the white' man's, methods of fishery, .according tp Marius T. Hansome, of tlif I'ntted States bufcioi of. education ut-Hyda-burg. Alaska. . Air., Hansome i com pleting arrangnmenta to enroll - a mint bar of Myilah Indians in the Col lage of llsherics at the L'nrvoisity of WaKbingUm und at private sehools. A number also, will- be plucl jn'indus trial plants near here as- a means of gaining practical knowledge., ". . Mr. Hansom says citizens of .the village of Hydah have twenty-five gas boats worth about f 6,000 each, and to operate and repair these -. tioatjf the mechanically incllntMl native beye are coming here to learn'" modern method of repair,, welding and construction. . The Jlidaburg Jndlans are; among tbe most progressive Indians In AI aka. -The student body qt the gov ernment school publish ,-thefr own newspaper as will as arrange lecture i in Knglish on science 1 and . business practice.; The nutlves bojist of a co operative store end sawmill. Hyda burg soon will have a co-operative cannery and an eletftrlc light ilant.- MILUNERS GIVE HAT TO MRS. HARDINT, rsr: No need for sugar on your cereal, wKen you eat Grape-Nuts Its tick flavor, ' ' sweet from the pure grain sugars of wrieat and malt ed barley, pleases every appetite. y - ' k r 'fax . l u fx 7 vf ! J.t ' " ' i i 1 I '- - i ' f -- V" t :.-. : - ( '-, - I LIFORNIA JAPANESE ' TO ARGUE AS CITIZENS SAN fr'KANClSCO, Nov. t (!'. T.) Japanese' hero today amioiinrtd their- intention of starting a court ac tion -to enjuln .the state against plac ing in effect the anti-Japanese pie- grutn which was passed by tue voters of California Tuesday. ' It Is under stood here that the Jupamae hope eventually to establish through the courts that they are eligible to.cltK xenalilp and that the anti,-alion law -does not apply to them-.''he law us written does not mention Japanese, merely specifying that persons not eligible to citizenship cannot hold land. - ... ... m. ixiiiih and Ran Pine ce, MiH,UUrl, near here. lat nigh ami demolished a privt mr atUicli me paNiengcr train. iais oi me road oen Killed, Three uffi rejtnrtotf to ptiy the rjir.uniT (itAKincs; TirmcE niii JOPUNVMo., Nov. ,. (A. P.) An extra .iremht train crashed into the BAD BLOOD 'npure, Thin, Week. Afflicta .- Crat Msiority of Peoola Whether In scrofula, eoree, bolls, and eruptions; .or as rheumatism with ag-iiiiing pains and achos in 1mh, julnte or muscles; ss catarrh Willi Its disagreeable Inflammation! and discharge; in disturbed dlges- oii. or dragging down debility and tired feeling, it la corrected by . Hood a Sarsaimrllla, that most economical and reliable blood rem eily and bnllUng-uo tonic. Thou sands use this medicine and praise t for wonderful relief. Made from the most Valuable remedies thnt physicians know, and unparalleled li character, quality, taste and cur- r,lLr?'rT,w!'' ' catluirtlO is tieeded, Uao ltootV Pills. pa iiij ; ? -t 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 it ii 1 1 1 iZj .e l , ' This hat and carf have been selected ae the campaign gift ot the Trimmed Hat Association ot American Milliner! to Mrs. War ren O. Harding. Tbe sectional tam combination Is made of Imperial Persian brocade end Scotch mole, while on the right side of the dovetya bandeau Is a large gold pin with a Jade center. Tbe Scotch mola searf can be transformed Into a purse which buckles over the arm. Tbe artist ha adjusted tb bt nod icarl on a recent portrait Ufh Bwdioc. ,s ,., , fHEMANDEL lS tftallv m3rotnan inst A tatl r inft machine. It IS a mtuical initnimant tlut reproduces the sin&ei's sonfc end th works pf in strumentnlista in a tniln l,fl;U Tr im ttheinstrument that will add pleasure ar.d hippineu to the home. 1 he MANDE.L plays any record. No extra parti. It woroUrftil f tons r delimits the ear. Its beautiful appearance pleases the eye. No home a complete without a phonograph. And yon should tea end hear the MA.NDEL beforachooiinA yours. - ' 1 ' - ' CRAWFORD FURNITURE CO 1 L-Tfe-, .1 L V . Jts.fe lltiiUltUii