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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1921)
., x. -ly " ,1 TACE TOO DAILY EAST OREGOKIAIT, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 21, 1021. TEN PAGES I im on bmi-jita ur .iajii i iviwrj iiu iit AjUiL3 illri Jill iLav- NKSS OF POOU QUALITY. Wc always five you the best for the price, no matter what ie price- PDZWm MONTANA CUMBKKS PERISH VIENNA, Feb. 21 (A. P.) Four men and three women who were climb ing the Wachsteln glacier have perish ed. FASSKXGER STEAMER. WHrXTCED MEX1CO C1TX. Feb. 21. (A- P.) PuzzleCoraerj EIGHT -ATKS" Each word, ends in ate 1. To counterfeit X. To destroy, t. To In sert. . To command. S. Lonely. . Suitable, I, confirmed. - Ex cessive, AN ENIGMA I am composed of IS letters: My 8. I. 10 is a tree H my 3fie I II HI HI W "! My 1, 4, S, X la a deep depreisioBimuch more, ancient date: there it Is a My 12. IS, U, is a short letter My 7. 11. 16, It la part of a bird My whole Is an Illustrious American ANSWERS ElOHT'ATES.- 1. Simulate. 2. Ex terminate. X lnlcrpol-aie. 4. Vict-ate. S. Dttol-ate. 6. ilppropri-ofe. 7. In. veter-ait. 8. Imvuidcr-ate. AS EXIGMAAth, Gorge, Hote, ITutj. George Washington, i WASHIXOTOX'S BIHTHDAY Fred, wt, Tom. Huoh. Ell. Rote. Otis. rrcrsK. Hetcn, sc2, Bam. Cora. Ora. f aoopieo. -, . ; , Vrtula, Ned, Ted. Ritlh, amY. FATH l The Ulustrtous Sir'. Isaje' Neston ER OP U IS CWKTRY. (when boy at Grantham Introduced VASHINGTON'S BIRTHBAY rixr ffr OUT To M0 3 ; - Cho? The" plO ' . " f : NOW NHftT'5 Chit n X'S wj - rR?1 lr - teEf'" ' ' Si-."' 1 lie June i.oj i 011 bo. uuy lu cat ouvu un ...( tier stun tie Misj pain to ascertain their best forms fMliH'lliiiiR Mailed: the xtc trie lie I11U mli w cm. . Tiicro are rl;liuvii jnd proportions, and the point at i.NHiiii-ic ht'tf' ! Sills' nm. n sU but the last one, 1I10 llrvt U-m-r oil which tae string should be attached i..tti iHinte s .l-Uie, In Hie f ist one. it is the last It-ilir of the name abkb- to thfin. )lj made also paper lan 1.. tntMiiis. Fill t letters to rumplcM tlie names. If you do this currvctly.i terns for cnd1', by the light of which 'I u v tit time another name lor bctr WaililugtoB, Vbst Is Itr ' j h went to school in the winter moru- , . . Firm Fabdcs that .thek Sha Often we think we talk too much of this important thing of quality, but just . when that enters our mind some good customer comes in and tells us how much she has en joyed wearing that coat she bought three years before! And only because that very coat had quality of material and quality of work manship did she enjoy it. , , So we are glad that we always have in sisted on this very point, for it is not what one pays at the time for any article of mer chandise, but the service it gives that really :ounts. An Entirely New Showing of Beautiful Suits Not a single maid llutf lias beauty aiiI style correctness to be recommended, lias been omitted from this splendid Jiowiiig. These liavo been imported direct from their makers, and we are wire you will freely admit tlutf our as aartmeiits are toe must interesting you've seen iH-n-about. Visit our Rcariy-to-Wear section tomorrow and try on as many coats as you wish, unUl you fhid one that just fits your fancy.. We know we can satisfy you. for our assort miiit comprises, a diversified variety of styles in all the newest fabrics and shades. I . . Our Prices $27.50 CSEAEEST DEPARTiHENT STOSZ boples Ifef efaous& IERE IT PAYS TO TRADE t !: V J The steamer Lucrio del Albia, with 17 passengers and a; crew of eight, was wrecked In a storm yesterday at the entrance of the Bay of Vera Cruz. One person was drowned aa. the others were rescued with dificijlty, "according to reports. 1 KITES PXU.NG will soon be cuming, and with its advent out will corns the tops and the Jumping ropes and the kites. Did you ever wonder as you watched your kite fly up is the air who invented 'his pleasant pastime? Kite flying does not ap'pear to have been knowa in England more than two hundred and twenty-five years. In China, however, it is of favorite outdoor fiwe. and ooe of the Chiaesc holidays is ep.cially devoted to kite flying. Tbc Chinese kite.-i, too. are most curiously constructed, and by means of ra .rnl holes supplied with I vibrating cords, their kites are made I to produce a'hummJng Dp s? like th.t I of a top. . Chinese kues are made in many different shapes, some look like birds, others are in the ehap of flh. Some resemble, the human form, but the common shtpe that we all know is for many reasons tlie best that can i i Mold, 2 A, A A 2 i Range From to 98.50 S s 4 Xcw Offensive Against Greeks Feb. 21. (U. P.) -The Turkish nationalists reported the con centrating in great strength along ths Smyrna front for a nejv offensive against the Greets, sayfl Constantinople. ESQ i ... The Little Red hen - 3-; SI ' . . , Put Snmelb tunc , Zz6t 441-::-:::::.--;:: ' Hen FccnANO Drink '. Jf-- - ' hrvtl Zv'Z Crc-dLACKMvj ToMaxcF Bone f nWTNly- -tjV 1 . mmi . feih- mil in net or r It Ok Use Pi, t Box ' . JCJ s J -h White, Grm Or Dark r i ' r-1 ; H - 7 17 s HK little red hen or the feeding , bu sure tile grain runs in the proper ciiiCHes as the boys call this toy j direction. This I indicated on the a is a fine one to make lor the little j gambled drawing. Cut thc-ae parts 'art A or. the base mp.y be made 'lrs- I'tane up ihe top piece, perfect-. y quar and on the center line bore , nols.or the strins and rubber band. Make tb four little feet B and fasten ! o the 2 in. x In. piece A with piece A with te and brads. Plan a piece long enough n.i lour ieet ana inen cm 10 'pnrih. Make pair C and fasten to A with brad or p:n . indlcsted on the draw nig. Next lay out patiern lor parts l and E.. l' the square method, noting esrefuily whre holes re to be bored for the pins, siring and rub ber b.-ind If c:gar box Jutpber Is used select a sood piece for the legs D and tn(o the grammar school there. iftyfngfOf paper kiies. and look grea' TRADITIONAL GAE1Y BY 15. W. Hl-M.1NC.KR Kdltor's Koto: E. W. HulUngcr of the Paris Bureau ot the United Press has Just arrived In Now York on a short, ienve of absence. He has writ ten a finely view of the Paris of to day. NEW YORK, Feb. 21. When by government edict an engineer pressed a button Xew Year's eve aud flooded Paris for the first time since the war with her old pre-war electrical bril liance, the orchestras on the boule vards and the Montmnrtre fairly burst themselves trying to do justice to the occasion and champaigno corks pop ped as they had never popped since lH. Taxis honking on the streets outside took up tbo refrain and students In the Ijitin quarter went singing in sor petlnes around the lampposts just as they did before the war. At that knnment- Pnrln frnm ItiA standpoint of surface annearance onee more became the gay old city ot tra- Lut in the real sense, it was not the same Paris. It was a new Paris, go ing through many of the uabitual ges tures of the old. , (Md laris Gone. For the old Paris, as hundreds of thousands of American tourists and students Know It and loved it. is gone gone for a generation, at least. , The war changed the people who made Paris Paris, and not .until these peo ple aro gone and aonther generation has taken their place can the old pleasure capital be herself. Physically Paris has crmpleted her j-everslo to 1914. Menus are no long er stinted. The win caves are full. The "guides of the night" are back ot the Place de l'Opera with their "most interesting show around the corner." The boulevards are fragrant with femininity. So far as the Cook's tourist knows, it's the sun.e old city revived. , , But the f'Pld Timer" knows that the peoplo he sees are different from his cronies of 1914, and frequently even a new type of Frenchmen altogether. First, the H. C. of L. has lifted the price scale between three and four hundred per cent. Parisians, who n 1914. could afford to dine with their fiTnilies in the cafe, no longer people the boulevcard restaurants, Their places havo been taken by newly-rich and foreigners with high exchange rates. t ,. . ' Longchamps, where France's elite used to display its finest gowns, has been virtually boycotted by the real aristocracy. The only fashion show there is at the races now kept up by flashy "parvenucs," or women of easy fortune. War Changes People. The war worked a remarkable psy chological change in the French peo ple.. It made them a nation of stoics. while the glamour of the trade on foreign soil unl'x ked the rfnotiuns of the British and turned staid London into one of the most demonstrative cities in the world, the long years of trench warfare, midst the mud of their own country, amid the ruins of their ofn homes, developed in the French man a dogged self-restraint that he hart never been thought capable of. Hundreds of thousands wept in White Hall on Armistice Day. Paris crowds looked on in almost expres sionless silence, as their unknown Poilu was escorted to tho Arc. Am ong the multitudes who deposited wreaths I do not remember seeing one shedding tears.- .....,, i This new netitalilt has fcoised the T0Y3 HMD DSEpULftRTICLBsS Thrt R Boy Crn Hrk&. -. - ....By. Frank LSolrr I;i3T2U ;tcr. Esp't Of rJVNutH.7aptHm6,P0Buc Scnoots OpDstrott nn a coping saw and sanUpaper edscs to line. .Vov maku the feeding pan by bor- i lug a hole In a pi :cc of wood and then jsawinif it round or u.-e the eoVit of a i small Dill box. F.inleo tha nan to A wilh a ,m.., ,.k j ,,. ,, K, . h 'K.- '. If you do not h'iva one make a sub stitute by driving a brad or fine fin-u-hlng null in ihe end of a stick. Kile o,T the h ad and then file the nail like a drill point so It will bore through ihe wood without cracking It. Assemble ihe hen wlih bank pins or large common pins. The points are to be cut and the ends turned by the use jpf pliers. But It would be wll not to thoKig; and he frequently attached these! ' .nterns to the talis ot kites 10 a dark night, to as to Icid credulous peop.e m b.lit-ve his cundtus 10 be comets. You all know oaw pur own Henja- mln Frankiln delected electricity In (he air by meanj of a long tailed kite to which had been attached a key. entire nation. It Is reflected In all classes, for till were In the war. Behind the bright eyes that Invite you so appeallngly on the boulevards often throbs it broken heart of a youthful widow or flanroo who lost her lover out there. A surprising number of tho merrymaker In the really I.allu rendezvous of Montmar tre wear mouring on their cwitsieevcs. Thus Paris could not, even if she would, bo the old care-freo effusive city of pre-war d.iys Dot for a gen eration, at. least. SPEED MAKES CHAMP ; 7 3 -J i; J llalptt Grccnleaf Shooting fast and concentatlon has mado Ralph Greenleaf the world's pocket billard champion. "The faster I shoot the better runs I make." says Greenleaf. Greenleaf. who is 21, has been shooting pocket billiards since he was nhie. Two years ago he won the championship. . . ' .. . DETROIT. Feb. 21. (P. 1'.) Bills authorizing the erection of an Inter national bridge spanning the Detroit river from this city to Windsor, Ont., will be introduced to congress and in the Canadian parliament shortly. Sen ator Charles Townsejid of Michigan is expected to offer the bill in congress. Word from the Canadian side of the river is that the bill will be introduced in parliament immediately. I As planned, tho bridge would cost $28,U0U,ti0 and would consist of iwol decks, one for railway service and om for foot and vehicle traffic. The river at this point is one mile wide and the channel through wBich tho largo lake steamers pass Is about 20 feet deep. It has not been decided whether the bridge will be of the draw- typo or built high enough to allow the steam ers to pass below. The present bridge plan was sug gested early lost summer and the ex pense of construction will bo met by large business interests on both aides of the river. The bridge will be oper ater hy the two cities. The only means of crossing thcriver jiow la by ferries operated by a private oom Iany. - . i turn Hie ends till after the parts have been pninied. However thu toy should be assembled and tried out before painting. Loop a rubber band through the hole Irr the body of the hen and then thread H tliouh I lie hole In A. It can be hold in place cither by knot ting, driv.ng a pin into A, through the loop in tho band aad the hole, or by inserting a section of a mulch stick tJitoi.gu tne a.uu beneath part A. Tie a piece of string to the budy and thread it through the bass A a in dicated. To operate placo the toy on the table, hold down with one hand and pull tha string wlih the other. Leaders which are the tine lihrs with only half an arrow head Indicate. the colon for palntln?. There ere many ln'er.stinz things about Mies, thing) of which you would never ortam when you send your pa- pur kite itying higu in the tai y aprlng brtcrja. Tho powtr of a flying kite Is very great: it has been made to sua- tain a body In water, nd even to draw a carriage upon common rouds. f . ' 'V ' I ' 'r 1 1 I ! ... i j J'fl ' - J j ' J MQ$ 1 i A Little Story of Washington ACUTE SAYS ClAXTON; WASHINGTON". Foe. 21. (U. v- I'ublto school tujiehers of the United J Spates should receive at least 000,000 In salaries this year, P. P. Claxton, commissioner of education, laid here today, -l-ast year teachers Jrew a total of approximately 70, 1100,000. s This is euunl to half what Is spent annually for clmu-ottos," said Claxton. riilurles ot elementary school touch t now are about 30 per cent higher than four years ago, according to Clax- ton's reports, showing that the cam- paign to get them more l'y na m ,n partliill)' successful. High school principal!) now lire paid average of IS per cent more than before tho war, the records show, , Wago cutting throughout the coun try and unemployment aro factors which are contributing sqme benefit to thn educational system. . ' "Many teachers who left the schools to sain higher wages in inuusiry non are beginning o drift back," said flux ion. "As a rule, however, such peon are not the typo of Individual whose efforts are inot beneficial to the edu rutionul system Porsops who skip from one profession to another for slinltt Increaavs In compensation tn&ke only fair teachers, ' -. 'The crisis of the education system is far from over. Good teacher still are nearly as scarce as during the war. Few persona are training- for leaching work -because of tho low salaries still paid.-- in some schools jlemoiilar grade teachers now are receiving only $700 a year. A good stenographer now can tarn twice this amount. , "Formerly - the teaching profession attracted the best element of tho pop ulntjon. Men and women of the finest culturo and education wero attracted to it. The uteu often went Into U ito earn money to train themselves for other work in the professions and pub lic life.- lTestdent-elect Harding was one of these. Thus for a .short tiin". at least, the nation obtained the serv ices of men and women who later In life went into tha professions liar nu-iiiciiio and the law and Into public life. . "Whoo the war came n and salaries and wages In most other professions were Iwosted, it hecame Impossible for the men and women to ro tnlo teaching to earn money while, training themselves for larger positions. Tholr trainlntc cost them more and they had to go Into Industrial positions to" etn che additional money needed. "This Is a condition that never wll' roturn. The schools from now on must pay salaries sufficient to attract peo ple whu will- make teaching their Hie work."; i .' i ; t ', THE HAGVK, Feb. 21. The aged Sultan of Tokjokarta, one of the two fowerful and wealthy potenates of the lutch Kast Indies, has decided to abdicate In favor of tils eldest son, pie Crown Prince of Jokjokarta, who has been trained Is Kuropean ways. The Crown Prince ha spent months at tho court of Queen Wllhelmlna nnd fxitch officials look forward tfl his rule ever the Mohammedan natives with much favor. , - , , . Before leaving for the Indies, a few weeks ago, the voting man informed lis father that he would not tako the Sultan's throne unless the abdicating PUKING the Revolutionary War Washington and bis troops were stationed near the City of Phila delphia. In that city there was at the time a young English boy, who had come to America to study medi cine under the guidance of the noted Dr. flush. Now. although this lad was accepting the hospitality of the Americans his heart was true to his native laud and lie took no pains to hkie bis lack ot sympathy with the Colonists' cause. . One day the lad and several of his fellow students heard that the United States Army, then on the outskirts of tho city, was preparing to build a barricade along the banks of the .Delaware River, to prevent a sudden water attack from the British, and on appeal had been Issued asking the aid of all men in this stupendous task. 1 "Lei us go out to observe the frolic," remarked the English' lad, scoffing at the ciTorts of the brave Americans; and so they trumped out into the coun try, where the building was In opera tion. 'There were the old men and the young boys, who wero not ablo to lli;lil for their country, busily engaged In piling stone upon stone and log upon log In an attempt to build a wall along the Delaware Itivcr front. The English boy and his companions seat ed themselves upon a fori cm and pro ceeded to look on whrte the others tvorked. A noble looking man, who had been working In his shirt sleeves now di recting, now helping the other work ers, approached the group upon the fence and addressed the boys: "Why don't you follows lend a hand In this work, come and put your shoulder to the fence," he sald.j "I am an Englishman," answered; , ' . A Modern-GW; WE'VE got a row of cherry trees. And you can bet I'd catch it II t went out and cut one down, Or backed it with my hatchet. . No matter if I lold the truth, Or how I'd try to patch it, ' My dad would never stand alunt - Like that one with the hatchet He'd yell 1 "You bad, outrageous boy I That tree you couldn't match ill Why did I ever buy you uch A weapon at a hatchet" 'J M own' ' VW V 9tl tZ- , Codfish, lHiiii-less, lb, ...... ."po Hloalers, filch . ... i. '."'". "i " Sliu-Ueiel, i'imIi..,. ( (imK-b Kanlliit's, -an loc to 5MK Kalumu, t un . . i ; . . ! W' " ; 'I ' t'rnli Meat, i-an ..... . ... , . 3K Shrimp, best Rrade, t'iui. . .'."iHM Uibstt-r. bost Rrle,! can. . 40o Tiinn 1'lsh. hest gnule, fan 85o Salmon, kippered, tlu !!.., 3iM Oysters, t ail Jilkl lu We llanis, can : . . . t . . -p - J'ltt'il IliuiilV, tail v .. J;- -.;.3f Mackerel, fuiicy frtrsli, cai( 60c Fish l'lnkes, can . . 2rr! ...... t AeTWlesViiTeiwusA i i 'Ariftr I.. w TysnsrMF potentate, with' his entire court, re nuived to another tow jtban ,Joklok arta, and tho father consented, rather than cause trouble. While Bolshevik agitators In tho Kast Indies have had much ssi cess In many wetlons of Java and Suiiuutra, they have Iwid very little. Influence In Jokjokura and tho new Hultn'ri Is ex pected to maintain this situation. he Hultan of Jokjokarta Is a v. sal of the D-itcli and has his heau iiuarters at Jokjokarta. -on the oiufi . crn'slde of the Island of Java. Jok jokarta has a population ul about , 000. Tho Sultan's water- palace or. citadel Is described us the chief feature of tho city. It covers on area of about ono square mile and Is a small tojwn by Itself with stieanito buildings for the occupancy of the women of tha Sultan's court nnd for workmen. The Hultan divides his authority tJ ,i certain extent with a uuasi-lndcpen. '"cut prlnce.Tnkn Alnm-.- - i . - .'! '--., i i 1 TRANSCONTINENTAL MAIL OMAHA, Feb. 21. (A. P.) Trial night flights In the transcontinental man service tetwcon. New 'York and R-.n Francisco are to be started next Tuesday nn ruing, air mall officers an nounced lust night. ' HI TTKIt KKMAlJiH HTKAUV. "f. POHTI.AM)! Feb. -Sli A." I'.l Cattle steady, hogs firm, prime light tllftll.35, extreme top ll.f.o. hiietp weak, Kggs unsettled, butler steady. 11 T- the boy, "and I am proud to say my hands have never been soiled by do ' Ing work aimed against my native. 1 land." ' , , 1 "That la poor gratitude for the ho. . pltallty extended towards you In your present home," answered the man, "X am proud to soil my hands with any work that I know to be In a good and a right cause," and he turned back to, his work, while the English lad. ashamed, jumped from the fence and hurried down the road to the city. The rebuke had come from no let person (has General Washington, I Am Proud To Soil My Hands With 1 Any Work That I Know To Ba I In A Good And Right Cause. ? What, cut a precious cherry tree,"" '. Or even think to scratch it) My dad hat taught me belter ots For pocket-knife and hatchet, Now little Georgia Washirrgtori (Who couldn't well detach it), ' Got caught because the cherry tree Was holding fait hu huu-h'ct, 1 . ' And when hit dady rme along. He tried and tried to snatch it, But couldn't to he told thrtrulh About hii little hatdieV' ' 1 . A