TEN PAGES EDC Social and Club News That's what they claim can now be we lay DAILY EAST OPwEGONlAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH 3, 1921. MltH. WAWTKM.K HONORED Mm. Kn ill M. Kiwtelle, who will rxiw afternoon for a 'businens session !' Pendleton noon. Has honors In !ln ine roui.ty library club room, a tlmrmlnff way yesterday afternoon ; whm Mr. Charle llond und Mrs. El len J. llond entertained with an Infor. rnal mr win party at the Charlm ltond home. Purinit the nervlnit of refreh nifnln, Mr. Knwtelle and Mrs. Ti. I Pmtt'h firelded at a table attractively rentered by daffodils and other spring lilotwoniH. 1 T. A. TO MKCT. The Parent Teacher Amoriation of liiverxlile will meet tomorrow nitr'nt at the school houe. Itev. Q. I (Mink Iator of the Flint Presbyterian church. Mm. Will W'yrlck. one of the orflcera of the State Parent Teacher Axanciatlon, and It. K. Tucker, com munity service worker, will apcik. DA.NTK AT SHERIDAN'S A nnmler of local people are plan i.lne tc motor to the Sheridan place on litittir i-"mk eViturday night to attend an Informal country dance, one of a erics er joyed this winter. O A. H. TO MEET The MrPhernon circle of the Grand Army of the Republic will meet tomor-1 W'yrlck. They will leave tomorrow ir rtn ruim:iu mm nm nail Auirvu S for l'earl Harbor, lluwuti, where IV. FurnswortU will l stationed as a. lieutenant !n the dental corps ot the navy. Or. and Mr. Farnaworth formerly resided here when Ir. Farn- worth practiced dentistry. He enlisted In the dental corps during the war and later practiced In Seattle. miss nrn.NsiuK visits. Miss Ke.therlne Durnslde, of Port land, Is a jruest at the heme of Mrs. t?uy Hoyden. The two attended col let at I'niverslty of Washington and both aro members ot Kappa Kappa Gamma. MILTON MATRONS VISIT Mrs. C. S. Cheshire and Mrs, J. O. Kcnyon, r.f Milton, were Pendleton visitors yesterday. VISITIXO IN CITY Mrs. A. C. Mylntyre has been visit ing In Pendleton today from her honv at Hel.x. MRS. CARROLL, RETTRNS Mrs. Edith Carroll returned to her home In Portland yesterday after a visit In Pendleton. VISITORS IN CITY Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Farnsworth ar rived In the city this morning from CIRCLE ORGANIZED. Queen Kster Circle of Westminster Guild was organised Tuesday evening at the home of Mis. W. W. Greeii. The circle Is composed of Mrs. Green's Sunday school class of the Presby terian church. Miss Shirley Rew was elected president of the meeting; Miss Margaret lilue, vice president, and Miss Norma Akey, secretary and treasurer. Following the business meeting the circle enjoyed music and light refreshments. Missionary study will be the work of the circle and the meetings will be held semi-monthly. VEDDING IS SOLEMNIZED Misg Carrie Fern Jordan, of Milton, became the bride of Fillmore Ray- Seattle and are guests at the home of mond Ocker, ot Walla Walla, at a aim Mrs. Fnrnswoifh's mother, Mrs. M. M. I pie ceremony last night. Joe H. Parkes, Justice of the peace, performed the ceremony. The couple will make their home In Walla Walla. HOPF'S UPSTAIRS SHOP Spring Apparel Assembled at this shop in the most approved styles. SUITS WRAPS DRESSES Styles that sparkle with the grace and charm of youthfulness. So reasonable are ihe prices that the woman .of moderate means can choose to her heart's content. DELPHIAN CLUB TO MEET The Delphlne Club will meet Satur day afternoon In the library club room with Mrs. S. A. Newberry and Miss Barbara Hoch as hostesses. 1 " ,iriv. for X -C ItO yum vvf.iK. , rit-W fBB--W faction! Sliced Peaches, can :: 25c Peaches, halfs, can Apricots, can Sun Maid Raisins, package : White Beans, 17 pounds -00 Imperial Coffee, pound - -4c Creme Oil Soap, 12 bars. ; rr:9j Gold Dust, 20 packages Carolene, it whips, 2 cans Z5c Stanfield Cheese, pound 45c Largest and most complete stock of high grade groceries in Eastern Oregon. Mail orders solicited. Phones 28 Gray Bros. Grocery Co. THREE f HONES QUALITY J WHEAT MARKET STILL E INGROWN TOE NAIL TURNS OUT ITSELF WASHINGTON. March 3. (U. P.) Congress has entered Its lost hours of life, lloth houses will be In session all day and night and until a few min utes before noon on Friday. With the hope of passing the sundry civil and naval,, appropriations bill virtu ally ended, all efforts will be directed towards the clean up of other meas ures, including the army bill. OfES TAYLOR HARDWARE CO. ER STRIKER STILL HAS PLENTY OF 'PEP' March wheat rose In price today. closing at 1.70 1-2 as contrasted with yesterday's closing of 1.68, while May wheat closed at l.t 1-2 which 1b higher than yesterday's closing of $1.59 1-2. Following are the quota-, tions from Overbeck & Cooke, local brokerss. Wheat Open. Low. High. Close March 1.68 1.68 1.70 4 1.70 H May 1.60 169 1.62 1.61ft : Com Open. High. lew. March .70ft .7114 July .72 .73 ft Oats. May -.45 ,46ft July .46ft v.47ft Ilye. NEW BOOKS JUST RECEIVED. A Fit Companion for a Pleasant Evening. Read THE WINDS OF CHANCE . ON McLEAN WAIF-O-THE SEA THE HEART OF THUNDER MOUNTAIN , THE WAY OF THE EAGLE .. THE LAW BREAKERS THE GUN BRAND STILL JIM THE PRAIRIE WIFE BIG TIMBER THE MAID OF THE FOREST THE NIGHT RIDERS i v . i THE OUTLAW THE W AY OF THE STRONG BELTANE THE SMITH THE STORY OF THE FOSS RIVER RANCH . THE GIRL FROM KELLERS and hundreds of other GOOD titles all priced at ONLY $1.00 PER COPY MliS DRUG STORE J For Sale Alfalfa Seed eardless Barley Corn, Rolled Barley, Oats UMATILLA FLDUR & GRAIN CO. Phone 1014-351 LOS ANGKLES, March 3 (I'. P.) To prove that 89 foodless days have not sapped his vitality" and health, ECngmark, the hunger-striking chiro practor, leaped from the floor of his celt in the county Jail, grasped the parallel bar overhead and "chinned it. "See," he said triumphantly, as he lowered himself, "I am not all In yet. My wife says I am thin and getting worn looking, hut even though I am growing more like a soupbone In ap pearance each dav, I am still a strong man." Engmark i solved to fast the full ninety days to which he was sen tenced for violates the state medical laws. By sleeping plenty and by breath ing exercises, he says he will be able to retain his stamina and walk from the jail at the termination of the sen tence, with the "firm step of youth, MILLIONAIRE GRAIN OPERATOR SUICIDES ACCOUNT OF LOSSES OMAHA, March 3. (IT. P.V Emll Rothschild, a millionaire grain operator, suicided at his home here today. Heavy losses In the grain markets speculation were responsible, according to notes left by the dead man. His wife found the body in the kitchen witlf the gas stove turn ed on. A noted authority says that a few drops of "Outgro" upon the skin sur rounding the ingrowing nail reduces inflammation and pain and so tough ens the tender, sensitive skin under neath the toe nail, that It can not pene. trate the flesh, and the nail turns nat urally outward almost over night. "Outgro" is a harmless, antiseptic manufactured for chiropodists. How ever, anyone can gel from tne. aru store a tiny bottle containing direc tions. .70 'A -45 ft .46 ft Close. .70ft .73 ft .46 .47 Ma' July 1.43ft 1.27 ft 1.46 1.39ft May Barley. 70 .70ft Wheat Showed strength from the start and although setbacks were fre- quent, the market closed strong at .the top for the day. The advance was based primarily on persistent green bug stories tfrom the southwest, al though more optomlstic trade had a beneficial Influence. Omaha said was much better flour demand. Kansas City likewise, and all the same time reported light offerings from the coun try. There was no evidence of a for eign demand from the Gulf for wheat. Notwithstanding the bearish statisti cal situation as verified reports from leading statisticians there Is an ap parent Inclination, to take cognisance of crop uncertainty and it Is probable that somewhat further advance will be received temporarily while these green bug stories pcreist. J ) LESS I MULE-TEAM Si ASYLUM ARRESTED ban Francisco, March 2 (A P.) Herbert M. Hcrry, said to be member of a well-known Portland family, was arrested here today In hotel following his escape a week ago from the Oregon State hospital for the Insane, According to the police, he was writing a letter at the time of his capture to the hospital superln tendent saying flight was necessary because since he had been cured of In sanity he would have to stand trial for assault on a pawnbroker, the of fense for which he was committed. I'KKMIKfl S.MITS (Continued from page 2.) MULE-TEAM S i BOSAX SOAP CHIPS ; mm ry. ovnnir -A ;c:o,7' things An the triumph which Is In store for the great moral ideals of the race. But this faith only too often leads to an optimism which Is sadly and fatally at variance with actual re salts. It is the realist and not the idealist who Is generally justified , by events. We torget that the human spirit, the spirit of goodness and truth in the world. Is still only an Infant crying in the night, and that the slrug gle with darkness is as yet mostly an unequal struggle. . Paris proved this terrible truth once more. It was not Wilson who failed there, but humanity itself. It was not the statesmen that failed, so much as the spirit of the peoples behind them. The hope, the aspiration for a new world order of peace and right and justice however deeply and univer sally felt was still only feeble and In effective In comparison with the dom inant national passions which found iheir expression in the Peace Treaty. Kven If Wilson had been one of the great dcml-gods of the human race, he could not have saved the Peace. Knowing the peace conference as I knew It from within, I feel convinced in my own mind that not the greatest man born of woman In the history of the race would have saved that situa tion. The great Hope was not the heralding of the coming dawn, as the peoples thought, but only a dim Inti mation of some far off event towards which we shall yet have to make many a long weary march. Sincerely as we Dcnevea in me moral lueais iur which we had fought the temptation at Paris of a large booty to be divided proved too great. And In the end not only the leaders but the peoples pre ferred a bit of booty here, a strategic frontier there, a coal field or an 011 well, an addition to the population or their resources to all the faint al luurements of the Ideal. As I said at me lime, ine reai i-eaco wus uu w come, and It could only come from a new' spirit In the peoples themselves. ... What was really saved at Paris was the Child the Covenant of the League of Nations. The political realists who had their eye on the loot were prepar edhowever reluctantly to throw that Innocent little sop to President Wilson and his fellow Idealists. After all, there was not much harm In it. It threatened no present national inter est, and it gave great pleasure to a number of good practical people in most countries. Above all, President Wilson had to be conciliated, and this was the last and the greatest of the Fourteen Points on which he had set his heart and by which he was deter mined to stand or fall. And so he got his way. But it is a fact that only a man of his great power and Influence and dogged determination could have carried the Covenant through that Peace Conference. Others had seen with him the great vision, others had perhaps given more thought to the elaboration of the great plan. But his was the power and the will that car ried it through. The Covenant Is iVilson souvenir to the future of the world: No one will ever deny him that honor. The honor Is very great, indeed, for the Covenant is one of the great crea tive, documents of human history. The Peace Treaty wiii fade Into merciful oblivion, and its provisions will be gradually obliterated by the great hu man tides sweeping over the world. But the Covenant will stand as sure as fate. Forty-two nations gathered round it at the first meeting of the League at Geneva. And the day is not far off when all the free peoples of the world will gather around It. It must succeed, because there Is no other way for the future of civilization. . It does not realize the great hopes born of the war, but It provides the only method and Instrument by which In the course of time those hopes can be realized. Speaking as one who has some light to speak on the fundamental concep tions, objects and methods of the C'nv enant. I feel sure that most of the present criticism Is based on misun derstandings. These misunderstand- Easter Styles SILK FROCKS FOR EARLY SPRING. Nw frocks which depict spring fashions are now in demand, especially those of silk in becom ing afternoon styles." They are exceptional val ues in materials of crepe meteor, Canton crepe, and rich taffeta, with braided, beaded and em broidered trimmings. The Thomas Shop lngs will clear away, one by one the peoples still outside the Covenant will fall In behind this bunner, under ---. fititian rare Is anlnff to ISfXcS fonwd to triumphs of peace- . uiKainxauon and achievement un dreamt of by us children of an unhap- pier era. And the lender who, in spile of apparent failure, succeeded In In scribing his name on that banner has achieved the most enviable and endur ing immortality. Americana of the fu ture will yet proudly and gratefully rank Mm with Washington and Lin coln, and his fume will have a more unlversnl significance than theirs. IF Special Meetings BAPTIST CHURCH FRIDAY 9:00 A, M. to 12:00 2:M P. M. to ' 4:00 7:30 P. M. to 9:00 8.TlltI.V 9:00 A. M. to 13 2:00 P. M. to 4 SPEAKERS REV. A.' RIDER, D. D of Los Angeles REV. SHEPHERD, D. D., of China ' REV. LYNCH. D. D., of Africa MRS. WADSWORTH, of New York City. ' EVERYBODY CORDIALLY INVITED Sellers Kitchen Cabinet Card of Tlianks We wish to extend to the doctors and other friends of Pendleton our sincere thanks for the beautiful floral offerings and expressions of sympathy in the loss of our beloved wife and mother. OfCAK 1R VAUL AJfD FAMILY. 1 A Man is just as Young , and Strong as his Blood ' Ko man can fight the battJbs of life and hold his owti if hisblood is not pure, for rich, red blood Is what strength is based upon. When you see a strong, rigorous man, who never knows when he is licked, you may wager that such a man has coursing through his reins rich, red blood. Many people have thin, pale blood. Ihey are weak, tire easily, be come discouraged quickly, and sometimes feel like giving up the struggle, buch folks need Di Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery, which is sold by druggists in liquid or tablet form. It is made up of Blood root, Oregon Grape root, Queen's root, jyone root, Uherry Hark, without alcohol. Send 10c. to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y lor a trial package of the tablets. Oltmpia, Wash." My husband always uses Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discoveiy as a stomach medicine and tonic, and declares that it is the best medicine in the world." Mrs. J. E. Foster, Cor. Pear and Spring Streets. SELLER'S SPECIAL J See How It Works No more standing on chairs and lifting heavy bags of flour dangerous work for women. ' This Sellers Automatic Lowering Flour Bin does away with all that It has been pronounced the most important improvement in kitchen cabinet design. 15 IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENTS The Sellers has 15 of these important improve ments and refinements never before combined In any cabinet. ' . .-- ; There is the Automatic Base Shelf Extender; the Dust-Proof Base Top underneath the Sanitary Por celiron Work Table; the Ant-Proof Casters; the sci entific arrangement which places every article at your fingertips. ., v CRAWFORD FURNITURE CO. 103 E. Court St. Pendleton, Ore. v Phone 496