PAC2 FIV2 TEN PAGES DAILY EAST OHEGOKIAN, PENfeLETON, 0EG0!T. WtT51IES9AY EVENING, MARCH 23, 1021. -r ! t-'V ft. ' Dr. O.- K. Holt, I'.wal OBleoimlh, ut tonded the ovtuuputhlc convention In Vullu Wulla yesterduy. Are Pendleton people hiinenl? A local man says they are. He left a In 1KB Indian robe In the back sent of his car widen was parked on Mnin street last iiIkIU and found the robe In ' the machine 1 tils morning. bit? building unroHlHted. Among the reenters us O. T. Cnrne. Ha occu pied u strategic poHltlon on lop of the building until he lout his footing and toll to -the rullroud tnickH below. One anklo wuh badly broken and ho In now able to get about by the aid of Htlckn. Accompanied by lm. Cariien he Is In IHiidlcton today. ' Mini Ireno Huwkii is doing: a little: jVmerlcHiilsalloii work for one of I'nele flam's now nephew. Mie la ttachlng Kngllah to I'ng Glin 1'oy. 14 yotir old Chinese youngster who cumf to Pen dleton recently- to Join IiIh futher, Und D. Cocy. S ' : Frank Ilrnnch KUciy, who Mpoke at the Pendleton Conimerclnl Association fenmiuet In t night, was formerly In Ihe abstracting utmlnens In Portland ond Oregon City. When the Abstract ers Association of Oregon was formed, Mr. lUley wan lis first secretary-trea Hirer. ' The train do not rim fait enough to take Dun Clark through without a Sop-off in Pendleton. He 'Is here to day between trains while euroute to Omaha, for -a. conference with official of the lTnln Pacific system. Dun's business is to get more livestock busi ness for the (). W. II. A X. and to see that the shipments of livestock are well cared for. ! When fire destroyed the grnln eleva. liir at Pilot Ilock News Via is Day the flume were nul allowed to eat up the If NEWS OF THE COUNTY OFFICES AND PFflCERS j Murcb wheat cloned ut $1.50 D-J and Muy at 11.41 1-4 in Die Chicago frruln market, im Increase In pries jover yesterday's market when March f heat closed at 11.52 anil May at 11.43 )-4. Through an error, the Kant Oi'ttgonlan reported yesterday that Murvh wheat closed at 11.43 3-4 and May at $1.52, a reversal of the oorrort figure. Following are today's quotations? " t'liicago Grain Market, WImmU I , Open High Low Close Mar. (1.51 $1.51 t.4!K $1.50H May 1.43 1 44. 1.40)4 l.('t i'orn ' - May MVi .65 .63 .64 July .C , .69 ",.sT .67 H Outs . . May ' .40 .41 ' ,U -.40 Ji.lv .4.1 .4214 ' .11 .41 Kbciiff In Wet Kiid. Khtrlff Houscr and Deputy 8par uro in the west end of the county where they huve been for a couple of days on official business. They arc expected home this evening. ILSI CiLD 11LY PUT ON HIS com ) : 1 "Rht-umatUm Certainly 'Had Me In Its Clutches," Says Se attle Man Tanlac Restores Him. hmtloo Court Still I'm liuiigi'd. The local Justice court district li still undivided and prohubly will not in- changed. Judge Bchannep said to. day that court was not yet ready to act on the petitions which had been pre tscnted to him for and against the pro posed division. Ominty liookg Kxncrted. t'raiidull & Uobcrts, accotintunts, have completed their exhaustive checking up of all the books of the county and filed thels report with the comity court this morning. This re port shows that the accounts of all of the. various officers were In proper shape. W 2 s g D o o o o fa. z z 4 HONE FOUR-O-NINE FOR BETTER QUALITY ..',-. -. ' , '. ' - " Nice Winesap Apples $1.75 Per Box ,-".- - -. ; LARD ; -! 25c per lb. fn 5 and 10 lb. palls About thoBe Easter Hams. Our stock will arrive Friday morning, freeh and sweet. Also Famous Ar mour Star Eacon. The Economy Grocery g rhOnc 400 113 W. Webb St., g PHONE FOUR-O-NINE FOR BETTER SERVICE, Suit to Foi-tt'Iuftfj. A suit to foreclose n mortgage on land near Echo was filed yesterday in the circuit court. The Union Central Ufe Insurance Company is he plain tiff and Mr. and Mrs. Isaac H. Bobell and Arthur Oiilllford and wife are the defendants. The mortgage was given to secure a loan of $12,1)00. t "There isn't any mlstako about It, this Tanlac hasn't an co,uul," fcald C, A. Nelson, 424 'Hiurrlson tU., Hcallle. Jlr, Xelson Is employed by the city of Beut tie as an acetylene welder. To quote his words: "I hud troulile with my stomach and sometimes I hud awful spells of indi gestion, but my main trouble was rheu matism. It. certainly bad . me In ita clutches. My rms, Ioks and should ers hurt tile so kad I could hardly stand it, especially in damp weuther. I suffered agony every time 1 drxed myself and it wits ull I could do to put on my coat. The pains Just traveled around my body, first one uluce ann then another. Hornetlmes my back hurt so I couldn't stoop over and straighten up aeain without suffering i"! uire. i uiun i v get much either. Stone Jars iw-t grn.l.i Wu- ai.l ' . rtolU k' wIhii you need tl' e fW ..XOTK TUFMF. I'IUCK8 . sleep, "But Tanlac drove the rheumatism right out of my system, put my stom ach In apple-plo order and nmdo me feel like a. new man. I haven't pain or an ache and have gained ten pounds In weight. I sleep all night without turning over one and feel fUio in the morning.; Tanlac la far and away the best medicine I ver heard of. It cer tainly does the work." Tanlac U sold in Tendleton by Thompson Hrothers. . 6 lluUrond Tax Man Here. J. C. Falrchild of the tax depart ment of the Northern J'acjfic Rallroaa la in the office of the assessor today. He Is checking up on the assessments against the company land In this coun ty and performing other duties of a similar nature for tils rood. Ills headquarters are in Tacoma. i County Judge Keturils County Judge Svhanncp has re turned from the east end of the county where he went In company with the county commissioners to view the state line road. The local officials met with the county commissioners ol Walla Walla county but were unable to agree wtth them as to the proper division of expense. XABHVIU.E, Tenn., Starch !3. (A. P.) A dilapidated little building at Greenville, in Eastern Tennessee, upon the front of which onee hung the sign; "A Johnson, Tailor." and which was the place whera Andrew Johnson, the man who succeeded Lincoln as M. P.'S SO POOR THEY ' . 1ST STRAP-HANG v LOXPON., March 23. (U. I'.) A member of Parliament's life is sot a happy one. In fact, various M. PC's gathered themselves together into a Helect Com mittee in order to prove Just how un- I happy a -life they led. The general . fc'riCVH nci v.t thpA mr.n irhn r.nrnuini president of the United Slutes, sntnlAKunciM. is ,hu, his business career, probably will be le men . represent nothina lack bought and preserved by the slate of Tennessee, A ui!l now is pending in the Tennes see legislature providing for the pur chase of flie building and its mainten ance as a state relic. Its picture has adorned Tennessee histories for years but the commonwealth has been slow to take steps to preserve the building. 1 gulfrm 2 gallon gallon 4 gallon & talliM' 6 Riil Ion ; galum g gallon 10 gallon VI gullou jnr noil (Jar and ( lar and fjur and (jar mid jar and (Jar and (Jar and (Jar nnd (jar and tuvfr) . rover) imi't) . cover) . cover) . v'-r) . cover f . vt) . co-r) . -ovcr) . . . . . 2" . . . . '.He . gi.no tn.T.- S2.00 . . . . $2..V ,...$:i.oo m m m sr inc. Ure. Tlie Largest Itomonl IcoU-rs In Eastern 1 " A llfef&M- Cgruen watch es)w Oregon, of cash. The snlarrf of a juember of Parliament is 4(H) pounds a year or about J 1,600, which, it is claimed, does not lift them "above (tie ordinary wor ries of the kitchen." M. P.'s poinUd out that their In comes Vnly permitted thera to travel thud-ela-H on the railways and they; compared themselves to "Tonsan ofj the A lies" on account of the Invariable; The little tailor snop stands at the and unnecessary exercise they got! BlHTS and SLICKl Regulation U. S. Army Slickers, new . . . $4.00 Green Oilskin Slickers, reel.. . . $2.00 Black Oilskin Slickers, new $4.00 Officers Raincoats $9-00 Medium Weight Cotton Union Suits c . . . . $2.50 New, Regulation Army Shirts ; T. . $4.73 Reel., Regulation Army Shirts ........... $3.55 Reg. U. S: Army -Shoes, Goodyear welt. . . $7.50 Officers Dress Shoes, Goodyear welt .... $6.25 X)ur Canned Gocds Bargains Will Not Last Much Longer. . FREE DEUVERY.. Aririy & Ivy Sales CO. Phone 861 546 Main J Pay Less Pav Cash Receive More Despain & Lee Cash Grocery 209 E. Court - Phone 880 ft '' i Easter Eggs ' STRICTLY FRESH GUARANTEED 25c Dozen 4DOZEN,9Sc V.. '-.. .'t Receive More Par Cash Receive More fay mj Despain & Lee Cash Grocery 209 E. Court Phone 880 Tax CoUcxtloiM improve. The tax collection department of the sheriff's office is being kept busy lheu days. It Is no longer possible to drop in and pay your. money without s mo ment's delay. One Is pretty sure to find at least one person in line. Later the waits M ill be longer. The deputies are being compelled to resort to night work to keep up. .Mrs. Montgomery Wants Ilvony After having been deserted for 14 yeiiM, Jfrs. Merry C. Montgomery has brought suit for divorce against R. A. Montgomery. The wife lives in this county but the address of the defend ant husband Is unknown. s They were married In Spokane In lecember, ltida, and the desertion took place while they were living in Sundpoint, Idaho. ' riutrgcd With Non-Support Charles Rothwell was arrested this morning on a charge of non-support preferred' y neighbors and Is being given a Hearing oeroro justice i-arnee thfs afternoon. Rothwell has wife and 4 children but neighbors who have been loaning the' family money say ho will not work. Deputy Sherifl RJdgeway found him plating pool when he went to arrest him and re ports that at least ihree offers of em ployment were refused. Boon after the arrert lira. Rothwell called at the office of the sheriff and insisted that ut no time had he failed to support his family. . RAILROADS ARE FORCED TO CARRY UNNECESSARY NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES CHICAGO. March 23. (U. P.) The national agreements between rail. roads and their employes forced the roads to c-ry 176. 8N2 "unnecessary" employes during m'A, V. W. Atter bury of the reniisvlvaiiia railroad, tes tified before' the 1'nlted States labor board. The roads were forced to pay over 3O0,09.i)O on their "exoess pay roll" due to the national agreements. Atlerbury claimed. ' CLARA HAM0N WILL NOT BE RECEIVED BY 'MOVIE' PRODUCERS RAN' PHAXCISCO, March 23. (C. P.) The allied amusement industries ut Sah Francisco, composed of motion picture exhibitors, made public resolu tions passed by the organisation plac ing any pictures featuring Clara Smith Humes "under its' bun. ; FURNACE COLLAPSES MEN ARE KILLED PTKEl.TOX, Pa., March 23. (f. P.) Five men were killed and anoth er whs. injured when an automatic furnace in the lictlileliem steel cor pdtSon collapsed. The men were burled under a muss of hot ore nnd metal. corner of East Depitt and College streets in the sleepy little town where Johnson, who was born in Raleigh, N. C, emigrated at the age of eighteen. Having served his apprenticeship to a tailor, Johnson opened his first shop In Greensville. After a year he was married to Miss Eliza McCardell to whose lot it fell to teach her young husband to write and undertake other educational preliminaries' as Johnson knew only his letters when he became head of his own house, having never attended school a day in his life. Johnson's political career began as alderman of Greeneville. He then served as mayor, was elected to the lower house of the legislature, then slate senator, afterward to congress, became governor of Tennessee serving two terms, United States senator, mili tary governor of Tennessee, was elect-, ed PrH vice prwident of the United States and became president upon the death of Lincoln. His final political office was that as United States sena tor from Tennessee. Johnson, while governor of Tennes see, once resumed his vocational im plements. . He had formed a strong Friendship In the Tennessee legisla ture, for W. IV. Pepper, of Springfield, a staunch Whig and once a black smith. Respite their irreconcilable political creeds tbe personal relations of Johnson and Pepper were extremely cordjal. Pepper became Judge of the .seventh judicial district in 1S54 and after a visit to Johnson, then gover nor, set about making a present to his friend, fashioning a shoyel which he sent with a note explaining it was In tended as a memento of a friendship that was proof against all political differences. Johnson, to show his appreciation of the token, took up his scissors and needle and made a handsome beaver cloth which he pressed and sent ,to Pepper. It wus a splendid jiiece of workmanship, probably the last pf that kind of work Johnson ever 'did., exists to this day, tbe property of W. W. lvpper. Judge Pepper's .only sur viving son. The coat was made about 11 years before Johnson entered the White House and the movement to preserve his old tailor shop In Greene ville by legislative enactment has re vled that story of the tailor presi dent.' , . - "strap-hanging" In the crowded trains: each day. I The upshot of the whole Invcstiga-1 t!on was that the following recom-1 mendallons are to be made. N'o rliange In M. P.'s salaries, liui ' that the 400 pounds should be regard-1 ed as expenses and therefore not sub- ject to income tux, which is very heavy ' in England. That M. P.'s should have free first class travel between London and their constituencies. . . Free postage on parliamentary let ters. This probably gonstitutes the most human document that has ever ap peared in the guise of a White Paper. RIIM.Fr IIH.1F.VKI OF IHSITIOX WASHINGTON, March 23. (A. P.) Major C. S. Didle. military aide to the president and superintendent of public buildings and grounds in the District of Columbia, was relieved to day by Lieut. Col. C. O. Shreill, corps of engineers, on orders of the president. ii HIGH SCHOOL NOTES SMkune Students Register Two new students, from Fpokane registered yesterday at the school. M!s Francis Howard as a senior and Allen Preston a freshman. Visits Glee (Tub Howard E. Pratt, director of music at the Whitman Conservatory, was a visitor'to the boys glee club this morning. Mr. Pratt was very well pleased with tho work done by the boys and expressed it by saving it was one of the best high school clubs he had ever heard. Mr. Pratt is accompanying the Whitman Men's Glee Club on their annual tour. Glee Club to Kiuerta'ii Members of the Men's Gloe Club of Whitman Collego who will appear in concert here this evening, will give a short program for the student body this aft ernoon. The program will consist of music by the orchestra, the quartette and a few students! J. C'Penney Co., A 'Nation-Wide Institution 'AMIl.SS.lOU FROM THE WEST" (Continued from page 1.) Association, Mayor George xHartman and Secretary C. I. Barr. A delight ful Gesture of the evening was a musi cal program esnsistlng of selections by the Sawyer orchestra, , stunt iiurtet tomposed of Hrooke IMckson. Rudy Motixr, George liner and Jack Dolph, violin selections by Mrs. McDonald, ac companied by Mrs. D. B. Hill and ft vocal solo and enciwe by Mrs. Wilt If. Hennoti at'i ompiinivil by Mi s, t K. Bond, mm Carrying your day into the night will soon wear you out. Many a good night's sleep is broken up coffee -drinking. If you find coffee keeps . : jtiu awake nights, change to FOS LEE TU EAL a refreshing drink of rich coffee-likr. flavor.bntfree from coffee's harmful effects. "Here's a Reason for Postum Made V Pbstum Cereal Company, lac s : o .V ' C ! C e-; ' art i V- dt'. tvim Colorful New Blouses Of Georgette and Tricolette .: ";$2.98 " Gay little blouses in becoming shades fairly radiating the cheerfulness of spring just that needed touch of color to give spring suits that touch of color and individuality. ' Really you'll wonder how waists of such charming style and worth-while quality can be sold at a price so attractive. "The Georgette numbers are embellished with fetching laces and bandings while the popular yarn embroidery serves to ornament those of tricolette. All the new colors are shown in this assort ment, including tomato, honey dew, jade, nep , tune and porcelain. See them in our south window. NEW SILK SASHES TWO YARDS LONG $2.98 Dark dresses take on a new appearance with the addition of these new sashes. Full two yards long, fringed ends. Daring color com binations make them at once tempting and charming, each i S2.98 NEW KID GLOVES FOR EASTER $2.98 ' The famous Simmons La Force gloves, made in France, fine quality kid, black, white, gray or brown, pair . . . . . $2.98 J. C. Penney Co., A Nation-Wide Institution DR. C. H. DAY I Physician ami Surgeon j Osteopath Rooms 21 and 15 Smlth-Crawforft ' Building. Telsnbona 704 Res. T49-R- I1.ANA VAN'S TRANSFER Phone 320 Res. Phone 378-R Walla Walla Pendleton Auto Freight Service .7 ROCXD TRIPS DAILY Leaves rrnflleton 2 p. m. rvtHlMoii rixme 8i3-W, Dr. Lynn K. Biakeslce Clironlc and js'srvous Pieasea tnd Diseases of Women. X-llay Ktoctrio TbsrapsutlcSL Tsmpls Bldj. Room It Ptions 41 rinnio :io-w r, o, u, :i