Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1921)
pitf-:a--.3fe-iif)5g ..... 6'. H 1 ' f . . fAcn reus DAILY EAST OREGGNIAll, PENDLETON, OEEGON, ,. FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 29, 1021. TEN PAGES 5: at rubllshH Dully and Retnl-Werkly, i'i-n(ii'i(in, Mnfiun. Dy ilia East ohkoovia.v ri hi.ishincj oo. Knlcrcd al the pt office At rcndle (on, Oregon, aa at-ennd clta mail Hint tr. ON BALE IN OTHER CIHF9 Imperial Hotel NVws Siand. Portland. ti.V J'll.B AT ChieaRO ltureuu. Security l.'viil.linc, V ahitiKl"n. I. . Purrau Cll Four teenth Clrcrt. X. . Member f Aanvrlittri Pre.. Tit Aiiocktiled I,r"!' ih cxvlusively entitled to th for rrpuMicalion of II newa dispatches ereilited to it or not otherwise credited in thla pap-r nd alau the local ue published herein. AX INDEPENDENT NKWSPAPER. ELliSCKirTIOX RATES (IV ADVANCE) Dally, one year, by mntl 1 V. ix months, by mail ... Hilly, three month, by mail .. Ily. on month by mail Oiuly, oat! yvar by carrier rv-iily. fix months by rsrrii'r ....... Daily, three montha by earrier . Daily, one month, oy earrier mi-Weekly, one year by mall. ...s. s oo l.SO ,f.o .... T.M S.T5 ..... l.5 . .sr. Oil s.-mt-Workly, aix months hv mail 1.00 Semi-Weekly three montha by mail .60 Thoir Home, Famous New York Building; is Demolished to Make Room for Skyscraper. Telethon ..... ay jooarA, west; ffiMiirJiw. TKAM'T SHELLS Borne may rldf In limousines and some In fino sedans, Hut let me have the rommon cari which la the hnppf man's. Tho car which onr was new andi fine, but now Is new no more, j The good old car with peanut shells j forever on the floor, j Oh, let mo have the popcorn cnr. with candy papers, too. And I'll not envy him at all whose bus is very new; Though I would be a tidy man, some how when day Is o'er It's good to put the car away with shells upon the floor. to I do not huneer for a rig whK h costs i It's $ood to have a battered car ao very much. j drive along the street, I want no polished body which the A car which shows to every eye the children must not touch; I marks of little feet; I like to see the sticky prints em-i It's eood to have a happy car, with blsioncd on the door, j gladness running o'er. And see the last ride's peanut shel'.s i And there's no richer siprn of Joy than till strewn upon the floor. shells upon the floor. (Copyright. by E&ar A. Guest.) NEVER AGAIN NKW ToliK. April 29. (A. P.) two bronze belliingers, which for twenty six years sounded out the hours for crowds In Herald Siiunre. have been hushed by the lU'oKresx they re corded. Their home, the famous old Now York Herald Jtuildlnir. one of the architectural beauties of Manhattan, is being demolished to make room for a skyscrappcr. Crowds loved to stand hero Proad way is crossed by Slxlh Avenue and Thirty-Fifth street and watch the twin figures Kink their sledge against the big. bell suspended between them With the heroic-slued Minerva which stood above them and the big- bronse owls which roosted along tho cornice of the building they are to be nroserv ed. , The Herald Building, designed In I Italian UciuiiKKunce stylo after the municipal structure at Verona, Italy, was built on leased land lit 1S93, the lease Providing that at Its -expiration the structure should revert to the land owners, but the lessee would keep the bronze ornaments. These were design ed by Jean Cartas, a French sculptor, and were said to have eost JumpHfior. i don Bennett, then the Herald's owner $200,000. The bellringers were similar to those on a building opposite St. Marks in Venice. They may be placed on the proposed James t.ordon Bennett Memorial Home for Xewspaper men. On the duy they were removed from the fa miliar surroundings, a movement was started to change the name of Herald Square iS Bennett Square. PRACTICALLY all transcontinental motor travel through this section must come over the Oregon trail. People from Southern Idaho or from Oregon points as far east as , Ontario must come bv this route. By the same route must pass all Oregon motor traffic into such counties as Union, Wallowa and Baker, and into Idaho. Therefore it would be hard to over eptimate the convenience and the commercial importance of keeping this roadway in the best possible condition. It is asserted that even now 'with the season .scarcely under lay 100 cars of tourists would be passing daily over this high vay if they could get through. With the highway impassable 'he stream of traffic is diverted through our southern counties or through Washington. This means a loss of at least $1000 a day to Umatilla county and adjoining counties. It means we are losing a tremendous business that rightfully belongs here when with very slight exertion this loss could be avoided. Never again should the Oregon trail be found in the condi tion tht has obtained this spring. The road should be kept open and Umatilla and Union counties should join hands in see ing that the road is not only passable but in good condition. Surely the county courts of these neighboring counties can - handle this problem in some way. If from lack of funds they cannot do so the facts should be clearly presented so that ar rangements can be made to have the work done by volunteers, who will step forth if necessary. ' If with all the millions that have been spent and are being s pent on highways in Oregon we cannot keep our mam trans : ntinental route open it is time we vere finding it out. PORK PRODUCTS VS. PEACE 28 MS AGO WRITING from Washington under date of April 26, David Lawrence says that "while the United States government has been reluctant to participate directly in the settle ment of the reparations question word has reached Washington that the German government is planning a prohibitive tariff on American pork products." It is further set forth that this may force our hand as such action by Germany would ran our ex port trade in fats. f - , . Does this mean we are H illing to get entangled m European j ffairs for the sake of our pork products though unwilling to "entangle" for the sake of promoting the peace of the world through the league of nations? THINK IT OVER ' (From the East Oregonian, April 29, 1893.) Mrs. Jesse Failing and daughter, M!ss Edith Scaling, left Thursday morn ing via the Union Pacific, to attend the world's exposition. ' Senator Haley, who has been detain ed at Washington, will return here May 10. ' Pendleton school teachers were en tertained last night at a party given at the home of Director John Hailey. Cards and other amusements sped the hours. Teachers present were Profs. German and Draper, Mrs. Beacham, Miss Ethel r.itner. Miss Martha Itit ner , Miss Bertha Hexter Miss Bertha Smith, Miss Eunice Smith. Miss Myrtle Dooley, Miss Ida Mcintosh, and Miss Neva Lane,. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. W. J.- Furnish, Mrs. Mary I-ane, W M. Pierce, H. L. Hexter, Clyde Beach and C. M. Pierce. The Tendleton postoffice has been moved from Court street to Main, in the Association block. The new post master, J. F. Johnson, is In charge. THERE are nearly 8000 people in Pendleton and thousands of strangers visit the city each year. Duringthe Round-Lp the visitors are compelled to hunt up street addresses which they find hard to locate because of the way our streets are named. Yet these visitors leave us hundreds of thousands .a iniinr onrh vpar and we are clad to get their money. Why not consider the convenience of these people and of our own people when street renaming w under consideration? hat chnnM Vio npfpssarv for a man to Day 75 cents more for an abstract? One does rot have to get an abstract very often but rD maVp us nf our street names every day m tne year., w ny 'gasp at a gnat and swallow a camel" ? f No stigma attaches to the supreme court over the Albers case. When a high official, in the attorney general's office ; .ade the claim the government was "in error" the covrt had no ir.urse left save to free Albers. If you feel resentful put the blame where it belongs. The. American Legion in Portland is on tse right track in addressing Attorney General Daugherty. The Roseburg Review says that the annual Strawberry Car lival will not be held at Roseburg this year and probably never again because of "people who seem averse to anything out of the ordinary in the way of amusement for the people. If a rtrawberry program is too sporty, why not try something with g )osfberries? ' Ma says one of the "Seven Wonders" is my appetite for PostToasties (Superior Corn Flakes) THE FUNNYBONE One Divorce. I'lenun' You made me w hat I am today. As through the.years we've rambled; Now rectify the mess you've wrought, I want to be unscrambled. Tho Vacuum Cleaner. 'Woman," sighed the henpecked man. , is a queer critter. 'You bet," came the mournful re ply from another in the matrimonial harness. "She figures that as long as man is but dust she has a right to stir him up, settle him and then finish by cleaning him up." Well, "WIuil of It? Spud Murphy, baby water tender of the L. S. S-Connecticut, with a dis placement of some no pounds, adver tised the fact that he wanted to sell a 'dl'mond pit! for fifty cents" There were plenty of bidders. So Suud fished in pocket and pro duced a silver dime and a pin. He got the half. A Riddle ! - f i ... , ' J ' v r ' .' . -.V . .-" ' ' w, . V' ''''' M.'ss J. Maliel Crown, first woman member of the New Jersey Pres Association, Is further proof that' woman Is a riddle. When she took over the ownership of her father's five newspaper In as many New Jersey ' towns, she bad the politi cians guessing as to what her no!' M would be. -They didn't knoif J2JP( vt ft W'an.' she sny, fcj HealthyYoung Womanhood T! IE tendency to constipation begins with girls na they approach maturity, and that is the very tiraethf mother should witch that tha important function of duilf I minition is remit ar and normal. Many thousands of mnthnra who havtdJUL'Mfr willtrll you they give only Dr. CftldwtH'B Syrup Pepsin. A traspoonful in sufficient to relieve constipation and its commoner symp toms nurh as headache, bad breath, biliousnrsa, loss of appetite and rest less sleep. Syrup Pepsin ! t compound of Etryptian Senna and other simple laxative) herb with pepsin and pleasant-tasting aroraatira, and t aiztv-cent bottle is enouuh for many months. Eight million bottles were bmitfht at drua stores last year, the laruest sale of the kind in the world. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin hue been on the market thirty years and there must be genuine merit behind it to develop tOainnre and steady a -s.le. Buy a bottle today and you will quickly see why it la ao popular. TRY IT FREE Send mt your nnme anj address and I w ill send you a free trial bottle of my SjmiO Pcfsin. Address me Dr. W. B. CflEuceU, irjWflshingtonSt.. Monticello.lll. Eitryfcodj now ana then needs a laxariee, and It Is veil to know the best. Write me roaVij , TAKE FLYING MACHINE WASHINGTON, April 29. (IT. P.) Medical science has discovered a new therapeutic agent In the airplane. The curative value of airplane and balloon flights In the rarlfled air reg ions was brought forcibly to the atten tion of the medical world by a recent incident In Washington. H. A. Hem Jr., who was rendered voiceless during the world war, was advised by Dr. Charles A. McEnerney of the I'ublic Health Servtce, to make an airplane flight. Henn was taken up by a gov ernment airplane at Rolling field and reaching an altitude of 14.000 feet was brought liack to the field. Kenz recovered his voice and mad" the announcement to his mother over tho field telephone. The air service pointed out that Miss Orace Ford, a Hounoke, Va., girl, re covered her singing voice in a similar manner. Miss Ford was one of the first to volunteer for service as an en-1 tertainer for the soldiers. Knrly in 11S her voice failed her. Every effort ; to find a remedy failed until in the fall ! of 1118, when she made an airplane j trip. This .wan -while she was in Lima, I Peru. President Leguia had asked her j to s'ng. She was preparing to send her regrets and an explanation, when a , former army officer asked her to ac- j company him on a flight. When they reached an altitude of 8,000 feet. Miss Fprd said she felt a curious sensation of the throat and nose. She said the senstatlon was akin to nosebleed. At 10.000 feet her throat and nose lost the peculiar sen sation. She immediately thought of her voice and essayed a few notes. To her surprise her voice was clear and audible above the roar of the propeller Miss Ford that evening sang at the palace. 1'hysicians attached to tho public health service believe there Is a tre mendous field of possibilities in the in vestigation of flying for curative pur poses. Many well known doctors are studying the effects of rarified air on certain diseases. Back in 1786 the "Aeropaldia," the first handbook on aeronautics )n the Knglish language, was printed. It rec ommended balloon ascents for conva lescents. "The spirits are raised by the purity of the air and rest in this clearful at mosphere," the author wrote. He advised scientific inveHtigatinn of the physical and mental reaction to ates and odors at different altitudes and suggested the possibility that the tonic effect of .change from hot oid impure air to cool, pure air, Impreg nated nith invigorating aerial acid, might contribute without the aid of drugs to the sick and invalid. A surgeon in the Royal Air Force, Kngland, called attention to a number of cures of different ailments effected by flying. These cures ranged from tho cold to phthisis, neurogolll and In fluenza. The nerve specialist may find a wide field of operations, the air service ex perts said. The near future was held likely to produce the aerial sanatorium and the areo-therapist. Give Him Air. A quite prim and proper young lady To the ball game went with her man. She was cool he was hot and excited. But then, she Fat next to a fan. itriini:n ilaxt hi axs ERIK, Pa., April 29. (L'. P.) The Keystone rubber manufacturing com- "BUY IT AT HOME" is surely the thing to do as it means more 'prosperity to everyone of us. In order to make it easy for you and a pleasure as well "to buy it at home" this store offers at all times merchandise of the highest character and reliability " at prices as low as good goods can possibly be sold. Remember that every dollars worth of goods in this store was bought on the new low price market for cash and in turn we sell it for cash at remarkable savings in every pur chase. Compare our merchandise and prices with anyones anywhere. It will be to your advantage to know that you can do better when you "Buy it at Home and buy it here. . , Waists for Summer Wear of lawns, batistes and voiles, dainty cool and beautiful at. . . '. $3.19 to $5.49 Organdy Dresses made up in the latest spring style at. .$6.49 to $17.49 Women's Envelope Chemise made of heavy Seco silk interwoven with cotton, some are cross bar, others plain, all flesh color, values you can't afford to overlook at the suit $1.59 to $1.89. Night Gowns of flesh color Seca silk, cross bar, very fine even weave, each ,. $2.29 Jersey AH Silk Petticoats in every color to cpntrast with or match your costume, trimmed with pretty ruffles in novelty effects, priced at $2.98, $3.49, $5.49, to $6.19. JERSEY SPORTS JACKETS are very much the vogue, a real se lection here in colors of navy, brown, red, green, sapphire and mode, each $7.95 to $11.95. omens House Dresses made up with pretty ginghams in neat pretty style's; a selection to choose from at $2.98. s ' - W Yi: KMT SII.K HUM: hi odor r brown, gray, white anil bluck, full fasliioiiixl, pair l.lt M UM: KMT SII.K MONK seiimlc, r. Sl.00 MAV KtitlTIAX HAM) TOOMOO llltOWX I.KATHI.K It.UiS AM) PAUTV ItOXIM, hliow. lug the latest ami newest titingk for mr lire itcti'sNory. Iju Ii t.H to T.S.i ItOSTOX llAtiS Oil t)VI UNKiHT HAGS nuulu of lllt cowhide, genuine leather, two Hlse. black or tan, card 3.4W ami J.9 FASt'IXATIXtJ MAV M'CKWKAII for Katur day liopM-r. collar ami sets of lace, ryt'M, r.m. broidery ami onruiitly. Priced at ,..50c to IJI Parcels paid for, C. O. D.'s or approvals promptly delivered with our own service. n - Buys for cash and sells for cash. Better merchandise at low-' t est prices. , ;. . . . .; .' ! " CROWDS CAME THIS MORNING AND BOUGHT TO THE LIMIT OF THEIR PURSES. NEVER BEFORE HAVE YOU BEEN OFFERED BAR GAINS SUCH AS YOU WILL FIND HERE. Come Early Stay Late THE BEE HIVE panv's plant In the down town district was entirely- destroyed by fire today. The loss l estimated at a half million dollars. " . , . (GRANULES) 21 INDIGESTION Taste food, io food; dlaaolr Instantly on tongue or in wmtr tk aa needad. QUICK RELIEF! ALU IN TAaLST FOIM POI THOS( WHO Ktrt. THEM. mads mt mean m bowns MAKERS OP SCOTT'S EMULSION SPECIAL Taffy and Maple Fudge 30c Our fountain menu is a line by itself. We are serving all - new specialties., A trial will convince. . THE CRYSTAL Formerly The Palm Phone 575 633 Main St. City Market BETTER MEATS FOR LESS MONEY. BOIL BEEF Per Pound 5c BEEF STEW Per Pound 5c CROSS RIB ROAST Per Pound ...... 18c CHUCK STEAK , Per Pound 20c ROUND STEAK Per Pound ...... 24c SALT PORK Per Pound ...... 25c I Ter Pound 2 LARGE LOAVES BREAD 22c CHICKENS, VEAL, SALMON, HALIBUT, FISH IN ABUNDANCE. i PHONE 703 , i , CITY IM MARKET 109 W. VEBB ST. BULK LARD Per Pound 22c NO. 5 PAIL LARD $1.05 NO. 10 PAIL : LARD ........ $2.00 PICNIC HAMS Per Pound ... ... 22c SINCLAIR HAMS COD 36c