East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, July 01, 1921, DAILY EDITION, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, ., FRIDAY EVENING, JULY 1, 1921.
TEN PAGES I
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Clearance
Prices
Women's
Suits
SATURDAY every suit in our women's wear
department will be reduced.
Look where you will, the.se offerings are with
out rivals as to quality, style and low price. Every
garment is from our regular stock which sold for
far more at the beginning of the season. AH sires
are represented in some style but all sizes arc net
here in every style, but every single suit is a birr
bargain at the price. Made of the best fabrics and
in the most favored styles of this summer season.
The choicest suits are grouped as follows: t
Lot 1 Includes Suits Valued at $32.50
to$4S.50. Clearance price. 25.00
Lot 2 Includes Values from $55.00 to
$75.00. Clearance Price. . . . $45.00
Lot 3 Includes Suits from $78.50 to
$115.00. Clearance Price... $59.50
SALE STARTS SATURDAY
MORNING
Small charge will be made for alterations
!ES OF
CHIEF OF STAFF-TODAY
Preparedness is, Goal; Civilian
Worth to be Recognised;
Aim for Decentralization.
DM
D FOR TILIG
BREAKS
ALL UPS
Amazing Success Achieved by Celebrated "Medicine' Nit
Only Phenomenal, But Unprecedented Over 20,
000,000 Bottles Sold in Six Years Foreign Countries
Clamor for It. '
Men's Suits ,
$36.50.
Wonderful
Values.
noire
i . 11
Dies vvsaron
A
IT PAYS TO TRADE;
10Uj
It will pay
you to watch
our ads
Carefully
'EXXIS CII.4.M. DCFTXnS TITI.U
l6ST50N June 1. d. X. S.)
if He. Suzanne Lenglcn, international
wmin'i turf court champion defend
ed fhe title at Wimbledon by defeat
ing Elizabeth Ryan
the straight sets.
of California, in
If la Said the prehistoric men wero
ii . . ...,;o iii irep'ninmg than our
mm
The Sign of
a Service
At First-class Garages
and other Dealers
L DIRECTORS ARE
ELECTED FOR NEXT YEAR
(East Oregonian Special.).
AVESTLAXD-M1NXEHAHA, July 1
At- the school election held June 20,
B. J. Xation was elected director and
Mrs. Kllen Gardiner clerk in Din. Xo.
8, Westland and in Dis. Xo. 115, Min
nehaha, W. O. Uodda was elected di
rector and Mr. Swan was elected as
clerk of the district. The union high
school measure was defeated in both
districts.
Mar?aret Ornduff is spending a few
weeks with Mrs. B. F. Williams of Mil
ton. Janet Cox of Arlington is visiting
with her cousins, the Kodda children
for a few weeks.
Mrs. W. J. Jackson who has been
visiting- with her daughter Mrs. Lucy
I.ainer of Wardner, recently went to
Big Sandy, Mont., whore she will visit
with her daughter Mrs. E. Z. Morris.
Bert Robinett hod the misfortune
to have a good Buick car destroyed by
fire near the Minnehaha Springs re
cently. It is thought the fire was
caused by back firing or by a short cir
cuit. The loss was partly covered by
insurance.
The Reclamation Service Is extend
ing the A ditch about a hulf mile
further writ so as to cover the land ly
ing in the bend of river near the rail
rood bridge. There will be about 1400
teet of open concrete ditch and 1500
feet of pipe line. O. O. Felthouse in
engaged this week in hauling the con
crete from the pipe yard in Hermiston.
A number of teams are doing the ex
cavating. The ditch recently broke on
the W. A. Hineline farm and did con
siderable damage.
J. L. McKlrop made a business trip
to l'emlleton last week.
Mrs. J. L. Mcl'herson and daughter
Daisy are visiting at the C. M. Jack
son home.
Those from the neighborhood at
tending the summer normal at Pen
dieion arMr.'f. W. H. Hesser, Mrs. W.
A. Hineline and Mltjs Irene Rhea.
Mrs. I'.'Ci. Shipley and daughters,
Helen and Lavelle, spent the week
end with .Mrs. Shipley's daughter. Mrs
Kulph Hartley of Xolin. They were
accompanied home by Miss Xina Ship
ley who has been at Xolin the past
month.
SY HAltHY U HWERS
( tuternvlloiuil .Yews Service1 Btaff
Correspondent.)
WASHINGTON, D. 0 July 1. -Oeneini
John J. Pershing today as
sumed his new duties as head of all
the military forces of tho United
States,
As t hief of Staff, succeeding Major
tl ene rii I Peyton C. March, whose ap
proaching retirement has been an
nounced, (ienenil Pershing Is In com
mand of the General Staff, the Wnr
Department peaee-t'me organization,
and ns head of the general headquar
ters oigiinliuitlon, authorised by Secre
tiny of War Weeks, he will hnve
charsre of the work of recruitinp the
reserve strength of the Army and of
building up the war machine which he
will command It the United Stutes
nRiiin gets Into war. '
General Pershing is thus put In n
position of more authority than has
ever before been bestowed upon an
i rmv officer in time of pence. While
nominally chief of staff, he will actual
ly be the executive officer of the Sec
, rotary of War.
Major-General Jnmes O. Harborjl.
as assistant to General Pershing, will
1 have charge of the routine work of
' the General Staff and in reality will
I rill the position which General March
has occupied for more than three
year.-!.
lTolinrediii'SS Is Goal
1 It Is the intention of Secretary
! Weeks that General Pershing shall
: devote the greater part of his time
i and attention to tho problem of pre-
paring- the United States in time of
peace for war.
, His first task will be that of or
ganizing thi' General Headquarters,
! which, under present plans, will 1
built up on the general lines of those
Tollowed by Marshal Foch In the
; French army prior to the outbreak oi
hostilities in 1914. On this subject
; General Pershing has very difiniti
: Ideas. He saw in 11117, how the Wat
' Department General Staff waS dls
: rupted when it became necessary to
! take the cream of officer talent from
that organization in order to form a
' staff for overseas duty. He is deter
mined that such a situation shall not
be brought about again If he can pre
, vent it.
! While the facilities at hand will
permit of only a skeleton organization.
: General Pershing intends to build up
; that skeleton organization in such a
j way that it will be adequate to takt
tho field in time of crisis and im
! mediately start functioning as the di
recting head of the American war
time armies. There would, of course,
need to be many additions of person
t el to put the organization on a wai
footing, but under General Pershing's
plan there would be a trnined man for
every really vital post who would not
only know how to run hla Job but
would also be ready to break in others
as his assistants when the proper time
came.
ltw-osni-ees Civilian Worth
The present General Staff will have
charge of all routine matters of ad
ministration in tho War Department
during peace tima. That organization
would not bo Interfered with by the
war-time machine, hut In time of war
would function as the Service of Sup
ply for the Armies in the Field.
General Pershing also has positive
notions us to the part the civllin
soldier should play in our scheme of
national defense. As a West Poln
graduate and "regular army man,
tho General appreciates the value ot
the proferj-lonal soldier as a nucleus
upon which to build an army. He la
bors under no illusions, however, ac
to the comparative importance of th
roles played by professional soldiers
and civilian soldiers during the Worl
Never , before, perhaps, in the history of the drug trade has
fhe 'demand for a proprietary medicine ever approached the
wonderful record that is now being made by Tanlac, the cele
brated medicine which has been accomplishing such remarkable
results throughout this country and Canada. As a matter of
fact, the marvelous success achieved by this medicine is not only
phenomenal.! but unprecedented. . . , r .
The first - botll of' Tanlac to reach results and have pronounced A the
the public was sold just a little over , k rent est medicine or ail lime.
six yearn ogo. H success was imme- Tens or tnousanas oi men nnu wu
dinte and people everywhere were men of all sKes In Ml walk of llf,
quick to recognlfe It as a medicine of orflicted with stomach, liver and ktd
extraordinary merit. Since that tlmejney disorder, some of them of Ioiir
there have been sold throughout this .standing, as well a thousand of
Country and Canada something over
Twenty Million 20,00O,0n0) bottles es
tabllshlng a record which has proha li
ly never been equalled In the history
of the drug trade In America. '
rame. Is International.
The Instant and phenomenal suc
cess which Tanlac won when It was
first Introduced has been extended to
practically every large city, small
town, village and hamlet In North
America.. Its fame has become. Inter
national In its scope and England, Ja
pan, Mexico, Cuba, Hawaii, Aluskn,
Porto Rico and many European coun
tries are clamoring for It.
From coast to coast and from the
rirent Lakes. Tanlac is known and
honored. Millions have taken It with (Thompson' Drug
the most gratifying and astonishing leading druKKists.
rr ' :! -s.." wt i r '1 f.
:ibedULi;Vicaeie
'iiii:;!'1.; Ill"
Mhere
I.
,We have
all the
New
Victor
Records
for
July
OM Aa Open ?aert FmcM AM
5 Curt, i C Miw ASacratta (Bralrau) FWaiss Q
7bit WmmU-uiM par m wm (Obi Lor, foe It Thy Fawtr)
ti-lt ,-,,., , . Amlit. CIUCuiet
7 . f Tont.-Spirto fcnbl (Spirit So Fair) Banianuno Gicii
Otw. Air.N. I (bar3at) Violin J.kIk Haifatz
W1 M.teaVia AMaior (Gtnal Chaf i. G. Diwt.) Violin Frits Kraialar
to.fcO bsaurfca-DKcha nairalnaiaiaaaWa I Infnae Fheodafaip ' '
l e-.nOur Souli. Oh Lord) CaaraaaM MartmaUi and Oaaeppa Da Luc
64962 Benaalii tlie UUxm of Lombaror John McCacmmek
J! trr.lutii i.i G Soars Minor (kaehmanmnlf) Piano Saraai ri.cniauiaoff
6 lb lorkuh March drom "I he Ruin of.Athent'O Piano Ola Smmwti
ItoVl Smnnif ho. 1, in C Major Finaia (Bactboren)
ArtaaraTaacaaaalaad LaScala Orckaatra
Raanaid Wanenratli
Maria Alcock
Elna Bakac
SlrHanrrLaader
Sir Harry Landae
Victor OVefcaam
aid Carotta
Victor Orchartc .
Maraarat MclCa
Martarat McKa
bVXA Lore Scndi a Litda Gift of
lit Wu thai iTia
"! ' '"'"a , Manr 'Arrr OB UM FifUaaf Jai
I'jer in- r;iu to Artfantaar
Mar'-Lc Rrulnc
ll Gavotte in a Plat (tlandcj
oaocLuikofii
jgj f Szl-rt 4 Aroe-ir ' Lcrc'a Greeting)
(3 Claa (Coralli)
Whittlisa
wmitiuif
W a
I U raraacl Aioa (from AidaT Violin Solo 11 Heaven Mar Fofiira Ifoia
i . i.i-s ... tr i i:m .wo i j nanai
1!
I Habanera llrx.rn "I irn,.,,'-! Klul nln " 4
Miwy'fl (irirl "Trumtor"l f nrnrt v.ln - ' -
1I75S C) Son o ta trenina Urora "Tanonauatr"! Viotrn''llo Solo (2) Torea
I t4r Sooe -tioia ' Carn.cn) VioUSU (ii Soldiara' Cfaema Krom "Fauat")
I iioiii S..g ( I) Womaa ia Facki (iiwa "kigoicttu") Cclrrta Solo
t VlTnv "
i-ucker up ara Whistle
"'w 1 H.-m. Atajp Slora
Tne L, ...-MdlcT Wafts
U761l H-IU tetor Walts
... . I '(-: 1 rut in a Bao'a Heaoa
ll7b , r'a Re
..... j Wait UnM Yo See M I
1?C
i P-rr O K.il
( C. wa-iar-Fe Trot
I tf' Krp on Levir,g Yonj Foa Tie!
I' t jri a lrvn ht for Mo Fea Tret
I I l ike li -A I iy to ru-V Medlar Fen Tret
.' V, r Old ,'.-,'uJr iinau and Old Black Jen
Dor, in Artianaatr
I,
rVad.nt HarcVif March
1 rtaunnni i-asuai nnnainl Mnjcb
Biihr Mimr
Aliens Stearins
Joaapk C. Smith and His Orchestra,
Jnsayk C Sanitb isd Kis Orcbestm
Haorr Bnrr
WiJiaaa lonm
Victor foberoj
Victor Roberta
Tbn Benaea Orcbastra aa Cbicaoa
Tba Benson Orchestra nf Phil aaa
Star Trio and Their Orchestra
Ail bur Trio and Tbr Orcbastra
Wood ban Ford rtanrorat
Mrars mmA U-.f J
United States Marine Been!
j me Banal
UatindbtaUtMaaa
Economy Dru g Co.
I
Advance Peep at 1921-22 Furs.
. tsti- 'Jum! - Hi : - 1
! f Ks I - 1
; j 3r
.ven in nH weatner the strict follower of Lady Fashion' lateat
cft.ll 1 thinking about fur. These photographs show the front and back
lew of a startling fur costume an advance peep at next winter's
InoMlWlltle. It ts a straight lined, klmona-aleeveU diese ot brood till
nrlLb mnnky.ui UnWJUj V u
weak, th.'n, nervous men ana women
apparently on the verge of collapse,
have testified that they have been ful
ly restored to their normal weight,
'health and strength by Its use. ;
llewtoml to Health. .
Still others, who seemed fairly well,
yet who suffered with ' Indlgestldri,
headache, shortness of breath, dlazy
spells, sour, gassy stomachs, coated
tongues, foulness of breath, constipa
tion, bad complexion, loea of appetite,
sleeplessness at night and Of terribly
dejected, depressed feelings, stats that
they have been entirely relieved of
'these distressing symptoms and re
stored to health and happlnens by the
use of Tanlac.
Tanlac is Bold in ' Pendleton by
Store and other
War. . He believes the United States they will be In the direction of deren
has in her youthful male population, tralizatlon. The General Intends that
the greatest military material In the! there shall be no ground In the future
world, nml he saw much of It itrova I for the criticism that th General
. . . . 1 ,..!. ,.. r-.. I U4.,fr la oatlVlkltl lhU f II
us wonn on tne oiiiLieiieius m riun,
The great task, the General believes,
s to keep these young veterans Inter
ested In the army. He wants the Na
tional Guard recruited to a strength
:if nnn.OOO or more, and he wants to
see tho Officers' Reserve Corps con
tinued with Its war-time spirit and
morale.
The Oenernl believes the present
system of training Rational Guard
units is all wrong. Under the present
scheme Hegular Army officers who do
tot "fit" In other Jobs are sent out ns
Instructors to National Guard organi
zations. They are given no particular
'nstructions as to how their work
shall be carried on, and each man is
free to do about as he plenses.
Decentralization Is Aim
General Pershing is convinced that
'nstructors should be picked men.
?hos'en because they show particular
iptitude for tho Job they are to under
take, ire believes the officers so
chosen should then be sent to a school
for six or eight months and given a
miform course in military pedagogy
In order that there may be uniformity
In the Instruction they are to Impart
to embryo soldiers to whom they may
later be assigned.
incidentally. General Pershing Is
expected to make a few changes In
the General Staff. While the nature of
'hese changes has not been divulged
officially ns yet It is understood that
Staff is usurping the functions of War
Department bureaus.
Sum nrown lay llcturn , .
Hut the Pershing Innovation, which
(s awaited with greatest expectancy,
especially by officers who served over
seas. Is the suggested modification of
the uniform regulations to Include th
Sam Drown belt. The question of the
Sam Hrown belt first came up. when
the American forces went overseas
and the "harness" was authorised for
use In the A. K. F. At that time it
was recommended by a board of gel
erul officer for ttsa In the United
States, but the proposal was defeated
by the opposition, It Is said, of Gen
era! March, - ;.
Heing a full general, Oeneral Persh
ing has the right to prescribe hla own
uniform and since his return to Amer
ica ho has always worn the Sam Brown
belt, regardless of the fact that other
officers may not wear It In the United
States. It ia expected that' Just as.
soon as he conveniently can the Oen
ernl will recommend to Secretary
Weeks that the Sam Brown belt a
adopted as part of the American uni
form. General Harbord, too, Is under
stood to favor the belt. 1 '
Hence the Joy among former over
seas officers who, despite two or threa
years of practice, have never qulta
got over the feeling that without tbe
Sam Hrown thev are "half usdresned."
4
4
Salesladies Wanted
One of the leading stores of Pendleton is In
position to offer a permanent position to one or two
thoroughly experienced salesladies. '
Experience in selling Hosiery, Underwear and
General Dry Goods necessary. No others need ap
ply. '
Address with reference "45" Care of E. O. . V '
I'll Tell the World
Firestone
lires
Are Good Tires Say the Men Who
Own Them. ,
ARE YOU GETTING TIRE
SATISFACTION?
Re Sure Your Next Tire is a
FIRESTONE v
Simpson-Sturgis
Pendleton. Ore.
223 E. CourtSt.
t
LX