Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1921)
..A, W. V - , '11 ill) f ACE foub m.. L. I. n :i DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 6, 1021. TEN PAGES - daiuyV 5, PubllaheA Dully nd geml-Weekly, at PcfttUton, Orcfoa. by tb AST OK BOON I AN PUBLISHING CO. Entered it th pout office it Pendle ton, Oregon, M second clan mail mat tar. OS SALE IN OTHER C1TIE8 tmpwlal Hotel Newi Stand, Portland, OS KILE AT Chlraro Bureau, tot Security Bulldlnf, Washington. IJ. C, Bureau 601 Four teenth Street, N. W. Mraabrr of the Aclted Prrw. The Aeaoriated I'rea i exclusive!? entitled to tho use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or ot otherwise credited in this paper and also tbe local newt published herein. AN INDKI'KNDKNT.NEWSI'APER. SUBSCRIPTION RATE! (IN ADVANCE) Pally, one year, by mall Dally, l months, by mall Pnily, three months, by mall Daily, one month by mail .., ltaily, one year by merrier Daily, six months by carrier Dally, three months by carrier.. ..00 3.00 1.(0 .60 - 7.50 S.?5 Stefansson at Chautauqua Famous Explorer Comes on Second Night .With His : Remarkable Story of the Polar Regions 3, Daily, one month, bv carrier .fiS 5mi-Wpklv. 1 venr hv noiil 9 AA jseml-Werkly, six months by mail.. 1.00 semj-H eemy. uirea tuantba by mall .50 Telephone .... ay Ed ga t A, west. iiaj gjSafrti A sox; ix.r vkrvthixg There is a mint In everything. In every little rare that comes. In babies a they suck their thumbs. The tunes the brave canaries sing. The mother's patient, gpiule smile, The tOory of the after-while. There is no sadness but is sweet With fragrance, and there is no day But spreads some beauty on life's way; Tho dusty and the weary feet Vpon their homeward journey bring Delights which loving- hearts may sing, (Copyright. 1921 The high chair and the cradle, too. Have ever set brave lips to sinjr. No Rrief has ever lived so long . Hut turned to music aa it grew, . - And every hour of strife and pain Leave in the heart some sweet re frain. V Lord, teach me this, from day to dayi To find beyond the hurt and care Thy mercy shinning everywhere: Let me rejoice that children play. And Know when bitter tempests sting There is a song in everything, by Edgar A. Guest.) f if V x y BOTH SIDES SHOULD EE STUDIED IN a recent speech the secretary of agriculture, Mr. Wallace said: . In times past there has been a tendency upon the-part of some farmers to look upon the people who handle the farmer's roduots and prepare them for consumption at business antagonists disposed to take every advantage of the producer. And also, there has been a tendency on the part of some handlers and manufacturers of food products to look upon the farmer as a man whose duty it is to produce grain and livestock up to the limit of his tibility and, having produced them, turn f ver tc the nearest market at what ever price the buyer is willing to pay, and then go home and produce some more. There has been at times a tendency to resent any interest tbe farmer was inclined to take in the marketing of his products or in their manufacture. We have been a nation of individualists, each disposed to look after his cwn affairs, depending upon his own efforts, and driving the sharpest possible bargain with the people with whom he had to deal. Gradually we are getting to have a more enlightened view. We arc coming to see that our interests are mutual; that condition which affect one will sooner or later affect all. The spirit of cooperation is growing. In every. group there are some intensely sel f sh individuals who seek every advantage for themselves without regard to the Interests of others; but the number of those who take the larger view and w that we are all brothers is growing, steadily. And this is one of the most hopeful signs of the present time. It is a hopeful sign indeed, if true, and in many respects it is true. The man who fails to see the "other fellow's side of the problem is no longer an efficient business man. He has to see the other side of the story in order to judge intelligently as to his own course. . .... , i , "BY THE ETERNAL" EASTERN Oregon farmers who feel peeved over the high prices they pay for, oil and distillate may be interested to know that the new tariff bill now before congress seeks to rrotect the struggling oil companies owned by the Rockefellers and others from competition by oil produced in foreign coun tries. A duty of 35 cents a barrel on crude oil is proposed. Nom inally this will be to protect an American industry but the oil companies of America need no protection because foreign oil can be produced no cheaper than American oil and is already under a distance handicap. Hence the only actual result of the duty will be to raise the price level .of oil in this c ountry. In ', other words the oil user, on the farm and elsewhere, will be taxed and the tax monpv will o-n. tint t.n thp TIniterl Rtaroa o-rv. ernment, but to the oil syndicates. It is a wonderful bit of fi- nancing but such is the protective tariff system and if people want it of course they should have it. Having sampled life in Russia, Bill Haywood is now ready to enter an American jail; that's not good publicity for Soviet ', Kussia. ' Now they are charging that the government did not spend enough money on the railroads while they were under federal control ; previously the accusation was that the government spent too much. Just what is the meaning of this new Mexican trouble? ENGLAND TESTS HELICOPTER PLANE AMID GREAT SECRECY HAS DIRECT LIFT AND CAN HOVER MOTIONLESS LONDONY July . r. K. 8.) Ex traordinary ore the precautions being taken by the authorities to keep the secret of the new "helicopter" the 'hujili-hush.' aircraft designed by Mr. Iouis Hrennan, the mono-rail inven tor. The machine is now undergoing tests at Karnborough Airdrome. Tills remarkable invention, which has long been visualized but never pi;.'iouHl achieved by aero engineers, p,e.slSi two great advantages over th ordi nary airplane. Jt a.s :t direct lift and tun soar siri'tcht ,.p from any confined fcpace. J; cm lover motion Jhs in the air lik a hawk. " An important pniiK-m in course of noluiion is to prevent ihe mju'Ure rom fulling into .xxi'jne if the engine wops, l'rincipljs ,f i. ,-osooni'.' oi. Irol are being uppii'. d t.i solvi Jif-'i-t.ullii's of stability whiie li t r. a. K.tie Is in actual mo' iou. . ' intense nnlivy mtcri'.ii ii I cing taken in Hie :p;-r n.'i.ls. Jt is I. It4 ved that a '..(.' 'cxKrul b !ivn tcr, liovciiiig. if .iii.'wiu"', 'jr ):ju above any glvei? i-ri!iy, tniou-iiM-ly I''ph in the air an.l tliu-.ist iiuimile, lvould be a nmit-u.-i'ii phttloiiu '. f lulled rcconn '1 ta--, wluic villi II very lar;e ii lie t'.l lr, poxpri ti! y rn-b-IikmI ii nd capaiil- of nl'ii:is v :.t Wk lKhls. It would be possible to wnd up uilil luiiiniain in uie air ai uny re-i luirid height "aerial forts" which might be ust-d with driiunalizing ef- j lMi against an enemy. ( The success of the new Invention is j sin. I to be iiHMin-d. and experimental lllitliis are to take place ehortly. HAD TO PRY HIM LOOSE FROM MAN-EATING MULE WITH A HUGE CROWBAR LOVG CREEK, Ore., July 6. (I. X. S.) Clarence Porter, young son of Allen Porter, had to I pried loose from a man eating mule with a crowbar, when the recalcitrant animal sunk Ita teeth in his leg and re fused to let go. Clubs, gtones and knives had no more effect on the mule than Si's cuss words on the famous Maud, and the iron crow bar had to be inserted between the jaws and the mouth forced open before the boy be released. Young Porter was seriously in jured, the flesh on his b-g being torn away from the bone. The animal was to be branded and Porter was holding Its head while another man tied its feet; In trying to control the mule. Porter struck it with a spur, but tho animal snapped onto the spur, drew the lad closer and si'ized his leg In a stubborn grip. .M IIFI L f.It WTI.VG LONDON', July .(!. X. S.) If you lose your thumb by accident It may be sal isfactorily replaced by yolii I'wiinn eudnriiig tor cUihl thousand big toe. A tYt-uch turgeon has per- yrs on ihe face of a girl is a re-; lormed tin operation with complete xarkiible feature of a mummy that j kuccorf. The patient, however, must luia been brought lo london from itimiin for a fortnight with his hand L'tn't and la now In tha Egyptology atiai bed to his foot before the toe i wrtuou uf the I'liivcraity Cull J completely atvered. Tlie cardinal lecture event of the week for all Chnutnuquans comes on the second night when Ellison-White presents yilhjalmur Stefansson, the famous Arctic explorer and discoverer of the "blonde Kskimo," for the first time on the Chautauqua platform. Knar Admiral Robert K. Peary, discoverer of the North Pole, said of him: "Stefansson has taken the white man's brains Into the Polar regions, and lias evolved a way to make himself absolutely self-sustaining. He could have lived in the Arctic fifteen and a half .vers, just as easily as live and a half years. By combining great natural physical ability with hard, practical common sense, he lias accomplished what he has accomplished, and made an obsolute record." ; . , Stefansson's lecture has thrilled audiences everywhere. He lias a re markable story to tell and unusual ability in presenting Us fascinating tie tails graphically. AMERICA CELEBRATES IE I PORTLAND, July 6. (I". P.) I America passed the safest and sanest I Fourth for many years, lieports indi- I cate a few deaths in the country duo. I to fireworks, drownings claiming the I largest' tolls. Portland accidents re sulted from automobiles, threw deaths and seven injuries. Chicago and Bos-! ton led the list with IJ deaths each. I Five were drowned in Chicago and the rest killed in automobile accidents. Six i cf the 11 .Milwaukee. Wis., dead arc! due to drowning. Nine were drowned I in New York, four killed in Detroit, three in Brownsville. Pa., and New Or leans, and two in Pittsburgh. Scores of cities reported small casualty lists due to drowning, and automobile accidents. pahkf.u ; Service Ftaff IKK!)S. Ca.tper K. Payne to Ralph Kvans, $10.00, S. 1-2 SW. 1-4 SK. 1-4 Sec. 11, Tp. 4, N. R. 2$ Theodore Neadeau to K. K. Shaw, $1.00, XW. 1-4 PW. 1-4 Si;. 1-4 Sec. 2'J, Tp. a, X. R. 29. Orange aii(j Conboy to Alta 1!. Smith $10,uoo, lot 5, blk. 12, Orange and Conboy's addition, Pilot Roi k. O. D. Tee to Joseph Cunha, $1000, W. 1-2 SK. 1-4 and K. 1-2 SV. 1-4 Sec. 21, Tp. 3, X. It. 2!l. O. D, Teel to Joheph fun ha, Sr., $31,500, NK. 1-4 XW. 1-4 and XW. 1-4 XK. 1-4 and X. 1-2 SV. 1-4 NK. 1-4 and X. 1-2 SK. 1-4 XW. 1-4 Pec. VT, Tp. 3, X. R. 29. W. It. .May berry to Roy 1). Wallace, $10.00, part of SK. 114 SV. 1-4 Sec. 14, and K. 1-2 XW. 1-4 Sec. 23, Tp. 5. X. R. 36. 70 acres. Iris'C. Hart to Peoples Whse. $600, XW. 1-4 XK. 1-4 and NK. 1-4 XW. 1-4. Sec. 35. Tp. 1, N, 1!. 3.1. T" NTTvvTOX C (International News Correspondent, i PARIS, July fi. All feminine! Europe is suddenly turning to black gowns and the women who flaunts bright, colors feels distinctly out of place. The running of the Pri de Dir.nc at the reopening of the Chantilly race course was the most fashionable event of the summer on the continen'. Promenading before the stands were thousands of the elite of Paris, Iin donand New York and scores of other cities and fully &'i Per cent of them were in black. The wave of sombre ness has struck Merlin, Rome, Vienna and all other Krnpean capitals. Kdouard Ponti, noted French writer, thinks he knows the reason why. "Fashionable dressmakers did not launch this mode deliberately, for i takes money out of their pockets," says Ponti. "A woman must have many gayly colored dresses, becauaa they are conspicuous and the same color cannot be worn eery day, whereas she may do very well with two or thrue gowns in black. "It is not a measure of economy Women are spending more money in F.nropo than at any time, excepting tlie porlnd immediately following the conclusion of pence. "It is simply the natural reaction "gainst the wave of jazz-band ayety that followed the armi.tice when everything was brightly colored. It is a historical fact that some mysteri ous link eonue'ts women's fashions with the prevailing attitude of the public mind. Affter the armistice, noise, chau'riagne, reds and yellows. I Today, sober second thought and reall i zation that the worl is still full of trouble, less noise and dancing, Hum life grows. "If, in the near future, Kurope be comes more stable and life every where returns to normal you will see lively colors reappear in the feminine toilette. ' V ... - mmm '" ...... ' ; ' ' J : .'- !txf, fc-i'.'c' I. ..'!. . V . - 'CI 4 1 i ' .ft !. -i V V Jl i Colonial Drapery Fabrics are manufactured, woven, designed and print-, f ed by Marshal Field & Co., the largest whole salers in the w-orld. In the future the sale of this famous line of decorative fabrics will be , confined strictly to this store in Pendleton. No other line is so meritorious, so original ' in designs and colorings.. Colonial Draperies comprise all the various weights in Cretonnes, Reps, Silkolines, 1 Sat eens, Chintz, etc., for the purpose of home beautifying. . .. . : '.- . ' We have just received a beautiful lot' of new fall patterns suitable for living rooms, bedrooms, halls or for making porch cushions, pillows, screens, laundry bags and the nu merous articles drapery fabrics are adapted too. And then too, these new cloths are priced just about. . , ONE HALF THE PRICE they were last fall. Just step in at this pro gressive stm-p to see these Colonial Drapery Fabrics. JUST RECEIVED LA FRANCE SILK HOSE IN-' BLACK AND AFRICAN BROWN $2.25 PAIR. . I Full fashioned silk hose of quality are very scarce and getting more dif ficult to obtain every day due to the fact that full fashioned workers in the ' factories have been on a strike since January. We are indeed fortunate to be able to offer this excellent'silk hose in the most desired colors at the pair $2.25. Attend the Chautau qua July 10-1 G. Chautauqua Week July 'l 0-1 G jf"" 28 YEARS AGO (From tlie Fast Orrironiun, July G, 1SU3.) Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Lowell and A. 11. Stillman returned last evening from t'nmas prairie.' Mr. Lowell ad dressed I'kiah people and Mr. ' Still- also called upon to Judfte a horse ! race, lioth celebrations were well at-jj tended. !J Dr. .('. J. Whitakcr left this morn- j inn for Lehman Spi iiiKS where he will j J remain for a t'e.w days before acconi-; 4 panyinff W. W. Oavlness on an ex- j tended huutintf trip to Greenhorn, j I Siith art; experienced bear hunters j and they expect fine trophies. j G. W. Hanscll has resigned as post- master at Athena and a petition Is be- I ing: circulated for the apointmeiit of J. . Maloney. Mr. Hansen's partner. ' He has the support of the commun- OLDSMOBILE ... ' i KDI CATI S PK.MII.S. JKltKKVVII.LK, 111.. July 6. (I. N. j H. Pearls are parasites on the bodies of mussels, . according to !nnnie Dor- i man, Illinois river fisherman. I'annle recently, found a mussel that appar ently found a mussel that apparently was producing a larwe button pearl. And the pearl is growing, he says, liorrnan expect to realize a neat sum from Its sale after it '"srmvB up." doings of the duffs SOMEBODY WAS SHOOTING WILD. BY ALLMAN w : JSBPfSSS' ' ' WMM& I MvP ? i r'TIMES I w"SH im1' - 1 ' -v ' toA i M !ift Bfvri7 $2190 $2395 $1995 $2550 $2750 $2095 $2145 Effective July 2d Model 43 Roadster, Four Cylinder $1575 Model 43 Touring, Four Cylinder.. $1595 Model 43 Coupe, Four Cylinder.', Model 43 Sedan, Four Cylinder.. Model 47 Tourinp;, Eight Cylinder Model 47 Coupe, Eight Cylinder. , Model 47 Sedan, Eight Cylinder. . Model 4fi Pacemaker, Eight CyL. Model 4f Seven Pass., Eight Cyl.. Model 46 Sedan, 7 Pass, Eight Cyl. $3145 Model 37 Touring, Six Cylinder... $1650 Model 37 Roadster, Six Cylinder,. $1625 . OLDSMOBILE ECONOMY TRUCK . Chassis $1490 Cab . . $1565 Express body complete $1635 Prices Oregon Delivery (War Tax Included) The Oldsmobile Co. PENDLETON, ORE.' Opp Pendleton Hotel ' Phone 975 ti.y.i .. 7 W