i Hi. a: f AGE TWO DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PEJTDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY EVENING JULY 9, J921. TWELVE PAGES Works Free for Uncle Sam rood Buy now while the stocks are complete Elli , - i our and ours ... 1 ! : I By reducing our profit on clothes we can in crease yours. . We want to increase yours. . Because, if we jih e vou unusual values, it's reason for Imyinir; and make more! It's a rule of business that a small profit and a large volume of sales is more profitable than a large profit on a small volume. , We're selling Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes today at prices closer to cost than ever before; we ought to sell a lot of them at this special price of $36.50 COOL SUMMER SUITS $15.00 to $25.00 NEW MANHATTAN SHIRTS . . . . . 2.50 to 810.00 STRAW AND PANAMA HATS REDUCED 14. AUlwO UiiUtM eopies worenous JlJ WHERE IT PAYS Mfr'r A Vz THIS TRUCK s5cnn ler if we sell more, we'll tl j LV-fl a fuse t TO TRADE p??p3jffl R0THER5 om Including Electric Lights Self Starter Stake Body and Cab 36x6 Cord Tires for $19SCI.oo IS NOW ON G a Remember the Chautauqua Dates, July 10th to 16th i I DISPLAY AT ompany 1 nna MI turf UUaajj I ts- t T.- T."nui'. ik ia koen He has been made head of tho new Welfare, Department of the Pouit' Perviea, without-pay. Dr Frankel Is vice president ol the Mau-opoliiari UXe luaunuice Co. and a leading welfare workr. Church "f the Hwlinncr Rev. Alfred Iockwood, rectiir. 8 a. m., holy communion. 11:00, morning prayer and Hermon. No evening service. The rector preaches at the morning service on ''Tho Com mon Task." The public is cordially invited. ' Christian Srtniro First Church of Christ, Scientist, holds services at 813 y, Main street (first stairway north of the Inland Empire Bank). Sunday services are at 11 a. m. The subject of the lesson sermon for Sunday, July 10th, is "Sue rament." Sunday school begins at 9:45 a. m. A Wednesday evening' meeting which includes testimonials of-healing Is held at 8 o'clock. The reading room, which' Is maintained at the same address, is open daily from S a. m. to 9 p. m., where the Plble am! authorized Christian Science literatitrr ALL RUN DOWN AND WORN OUT Because you have not thorrmchly purified your blood, but have tillowed to remain in it tho accumulations of wasto matter that cause weakness, loss of appetite, dull headache, broken sleep, backBcho, eruptions end humors nnd other troubles. Take Hood's Sarsnparilla, tho medicine that renovates, strength ens, tones it will build you up, mukt you feci better all over. Hood's Pills help as a stomach tonintr. diere3tive cathartic. ':' tv fl 1 . iT nmuU clerks nanny and sinltlnx may bp read, lir-rrowed or purchased The public Is cordially Invited to nt tend (he chunh services and to visl the leading room. Sp rimallst The First Spiritualist Science church w II hold services Sundav evening al ? o'clock In the Rmle-Woodman hall .cture and demonstrations by Elmel nichtcr. Subject, "fiuardlan Angets.' Everybody w elcome. ' ' rrcsb) tcrinii-fciliodlst 10:00 n. m., Sabbath school In eac luirch. 11:0(1 a. m.. linltMi service I t. E. church. Sermon by llev. G. I'lark. No evening service on account )t CjiautaU(Ua. Gcrnuin IiUtlicmn There 'will- be German Luthern lernion at. the First Christian churc it 2 p. m. ffev.' A. Hlasberg will r-nch tho sermon. , ISairtl.-t Chinvh Itcv. AV. H. Cox, pastor. Residence Sir. Ttush St. I 'bono IK 7. Sunday morning Sunday school at 1:50 a. m. F. M. Itiley, Supt. Preach ng service, 11:00. Itev. W. H. Cot .vill preach his farewell si'imon ol Sundav morn 'tis. You are cordl.ill! nvitcd to be prcpcnt at' that time There will be special music and spe ial sins: m; and a hearty welcome Sunday flight, no service, but a inlted Chautauijua meeting at Hap Canyon. MARK HENDERSON WiLL HE WKSTOX, Ore.', July 9 (E. .O., Spe ,'lal) .Mr. and, Mrs. Kd May and .laughter returned to Oregon City Tuesday after u three weeks visit Willi relatives on the hill. I Mrs. Dick English is moving to Camp Jlc.Doiigal for the summer, to ';e near her husband. I.lttle Margaret I md Evangeline Ixgan will be with I her. . Mrs. C. W. Avery and daughter Elisabeth returned to W'esfton after visiting relatives and attending the K. 1'yct'lcbint.on at Cold Springs. .Mr. and Mrs. John Wroe and fam ily of Wild HorHe, former residents of vVcston Mountain, celebrated at Cold Springs. Mark and Fred Henderson drove to Dayton, Wash., Friday and visited friends and attended the Chautauqua both days, -Hra. Mark Henderson and daughter Dorothy returning with them. Mark' Henderson bought Charlds May's Interest in the Ml. Threshing Co. machine and will run It this sum mer. Volstead s Aid Her father'! daughter la his chief lieu tenant In making the oatioo dry Miss Laura Volstead, Un(htar. Ok bm Minnesota congressman wb put lit teeth In lh dry law, 0U M ktl t George Hkckenthorne, former Pert- dleton boy, who la playing opposite Qludys Walton as a cripple In her lat est feature "ChrlHtlne of th Younr Heart" was nearly actually crippled recently when a wheel rime--Off hid car on the road to Balboa Hcaoh near Los Angeles, throwing the car into a ditch at the foot of a xteep hill.'- Mr. Hackathorne finished the picture, however, but he hardly had need of he braces he wears to make him pp pear crippled In the picture. Hackuhorne gained a great deal of prominence in l,oA Angeles film cir cles by his portrayal of ; Alias, the Hunchback (another cripple) lit Allan awn' "The Rln of Martha Queed" nd in T. Hayos Hoisum-'' nrdu',l'"t f the Irving Ttachellor novel IThe) Jght In the Clearing." .Jloth pictures will be released this fall. 1. 1 WASH I N'flTON. Jutv 8 fl. N. fi! A varied diplomatic career Is behind the new American ambassador to Chile, William Miller Collier, president of the George Washington university and former American minister to Spain, Who was appointed to the South American post a lew days ago y t resident Harding. William Miller Collier was born In ijodl, New York, In November, I8(t". he son of the Rev. Isaao Collier, i'oung Collier was graduated from Hamilton college In 1889, with the de (ree of Bachelor of Arts, securing his master degree in 1892. He spent a ''ear at Columbia university law school 'hre he won the degree of Doctor of law, which degree he also had b towed upon him by Hamilton. New fork, Syracuse, George Washington ind Wesltyan universities and col 'eges, the degree of L. H. IK from Ho wrt college being bestowed upon him ;n 1920. ' ' As a young nttorncy Collier prac .Iced In New York City, having been ul mil led to the bar In 1891. He mar--led Frances Beardsley Rosa of Au mm. New York, In 189S. He becama i referee In bankruptcy for the north ern district of New York In 18M and a member of the 'New York Stat Civil Service commission In 1899. Later he became president of that body. In 1903 President Roosevelt ap pointed Collier special assistant attor uy general of the United States, as I'gned to the department of com Tierce and labor. He was appointed ;olicitcr of that department In 1104. n 1 90.i he was named envoy extraor llnary and minister plenlpbteritlafj' to 3pain. He returned to America In 1909 and becme a law lecturer and ittorney for various American corpo rations doing business In Europe. He hen became a lecturer on diplomacy at George Washington university. In 1914 Collier wat appointed plenl. intent tnrv and head of the Amf.rl nn delegation to the International con ference at Christlanla. Nbrway, to frame a government for trie Island if Spitsbergen. In December, 1917, 'oilier was 'elected president of 3eorge Washington university. While In Washington as a college president he was frequently called up on for advice on many diplomatic luestlons, and he served during the .var us chairman o the extension com mittee of the Rod Cross; Collier Is a Republican. He Is the author of a number of standard text books on bankruptcy and civil service law. -- . SAN FRAXCtSCoi July (I.:N. ft) Sisters separated by the fereiit fire mil earthquake of 1808, each believ ing the other dead, will be reunited through the medium of the printed page. "An appeal to Captain James Qulnn, .lerk to Chief of Police Daniel O'Brien ,'rom Lilly Queenie Maker Thaln to assist her Jn getting back to the Unit ed States from an Internment camp in Hilda pest, Hungary, is to bring a reunion of the sliders after IS year of silence, ', Belle Haker Wilton, vaudeville ac tress, now In New York City, read In a newspaper dispatch of her sister's appeal to Captain Qlilnn and the iden tification was established, Mrs. Thaln, widow with two children, soon will bo on her way to New York to join her sister. ; .Valued In Casualties The sisters are the daughters of the" late Captain Joseph 11. Baker of the San Francisco police department. The homes of both sisters were de stroyed In the fire of 1906 and their names were published In the list ot "victims." Bello Wilton believed that both her sister and mother had perished. And Mrs. Baker and her daughter, reading the name of, .Belle among the dead, made their way to Europe. Mrs. Baker died on her way 40 Vi enna and the oncoming . war" found Lilly "an Interned American" In a hos tile country. - ? Recently Lilly wrote' to Captain Qulnn asking assistance in getting out of Hungary, where she had been striving to raise sufficient funds Tor that purpose. In that letter she stat-' ed that her mother and sister, Belle.,, Vllion, had died In the 8n Franclscoj fire. -n ' Protects Side, Curtain Fahrlo ' ' There has been invented a' thimblfl for the ends of upright rods, used to support automobile side curtains to protect the fabric fr6m punoture and relieve the stitching' from strains. Indicates Supply of Gasoline - A newly Invented guageto-Indicate the am'oOhTbf gasoline in an auto, mobile tank of a dial on the Instru ment board of a car Is operated by the pressure of the fuel on a cylinder ' cniwed Into tbo bottom drain, pip.