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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1921)
EIGHT PAGES" ftg... ' DAILY EAST OREQONIAIT, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 14, 1921. 'FAGS TEllSS i News Notes of Pendleton calendar op events June' 27-Auguit I Summer Normal School. July i to 1 Elltaon.Whlt Chautauqua. September it, JS, 14 Annual Pendleton Round-Up. ' (ii-(H ItuMdliiK Permit (.' A permit to construct a new porch ' on hid resldence'on Went Webb street (ivi An Appointment '.u. Frank WelHhrod, formerly nf YiiKlma, ft brother of Mm. B. n. Hownn nf thlH city, ha received an appoint ment h aeeond officer hy the V. S. IhRpoctara nt Norfolk, Va, He will he atntlnnejj- on the Kurtz, a new 8,000 ton ship plying between Philadelphia and cuba. To RcgiiltUo Water How ' :A carpenter has been engaged to construct a cage that will be placed river the tap that regulate the flow of water Into the wading pool, for chil dren in Pioneer park. An announce ment to thla effect was made last night nt the meeting of the city council hy Councilman William Dunn who is chairman of the park committee. The Improvement la being made no children "Ml not he Permitted to vary the flow that feeds the tank. has been granted to I). A. Downey at the office of the city recorder. The estimated cost of the Improvement Is $150. Sntlwficl Willi Price Honry I.aklnza, a leading cattle man of the Itkiiih district, was here this morning. Ha has Just returned from Seattle where he recently went to mar ket' two carloudd of fat cattle. The prices realised were very aatisfactorv-j to him, Mr. Laktrika reports. promises to bring the average for the whole country to a much higher figure than has prevailed In former years. Klipervlwor Is Coming ft. R. Arne, assistant supervisor of the Northwestern Division of the Red Cross, will visit- tho I'matillu county chapter next week. Use the Phones Grocery,-2 Phones 520 Other Depts. 7H II.fi l M VtIJ-M-4M MM jar vj t x SERVICE. PENDLKTON'S LEADING TORE Use the Phones Grocery, 2 Phones Other Depts 78 526 Whc-nt Yields Well A very satisfactory yield of wheat has Just been threshed by C. A. Moll on the .lack I.awson place, seven miles this nidp of Kcho, according to reports reaching Pendleton. From HO acres 2,000 sacks of grain were secured, and the sacks are weighing out better than usual. The crop total will be more than 4, no.) bushels It Is thought when all the wheat has been hauled in, which will make an average of a little more than 32 bushels. The higher I yield that are being secured on the lighter soils in the county this year where threshing has already been done Is New F.mployo Miss Ida Hoyd Womack Is a new employe at the Hlamley & Co. Sad dlery. Miss Hoyd arrived here recently from Virginia to make her home with her aunt, Miss Ida Boyd. , 101.101101-101- -1011 01101101101 Pressed Veal with v , Chicken A Tasty Lunch Meat, 'fresh made in our sanitary kitchen. AIho a full line of other lunch meats. FRESH GREEN PEAS, CELERY, GREEN AND WAX BEANS, GREEN CORN, CAULIFLOWER "WASTE LESS BUY THE BEST" Pendleton Cash Market, Inc. 301 E. Court Street Phones 101 Private Exchange Connect both Departments. -101 101-101 101 I0M0I-I0l-I0I-I0t-V 1 J THE SEASON'S NEWEST NOVELTY Tho Harding nine Pautolr and Pracelet. This new novelty, origi nated by the Kiger lioyn have only been on tho market three weeks, but, O Hoy these three weeks !! . If you haven't one get one now, be in style with the rest and be one of the first in your town lo wear a Harding Ulue Ribbon on your watch or a Bautoir. Tome in and see us, we have just received a big selection at ery little cost. (IKmt delay t Come mm). Hanscom always has the best and newest. niFTS THAT LAST llanscom's Jewelry Store Fishing Tackle That Brings Results How About that Winchester 22. cal. for Squirrels? CHAUTAUQUA DAYS, JULY 10 to 16 Iienve For Meacliam J. C. Kuhns, Umatilla forest super visor, and R. A. Botteher, his assistant, left today for Meacham to Investigate the forest fire which broke out yester day on the Pmythe-Lonergan timber land. Weather Is Warmer The thermometer is a wee bit hlsh er tMinjj than it was yesterday, accord ing to the report of Major ee Moor house. The maximum today was 90, just two degrees hot'er than yener Ky, Tom Johns At 1'kiah Tom Johns, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Johns, Sr., is spending the sum mer on the IJowell Oanger ranch nt I'kiah. In a letter to his father young Johns says he has very little to do be yond herding the steers, milking cows and performing a few other tasks. Firp In Grocery Huire. A defective flue caused a fire yes terday In the John I-ang grocery store which caused some dtfinage from smoke and water. The fire depart ment responded to the alarm and in a few moments had the blaze, which was a smouldering one, under control orest Fire I'ndPr Control. Reports reaching Pendleton today are to the effect that the forest fire which started yesterday on the Smythe and LonTgan land near Meacham, was under contror. Quite a lot of damage was done before fighters se. cured the upper hand. City Has Taxes. The municipality of Pendleton is in arrears on Its tax payments It became known last nlgh,t when a report was received showing that Uncle Sam has not been receiving his share of the re ceipts taken In from the sale of ad missions to the natatorium. A check will be necessary to establish tjhe amount that is due the federal govern-p'- ' " - city. AF ew i "IV I viore "Big" of Glean Up Sale Days Oi ir .Of shoes for women. Avail yourself of iliis opportunity to get fine seasonable slims at way below wholesale cost. Come in tomorrow and buy one or two pairs. - Women's Fine Black Kid and Patent Pumps, Louis heels . . $3.00 Women's Fine Black Kid Pumps and Ox fords, Louis heels $4."0 Fine Bronze Oxfords, Bronze Pumps, Brown Suede Pumps, Louis heels $4.oT Women's Fine Brown Kid and Paten! Colt Pumps, baby French heels . . $4.05 Women s Lace Boots in fine kid, ivory, brown, Louis heels ..... Roy Snialley IU-s. Typhoid fever proved fatal to Roy Smalley. fgormer Penflelton boy, at Ivencwlck, Wash., where he d'ed July 10. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Itue Smalley, better known here as Rae Overman, hy the parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Smnlley, two brothers. C'liiude and Joe of Kenewick, and a sis ter, Mrs. Blakley Jenkins, of Pendle- jtn. Mrs. Smalley Is here as the guest ;f Mrs. Cora Menke on Thompson street. She will leave in a few days for her former home in California, j ltPHrt (;lvcn Two compensation claims were granted through the Umatilla county Red Cross during June, according to a report made by Miss Rsther Kelly, social service worker. The claims were for JSfl each. Two Washington state bonus claims of $12.1 each were grant ed. Twenty-five branches were visited and the mileage covered was 792 miles. There were 147 cases which came to the attention of the office in June, the report shows. Correspondence was carried on with offices In many cities. MANY STYLES OF HIGH GRADE BROKEN LINES 83.00, S4.50, $4.85 Women's White Reignskin Pumps and , Oxfords Louis heels and military heel-, Price,... .;.83.00 Women's White Reignskin and White Kid Lace Boots, Louis and military heels, Price $3.00 grav. 83.00 II ROMK, July 14 (Henry Wood, V. p stuff Corresmmdent. I The nuke of the Abbruiust is again putting his; iiersnnal services at the disposition of the crown in a serious effort to devel- , entitle Somaliland in the eastern part. Xone of t lie'ii have ever reached a point of development to render them an im portant factor in Italy's economic life, as is the case with the colonies of nearly all the other Kuropean coun tries. This situation Italy is now trying to remedy and the DuXe of the Abbruz zi's expedition Into Somaililand is one of tfie first s.leps In that direction. He is putting into the task all of the sci- knowledge as well ao putriotlc the means 'cf transportation necessary for the material for putting large tracts of the colony under cultivation. Huge quantities of agricultural ma chinery and other material have al ready reached Mogaiscio. This is be ing distributed over the colony as fast as means of transportation can be de veloped, , , , ..-,' .... Aside Yrnm about sixty wh'te work men'whotfr he has with him the li?u of the Abruzzi is depending exclusive ly on indigenous labor for- carrying out the .various projects to place. li e terrltoiy under cultivation and render it an asset to Italy's national l'f. ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu on Italy's colony at near the Red Sea. He has already been there several months and Italy is now beginning to receive some forts. Uu to the present time, Italy's col onies have been much jnore of a lia bility to her than a dividend-laying ot maliland, down 1 zeal that characteried Rank Oei-ks On Trip A special Pullman car carrying 16 hank clerks of Portland, Seattle and Tacoma to Minneapolis where next week there will be held the annual convention of the American Institute of Rank Clerks was attached to No. 18 yesterday afternoon. W. H. Rennett and Rudy Mollner, local bankers were at the station to meet the train and renew acquaintances with the visitors. At Oreen River they expect to be join ed by a rlnillnr delegation from Pan Francisco. Included In the party were T. H. West, vice-president of the Was co County Bank of The Dalles; Ray Dobie and Steve Austin of the First National of Portland; Flody Warner nf the Security Savings and Trust: Fred Webber, of the Hlhernia Savings Rank: B. L. Fralcy, of the Northwest ern National Rank; Kugene Plunkett of the Anglo-I.ondon-Parls National Rank of San Francisco and Cyrus Woodworth of Ladd and Tilton. NEWSOFTHE COUNTY OFFICES AND OFFICERS of the fruits of his ef- la! his polar rtukings in be asset. j nev consist pi un:M.in.v ... . Trinoll and Cirenaica In the northern navigable the I'bel Scbeli river for part of Africa and iKrytrea and Italian ages and his other undc half of Italy. Is He will remain in the Somaliland 1 until October, when he expects to be ! able to render the government a com-js pleto record on the economic possibil-'s ities of the colony. One of his prin-!s clpal tasks Is the supervising of thejSS work already under way for rendering its S entire length. This will then serve as; GROCERY NERVOUS, IRRITABLE, AILING WOMEN Mrs, Britten Tells How She Was Restored To Health After Suffering for More Than A Year. Another Triumph for Lydia K. Piukhani's Vegetable Compound Quality TWO PHONES i Well made Brooms, each .-i Service 60c Marriage IJornsa tiranted. A license to wed was granted yes terday evening to Clement M. Howard. a clerk of Corvallis and Rertha Gene vieve Sevy, a teacher of Milton. 1 R'vorce Is Grunted. A decree of divorce In favor cf the plaintiff has been granted to Lillian Irene Wickham against Samuel Fred erick Wickham i by Judge G. W. Phelps. Her maiden name, Mattsnn, Is restored by the decree. IH-scrtlon Charcot!. Claiming that his wife dcesrted him withotil cause, Ceorgo A. Monroo has instituted suit for divorce from his wife, Mattie May Monroe. Accord .-' to the complaint, the couple married1 August 24, 1S95. at Ray City. Their two children are both of legal a Fee & Fee are the plaintiff's attorneys. In a barren and waterless waste Jn P.i'itlsh Kast Africa is what appears to he a. lake rovercd with a coating of snow partly thawed and then frozen again. It Is. In reality a deposit of soda. Travelers traversing this dist rict In the dry season find their shoes burned and the sharp spikes of the soda will pierce any but I lie thickest soles. During the rainy season the lu,ke U a beautiful pink. Dimondale, Mich. "I had inflammation and a displace ment and weakness, and it had been neglected so long that it caused great pain, and this affected my mind and nerves so that I was very irritable. I had severe pains every month, so that 1 was often obliged to lie in bed for two days at a time. 1 suf fered for more than a year before my friends said, ' Why don't you try Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound?' So 1 purchased one bottle after another until I had taken ten bottles, then Lydia E. Pinkham's SanativeWash. I received so much benefit from this treatment that 1 am now able to do my own work." Mrs. W.D. Britten, It. No. 2. Dimondale, Mich. Another Michigan Woman says: " I was bothered for a long time with female troubles and was so nervous I felt almost afraid at times. I also had a pain in my right side and was certainly in a bad way. Lvdia E.Pinkham'sVegetable Compound has relieved me of these nervous feelings and pains and I am much better in every way. 1 don't know just how many bottles I have taken, but I took it for nearly a year and it 1ms done me a world of good." Mrs. Jfssib Granger, R. No. 8, Box 51. Kalamazoo, Michigan. Good health is a woman's greatest asset. With it she may be the inspira tion of her husband, a happv mother, and the life of the home. Without it she suffers agonies herself, household duties are a burden, and her family is made miserable by her condition. Is it any wonder that these women were nervous and irritable after suffer ing so long from such deranged conditions? Such ailments act directly upon the nerves, and it has been suid that a large percentage of nervous prostra tion, nervous despondency, "the blues, "and nervous irritabilty of women arise from some derangement of the female organism. If women who are in this condition would only profit by the experience of others and take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once, much suf fering and unhappiness would be averted, as everyone knows a nervous, irri table, ailing mother makes the home unhappy and her condition irritates both husband and children. Lydia E. PinUIiam's Private Text-Hook upon "Ailments Pecu liar to AYotiK'n" will be sent to you free upon request. Write to The Lydia IZ. Plnkliam Medicine Co., I.yun, Massachusetts. This book contains valuable Information. i ll $ Best Crepe Toilet Paper, 4 rolls '. 25c Phez Brand Apple Butter, 22 oz. jar ...25c Extra Good Bulk Coffee, 3 pounds $1.00 Tree Tea, Ceylon and Java Blend, fine for iced tea. The, pound 60c Pure Extracted Honey, quart jar v 65s Everything possible to obtain in fresh Fruits and Vegetables. imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiw CSS SHOW HER YOUR BANK BOOK The young woman who takes the chance of tying her future with yours has practical, serious prob lems ahead. No doubt you want to provide for her comfort and happi ness but good intentions will not pay for a vacation, a pleasure trip or comforts that mean so much. Show her your bank book be cause she has a right to know what you have been doing with your money and what efforts you have made to prpvide for a home. Show her your bank book for your own good. It will bring home to you the need of practical man agement of your income and time. It will strengthen your resolution to save and provide for her.