1AG2 SIX
DAILY EAST O&EOONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 21,1021,
TEN PAGES
Social and Club News
l-KSSr MICH K.VJUVEI.).
Tli lti.tv.ry 1ul picnic given last
i-irnlug ill Ih Indian Ascnc.v trrotiiirix
In honor or ihr f.icnliy an xiuilcnis
i;f iho minimcr rmrmul whool, .
ninfl nijnynblp. The honor Riiost.
with Kilnrian ami their v lvcu. mi-i
1iiI to the Kjml In the fvenins and '
njoypd ft iiicnic miliar. r.timpn worp
tin? ilhcrftlim t.f the lmr hours sn.l ,
llei'. Ocoruf K Clark, pnmor of tho'
t'rtnli.vtrln church and one of tlipj
Hi(nr)an, (rave a wtu.it talk In wh'ch
hi- told of the upon which the
Itotiiry clnh wn founded. He cm
ipliimlecd Hip fuel that the club Is os
pijclBlly intorcKled In education and
that Roturlnnn of this city are there
fore much pleased that Pendleton is
the hostetig city for the normal twhool
HCHSIonR,
Several oi islnal sour were simp l.y
the honor rriieKia, who na a climax to
tho evening enjoyment were taken
liy, machine to Cabbage Hill for a view
11 tllC 8UIIW1.
MOTOR TO WALLA.
A motor party to Wulla Walla today
Included Mrs. B. M. Huntley, Miss
Helen Huntley and her house truest,
Miss Verna Hunter, of Sioux City,
Iowa, Miss Blanche Purnish. Miss
Oorpmna Fletcher, Mrs, Fred Reun
ion and her niece, Miss Sybil Spauld
l"R, of Suit Lake, who is a truest at
the Hennion home. They left this
morning and will return tonight
I'IC.MC J.S HEI.lt.
The annual picnic of the Pendleton
fash Market was an event of last eve
ning when employes and their families father, Alvin Plusher.
spent I ho hours of curly twilight and
evciiliu; at Mission. About thirty
quests were present. Swimming was
a ptcasintr part of the cutci UiinineM
program and u picnic supper was tsurv.
ed laler.
.
St IN IS TSUlt.V.
Mr. and 'Mrs. i'ecil Sykcs (Xuiltne
HlakeleM are the parents of a son
born last evening at St. Anthony's
hospital. The new arrival weighs
eleven and a quarter pound and has
been named Joseph Waller S kes. in
honor of Mrs. Sykes father, Joseph
A. Hlakeley and of Mr. Sykes' father,
Walter Sykes. The child is the great
grandchild of the late Captain James
lilakely and a Brand-nephew of Wil
liam M. Hlakeley.
LKAVK FOR HO.MR -
Mrs. I. E. Puncan and son, "Ixucn
Duncan, who have been visiting In
Pendleton as the guests of Mrs. P. C.
Schauder. left yesterday for "their
home In Wallace, Idaho.
MOTOlt TO HKK.M1STOX
Mrs. J. F. Robinson, Mrs. Clara
Stocker. Mrs. W. W. Caviness and Don
ald Robinson motored to Hermiston
this morning to spend the. day.
LKAVKS FOR WALLACE
Miss Laura Uasmussen left yes
terday for Wallace. Idaho, to visit with
relatives during the nex six weeks.
VISITOR IS HERE
Miss Mai-iTnret Slusher arrived this
morning from Portland to visit her
ARE OX WAV HOME.
I Mr. and Mrs. Roy Alexander, who
, have been spending aunie time In Cal
ifornia, are now on their way home
j according to word received today by
! Mr. Alexander's father, R. Alexander.
Mr, and Mrs. Alexander who are mnk.
jlng the trip by motor, wore In Ash
land last evening.
RETURN FROM TRIP.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Leader re
turned yesterday after a three weeks'
I motor trip to Seattle, Washington.
Crater Lake and other points.
! Xtr. Leader's father, U. P. Leader,
who accompanied them, went to Los
Angeles for the Elks' convention.
MR HOWARDS IX CULVER
Mrs. Clair Edwards Is now In Culver,
Oregon and will go from there to G res
ham. She will be joined by Mrs. Kiln
Thohmpson, her mother, and the two
will spend some time at Seaside before
returning to Pendleton.
MRS. HATTERY ON TRIP.
Mrs. H. H. Hattery, who has been
attending Vnivorsityof Oregon sum
mer school, is now on a hiking trip
to Mount Rainier. Mrs. Hattery is
accompanying a party of summer
school students.
LEAVES FOR SAN DIEGO.
Mrs. William Johns, of Youngstown,
Ohio, who has been visiting in Pen
dleton with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sinip-
json, left last night for San Diego. Cal
ifornia.
IS IN MILTON
Mrs. William Edwards is in Milton
where she was called by tire serious ill
ness of her sister.
HOI'l'S UPSTAIRS S. 11 O P
J uly Clean Up Sale
Great Reductions on
SPORT SUITS '
COATS, DRESSES
SILK SKIRTS
and BLOUSES
ALL SUMMER DRESSES AT GREAT
REDUCTIONS
HERE FROM HELIX.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Anderson of
Helix, are in the city today.
-
MRS. CUXH.V HERE.
. Sirs. Joseph Cunha, Jr., of Echo, is
here today.
HOME DEMONSTRATION
IDEAS FOR HOUSEWIVES
S f. C O .Ml V LOOK TAVIOI! 11 A It l W AUK It 1. 1 G,
Pay Nothing
Deposit Nothing
Wc will lend you this Valet AutoStrop Razor
On thirty days' trial.
If after trying it for 30 days you find that it solves
the problem of keeping a razor blade up to its high
est shaving standard, keep it and pay us its price,
$5.00. Otherwise you may return it without cost or
obligation. Any responsible party can arrange with
us for this free trial. An offer of this kind has never
been made in connection with any other razor and
is more convincing proof of the merit of the Valet
AutoStrap Razor than any argument we could pre
sent. Call at our store, borrow a Valet AutoStrop
Razor and demonstrate this merit to your own satis
faction. . THOMPSON'S DRUG STORE
T:
In doing house work, there is
always necessary fatigue, and too
many times unnecessary fatigue.
It is a realization of this fact
that led efficiency engineers to
standardize brick-laying motions
in such a way as to enable the
bricklayer to lay 350 bricks per
hour where he had laid 120
bricks per hour before, and to do
this with less fatigue than when
he was laying the smaller num
ber of bricks.
Care in arranging ironing
board, basket of unlroned clothes
and clothes rack will help a busy 4
woman to accomplish more work
with less effort than if she does
not take this care. There is
no need for her to stoop for each
garment to be ironed nor to
walk several steps to get that
garment or to hang it up after
ironing. .he need not think
herself a shirk if she hits at her
work. Slio can save steps by-
tacking an iron stand of asbestos
or tin on the end of the ironing
board. It also saves needless
motions to sort clothing as it is
ironed. ,
Things going to ne part of the
house should be put on one Piirt
the ironing rack and those to an
other part of the house on an
other section. Things to be
mended can also be placed to
gether as they are ironed. A tea
of ironing rack and those to an
iug the ironed clothes to various
parts of the house. E. V. D.
TELEPHONE RATE CASE
Just a Few
OF THE MANY THINGS WE CAN SAVE YOU
MONEY ON.
HxlG double filled 10 oz. duck wall tent $26.50
8x10 double filled 10 oz. duck wall tent : $10.00
No. 0 galvanized Tub, heavy grade 75c
No. I galvanized Tub, heavy grade 90
No. 2 galvanized Tub, heavy grade $1.25
No. 3 galvanized Tub, heavy grade $1.45
Medium large Wash Boiler, copper bottom $2.35
14 quart galvanized Water Pail 50c
5 gallon galvanized Oil Can . $1.45
3 quart Aluminum Kettles 75c
A good padlock, two keys, each 25c
We don't keep the above goods, we sell them.
Yours for service,
iley&Kemp
Vualitf Our Watchword featJsfaotloii Our Aim
SALEM, July 21. (A. 1.
Charges and retorts were exchanged
between James Jlott. Astoria city at
torney, and Attorney Shaw of the tele.
Phone company, concluding with the
statement by Chairman Williams of
the public service commission, that
the attorney general would be asked
to settle the dispute that occurred at
the forenoon session of the telephone
rehearing. Jlott and Shaw got Into
words over Mott's request that he be
allowed to call as a witness an Ajtoria
j telephone company employe.
1 SALEM, July 21. (A. P.) Deputy
jCity Attorney Tomlinson, of Portland,
"in Un argument late yesterday, de
manded the restoration of telephone
rates as low or lower than those pre
vailing before the increase last March
and that they be made retroactive. He
j urged a readjustment of the Oregon
! rate situation, a lower basis of the
company's property valuation and a
'divorce as far as possible from the
American Telephone and Telegraph
'company. He charged poor business
management.
3
Bifocals that combine
invisibly the correction
for near and far sight.
Have them fitted here.
HMOUTOM OOfGOU
American National llank
' JluildillK.
Apricots for Canning
Extra Fancy Apricots, fine for canning,
large box $2.50
Red Raspberries, crate $2.70
Logan Berries, crate $2.50
Umatilla Peaches, crate .$1.1 5
Bing Cherries, pound 15c
Royal Anne Cherries, pound 10c
Plums, basket a ...75c
Water Melons, extra nice, pound' 05c
Cantelftupes, each .: 15c and 20c
Apples, box '. $2.25
Our trade is heavy on Fresh Fruits and Vege
tables as well as high gracje groceries, assuring you
fresh stock at all times.
Gray Bros. Grocery Co.
3 Phones 28 Only 1 Quality the Bet
Every need for the
Harvest Time
Stunlis & Storie
Figures in tho Chicago grain mar
ket are practically the same as yester
day's, September grain only showing
a slight advance. July wheat closed
at $1.25 "4, half a cent higher than
yesterday's closing, September at
$1.26 Vs, a cent higher than yesterday's
closing while December grain closed at
$1.29Vi, a fraction of a cent lowet
than yesterday's closing.
Following are the (imitations receiv
ed by Overbeck & Cooke, local brok
ers: Vlicat
Open High Low Closo
July 1.5 1.25i 1.21' J1.2514
?ept. 1.23 1.261a 1.2! 1.2614
Dec. 1.2a 1.2'.li 1.26 'i 1.2SK
Corn
July .6 114 .61 .63 H .64
Sept. .61?4 .6214 .6U-!4 .616
Dec. .60 .61 .60 -61-
Wheat The market showed a rath
er easy undertone, due to heiming sales
and lack of aggressive buying, but al
the inside figures today September was
offered over 12 cents from high of last
.veck. a decline sufficient to Improve
the technical position to some extent,
and the rally from the low point was
not surprising. There is ven- little ac
tual pressure on the market and the
character of the news is such that any
increase in the buying would probably
esult in a higher range. It seems to
be only a (mention of time before the
fact that European crops have been
cut down considerably by the recent
,heat and drought will become a factor
i the sit'iation. and Paris rubles to
day said that Russia had appealed to
the world to save the starving people
in the drought stricken section of that
country, which under normal condi
tions are the best agricultural produc
ing areas. This should place Russia
in the importing rather than the ex
porting column for a year. Crop ex
perts are taking a less rosy view of the
Canadian situation and with black rust
present in practically all sections, j
weather conditions must be closely
watched. Cash wheat on spot was
iishtly firmer, although export de-
nand was slow.
Card of Thanks
Wc wish to thank our many friends
and fraternal orders for their sym
pathy and the beautiful floral offer
ings during the illness and death of
our beloved husband and father.
Jilts. S. C. WIL.SU.V
AXD CHILDREX.
(East Orcgonlan Special.)
M EACH AM, uuly 21. A J. Smith
and wlfd motored to Pendleton Mon
day. Floyd Hewitt and wife left for La
Criande this week.
Victor Peters and Dick Withers mo
tored to Kamela Wednesday. '
Guy Norden and wife, motored to
Meacham Tuesday evening.
. Mrs. T. C. Vaughn and children
camo up from Pendleton Wednesday
and will spend tho next two months
camping out.
C. B. Rogers left for Puker Monday
to look after his horses.
Elsie and Gilbert Marlin left Sunduy
lor their home at Wallowa. They
spent the past few months with their
grandparents Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Pai
ker. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hidden spert
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Baker.
Mr. and Airs. Lee Todd, Mr. and Mrs
Ollio Cramer spent Sunday at Meach
am. 1 ,
Mrs. Charlev Van Orsdalo and Mrs.
Rae Van Orsdale from Pendleton,
spent the week end here.
Mrs. Weaver and Mrs. N. F. Cole
came up from Pendleton Monday to
spend a few months camping.
Mrs. AV. H. ' Xebergall of Pendle
ton is here to visit with her daughter
Mrs. T. C. Vaughn.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl (inlanders came
up from Pendleton Saturday evening
and spent .Sunday at the hotel.
Mrs. Fred Diving and children n!
I,a Grande are visiting with T. F.
Watkins this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Joo Parkes are up
from Pendleton to spend the summer
months.
Mrs. Lemon and daughters of Inde
pendence Mo., are here visiting H. T
IJealy and family.
Fire broke out in the Smythe Loner
can timber west of Meuehun this week.
They were about 30 men sent up from
Pendleton to fight the fire, and got II
under control after two days of hard
work. About 300 cords of wood were
completely destroyed.
putting in the steam heating plunt in
the new high school building, Mrs.
Holmgren is hero ulso.
Mrs. Mary Howard of Portland and
Mrs. John Reaver of Irrlgon was the
Sunday guest of .Mrs. R. I). Stiirk
wcather. Miss Outherlno Pregnollx returned
Monday from a two weeks yacallon at
L'klah and vicinity.
M. R. Stuart of Portland spent a few
days with his parents Mr. unci Mrs.
James Stuart.
Mrs. M. G. Bcntley and daui'hter
Verna of Milton are spending some
time at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. C. S,
Bricrley.
It. J. McMlllian and Harry Coleman
of Tacoina were In town the first of
the week looking after the Interest of
the- Furnish Pitch Co. .Mr. Coleman
Is the new auditor.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Richards have
returned from an eight days visit
with their son Glen and family at Con
don. The farmers have begun cutting the
second crop of alfalfa which is much
larger than the first cutting.
E. P. Marshall was In town Inst
Saturday. Mr. Marshall Is oe of Pell
dleton leading citizens.
John Mci'ollough a former r'tanfiuld
bo" was In town last week.
Mrs. Tom Smith of the Meadows
visited at tho home of Mrs. T. o. Vates
Monday.
Carl Helm and family have moved to
the Htanfleld ranch on Butter Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hogsiard will
move soon in their new home on Bar
bara street. Just vacated be'the Holm-.
'3 PerfectSlivalderi and Arm
U0
Nolhln Mtub Mm
beautiful, (oft, pcu-ly
w h 1 1 appeirue
Couraud' Oritntal
Crm readff to tlw
shoulder and anna.
Covert ikln hlcmUhc.
Will not nib off. Far
upnlor to powriart.
Send lie. for
Trial Su
FUD.T.HOttUHS
SUN
KawYork
A French inventor has perfected a
tallk Which resemhlea thn Aerllnnev
whippet tank except that It is propell
ed from tho stern. It crossed trenches,
climbs wails, enters water, cruises on
the surface, dives and crawls along
the bottom, according to French army
officers who recently witnessed the
performance.
Hall's Catarrh Medietas
Those who ar. In a, "run down" condi
tion will notice, that Catarrh bother
them much mora than when they are In
(food hea th. This fact proves that whlla
Catarrh Is a local disease, it la freatly
Inlluenrcd by conntltutlonal condition.
HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE I a!
Tonic and Blood Purlder, and acta throuxh
the blood upon the mucnua stirfatwa of
the body, thua reducing the Inflammation
and restnrine; normal conditions.
All druggists. Circular free.
F. J. Cheney aV Co.. Toledo, Ohio.
As part of the campaign waged by
the federal and state upon the cam
phor scale, which threatens to destroy
much vegetation In Xew Orlenns, res
idents of that city are required to ob
tain a certificate when they wear flow
ers, showing that the blossoms are
! free from Insect posts.
Mary Aids tads
-A' .
W- M 'Jill
1
Here'a Mary Pickford on the way
to the mail box with a stack of hec
photos. Tho proceeds of the aala of
photograph go to the "Good Cbeer
Fund" which she established to helpi
tick and orphanl American cbil
trta, - ,
D
(East Oregonlun Special.)
STAXFIELD, July 21. The many
friends of Mrs. Eva Dumas will la
pleased to hear she has just graduated
i loin the San Jose California Normal
School. Mrs. Dumas was a former
teacher In tho Reeno high school i
this city.
Oscar Holmgren formerly of St. Paul
Minnesota Is here for the purpose of
Crow's Feet. Wrinkles,
Enlarged rjK
Pores dmu
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 provide for a home.
, Show, her your bank book for
youi 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.
Quickly Show a
Improvmr-t
Honey
TIir flrnt application of Ifowftnl'n
RtittcrmHk Ochih will a.'tontHh you.
Th (lullHt, tnot UfVIfHH complexion
in turned to radiant beauty and red or
roiiKti linmU or htwb ihhI itnowy
white yet there in not the pllght1t nls?n ,
of tin ue. It actually vanishes from'
Kitrht and the rnont hatod atmosphere j
will not produce the leant shinfnens or
Kreartineftfl of the skin, j
No matter whether you are troubled i
with a poor complexion, wrinklvn, puf-j
fine around the eye, crow's feet on
lined around mouth, or junt a aknplel
roiiKhneaa of (lie faee, hands or annul
canned by wind or aun, you will flrvdj
that lhee troubles will quickly diaxp
oear with the uae of Howard Butter-j
milk Crem. i
To prove thla to your complete aat-
olfaction, tret a package today al any
flmt clntn drtisr or toilet Rood counter.
InniM on Howard's Buttermilk ('ream.
i.o other Cream can take Its place. If
you cannot obtain, tend 10 cents silvr
or stamps for generous trial package
of ('ream and Hoap to Howard Pros.
Company, 457 Washington Street, Buf-
r. n. i. All aruffffiata can supply,
You Save Money
When you get your Refrigerator from Us. vv
The 'balance of our Refrigerators will be closed
out at
20 Off
See us before you buy and save money:
CRAWFORD FURNITURE
ICS E. COliHT ST.
rUO!S 46
rou. ,