"S tcY ! una DIXIT EAST 0SEG02TLLS, KS.DLETOIT, OSEGON, ; SATURDAY EYniET'CV AuGn-T'6; 1921. Jack Dempseyr "and Sylvia Jocdyft" ., i. i v WARNER'S CORSETS will not r.K-t ana every one is guaranteed New models to fit every type of figure, Many Warner Corsets are made with the X new double skirt that reinforces them where needed and makes -the corset i wear longer. Lace, front or back lace models, prices range from $1.49 to $6.00 ; ' 1 H 1 AN INnKl'ENDENT NEWSPAPER. Published Pully and Semi-Weekly, at 1'endleton, (lrmn, bjr the KT OHKUOKXIAN PUBLISH 1 NO CO. Entered t the post offlre at Pendle ton, Oregon, second class mail mux 6CBSCRIPTI0N RATES . tN ADVANCE) one year, by mall J six months, by mall three month, by mail one month by mail . one year by carrier , , six months by carrier three months by carrier ...... Dully, Maily, Daily, nmiy, Daily, llsily, Daily, naily, C.(I0 , 3.00 , !. , M 7.60 , .?5 . 1.S6 . M , sm . 1.0" C. P. Ford Shoes (N SAI.H IN OTHER CITIE9 In.titrrldl Ilotl Now pmnd, Portland. UN ULE AT . t'blCBgo Tii.resu, KOK Security Building. K n'l'iimii.n. 1. t, Huresu (VI Four teenth Street, N. W. Member f be A.wMliitea' 1're.a. The Ar.ciated Tree in exclusively entitled lo the use for repiiblicslloa of II new dinlrhi credited lo it or nut iithorwirc credited in thin paBfr and , one month, ny carrier Weekly, 1 year by mail Weekly, aix mnntha hv mall Seml-Seml- Semi- Weekly, three month by ma il .St for wnnlcn Rlvo tho ill most satisfaction in wear, fit unit style Tlio new .ulviin-'O styles for l'nll linvo arrived, olhers ore oiiiiln r In dully, anil the price are rcii sonabli'; V lnu the Iik-I new, published herein. Telephone ... m -Liu U . ; your size. We i A TASK TO IX A task to do ana a bite to eat, A coat o wear and a bed at night, 1 hcse four make up this life complete. All else la sham If you view It right, A task to do and a home to keep, A wife to amlle and a child to love, A place to play and a place to sleep What more shall be In the Heaven above? One task la all that a man can do, fine, coatrla all that a man can wear ftt who haa eaten a dinner through Could eat no more of the costliest fare; Gold cannot sweeten a baby's smile. Fume cannot better a good wife's kiss. Sleep doesn't come to the couch of style, , So rest content as you think of this. (Copyright. 1921 Work is the father of appetite Better the dinner that's truly earned Than the silvered table that glows at nlsht "Where little la eaten and much is spurned: Better he sleeps at the close of day Who weary comes to his humble hol. Than the man who putteth no care away. Better he wakes when the night Is sped. The humble home and the castle wall Shelter men's happiness, your's and mine, "And God has given the same to all And strengthened them by His love divine: A task to do and a bite to eat. A coat to wear anda bed at night. These four make up this life complete. All else is sham if you view It right. by Edgar A. Guest.) WE SHOULD HAVE FIXED IT WHILE THE FIXING WAS GOOD . ,. 'HEREjmay be more truth than poetry in the followimr view oi England and Japan as expressed in an editorial in the L.nicago Jnbune: Today England haa divided feelings about "the United States, just as it had during the civil war. The aristocracy doesn't like tis because we have no titles and no king, and yet have succeeded In life. We are a bad example to their lower and middle cisrses.. roor aristocrats marry rich American, women, but that is only be ,,.r !- wuum p-Hiner no anyimng man work for a living. They are active nnft mey will work at politics, war, sports, but not for bread and butter. They think It is more, honorable to marry for money than to work for it. Fundamentally they dislike our style. To the British upper classes all , Americans are middle class. lower middle class, or lower class. These British aristocrats are typified in Lord Curxon, the minister for for "Sen affair. He is tying to renew the treaty of alll.we between Great Br t Kin and Japan. He knows that there is friction, which may develop into war. between America and Japan. He is anxious to line up Great Britain with Japan. It would probably be the policy of the Tory class In case of s' h a war for ireat Britain not to shoot guns .at us. She would simply "hold the ring" and Vtserve a benevolent neutrality in faAr of her ally. She would prevent an effective blockade of Japan.. A man like Curzon, who was viceroy of India, and had 3nrt.fl9O.OOO Indians prostrate before him, has more sympathy with a militarist empire than with a democratic republic, A good long war between us and the Japanese would weaken us both. At the same time Great Britain would be selling her goods to both sides and vould regain her place as first world power. Just now we? are the first world power and England knows it. The middle and labor classes in England are more sympathetic with us. They don't want to see a yellow imperial power beat a White republic. They nren t i-eally a bit enthusiastic about their lords and masters and often wish that, like us, they were well rid of thm. , It is working with them that we An get anywhere. And where we want to get Is to get Britain away from Japan. If those views are correct, and some of them are, it is most unfortunate we did not fix things up while the fixing was good to wit, last year. At the Versailles peace conference we had tr.ings our way with reference to Japan, all except Shantung, and had the peace treaty been adopted by the United States there was a method of correcting the Shantung affair. Japan .. asked for racial equality at Versailles and did not get it because President Wilson opposed. The leacue covenant if arlnntori fcy Lncle, Sam, would have automatically settledthe Japanese iiiimirration problem according to our own wishes and Japan would havfe been helpless to protest. But the senate treaty foes played politics at a time when politics should have been taboo and here we are. President Harding is striving earnestly to recover in part at least the ground we lost. But it is going to be a hard fjght He has far to fo and even if he should wish to go there is a question wheth er the senate will follow. How much better it. ti have forgotten politics last year and viewed in their true light me euujecis we are now compelled to face Aroused by the fact Umatilla county is sending a party into Crant county, Baker is going to do the same thing just after we get through ; however, rivalry is the spice of life, so "Lay on That telephone official who says women spoil the telephone business by talking too long is a verj' rude guy; very rude, be sides you sometimes have to talk H long while to make any one unuei hutnu wnai you say. Spain should not attempt any fighting; they dont seem nuapieu 10 11. Let's hope that farmer relief legislation will stiffen , the wneat market. Here U a picture of Miss Sylvia Jocelyn, the scenario writer of Holly wood. Cal., and Jack Dempsey, the heavyweight cliamplon. They be came acquainted while Dempsey wHis in the movies. She was In New York at the time of the Dumpsey-Curpentler fight, this giving rise to a rumor Uiai Deinpsey and she were er.uged, but this she denied. WHAT OTHERS SAY Tin lJ-SSOX OF ltl'SSIA IMIKIl 1MH.SIIFVISM. (From the Chicago Tribune ) The curtain of official concealment which has hid Uie Russian scene so long is now thrust aside and a picture tragic and terrible is given to the eyes of pitying Christendom. Famine and plague, wild horses of a new apocal ypse, harry the Russian countryside and make desolation in towns and cit ie. There is disaster on a scale which r.iodein Europe has pot known. To the Russian appeal for help tin re can be and there will be only one answer. It Is well that our gov ernment has made conditions for t'.ie release of Americans' held by the fa natic -powers at JIoscow; but these be ing fulfilled America will hot ntint gc int, where need is so vast and im pelling. Thoroughly' as we condemn the bolshevik regime, AnWica. has no quarrel with the Russian people and w. 1 be glad to dp all that its science and ita resources' are able to relieve Muxvntion and check the spread of disease. . .i only is this dictated by the im unl.se cf humanity, but it Is also ap proved by reason, for there should be lasting friendship between our nations. Russia has been passing through a stage of fanatic control, but she will emerge from it, and once her feet are 011 the road of real republican pro gress there should be strong bonds of friendly understanding and coopera tion b twen us. Meanwhile Russia's plight holds n lesson which 110 democratic nation is likely to ignore or loiget. ' It nil! be at least a very long time before anv people will permit themselves to be thrust iito tbe p:t rf blind destruc tion wnich the fanatics of academic communism dug for the inexperienced Russian masses. If we had doubt of the folly of any sweeping destruction of the going concern of society It has been wiped out by the ruthless experi ment of the bolshevik regime. j-.ri:i and his brother bigots have demonstrated through the evils of rev olution ln.w necessary to real progress is the gradual evolution of social and po.it iai f.vstemS. The bblshevik. drunk w.th formulae, boasts of mak ing a clean sweep of the past and of erecting nil ideal structure of human justice and efficiency on a foundation cleared of ancient wrongs. In Russia was his great opportunity and the ai'swer ban been a vast and bloody ruin. Rolshevism blames war inva-f-ion, consiiring capitalism, etc., for its failure, but these excuses cannot cover the breakdown of the commu nist system. II; man nature In Russ'a did not function according to bolshevik the ory. Ti e substitution of -communal interests for individual Initiative bas ed on the right of private ownership did not 1 roduce the essential of Rus siiii lesioration namely, production. There icne was adopted, and that has not accornplished.the result required. Cities have faded. Communication" have not been restored uy concessions made to lha peasant's demand for his own land, which cracked the communist system from foundation to rooftrfe, has been un availing. In fact, it is because the Russian farmer was kept In constant fear of the loss of his produce under uie communist system, maintained by ihe central jiower of the proletarian dictatorship that ho refused to pro duce the surplus necessary to meet the needs of the town proletariat. He raised only enough for his own imme diate needs because lie feared any re serve he built up would be taken from him. Therefore there was no reserve ind the productivity, of Prussia fell to; tne lowest level, 'men came drought and now famine and plague. The bolshevik, with his book the ory and scorn of human experience, reasoned in a vucuum and has created wmcthhig like a vacuum in Russia. His elaborate mechanism left out the mainspring of humuif effort, the mo tive power of self-preservation, an In stinct ns profound as human life tnd the source of the basic accomplish ments of civilized society. . VV'c do not believe there ever can be a substitute for this mainspring of human effort, the motive power of self-preservation, an Instinct as pro found as human life and the source of the basic accomplishments of civilized society. : H i do not believe there ever can be a substitute for this rftiinspring and motive of individual interest. jyny theory wh,ich ignufes it will not work. Any social architect who ignores it will build ia wreck and not a structure as one builds in defiance of graita lion. ' There are, of course, cheeky and b l.tpces.' There is, we hope, a con stant enlightenment of the factor of .self-interest and a growing under s'fr.dirg tf the principle of human In" rdependence. There is, wo hope ar.d believe, a steady progress in the to.t.ol of egotistic irnplM; a bronden ir g of the ownceptiou of organized so i'.eiy throutsn intelligent cooperatin. This is a process of slow education t' u ugh generations of thought and 1-pcrlenie. -Tfie bolshevik Imagined li a it could be produced overnight, and -when It failed to appear in the onwii.of revolution lie turned to force is rithlessly as any other tyrant, und failed as miserably. There arc no short cuts to perfeo tioiL There is no patent formula for an ideal society. There is progress only through the slow development of Pie individual's intelligence and moral Bbiifg. The fanatic theorist is impa tient of this process, but any people that tarns from this path will follow hint into disaster. Hie resources of JUissia are untafM pod -ir d enormous. They are resourc es not only of the land but of a pei- plo of ertai natural gifts. - If -Russia will fiee initiative and permit the nat ural genius of her people to work JKithcut shackles the iworld will pres ently he the rietter for another great civilization. To aid In this achieve ment America will gladly give gener ously. But her people avo had too much experience to help that dark re action 'whi( h the bolsheik thinks .s progress., I Pinups, Oxfords and Lace Shoes'? frowns and Black, in just would like to show them to you. Pink Pongee for Silk Lingerie is ono of the latest Ideas from tho world of fash Ion, We lunc Just received a beautiful quality, firm even weave, ami the price is extremely low, the yard . '. . . $I,:U Silk Camisoles $1.00 They're) mighty pretty loo, mnde, of wash satin anil trimmed with laivs. You wont fliul. .value t like these elsewhere oi .. $1.00. Jrih Linen Daniasl 72 Inches wide, extra heavy fine pure linen. Made In Ireland; largo grape design; a linen that even lvo iihihIIm ig was very much higher. Our price, per jard fll.tO Napkins to match, per dozen Stil .'iil ' -, x .Women's Gauntlet Gloves For driving; all leather; very'stroiiR and Rood wearing; color browns and tans, the pair $2.35 lo $3.00. " . We Make Vp 5'our roiirtaliw for Yon If You . liny Your Drapery Materials " " nt this store. Yon can tell in just liow jrmi want them or we will help yon plan tlieni. And too, you wont find better materials from which lo choose than these ' Colonial Cretonnes and ; y Mount Vernon Curtain Nets' See this pretty piece of.cose color madras with a bird design interwoven, the yard . It's truly beautiful. 9fk! Merchandise ot Merit at Lowest Prices .When they make bet ter foods we will have them. ' " ,v. 28 (From the Aug nilv Ei u.s 6, 1 893.) The tw(i( Roberts, surnamed Rond nl Starkweather, will return to the Springs Wednesday morning. Mrs. A. M. Raley and daughter Miss Cozzie, are visiting' in Boston, where they will make their headquarters for the winter at 7 Janjes trect, Franklin Square. Miss Raley enters the con servatory on September 7. Mayor Reuben Alexander returned Sunday evening from Bingham Springs, accompanied by his family, who have been spending a couple of weelts at the popular summer resort. Bennle Burroughs returned Satur day from Lehman Springs vlt the Bond and Starkweather stage route. J. H. Raley's little daughter is much better today,.nd la considered out of danger. , , , Thirty ' or forty persons Even the tar- ployed In making a doll. are One of the most valuable historical discoveries made In recent times Is the remarkable discovery of city records of the city ot Mexico, dating back to the year 1524, In the basement of the municipal building at the capltali A portion of the basement which had been bricked in centuries ago contain ed tho daily records since January 1, of that year. Decrees of Spanish kings and Aztec relics were also found. WHAT KKE. YOU THINKING ABOUT? Sunday you and your friends will want to take a ride In your ' car. The new completed roads and hlghwnys are unsurpassed ! for beauty. You should enjoy this scenery. ' i Are you worrying about your tires? Let GATES TIRES tako the worry from you. , Gertson & Marty 639 Cottonwood Street Thone E95 - SLIGHT ADVANCE TODAY , Wheat closed one and three quarters Cent above yesteroay s closing price at t'hlrugo, September closing at $1.20. Following are the Overbeck & Cooke quotations: Wheat Open High Low Close Sept. $1.1 ll.2m $1.1 $1.20 JHc. l.:i'i 1.21 1.21 4 112 rn Pept. .f."Si .8 7 .55 .66 Jlee, .ST ,6T .M Wheul The news was somewhat linnet bullish today which Induced eon Klilcrulile oeiing of sflort contracts Mvrr the week-end and gave the mar ket a better lone, ljite In the day tbe wiihoard reported that one million Is still very conflicting, one prominent authority wired tday that prospects! In Saskatchewan are poor'because oM black rust and excessive heat early in the season. This contradicts other ad- vices to the effect that Canada will raise the largest crop in six years. Al though the world position of wheat suggest a strong market later In the I season, we doubt that the situation can manifest Itself until foreigners show a disposition to take our wheat in greater quantities and until the Initial Influx from winter and spring wheat belt la past. ,' Canadian mounted police report that bUrving Indians in (lie Caribou Tribe have been resorting to cannibal ism because of the scarcity of game. A few'years ago the Indians ate only the tongues of the caribou' they slau ghtered. Now the caribou have prac tically dlsapeared from that particu lar section of the country and the i aborigines are starving. 1tihthi tv.id been taken for export Shipping nin out of Chicago totalled r.m.IlM: FA It KA It MTJ). ri huxhels of which 140.0U0 went! TKW lOHK, Aug. . (A. P.) to !ntr-iic mill, tbe largest In mmIIu Teliengen. the actor, haa filed suit ttme. Yesterday' shipment by Isk' for divorce from Geraldine Farrar, wVr ever ene million bushet. Tha the opera singer on Ihe ground of f.ew i-ouilnr trom Canada oorthwert daaeruon, hi counsel ha announced. !l' " ill III - DOINGS 05" TTTE IITTFI'S Tflll ninill'T CTV I fllllf ' tw t t . r . i m iuiii uiun i dim l.uivu. tuiuauka ( j ; ' : ; i ...ii j TOM, YOU'D BETTER HUrtRV.1 - . I . WAS ,..ST rtnmr ) 1 1 I r 111 . "IK-rit-ftKo rj ' f-- yflf I . 'ir F-yr-' lHrP - - ' I 1 GET NOW? i SH ID AMW HASH! (k. U Hi I QuaUty PRINTING at Reasonable Pnces4. ; East Oregonian Printing Department. , FIRESTONE i .A MOST MILES PER DOLLAR 0 the great army of car owners who confi dently loojs. to Firestone for economy and protection in tires, most miles 1 ner dollar stands as the guardian of value. ... '-' , T Twenty years ago it meant "intent.". The Fire- stone Organization pledged itself to' work td this, -high standard. Today there are two decades of experience and millions in resources back of 'it. , '., That is why good dealers offer you Firestonep with such .sincere endorsement. " They know that ( the name these tires carry the signature of the active head of the organization which builds them is the safest guarantee of mileage you can ask;! Simpson-Sturgis 1 For Service, Phone 651 ' Pendleton, Ore. 223 E. Court St Golden Rule Hotel Building : : ' ,'