f AGE SIX DAILY EAST CREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY EVENING, AUGUST 18, 1021. TEN PAGES Social and Club News Catties may tumble dun to revolts. No re. UyuIkIV - - - - - a1 il11 'V Miimi.irruN To kino won is n of prominent feature of'the esson's B'livl1liK, which the Wnmiuw Club is pliinnlnx. will 1p a recital I'V Arthur Mlddleton, the renowned Am erica n baps-bunione. It lit probable that Mr. Sliddlcton Is tho nrwitpBi singer that has ever Wen brought til 1'cndlcton. Then are hut few larRo cities tn the country where Middlelon has not sung, and ho enjoy the distinction of being a fav orite wherever he is heard. Hi con cert hcrp will take place in February. Mr. Mlddleton has practically de serted the operatic stupe, us his time Ik fully taken up In giving concerts. Tho New York American states that "Mr. Mlddleton might appropriately he described the John MoCorniack of bass-baritones'' The verdict of the ItoHton 1'oM Is: "Mr. Mlddleton is suro- ls me of the finest kisses on the con cert stage." and In (he Chicago Even ing American It was wtid of him: "Ar thur Mtddlelon's name alone should draw crow ds." This famous singer's concert In Pen dleton will undoubtedly lie one of the most Important events of the winter, and will attract a lurce audience, not only of local people out from the sur rounding territory as well. LEAVE ON TRIP. Mr. and Mrs, U. K. Perry lift to day for a visit to Seaside and other points. HOPF'S UPSTAIRS SHOP NEW FALL MODES Suits Coats Dresses Offerinnr colatinnc nf flic. tinctive b e c Hirrmtrri thpir Erv of type and exclusiveness of styling. SECOXD FLOOR TAYLOR HARDWARE BLDO, EXTRA SPECIAL LOW PRICE ON A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF s Permolin Toys .A toy that every small child likes to play with, and at a price that everyone can afford. Buy several at this price and use them for birthday and holiday gifts. - ' Priced at only 25c each Ilift'i 'S "Try the Drug Pi The Lang Range .The Greatest Stove in the World Sold exclusively by & Quality Our W atciiwurd Riley LEAVE VOll W A TATA. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Klchurdson, - of North Itassalhoro, Maine, who re jcviitly motored here to visit Mr. Hleh- l left today for Wapata, Washington, 4o visit Mr. Kichardson's uncle. G. 1). Uchaidson. WILL KKTfltN HERE Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Twitchell, of Sl Mark Street, will return tomorrow! after a sojourn at Seaside. Archie ! Twitchell is much Improved in health hut he w 111 remain in Portland with Mr. Twitchell's sister, Mrs. Surjers. ARE IN PORTLAND. Mr. and Mrs, Charles It. Marsh are now. in Portland, having motored to that city on Monday. They expect to visit Seaside before returning to Pen dleton. DRIVE TO HELIX. Mr. and Mrs. L H. Tnggart left this mnrninc- liv snloniohiln for ITnliv where Mr. Taggnrt was called on bus iness. They will return this even ing. LEAVES KOR SEATTLE. Mrs. Charles H. Carter left last eve ning for Walla Walla and will go from there to Seattle where she will visit her niece. Miss Dorothy Green. o mingness ft inrHviHnlitv Stcre First" Kemp Satisfaction Oujr Aim 1- o 0 MI!S. HK'KS l.MHtOVKD. Mrs. D. P. Hicks, who has been ill! for the past two weeks, is slightly im- j proved today. She is at) aunt of Miss! Emily McHioom. RETIRN KROM SPRINGS. Mr. and Mrs, J. Possegar have re turned after a visit to Lehman Springs, HOME DEMONSTRATION IDEAS FOR HOUSEWIVES Windows should be placed -over sinks and work tables. Casement windows with fino white screening provide good ! t llr-hf anil ..A,tl1.,t. ..-.,.. A I and ranges. They may be fitted with sliding frames or with glass doors, Windows should be placed In all outside walls of the kitchen. Large, easily reached window's should be placed in cellar-ways. Shelves, cupboards and drawers are much more satisfactory if coated with white paint or enamel. Do not use scouring soaps on the gas range. If Inclined to rust, rub a little clean grease on it. The blaze should be light blue. If the balance of air (oxygen) and gas (carbon is as it should be the flame will pro- duce the greatest amount of heat. The red or yellow flame indicates that there is not enough air mixed with the gas. This condition should be chang- ed at once by opening the air mixer or reduring the flow of gas from the small orifice. This is accompanished with a wrench to fit the connection, or with a pair of pliers. The difference can be easily noted in the sup- ply of heat It holding the hand over the flame when, She air is shut off. and again when the adjustment is right. 10 COMPETE IM CONTEST Members of Boys and Girls" clubs of Umatilla county are now making plans to enter the bread "making, canning and cooking contests which "will be held in Pendleton during the North west Grain and Hay Show. Septem ber 19 to 24, and for which substan tial prizes will be given. Mrs. Edith G. Van Deusen, home demonstration agent is In charge of the clubs, and IV. W. Green, county school superin tendent, is arranging for the contests. The finals for the canning contests will be held at the high school on Thursday, S-ptember 22. the prize f"r the team having the best score being a trip to the state fa'r at Salem, w here the team will enter the state contests Mrs. I. M. Schannep will be the judge and the basis of awards will be 5" points on the exhibit of two Jars of fruit and two jars nf vegetables and 50 points on Hie report of the work done. Preliminary contests will be held the second week in September. The second contest is the bread bak ing contest for which prizes are offer ed for the best loaf of bread baked hy a Umatilla county girl between the ages of 9 and IS, whether a memer of a cookery club or not. The first prize is J10, the second 17.50, the third $3 and the fourth. $2.50. Mrs. K. J. Matthewson will judge the bread making contest. Another contest will be the cooking contest, for which the basis of wards will be 50 cents on the exhibit of a loaf of bread and 50 on the report of the amount of work done. The prize will be a trip to the state fair for the team. The cooking club girls will demon strate bread baking on two mornings, Wednesday and Thursday at the big Grain and Hay Show tent. In the aft ernoons of these days, the Boy Scouts ; will demonstrate camp cookery, and ; will make flapjacks with I'matilla flour, which will be served to visitors. , Both contests and demonstrations are ; open to the public. PEACE TREATY WITH LKIILIN, Aug. 18. (i: P. Ac cording to current reports the United States Is making reparation for the American lives lost in the war one of the demands in drafting the peace treaty with Germany. Despite the re sentment on the part of German lead ers over this and other demands they show a disposition to sign the treaty, thus acceding to all of them.- H Is hinted also that the United States Is seeking a Lusitanla reparation, al though there is no confirmation of this. 'SANE LAST NIGHT AND INSANE TODAY' REPORT REGARDING MAH0NEY SEATTLE, Aug. 18. (U. P.) "Sane last night and Insane again to day," is the report the authorities gave out concerning James Mahoncy, scheduled to plead "guilty" or "not guilty," Monday to the murder of his wealthy aged wife, Kate Mahoney. I,ee Johnstone, Mu honey's lawyer, may file another insanity charge against the prisoner, despite the fact that five alienists declared Mahoney sane yes terday. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY Fort SALE, OR THADE Hudson six, 7 passenger for smaller car. Phone 1032 after 7:00 o'clock. THREE BIX IIOB8E teams wants Job, hauling wheat. Eddies Barn, Mat- June Apples, finest quality, box $2.50 Real Rye Pretzels, direct from the east, lb. ......40c Roll Herring;, imported, large jar .......35c Poppy Jelly, gallon tin $1.75 Phez Jam, assorted, dozen $2.75; tin, 25c Gold Dust, 20 small packages .......$1.00 Butter Crackers, large box .: '.........25c Gorham's Silver Polish, cake or cream 45c Gorham's Polishing Cloth 45c C. & H. Cube Sugar, large box 35c Orange Pekoe Tea, Chase & Sanborn's, lb.....$1.00 Tomatoes, box 85c Largest assortment of High Grade Groceries, Fresh Fruits and Vegetables in Eastern Oregon. Prices always right, quality considered. Gray Bros. Grocery Co. 3 Phone 23 Only 1 Quality the Beit WOMEN LIVE LONGER THAN MEN, INSURANCE RECORDS DISCLOSE! FAIR SEX IS BETTER EQUIPPED Statement That Biggar and John D.Will Celebrate 100th Anniversary Causes Thought (Written by Margery Hex for tho In ternational News Service.) NEW YORK. Aug. 18. Dr. H. F. EiKKar, physician to John D. Rocke feller, threatens to play golf with his famous patient in their hundredth year. We say "their" advisedly, since both men are now eighty-two years ojage. ani the doctor says there is no good reason why they both shouldn't reach the century mark. "Anyone who follows his sensible way of living: can live to be a centen arian,"' says Dr. Bigsar of Sir. Rocke feller. "He can eat anything, but he ob serves one of the prime laws of health to eat moderately. His ;ood sense tells him that moderation in diet is a prerequisite of endurance." Golf, malhimatical games, early to bed and early to rise these are the rules of the great financier's simply lived life. But what are his chances or those of any other man or woman to live to be a hundred? Is woman's chance better or worse than man's to reach a ripe old age?" Investigation shows some startling facts. For instance: Women, with husbands dies earlier than spinsters. Married women who buy insurance ind choose husliands as their benef. eiaries are considered poor risks. These facts have been called to our attention by a high official of a well- known insurance company, who says regarding longevity. Insurance Expert (;ives Facts'. "Well-regulated, outdoor life, with a fair amount of exercise, seems to be a good rule to follow. In general, peo ple who hiive adhered to such a mode of life have found Horace's 'gulden in all th.n's. They choose everything fi moderation. "In the 'iTuited States Life Tables,' drawn up from the census of 1910, taking note of the deaths of 1309-1910-lStll, the women show up very favorably. "Iyct's look at the tables of "Expec tation of UCe,' which means the aver age number of years lived beyond a certain age. . "This 'expectation of life' in wom en whose lives were followed up from the a,'e of ten years, was fifty-four years, ivhlie for men it was fifty-one. "Taken on from twenty-five years, the average 'expectation' of men was thirty-nine years, and in the cases of women It was forty-one. This means that the average man would live twen-ty-f.ve plus thirty-nine years, and the averaee woman would live twenty-five plus forty-one years. "Taken at forty-five, men may ex pect to live on tenty-four more years, the women twenty-five. The female is H'ili In the ascendant. '"When sixty Is reached, the three score years, our average male has fourteen more years to look forward to and the woman still fifteen. I am leaving out the small fractions; nev ertheless, woman Is still ahead, when the seventy-five mark is reached, if reached, is only by a fraction. Other wise we count seven years yet to be liv ed by both males and females, not for getting the small additional time for women. Why Women Have ISest Chance. '.'How do we account for women be ing ahead? Well, perhaps less ex posure to the hardships and accidents of life, less chance of violent deaths. Vow we come to insurance statistics. "The Medical Actuarial of Mortality Investigation, published in 1913. deals with tho deaths of insured lives and shows mortality rates among the va rious classes, as compared with the average mortality of the country. "The number of deaths amon? wom en is 104 per cent of what they would be if the mortality of women had open the same as the average mortal ity for all 'risks,' or for the total class. "That Is, for every one hundred deaths, counted among general policy holders, we would get' one hundred and four among women. ' "Spinsters, the term covers all un married wopien, have a low rate, 81 prt-cnt. "There are two clusses among the married women, First como the wom en whiwe husbands are to be the bene ficiaries. They lead In the highest late of deaths, 126 per cent. "The other class, composed of those who have beneficiaries other than their life partners, have a rate of 114 per cent. Among widows, both real . and di vorced women, the rate Is 105 tier cent: "Women with husbands seem to die quicker than those without." "Mortality among women, therefore, seems to have been Influenced a great deal by what Insurance people term 'self-selection.' "Where the 'insurable Intent' is weak the reasons for taking out Insur ance by those who buy It are actuated by reasons other than necessity for such protection. "The married woman not earning her own living, supported by her hus band, will bo accepted for only a smull amount of insurance. - "She generally insures because she hasn't good prospects for longevity. "Men who must get insurance to provide for those left after them get it whether or not they think they will live- long, regardless of health or lack of it. "In the occupational life. I'rotcstant clergymen lead the longest lives. As an old friend of mine said of their longevity and reluctance to die, 'they point tho way to others, but show lit tle haste themselves." "Another good group is the farmers not the laboring agriculturists, but the proprietor farmers. "In England this class Is an epeclal- ly long-lived one. Mortality Among Drinkers. "People Interested in different as pects of prohibition frequently like to show a higher rate of mortality among drinkers than abstainers. Py drink ers I refer to the regular drinkers, not the men who get spells of drunken ness, out tne good rellow' who takes a little all the time. "The total abstainers and the three-tn-four-drlnks-a-day fellow differ in l other respects than their bibulous habits. The 'good fellow' very likely has irregular habits of life. He eats at odd hours anil neglects to get enough sleep. It is hard to determine how much of his condition is due to drink and how much to other causes wh;ch go with his type of nature." Among the group of "moderation ists" to which Mr. Rockefeller evi dently belongs, are also Chauncey M. Depew, who recently celebrated his eighty-seventh birthday by working at his office. Tho well known states man once told mo of the simplicity of his daily life and of his diet. John A. Stcart. who in his n'netieth year works at his desk In a Wall street bank, is likewise of an abstemious na- i ture. He motors to work, stays down town a few hours, partakes of a bread and milk lunch and goes home early. Julia Ward Howe and Harriet Reecher Htowe were, long-lived and il lustrious women. Their later years were anything but empty, and today! we have the renowned Bernhardt, marvel of the world, aged and crip pled, but still upon the stage. The liaison -runner who penetrated the German lines in the forest of Ar gonne, carrying the message that sav ed the "lost battalion," recently died r.f tuberculosis in New York City, -ilone and ill groat poverty. With the exception of his Distinguished Service Cross, Croix do Guerre and Medaillo Milltaire. he had Dawned and sold ev erything he owned, , "I'HiW ASPIRIN' Name "Bayer" cn Genuine Beware! Unless you sec the name "Hayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre scribed by physicians for twenty-one years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neural gia, Hheumatlsm, Karaehe, Tooth ache, Lumbago, und for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Huycr Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sll larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of lluyer Manufacture of Monoact tlcacldestcr of Kalicyllcacid. DR. LYNN K. BLAKE5LEE Chronic and Nervous Diseases an! Diseases of Women. X-Ray Electric Therapeutios. Tempi Hldg. Room 1 Pbons U Boost Your Own Town -AndThe- ROUND-UP , t ' ' ; (. . 'N '' ' ' To get advertising results for this year's show, send these out' to your friends and relatives now! "LET 'ER BUCK" !.(. Furlong's book on Pendleton and the Round-Up. "LET ER BUCK" Chauncey Haines' justly celebrated song. A Round-Up souvenir edition. Both securely wrapped and POSTPAID to any address in United States for t ... $2.25 FRAZIER BOOK STORE OHIO AUTOISTS ESCAPE COLUMBl'S. O., Aug. IS. (I. N. S.) A way to avoid being hailed Into police court for violating traffic rule has been utilized by a number of local autolsts who have been disobeying these regulations of highway traffic. It has been the practice here by the police not to arrest an auto driver until he, or she, has been warned twice. Each time a traffic officer "warns" on autoist a record, Including the license number of the driver's car, is made at police headquarters. In order to avlod. the third ''warn ing" and arrest some autolMs, imme diately after being "warned" tho second time, buy new license tags bearing a different license number. . Not only do they avlod the humiliat ing publicity involved In being hailed into police court, but they save money oftlmes. During the rest of this year & t i Aimosi UabeiieTable You can hardly realizt the wonderful im provrment to your skin and compltxion your mirror will reveal to you after ustngGouraud'sOriental Qtam for the first time. Send 15c for rrlal SLa FERD. T. HOPKINS ft SON New York "IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi:illllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIII!IIU Jr fr GROCERY I Department QUALITY SERVICE 2 Main Line Phones 52G S3 ELBERTA Extra fancy Elberta Peaches for canning, al so Bartlett "Pears, Plums, Blackberries, Yelow Preserving Tomatoes, Pickling Cucumbers and Onions. Cantaloupes, the Crate 85c ' Miiiiiiimmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiii Our Display In Our Window AMBASSADOR , 1847 Rogers Bros. Silver The Family Plate for 70 Years CRAWFORD FURNITURE CO 103 liist Court Street M Is the auto license foe on the small cars, while J3 and costs, totaling $7.75 Is the minimum fine assessed violutors of tho traffic code. One Columbus autoist boasted he had bought three now sets of license tans this year In order to escape ar rest. It has been suggested that the police can catch these fellows by making a record of the engine number Instead of the license tag. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the disansed portion of tha ear. Catarrhal Deafness requires constitu tional treatment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deafness la caused by an in named condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tub. When this tube II inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entire ly closed. Deafness ia the result. Unless the Inflammation can be reduced, your hearing may he destroyed forever. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE act ih rough the blood on the mucous sur faces of the system, thus reducing the In flammation and restoring normal condi tions, t Circulars free. All Druggists. F. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo Ohln Oregon's Higher Inililutioa ol TECHIiOLOGY Eight Schools: St vent r Depsrlmentt FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 19. 1921 For MmMiee tnt la ikt (raitiisr Oregon Agricultural College CORVALI.IS a eh vie a PEACHES iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiv I'hoiic 496 5 j I lock bridge.