East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, August 24, 1921, DAILY EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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PAGE SIX
DAHY EAST OREQONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 24, 1021.
TEN PAGES
P-" r--rr- . .
Social and Club News
lUTVUX FP.OM TRIP
Mr, and Mr. I,. L. Itinera and Mr.
und Mr. 8. K. Thomiwn hnvo return- j
t'fi from n motor trip to l.cwiston, Ida-'
ho. Mr. Hhkith mid Mr. Thompson'
Malted Montana also dtiiiK the trip. '
.
UJAVK Foil 1.A OI'.AXPH !
Mr. und Mrs. James Mctormniarh j
left jpftift-rifty fnr li Grande whore;
they t port to upend tin- winter with
Mr. MrCornimach'B undo, James lc-
Citrnnnaeh.
t .KTU: TO WAI.I.A WALLA
-Mrs, F. K. Hoyden, Mrs. Uirhurd
Maybeiry, sol) liohby Mayberry, Mrs.
Source Strand, Mrs. Involl Kent and
Charles Kuy Htshop formed a party
which motored to Walla Wnlla this
morning. Thoy will return this even
ing. HKTtT.X TO HOMK
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Sawyer of 810
Mill Street have had as their house
puests for the past two days, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Alhrecht of Pilot Kock.
They returned home today.
LLTt'IlX FP.OM 1PA1IO ;
Mr, t'harjes Walters ami daughters.
.Alice ami Florence, have returned aft-AUK IN" PORTLAND
r ton days visit to limine Ferry, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Iihodes
Idaho. spending a few days in Portland.
fr: " W
(it
-fit
aOl'F'S UPSTAIRS SHOP
HUNDREDS OF
NEAV FALL GARMENTS
HAVE ARRIVED
Suits
Coats
Frocks
You'll find that prices are much more
reasonable than they were last Fall.
Come Up and See the
New Things.
STAG lMNXKlt GIVK.V
In honor of Karl lawyer's birthday
anniversary, Mrs. Karl Sawyer, 810
Mill street, was hostess last evening
for a seven o'clock stag dinner.
Hod asters were attractively used in
decorating, and centered the tablo ut
which were seated Mark Putton, M. A.
Ooddard, Wade Prlvett, Albert James.
Joe Burns, Sam Nye, Walter Albrecht
of Pilot Kock, and Mr. Sawyer. Mrs.
j Sawyer was assisted in serving by Mrs.
Ainrecni. Mr. Sawyer received many
Rifts, among them a smoking set pre
sented by Mr. Patton, Mr. Hums and
Mr. James.
Gl'ESTS IN PKXDL1CTO.Y
Miss lionia Jncobson of Iji Grande
and Miss Edna Pearson, of Portland,
are suests at the home of Miss
Klanche -Furnish. They are on their
"ay to Husum, Washington and Port
land, after a visit in La Grande at Miss
Jacobson's home. Later they will re
sume their studies at Oregon Agricul
ture College. Mips Jacobson, Miss
Pearson and Miss Furnish are sorority
sisters, all being members of Aloha
Chi Omega.
, 4
KETFKXS FKOM HOT I.AKE.
Mrs. Charles Yaughan and children
returned last evening from Hot l,ake
where they accompanied Mrs.
Vaughan's mother, Mrs. W. H. Xeber
gall, who has been very ill for the past
month. Mrs. Nebergall will remain ut
Hot Luke for some time.
MISS CLARK CONVALKSCI.VG
Friends of Miss Helen Clark will be
glad to learn that she Is convalescing
after a sereva attack of bronchitis.
Miss Clark, who has been at St. An
thony's hospital, Is now at tho Guy
"jrick home on Jackson street,
MRS. THILLIPS TO VISIT.
Mrs. Charles H. Phillips, of Port
land, will arrive here tomorrow even
ing and will be the guest of her son
and daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde E. Phillips.
Gorham's Whipping Powder
Have you tried it? Makes whipping cream-
out of Milk.
3 OUNCE TIN, 40c.
Imperial Mavshmallow Dessert, pt. jar. . 33c
Major Grey's Chutney, bottle . . . . . $1.23
Heinz Mustard Sauce, bottle 25c
Maple Butter, pint jar 63c
Hearts of Baby Artichokes, jar 35c '
Chicnic, jar 40c
Sinclairs Boneless Pigs Feet, qt. jar 75c
Sinclairs Lunch Tongue, jar 75c
Bordens Malted Milk, 50c and $1.00
Hershey's Cocoa, pound 20c
Bulk Coffee, pound 25c
See us for QUALITY CANNING FRUITS.
Gray Bros. Grocery Co.
3 Phones 28 Oaly 1 Quality the Bett
e
(J.S.FI
IS KEPT BY HEROES
SECOND FLOOR TAYLOR HARDWARE BLDG.
COTY'S
L'ORIGON
Face Powder
TOILET WATER,
PERFUME
Direct from France.
L'Origon Face Powder
SI. 23 Der box
THE PENDLETON BRUG GO.
DR. AND MRS. HOLT HKTlRX.
Dr. and Mrs. G. E. Holt returned
last evening by motor from Idaho,
where they spent two weeks. A part
of tho time was spoilt in an outing
in the mountains.
RETL'R.V FROM TRIP
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Schaefer, with
son and daughter, returned today on
the Northern Pacifio, train after a so
journ at Sattle and other Sound
points.
MISS JOERGER RETURNS.
Miss Elizabeth Joerger has returned
after a three weeks' visit in Portland
and Seaside. She also visited her
brother, John Joergcr, at Enterprise.
.
LEAVES FOR HELENA
Mrs. W. C. Minnis left last evening
Tor Helena, Montana, where she will
visit her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Minnis.
LITTLE DAFGHTEri NAMED
The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
E. F. Avorill, born on Saturday even
ing, has been named Constance.
HERE FROM ECHO.
Mrs. Charles Lyle, Echo matron, is
in the city today.
VISITORS IN PORTLAND
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Jones aro Port
land visitors.
i
t
t
t
T. P. W.
Pure Food Shop
SPECIALS
20 Mule Team Bora Products
6 SPECIAL LOTS
IDEAS FOR HOUSEWIVES
HOME DEMONSTRATION
Overwe?Kht children, especial-
ly when they are more than ID
percent above the standard ave- !
rase for their height, are usually
indolent in their habits. They
get too little exercif-e, eat too
much of fattening foods such as
milk, cereals, potatoes, bread
and butter and sweets. Ruth
their school work and their sen-
eral heilth would be Improved
by a reduction in weight to nor-
rnal.
Lot No. 1 10 Bar- Borax Soap, 3
Jiorax LIiips o IIj?. Borax Powder, 2
Cans Boraxo S1.60
Lot No. 2-100 Bars Borax Soap. . . . 86.75
Lot No. 3 12 Larjje Packages Borax
JUNGLE SNAKE GOBBLES
DOWN HENS AND EGGS
BUT ALL ARE RESCUED
HONOLt'Ll', Aug. 21. (I. X. S.)
Another unit has been added to I'nele
Sam's system of national playgrounds
by the official dedication of Hawaii
National Park.
Simplicity marked the dedication
ceremonies, which took place on the
brink of Haieniatimau. fire-pit of Kl
lnuea Volcano, where the hot breath
of Pele's fires scorched the faces of
participants and onlookers. A feature
of the ceremony was the chanting of
an ancient Hawaiian prayer to Pele,
Goddess of Fire, whose legendary
home Kilauea is, followed by a repctl
tion of the first Christian prayer re
peated at the volcano by the first
Hawaiian to defy Pele: The park was
received on behalf of the Federal Gov
ernment by A. O. Rurkland, of the
Fnited States Geodetic Survey, who
acted at the request of Secretary of
tho Interior Fall, while Lorrin A.
Thurston, publisher of the Honolulu
Advertiser and pioneer citizen of Ha
waii, represented the Territory. In
cluded in the large crowd which gath
ered to witness tho ceremony was a
party of twenty-eight tourists from
New York, headed by H. V. Kalten
born, of tho Rrooklyn Daily Eagle.
The new park, with a total area of
about 74,000 acres, is divided into
three sections, which embrace some of
tho most interesting and in many re
spects the most noteworthy features
)f the entire National Park system. On
the island of Hawaii are the Kilauea
and Muuna Loa sections, which ad
join and which Include within their
boundaries two active volcanoes. Kil
auea und tho intermittently active
volcano Mauna Loa, the latter, with
an elevation of 13,675 feet, being the
second highest peak in the Pacific.
The third section of the park lies on
the Island of Ma'tl and Is known as
tha Haleakula section, taking its name
from the mountain whose great ex
tinct summit crater forms the princi
pal portion of tho nrea controlled by
the Government. The crater of Ha
lcakala Is twenty miles in circumfer
ence at its rim. which has an elevation
of ten thousand feet, has .1 depth of
over two thousand feet und an ex
treme width of seven miles, being the
largest extinct volcanic crater known.
Comparatively speaking, Hawaii Na
tional Park Is still uncommercialized
though there arc two hotels In the
Kilauea section and rest houses for
thi accommodation of tramping par
ties on both Haleakula and Mauna
Loa,
American Legion Stands Guard
To Compel Burial of Their
Comrades on Sunday.
THE
THOMAS
SHOP
FALL'S NEWEST
ARRIVALS
TAILORED
F
ROCKS
SUITS
COATS
For Misses' and Women
We have new garments arrive
every day. Come in every
r afternoon and see the new
o numbers and let us help you
make your selection.
Prices Very Attractive.
loss .r Vitality Is loss of the prin
cipal of life, and is early Indicated by
falling appetite, and diminishing
strenRth and endurance Hood's Sar
saparllla Ih the greatest vltnliier It
acts on all the organs and functions,
and builds up the whole systom.
(Bv International News Service)
H CANTON, Ohio, Aug. 24. -"Tho
bivouac of the dead'' has become a
reality in Canton and promises to re
main for some time, unless YVestlawn
Cemetery Association trustees relent
from the'r order that no more burials
will be made there on Sunday.
The Canton Post of the American
Legion has become embroiled in u
contest with the cemetery officials and
j is carrying the matter to the attention
of State and National omcers.
nod leg of Canton soldiers, killed or
dying from injury and disease over
seas, are beginning to arrive with fre
quent regularity, and the local post of
the lonlon sees to it that each has a
military funeral as a final tribute to
tho supreme sacrifice. These funerals
have always been held on Sundays,
because more of the ex-soldiers can
turn out on that day. and the funerals
are always biuger. The cemetery or
der hit the legion hard; but the old
aimv resourcefulness came into play.
They held the funeral for Corporal
Walter Griffith, killed at the Marne,
and it was a large one. Full cere
monies took place at the spot where
the crave was to be, then the casket
was ldwered to the ground, and an
armed guard was tolled off. Ueliefs
were formed, and two sentinels stook
erect, keeping v'gll through the night
and on Monday morning until ceme
terv sextons came to dig tho grave
.ind lower the coffin into it.
This "bivouac of the dead" will be
the policy of the legion until tho ceme
tery trustees relent.
These questions were answered by
Or. C. P. Sylvester, of Allerton, who
has treated scores of persona "bitten"
by Jellyfish ut Nantaskct. He de
scribes tho "sting" n "an anaphylac
tic reaction due to the entrance into
the pores of Jellyfish protein."
The poisoning Is only temporary, he
explains, and while extremely Irritat
ing, Is not serious.
"The irritation comes in the form of
red rash on any part of the body
where the flt-h touches," he explains.
It has no srlous after effects and, but
for the pain, is of no consequence.
now jf.i Lviisu urn:"
ltOSTON. Au" 21. (I. N. S.) The
Jellyfish "bite." What is it 7 Is It
dangerous'; Whf.t are the symptoms
of Its victims?
night and raided the hen house of
T ! the mir:on, at which some mission.
j i.ires had gathered. The hens roostg
I were in an enclosure on the top of a
. ' iiwnzomai logs, 10 protect mem
V ,11 1 J .- S3.9.J ' .fr"m the Hl,1!,"'"r im;ils of the bush.
'" 'Jl fhf' snake wound his body in and
( wiiMiig me njtfs aim got ins neau
(!!y International News Service)
NEW VOP.K, Aug. 24. A snake
story without the background of home
brew is related by the Rev. .Mr. Edwin
ri Kicnarits, for thirty-one years 1
missionary to Africa under the Doard I
of Foreign Missions of the Methodist
tii'inn, who maoe nis re- ,.i,.FO ,i,,nm.M nr tr,.i,.i,i
port at the headquarters of that or. L' , , ' Washington about
Z,T rVCe" -'I f.':yth."n ifU'cn UuBUst 25 on his long trip, which is
P.V HAH It V WARD.
International News Service Staff
Correspondent.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 24. A three-
year trip through little-explored . re
gions of southeastern Asia in search
of useful varieties of trees and plants
which are unknown to horticulturists
of the Western World is about to be
undertaken by J. F. Kock, agricultural
:
I
I
Lot No. 1 One Ca.-L' 21 Larjre Packages
Borax Chips value S 10.00. special 87.90
Lot N. 5 10 Bars Borax Soap, 5 lhs. Borax
Powder, 1 Large Package Borax Chips I
J Can lioraxo SL9. i
Lot No. () 50 Bars Borax Soap, 12 Large
Packages Borax Chips, 10 Ihs. Borax, 2
Cans Boraxo $8.90
(See other ad on page 2)
HSWIIONS OKlCiST DIPVUTHIM
Jfi9pQoples Warehouse,
V',-fc : i : f Hi nr II t'A-i TO limit I'm" V'
among the fowls. He swallowed seven
largo chickens, a setting hen and nine
l- ESS.
The noise made by the other fowls
woke two native girls, students in the
mission school, who slept in a dor
mitory nearby. They armed themsel
ves with an axe and went out to In
vestigate, finding the python still
wound urnoiig the logs and drowsy
after his meal. With the axe they
chopped hlin in two. and their shouts
tor help brouKlit a half dozen Metho
din preachers in pajamas and slippers
with lanterns and shotguns. The py
thon was pronounced dead and the
native who gathered from the kraal
outside the mission compound begged
permission to salvage the chickens.
The fowls v.-cre found almost whole
:jund were home off In triumph by the
j natives. The eas, too. were not brok
J j en and were put under another set
4tliiK hen und -were hatched Into pcr-
jfeetly norm.il missionary chickens.
; Mr. Richards gives the names of the
i , Hishop of Africa and several other
J j missionaries who are corroborating
Z wi'nesi-ea to his story.
He says the python Is stronger than
An ideal home fuel for oil
cookstoves, oil heaters and a
oil lamps. Get it at your
dealer's.
n
j dealer's. U
vT.
In imri ,,r n lion, mil
ta1114uit.il uny of llitm.
gorlala ran
likely to have far-reaching results.
On this trip Davis will complete his
studies of the chaumoorgra oil trees
source of th leprosy cure of the
warmer portions of that region and
study the various wild and cultivated
plants wh'ch are worthy of being
brought more forcibly to the attention
of the botanists and husbandmen o!
America. '
One of the special objectives of tht !
Rock expedition Is a search for chest-1
riots worthy of introduction to thejj
Eastern T'nited States. There srel$
Known to oe chestnuts in western i:ni
tin and southward into Slam und IHir
ma and even as far south as JavaiS
which form Immense forest trees. The'j
resistance of these trees to the barklJJ
disease which is slowly killing tb i
chestnut trees in tho I'nlted St,ates isj
unknown, but since certa'n seedlings 1 2
of a dwarf chestnut sent In by .Meyer, life
in 1 908, from Ch'ni have shown Hi
1.1. .U .1 :.. - I.M..1.. i w
iiiKii urniri; 01 rcniniunee ill me iiiikiii.
it is deemed important to secure all
the chestnuts of that region.
Southeastern As'a Is the home of tin
hestnut. There are more speciet
there than In all the rest of the world
together, and since I)r. Vun Fleet, o!
the agricultural department's plant
breeders, has already suocessf ullj
made hybrids between tho American.
Japanese and Chinese chestnuts ther
is good ground for believing that
through hybridization It will be pnsnl.
bl o to produce a disease risistant
ih'-Jtiiut forest tree to replace the
Aiuci'oaii vanishing apecie.
WOMEN WHO OVERWORK
"Man may work from sun to sun,
but woman's work Is never done." In
order to keep the home neat and at
tractive, the children well dressed and
tidy, women continually overdo and
suffer in silence, drifting along from
bad to worse, knowing full well that
they need help to overcome the pains
and uches which dally make life a bur
den. Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable
Compound Is a medicine with specific
value which overcomes mnny of the
worst forms of femule complaints, as
the letters constantly being published
in this paper will prove.
ANNOUNCEMENT
I have taken over the prac
tice of Dr. Dale Rothwcll, op
toemtrist and optician, and
will practice permanently In
Pendleton nt the office Kr
merly occupied by him In tho
American Rank building.
I am a gradunte of 1)6
Kcyser Institute of Optomet
ry, one of tho very best In
tho country.
Glatse Ground to
Fit Your Eye
Lcniei Duplicated on
Short Notice
I have all of Dr. rtothwcH'n
office records and equipment
and am ready to meet the
people of Umatilla County.
DR. L. C. RICHEY
American National llnnk
Ilulldlnij
University of Oregon
CONTAINS.
The College of Literature. The Gnduite School.
Science and the Arts.
The School of Architecture
nd Allied Arts.
The School of Duaineai
Administration.
The School of Education.
The Extenaion Division.
The School of Journalism.
The School of Law.
The School of Medicine.
The School of Music.
The School of Physical
Education.
The School of Sociology.
Fall Term Opens September 26
A hill, standard of cultural ard profaaiional scholarship has bfcomi
on ol th outsMnd.nl marsi r, ihe Slat. Unlverally. For catalogue.
loldtra or th various aihooli. or lorjny inlormabon. rM
THE REGISTRAR. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. Euen. Ora
THE SHOE THAT
HOLDS ITS SHAPE Jj!
-
When you purchase
a pair of
W. L. Douglas Shoes 1 1
you are getting the J
best shoe value for i
the price that money
can buy.
l-'or Sale Iiy
A. EKLUND
737 Mailt SL
Em
in I
Jl y i
BP rL-J
ITTALL
appeal to everyone
who appreciates and
admires the artistic
worth and merit in
fine masterpieces or
Oriental weaving.
They permit you to
enjoy in your homes
all the beauty in the
designs and colorings
of these rare fabrics l
and without departing
from your own ideas I
of true economy.
There is aWhittall Ruq for
Every Room in Every Home
CRAWFORD FURNITURE CO
104 Kust Oourt Street