DAILY EAST CHEGONIAN, PENDLEtON,l)EEGON, SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 27, 1021. t ACE TITHES . ... .. EIXTEEN News Notes o f Pendleton f CALEXDAR OF EVENTS August 26-30 Water First Aid courts at City' Nutatorlum. Direction of Joseph C, Hedges. , , Hcptomtier 10 Hermistwi Ex- , periment Station Field Day. . September 19-24 Northwest ( drain nnd Hay Show. , . September 22, 21. 14 Annual Pendleton Round-Uo. ' t (October 7-8 Seventh Annual Dairy .and Hog Show, at Her- . . miston. Ih S'ew Kiiiploje i T. W. lumiin, who for the past 10 years nns necn empioyeu iy un "j Motor Co. in Portland, : a new addi tion to the Peterson Hrothers Garage. Mr. Inman spent the entire time spe cializing in Cadillac work and, wll work-exclusively on this make of car In Pendleton. ... S. A. Hells Tx Ovum ThB-.Hulvatlon Army will serve ice cream and cake at their hall on AHa street next Saturday from 1:30 p, m. to 7 p. m., for the benefit of their lo cal relief fund.' . Kiddles IJku Show Over 300 children saw theWolford Dog and Monkey Rhow yesterday at the Alia theatre. The youngsters are enthusiastic over the performance. A pleasing feuture Is the performance by Tex Bender, cowboy fiddler. The show continues tonight. In conjunc. tion with the Red Cross life saving demonstrations the various methods used in life-saving , New OainUT Completed. 1 The new outside cigar counter for the Office Lunch, on Main street, was finished yesterday, and Is an attrac tive addition to tho store. All the werk was done by local men. Ilmk In Office. i Miss Vera Huey, formerly stenog rapher In the office at 6upt. H. E. In low, is hack for a slfort time taking euro of the stenographic work. She was a student at tho University of Oregon last year and expects to attend again this year. Calfi-d ny lX'utli lrs. .1). E. Carglll and sons, Louis Carjlll -and Wallace Carglll, accom panied by Mrs. Wallace Carglll, left today for Nea Percej Idaho, where they were called by the death of Mrs. Cargfll'i granddaughter, Florence Car glll, aged li; who died yesterday. She was' tho 'daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Janies -Carglll, .who survive their daughter. Four brothers also survive. Td Attend Item Sale. Muc Hoke, secretary of the Cun ningham Sheep Co., will leave this evening for Salt Lake City, where he will le on hand for the National Ham Sale. The auction starts Monday and will continue for three days. The sale Is an event which annually attracts sheep men from all over the West, nnd consignments of rams are made by' the best breeders In this country and from foreign countries. -; 1 bj -101101101101101101101101101- CREDIT? ' CERTAINLY, WE ARE GLAD TO EXTEND WEEKLY OR MONTHLY CREDIT FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE. All we ask U a SATISFACTORY REFER ENCE. - Phone our office Monday and open an account for September. Our August accounts are closed Monday night. 0' "YOU CAN DEPEND ON 101" cl I 1 I I pi I cl T 101 101 101 101 101 101 101 101 101- Pendleton Cash Market, Inc. 301 E. Court Street Phones 101 Private Exchange Connects M I o D E L T You Are-dudjfdd by your Appliance I L O R S If surprising how prepossessing1 good Clothes are aside from the assurance and poise (hey give to .he wearer. Our Suits are hnnrt-tnil- ored to your measure of the finest woolens. Clad in one of these suits for business or pleasure your case is half won. You owe it to yourself to try. their merits. Give us your suit or call us be'fore 8:30 A. M. and you shall have it X back before 3:00 I". M. cleaned and pressed and free from gas odors. MODEL TAILORS 304 VI. Webb Street (f'ltlTMAX WILDING) Hunting Season Opens September First , Let Us Show You Our Large Assortment of WINCHESTER GUNS AND AMMUNITION They Get the Game. TrnnsfcT Is Made. . O. M. Codfrey, for the past five years employed as engineer for the I'asco-Pendleton run, has been trans ferred to the Waila Walla-Pasco run. U. 2. Smith, formerlv freight engineer for the Pendleton-Pasco run, has oet ii made passenger engineer. Or tcid to Preach. , I'ntil the pulpit of the Baptist church can be filled by a permanent pastor, Dr. Iteid, of Portland, will preach In Pendleton. He will arrive here September 1. The church has not yet decided upon a successor for the Hev. W. H. Cox, who recently accept ed thu Newberg pastorate. Use the Phones Grocery, 2 Phones 526 Other Depts. 78 Acrobat Dim at The Dalles. Douglas Clark, famous acrobat, who has operated with Captain Parmalee and Uoy Black, who are here in an airplane this week, died last night at The Dalles. A message received here this morning gave this Information. Clark has been ill for only three days, and his death was totally unexpected. He has done many stunts before the moving picture camera Roy Black is staging the stunts here, and tonight it Is planned for h(m to be seated on top of the machine while a loop-the-loop is done. Will Handle Paper. A complete line of paper from the Blakc-McFall Co. of Portland will In future be handled by the Smythe Lonergan Co., according to arrange ments, made in a deal completed yes terday by the company with J. II. Flynn, district representative of Blake-McKail. State lines will be the only limit of territory and the local firm which will carry on jobbing bus iness, will receive Its first load of pa per by October 10. Paper bags, twine, wrapiflng paper, etc., will be included in the line and the firm expects to carry from one to three carloads in stock. They will handle nrf print pa per. Sales, none of which will be re tailed will be made from samples at the Smythe-Lonergan office. Vagrants Grow Source, There are coming to be fewer and fewer vagrants in Pendleton all of the time. The policy of nabbing men ot leisure who have no means of support which hns been followed by Jinks Taylor since he came Into office is get ting Pendleton a hard reputation with the "knights of the road." There werejione of the rtavelers in city conn this morning. Keports have it that tramps who are going through have established the practice of getting off of trains on either side of town and walking around the edge of tho city limits to the railroad on the opposite side where they board the next train and get away. Louis Anderson, charged with being drunk, was the only man to face the police Judge this morning. He paid a fine of $10. Colonel Furlong In Portland Charles Wellington Furlong, author,! artist and explorer, who has had many exulting adventures in the far corners of the world, loves the west with fer vor and understanding. He has put his great feeling for this country into his latest book, "Let 'er Buck", in spired by the Pendleton Itound-Up. which Mr. Furlong witnessed for the first time In 1913. He makes his home now in Pendleton and is in Portland for a few days at the Benson. His borfk, "a story of the passing of the old west," is a tale of ndventiire, his tory, romance and' information, all blended in a most attractive way. Mr. Furlong I'oesn't look as if he had rid den a bucking buffalo, but he has, and It Is probably because of his ac tual cont;it with all tho thrilling events which are part of the Round I'p, that ho has been able to give such a faithful picture of the west, full of life and color. Mr. Furlong is modest about his work nnd refers only in the most casual way to the "time when I was In South America," not mention ing the fact thnt there he was in charge of an expedition through Tierra del Fuego and Patagonia for a leading American magazine. He was the first American to cross through the heart of Tierra del Fueeo. Other expeditions led him through the wil derness of Dutch Gutana and up the Orinoco. In South America he also carried on ethnological research in leading museums. The West African islands were the scene of another of his exploration trips and he led an expedition through the interior of the Azores, Madeira Desertas and Canary Islands.' During the war ho was ap pointed on the general staff of the United States army nnd was with the A merle's it and allied forces in the near east. Oregonian. ' OPERATION CALLED OFF DF.LPHOS, O., Aug. 27. (I. N. S.) Julian Fast, manufacturer, thought that he had swallowed his false teeth in a fit of laughter, when a hen sole a K.mdw.'ch he was eating " his yard He was rused to a'ospltal, apparently choking to death, arrangements were made for im operation, ord was re ceived al the ls-t moment, however. net to operate, hk the teeth had been found in the yard. A bite el ths :! wtcJi and a live': Imagination produced the clicking sonitlon, from whkh Fast rapidly re covers j wbfl be Kwng4 bii wsts? QUALITY SERVICE. PEN DliETTON'B tEArilNG TOHG ; Use the Phones Grocery, 2 Phones 526 Other Depts. 78 B ' Get your Fall Needs Now More men every season take advantage of the convenience and completeness of our MEN'S WAR ( ST0E. where prompt attention and most desired styles as well as complete range of size, make quKk and satislymg seiec tions an easy proposition. Then, too, we guarantee satisfaction or money cheerfully refunded. . TAILORED AT FASHION PARK vswing A smart Norfolk of the latest vogue having the Bi-swinj sleeve expansion feature. "Our taU ors at Fashion Park have combined in this mod-' el, all the comfort and freedom with exclusive ness in design. it It is an indispensable feature of the well dressed man's wardrobe. They are surprisingly low-priced. ,v , f. t ' $40 to: $65 : V: . - .. ''.-' ' The" MAJ Store, Fashion Park Clothier : " PAIR.U MEN! YOUR ROUND-UP HATS $8.00 to $18.50 ; September 1st, you know, is the official day to don the BIG HAT. Let us sell you one. Our etock is complete and we can certainly please you. "' '.-; ,,;. i I i hfgd FALL HATS FOR MEN The man about town, business man and working man, will all three find just the type of hat they prefer in our most complete showing of new hats for fall and early winter wear. Cloth Hats $4.00 $5-00 Stetsons Hats $750 up TIES FOR PARTICULAR MEN t 50c to $4.00 . Selected fabrics that will knot and slip well in tieing. r I MEN'S E. & W. SHIRTS .f. . $zso to $10.00 t! . '. ; , f They fit better and they wear well. You get shirt sat isfaction when you wear E. & W. Shirts. New patterns and colorings. , , . MEN'S FALL WEIGHT UNDERWEAR v $1.00 TO $5.00 ' Here we are offering the finest quality of underwear ; for fall as money ean buy. Just the Tight weight in many styles and all sizes. MEN'- SOX 15c to $2.00 pair Whether you want work sox or dress sox we can fill your wants. Best of quality, fit and wear. Buy your fall supply of sox at this store. . burial examiner seemed to think that the children, who were accustomed to Play In the woods ne?ir their home, might have been poiyoned hy eating wild berries of some kind. The stomach contents of Katherine av.d Andrew, Dr. Ueiseimunn said, have been seat to Dr. A. O. Kcttler, at the City 1-aborntory, for analysis. It was learned thnt several other children living In the vicinity of the Lennox home have been suffering NEW YORK, Aus. 27. (I. X. S.) A strange Illness. resemmtnR moon poisoning, has caused the death of three children of a Bronx policeman s from minor throat troubles. family and nonplussed the medical profession, rhysuians at ranani Hospital are mystified by tne muiacty. James Lennox, five years old, was taken sick about two weeks awe and died a week later. The outstanding symptom of his ailment was a sore throat which caused him great sutier insr hefore death, ' , The body of James was buried Sun day, nnd on the same day a sister, Katherine, ten years old, became ill wilh tho sumo symptoms and was re moved to the hospital. She died the next day. Arrangements were being made for her burial Thursday, when her brother, nine years old, vns stiick 011, ami h' lird. I'r. Ket-.clm.nni. Medical lOvunit'or ol the Bioox. who reported Hie K-.rec. rlcilhr. r,-id the phy;b:iaiis at th hoc pi'.i! had Wufti traces ft mtirhrortn poienlrg. but he h:io k.irnad. he ea'd. that the children had r.ot eaton mush regms fcUre they becamn ill. Xh today, September wheat closing at t-2 1. December at S 1.22 94 and May ut $1.254. Yesterday's closing Quota tions were $1.194, V4 and $1.24 Vi. respectively. Following are today'4 quotations, received "by Overbeck & Cooke, local brokers: NORTHWEST REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATION ELECTS LIVESEY PRESIDENT1 TACOMA. Aus. 27.--tr. P.) Percy Livesey of Kellinsthain Wash., waa named president of the Northwest Heal Instate Association at the annual convention in Paradise Valley. Tho next convention will be held in Van couver, 11. C. 0FT1MJ1.21 Tiat shows ft strong upard tisnd Vlit-at Open High Iaiw Close Sept. $1.19$ 1.21 ,.- $1.1S $1.21 Dec. 1.21 1.22V4 -.20 1.2214 May 1.21 'i 1.2C V 1.231.1.25 Corn Sept. .;.4S .54 .51'i .54H Dec. .f.4Ss .54 sj .64 .54 Way- .5S .5SH .5TH .58 Wheat Buying by seaooard Inter ests export sales had but littte influ ence early in the day, but found reflec tion in the market toward the clbite when the derlirte. failed to brins- out liquidation, aside from the contlnuefl export demand ihe news in circulatluu was morvbeur'.Kh than It has been r cently. A Canadian messiige reportil an-vrror of three bushels per acre ifi the indicated yield ilveii in the Winol-peg-Pree Tress report early in tlj week. This means an Increase of i'ii 000,000 bushels in the Saskatchewiyi crop. Oilier advices from CanadH were to the effwt thnt yields In Mani toba and Saskatchewan afe turnhfic out, better than expected. . An ear' and heavy movement la expected hi that country 00 itn-otmt of adverse fi nancial conditions. fteivlpts are gradually Increasing in the Amcrlc:jji northwest, and ca.di prices at Min neapolis today de lined about fi Cents, compared With futures. We T" not consider the lm nppi'rt'in In take art Ti?sresl e position on the lo side. Safe Willi for mm & iihwuds V i . - , Anf tab 1 ri r?r!-ifar!ts !nv-!'din43rff!r-C!i!li!re I RtthM" MVr 1 -,i '. !n TbeOtTnalfood-CrinkroHUAjsi No CK)kint-f lori!unj-lVnUblj