TEH PAGES 3fl DAILY EAST OBEQONIAN, PENDLETON, OEEGON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 31, 1921. PAGE TintEJS "" News Notes of Pendleton country. A series of hearings on CALENDAR OF EVENTS August 28-80 Water First Aid course lit City Natatorlum, Direction of Joseph C. Hedges. September 10 Hermlston Ex- perlment Station Field Day. ' September 19-24 Northwest drain and Jlay Showi September 22, 22, 14 Annual Pendleton Round-Up. October 7-8 Seventh Annual Dairy and Hog Show, at Her- mlston. Jwool rates was recently held In the in- Is Feeling Bettor. J. P. Walker who has ,boen In tho hospital (or a couple of days on ac count of Illness Is able to be at his work again. termountaln country. Wants Batn on Foxes. A request from a resident of Was tlna, Oregn, hus been received nt the offices of the Pendleton Commercial Association for Information about fox farms which the writer declares he understands are In operation near here. Railroads to Ask Rate Change. The railroads havo given notice of their intention to file on application with the Interstate Commerce Com mission for permission to secure the benefits of the long and short haul, a message from the Intermediate Rate Association to the Pendleton Com mercial Association discloses. The lo cal organization I has assisted in the Queen Candidates Work Hard. A change In tho standing of the can didates for the honor of representing Pendleton in the Labor Day celebra tion at La. Orande Is shown in the re port that was made today by A. W. Lundcll, chairman of the committee which is In charge of the contest. Miss Bessie Elklns now has 6.B60 votes Misu Frieda Green, 6,600. Miss Gert rude Jones 6,800 and MIhs Nettie Pourrler 4,800. Miss Elklns has climbed from third to first, and Miss Orceii has climbed tho ladder. The contest will close promptly at 11 o'clock Thursday night at the dance to be given in Union Hall, and no one except the members of the commit To Ovcrliaul House. A building permit has been granted H. M, Bloan for the overhauling of his house at 115 Beauregard street. The estimated cost of the work is given at D0O. . .County Schools Heady All Is in readiness for the beginning of the terms of the county schools. The certificates and contracts which have been held by the clerks of the different districts have been turned over to the county superintendent of schools. Practically all of the schools have teachers, and a majority of the teachers are experienced and specially trained. Some of the schools will open on Monday, and others will not open until Tuesday September 6. fight against Increases In rates which tee In charge will know the standing riave been waged by the Interior of the contestants. Ji 101- -101101101101101101101-101 Lipton's Tea FREE PACKAGE Turn in your card now' entitling: you to a free package of Upton's Highest Grade Tea ORANGE PEKOE. SEPTEMBER IS A BUSY MONTH Place your meat and grocery account where you can depend on your orders being taken care of according to your wishes. "YOU CAN DEPEND ON 101" Pendleton Cash Market, Inc 301 E. Court Street Phones 101 Private Exchange Connect V "101 101 101 101 101 101 101 T0I TOT Men, Have You Ever Worn WHITE HOUSE SHOES If not, you will surely find your style and fit and lgliiSli ffl-jiftl , V at moderate cost Her Brown Shoe Store Formerly Nye-Ward Co. CHILDREN'S SCHOOL SHOES We are prepared to care for the growing-up. Service Footwe'ar. Shoes that wear and fit and are fit to wear BUSTER BROWN Arby Hons Dies Arhy Hess, 16 years old son of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hess of Walla Walla, died Tuesday night after an illness of about a week from Infantile paralysis. Funeral services will be held Thurs dnv morning nt in o'clock nt Walla Wnlla. Besides his parents he leaves two brothers and three sisters, William Hiess of Wnlla Walla, Elmer Hess, Pendleton, Mrs. Itay Colbert, Walla Walla, Mrs. Henry Molstrom, Pendle ton and Mrs. Dena Larkin, Portland. Examinations Kent. 1 and 2. Eighth grade examinations for those who fulled to pass the tests early In the summer, will be held tomorrow and Thursday in this county. The tests for Tendleton students will he held at Hawthorne school, beginning each morning at 9 o'clock. Very few stud ents failed In this county, says W. W. Oreen, county school superintendent. The papers will be graded In time to permit successful applicants for state certificates to enter high school this term. Use the Phones Grocery, 2 Phones 526 Other Depts. 78 QUALITY- SERVICE. PENDLETON'S LEADING STORE Use the Phones Grocery, 2 Phones 526 Other Depts. LET 'ER BUCK Every body's getting their togs for the "RoundUp," Have you yours? Come forth in your shirt and hat tomorrow.- Buy them at Alexanders, we have the, goods. SILK ROUND-UP SHIRTS $8.50 Term Opens Si-pieinlier 5. Studies nt St. Joseph's Academy will be resumed on Monday, September 5, and present Indications are that the attendance this year will be at le.ast as good as last year, and from the many inquiries that have been receiv ed, the school authorities are expect ing an increased attendance. The en rollment lost year was 260. The list of books to be used can be secured from the academy before school opens, and in this way students may purchase their books and avoid the rush. ' - vf - ' ' , . i: l'K J - . f: .::V - '- ; i iiS)fe:-::r:;.-.v::-v. v.-.v.-.-.-. . A. ' -. t t MMMMM Tickets nought for Joumul 8eolul. Two hundred arid fifty tickets for the Happy Canyon show for members who will compose the annual special party brought to Pendleton for the Round-Up by The Oregon Journal were ordered reserved this morning by H. W. H'cks. traveling passenger agent of the O. W. R. & N. There Is a prospect that another delegation of 100 from Portland will- be on hands, but no definite reservation will be made for a few days yet. The Journal party will attend Happy Canyon on Friday and Saturday nights. Accom panying Hicks on his trip here is Dan Clark, livestock agent. Wnt More Hoys In High School Tho situation regarding attendance at high school was discussed before, the Rotary Club today by Superinten dent H. B. Inlow who urged commun ity cooperation In trying to Induce more boys and girls to enter high school and stay with the work per manently. The superintendent said there is too much disparity between attendance at the grade schools and In the high school. The boys committee of the Rotary club was directed to aid in a plan for helping the situation out. E. J. Murphy told of a visit to Spokane and of the oil excitement there. Wll Jiard Bond was called upon for a talk about his Alaska trip. Two new mem bers, Howard Sheehan and Carl Hopf were elected to the club today. A bier assortment to select from. INDIVIDUAL PATTERNS and colorings. They are hand made and are of best quality goods, price considered. See window display and pick one out. Wear one tomor row. , ROUND-UP HATS $6.50 TO $17.50 Of course you're going to wear a "ROUND-UP HAT." If you haven't any come in and let us sell you one. Several styles in many colors. ROUND-UP HANDKERCHIEFS Comes in a wide range of colors. Buy yours now and use it now. Great big size with wide hem and bucking horse and every thing. LET 'ER RUCK The book-LET 'ER BUCK-a story of the Round up. Every family should have at least one. Let us sell you one. Price $2.25. WOMAN KNOCKS LID OFF COFFIN; WANTS DRINK loss of Appetite Is commonly grad ual: one dish after another is set aside. It is one of the first indications that the system is running down, and there is nothing else so good for it as Hood's Sarscparilla the best of all tonics. LONDON", Aug. 31. The story of a woman who knocked at the lid of her coffin after it had been prepared and sealed for burial has been revealed in Tokio by the Japan Times and Mail. 'it Is stated that the woman appar ently died one morning at 5 o'clock and arrangements were immediately made for the funeral. Triests wore sent for, and the usual service read over the coffin. Suddenly the priests and others heard a feeble knocking inside the coffin. The lid was removed and the mourners found that the woman was ! alive. They called her name, fcne re plied: . "I am thirsty. Give mo some water " Water was given and she was removed to her bed, but died two days later. Hunting Season Opens :ember First Sept Let Us Show You Our Large Assortment of WINCHESTER GUNS AND AMMUNITION They Get the Game. Wants Road to Grant County. Robert Bond was here today Trom tho Bond Bros., ranch near Ukiah, and he is just one of the many resi dents of that section of the country who is mighty anxious to see the road connecting Uhnatllla and Grant coun ties constructed as soon as possible. There ore about 250 carloads of cattle alone shipped from tho section from Ukiah south to the county line every year, he declares. This year the value of a carload of cattle has been about 11500, making. a total of about $375.- 000 for the value of cattle produced in the section. A majority of the men In. that territory already do their banking In Pendleton, according to Bond, but they don't trade here to any extent, though they would like to do so. MINE WORKERS TO BE E OTHER NEWS OF THIS DEPARTMENT ON PAGE 5 Flavor is sealed in by toasting REOPENING DAY Kirst ClirMlaii Church Sunday Scliool Sunday, Kept. I. 9:40 A. M. Lundcll and His 20. Piece Orchestra Cornel By HARRY WARD. International News Service Staff Correspondent. WASHINGTON". Aug. 31. The un sung, unheralded hero wno penorms his deeds of valor thousands of miles from the bullet-swept battlefields, in dark underground crannies reeking v.hh deadly gases that attend mine explosions and fires, is to be accorded well-merited recognition at the Inter r.alijn:il First AM and Mine Rescue Meet In St. Louis, Mo., on September 1-3. Ot !J medals and diplomas of valo; for saving, or dy:ii? in the attempt to save, the Lives of their fellow miners will be awarded to twelve heroes oi mine disasters, or their nearest sur viving relaties. by F. Foster Eain, di rector of the United States Bureau ot M'nes, on behalf of the Joseph A. Holmes Safety Assoeintionl The meet to be held under the auspices of the Eureau ot Minos In cooperaiion with the American Led Cros' u. fsutlna Safety Council and various miners' and operators' associations. Will Award Slodals. Medals will be awarded to K. P. Krueger, Lew E. Ryan, Frank Pierce, Herbert Fariin, George Reichcrt and John Gregovich, Butte, Mont., miners. for their efforts to save the life of a i surveyor who was ovucome by gases from a mine fire in the Leonard Mine. Medals will be presented to the near est relatives of Francis Henry Murphy and William Ferrington, of Franklin, Kan., who lost their lives in n mine I near there in an effort to res?.ij two rs w.i v. ore n , noil fol iUf.'ir1? nn expi- ' in the n in i.nd tth i I. '.er wero fciuid de 1 Ale Ogilvji tn I TlfRS CnM i.f Lehigh, Oklahoma, will both receive a i ipdiil for tX .'i . T u' great risk a! worked who accidentally came In con-1 tact with an electrically-charged wire. Medals will be presented to the near- est relatives of Lasco Kobinson and j Clarence Williams, of Pcgnnn, Okla., ! who died In their attempt to warn mi- j ncrs of an Impending explosion from j an accumulation of gas within the mine. Before they reached the men , to give warning the gas accumulated and the explosion occurred, resulting; in the loss of ten lives, including their own. Will Work for Safety. Tho Joseph. A. Holmes Surety Asso ciation was founded in 1915 to honor the memory and continuo the work of Joseph A. Holmes, the first director of the Bureau of Klines and the popular izer of the slogan "Safety first." The association Is completing its plans for the formation ot local safety chap ters of the national parent organiza tion. The proposed chapters, it is hoped, will be the means of bringing together the miners and mine officials as common workers In the great cause of making safer the operation of the 35,000 mines, quarries and smelters in which a million men do their dail; toil. Among the speakers at the meet will be Governor A. M. Hyde, of Mis souri; John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America; Representative Marion E. Rhodes, chairman of the house committee on mines and mining; H. Foster Eain, Di rector Bureau of Mines, and J. G. Bradley, president of the National Coal Association. HEALTH THE KEYNOTE TO BEAUTY Eeauty means so much to women power, social triumph, admiration and love. Beauty implies good health. Who ever saw a woman racked with pain, struggling with weakness or disease, who could be called beauti ful? The woman of today in this high-strung, nervous age is continual ly overdoing with the result that Ills peculiar to her sex develop which, un checked, will ruin all chances for her happiness. The natural restorative for such ailments is Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound, which for more than forty years has been recog nized as a standard remedy for wom en's Ills, and hns done much to relieve pain and restore good health to wom en. LOOK! LOOK! LOOK! Big Used Car Sale Thursday COMMENCING AT 11:30 A big reduction on all used cars. Five per cent discount to first buyer of the day. Come one, come all. Oldsmobile Co. Of Oregon Opposite the Pendleton Hotel QUALITY PRINTING at Reasonable Prices East Oregonian Printing Department Wood for Sale IX CAR LOTS Yellow Pine, Fir and Tamarac EA11L G1LLAXDEI5S, Pendleton ANNOUNCEMENT I have taken over the prac tice of Dr. Dale Rothwell, op toemtrist and optician, and will practice permanently In Tendleton at the office for merly occupied by him in the American Bank building. I am a graduate of De Keyser Institute of Optomet ry, one of the very best in the country. Glasse Ground to Fit Your Eyes Lenses Duplicated on Short Notice I have all of Dr. Rothwell's office records and equipment and nm ready to meet the people of Umatilla County. DR. L C. RICHEY American National Bank Building BOYS DON'T FORGET THE PIG RACE THURSDAY MORNING OR THE CHICKEN RACE SATURDAY AFTER. NOON AT CRAWFORD'S. WE LEAD OTHERS FOLLOW Watch our window and spp tho offering you each week. The vfcry newest stvles in JwrfrvAnm ooi ,.;!. bears our guarantee if at anv time an nrricl rlnpa nr. give satisfaction tell us, we can help you and if you tell i ncifcnuuis, uiey can not ana will not. We are still offering you a bier reduction on everv nr. tide in our line. Now is the time to make your dollar which you have worked so hard for rro almost twice as far. Corns in and look over our large stock. We are at youi lervice. Hansen's Jewelry Store