m a-.iKiBiilMi-aj&-li 1:4 JIW ONI.Y SMALL DAILY IN MIERICA CARRYING REGULAR WIRE REPORTS FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, UNITED PRESS AND THE I. N. a DAILY EDITION DAILY EDITION Tha net press rim of Saturday'! dally 3,397 - - Thl paper is a memner of and audited by tha Audit , Bureau of Circulations. Thf Bast Orrfimlan la Raster Ore gon's greatest nwpaar ana as a aU' ln fore ai' to the advertiser o twin tha guaranteed psld ctrtsu'atioa la Ftidlrton and Umalliia COUU f aay scbsr newspaper. , COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPEE .'; VOL. 33 v - COUNTY OFFICIAL PAP.FJt DAILY EAST OEEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, ' MONDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 5, 1921. NO. 9322 AGUEtiF TIONS ASSEMBLY MEETING i. v. NA .46 fims in PARADE TODAY AT LA GRAN Pendleton Band Representing Led . Section F r a t e rnal Orders; 3 Ban3s Present. Sports and speaking . feature the aft noon Ball Game Between tove and La Grande Scheduled for Afternoon; Fight Tonight. LA GRANDR. Kept. 5. (East Oregonlan I Staff Correspondence.) Tha chief feature of the big Joint La bor Day celebration during the fore noon was 4 combined, ImlUMtrlal, fra ternal and commorclul parade, start ing at 10 o'clock. The ;' Pendleton tand led the fraternal section the Ker band the industrial section and (he I Gaude I wind the commercial see tlon. All told there were 46 float" In the parade. ' Immediately following the parade John Bpallard of Oklahoma made an rddrera which was followed by nn ad . dress by Miss Freeman on the subject of cooperative stores. The speaking was held at a temporary stand near fhe depot,, Th' afternoon - program . will consist of sports, Including- a ball game between La Grande and Cove. There la to be a. band contest and a prize fight during ths evening. The Pendleton delegation during the forenoon was not as large ss anticipat ed but mqra people are arriving. Pak. er has a larger delegation In attend ance than has I'endleton. The Pendleton family of Labor threw aside its every dAy today, " and dressed in holiday attire, Joined In the observance of Labor Day. held at La, Ornnde where Raker, La GrnnUe and Pendleton cooperated In the stag ing of, a monster celebration. By motor and train the crowds of men and women made their way to the neighboring city, the exodus starting Punil.iv tt'iernoon when the Pendleton hand and Miss Gertrude Jones, "La uor's Queen," left, . .About JO carloads of people left early thla morning, and No. 24 on the O. V. R. N. was also well crowded Isoth lth representatives of labor and with townspeople bent on having a part In the good time. V -Business was almost totally suspend ed InPendleton In honor of the holi day, and merchants and their employ es took advantage of the rest to take trips Into the hills where hunting was enjoyed by many. Grouse shooting and pursuit of deer were diversions on tha program of many Pendleton people. ' . MILDRED Ui So big a crowd that the city streets -r. t n.rrnw to hold it congregated Saturday afternoon In front of the fr.innl Furniture store for the drawing for the floor lamp and to see t.. which were staged for boys. The contest was conducted byi E. J. Callahan. . When trntflo on Court street had become Impossible on account of he packed humanity that stood, waiting In-expectancy for the pig to lie loosed the police ruled that the stroet could not be further blocked. Permission was then secured by Callahan from H. W. Collins, for staging his perfor mance on the Round-1'P grounds, and about 509 people repaired to the ground. - , , ... Th. rinnr Inmn. valued at lift won by Ml Mildred Rogers, her num ber being the fourth one called. Pe aides this drawing, tha greased pig race and, the chicken races were IxK .a ....... woe nrlses for stopping the pig. and there were four prizes given 1n the chicsen ra.e. AIIPKNT UVKIl IS JAH.KI) WORCHEHTICR, Mass., Sept. f. . (I. N a) Efforts of Justice W infred It. Whiting to patch up a quarrel prov ¬ ed unsuccessful in msinc. , John H. MoOahey, nineteen .yenw ,oM; w. arraigned on a charge of auos iug on complaint of hi; former crt heart. Annla fmlth. of Parish Place. Miss Smith is seventeen years o d. Mc- ..i.i ., nnllee they would haxe ' t.i Jock him up to keep him away from Mi., .mniih. and they locked him op. FACE Hi t n ,'J U X h r it; . a ft , ' J A Labor Dny picture posed especially by Mary Pioliford. "The hodcar- rler," she snys, "henrs the first burden vanguard of labor." . IT TiCKETS: J. J. HAML! VINS FIRST PiACE- EARL WiLLIAMS NEXT SIX MILLIONS SEEK EMPLOYMENT DECLARES SECRETARY OF LABOR s DETROIT, 6ept. 5. (A. P.) The dedication of Labor Day. iiil, to the relief of the nation's unemployed was proposed .by the secretary of .labor - In ad- dressing Detroit' workers. "This year it is a day that millions of our people would rather ceie- brate, not by taking a holiday, but by going back to work at a Job." Davis estimated the un- employed at nearly six millions. TinarnV. Sent. B.-(I. N. I 8.1 J "Ilabo" Ruth's fame as King of Swat Is not as widespread as some people ixiniriiie. Frank Doherty. of Allston. a ball player of note himself, found that j out when ho plcscu up a who turned out to be a sailor. The mariner mentioned the fnet tfeit he v.iis "a graduate" of a reform school. "Don't let that worry you," said Doherty, "so Is 'Babe' Ruth.", "Who Is 'Rabe' Ruth?" asked the Innocent shellback. "An admiral?" ..iwik-t.-v nvMtT 1ltlt'K LirrLD ROCK, Ark., Sept. 5 (I - S.Tho value or urown hii,iimi rcpiiouc. (..ciienu wu Pel Kit's v,.h.. Miss Florence u.eeoe, iwenw two and pretty, declares ner ne.ii i hrnken as she alleged It to be, by, Cirady Greene. , auto salesman It worth $23,000. ; Her suit,' flieu in i uiari v- Court hcre, charges uirmw brenoh of promise. Oreene is namea as , na the father Of Missy niriir - named baby. H uenR-s tne aii- MANY-IMPORTANT PROBLE 'I'M PROUD I'M A WORKING WOMAN" ' M . t , , . of-industry, Kiilute him, for he is the ; The old familiar Round-Up cots made their appearance on Main street lust night when thie I'endleton youngsters, proxies for J. J. Hamley. j because it was celebrat'ng the nation Earl Williams and Tom Toung, attar holdlday for workmen, .hut idle be- . ,, .U. i, b ,.,. cause It could not nnd work, n vigil which began at S a. nj. yester- , . . , ; Few movements of any character day spent the niglit under the stars n wwe lu,r way purely from the order to be first In lino when the I standpoint that the men should be put Round-t'p ticket office made its ap- j to productive work,, so their hardships pearance near Tallman's today, and to!"'"?"1 bc tee ""f national .. . win pimiuiJim in 11110 vsiieu ine sum saie opens Wednesday morning, Alvin Wilson, proxy for Mr. Hamley. has won the coveted first place In th Hue which will form to receive the I t.reeious pasteboards. Next Is Frank Magee, proxy for Karl Williams. For j third place, there Is some contention. Rupert Graham, who slept in the street last night and who Is "in line" for Thomas Young, claims third, but Jimmy Carden says that the place is his. others In I 'lie and who will make their beds on Alia tonight are John iiowman nnd Allen Pardon. Mora will probably Join the ranks today. rj j ....... .....igla, come stones of m STATE 0FCIWR:3H ! ' ' 1 SHANGHAI, Sept. 5. l P.) China's complete unification Is con - sldered nearer than at any time since her internal troubles started. Ten of ibe eighteen northern provinces are reported as ready to confer with thejrun into the hundreds of mllions of southern provinces on a complete ,iUars annually. The railwaymen t mci ones in central China nro cnnst.l- rrru an, naving cemrnteil tlie country, Many mutinies and much loss of life are reported along the upper Yangtze lmw' r loons added to civil war In M , nr penoie in serious tlis- im.. u laenons unmit that China s umflcjitlon most be accomplished prt- oi u me, nisarinaiueiit rioiferenee. weicn m rerrarueci as offeriil:; a aolu- i HV IARV I'ICK1'0H! j Am r.m's Hlii'iewt Puul Atonuui I Wugx- ICarner. I'm proud I belone to the ranks : of Ami-rican labor. j ."rue, I'm more fortunate than ; inst, inasmuch as 1 eiecteil tot: work for an industry which has ! become notable for the liberal j wajres l pays. ! Tlut l'iir prouder of mv work than am of inarnlni;s. It's not so strange, however. Hint the harder I work, the greater my recompense. And to work and earn, in my jplnion, Is much more enoblinc; xinl noble than merely to invest ind receive. .WIVES IE AFOOT F ! Labor Day Finds Vast Number ' " of Jobless Facing Hardships ; Work Has Allayed Needs. Ey FLOYD MacGRIFF, ; International News Service Staff , ' Correspondent. ' NEW. YORK, Sept. 5. An army of unemployed, an army greater than the United States sent to France to help win the world war. was Idle through out the I killed States today Idle not mHii - oer waie irrimiiaieu. Never' before "has a Labor Daybeen oelebrated with as many Americans detached from a steady payroll. Farther west the harvesting tempo rarily has allayed the unemployment situation, but in these agricultural dls tr'cts there prom sea to be some hard ship when the thousands of workers who have flocked in to help harvest, are left to shift for themselves. In the western mining regions the situation is far from normal, but noi -distressful, reports sliow. I'erhaps the Tactfic coast states ahve less unem- uloynient. pmportlonattely, than any ! other section of the country, but these regions are beginning to accumulate a 'larger labor surplusage from the thou- sands of men who have flocked west ror wors. -In the South, from Texas to Oeor- gia, come stories of men without worK pp-irently has fenei than the indus- north. The majority of workers without jobs are classed as unskilled help, al- though in some cities large numbers 0f skilled workers are Idle or forced to accept makeshift employment. Many Wages Slaslwd. Wage cuts accepted by the workers nlone have been slashed some 1400, oou.oun a vcar In liny. Samuel Gomp- ers head of thf American Federation of Ijibor, has estimated that by rea- J,,,, of l-educed wages and unemploy- !n,ent American workers are getting one billion dollars a month less in pay than a year ago. In but few cities or states has there been any well thought-out plan ! AMERICAN WOMAN LIONS, TWO RHINOCEROSES AND AN ELEPHANT IN THE JUNGLE New Yorker on 'Health Trip') . ... ,,, (unhurt. Most probably the rhlnocer- to Africa Makes Record;; did not see me." j Hre Sir Charles Rons broke In, , Totally, Devoid of Fear.;1 , , , , ! "Ti ere is only one thing that Mrs. . , i Dalziel has been entirely deprived of In i her composition. That Is fear. When LONDON, Kept. S. lIJy C. A. Smith u lion suddenly appears a few feet t. N. H. Ktuft t'orrespoiident.) After j away from you and Mrs. Dalzel says. a six monius' uig game snooting and jxpluiailon expedition in the Tangan- yika territory, formerly German Kast Africa, Mrs. Frederick . Dalziel,' a! young American woman, U in London ! on her way to a quiet home life with her husband and daughters in Nw York. During her expedition, which she nade In company with Sir Charles Koss and Mr. Barnes, the African ex plorer, and his wife, Mrs. Dalzel in cluded In her "bag," among a large quantity of, smaller game, an elephant. i buffalo, two rhinoceroses, three hip- ,iopotainuHes and se,ven lions. "I went for my health, really," she ; said to an interviewer, 'for I was com- continue negotiations with the Sinn pelled to lead an open-air Ufe." jFeiners on a, basis of "consent of the Mm. Dalziel described hw Rhe miss 'goverhed" or Issue an ultimatum to ed deai.ii by inches In an ; encounter ! Irish republicans to accept or reject with a wounded rhinoceros.. fthe government's proposals looking to "One day;" she said,, 'we were walk 'settlement of the Irish question. De ing down one of the jungle -trachs, valera's reply published yesterday almost like subway tunnels, which run 'seems to leave the situation as it was from -water hole to water hole, when ' befure'thc last exchange of letters be we came orv a big animal asleep. Sir 'tween Dublin and London, i harles Ross, went on ahead and fired at and Wounded It. and it went crash- , ing away into the jungle. I was some j little .way behind and suddenly I i heard, scarcely a yard away, the nobe I of the rhinoceros.- which had gonej rouna in a circle ana was coining nacK to the track again. . - . "I went behind a bush, buf the -.mi mat also had the same Idea, and it 1 le crashed right vast ine an.l, caught me with, its side, and I and two others who were with me were knocked over AND SHE WLIEO HIM TIHS HAPPENED CALEM. Or.. Sept. 5. Andrew Wurtzbnrger, 42 years old, assistant gardener at Chemawa Indian school, was beaten to death with a heavy blacksmith hammer wielded by his wife. Alum, 37 years old, as he lay in lied in their home at 2 o'clock this morning. Mrs. Wurtsenbarger, in the county jail here, has admitted, off.cers said, that she carefully planned and' ccm--mitted the crime following heated words with her husband a few minutes before when she had arisen to prepare some medicine for the relief of asth ma, with which she was suffering. She declared he awoke at that time. too. and when he asked her what she was doing and she answered, he is said to have replied: "I hope you choke to death." , Sho went downstairs then, she said, where she saw the hammer. She de cided to use it on her mate, according to the police version of'the story. She Exponents mm 4 r-i . ' V v. i. V I A. C : ,:v . ' Congressman Nicholas Longwortb. often seen taking long hikes, together. of the day's business. This, to keep in by, Uic ' bi-otheoln law, you kuoic. I V 5 -s w v&Ez&M 'lN i i f Ls X , - t v I i .T '' .. -' : '.' l . jl ' . '. BAGS SEVEN ; Into a thorn bush. Except for some cuts afcoct the face I was otherwise 'What a beautiful lion!' well, there you are." "it was!" exclaimed Mrs. Dalzel. ' LONDON, Sept. 5. (A. P.) The British Cabinet will be called upon to reach a dec's'on Wednesday either to v . I) PARTY" WAS .STORK VISIT COLVMEil'S. Oh'o, Sept. 5. (I. N. S.) The , entire neighborhood. It seemed, was aroused. People were unable to sleep. It was an early hour in ine morn-ng wnen someone pnnned police-?, headquarters tht a "wild party" was being held at the home of J. V. Rich, No.' 564 . When the policer Lexington avenue. liceman reached the ttich residence the "party"' hJd ur- rived. The stork had brought it. E WITH A HAMMER; ALL AT THE CHEMAWA SCHOOL . . .. . ., ; ,. - , carried the hammer upstairs with her and. according to the police,' struck her husband with it on the head as he slept. Several times his head was struck with crashing blows, it would appear from the blood-spattered walls and ceiling. When his body was tak en in charge by the coroner the akull was found to havo been beaten to a pulp. The Wurtabargers were said to have quarreled frequently, and only las Tuesday, it was reported to the offi cers, he .had broken one of her ribs during a quarrel. . On the other hand, officers said they were investigating reports con cerning Mrs. Wurtzbarger's alleged frienclsh'p with a Portland man, whose name has been given to the police as Charles C iallagher. A 15-ycar-old boy, a witness to the reputed many quarrels, of the. Wurtzbargers, said he frequently had heard the name of Gal lagher mentioned. of Hiking left, and Theodora Roosevelt are They take it as a rerioua part uivn tor cSicUl duties. Ey tha ' 1 , LHI ,r "CS. L .'..'"V f ; v. '-f- :n- I f ASKABISK KOWttlD Disarmament Move . Already. r Underway by league But? Progress Will be Slow.' SWISS WANT HUNGARY ADMITTED TO LEAGUE Several Members Known to Favor- Giving Membership' to German . Government., GENEVA, Sept 5. (A. P, I Questions of great interna- V tional importance were on the projn am of the assemblv of th-'' i League of Nations when it'op- enea toaay Hungary was lite ; only applicant for membership,, but it wa3 said . the r assembiy..-! might be called upon to pasa upon the admission of Ger- - many and it was said several m.i,L . j wuuiu aupporr - her claims for admission. GENEVA, Sept 6. L JJ. R Tha League of Nations Will work for world -disarmament -notwithstanding- tae. dl. armament conference fresideat Ka(il-v' ing has called for Washington It - announced when the league assembly: met. . . , ; : ;..'-;' "The League of Nations commit ten. on disarmament has already laid the lounoauon ror general disarmament . though its progress Is., necessarily slow." said Dr. Koo. Chinese ambassa dor to England, , president ' of the League council, who. deHWrefl the opening speech..' .. i - t- yt J....-: A movement for the Immediate ad mission of Hungary to the league .of Nations was beaded by the Swiss del- egation. ,. ....' 1; . ' , : WITH A VENGEANCE? BIRMINGHAM. Ala., Sept. S, L.t s One man's meat is another's v poison. ' " . ,.j ,, F"rinstance: , , , ". ' " ' i A pastor, tired of suffering from th, continued heat speli, gathered ' his flock together and for three . houra i prayed earnestly for rain.- ,E'idently his prayers were answered, for tha '. rain came and in torrents. ' ,. ," - ,'. However, an electrical storm pVevf ceded it and a bolt of llghfnihgv str!F-' Ing a manufacturing plant one square.' away from the church, started a USA . ' j 000 conflagration. . .. AMERICANS WALLOP ' JAPS COMPLETELY IN TENNIS MATCH FOREST HILlJt, N. YM Sept. " 5.-4 (I. P-) America and Japan-will for mally end the Ia1s cup matches when' Tilden meets Kumaga, and Johnston meets Shimidzu, in the two ' final singles matches of the nromim. Tha i Americans have already) won 'two singles and one doubles match giving the cup to the fnlted States. Tha Americans hope to make a clean sweep of the mutches as they did last winter when 1'nited States nlnwr. whit. washed Australia's players, THE WEATHER Reported by Major Moorhodsa, weather observe!. , i . . ,' i Maximum. 71. ' ' '., Minimum, 2. Itarometur, ZiAi. - TODAY'S FORECAST .1 Tonight and Tuesday fJr, mrmu, (Continued on pact (.) Tin cats cuntinuea. , t'on,