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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1921)
TEN PAGE3 DAILY EAST CEEGOUUN, FZXDLSTON, OEEGON, THURSDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 8, 1021. ASPIRIN Vs' ' nt-rman-r-rr-wnn-ztri " ' ' -ZJ -rr .. -rrrr-nr f mj w m v i f j M m . r m m m m m m m m , m m, m.wr - mjw mum. n iii'in -- i i i i) k CALENDAR OP EVENTS f ' August 28. .10 Water First LA Aid course at City Natatorlum. ) Direction of Joseph O. Hedges. ! September 10 Hermlston Ex- perlment Station Field Day. September l-2 Northwest Grain and Hay Show. . ' ! September Si. 13, 14 Annual v I. Pendleton Bound-Up. October. 7-8 Seventh Annual I Dairy arid Hoe Show, at Her- tnlston. , lrn. Htnnlt j1 lthn. I Mrs, Verlltta Stanley, daughter of lrs. A. J. Amoureuux of this city, Idled In Salem, yesterday utter a Ions illness, xiie oouy will ue orougiu here for burial. Will 6H! Jtoinul-l p. A. W, Tracy. Kenerul secretary of the Theodore International Highway association writes tlmt he and Presl dent Koll will see the Pendleton Ilound-Up thlB year. They are now at a meeting of the international As sociation at White Fish,' Montana. During" their stay hero they will be guests of the Eastern Oregon flub. Attractions Are Added. A number of entertainment features have been added to the vrogram for the Hermlston Dairy and Hog Show to be held at Hermlston October 7 and 8. In addition to the premiums for dairy cattlo, hogs, horses, - farm produce, fruit, honey, boys' and, girls' club work, there will be several interesting contests. Among them wju oe me greased pig contest, horse races, foot races and football games. C. 8. Wheeler Returns. ' C. 8. Wheeler, pioneer 7 Pendleton photographer, has returned to Pendle ton to take personal charge of the Wheeler studio, which during the past year was leased to Struck Aune, Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler and niece, Miss Lois Swaggart, have, been touring Oregon and California by 'motor. Mr. Aune will In future have charge of the Grove .Studio In Portland and left for that city several days ago. strallon agent. The story may be writ ten In ou til n? form or may be a sim ple paragraph of the process and Un complete directions ' followed. It should not be over 260 words In length but should be much shorter. This contest Is open to any girl be tween the ages of 9 and 18. The bread may be mailed to the home demon stration agent, box 661, Pendleton, or brought to her office in the. federal building if It Is not convenient to de liver It at the high school the mora- Ing of the contest. The bread will be Judged In the cafeteria and will be put on display at the Grain and Hay Show after the Judging is completed. The girls In the county who bake bread at horn are urged to send In a loaf. The first prize is J 10, the second Is 17.50, the third Is 15 and the fourth is 3.G0. To Tell How Broad Is linked. Each Individual loaf of bread en tered in the bread baking contest at the high school September 22, during the Northwest Grain and Hay Show, is to be accompanied by a story of how Auto the loaf of bread was baked, says Mrs, Edith O. Van Bousen, home demon- Bminein for 'arn. The Pendleton Itound-Up Associa tion has a, limited number of Round Up banners which will be given away to Pendleton people who call , at Round-Up headquarters. They arc for use on cars. 101101- -101101101101101101101 14 YEAR OLD HIGft SCHOOL BOY ' WANTED to work mornings, evenings and Saturdays. THE 1921 CANNING SEASON IS FAST DRAWING TO A CLOSE. Fill your remaining empty, pantry shelves now. "YOU CAN DEPEND ON "101" . . i- t . ' Pendleton Cash Market, Inc 301 E. Court Street Phones 101 Private Exchange Connect T I0lT0I 101 101 101 101 101 TOT TOT M 1 IIo? KillH Ifcwr. Oeorge Sevey, aged H, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sevy, bagged 500 pound brown bear yesterday near Huckleberry. This is the youngster's first experience as aliunter and he Is proud of the kill. Name "Bayer" on Genuine JScware! t'nless you see the name "Bayer" 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, Rheumatism, Earaihe, Tooth ache, Lumbago, and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of AHpirin cost few cents. Drugils also sell larger packages. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer "Manufacture of Monoacetlcacidester of Sallcylicacid. fTt 1 t OH. MR. SCHOOL BOY AND GIRL! Vtt have Just what you want to start you off right In your new year of school.. A happy start makes success'. We have a full line of the best make of Pencils and Pens, ranging In price from 50c to $12.00 Each pencil or pen is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction. We are equipped to repair all OCR Pens and Pencils FRJ3H. Wo .also' have an Ink that does Vot clog your pen and will wash out of'your clothes should you happen to spill some on them, BUT when It Is put on paper It becomes permanent. We defy any Ink eradlcator to remove It from paper. . Come In and see us. We are offering a special price to users of our Pens and Peifclls. , Hanscdm's Jewelry Store WE IiEADIXG JKWKI.ER8 Hunting Season Opens September First wmM Let Us Show You Our Large Assortment of WINCHESTER GUNS AND AMMUNITION They Get the Game. For Shooting Pheasants. A fine of $25 and costs was assessed against 8. It Walker'yesterday when he was arrested by W. H. Albee, dep uty game warden on a charge of shooting Chinese pheasants. Walker is a resident of Pilot Rock. F.c:iViiiliig for Tank. The work of excavating for the gasoline tank whteb will be Installed by the Oregon Motor Garage was start ed yesterday morning in front of the gamje on Court street. The work will be rushed to completion as rapidly as possible. Will ISO Initiated. Fred Karl and Ben Cresswell will be initiated Into the mysteries of the Shrine tonight in Portland. Mr. Karl and Mr. Cresswell left for Portland yesterday. Rex Ellis. Cecil Cole and David H. Nelson are among "the Pen dleton Shriners who will see the cere monies at Al Kadcr temple. Y. 51. C. A. Man Here. W. W. Dillon, inter-state secretary of the Y. M. C. A. organization for Idaho and Oregon, with offices at Portland, was a visitor In Pendleton today. Dillon came here from Port land and left this evening for Couer d'Alenc, Idaho. While here he was in conference with Judge J. W. Maloney who Is the Pendleton representative on the committee of 45 from the two states. Western Auto Co. Robbed. A, daylight robbery made Monday morning between the hours of 8 o'clock and noon resulted in a loss to the Western Auto Co. of hetween J175 and $180 In cash and checks that brought the total loss up to $470. While th office was temporarily de serted, the robber entered, took a wal let from the unlocked safe and suc ceeded In escaping. Local talent is believed to have been responsible for the work. ' Hinillmeiit Is High. The enrollment In the high school, according to figures compiled yester day evening, show that there are 280 students registered for work. This is in excess of the number who were en rolled at the end of the second week last year, and there are several more who are expected to start within the next few days. Work on the girls' glee dub and the boys' glee club, in dramatics and for orchestra members has already been started. Many Pile Application. A total of 28 veterans of the late war have filled their applications for either loans or cash from the state, report u,v P. It. Idleman shows; Of this number, 27 are seeking loans and 11 are after cash. An Interesting fact is shown in that of the 28 who have bcA first served by Idleman, and Cyril Troebstel and Earl Williams, 21 are not members of the American Legion. The making out of applica tions will continue until all the vet ernns have been able to fill their proof of service blanks. Died at Salem. Mrs. Vernitta Stanley, 22 years old, who died Tuesday at the hospital at Salem, Is well known In Pendleton. The funeral services will be held at the Catholic church Friday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. Mrs, Stanley came here 11 years ago and grew to womanhood In Pendleton. She is survived by her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Amoureux, her little daughter, Beryl Jean Stanley, four sisters, Mrs. Orval Brown of Hoqulam. Wash., Mrs. W. A. (Manna of Portland, Nadlne Amoureux, Mary Toy, and two broth ers, Homer and Alfred. Mrs. Csc Dies. Mrs. Elizabeth Case, aged 2, died yesterday afternoon at St. Anthony's hospital after a brief Illness. She war ' born i Umatilla county and was mar 'rled In 1911. She is survived by her (husband, R. E. Case, three children, Irene, Vernon and Clinton, her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. I). Raima, a sis- Iter, Mrs. Ed Carney and three broth ers, A. B. Hanna, Jr., J. It. Jlanna and Charles Hanna. Funeral services will be held tomorrow at 2:30 p. m. from the Folsom chapel. Rev. George L. Clark, pastor of the Presbyterian church, will officiate. OTHER NEWS OF THIS DEPARTMENT ON PAGE 5 Card of Thanks We wish to express our most sin cere thanks to the many kind friends who so generousluy contributed their assistance during our sad bereavement and loss of our beloved daughter, Yuvonna. Also to thank them for the beautiful Tloral tributes received. Mil' AND MRS. M. MANNING CONSERVE CHILDHOOD AVASHINGTON, Sept. 8. (I. N. S.) Belgium Is working out a pro gram for the conservation of childhood according to information reaching the Children's Bureau of the Department nf Tjibnr. How intelligence, deter mination and united effort triumph over conquest, war and famine isj vividly portrayed in a paper read at, the second International Conference on the Protection of Childhood, re cently held in Brussels, by Dr. Rene Sand, of the University or Brussels, a copy of which has reached Washing ton. ' According to this paper, even dur ing the years of occupation, when the Government had left Belgian soil and the only central' co-ordinating agency was the voluntary Comlte National, publlo health activities were started on a hitherto unknown scale, and for the first two years there was an actu al decline in Infant mortality. iJr. Sand accounts for this in part by the cessation of Industrial work for wom en. ( . Retarded Full Year The average Belgian child was, at the time of the armistice, one full year backward In normal develop ment; the weight of the average Brus sels schoolboy was three pounds be low normal, while the average school girl was seven pounds below normal. The first step in the medical recon struction of Industry was the estab lishment of an independent Labor Medical Service, which includes In Its functions the protection of expectant mothers and nursing working women and the care of the health of working children. The service immediately for myjlUed a. constructive programme which enlisted the co-operation of all agencies concerned in Jhe promotion of Dublic health, including the health of working mothers and their children. In the United States eighteen States nrovlde for the physical examination rhIM entering industry, but no state has provided for examina Hon of -working children at regular Intervals. Belgium has adopted the advanced programme of medical ex amination for every Juvenile not later than a month after It has entered an Industrial occupation, to be repeated once a year until the child reaches eighteen, and oftener In case of dis ease. 1 Working Youth Peotevtcd Beligum has realized that health protection in the community must go hand In hand with health protection in Industry, and Mr. Sand emphasizes the following points; General public health work, child welfare, housing, the restriction of alcohol consumption and education and recreation both for adults and children. A national children's board has been established, which is maintained by public and private funds. The child welfare programme includes the peri odical free examination of children under three years of age, brought by their mothers for examination; the es tablishment of free medical dispen saries for expectant mothers, the dif fusion of knowledge relating to Infant health and maternal nursing, and the supervision of boarded-out children under seven years of age. The cost of child welfare work is borne one-half by the state, one-fourth. by the prov ince and one-fourth by the munici pality. . SUFFERED SIX YEARS Mr. Stoll Tell Women How She Found Relief From Pain 8i ft v Philadelphia, Pa.-"I suffered for sir year3 with pain every month, bad vom- iung speuH tuts mat two days, and was unfit to do my work. I read in your little book about Lydia K. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and took the medicine with satisfactory results. I am a mid wife and recommend the Vegetable Com pound to my friends and mv daughters take it, Yu may publish these facta as a testimonial." Mrs. Louise Stoll, 609 W. York St., Phila., Pa. It is not natural for women to suffer as did Mrs. Stoll, and in nine cases out of ten it is caused by some displacement or derangement of the system which Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound overcomes, because it acts as a natural restorative. Every woman who is subject to cramps, headaches, nervous spells, backache or those dreadful bearing down pains should profit by Mrs. Stoll 's experience and give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, and if there is any complication write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.. Lynn. Mass., about her health. . . J Use the Phones n o ti coc Other Depts. 78 j QUALITY SERVICE.' PENDLETON'S LFAI STORE eimer CLOTHES GOOD W& ' An Investment in Good Appearance For the young fellow return ing to school and the older chap who never' lost his live school spirit, we offer one strong recommendation: Kup penheimer Good Clothes an investment in good appearance. $40 to $65 the house of Kuppenheimer good clothes O B. K. ft Co. t; iT.Ttr;ij;,,,.; NEW FALL HATS 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. Cloth Hats ..' $4.00 to $5.00 Stetson Hats $7.50 up TIES FOR PARTICULAR MEN 50c to $4.00 Selected fabrics that will knot and slip well in tieing. MEN'S SOX 15c to $2.00 pair Whether you want work sox or dress sox we can fill your Avants. Best of qual ity, fit and wear. Buy your fall supply of sox at this store. MEN'S E. & W. SHIRTS $2.50 to $10.00 z They fit better and wear well. You get shirt satisfaction when you wear E. & W. Shirts. New patterns and color ings, i MEN'S FALL WEIGHT UNDERWEAR $1.00 to $5.00 Here we are offering the finest qual ity of underwear for fall money can buy. Just the right weights in many styles r MEN! YOUR ROUND-UP HATS $8.00 to $18.50 Let us sell you one if you haven't any. and all sizes. REGULAR ROUND-UP SHIRTS $8.50 Big range of patterns and color ings. Buy yours now. I DR. LYNN K. B LAKES LEE Chronic and Nervous Diseases an4 Diseases of Women. X-Ray Electrlf Therapeutics. Temple Bids. Room It Phone 411 CHICHESTER S PILLS irv TIIK DIAMOND ItRANU. A I.dlrI Ak jour Vrauisi lo fx hl-(.tr IflKMMd Unin4 1MIU la Krtl nt UeM naUUY boirs, tnlcd with Blue Ribtaa. Tmk oiker. Buy f year " !rtit. A -f" Iil- IU VTFK THtt nown Bet, Safest. Ali RriUlm SOLO BY ORDGGrSTS EVLRHU FOR SALE White's Doughnut Lunch 123 West Alta. Owing to poor health, I am compelled to sell my place of business. GET IN NOW BEFORE ROUND-UP