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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1921)
1 W EM(sff 4 tal TWELVE PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 27, 1021. ' 'PAGE SIX ' ' r-a.asarrr- ; -rr-v ' 1 , I . Social and Club News , 41 B'JniCTY TO MKET. The I're bytt l inn Missionary Society will meet tn the reception rooms of V) church tomorrow at 2:30 p. m., v.i Mr. Wm. Rlakeley, Mm. CI. H. ii-kMtrp. Mm. George Techier and Mr. L. H. dels! as hostesses. (il'FSSTS AT IKWHKlt HOME Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Booher have ns their guests Mr. Foohcr's cous'ns, Mr. mid Mrs. Adolph Zurfler, and Mr. Booher's mother. Mrs. Florence CooK. tau of Portland, and Mr. Booher's mother. Mrs. W illiam Hooner m wes I'ians will be made lor a silver tea, ton. Mr. and Mrs. Zurfler are well l be held early In Octouer ai me liume of Mrs. 8. H. Tlicir.pson. A del eaaie Is to be elected to attend the t invention which will re i-'d in I-a (itaiide Ociober 19 una - MOTOIt TO SPOKANE. Mrs. Fred Earl. Mrs. Herbert Thompson. Mrs. OeorKe Strand, Mrs. H 'nry Collins of this city, Mrs. Clarke Nelson and Mrs. K. 1. Burke of Tort-l-nil, who have been visiting l'endle-, ) n friends, left this morning for a m .tor trip to f-poKanc. m-j t un here after a few days. lit UP, riCKKUS IS HOSTESS. In honor of the birthday anniver-e-ry of Miss Effie Jean Fraiier. Miss : - FiUmaurlce and It. E. Bickers. .Mr. B ckera entertained last evening with an enjoyable dinner party. Asters In pastel shades centered the table, ii vomxc, Mns. Thompson. Mrs. W. J. Furnish will be hostess to narrow at a luncheon for Mrs. W. L. T ..mpson, who will leave soon for Wash iiRlon. Oregonian. M TOR TO WALU WALI.A. and Mrs. James H. Snirgis mo-In-od to Walla Wnlla today. ' k nnvn in musical circles in Portland and have many friends here also. DI-V.REE TO MEET. The IVgree of Honor will hold a so cial meeting tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 in the 1. O. O. F. hall. It will he the first social meeting since sum .mcr and Mrs. Ava "Edwards nnd her committee will be hostesses. MRS. SCHWARTZ RETfRXS Mrs. Sarah Sohwarts of 209 Garden street has returned home irom .-orin rn-.w u-litr sho has been spending the past month as the guest of her daughter, Mrs. J. S. Sanders. RETURN TO HOME. Mrs. A. M. Spalding and Mrs. Tl B. Bruin returned home to Portland last evening after being guests at the home The telephone and automobile have done much to free tho peo- pie who live In the country from isolation. Yet there are many farm women in this pnllntv who have p.it tho opportunity to en- Joy sholesome and Inspiring contact with the outside world. Thorp is Mnmpthinr U'rniic u-ith of Judge and Mrs. Thomas Fitx Ucr- j , tho management of a farm when 'LEAVES FOR COLFAX. Mrs. Claude lrr left today for Colfax, Washington, to attend tho fu neral of Mrs. . B. Morley which will tako place tomorrow. MRS. SHEAR!) VISITS. Mrs. Joseph Sheard, Athena matron is here today. She has Just returned from La Grando where she was the guest of her sister. LITTLE DAI GHTEU BORN Mr. and Mrs. Guilder Terjeson are the parents of a little daughter born yesterday. IDEAS FOR HOUSEWIVES! HOME DEMONSTRATION aid. LEAVES FOR PORTLAND. Mrs. John Montgomery left evening for Portland. ' last MRR PEDRO HERE. Mrs. Mary Pedro of Pendleton today. Echo, Is In botf's irsiAiRS shop Smart Tailleurs and Wraps That Denote the Sea son's Trend. Presenting the newer modes of the moment in Suits, Coats and Dresses. All moderately priced. the housework is too heavy to permit the farm women to tako part in some form of community work. Statistics show that more young women than young men leave the rural districts for the city. A survey of the conditions under which some farm women are working would bring a rcal- i7jition of the hardships endur- cd. Running water, a sink and a bath tub should be in every farm home. There are several practical and quite inexpensive arrangements that farm man have installed to save their wives from the drudirerv of rar. rying water. Xot only will labor and time bo saved by ernaefi- ping the home as carefully as the barn but also the homemak- er will grain in health and hap- piness. E. V. D. PEMILETOX'S POPULAR GARMENT SHOP Hubbard Squash Pie Pumpkins f WHITE PICKLING ONIONS Sweet Potato Squash, pound - 03c . Hubbard Squash, pound 05c Pike's Peak Squash, pound '. ......05c Extracted Honey, pint 35c Extracted Honey, quart 55c Extracted Honey, 1-2 gallon : $1.15 Comb Honey, each '. 30c Conserved Figs, box ....:...$1.50 Conserved Apricots, box $1.50 Manchurian Walnuts, pound 40c' California Soft Shell Walnuts, pound 50c Cuban Grape Fruit by express this morning - New crop Dates just in Set of four glass mixing bowls ....9?c Gray Bros. Grocery Co. 3 Phone 28 Only 1 Quality- the Beit ' We Always Cater to the Users of y Fine Writing Paper QUALITY is something in the paper itself . STYLE is the way the paper is made into stationery. EACH is necessary. jT BOTH are found in the papers sold by Tr IB DRUG STORE "Try the Drug Store Firt" I. , n - i 1ZZZZZ1 Round-Up Peanuts 2 Sacks for 5c Don't think these peanuts are not first class in every way, for they are. That's why I am closing them out now. I roast peanuts for my trade every day and when I found 1 had overstocked for the Round-Up I decided my trade might have the advantage of my over-supply. I want to close these peanuts out so I may continue to roast pea nuts every day. I give only the best, and this is the only way 1 can. Don't forget I Bell the best pop corn in Pen dleton. Try a sack for breakfast F. M. RILEY, For Quality Corn and Peanut. Yours for Service Riley Ik Kemp gteaJtt ar Wewof Satisfaction Our Aim By K. M. EUSH ' (International Xews Service Staff Correspondent.) NEW YORK, Sept. 27. Greenwich Village is rubbing Its eyes. Also the little Latin quarter over on the "left bank" of the East River that is to say the artistic colony on Brooklyn Heights is also pinching it self to make sure it's awake. They have all been set by the ears. The artistic sanctum sanctorum of New York the Metropolitan Museum of Art has been denounced as a hot bed of Bolshevism. Printed circulars denouncing as "degenarate and pathological" the exhibition of modernistic art now on view at the metropolitan have been going through the mail to a selected list of connoisseurs. Addressed by ' typewriter, and without return ad dresses, the pamphlets bear the print ed signature, "A Committee of Citi zens and Supporters of the Museum." Condemning the exhibition as "en tirely unworthy of the Museum," the "committee" characterizes In detail the pictures it deems offensive. "Vulgar in subject," "corrupt in drawing," "childish in conception" are the labels affixed to one group. "Simply pathological in conception, drawing, perspective and color," is an other characterization. According to the circular the Metro politan In being made the tool of art dealers who want to "unload this rubbish on the public." The trouble with modernism In gen eral, and the Metropolitan's exhibition In particular, according to the pam phlet, is, a combination of Bolshevism, commercialism and just plain insanity. IH-ific-ation of t'elliK-ss "The world-wide Bolshevik propa ganda," declares the brochure, "aims to overthrow and destroy all existing social systems, including that of the arts. This modernistic degenerate cult Is simply the Bolshevik philosophy ap plied in art. The triumph of Bolshe vism, therefore, means the destruc tion of the present aesthetic system, the transportation of all easthetic values and the deification of ugli ness. The philosophy of Bolshevism as applied to all channels of human action is the gospel of mental Import ance. Hence the Bolsheviks would open the gates of the temple of art to the mentally lame, halt and blind of the human race. Human fircwl Factor , The circular declares that the sec ond force back of the modernistic movement in art Is greed. The whole propaganda of this movement. It de clares, was organized by European art dealers who had flooded the American market with French and Dutch pot boilers. But the real cult of modern ism, the circular declares, began with small group of neurotic egomaniacs in Paris who styled themselves wor shippers of Sa.tan, the God of Lgll-ness. The third moving force of modern istic art is a well-known form of In sanity," declares the committee. If. O. Payne llcvc. IL O. Payne, division chief for the Internal revenue bureau, is here for a few days checking up on Income tax returns. Ho In st his headquarters In the federal building. Not A Blemish Hart the perfect appearance of he completion. Permanent and temporary tkta IrouMeft arc rif ecltvrjy concealed. Reduce unnatural color and correct grew tUna. Hiffclr anUaepac Stnd lie. fnf Trial Sit. Jj FFRn. T. HOPKINS SON, New York BLACK ( THE THOMAS SHOP bft NEW FALL APPAREL ; , . Introducing new style-themes of extreme desirability. ' COATS, SUITS ' : DRESSES Stunning and smart as can be, developed in the most favored fabrics. j Priced Most Reasonably International S'ews Service Staff 'Correspondent. CANO.V CITY, Col., Sept. 27. That Dr. William F. Warner, seventy, who has spent twenty years of his life be hind prison walls, will end his career by dying In jail Is tho tielief of offi cials at the stato penitentiary here, who have been warned that the elder ly "con man'' may attempt suicide. Warner started this week on a five to ten year term, his eighth pcnltonn tiary sentence following his plea of guilty In Denver criminal court to a charge of obtaining money on false pretenses. confession pre sented to Judge Warren A. Hnggott, In the Denver west side court. Just before Warner wrote: cash checks on theso fraudulent drafts," Warner declared. "But In scores of cases they cashed the checks without question." Frequently, according to tho con fession, Warner has found it to his ua antage to consort with widows In va- Jean Paige, one of the most popu lar of the younger stars, heads the all-star cast In Vitagraph's special production, "Black Beauty." Miss Paige Is of the simple country type that makes her a charming heroine a picture. of thl8sort IlIVOLI TODAY In a written he was sentenced, EPER LOCKED IN VAULT; BANDITS ESCAPE JEFFERSON, Ore., Sept. 27. (1J. P.) A lone bandit locked Bookkeep er I W. Hall in the vault, and es caped with over J3.000 In currency and silver. Posses are out in pursuit. ' Jio Trace is Found. JEFFERSON, Ore., Sept 27. (L. P.) No trace has been found of the lone bandit who robbed the Oregon State Bank here of over $3,000, after locking Bookkeeper Hall in the vault. Hall escaped from the vault by re moving part of the combination. He gave the alarm. Knentf Kendall is leading posses In pursuit. rlous parts of the county In his oper ations using them to Identify him at banks. , -Warner deposited a bogus draft at a Denver bank last June. He was later arrested In Salt Lake City and taken to the Colorado metropolis for trial. 11 rr; "I have found a solution of all my troubles and worry." Then followed a Latin quotation that was translated to mean "thero is one ultimate remedy." "The fitting end of a lifo that has Decn tainted with dishonor is the ob security of a prison or death," War ner's confession continued, and I do not fear either the latter less than the former." Officials believe this to be a hint that he may be contemplating taking his own life, and he is being watched carefully by the prison guards. Warner related a graphic picture of his fall from a position of respect to the career of a felon. He Said he was graduated from a Philadelphia medi cal school In 1879 and practiced his profession In that city, until 1882, when he first fell Into the clutches of the law and was given a two year prison sentence in the Pennsylvania city after being convicted of a charge of obtaining money on false pretenns es. In 1903, tftree years for forgery In 1906, three years in Pittsburgh. In 1911, for larceny, and three years In 1915 in Illinois for false pretenses. In his written confession to the court Warner stated that during the last two years he had deposited spur ous drafts for collection In more than one hundred banks In ten states. He declared he would have collected hun dreds of dollars If his courage had not failed him when some checks he had drawn on those accounts were ques tioned. "Whenever the bankers seemed to doubt the story I told I never tried to The pleasure of drinking one cup of HILLS BROS. "RED CAKCOFFEE is greater than could be supplied by many cups of ordinary coffee. Japanese Emperor's Son Nil I Ui ill II III I Mil I nil iiiijii.M ill ij. il) i.i u n nil ill Milium Jim" 'JMI f - Z. i . - : y rv ; i Vv'' S iv :vmr . f , - '"'tJ V t'miArn Print Hirnhito of Jaoan is a natty and neat young man But Prince Atsu. the emperor's second eon, doesn't give a whoop about his clothes. Here he Is. In rough i ports clothes, eocki falling about nia shoes, watching athletic games with his ttUow students at the Military Hand Decorated Vases and Jardiners Now is the time for repotting your choice plants and to do them justice and at the same time to add distinc tion to your home you ought to have the right kind of a jardinere to place them in. We have the largest and most complete stock of such articles that can be found in the city. Prices ravnging from 50c to $5.00 THE;: BEE HIE A OREGON Announcement THE CRAWFORD FURNITURE COMPANY ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF THEIR USED FURNITURE" department and will accept old furni ture as part payment on new We will also pay the highest prices for second hand articles. See Us Before Disposing of Your Old Furniture FURNITURE CO 103 E. Court St Pendleton, Ore. Phone 496 filial SChOOl. i i 1 : - -