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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1921)
t TEN PAGES PAGE TWO DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 3, 1021. Keep the Wheels of Industry Turning When You Stop Buying the Things You Need Then Industry's Wheels Stop Turning. Plioonix Sik and Wool Hose ! Sultana Heather Mixed Ilo.e Thc IIoS and Dair' Sh al Little Girls' Dresses We've placed on sale nno hi'j; lot of goml dresses tor girls - years to 12 years. Uasoment Siiooial Glen's Dre Hats Our hi;; lot or all sU" of liat- in cloth fabrics anil knkI felts. 14aeiiiciit Sixvial Sl.00 q9 - litiniiMUii . lie sure that yu make early n"uiralioiis to attend this good show that in no sticil'iiliy put oil mir l-.st'in Onuoii Hustlers. IT M IU' IS mi .m iti-ni:vri(; snow. lti !ii lien ribbed sill, and wool mixtures. Very Mnarl for I ail. Heather mixed raiu'jr weave, silk and wool (Imp slitoh. superior nimlitv: n ai vitic. V? T.P.W. Fail Festival Week of Greater Value Qlv'm No matter to what department your shopping will take you, what you want to purchase, the Festival will be found in full swing. For every department is ready with Festival offerings. Greater than any previous week of Fall shopping offerings. . ! 1 : . x i! v i f. SHT"- ) J i Uf ( I e 1 X 'i i.'H r-'V! I i is,1'. ' H ip2 Tfiere Is a Way to Do Ail Things Practice it now during this Fall Festival Week. You want to save on clothes get quality first; pay what quality's worth; X add right style; You've got 1 HART SC1IAFFNER & MAUX CLOTHES Your Overcoat and Suit is here. Copyright 19-0 Hurt ScInfTner & Marx Infants' Carriage Rohes Imported Jmiiini-Hii Hillt, plnU, bluo anil plilte, (lie finest of I lw fin". Infants' Coats I s.'i'llrnl Values K(l.7. Mailt" of lino wool, liaml embroidered, mudo Willi capo collar. lixecllont iiliio nt K.H.7.1 - Infants' Sweater Sets 'onsist ing of a nip, sweater ninl lcggins. All colors; . -I In 4n. Quality goods, l ivoclh lit Values lit 9ft.AU. Infants' Bootees Offering liolh short, ami knee length; col ors whito, hlwu anil pink, of tlio flncNt mil Ici'liilH. I ('c!li nt iilni" in SI.LT, Xtra Special! Cape and Kid Gloves Cleaning up a limited lot of oiMs ami ends of excellent kid gloves in the liglit and heavier weishtn. Values running originally as liitili as Xtra Siie"iiil SI. 79 Black Kid Oxfords Goodyear welt soles, low heels, repre senting; the very newest in oxfords. New l ull I'l'ice :J9.00 Black Kid Pumps Turn soles, with baby French heels, rep resenting the very newest In Fall I'tunpa. New l ull Price iitt.OO Brow 11 Calf Oxfords Ciooilyear welt soles, low heel, siiiure toe, this is the last word In Oxfords. New l ull J'rice :.()( Black Kid Pumps I'lexilile soles, French heels, two strap. You'll Hire this very in-at 'puiap. New 1 nil l'liif SUU Girls' Elastic Hose Full length h'K. elastic lilibed and good, strong loot; 35c value. Basement Special lite Boys' Tuff Hose Not made merely to sell, but to give ex cellent, service. Heavy ribbed, all sizes, luiscincnt Special lilc Men's Heavy Underwear Slightly soiled but still good and warm. Nearly nil sizes in the big lot offered. Villous Sl.lll; Two Piece ibSc -r..- -- ' J MILLIN r - i n 1 .V i IVjI ill , A i .. ( ' ii . A mm A stroll through our newly opened Millinery department re veals interesting fashion quirks in the exclusive Millinery. One step inside this department and you find yourself com pletely surrounded by the loveliest, most alluring chapeaux that designers, Parisians and Americans, have ever before been, in spired to create. We mention herein but a few of the excellent offerings and ex tend you a most hearty invitation to visit t his new department. A very nice select Ion In this class of lints Millinery Priced at $ 1.50 Millinery Priced at 86.50 The offerings In this cluss of hats com. prise chick shapes of soft felts, varied colored velvets and duvelyn, luoilistly but neatly trimmed. The sport hats route In thU most reasonable class of millinery. We are of ferini? the new shade of purple, orange, henna and the popular Sand-lHivetyno. Offering a li.niitrtt selection Nation Hats at fti.OO Hinds the excellent materials Used In the make-up of lln.se hats tlu-y are, as a whole, worthy of the nation's attention from the viewpoint of adaptable styles lint l'.xccHent Millinery Hals Priced at 810.00 Quite notable and interesting are the new hats of velvet with their large shapes ind terned back brims which circle half the length of the shape. They strike a new nole in the winter modes and are attracting much attention from the wo men who know. GOOD NEWS FOR EVERY MAN IN EASTERN OREGON A R Pine ousm g b ale of irts , Beginning Tuesday morning and continuing all week we will offer the great est collection of the Finest Brand New Silk Shirts ever assembled in this Big Store. There will be great numbers of shirts of the most famous makes, such as Manhattan and other nationally known makes, whose shirts are made to fit and give entire satisfaction. They bear the makers guarantee and our own guarantee. 1 These fine Silk Shirts are made of the very best grades of Jacquard, Jersey Crepe de Chine, Radium, Broadcloth Silk and Climax Crepes in a most pleas ing variety of stripes, figures and the popular solid colors. These Shirts will satisfy discriminating men. They are values that would have sold a year ago for $15 to $20. YU. FESTIVAL OF GREATER VALUE GIVING 1 i n txtensive dfloivffie of Kayser and Phoenix Si! Underwear Both these two makes of Silk Underwear is economical to buy and wear. The first cost is not high and the ease with which the garments may be-laundered at home eliminates laundry bills and ale-o insures longer service. The fabric, being knitted, is elastic and yet retains its shape. It is less liable to tear, because it "gives" with each body movement. These and other features have made the use of silk underwear quite univer sal. KAYSEPv MARVELFIT ITALIAN SILK KNICKERS AND PANTALETTES Priced According to Quality fro m $450 to S7.50. Will not rip or .tear, best for fit, wear and economy, cost no more than the ordi nary kind; Knickers in flesh color only; Pantalettes in black and navy blue. Phoenix Silk Vests In Richelieu rib, bodice tops with rib bon shoulder straps, shown in flesh col or. Triced $3.00 KAYSER MARVELFIT ITALIAN SILK VESTS in bodice top, band top. and also with no straps, which makes them especially desirable for par ty wear. We are showing these Kascr vesta in the different qualities in plaia weaves as well the more elaborate embroidered oikv. I'ricctl accord ins to quality from Jl;!.;5 Phoenix Silk Bloomers , To match the vests, well reinforced with elastic at waist and knee, Riche lieu ribbed. Priced $4.75 , rf.irv;S cicvrisT Di.r.w.Hrvr store Jno Rqoples Warehouse, OmUSH PEOPLE BEGIN (In l!Y EAKLK I'. KKI'.VKS laoruutioiial .News Service Staff t'orrepondent.) LO.Vpn.V, l.ct, 3. - The KuKllMt, ' ate besitnning to "see Knglnnd." The motor bus and charabanc threaten to; make the Union a tourist In Ills own I land. Only the third-class passenger and the "lower middle cluss" have been liUfen by t lie travel bus as yet, but that Is a heginning. and today one can ' nee the unprecedented sisht of ucorei,' ! even hundreds of Kurdish being guided ; about over their own historic towns. 4t-4s difficult, In Kngh..id, to find anyone vho lum, tor instance, visited ftraUoH, that tneecT of till American loiirlHtH, Ho far as Merry Knsland Is com erned, Will Koycrs may he l ight In Intimating that of the two he ia the William who is famous. The upper class Ihigllshman bowls through his country to some hotel with tin. cryptic "A. A." or "U. A. C " sign above its door, tostitslng that the nu tomuhittv associations have nlven It a report equivalent to a liradstreet "AA 1." He and his family go to their favorite seaside resorts and to the In land watering places by train or mo tor, and the musty castles are lumped in his mind lis something to lie unload ed on American millionaires, and devil, take the guide books. Hciienth his notice also are the bs and charabanc routes which bavej grown by mir icie in two years until j they make a network or Kns'land. The upper clas;i Kngbshman doesn't ride; buses, nor have recourse to tired' sight neelng cars that crowd nearly folly persons into u gasoline wagon i that races twenty end (went" -' ej mlle en hour thrmteh rural EmM; -ml. lntenirhan Network )':tl h's "inferiors," so to speak, are not Csistidioiis. They are maki'ig motor mid bus lines rich. and. doubtless, swelLing the dividends which permit the Mwank of the land to roll along in Koll -Koyoo style. The ordinary folk, of tho particular linc;ve. have discovered that they can hop i bus approximately at their door step and ride high In the air, overlook ing liigh brick walls, twenty miles or so, for a shilling or two. v And that. If they" desire, tiny eaa take a sniail por tion of "lusgaue" and spend days transferring from one Pps-line to an other and from one charabanc trip to line t her. traveling always through Kns'land's most beautiful country and vi-a'.iug historic and pieturesuue spots for the sight of which Americans must Pay hundreds of thousands of dollars. I h en the small towns have become great motor centers. One hotel bulle tin boards of such towns ns. Oxford, iivv.tr-( f"-ie"'rb"-y( r'.".'"ee, fra Combe small towns nil are lists of ten if a d-i;en re pa rat charabouc ; towns, ntid one district into contact tups to points of interest some of them provUbng a swing of as much as ltlO mih's on a single day's journey. At any point of interest three or four of these giants of the road are to 1-e found parked at almost any tune ef the day. Along the main roads they travel literally in droves. Kvery suburb of London has its two or lhre; bi garages whose chief business is charabanc trips, varying in cost from seventy-fie cents to 4 for a full twelve-hour journey. "See- Kngland First" Simultaneously the two-deek motor bus. the universal means of transpor tation in ljotidon, where there are comparatively few street-car lines, have crept further and further Into the country. Country lines have been es tablished. These connect w ith the city l'"e TV "T-'V.i ,uc I'.....i..g uul Kngland Into closer contact with the with another, lust as the growth of in j terurban electric lines did in America ! twenty years ago. Pemenstr iting touring poss'.bilitii s of these fixed route bus lines a news-! ; paper reporter has traveled f rom j I lKiver to Blackpool, diagonally across' j Kngland, a distance of about 350 miles' in five days at a cost of $10 in fares, entirely on bus top. Connections over; 'a greater distance doubtless can be , made by charabanc. In tho old days the traditional tour. 1st was the Yankee school marm. w ith her guide book and spectacles. Today whole Knclish families, fol lowing an elected leader, who reads! aloud from a "tupenny"' guide book, may be seen everywhere, brushing up , en English history. Ture cockney is i spoken in the land of Shakespeare by ) a horde of native invaders, who have : ..dopteii liie coefcau ' ) iugland i First." I n YEARS M "1 (From the Dudy East Oregonian, October 3. 1S13.) l'cars are active and numerous aro;:ml mountain sheep camps. Three were killed the other day by the herd ers for T. J. Tweedy and E. H. Clarke, on Meadow t reek ranse. Miss Jessie Nye left on Monday night's train en a visit to friends in Portland and Tacoma. W'm. I.!oyd, a leading stockman of Putter Creek and also a fruit farmer of the Milton neighborhood, was in the city Monday. .Mr. l.h d was on his way to p-itter Creek, from his fruit farm near Milton, where he resides. Prank Fra-.icr left on Monday night's train for Pnrt'and nnt whn he returns will bring" home his re markable swift little pacer, Chehalis, w hich he "will winter in Pendleton. The ! colt is entered in two more races In the valley, which take place thiweek, aim no doubt will acquit himself with ci eon. i l..l, - ... ... mull ,i meieor leu northea.1 of Pendleton, illuminating the heaven for a moment. It looked like an ait light traversing the horizon, althougl much more, brilliant. con-ox chop coxnmoxs bad WASHINGTON'. Oct "i it v- o 1 Cotton crop conditions are worse I,'""" "l Miuuar period in the his j tory of the cotton growing industry, j according to the report of the depart j luent of agriculture. ' 1 -rS I'lnimiM-nt Muscnlar Strength can not exist where there is not blood strength. Young men giving atten tion to muscular development should h1P W( In m!r.2. IIooJ. oaiimparil la givea blood strength and buiida the whole system.