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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1921)
1 PAGE TWO DAILY EAST OEEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 15, 1021. TEN PAGES - ! a '5 . .. 1 .. ' Seamless Silk and Fibre gllli! Hose 131 BOI mm yith clock, semi-fashioned; col ors, black with white clock and havana brown with white clock. You'll say splendid at.... $1.00 100 Per Qt. New Wool Comforters, Our Price $8.00 Full size comforters, filled with 100 per cent new wool; cov ered with dainty floral pattern silkoline, with main border of sateen to match center. Special Values, each . ...... $8.00 Specials! From the Lowest Priced Shop The Bargain Basement Miss Spokane House Aprons, ; special at $1.89 Children's Heavy Sweaters at $1.49 Men's Heavy Underwear, unions $1.49; 2-piece .98c Pencil Tablets 4c Heavy Wool Blankets at. $4.98 All Dolls Half Price. SILK UMBRELLAS j Special Values From Jr $5.50 to $19.50 1 Whether the weather be rainy or not KO prepared with one of these handsome new i-i Ik umbrellas. They aro glorious Au tumnal shades of browns, navy, purple and green silk taffetas, some with wldo satin border and such good-looking handles of funcy Imitation Ivory with fancy carving, umber and strap handles, finished with Imi tation ivory ferrules and tips. Lost yeur un umbrella such as these would have cost you from $10 to f:fi. Now you can choose one from our handsome as sortment at from 5.50 to 1U.50 M . Dollar for Dollar Value Overcoats m to $60 Today economy is the watchword and de pendable value for every dollar spent is what everybody wants. Our overcoats always meet the public's needs because we have never varied in giving the utmost in style, material and fit and for the least money. HI m J'-n f ! UJIBERS1UP3Y0DR SORE STIFFJOINTS WEATHER exposure and hard work bring pai.13 and aches in muscles and joints. Have a bottle of Sloan's Liniment handy and apply freely. Penrt'atesuitliout nibbing. ! You will find at once a comforting sense of warmth which will be followed by a relief from the soreness and 1 ;u;7ncss of aching joints. Also relieves rheumatism, sciatica, iiraleia. sprains and strains. 1 or forty years pain's enemy. AsIc our neighbor. At all drujsts ix, ivc, J1.4U. PLAN TO GIVE MARRiED IlKEMGAi MS IS II) IN SOUR, ACiD STOrvlACH, TAKE "DiAPEPSIN" Employment Ideas of Detroit Mayor Openly Combatted by Head of Women's League. SHIIIIIIIil M Pi Cosyriaut 1919 Hart SchnTfacr & Man Peoples Warehouse Special Nainsook ''Johoco Brand," an imported cloth is an especially fine nainsook, 40 inches wide, put up in 10 yard lengths in neatly packed boxes; comes in pink, maize and white. PRICED SPECIALLY LOW Box of 10 yards $4.95 Cut by the yard 55c PTNM.1TONS ORTATFST DrPAUT.HI'VT STORE fiePeoples Warehouse, win nr i r pays to t rape" Ksgaaana'ji ucEsaiEaaiisaa "Aunt Marthas Corner Cupboard" A UNT MARTHA used to go to her corner supboard and produce ar ticles of the common, or garden variety that folks never thought about because they were so matter-of-fact. When she told the simple story of these articles, they took on a marvelous interest and new im portance. Every day this newspaper publishes new editions of good "Aunt Martha's Cor ner Cupboard." These are the advertise ments. Each advertisement has an inter esting story to tell. It gives you informa tion about something that w ill make vou happier and more comfortable or save you money. They help you save steps. Even the smallest of the advertisements says a whole lot. I READ THEM ALL FOR YOUR OWN GOOD! (East Oregonlan Special) ATHKN'A, Nov. 15. T'mler auspices llof Atliena-Wi'Mtim American Lesion I Post, Armistice Day was appropriate ly observed in Athena at 10 o'clock I!Y MARGERY REX (Wrimn for International News Service.) NEW YORK, Nov. 15. Mayor "Pape's Dlapepsin" is the quickest, surest relief for Indigestion, Gases, Flatulence, Heartburn, Hournera, Fer mentation or Stomach Distress caused by acidity. A few tablets give almost '.mmedlate stomach relief nnd shortly the stomach is corrected so you can e:t f.ivorite foods without fear. Large I case costs only few cents at drug store. ! Millions helped nnnually. ! on the Athena field a football same ,took place. -between Athena high and Touchet, Athena winning: 46-0. At 2:30 in the afternoon at the hiffh school auditorium a program was given by the Athena and Weston schools and the Ktude Club, with a lurge audience in attendance. An Armistice Hay dance was held in the Legion hall at 9 o'clock. Mr .and Mrs. 11. T. Watts were vlslt- 'ors in rendleton Saturday. Mrs. Itert Ramsay has returned to her home in Athena after visiting rela tits at Condon and Albany. T. '. Ward was in tho city from Wtston Saturday. Mrs. Nettle Havis of Mil'.on has been visiting ut the Ueorgo Geiklng home. r. V. I). Watts was a Fendloton I visitor Wednesday. I Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Uu worth have ; moved into the Robert Beckham resi lience on 3rd and College streot3. Mrs. W. O. Read entertained the Sunshine Club ut her home south of .Athena Tinii'scay afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Harder, Jr., and baby daughter or Milton visited rela lives in Athena Wednesdtiy. Williird Forth of Weston Athena' Thursday, Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Hutt and daugh ter Ruth spent the day Sunday ut the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles May on Weston Mountain. Mr. ami Mrs. Richard ThompBon and daughter June and Margaret were in l'enilieton Thursday afternoon. ' Tho ladies of the Methodist Episco pal church will hold a bazaar in the basement of the church on Thursday. Iiecember 8th. A chicken dinner will be nerved at (i p. m. Mrs. Nettie Whetstone of Pendleton will make an official visit to Mignon ette, Rebekah Lodge No. 8ti Monday evening. A banquet In her honor will be held at 6 o'clock. Mrs. W. li. Taylor visited relatives in Pendleton Thursday. Mr. nnd Mrs. Dtiming have return ed to Athena to reside. Mrs. Charles lietts was hostess to the W, C. T. U, Wednesday afternoon. I A most Interesting session was when Mrs. A. V. May of Pendleton gave a I report of the National conference at San Francisco. .Mrs. Hetts was assist ed by .Mrs. Clarence Tubbs In serving I refreshments. I M. I j. Watts, a member of the Athe Inn hunting party in tho Starkey l'rai Irio district, returned home Tuesday evening with a fine huck deer. Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Read and Mrs. I Frank Coppock and baby daughter were visitors in Pendleton Saturday. Wesley Parris has moved down from Idaho with his family and will farm the Parris hind northwest of Athena. Arthur Jensen left Thursday af ternoon for Denmark where lie will visit with his mother. .Mrs. Jennie Cross, Verva Gross and .lennamae Read were visitors in Pen dleton Saturday. Mrs. Rex Hopper has accepted the chairmanship lor Athena of the un nu:il Red Cross roll call and member ship drive, which began Friday und will continue until Thanksgiving. A meeting of Mignonette Rebekah Lodge No. St; was held Tuesday even ing. Five new members were taken into the lodge. They were Misses Hansen, dries, Christensen and Chan dler, all teachers in the school nnd Kdna l'lnkerton. Mrs. Clyde Sands nnd daughter Miss ; niunche Wilson were in Pendleton ; Sat unlay. Lnder the efficient direction of 'Miss Drake the comedy drama "A .Night Oft" was played by local talent , Thursday evening with great success before un audience that taxed the ca ! naoity of the high school auditorium. I proceeds from the play total $106. 65 and will be used for the improvement of the school grounds. James Coazers. of Detroit, wants :o ' take married women out of office and simultaneously remove loafers from park benches. This is his proffered solution of the present problem of unemployment. While many men are out of work, numbers of married women are earn ing good salaries. Whether or not apportioning one salary to a family or giving up a married woman's Joe to a sinele man would be feasible has aroused some discussion. Miss Rose Schneidermann, head of the Woman's Trade I'nion LeaB'ie, questions the advisability of the plan, while Dr. Kurolph M. Binder, profes or or sociology at New York Unlver sity, is more in sympathy with Mayor Couzen's ideas. '"I am opposed to the idea of oust ing these married women from their Jobs to make way for idle men," Miss Schneidermann declared. "The argument that they may not (have to) work is no more sensible than, to say that there are many mar ried men who don't have to work. "Women's work as housewives and mothers has not been recognized or paid, and until the State does offer such recognition wny should not women have the right to seek employ ment and be self-supporting If tney want to? "Mnrrled women have as much right to jobs and independence aa single men have." How Dr. Minder V iews Case We were wondering if some of the park bei.ch idlers mlzht not be the husbands of the married women with the good jobs, and If a wife's success In business doesn't often stultify a man's desire to achieve. With these questions wo approached Dr. Binfier. "There is a good deal in the Idea that a couple often does not get r.hcad in the world when both work," he paid. "Married women ought to he sup ported by their hrslmmls, In any nor mally constituted society. "It should bo a man's job to look was In out for his wlte and nis ennuren. ' Any society In which a married woman han to work presents an abnor mal Industrial condition. "Women who look after their homes are amply employed. Houses require plenty of work to be presentable and comfortable homes. "But I believe that there are' few women working who don't have to be wage earners. If a married woman needs her Job she should be allowed to keep it. It would not be rlsht to take it away from her and give it to a single man who might be a 'bum' nnd not deserve It, nor be ablo to fulfill the requirements ns well as the woman al ready In the position. "That wouldn't be good for employ ers or employes. "As for the married woman who works for mere pin money or clothes money to get finery with which to stir her neighbors to envy she ought to be spnhked. Have You Kidney or Bladder Trouble ? READ THIS: Mailers, C.t!. "I ufT?ril for three years with catarrh of the Madder, having tneil every rcmedv I hoarit of. but with out relief, l iiiaily I saw Pr. Pierce's Anuric uiivcmse.l ami, like a ilrowninR man crabbing at a straw, I thought I would try it also, which I did with prcat success, as it relieved me almost imme diately, before I h.id taken .ill of the first package, so I continued, and would say to all those suffering from their kidneys or excess uric acid, try Lr Pierce's An urie Tablets and suffer no longer! I have tre:it faith in Or. Tierce's remedies." S. P. Hensley. Your health is your most important asset. So why not write Dr. Pierce, pres ident Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, X, and receive confidential medical advice, free, m soaJ 10c for a trial pkg. tabku. Have Regular Spending llace "If women earn money they feel they have the right to spend it. Then a husband with a salary-getting wife feels that he is freer to spend, too. Result they both spend to the very limit of their resources. "There is nothing left. They have no right to live that way. "If a woman decides to marry she should be willing to have children and care for her home. "The pioneer women of this country raised big families, worked for those families, and conserved the result of the husband's labors." Miss Sclineldermaim's Ojnnlon But, In opposition to Dr. Binder's theories, Miss Schneidermann empha tically states: "If society women want to work, they also have the right. It is good for people's souls to have steady oc cupation. Of course, they don't have to work as far as finances are con cerned but rich men don't have to go down to offices and take up profes sions either, except for the satisfac tion and self-respect they get out of honest endeavor. "In many cases where mnrrled women work, when they don't need the money, there are circumstances existing that we don't know about. There may be something behind it. "We have got to have a remedy for Industrial conditions that produce idleness, but the only one so far nnd it is only a palliative, not a remedy Is the 'unemployment insurance- proposition now widely used in Europe, where it has been tried and found effective. A small amount Is given the unemployed enough to keep them from being destitute. "That would put the burden on the State and the employer. Without it tho burden Is all on the Individual when busines- is slackened." NEW YORK, Nov. 15. (I. N. S.) "' Over 5,000,000 school children In the I'nited States are suffering fj:om: foal nutrition, aceording to a bulletin is sued by the National Tuberculosis As sociation recently. Malnutrition when . curried far enough becomes plain star vation. The vast majority of tnese millions of little ones are malnourished as a result, not of insufficient food, but of improper food. To relieve the situation a plan for instructing the children In correct health habits has been diversed by the National Tuberculosis Association in co-operation with Dr. W. R. V. Emer-. son, of Boston, the nutrition expert, nnd will be inaugurated in schools throughout the country as soon as i possible. The plan will by no means be an ex periment, since it will follow the lines of the Modern Health Crusade, in which over 6,000, 000. school children of normal weight are now enrolled. Jn determining what children should ba classified as malnourished Dr. Emer son has decided, as a result of long study and careful observation, that a child more than 7 per cent under nor mal weight for his age and height is clearly suffering from malnutrition.' It is on this basis that the estimate of 5,000,000 little ones of school age suf fering from insufficient nourishment in this country has been made. In the plan specially prepared for tho benefit of the malnourished chil dren each child will be required, through his teacher and parents, to keep a "chore record'1 card. This card, which l:i to be submitted ut regular In tervu's to the teacher. Indicates the performance of the following health chores, particularly adapted to the re il'iirenieiits of children suffering from malnutrition: ' . 1. T was weighted this week on tho day checked (x). 2. Besides a good breakfast and the noon r.nd evening meals, I ate mid morning and afternoon lunches, as di rected. 3. I ate only wholesome food today, including vegetables, fruit, and drank ut least a pint of milk, as directed, and tried always to eat and drink, slowly. ., .'..- 4. I drank four glasses of water, some hefore each meal, and drank no tea, coffee nor any injurious drinks. 5. I w ent to the toilet at my regular time. 6. I was in bed lust night ten or more hours, as directed; windows open, 7. I rested lying down not less than twenty-flvo minutes both this forenoon and this afternoon. 8. I played in the fresh air to-day, exercising for the time and in the way directed. 9. I washed hy hands before each meal today. 10. I brusheed hy teeth thoroughly after breakfast and after the evening meal, 11. I took a full bath on each of the days of the week that is checked (x). The chore records will also supply a table showing the normal weight that the child should have. His actual weight und normal weight will both he plotted on the chart on curves, so that children and parents can graphi cally picture the change In physital condition. By doing the eleven chores faith fully four periods of not less than five, ten or fifteen weeks the child becomes a squire, knight or knight banneret and Is entitled to wear the Insignia of the Modern Health Crusade. When he gains normal weight he may earn ad vanced honors by performing stand ard Modern Health Crusade chores and be admitted to the Health Round Table through physical fitness tests. With these chore records will be supplied information on nutrition clinics and nutrition classes for the training of children and mothers. "A malnourished child is an easy subjeect for tuberculosis," says Dr. Charles J. Hatfield, In the National Tuberculosis Association. "We shall try by means of these special chore records and with the co-operation of our State and local tuberculosis 'associations to bring as many of the millions of malnourished children as possible up to a proper standard of health, so that they may better resist the onslaughts of tuberculosis." The announcement that "Yon Yon snn" is soon to appear at the Alto Theatre in this city will bo cheerful news, not only to the candamiviun population, but to all theatre patrons who have a love of good clean comedy presented through the medium of such a charming story as "Yon Yonson." It has been many years since this great Swedish-American play was first pro duced ami its revival comes at a time when there is a great demand for plays of this character. ritfi Cwrti In to 14 DaTS Pniggists refund mony if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Instant y raUevus Uuiug files. f0& 'BIG TIM' MURPHY GETS SIX YEARS IN LEAVENWORTH PRISON CHICAGO, Nov. H. (A. p.) "Big Tim" Murphy, former state represen tative and gang leader and president of the gas workers and street sweepers union, nas Deen sentenced to six years in Leavenkorth, and fined J30.000 by Judge Landis todav for his cart in planning the $CC3.0no Dearborn Sta tion mail robbery last April. MtrroixM.w not r.osrxG axy TIME ' "I don't think anyone ever suffer ed more from stomach trouble and bloating than I have. I had to lay off my run more th in half the time and could get no help from prescriptions or medicine. One of my friends advis ed using Mayr's Wonderful Remedy, which I found to be the greatest rem edy ever put on the earth. I have not lost a day since taking it. It Is worth its weight in gold." It is, a simpln harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the Intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes practically nil stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. At druggist! everywhere.