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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1922)
DAILY EAST ORZGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON,- FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY 13,-1922. TEN PAGES 11! na- PAGE TWO 8 I A t I i i i s I i i ! 1 1 I 5 ATTEND FRIDAY AND SATURDAY - 1 NATWTOM HIGH COST Of UViNG MEN'S CLOTHING MEN'S FURNISHINGS MEN'S SHOES WASH DRESS GOODS ALL DOMESTICS ENTIRE STOCK OF SILKS ALL ART GOODS DRAPERY GOODS WOMEN'S FANCY GOODS J Guilty Profiteers Will Receive 4 Jail Sentences; Secret Set- i' vie Men Lend Assistance. fA I dnv Issued n rder that il foix of ! J f department of Justice, labor and com Blmerce united in an Investigation of WASHINGTON, Jan. J J. ". P.) President Harding and hi cabinet to- 9. th federal eovernment be osed to r. , force down prices. Uuuty promeers will receive Jail sentences. Federal district attorneys trere or dered to hasten prosecutions against buildini; material manufacturers. The high price. Secret service depart ments of labor and Justice are coope rating to convict profiteers. J REOPENING OF (SRMAN 4 It A - A m ti Greatly NEW 1 YOTtK, Jftn.' 1 J.-MT. ''It. ' & ) -Buss, bustling Lower Broadway A i paid no heed to the reopening of H'ria.mnn mnsiiliir headouarters here. CHILDREN'S BEST SHOES i WOMEN'S SHOES ALL BOYS' WEAR TRUNKS, SUIT CASES, BAGS ENTIRE STOCK OF BEDDING WOMEN'S SUITS AND COATS ALL SILK AND WOOL DRESSES . . ; WAISTS, SKIRTS, SWEATERS, ETf ENTIRE STOCK OF MILLINERY C ! The streets resounded with only the E i usual workaday din as Karl Lang J took over his office at No. 11 Broad 8 ; way. f Just a few short months before., 'skyscrapers had thrown to the four 'winds echoes of the trample ' of 5! marching feet and "clamors ' and 2 'shouts for victorious jrenernls. 5j Before 1917 the opening of an lm Blpoitant office of the German em jipire would have been the occasion ' (jltor ostentatious ceremony, and the 4 1 world, and Broadway, would have f I stopped nnd taken notice. A Aftcr-the-war opening of the ' of- 8 Tlie Clearance Sale Extends Throughout the Bargain Basement Also PENDLLlWlS GREATEST DEPARTMENT STORE fiePeoples Warehouse - i WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE Many Clearance Prices 5 Throughout The Grocery Basement fA flees was modest.' Chairs, desks, III 5'lng cabinets and typewriters were 5 j dragged across the hall, from' the Ki Swiss consular offices, dusted otS and put in their places. Broadway y paid no netice. jsroauwuy mu i- piauaea wneii u juijcuui flag was hauled from the flag pole at the top of the building on the B'onening of hostilities. B1 One decoration of the old German K I offices was missing after the rooms Rthad been prepared for occupancy. It iwas an oil portrait of William Hoh Jienzollern, stored with the furniture A In the Swiss offices. It was "gone" 8 MONTANA EXPECTS BIG MNSEKilC AND III INDUSTRY ' StaW . Greeted New Year With Open Arms and Looks For . ward to Rapid Improvements 'i HELENA, Mont., Jan. 13. (I. N. .O Mnmnnti' greeted the New Tear w ith open arms and is looking forward to rapid Improvement over the condi tions which wcro confronted twelve months ago. Jn ngrli'ultutc, In splto of hiirbIiik FOR 1ND1 4 TAKE "DIAPEPSIN' 'Tape's Dlapnnstn" Is the quickest, sureHt relief for IndlgoHtlon, Ouses, Flatulence, lluartbum, Sournest, Fer mnntntinn or Stomach TlHtress caused by tdfllty. A few tablets give almost ,mmei1 ate stomach relict' and shortly the Womnch Is corrected ho you can eat favorite foods without fear, Uirgo case costs only few cents at drug store Millions helped annually. Give That Boy a Chance Start him off .now wltli ft rtwiKchrr Instrument while Im ran Join the band and get a start In Music while the opportunity Is offered. .. Se A. W. LUNDELL at Once. Kasy payments if desired. $200 Given Away Free For $fost C-raeefiil Couple In the Old Stylo YValti. Waltz, Two-Step, BchoWische, Three-Step and other old style fancy danr.oe given by P. J. rowers every Friday night at IJItMlTY HAIX Public Invited Music by McF.lroy Orchestra. prices, efforts are being made with a good acreage Ir, fall grains, to make the most of ft Winter which so fai has brought plentiful moisture to every section and, with deep snows In the hills. Insures an abundance of water for Irrigation throughout the coming season livestock 'prices continue to show littlo Improvement, but many of the larger owners of sheep and cuttle point to tbo lower coh(:i of production, with an abundance of cheap lu.y, little winter feeding this year and lower costs of labor. Several of the far sighted cattlemen are now quietly picking up nil the breeding stock available and tit pre-war prices, basing their Judgment on the proposition that the world must eat, nnd will continue to eat meat. 'While the wool growers, many of whom have not yet disposed of the 1(121 clips, storing them Instead, are complaining of lower prices for wool, they nro also congratulating each other on the passage of the era of lon-a-mionth sheppherders nnd spending half ns much again to feed eal man. Hogs are slowly forging to the front as a source of revenue In Montana, nnd more nro hellig raised In this slate each year. Poultry nnd dairy producta nro finding ready mar kets, and their production la nlso on the Increase. While silver mining has been at u standstill since the white metal drop ped months ago, nnd copper mining has been carried on In only a desul tory manner, if at all, and the bigger operations dependent upon it at Unite, Anaconda and Client Falls did practically nothing during the entire year just closed, one smelter stands out for Us ability to get new business. That was Iho load-silver ' smeller at ' Camera Story of Thrilling Rescue in Gale lifS S:;:'!":'v:r:;i;:'i. lifTT"' ' ' - tJL., L 4,.,: . ft:.,?'" mm f $9 "ST? "5 mi 2 (.:. .-:: ..! BE i LONDON", , Jan. ' 13; (I. N. 8.) Should every fashionable hon.e have a doctor attached to its staff, pre- Otlier flianges, Too. Outside the building there were changes from the pre-war order of things. At No. 45 Broadway, a few doors north of the newly opened offices, the former Hamburg-American Steamship Company had- headquar ters. Today all floors of that build ing are occupied by United States Shipping Board offices, -. Members of the German .cqnaulo staff formerly looked out . of their office windows, across North- River to Hoboken piers, , where German flags flew from the masts of in numerable liners and freighters, . To day some of the same shops ma-V b seen, but there Is no Ciernta,n flag. Ships like the Vaterland, now the Leviathan, now fly the American or pared to give his opinion from the by- some other flag. glenlc point of view of every new. In the old days-the Germans Wel garment that di rtn.inor. t- also to look down at the statue Of Here' the news picture story of the thrilling rescue of mx men from ih i'ren.jli fUhlug smack "Kemo nier8" in a gale at sen, by Cuptaln A. b uanuau oi me riuuaou, uij "-'-"'" "" si'-v-- Lavlne ignoveJ fAshermen'.! signals of distress. His wife's joy at hie proved hcroinm Is ihown In the pic ture on the Jlght. The nioture on the kit, taken irotu the loek of the Hudson, thowt tbt retieue. llltl'11'''" iini" lUUnHil mkliMAtxhlhatl " I TOSHEBT I liiSfP ' os thi ecutf or I i IMkMk - I' ll u ' ! h n'li 'hcpN0 couoh, m BRONCHITIS. fe CCHTA1N3 NO NARCOTIC llilChafiiklalaMsdicineCiJ, I J '?Mi''n l Mofotvirtt PhwnadtM, 9 Mj D Nolnu, low. V. S. A. ' M1f(Cf;tiiuukjaBUruwiac.3a) East Helena, which increased Its iductlon, two refineries have started forcoa n few months ago, doing a big operations In or near tho Cat Creek custom business from many small in-1 field, two more have started at Lew- divided producei-H who shipped there 1 1st on, one at Billings, another Is be Off icials of tho bigger operating I ing completed at Miles City, nnd one when other shut down. smelters nearer, were Officials of the bigger operating companies, Including the Anaconda, however, hold out much bettor pros- peels for tho new year, with the sur plus copper being absorbed, tho Ana condu finding a seady outlet for much of Its production In tho recent an nounced merger with the American UrasM Company end a slight Increase in prlco of copper. New Year's mes sages to several Untie organizations also point out the possibility of resinn ing work at least on a small scale In Iho near future. Montana's newest Industry, oil. Is closing the year with .sixty-nine com mercially producing wells, two In tho Devil's Unsin field, where oil was dis covered, four in the Soap creek field, the last field to be brought in nnd the Cat creek field, with sixty-three wells and a production, with the recent in crease in price to J 190 a barrel, being increased rapidly In addition to pro- each is proposed at Great Falls and Round-Up In addition to the work In the producing oil fields, many tests will be s.arted In "wild cat" territory in the spring and a number of others are now being carried on . PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 13. (I. X. S.l Within a few years, buffalo meat ought to be fairly plentiful In the markets of tho V'nlted States and Canada. With the decision of the Canadian government to kill a certain ' per centage of the" bulls in the buffalo herd it Wulnwiight, In Alberta, comes the announcement that Wenas up and sold because it has outgrown range, a wild, untenced tract of 25.- its range, 000 acres in Washington, between the Yakima and Columbia rivers, is to be turned into a buffalo ranch, with young Indian bucks employed as herd riders. The buffalo that will form the nucleus of the proposed herd are al ready on the range and are a se lected lot from the herd of the "Scotty" I'hillp estate at PJerre, S. P. The rhllip herd Is the largest privately owned herd In the world, i). I), (.iibson will be In charge of the Wenai! range buffalo ranch. The Wnlnwright herd roams a fenced-in pasture of more than 100, 000 acres in the heart of the pioneer trapping ground of the Hudson's Hay company. It numbers 6,000 and is the largest herd in .the world. It has demon strated the fact that buffalo under present day conditions, will Increase at a rate far greater than Is neces sary fur the preservation of the spe cies. So also has the Philip hern, which grew from five calves cap tured wild on the Dakota plains. The Philip herd is now b A medical expert selected to fill such a position could be present at every dress parade and advocate or bun each model, drawing up charts to show its hygienic advantages or disadvantages. Millinery might be subjected to the same inspection, for many women discover that their in creasing tendency to headaches is caused by wearing a hat that is too tight or blocked so that It presses the head in a particular way. "I think the Idea of a doctor for every fashion house is an admirable one," said Miss Olga Nethersole, founder of the People's League of Health. Women and men, too. are far too apathetic with regard to the effect of their dress on health. I should like to see ' not only medical experts on dress houses,' but I should like to see them watching tho work er:! in every large firm and advising the people whaf to buy." "I have never yet heard a woman inquire abdut the hygienic advan tages of a dress," said a prominent member of Luclle's staff, "but It is the fabric, the color and the style mat count in every Instance, women are slaves to fashion." for COLD CKIX FOR LANDLORD XEW YORK, JTan. 13. (I. N. S.) Mariano Marsalisi, agent for nn apurtment house In the Bronx, failed to furnish heat when the thermome ter registered round the near-free-ing point. Haled to court this "warm-hearted" landlord Was sen- ng broken I tenred to five days in a cold cell Iy l city magistrate. His tennants will have heat from now on. , Oermania in trout of the Customs House. The war, aided by a sculp tor's chisel, altered that block of marble to make out of It a repre sentation of the heroism of Little Belgium. Less than three months ago Ferdi nand Koch, generalissimo Of the al lied armies, rode up Lower' Broad way and was applauded to the eoho. Germany's re-entry into intercourse with America Vtas unheralded ' and unnoticed. CHICAGO, Jan. 13. (IT." P.An expansion program, covering k' five year period, today was assured Ktha Field Museum one of Chicago's wSow places. Guarantees were announces which are expected to rank .it foremost among similar Institutions In the world.- President Stanley Field gave 200 000 to clear the building deficit and 6,500 to wipe out the year's operat ing debt. Captain Marshall Field promised $50,qoo a year to be used for Improve ments a nil additions to the exhibits. Arthur B.. Jones pledged J?5;0OO tor an ethnological expenditlon to Borneo, Java nnd Sumatra, under the direction of Dr. Fay Cooper Cole. ' '"' 1 Completioh of the work;' ''of"" pr. Charles B. Cory's "Birds of America." who died without finishing the Work, was assured by a 130,000 donation from Charles'H, Crane. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Olivia Receives a Caller By Allman nwb, IHJPF, I HEARD IM wi.; NIECE, MIS5 OLIVIA, HAS DONS 50 WELL BV DIETING THAT I THOUGHT I'D COME OVER AND CONSULT WITH HER- WAS SHE SUCCESSFUL? 1 I I 5hi 15 JUST PARTAKING OF A Pr 1 M ! OH CHOCOLATE CAKE 1 Tl irV? LITTLE HouRiSHMgM'T now- p W I AND WHIPPED CREAM ! jVoULLEXCUSEj MV,0Uh ,KCO"!fHSHE0frJ I MOW VOU MUST TELL ME I JW- J? come in- - now oo you oo, J 1 4 rv r ii a t$F& mr& hill -won't fT : SZ : ZZt&V pM :Wf;j'v-3 At have some- i-rn i : -Vm tali mm L Jffl JjjjA gfe Ha AJL