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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1922)
tMLl EAST OEEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, JANtXRY 25, 1922. EIGHT PAGES 1 r v. ( News Notes of Pendleton lias Narrow Kj-aip Engineer Frank I'.ke, or La C ramie. acting of Kiehard Barthelmess anil , produce. The store rviil be ready for classes the picture as on or tne cut- Dusineti in l days. ' an employe if the o.-W. II. X., h id wanning nuuimi puiurcs ul an mue. , , a very narrc.-. u front death yes- ' S'vt Man-toe Uiiw. terday mornm?. He was in the gar- n Tonsils Hemmed. A license to wed has been issue,! age. witn the uoors rlused. g;v;:ig hit"! Hev. J- T. LaUose, pastor of the ;lt the office ut the office of the c-ar ail overhauling and tinkering w ith Naxerene church, underwent an qp-.county clerk to Guy U Arbogast. a the batteries. Some escaping gas from wation for the removal of bis tonsil Istorkman of lcittor. Ore., and Hazel the ear overcame him and he started wtenlay. The operation was per- JlcFarlaud, a titudent of Athena, w for the 'house mid lost consciousness formed at his home. 713 Calvin street. just as he reached the house. Two Ho is resting easily. Vcailu-r Is W armer nurses were at the house and revived J 1 . him Just before a physician arrived. funeral of Mr Matlock It was announced that he had had a ! The funeral of the late Mr. Ami very narrow em-ape as a very quick j Matloc will be held tomorrow ui'ter donth will result from this gas unless noon at 2 o'clock from the Matlock medical Jiid is at ham!. (Veil Pear- ! residence on Garden street. Hov. Al- The ice in I'endleton streets' was melted today by warm rain followed by intermittent sunshine. 'The nurxi- JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE i 11 r n m m- ! - pfniujctovs i j QUALITY SERVICE AHIXG- STOUE. JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE THE END OF OUR t : , - . . i - . . re r January Clearance Sale mum today is 4. the minimum U and fred Lockwood, pastor of the Church i of the Uedeemer, will officiate. : Bon, a mcchinist in the O.-YV. shops. whs alsti!t the place ut the time and aided in Mr. Pike's recovery. Mr. Pike lived in Pendleton many years Local Student Honored. ago and has friends here. p jons Tcrjeson, of Pendleton, a stu- j dent at University of Oregon, has been Pcture PinlvO. -chosen as a niembt-r of To-ko-lo, That Richard Barthelmess, star of sophomore honor society. The sb . the I. W. Griffith picture "Way ciety is made up of students who, aro Down East." which played at the representative of the various men's Alta theatre a few months ago, has fraternities. , equaled if not surpassed his remark-, ' able performance in his next starring vehicle, 'Tol'able David," a coming) Rlvoll Theatre attraction, is the opin ion of Carl Peringer, and E. J. Morris. Mr. Peringer has but recently return- I ed from New Vork where he wit- ! nessed "Tol'able David in that city and says he considers it the best picture of the' year. Mr. Mor ris has Just returned from Portland where last week he visited the Liberty theatre and "Tol'able David" was the attraction, Mr. 'Morris praises the i the barometer 23.su says Major Lee Mooj'house, observer. Grc'.-u firwery to Oia-n Pendleton Is soon to have a new grocery store. It will be the Green Grocery and will be located in the room now occupied -by Snow & Day- i imi un vuun sueei. ine siore will uc at the Rialto I owned by V. YV. Green, county school superintendent, and F. C. (Happy) Graham, who has been in the grocery business here for four years. Mr. Green will not give his personal atten tion to the business. The, new store will specialize in vegetables, f ruits,ain3 loi loi-ioi im-ioi ; oi ioi-ioi iui- Take Advantage of the Warmer Days and ' ORDER A.SACK OF FANCtf YAKIMA '' Potatoes at. ..; $2.50 per cwt. "Wasteless Buy the Best" v. Pendleton Cash Market, Inc. 301 E. Court Street Phones 1 01 PIUVATE EXCIIAXGB CONNECTS BOTH DEPARTMENTS - -tOIIOI-TCI TOI 101 I01-T0I-I0I 101 I Of tii lal Appointment Mado P. D. Hall, acting agent for the O. W. It. & X. f r the past few months, has received his official, appointment as Pendleton station agent. Mr. Hall, who succeeds T. F. O'ririen, came to Pendleton from Huntington. Petition Is Denied The Supreme Court has denied the petition for rehearing the case of Kirk vs. The Farmers Union Grain Agency and the case of Cannon vs: the ."ency. Announcement of the denial was received in Pendleton today. Mi-n Arc Poui.-d Over. Matt Allen. Fred Macumber and R. E. Pierce were bound over to await the action of the grand Jury when they were arraigned before Justice Joe H. Parker yesterday. The charge against the trio is larceny. They are said to have stolen a car and then to have stripped it of its parts. Senior Avprill Hotter. A letter from E. F. Averill, who is at Corvtillis where he was called last Saturday on account of the illness of his fnthei, gives the information that !he elder Mr. Averill is appreciably better than he was t the time h's son arrived. E A' erill is expected to return home the laticr part of this wet k They've Invited Pendleton. Invitations from the National Riv ers and Harbors Congress to the city of Pendleton to have ' delegates In attendance ut tbo meeting of that body in Washington, IV C. March I and 2 have been received by Mayor G. A, Hartivmn. Action will be taken on the invitation tonight by the coun cil, the mayor Indicated. Winter Hats Xo Place For Show . Because of the destruction of Happy Canyon; caused by the cavo-ln of the roof (lining the deep snow, Pendleton automobile dealers are at it loss to know where to hold their annual auto mobile show, held each March in for mer years by the Pendleton Automo bile Dealers Association. , No plans have been made for a show this year but a meeting of the dealers is to take place soon. There is some dis cussion among dealers regarding the holding of a show, the cars to be din played In the show-rooms of the vari; oils firms. Is at hand. Many good things are here on the BARGAIN COUNTER for your choosing during the inal days of this great Clearance Sale. Come tomorrow and get your share. Lot-1 Women's, Pumps and Oxfords, January Clearance Sale $1.00 Lot 2 Women's Pumps and Ox- fords, January Clearance Sale $3.00 Lot 3 Women's Pumps and.Ox--fords. January Clearance Sale $5.00 Lot Towels, January Clearance Sale 16c Lot Towels, January Clearance Sale 39c Cretonnes, January Sale' Clearance 1-2 Price Lot Purses, January Cleararice . Jale $3.45 Lot Dress Goods, January Clear ance Sale $1.85 Remnants, Cotton, Wool, Silk 1-2 Price Lot Neckwear, January Clear ance Sale...;..... 1-2 Price Lot Women's Gloves, January Clearance Sale $1.85 Lot Women's Gloves, January . Clearance Sale 60c Lot Corsets, January Clearance Sale .................. $5.93 Lot Corsets, January Clearance Sale ........... ......... $2.50 Lot Corsets, January Clearance ;Sale $3.50 Children's Outing Sleepers, January Clearance Sale. 98c Knit Caps, January Clearance Sale"............... 49c Scarfs, January Clearance Sale . 49c Sheets, January Clearance -Sale $1.49 Silks Reduced 20 per cent, Jan uary Clearance Sale. "Winter Underwear Reduced 20 ; ner cent., January. Clearance Sale. ' . ; One Lot Package Goods, Prices Cut Deep, January Clearance Sale. . -; . In fact everything reduced ex-, cept contract goods. To real- ly appreciate the values rome and see them. 1 ,:" - -.; ' .' Pendleton Voolen Mill Blankets, Special Offer. Soiled Blankets 20 Per Cent Off. , . Just a ! few .fine Pendleton Woolen Mill Bed Blankets that have, been soiled by handling, 20 per cent off regular price.' One Lot Silks, $2.93 Such silks as Satin, Canton; -. Silk Repp, - Calpe ' Satin and ! Fairy pun in all wanted shades for street and sport wear, These silks regularly priced from $4.00 to" $5.00 the yard,- and' .must -be closed out at, the yard. $2.95 Lot "Street Dresses, January -Clearance Sale . . $J1.95 Lot Party, Dresses, January . . . Clearance Sale . , $25.00' " IMPROPERLY CLOSING OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF WffitTER HATS AT 1 I'ord Produi-tion fimit Ford production reached the mil lion mark in 1921, according to a re port Just received by the Simpson Auto Co. ' The Ford factory and es sembly plant turned out 1,05(1,740 carH, trucks and tractors, the retail y.iiWx being over li million besting 'the 1920 record of 104,213. The sales show, a remarkable Increase In the number of enclosed Fords sold. The price redaction bring the curs following prices: Touring, $443; run about, $414; coupe. '$'0: Sedan, imfi Statistics - Compiled Indicate ' That Many Eat Wrong Toods Even in Better Class Homes. '. n By WALTETt C. MEttltlTT. International News Service Staff Correspondent, , l'lTTSHrKGlT, Pa!, Jan. 25. Do children, even of better class families, eat the right kind of f6od to properly to the!nourish them? Evidentlylhe children eat enough, out oiiieiui. siausncn crsmpilcd by thoc.ty board of educa The same table Indicates a child on the average should have a monthly gain in weight as follows; Five to eight years, 6 ounces; eight to eleven, 8 ounces, and eleven to fourteen, 12 ounces. T !Al r i: r Tirin Tin imta lAUdiiUDiiy ;T ; j ' I. N. S.) - X chassis, f 3S0: truck, $430; all prices noil uoui being F. O. B. Dclroit. ' LESS THAN HALF OF THE WHOLESALE COStS , . ' ........ ..- , . YOU CANNOT FIND' A, BETTER WAY TO SAVE, THAN BY TAKING ADVANTAGE OF THIS . CLOSE OUT Forum IjUii1iciii I'ri.lay. The weekly forum luncheon of the Pendleton Commercial Association, ordinarily held Thursday at noon, has been moved forward until Friday at noon this week. Tim clause in dates will enable tlis " moiabcrtdiiii of the association to meet with tbe Ore gon beekeepers who will bold ytnlr state "round-up" here Friday and Satuiduy; The luncheon will be given tions at the French restaurant, and Fred J)r, H. B. Burns, d'reotor of the de ISef nion, county agent, will preside, partment of public hygiene and one of The program will be turned over to tne city's most prominent physicians. the beekeepers, and speakers on the Bves out the official figures resulting program of the convention will speak BEE HIVE Pendleton, Ore. apww mwmrmam mam I four of , the big grade schools In the east end section, where the average family is In comfortable to wealthy circumstances; show that 10 to 15 per cent of the children of these schools nre under-nourished. City health phys'.cinns are seeking the cause. , The schools rtre Friendship, Liberty, Khakei-peare and Osceola, where the children attending come from honjes enjoying the a eruge or above the av- erntje of American home living condl- WAflHINOTOX, Jan. Press.) It Is foolish for the world to worry over artificial gold or Its ef :m noon the economic situation. This Is ttip balm of the United States Oeologioal Survey to soothe the uni versal disturbance in the minds of economists aroused by the recent an nouncement that a new method of al chemy had been dlspovered. Thn feat cannot be termed impos sible, but it is too costly, the survey states. The process would be far more expensive than the nutural method. The discovery by modern chemistry, the survey says, that many of the Blip. JOK CITOYNKKt MAI15 l-TTZ A i ' CUAMPIOX. N'KW yOIlK, Januury 25. As wo jhnve remarked here In , th column more than onco, Bob Fltssslmmons'was probably . the luckiest heavyweight (I'ntted .oiiatnuiun tnat ever woro tne crown. Fitz, a great hitter, a reiiow wno could take it and keep going, was not what we consider a great fighter, Ha was on the floor in most of his, chair to get him on his feet. fights and won out with luck on his there, had Muher hit him again, no side in nearly every one. jwoiild have won, or had his seconds ltulln had him dizsy and reelinif, thjngs in the first round ifnher would and alter Fill won he thought It was have been the winner, and because of the thirteenth round instead of the such victory would have met Sullivan alxth. . "' v ' Instead of letting Jim Corhett get the Tom fiharkev had htm out In the easy prey. Muher would have beaten first round at. Coney ,Iland, the be". Sullivan Just as easily as Corbett did posed elemental substances are In fact farson Cltv, bleeding and dliaiy, and for he wasn't even knocked down dur- compounds, has revived the age-old hope of alchemy, which has drawn men into its lurliig grasp for centur ies. There in ho dantitr, however, ac cording to the government scientists, that artiflciil gold, ir it can be made, will ever be anything but a curiosity of the chemical laboratory, . at the luncheon. Dance and Basket Social , ;;; ; ; ': .; .GIVEN BY THE ', ' . : -' K ' UNITED SPANISH WAR VETERANS AT THE PENDLETON ROD AND GUN .; . 'CLUB HOUSE T : ..' ' ' ' -. " ' - - 'J ' -, Friday Evening January 27 . , EVERYBODY WELCOME. Proceeds used toward entertaining delegates. at - , Staie Convention held here.' Ilonvei- FxpoKPH Ulinst'lf. Pendleton has a beaver. , He )b not in captivity, and he has no desire to be molested, but yesterday he Is said to have got into a little difficulty. He was seen on the ice on the river in the vicinity of the Alain street bridge. One of the men in the party thinking the beaver was said to have hurled a stone nt Mr. Heaver, and that surprised animal caught the' missile in the short ribs. He hoisted his tall in the air, and 2 when the man w that oroafl Ej trowel-like appendage, he prayed Jithat he had not Injured the beaver, R: because the animals are protected under federal laws, and anyone mo- 4 llesting them is liable to a heavy fine. from the Irtvesl'gatlon mode under his direction In the Friendship school 621 pupils were examined, 322 boys and 299 girls, nnd 108," or 1 per cont were found to be 10 to 15 per cent under weight for their ages and height, according to United States standard tables. In the Tjiberty school, where 591 were exam ined, 312 boys and 29 girls. 101, dr IT tr.ni- nv,t 'ftwrt under normal. Tn the badger, W et,i,.- rhi inn wr rmmln ed 50fi hnvs nnd 214 girls, nnd 74, or 17. per cent, were found to be under normal, nnd In the Osceola school where 475 were examined, 250 boys nnd 225 girls, 95. 'or 20 per cent, were found under normal. , I li l Mostly VnoVr Weight. The under-welght girls, in each in stance outnumbered the boys and the thk ice tests were taken or nupiia r.-om ine He has flrnt to-eighth grades, the elementary The beaver left - tracks on mm Ri.w on ine nun iavo, itj , f iff n nh trpp n Inn ip lh mill school limit. race for several months. i The Unltea states nearni fftannam - ' 1. , !i J.ll n Alt I.l nr 1 iirrt jXaDlCH UHCU ll!UCiLl.e n. . vii'i'" years, thirty-nine to fortv-slx Inches tall, 'should weigh thlrty-ro'n- to mr. tv-elght pounds. . Showing the varla. th,n for the v.-are five to fourt JS-v th .tables follow: Height Vailaiion 111 litiiici. Other News of Thl i Department on Page 5 Be Comfortable, Stop Eczema Torture Nov) , WithZemo Thousands of Eczema suITerer heve found welcome relief from their burning torture in Zemo, the antiseptic liquid treatment for 11 skin afflictions. Zemo relieves Tetter and rashes, eliminates pim- , pies and blackhead , keeps the akin clear and smooth. All DuggisU. Age 5 6 7 ' 9 10 11 12 13 . 14 Age li tfoyu 30-45 3!M 3-r,2 42-S4 4r,--i 47-BO 4S-6.1 BO-84 r3-lff Sr-74 saving Flta, next. Corbett had him on tho Shnrkev went out the and Maher, Insteiiu 01 vorneu, wouin V i - '..ft: 1 lhave become the heavywe'ght cham- floor, at plon.,. This defeat broke T'etev s nenn, Wine Is poured first into the host's' glass so that he may taste It and as sure himself of Its quality beforo of fering it to his guests. if Jliif hadn't trlod to make a show of Fit he would have won. Choynski had him on tho floor, dead to tho world, when the bell and the oops helped him out. I'eter Maher had him stiffened in Now Orleans, ready for the final wal lop, when Joe Choynski pulled the bell with the round still forty seconds to go. ; - r Most of our heavyweight ' champs never sat down in a fight until tho battle in which they lost their titles. Jim Jeffries, although he met every lug the fight. When he threw up the towel. In the twelfth round he simply pulled off his gloves nndsaid: "He has th divll ,tn him nnd I can't bate him." Some then labeled Peter , a , oulttor. We will be more charitable to the old chap and say he became dis couraged and stopped. t Maher' was dashed off his pedestal and his fol lower shook their heads and wept. Toronto ha now 100.000 telephone, or one to every five persons men, women and children .In Ihe cits',, . , . r?i.zz 1 1 in. rnnimTCTsTrj fiirl 39-49 3-r.2 42- 54 43- 56 47-59 4S-63 50-116 53-9 65-71 Wright 'nrlnt!on in I'ouiuls. X (10 ' Hoys 35- 4S !- 55 37- 62 44- 8 9 " 49- 77 54- 91 7-10." R2-1I3 71-13S Jj-163 Girls 34- 35- s; '. ',- It I 41- 49- 7f. 53- Kfl K-10!i You wouldn't put on hobbles 1 to run a foot race fa. . Ther why load up on handi caps for the day's work? A good deal of food, unwisely chosen, does weigh the body down and clog the digestion, and dull the brain. , , Why put on the hobbles ? - Grape-Nuts is a breakfast or lunch-thne dish for those wo want food efficiency, and mind and body efficiency. ' Grape-Nuts satisfies and nour ishes. It delights the taste. It is ready to serve whenever you are ready to eat. And it digests easily, quickly and completely leaving : no handicap of heaviness and drowsiness.. .... ' . Grape-Nuts is the food for health and action. "There's a Reason" Made by Postura Cereal Company, Inc. Cattle Creek, Mich. .heavy of note, never klHsed th can vass until the day he met Johnoi. at !, Heno, ' .' ". . . 11 . 1 '' .. . . ... i . 1 Here Is what Otto Floto has to Say regarding the Maher-Fit go: !' ',, The men met. at New Orleans in Ihe Olympic CJub, and, in the f lint round Muher clipped Flu on the chin, hang ing hint over the rope dead to the' world, or apparently so. ' The round had still forty seconds to go when Joe Choynski, one of the seconds In Fits' corner, reached over and hit the bell, and Alex Greggalns ran across the ring, picking Hob up In his arms and -carrying hfin to his corner while JiMV erce Duffy was counting Fits out. Fits was over a minute, for when the bell rank for the second round 'Greggalns had to lift Bob from his Right 4 - I " r ! 61-119 J F.OR is IN R B I TATI 9 KS "j 70-129 V 12