Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 4, 1922)
TWELVE PAGES OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE DAILY MARKET NEWS, LOCAL AND GENERAL Including Pendleton Prices and Associated Press Reports DiHT EAST OSEGOKIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 4, 1922. $i. KScSX ' e-N Record Set I'vr i-'i'istvf industrials chared in Bund MoituhkIii j the movtineni, which was iuwt cun- ,VIV YORK, March 4. (A. P.) vpicuoua In low grade transportation. Yesterday's bund market established j foreign oil, rubier, motor accessor a record in point of activity and; ies. sugars and utilities comytiiliiK the breadth for the current movement, al-j gas group. , i . though the tone was very Irregular. j Firm to strong features at the close I'nitt-d Kingdoms, lk-lgian end! Included Oulf Stalest and Crucible Swedish issues were better, but other Internationals were inclined to earn on Intimations that the state department of Washington intends to exercise cluser serutly over future foreign un derwritlngs by our bankers. Many' of the Junior domestic rails veer In further demand, some at high er levels, but In that division also the market disclosed many gains and luss- Liberty issues were heavily absorbed and closed for the most part at gains. Total sales (par value) aggregated $:J,375,000. The stock market gave another demonstration of strength and activity today ..extreme gains In numerous mis cellaneous shares ranging from 1 to ( points. In a majority of Instances, however, these later were reduced to nominal proportions. Few, if any, of the standard rails or Steels, Mexican and Tan American l'e trbleums, Kelly Springfield Tire, Am erican Sugar, Consolidated Gay, Fam ous Players and American Woolen, coppers also Improving on an advance in the price of the metal. Heaviness was displayed by Chandl er and Studebaker Motors, and Unit ed States Steel was under moderate pressure. Tobaccos and several of the textiles were offered In oennection with adverse dividend rumore. Kales amounted to JSO.OOO shares. Momentum was given to the' early advance by over-night advices of a hopeful character. Chief among these were the February review of general business conditions by the federal re serve board and the weekly survey la ued by the department of commerce. Money rates also favored the rise, demand loans opening and renewing at 4'4 per cent on the exchange, while private accommodations were obtain able at 4 per cent, to which figure the open rate was lowered In the final hour. Relaxation of the domestic money market was not helpful to internation al currencies, nearly all of which re acted. Sterling dropped 1 1-4 cents, and allied bills were lower by three to eight points. The German mark con tinued to weaken and low records were established by central European bills. THE OLD HOME TOWN By Stanley : " ' " JIM HADY Bl)U,T AMOTVcrj LCAN-TO OH HIS POTTER ThtfT.HOMU- LONGFELLOW ; , , ,. ,'. , ,. i ", wroUJ thuslyi . . ?' ' "Whosoever tliou art that mif forest, try not t tUssl VMo thy sorrow by tho brcutlt or tho workl, ' nor drown s voice in tlioiiglilltiKs incrHimciit. It Is a trcaclMTous peuoo that in pmvhiiwd by Indulgence. JUitlier take tills sorrow to thy heart and ntuikp a ' part or th and It sluill nourish Uho till tlwu art Wrong ngalu. , . V The AniericanNational Bank Pendleton, Oregon. iSSS, 'Strongest Sank in Gostern Oregon JgLJ E I WEB BSrvW Your. Jt CRUIK3HANKCMAVT0 Mr. I. M. Right Say folks C. & H has bed room furniture of j most any period, but the prices are of the period before the war. CI(UIKSHJ1NK & HAMPTON WHrttniiouseruRNiSeiBiis 124-28 E. Webb Phone 548 Your Old Furnlturo Taken In Exchange as Part Payment on Xcw Exclufilvo Agcuta ia Peudloton for McDotignll Kitchen Cabluuu KusliMwH Trend tkxxl. RradKlreet Rays XKW YORK. March 4. (A. P.) Bradstreet's says: developments of the week In trade and Industry have been mainly favor able and this despite storms covering wide areas with severe cold, snow and sleet er heavy rains, which have ope rated to render country roads Impas sable and restricted retail, buying In all but a few weather-affected lines to narrow proportions. Perhaps the most important feature has been the definite breaking nf the southwestern drouth, this being accompanied, how ever, by a reaction in the bull move ment In wheat after May delivery had reached Just short of l-0. Other r. itable events have been a further slight gain in activity . In wholesale and Jobbing lines, the bulk of this confined to surplus grain and cattle-growing districts; a further ex pansion In Iron and steel buying and production, railroad proceedings being the chief feature, with a fair amount of steadiness in crude forms. but furth er weakness in finished products; a continuance of the rise In foreign ex change rates Into new high ground, the highest in fact, since 1919, when the "peg" was withdrawn; fair strength despite reactions in tho stock market and a strong and. active bond market. i Weekly bank clearings were $7,198, 912,000. v j Chicago . , Livestock Slnrlet CHICAGO, March 4. (V. S. Bur- eau of 'Markets.) Cattle Iteceints. 4000; veal calves steady to weak: oth er classes generally steady; top beet steers, is. 90: bulk beef steers. I7.40ifii 8.25; bulk fat cows and heifers, $4.76 S.25; bulk fat cows and heifers, $4,760)6.25; bologna bulls largely $4.Uffi4.85. Hogs Receipts, 23,000; fairly ac tive; mostly 10c to K.c higher than yesterday's average; big packers hold ing back; tup, $11.85;- bulk. $11 11.25; pigs slow 15c to 25c lower; bulk desirable 100 to 120-poundcrs iiround $10. , . SheeK liccelnts, 8000; opening slow; fat lunibs about 15c higher; tor parly, $1576;, Montana, clippers, $13.26; fall shorn Texas yearlings, $12; not enough matured sheep here to makc-a market. : . , HOl-VINJGi "200(V fOO UKfe TO A NUT inc. iw wvivwNs '1 1 Primary Rex-clpts , . Of All ;rnln CHICAGO, March 4. Primary ro celpts Wheat, er.,000 'bushels a gulnst 704,000 bushels; corn, 1,389,000 bushels against 1,600,000 b'lshcls; onta 549,000 bushels nffuinst 700,000 bush els. . , . Slilpments Wheat, 432,000 bushels against 620,000 bushels; com,', 1,069,. 000 bushels aijaUist 1,050,000 bushels; ortts, 712,000 bushels ugulnst 319,000 bushels. , ; Clearances Wheat, 91,000 bushels; corn, 1,012,000 bushels, oats 25,000 bushels; flour, S3,00n barrels. Carlots Minneapolis, wheat 170, corn 78, oats 62; Wlnnigcp, wheat 242, onts 132; Diiluth, wheat 29, corn 18; Kansos City, wheat 81, corn 43, oats 6; St. Louis, wheat 43, corn 76, oats 43; Omaha, wheat 40, corn 108, oats It. ... .,. .' Seattle ' : (iraln Market - SEATTLE, March 4. Wheat, hard white, soft white, whlto club, soft red winter, $1.82; hard red winter, $1.36; northern spring", $1.35; eastern red '! Walla, $1.29; liig Bend bluestem, $1.48. , Hay and-feed unchanged. I OFFICE CAT POPULAIt IV CITY. SAN" FRANCISCO, March 4. (U. P.) Don't hide your light : under a, bushel ,or. In other words, If you want to get famous, como to tho big city. As this story would have been printed had the events occurred at Gopher tenter of Blattsville. However, an .unpopular Httlo crea tutre. black nil over save, for a wh'tn streak down the back, took possession of Union 8iuurc, In the heart of tho fashionable hotel and shopping diB- i ti'lctf San Francisco. . . He immediately made his prosenco , felt throughout the entire district. . Guests In the fashionable hotels of j tho vicinity asked each other in an ! aside what could have happened. Persons In the hublt of reading a newsnaner hs they tint on the sonare bench taking an airing hopped street cars and fled. i George Eaton, caretaker of the' square, wont poking around to find ! tho cause of the trouble. He looked Into the bushes . He found It. Ho called Policeman Thomas Lark In, who trailed tho Httlo animal to a point near' the Dewey monument, where he fired two shots. He thon aent for the "dead animal wagon," and had the remains removed. , . i It was two hours before pcoplo ro- j lurneu to inc pars benches once more to road. BY JUNIUS San I raiiHsoo ' (iraln Murket ' " Sun Francisco, March 4. Wheat Milling, $2.25(ff 2.30; feed, $2.20tf2.23. Barley Feed, $1.30(1.35; Bhlp ping, $l.37Vott)1.r.0. Oats Red feed, $1.40 W 1.65. t Corn Whlto Egyptian, red Milo, $1.86 (f 1.90 Hay Wheat, $17fl9; fair. TWO X.YTION.YIi Ii.WGUAGES. ASUNCION', March 4. (United I Press. Paraguay, which' is the smallest and most remote of the South American countries, is at tho same time the only one that Is tho proud possessor of two national languages, both of which are official. One of them is Spanish and theother is uarani or tongue of the partially civilized In- $2iG2.101 tlluns who possessed the land before tho arrival of the Spaniard. Ouaranl eIii March 13. tUW is spoken overywhere, being heard on l ' You Can't rool Her. The young lady next door asks why motorists pretend that they tlon't want to hit peoplo, when everyone knows that that's what the bumper Is for. We wager that Will Hays' wife ac companies lil ni on that trip to Holly wood. :'''' . Edison, who has already passed tho 75 watt mark, says he will work until he la 90. Oh well, Ed Is a light work- For those who like mystery fiction, wo recommend an income tax blank. 312 DEPARTMENT STORES PEYDLKTON, OREGOX Hand Made Hair : v Nets ; Quality Nets at a Low Price These hand-made hair , nets are of real superfine, sterilated hair, invis ible, fashionable and durable. I They are self -conforming;, cap shape, durable mesh. - ' i Double service at our low everyday price. Each net In an envelope. All colon. Sc Women who value strength and long wear In hair nets become enthusiastic wearers of these real hand-made hu man hair nets. They are exceptionally strong. To Mrv McCallum's remark, "You just know she wears them," may we not add, r"You Just know ehe rolls them." It use4 to he "How old is An?" Now It's "How old Is Max 7" If Fatty Arbuckle is at all supersti tious he may be able to get a thrill out of the fact that his third trial will be- 17; tame oat, l&i)18; wild oat, $11 dfi the streets as frequently as Spanish. 13; alfalfa, $13t'16; stock, $7 10: Tho language is composed of short straw, nominal. and snappy monosyllablos. Lots of people, who believe in signs pay no attention to ones reading "Speed Limit 15 Sliles an Hour." DOINGS OF THE DUFFS THE PROPER DEPARTMENT. By Allman mm- 1X X X 1 11 I 1 I If The Safety Valve of, Shopping Today Leaky valve- cause needlesg wasle of energy, of buying power, of the pleasure derived from buying! The safety valve of shopping today is Confidence believing in the store where you Blujp, ' Qf course yon are not going to believe in any store until you have carefully tested it out ; proven to your own satisfaction that it is trustworthy in all particulars. Our policy is non-transferable, irrevocable ! It offers as much. no more to you as it offers to . tthers. . ( . ','r; Ilere the same square treatment is accorded to all .. always. , ; . . ... , :.f,--.:. :;t And this unassailable policy of our Company is now twenty years old. " ; , I I ft LADY-LYKE" CORSETS $1.49 BACK LACE BLACK BONING r ' The utmost worth pos sible to put Into . Corsets ' selling at a price so at-: ' tractive Is found ln'our "splendid modclStTcTnng,'St;' , $1.49, There Is far bet ter workmanship and ma ' terlals a truer regard for the comfort and pleasure ' , of the wearer than In oth er corsets at this price. " 'Our Own Model ' "Lady-Lyke" Corsets S1.49 . Made of coutil body cloth; ' boned with hlack boning which cost eighty percent more than the ordinary paper-covered steel boning, being mora resilient and thoKfan will trivA hettay They havo all the service giving feature of higher priced corseta, l.dy-Lyk CorseU are told exclustvely in the J. C Penney Co. stores. THE LARGEST CHAIN DEPARTMENT I STORE ORGANIZATION IN THE WORLD; I WANT THE MOST PROMOUNCED CHECK VOL) HAVE! T THIS ONE OUGHT TO SUIT YOU l l I if ii I 1 n i i ii i - vv Mtxm. i THE CHECK GIRL OvER AT LUNCH GETS MV GOAT EVERY DAV-WHEMI GO IN THERE SHE WANTS TO CHECK MY HAT- IF SHE . A5KS ME TOPAV. I'LL 5AV x My . HAT . IS CHECKED. CHECK YOUK HAT, 51 R? MV HAT 15 ( CHECKED ! V ' HA HA' OH.50YOUR HAT IS CHECKED! HOT 3TUFF -M?U OUGHT TO GO IN BURLESQUE- HE MAKES UP A FUNNY JOKE TO SAVE ATHIM DIME? YOU'RE SOME CUCKOO I'LL SAY: Vaa. I Ar- i ln rVi tnM u A cypai thai i ml . ' o tnu mfli tif ; i QUALITY PRINTING at Reasonable Prices East Oregonian Printing Dept. " ." 1 . "S ' . ; ' . fkWVrjf caid to your saved dollars. "'-.. r i T Soma day you will bo too old to work but $jf V Sto paid to your saved dollars. Soma day you will bo too old to work but you need not worry If the dollars that yo.u own can work for you. v w ! To assure success you should begin sav ing now and get your spare dollars into tho ; habit of earning money. . Get those spare dollars trained to work while you aro young and they will ha thor oughly broken in by the time you arrive At oldtlge. Not only will your dollars earn Interest in this bank, but the Interest 'wilt also earn more interest. Wo pay 4 per cent on your dcpoNi's. - ;- - .; '"'' . Kvcry man of Mtjalth nude liis fortune " by putting dollars to work for him. -frame opportunity Is yours. , Member IX-denU Reserve Sytm