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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 9, 1922)
PAC2 TWO DAILY EAST OREGOMAN,. PEyPLETOS, OREGON, TEUE.SDAY I VEXING. MARCH 9, 1922. EIGHT PAGES 4 nirmuir ! Everything that is New and Good is Here i ; . WE'VE ALWAYS GOT THE BEST OF EVERYTHING quality rather H than price is our policy. When you want something good it will pay you to j come to The Peoples Warehouse. Ask for S.&H. Green Stamps They offer you an aetur.l cash saving that you can't afford to overlook. They make it possible for you to live for less. And they cost you only the asking. 63 IS Boys' Togs Our boys' dept. is full of new things, new wash suits, new blouses, new knick er suits, new caps and hats, new shirts. It's the best boys' dept. in the city. The best assortments, the best values, the best styles and the best makes. That "Something" Different in Our Blouses make them all the more desirable, for its their littlo differences, such as handiwork and the clever placing of decorative touches which lend smartness and character to the woman who elects to wear them. $2.49 to $13.75 Suit Styles Are As Varied As The Fabrics Used in Their Development The selection of your suit simply resolves itself into a matter of choice. Here are suits simple and dignified for street and business wear, and for those who dote on sports clothes,' these modes achieve no little success with their fringed skirts and flare of contrasting color effects. Tricotine, tweed, Poiret twill and wool jersey are the most popular fabrics of the many others used in their fashioning. $25.00 to $89.50 New Spring Styles in Stetson Hats Just Received Including all the new and wanted colors. Call in and have a look at them. $6.50 to $10.00 Now is the Time to Buy Your New Spring Millinery We are prepared with a choice stock of newest styles and creations. Something attractive and indi vidual for eveiy face. The prices, too, will be a glad surprise to you. RUNNING IS INDIAN BOYS PASIII LAWREXCE. Kansas. Slarch . r.) In keeuins- with triKoi .,..- torn on their native reservations, lone distance running is the favorite' ias- uine oi me Indian hov wimnt.. r. wie iracK learn at Haskell Indian In stitute here. Of the sixtv-thre MM. didates who answered the first call foi track men. thirty-one felt the milt and two mile events were the ones tc which they were best adapted. 'The large number trying nut foi the distances is due to the tart ih.i J during the past ear there hes been at- innux ot .Navajo students from Xe Mexico and Ariiona," explained F. W Alt Donald, track coach. "On theh native reservations these students har often left their schools on Fridaj evening, going tn their hnm jtanee frequently of 40 miles. Th ran practically all the way. On Sun day evening they would return tn thai! schools, arriving there In time for their classes on Monday morning." Illustrating the end Navajo hoys. Coach McDonald related me following incident: Rex Andres, a Na.vs.jo student from New Mexico, reported for prac tice recently. He told me he was a long distance runner. I gave him a suit, took him out on the track and told him to takt a few laps until lie could get up a good sweat and then beat it for the hot showers.. In order to loosen up his muscles. I gazed on the most awkward running form lm uglnahle as -Rex started plodding down the track. I left Rex and went over to the traightaway where the sprinters and hurdlers were working out, hen I returned to the track an hour and a half later, 'o and behold there was Rex still warming up. asked him if he were not tired and he said he was not. I was surprised tha he was not breathing hard. He re. marked that the air was heavier here than it was where he came from and It hurt him to breathe very deeply, He said ho had been running since I left him, but he did not show signs of perspiration on his body. That's just a fair Illustration of the way the Na vajo boys at Haskell run. They run cross-legged, necessitating very short steps. A man with a fair stride will cover as much In two steps as a Na vajo runner does in three. But the redeeming feature of his stride is that he leans far frontward so that the weight of the body aids in the forward movement.- PfNULETONj CREATES!' DEPARTMENT STORE USE OUR FREE PHONES : fiePGopJesWarehouse, TOE 0 WE KteT I I WHERE IT PAYS TO TPAnr fjgiffil JEKYLL-HYDE JREACHER IS TRAPPED AS THIEF "WASHINGTON, March 9. (I. N 1 3w WATADD1UI 1P1IY wwuuuinbuixu b guaranteed by 30 year tervk to million of American!. Kundon't works wonder! for your tneailniL counh. chronic catarrh, head ache, tore nose, etc, FREE SOTnalm tin rtcelit el rir ium 04 tUnm . KONDON ' Hioiwaeills. Mine. H.) William Hlmttis, a negro, Is leading the placid Ufa of nn inmate of a local jail after pursuing the dual cxlstunce of a Dr. Jekyll and Mr, Hyde long enough to land him In the clutches of the police. Hlmms was a porter during the day and Is alleged to huve stolen shoes from the shop In which ho was employed, At night ho was the preacher of the Church of Ark, in advertently preaching against theft. , It developed that Slmms had been selling the stolen shoes to members ot his congregation, who expressed profound umazemont at his arrest in view of the regularity with Which he had from his pulpit, exhorted thorn not to steal. American corn, .once despised, h now the most popular food grain In Russia, according to John I Gregg, of the American Hellef Administration. NEW YORK, March 9. (I. N. S.) Diametrically opposite views as to the best way of remedying or solving tho "problem of the age" marriage are held by two modern Solomons of the New York bench. Judge Alfred J. Tally, of the Court of Cienenil vHesslons, holds that more stringent marriage laws will result In fewer divorces. Senior Justice Leo pold Prince, of the Eighth District Municipal Court, in answer to Judge Tally, holds that stricter marriage laws would result In a deluge of di vorces, und that easier divorce laws would result in a far happier condition of life and living. B MOTOR 8 ill e nit The first shipment of the new Super-Six Hudson Coaches, the closed car, at a price equal to all open models of other makes. The New Coach Model is something new. Every person interested in a closed car should see it. It will sell in Pendleton at $2235.00. One hundred above open model price. Built to Hudson Standard with the veil known Super-Six Motor. The Hudson Coach is in a class by itself. We also have the Essex in the same carload. The Essex is a Four Cy linder car built by the Hudson factory. Lots of "Pep," light weight, with a large roomy five passenger body. 87 percent of Hudson parts are inter changeable with Essex cars. Essex sells in Tendleton, $1385.00. "Did taxation without fermenta tion make for a prohibition that pro hibited?" asked Justice Prince. "iMnko Man Jump Over" ' "Barriers of any kind only want to make men jump over them." he ex plained. "Make marriage laws strict er and you will have a similar ef fect to that produced by prohibition. Kveryone knows that there have been more hop-bottles and more drinking, even among young people, than over before. "1'eople want to be free to do as they choose. Legislative restraint im posed upon them that deprives them of their rights makes them want all the more to do a thing they are told that they cannot. "Before a man and a woman are married both wear their best clothes, as it were. Roth are on their best be havior. Neither shows his or her real self to the other. They cannot fore see what the other may turn out to he like after married life. And Just ns they themselves cannot forsee, neither can any law. For that reason, therefore, I cannot see how stricter marriuRo laws would accomplish any thing. "Imuths nt 1 locksmiths." " 'Love laughs nt locksmiths,' and It certainly will laugh ut laws. If a couple have made up their minds to he married they will accomplish their marriage somehow. "There have always been runaway marriages, and there always will be. Often they turn out to be happier marriages than those where the two have kept company for years before marrying, "What I advocate, then, is not stricter marriage laws but easier dl- vorco laws. In the beginning of civili sation, in the days of Moses, a man could divorce his wife on the grounds or incompatibility, m those days, of course, a woman was a mere chattel. Today, when woman is the equal of man, tho law of Moses should work both ways. Kither a man or a woman should he allowed to divorce tKe other on the grounds of incompatibility. "Divorce Laws (iood." "I am convinced that the divorce laws of Nevada are good laws. There, after six months' residence, a divorce can be obtained on the grounds of de sertion or non-support or incompati bility. "I'nfortunately, the divorce laws tjin Reno benefit the rlrh and not the ! Pool. The n,mr ,i'f'.M .... f.i,.i.i iiviv, juni uo they suffer with prohibition. The rich man has his cellar stocked, but J.tho poor man cannot buy even u cou 4 1 pie of glasses of beer a week. T "The rich can go to Reno and stay Zjat an expensive hotel for six mouths, ,hut no poor person can afford to go th,-. ... I i. 1 1 "1 am in favor of a uniform divorce law that will brinir' ahnnt the simple grounds of incomnatibilitv eif for no other reason than for the sake of the children. How can anv children grow up to live useful, happy iieswhcn their parents are continual ly fighting at home?" PEHING IS FOUND NEW NEW YORK, March 9. (I. N. S.)' Some of 'cm do and some of 'em don't, all emphatic declarations from Cali- lornia notwunstanding. There s no general rule. Such is the retort of co-eds of Now York colleges to the charge of Editor R. I Ingrnham of the California Peli can, that "all college girls like to be kissed" and "expect every man who takes them out to attempt it." "Kissing Isn't on the college curri culum," said Miss Mitzle Kalish, New York University dramatic star. "It's ridiculous to say that our idol is a cave man. "Every girl likes to be kissed by the man she loves. She wants it and ex pects it." A sweet young think at Barnard, on the other hand, deposes that: "Pettiiis has established itself as the new inter-collegiate sport." While a short-skirted, bobbed-haired, rolled-stockinged flapper chimed in with: "Don't you know that the idea that you marry the girl you kiss is worn out and ancient." The editor of Mortar Board, Bar nard's annual publication, dodged the issue partly. She said: "There are two classes or girls In o college, the sooial lionesses and serious students. The former are distracting and a danger tn education." If you belch up a bitter-tfistins liquid, suffer from heartburn and sour stomach, you need the tonic Droner- ties of Herbine. it is a purifying and sirengtnening medicine for the stom acn, liver and bowels. Trice, 60c. hold by The Pendleton Drug Co. For rapid healing there is nothing like Liquid Rorozone. It mends torn flesh, heals cuts, burns or sores so quickly no time is lost from work Price, 30c, 60c and $1.20. Sold bj Tho Pendleton Drug Co. Cold settled in the muscles of the neck, arms or shoulder makes ever movement painful. Ise Ballard'f Know Liniment. It relieves the pair and relaxes the muscles. Three sizei 3'c, 60c and $1.20. Sold bv The Pen-I dleton Drug Co. WARNING ! Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy "Baver" boxes of 13 tablets-Also "J--" Atplrlii l tbe triUe mr or eajrr El BERLIN, March 9 (I. N. S.I One of the Die mysteries of international finance is the amount of foreign cur rency and foreign securities held by Germans, llpon the solution of this mystery wil( depend largely the set tlement of the reparations problem but unfortunately the only light that can be shed upon It is that of conjec ture and guesswork. So the mystery will continue to remain quite myste rious; In their belief that Ormany is wil fully concealing her nssets, French nubllsts have charged that capital to he amount of 6.000,000,000 to 7,000, 000 gold marks ($1,405,000,000 to $1, 640,000,000) has been converted Into foreign securities or has been put on deposit in foreign banks. As the Ger man reparations installment for Feb ruary. 1922, was only 650,00,0.000 gold marks ($160,000,000) it seemed evi dent to the French press that Ger many could pay if she wanted to col lect tho money from her private citi zens. Now comes an interview, published ln,a Berlin paper, quoting Herr Urbig, director of the Disconto-Gesellschaft (one of the largest banks 'in the Reich), admitting the . outward flow of German capital. The figures given by Horr Urbig are quite naturally more conservative than those taken from tho French press. His estimate and he admits it is only an estimate puts the total of converted German capital at 1,500,000,000 gold marks ($351,000,000). Most of this conver sion took place, he says, during the full of 1921, when the mark suddenly collapsed. Against this figure, however, Herr Urbig sets up a debit of several hun dred million gold marks representing amounts that German capitalists owe to allied and neutral countries. He camions students of frenzied interna tional finance to guard against furor numeri the craze of writing strings of zeros and counting in billions and trillions. Herr Urbig does not believe that the' German government will in Its present position be able to stop the conver sion ot German capital. Stronger governments have tried to regulate the flow of financial paper from one country to another, but have been battled Dy me prooiem. - . The Treaty of Versailles contains a clause permitting the allied govern ments to seiao private German depos its in the financial institutions of al lied countries. This clause, however, has been annulled through the efforts of British financiers who found it drove away a lucrative amount of Gcrmun business to American and German bunks. THIN, FLAT HAIR GROWS LONG, THICK AND ABUNDANT "Dandertne" costs only 35 cents a bottle. One application ends all dandruff, slops itching and falling hair, and, in a few moments, you have doubled the beau- ... T ...111 U ul jruus nail b mil " appear a mass, so soft, w lustrous, ana easy co ao f t tip. But what win ig please you most will be after a few weeks' use, ! when you see new hairj fine and downy first yes but really... new hair growing over the scalp. "Danderine" is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sun shine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, invigorates and strength ens them. This delightful, stimulating tonlo helps thin, Ufeless, faded hair to grow long, thick, heavy and luxuriant. ... m Wit I r 8 s ! '4 i Farm Implement Sale i 3- bottom No. 5 John Deere Tractor Plow $150.00 S 4- bottom No. 6 John Deere Power Lift Tractor f Plow $218.00 d 3-bottom 16 inch Steel Moline Plow, with extra . . . k Shares $125.00 j 2-bottom 16 inch Steel Moline Plow, with extra . J Shares 90.OO 5 John Deere No. 40 Fordson Tractor Plow $120.00 5 8 foot 18 inch John Deere, Double Action Disc Harrows, f with tongue truck , $140.00 18-7 Kentucky Hoe, Grain Drills $155.00 18-7 Van Brunt, Double Run Feed Hoe or Disc Grain J Drills. $175.00 t 6 foot McCormick Grain Binders, with tongue 8 truck 220.00 2 Metal Wheel Farm Trucks, 28-32 wheels 50.00 S In addition to the above we have a. large stock of John Deere Steel S Gang Plows, Walking Plows. Stag Sulkies, Walking and Riding Cultl- 2 vntors, Corn Planters, Mowers, Rakes, Harrows, Pulverizers Fanning 5 Mills, Gas Engines, etc. . - 8 A complete line also of Farmers' Hardware, all nt correspondingly R low prices. Trade where you can do the best. We have the goods, and f as for prices, tear this out and make comparison. Be your own Judge. 4 Money is scarce, so why not save. COME AND SEB US. & JONES & JONES i IMPLEMENT AND HARDWARE DEALERS f ' Weston, Oregon 4 (SI OOilOii! s-TronblWp . HACK I1KTTIXG FAU.S OVF . PARIS, March 9. (U. r.) The general tightening up of economic conditions In Europe has hit race track belting. The committee which takes the state's percentage of the re ceipts of the Parl-Mutuel betting ma chines at the tracks has reported that the 1921 takings were ' 24. 500,00') francs, or a drop ot about tcu per cent under last year. WE NEED YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT Saw at home this llicrty lu-ll name Itaifc Is an incentive to save fur linlcHiKleiuv. t'oiw In und let ns explain. Big or little, this bank wants your account, because wo know that once started the little accounts will grow- to our mutual advantage. We pay 4 per cent interest compounded semi-annually and your principal Is secure and the inter est a certainty. Why not start today? A dollar opens a Savings Account here. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM The Inland Empire Banjc ZVndloton Oregon Illlinillllillullllllllilllllllllllnl ' """""""""'""iHiiHiHUUHWiumHiiiuuiuU(iiUiyiuar -' timmJil-MkutoMH