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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1922)
PAGE TWO DAILY EAST OREGOKIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, MARCH 14 1922. EIGHT PAGES 1 f Us I ; y i' ' . m ! atywiywiirnrrmrt EliUalIiii-lltiMlM Tfte Sweetness of Lovj Price Afever Equals the Bitterness of Poor Quality H For that reason we sell only Quality Merchandise. When you spend your hard earned dollars you want HI one hundred cents of value for every dollar and we are prepared as never before to give you that value H and in addition to giving you the best for the price, no matter what the price, we give you S.&H. Green Stamps on all cash or thirty day business. : They offer you an opportunity to save about 3 per cent on all H you spend here that's worth going after. ' Just stop and think, if you'll save your S.&H. Green Stamps from; now till Christmas you'll have enough saved up to buy a generous supply of Christmas gifts with lH out spei.ding a cent of money out of your pocket. " , . W A Fe:v -.''Attract-' H ive Items Froms 1 Our , Dry Goods M department ca . ' ... . ... H where you'll find the H best assortments of H wanted goods in Pen M dleton. ', Handkerchief Linens III colors' Hunt, Cherry, Or chid, Rose, Yellow, Nile,- Cope, Hnk THege.'A reulr linen, a nice round thread. You wlllappre- 3 Mate tlto value when you see the, p linens, 31 inch width. m The yard $2.50 3 . jj Figured Geor j gettes Eg Just the thing to combine ja with the dress you are muklng over. A Viry fine tUullty silk 3 and coineii In the Pulsley pat i terns with nuvy or turquoise ij background, '40 Inches wide. M The yard ........ $3.50 Georgette D'Figre A floraul patterned Georgette In beuutirul shades of tuupe or nuvy backgrounds. 40 Inches wide.. The yd. $2.50 & $2.08 Sport Skirting Exceptional values in. these goods, staple shades only. 'White, Light Blue, Peach, Salmon, Tui quolse and Hose, are tho colors most used. 40 Inches wide. ' Price ....$2.08 to $5.50 B3 1ap anese Kimo- naSilk i This Hem has been scarco but now we offer you some In the 38 Inch width. Special $1.50 Wash Satin Again In stock. Exoellont for tiiidcrweur ,etc. Comes In threo shades, White, Flesh and Or chid, 30 Inch und the price,' Per yard ...$2.50 A Percale Special Arrived today. Dark and Lights, best colors, Checks, Stripes, Figured, 36 Inch; very special, Per yard 25c New Stetson Hats are here awaiting your inspection. RIFLE SHOOTING IS POPULAR AT U. OF W. HRATTI.R, Wash., Slurch 14. (U. I'.) Rifle shootlnr at the University i'f Washington him assumed the l ost tlun of a major sport within titc l.st LAONDPOr KIDS COLD WEATHtR Alfc LAUNDER. AT PRICfcVTHAT MAK I FOLKS POHDeR. I i ' The cold weather 1 flag is up. Send your I blankets to us. Send i your curtains, too. We'll ' do them up to look like new. We are certain that we can please you. Our service is right and i so are our prices. , TROY Laundry 008-10 Garden I " k-M' V rm aitB-ir- 1 . i f mnw via A Tweed Coat Era serves many purposes Spring, with its changeable weather and out door activities calls for a coat of this character. A tweed coat can bo appropriately worn every hour of the day there's nothing smarter nor more prac tical. Our assortment of these practical garments is wonderfully attractive and the prices are ap- pealing. TWEED Suitable for street wear and particularly smart and correct for week-end trips. They have no ri vals for attractive, all-around wear. The types are unusually appealing in their trim smartness, in variety to gratify the desires for distinctiveness. The "dash and go" of the model illustrated sounds the keynote of the effectiveness of all of them. Priced from $22.50 to $50.00 ' rJTOITONS GREATEST prPpeoDWsWar9house, lui.'iJ.i,ni:iiw,Pr pays to TtAut r'i-Mm year, If !'.s popularity with both men und women students In any indication. More th:n 100 giiiu and three times thnt many boys have uvullcd them selves of the range In tho l:iM three years, a yearly percentage that bids fair to Increase to a marked extent this coming Season under the tutelage of Major W. D. Frnxer, coast artillery corps, team coach. Hy a unique method of competitive procedure, the .university team so fur this season hurf won two of four meets, tied one, und lost one, The shoot with the competing team In held on the home range and the results ex changed by telegraph. Tho University of California and the first battalion, 16lst. Washington in fantry, National Ciiiaid team, were the two defeated, Boston university was tied 497. each nut of a possible 50H considered an excellent showing by both schools. Tho Seattle Hlfle und Kevolver association team Is the only aggregation to down the Sundodgers. The University has entered two teams In tho coming NationnfV Rifle Association Intercollegiate Champion ship match, to be held In the early part of April. . 'CMARRlIALJEUr k (uarantetd by 30 years Mrvict to Billions of Amaricani. Kondon's work! wonders tor your .cold. nilng, coufh. enronic catarrh, oad- FREE' , (ore note, etc. SOTruloKar la H G al tmlt mm asfiMrtM KONDON Visaatfilll, Hiaa, . inuuM l .ij.j.am -"j tf-flfiWGtMl ijfc&sa 4 . SUITS DEPARTMENT STORK' Archie Demaris to A. X. Pemarls, III). N 1- NV 1-4, SE 1-4 and XB 1-4 Sec. 28, Tp, 5, N. it. 36, and part of SB 1-4 Sec. 21, Tp. 5, N. R. 36, 90 acres and SK 1-4 and NR 1-4 SV 1-4 SW 1-4 Sec. 28, Tp. 6, N. It. 36, and mete and bound tract In SW 1-4 Sec. 28, said Tp. and Range, and 1 1-2 acres in SK 1-4, Sec. 21 and 5 acres in SW 1-4 SW 1-4, Sec. 22, and SW 1-4 Sec. 21. said Tp. and Range. H. W. Collins to Klmer Moore, 1, N 1-2 Sec. 2. Tp. 2, N. R. 31, B 1-2 Sec. 35, NW 1-4 Sec. 36, Tp. 3, N. R. 31. t 'Klmer Moore to H. W. Collins. J1.00, W 1-2 NW 1-4, NV 1-4 NW 1-4. SK 1-4, N 1-2 SW 1-4 Sec. 1, Tp. 2, N. R. 31. NE 1-4, S 1-2 Sec. 36, Tp. 3. N K. 31. Herbert March to Roy March, $1, 4 REALTY TRANSFERS j Is Cold day in Qermtuiy. Deep snow. Roads blocked, t unerul to be held in village in the bprecwald, nerx rluCoffja q eled Ut-ftwu by paubewera gver Iigen tu-cam to cemetery. Mourner Xoilowcd pa skates. ii will pay yi wait iW a f you to M more aays to Duy your new opi uig oiiinrs. e nave two big shipments on the road now and more to come. Where the Prices Are Lower. Basement Children's Hose 19c Basement Pencil Tablets 4c M 4000 Yards of Percale Remnants. Basement Children's Gowns 69c Basement Infants' Wear Half Price Basement Men's Leather Gloves - 49c ; ' Basement Jap-A-Lac Paints on Sale. Black Satin Bungalow Aprons Flower trimmed, hand embroidered. 53 NEW SPRING i MILLINERY First of all, ask our Milliner -to show you a few of the closely fit ting new models that we have set out to de light particular women with who really expect to pay more than we ask for these shapes. Colors include orchid, L red, canna, henna and penwickle blue. See our very special offering at $10 W 1-3 NW 1-4 and NW 1-4 SW 1-4 Sec. 23, Tp. 66, N. It: 34. S. T. Carroll to Henry Dexter, $1, mete and bound tract on SW 1-4 Sec. 14, Tp. 5, N. R. 27. George C. Hill to Lester Hamlcy, $1, Lot 2 In block 4, Llvermore's Add. to Pendleton. Onus. E. Demaris to A. L. and Arch Demaris, $10, 3786. 53 acres in Sees. 1 and 2, Tp. 4, N. It. 377, und In Sees. 25, 26, 27, 28. 33, 34, 35 and 36, Tp. C, N. R. 37 and lots 1 and 2, of NE 1-4 Sec. 4. X. It. 37. John J. Merrlfleld to A. L. and Arch Demaris, $10. NW 1-4 Sec. 11 and SW 1-4 SW 1-4 Sec. 2 and E 1-2 BW 1-4 Sec. 1, Tp. 4, N. R. 37. Oregon has 4S citizens with an In come of over J70.000. The state r.uiks 26th. I'llp Tared In to uni Druggists refund mnnev if pitn OINTMENT fails to cure Itching, Blind Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Instant- j reuetas itcrun Files. 60a It will Ask for Your S.&H. Green If Stamps. j n u . : A Funeral Cortege on Skates JX rr JR. 1 evc4rr 1 ' KSfi s.j J II r I 3000 I -riOUAS ojjSoud Cotitjott PARIS has become the "buy" word lor garters the world over, because a pair oi PARIS Carters assures the pur chaser at least 3O0O Hours oi Solid Comfort for 35c Single Crips 35c and up. Double Crips 50c and up. More men than ever re wearing PARIS Carters in silk at 50c and up. Have you tried them? A STEIN & COMPANY If AKSM ' ChiUren'l HICKORY Cmi Nw York . Chioao r0 GARTERS MO METAL CAN TOUCH YOU Paris Carters work for you , 16 hours a day 35c and up PHOENIX, Ariz., March 14. A ! project that means billions of dollars Sand is considered one of the greatest forward strides ever taken by the southwestern section of the United S I States will be discussed hero to Hl1 morrow when the Colorado River 53 j Commission opens tho f)rst of a ser 3 ies ot meetings In the Colorado river basin on plans for development of the river. The Colorado River Commission 3 was recently organized In Washing ,ton, n. C, following its creation by S i legislatures of seven western states Hi 'and congress, when the commissi Ej oners of the seven states .were call- ed to the capltol by Secretary of 3 ' Commerce Hoover, who was appoint Hjed by President Harding as federal ' commissioner and chairman. I Organization meetings at Wush sjrj lngton in January provided for tho I making of a thorough survey of the Si whole situation in the Colorado river basin, and to accomplish this it was determined to hold public hearings throughout the basin. The first of these was arranged to open here tomorrow and at its conclusion the commissioners will hold another at El Centro, in the Imperial Valley, California, and then proceed to Los Angeles. Hearings will bee held in other interested states' according to the announcement by Secretary Hoover Construction of a dam In the low er Colorado, primarily for flood con trol, but to be utilized as a develop ment for reclamation, irrigation and probably hydroelectric power, is the ouestlon upon wiileh Interests in Arizona and California will be heard. Involved In this Is the question of state rights and claims have been made for Arizona that the state should have certain rights by reason of the probable necessity for con structton of the dam in Arizona ter ritory. The commission was ere ated primarily to determine the rel ntive rights of each state, and indi cations are that the question will form one of the major topics of the healings here. Arizona, with California, suffers from the periodical floods of the Colorado, ami the residents of the southwestern section are prepared to present vigorous demands for early action in flood control development for the protection of their property UIVKS KRKE HAI1MTT. KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 14. (I. X. S.) Sol Stlbel. a local barber, 'tells the world" that he will never give another fellow a free haircut, even though his hair be as long as a hula-hula grass shirt. A haircut he gave away a Sunday or so ugo cost Stibel a total of (61 and not Mexican money, either. He took into his shop a boy who needed a haircut but who didn't have the money and exercised his clippers for a bank-up good workout. There Is a law prohibiting barber shops operating on Sunday, and Stibel was fined 140 and til costs. On top of that he paid J 10 fee to a profes sional bondsman. PORTLAND FANS NOT E Affair in Portland Between Tate and Wil's Did Not Show Championship Form. POHTLAXD. Or., March 14. (C. p.) Fans hero are unable to figure whn In erttinr fooled as a result of the Willis-Norfolk fight In New Tork March :. After w-eins Willis and Kill Tate tangle at the Milwaukee arena here, with Willis making a might poor showing against the Chicago heavy, local ring followers merely erin when a Wllls-Dempsey go is men tioned. Tho first fight Wills and Tate had here. 'Wills fouled the Chicago man in the first round, the refcreC giving the serai, to Tate Just -as the bell rang ending the round. It had been under stood that the men should break clean from clinches. Wills didn't dt It. The following Friday night the two stag ed a return enaiugement and fought a bloody ten round draw. The second fit?ht was merely to give fans their money's worth and attempt to show ring sportsmen that the two could renly fight when they felt like it. Some think that Tate beat Wills. There are those who question Wills' right to the negro heavyweight title. They clnlm Tate is as good as Wills, nd everybody knows what Dempsey did to Tate when the champion was training for Carpentier. Tate left the camp while he had his health. Now Wills beats kid Norfolk in tne second round of a scheduled fifteen round go, and many eyewitnesses of the fluht claim Norfolk just curled up on the canvas without even being hard hit. He was up at the count of ten, fresh as a new briquet. Fans here echo the shout of tuns In the east that tho Wllls-Xorfolnk affair never should have been staged, not because Wills seemed too good for Norfolk, but because they think It did not look right. And they believe furth er that a Dempsey-Wllls scrap would not look any better. llirtl) RHOIIT tTROUIT.S WIttK DE.WER, March 14. (I. N. S.) Transcontinental telephone communi cation was seriously interfered with when a sparrow, seeking a suitable place to build a "home," dropped a piece of fine, wire across the span of telephone wires on the outskirts of Denver. For ten days mysterious "trouble" showod on a pair of wires used for direct talking between Xcw York and San liYanclsco. Finally two linemen took up an all night vigil atop ot a pole and discover ed tha tiny bit of wire that hnd been left by tne homeless sparrow. Low temperatures at night that caused the telephone Hires to "tighten up" per mitted the email strand to form a con nection that resulted In a "short cir cuit." SAN FRANCISCO, March 14. (IT. l' ) When a criminal turns up a "two-time lofer," don't blame it on his animal instincts. It really isn't the poor fellow's fault. . The real reason he got "sent up' the. second time was because, while he was in the first time, they cooped him within gey stone walls, made him weur a "zebra suit" and sur rounded him -with drab colors. At least, that is the theory of Ru dolph Sehoeffer, of the California School of Fine Arts, designer of sets for the Greek Theatre at the Uni versity of California, and tho color seta of the Detroit Symphony orch estra. The criminal would automatically lose his criminal instincts if the walls of his cell were painted bright orange mmklst hue given to the prison wullf, and a nice bright suit of the so mo color presented to him instead of the sombre grey, said Schafftr. "I should suggest the use of orange l'i criminal surroundings because It is p. color that radiates happiness. "Colors produce emotion, and grey and crnb colors are very bad for eiimlnels who aren't Inclined to be t.atu'a'ly in a cheerful frame of mind while In the penitentiary. Kur- tMerihoie, I believe we would have 1m fime If our streets and 'build ings were of brighter, more cheerful coiore. The criminal emotion would '6 drowned by emotions of pleasure COBBLER, IS PROUD. EMPORIA, Kan.. March 14. (I. N, S.) The proudest man in town today Is E. A. Spady, a quiet cobbler, who for many years has "stuck to his last" In good old-fashioned Btyle. For Spady recently turned out a. most Im portant job repairing a pair of Pres ident Harding's shoes. They attracted crowds to the cob. bier's window, where they, were placed on exhibition, and Spady was "shot" oy the movie camera men while he I put new heels and soles on them. l he president sent the shoes to Spady on the recommendation of Ho mer Hoch, congressman of this dis trict, who told Harding of Spady'i skill as a shoemaker. If you belch up a bitter-tasting liquid, suffer from heartburn and sour stomaon, you need the tonio proper ties of Herbine. It is a purifying and strengthening medicine for the stom ach., liver and bowels. Price, 60c. Sold' by The Tendleton Drug Co. For rapid healing there is nothing like Liquid P.orozone. It mends torn fleh. heals cuts, burns or boi-m nuicKiy no time is lost from work. Price. JOe, 60c and $1.20 Sold by1 The Pendleton Drug Co. t.olfi settled in the muscles of th neck, arms or shoulder makes every movement painful. Use Ballard's Snow Liniment. It relieves the pain and relaxes the muscles. Three sizes 30c, 0c and $1.80. Sold bv The Pen dle'&O ppig Co, I RAISED hflkwta.iehtbrownon nn reaHv to melt in your mouth that's Cal-, l l : llr Atranf flmA it, the same itory of evexytbing in which CALUMET BAKING POWDER is used. It never varies, fails or disappoints.. Under every condition it pro duces the best biscuit, pies, cakes, muffins, etc. Don't put up with the dis annointments that come from using ordinary baking! powders it isn't necessary . buv and use Calumet the pure ana eurs orua. . i j A pound can of Calumet contain full 12 oz. cana inatead of 16 or. cans. Be I aura you get a pound when you want It. 1 (East Oregonlan Special.) DOARDMAN, March 14. The lioardnian and Umatilla Juniors play ed a tight game of baseball, the first of the season, on the local diamond Friday afternoon. The game was well played and exciting and the score tied several times. Imatllla finally secur ed the edge on Hourdinun and carried off the honors, 7 10 4. Batteries, llourdmun, Chit f fee and McClellan, Umutilla, Klndler and Yeaecr. ' Um pire, Al Macumber. To Cure a QpW In One Dav 'Be sure you get ; The genniae bean this signature Trice SOt. SASH AND DOORS O. B. WILLIAMS CO. 194.1 First Ave. So th SEATTLE, WASH. s Largest mill In the West selling ai rect to the user. Saves you all middle man a profits. ' r CHICKEN HOCSE 9ASH " 20" wide by 25" high, 80e A dozen different aizea in atorV tnr prompt ahipment CHicKry nore sky lights n-??" ?r 1H" Prte gUae 2.00 1 n i s w the kith r ..... ... m .i l I Western Vhington Experiment 8t- n" oraera V'd promptly. J& ' ' Lsxatlva QuinInsM tabtea Fle rroaa panrl dovra, Z feet a I.. ay reel Inehes. at eaeb jj M Omr panrl mn, at ear a . "m7 Money cheerfully refunded if not aat Isfied. Write for free illustrated cat Jim'Li nt .'"belPful hinta for remodeling the old home or plannin tha new. o. n. wn.i.itMs co. fatWlaaejjjyt v