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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 19, 1922)
PAGS TWO DAILY EAST CREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON," FEIDAY EVENING, MAY 19. 1922. TO PAGES i'A A"WORD"TO THE WISE ' What we consider in our business first'is, selection of onl$, the highest grade merchandise. We therefore have never offered to our trade "plunder merchandise' as we consider plunder merchan dise is merchandise in which quality, workmanship, service and satisfaction has been sacrificed to create fictitious bargains, and this plunder merchandising is the poisonous growth of illegitimate competition between unscrupulous dollar chasers who have no appreciation or respect for public gdod and good will. The profits in plunder merchandising is the greatest will-o'-the-wisp that re tailers' ever pursued and is the falsest bargain eyer foisted on an economy seeking: public. We do not handle "take-a-chance" stuff. You'll always get the best for the price, ho matter what the price here. 1 Women's White Kid ' Pumps ' " ki xlhlc mIi. one 'rarl. full LXV llCCis. 11-if.' $10.00 Women' White Kkl I'limp flexible . Miles, Huhjr Vmnit Covered heels, I .one strap. VrU u;. 99.50 Women's White lUiluskin Pumps, one , strap, -flexible Mile, covered kw military heels. Price A.AO Women' White Mid OilmK mi II " tarjr heels, Goodyear welt, wash able kill. Price ll.00 Women's While Kid Oxfords, Good year welt soles, military herls, lrlci i... IH.50 Women's White ' Kuliikln Oxfords, Compear welt soli's, military heels, Prl ...... i.,.. v $5.00 Women' While mid Itluck Oxfords, Goodyear welt miIcm, low heels. Prk n... ...... ............ $7.00 Women's Whiti) Italiiskln Oxfords, Goodycnr welt soles, low heels. I'riee ,. $5.00 If your feet ache and pain, if yon have callouses, If your feet tiro easi ly, ir yon have fallen or broken arch ex, call lit our shoe department, wo have, a (traduute Kpeclrtllst to nerve yon. Women's Footwear I'ateut 1'timpi". , (iiMNlyear wt-it, . one novelty Wraii. low lieelx. Pr. $5.00 ' Kid I'limjis, Goodyear welt, two straps, low 'heels. I'Hee. . . . $5.00 Drown t'alf Pumps, flexible soles, low rubber heels. Price. . , . $4.75 White Rnlnskln Pumps, flexible soles, one Hi rap, low covered mllltary hieb. Trice '. '. $5.50 White Hulnskiii Oxfords, welt wiles, 1 low white IVofy leather heels. Price j. 95.00 lliiiwn Calf Oxfords, Goodyear welt ' Holes, hliichcr cut, low liecls. Price $11.50 lilnck Calf Oxfords, Gisslvcur welt, hliichcr cut, low heels. Price $0.50 Good Millinery News New Summer Mats Special-$lQAQ-2d Floor The last word in smattness for early summer wear are these charming new Hats and the price We have put upon them assures a quick clearaway of the entire shipment. Dress Hats and Sport Hats. of hairbraid and haircloth, lisere, Italian hemp, Milan hemp and novelty straw braids -also the new crepes and taffetas. Large selection of beautiful mod els in flower-trimmed Hats in all the newest shapes and colorings. As this is a special' lot there is but one of a kind; therefore early choosing ns advisable. , Special $10 MILLINERY DEPT. 2D PLOCR New Wash Trimmings "IUASEIIG" Single Fold Scalloping, JUiffle KdKP. A now trimming for summer dresses, will not shrink and is guaranteed fast colors. The colors are white, sky, pink, maize, brown, green, lavender, tan, red, nuvy and black. 3 yard holts Sfx; "niASKDfi" rumble Fold Scalloped Hilling A checked Rcnlloppd edge which mukes a splendid finish for all wash dresses or gingham, percales, etc. Comes In blue and white with blue scallop, pink, and white with pink scallop, lavender and white with lav ender scallop, green and white with green scallop and many other com binations. Very pretty and gives that finishing touch; S yard holts... 2()c Wit K.I ITS COLORED was tape ISIus tape makes n lovely trim for dresses, aprons, romper suits and other articles too numerous to men tion. Comes in yellow, pink, red, lilac, light blue, Copenhagen, navy blue, lavender, khnkl, brown, green, grey, black; t yard bolt, the bolt 25c WRIGHT'S STIUPF.I) MAS TAPE Fine for trimming aprons, dresses, etc. We have it In the following col ors; black and white, navy anil hite, light blue and white, red and white, pink and white and lavender and white. li yard bolt, the bolt 25c SAVE S. & H. GREEN STAMPS WE GIVE THEM SAVE S. & H. GREEN STAMPS WE GIVE THEM YOUR UNDERWEAR NEEDS FOR THE COMING DAYS LADIEH EXTRA SIZE UNION Kl'lTS t ' r A fine lisle thread number that the "Stout Lady" '. will appreciate. Low neck and shell knee! slaes " 4H, ks, 60. Each ...';' 75e I.AMKK' "COMFY" CIT UNION SUITS This is a very fine quality ribbed suit, cut V-neck and with either tight or shell knee; sizes 116 to 42. Koch 75c "FITHITF." UNION Kl'lTS . 1 Nationally udvertlscd, universally liked. A fine qual ity garment, n leader in Union Suits, band top with' either tight or shell knee. , . Sizes, 84 lo 40. Kach 75c 8l!e ubove 40. Kach 85c I.AIHF.S' i:TIl V FINE UNION SUITS One of the best garments put out. The new price , Is much lower than last year and the workmanship Is butter. Hand top with tight knee. Itemdnr siics ; $1,25 Uirgo sizes ... $1.50 HODK K TOP UNION SUITS No better value for tho price can be obtained. Rib bon shoulder straps and tight knee. Regular Sixes ; ;-,, Uirge Sizes 1IAM TOP UNION SUITS This garment conies In flesh only with band top and , tight knee. All sizes $1.00 ' THE GREATEST STOCKS IN PENDLETON ARE HERE. PtNWI'.TONS ItkT.-VTfST DrPWtT.HI'VT STOHF. XlliePeoplesWdrohousQ 1. I- '1 ,H m It 'AS TO UtAltr Llii lull 1' THE GREATEST VALUES IN PENDLETON ARE HERE. SEX EXTINCTION IS I1Y KPN A liritKl! CHURCH, Inli'i'iiiitlnniil News Service Staff Correspondent.) . LONDON, May I!). English women lire bended straight for sex extinction bcr use of their tendencies to join In the nUciiitc'ls sports of malci. This, ul least, is the opinion set forth hy (icorge Chainlets, secretary of the College of Preceptors, who heads a committee f members of the medical ami teaching profession which hiis been organized to take steps to prevent tho rev extinction of English women, , Knmlsh women are right up with the men In the fore ranks of sports. They turn out, barelegged, nnd run In iclay races. They put the shot and they take the hurdles, and they even want to be admitted to th" ''Various jockey clubs. For years they have keen giving the men a run for their money In the less strenuous sports, such rlf and tennis. Tho doctors and the teachers are worried about thete sporting pro clivities on the part of the women of England. They pre afraid that It may eventually lead to a nation that if Hingis sexed, .,., - "The Medical profession for many? years has had misgivings about our present system of physical Instruc tion for Women,' declares Chalmers. "Many of Its most distinguished mem bers are continualyy asserting from their own experience that the func tions or motherhood are impaired by these strenuous games, and that the. cause Incalculable suffering In Inter yen i s. ' "Alldlnu to this. We IWU h,..l ,,nn.l scientific opinions submitted to us by eminent biologists, pointing out that In these strenuous names women nre spending all their 'capital,' with the consequence thnt they are modiielni! an emasculated race of men. "These biologists also imliit nut that woman has a mule ns well ns a female element In her constitution, and that the accumulated effects of the nresent svstem nf tfntiinu t.m.i jto develop only tho mule In her, with! me consequence that we shall soon have a aperies of human beings who Is neither man nor woman." And there yon are. Maybe this sex extinction Is in Its way here In Kng land, for to an American It certainly seems that the Women of Knglnnd are fur more masculine than the women of America. Knglish women walk up und down Piccadilly smoking a Cig arette, swinging a cane nnd wearing a monocle, and it causes not a ripple of excitement. English women In run ning shorts and jerseys or women In lights playing hockey bring not a snsp of astonishment. A meeting of the state bond com mission has been called for Monday, May 22, to Invest approvlmatelv $45.- 000 of state Industrial accident funds in school district or other bonds. Chinese Punishment I(i2f.,i iff 4 rh III wflwvH rn fefiini it!?'- w'WToc.MI T '"'';'nt'- 'Three Chinese women found guilty of misdemeanors Ktrve their time Knickers i y jj Knlokert are the tul table outlnt costum . for jour active young daughter. They come in tweed Jer ty, khaki, linen, crash and ratine. XATO AIJVTUIMP ILHIO HillllimU ON THE TABLE, GAINS 'WEIGHT Mrs. Howell Went for Days Without Food. She De clares. Now Thanks Tan latforHer Present Ex cellent Health. .. . "I can't tell yo how glad I am thnt f tried Tanlae," said Mrs. 1-aura How ell, 41 oth Me., Portland, Ore. "I had an x-ray made of my stom ach and wan told I had gall atones, apiendicitis, stomach ulcers and oth er troubles. I spent hundreds of dol lars without relief. 1 could hardly stand the burning pain in my stom ach end went for day without eating. Oas bloated hie until I nearly smoth ered. I grew bo dizy I would almost fall over and would have to go to bed with sick headaches. f "Hut now Tanlao hns built me ul) In every way, I can now eat anything on the table and have gained weight and strength. My housework is easy for me nnd I have taken the care of two children besides. I prize Tanlae a beep every other medicine." Tanlae is sold by all good drugglstB. RETURNED BY SOVIET WEST WON TENNIS LOS ANGELES, May 19.-MC P.) Theodore Kosloff, Russian dancer and motion picture actor, has bene fited to the extent of $50,000 by re cent return of Jewels and property confiscated by the soviet govern ment several years ago. Kosloff this week received word from his married sister, Tonya Otra- dlnsky, now in Moscow, that his pos sessions, including many rare gifts from European royalty, have been returned. Permission to travel has been granted Kosloff's sister who will bring the restored valuables to Am erica If permitted to leave the coun try with them. 'SAX FHANCtSCO, May 19. (tr. P.) The star of William M. John ston, former national tennis singles champion. Is in the ascendent again. Johnston , beat the present national singles championship holder; William T. Tllden. twice In d -week, the first' time in the East-West matches, nnd the second In the Pacific Coast tour nament. Hoth matches were excep tionally hard fought, and gave tho fans a- chance to see some of the most birlliant tennis ever played on the coast. LONG BEACH, Cal., May 1D.-MI P.) Staid Long Heach is Just recov ering from the slunk and beginning to take u devilish interest in the unpre cedented proposal of real estate men to hold a bathing beauty parade here. . The suggestion was made In order to provide an innocent attraction for tho land salesmen of the Southerland when they hold their annual picnic here .May 20. Such nn Idea was unheard of and has occasioned considerable comment by members of civic, church, and women's organizations nf this city, particularly as the real estate men ap pear to be preparing to carry out their design. i Tt ia rnnnrtpd th.1l nn the nlliet there is in reality a sly interest in the parade, and that the realty men are so convincing in their defense of the performance, that a number of repre sentatives of the most reputable or ganizations of the city may be induced to enter the parade as contestants.; The Salem Red Cross during March and April spent t7ft for hospitaliza tion and care of disabled ex-service men, besides loaning ft2 to needy. ex-soiuiers or tneir inmines. NO CRIME WAVE IN ENGLAND, DECLARES . FORMER DETECTIVE By DAVID M. CHlHtCH International News Service Staff Correspondent. LONDON, May 19. Great Britain is In the midst of a crime wave, or at least in the midst of a wave of criminal news. Tho press of London fairly bristles with murder stories, suicide, tales, sen sational court cases of one kind and another. 1 Yet. Sir Basil Shompson, formerly a Scotland Yard chief, declares that there Is actually no crime 'wave over Great Britain. Tf one were to Judge from certain superficial indications a wave of crim inality has swept over the country," declares Sir Basil. "Probably at no period in our history has there been so brisk a market for details of crim inal trials. "Just before the armistice there wero gloomy forebodings about what would happen when men accustomed lo hold human life and property very cheap came home. There was to be an epidemic of murder and robbery by violence, and when a few cases were recorded they were hailed as n fulfilment of tho rather obvious pro phecr. . Morbid Interest In Criminals. . "But, In fact, there was no such epidemic. Both during and immedi ately after the war there were a few sensational murders, but there wis nothing at all resembling the condi tions during the wars of the last cen tury, when thousands of discharged soldiers roamed the country as home less vagrants, committing crime, and executions and transportations seem ed to thnt generation the only pos sible remedy. "The statistics of crime nre sensi tive Instruments for' recording the fluctuations In the social health of a community, and an examination of these statistics Is reassuring. ePr haps the morbid Interest which is ta ken In criminals Is actually a healthy symptom. .There Is vtiothing interest ing in a phase of life with which one is in daily contact. "The prevalence of crime it imme diately indicated by a rise In tho pris on pouulation. Wo do not know what the next two years may bring forth, but we do know that three years after tho armistice, when we are at what we hope is the lowest level of depres sion, we have been able to reduce the prisons In the country to the smallest number at any time in our history. Clime Mils 3iewsMcrs. Sir Basil may be right that there s no crime wave, but merely a wave of interest in crime. The fact remains that crime and court news occupy the greater part of the space in the Lon don press at the mioment. The news papers are featuring the case of Ho rallon Bromley, M. P., charged with converting the funds of a bond club to his own uses. Next in importance is the case of Captain and Mrs. Owen I'eel, scions of a well-known family, charged with irregularities In betting on the races. To add a bit of spic to the day's news, there is tho case of Ibrahim Said Fazil, nn Egyptian prince, who is the central figure In a divorce case; the case of Ronald True, an aviator, charged with responsibil ity for the death of beautiful Gertrude Yates: the case of a Liverpool curate who drank poison'ln champagne with a young woman In a hotel room, and the headline, "New Murders In Ire-1 land," Is always kept standing. Great Britain may not he in the midst of a crime wave but its newspa pers indicate to the contrary. Remove Corns Easily, Quickly not bjr ps'nful, dangerous sousing or .. cutting, not ly framing Dut iatmnil? simply by shriveling them up go you . can peer them oil in one piece. -, uaa "6ETS.IT" Demand the genuine. Your money back II It falls. Gentle, soothing. Hbnobitety harmless to live flesh. At all dftifffftxti. . Costs tint a trifle. K. Lawrence A Co Mir., Chicago. Sold In Pendleton by Tallman ft Co. nd Economy Drug. Co., .... , Oril OWN ROAST COFFEE IS BEST, I .'. ' Goes Further. Tastes Better Supremo Blend, 11), . 45c 2 1-2 lbs. $1.00 Bonne) s Special, lb....:. 35c 3 lbs. $t.oo SPECIALS FOR SATt RDAY Strawberry Preserve, 12 oat. SOo l'uyalhip Jam, 15 oz.i . . . 22c Jifry Jell , 10c Calif. Sardines, 15 oat., 3 for 60c Macaroni, 3 boxes 25c Shredded Wheat, 2 for. .. 25c EVERYTHING IX FRESH VEGETABLES. Hard Grocery Co. Phone 96 230 E. Court St. CL. BONNEY ; , . . e 'Try the drug store S first." and Koeppens, 1 the drug store ? that I 2 5 serves best, for ' Pre-1 I scnptions. William Posei. prominent hotel man of Keaverton. disanneared iut Fritt'iv tileht. nnd as he bud t?;n.n in currency on his person, friends fenr he has met with tout play. - 0 m