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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1922)
DAILY EAST OEEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 18, 1922. EIGHT PAGES sis, TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS CLEARANCE OF Al Suits, Goats, Silk Dresses Skirts, Jersey Jackets and Wash Waists AN INDEPENDENT NEW8PAPM Pnblfihe4 Dally and Beml-Weekly, at Pendleton, Oregon, by th BAST ORBGtONIAN POT. CO. ntred at the post office at Pendle ton, Oregon, a aeoood claet mail mat ter. ON SALE IN OTHER CITIES. Imperial Hotel New StandPortland. ON FILE AT Chicago Buret u, 0 Security Building, Waahlnftcon, D. C, Bureau (01 Four teenth Street, New York. Member of the Aaioclated Preee. The Aeajclated Press U exclusively entitled to the uee for publication of all new diepatchei credited to It or aot otherwise credited in this paper and alio the. local hew published herein SUBSCRIPTION RATBI (IN ADVANCB) ' Dally, one year, by mall ....-.tt.00 Daily, six months, by mall t.OO Daily, three months, by mail.......... 1.60 Daily, one month by mall .- .SO Daily, one year by carrier .......... 7. SO Daily, six months by carrier .- 8.76 Dally, three months by carrier 1.96 Daily, one p.onth, by cariisr -66 Semi-Weekly, 1 year by mall 2.00 Semi-Weekly, six months by mall 1.00 Semi-Weekly, three months by mall .60 - BY Women who marry smart men are rarely' -happy. " '.'. Luxury and poverty are the things that tumble governments. 4 We are not poirtp; to carrv over a single garment if low nri- Two big men in a small town are: worse for it' than a spell ' of typhoid IVver. , . It doesn't matter so much what the laws re if hon "t men are elected to run things. , O O - V A rAtns rous K 'P' XUKk. ' 1 Jt!fsli f ces will move them. See the window display. ' x ALL WASH DRESSES remaining have been marked down for quick selling'. - Telepbeaa 4 fb aiA. Guest GAKDEV HOSES A BiiiKle rose la fiilr to no, the dollar kind the florist sells Vifwed from an artist's point of vlw ft tale of care and culture tells And in Its slender silver cup, provides a touch of lovely grace, y Tall, HtralK'ht and perfect and precise, a lump to light a darkened place, Hut there's a lovelier sisht to see, the roses In a garden grown, Old-fnshlnned hloomB of red nnd white with nil the petals fully blown.' ! V " The florist might not call them t',rv, the urtlst's eye might fail to see True beauty In so mixed a mass; but still they mean a lot to me. I've known this rich bouquet for years with every, summer that has been , ( Always upon the table there this glo rious cluster I have, seen, And 1 can call them all by name, this red one shading almost black Has been a boyhood friend of mine u Jacqueminot -best known us J nek. (CopyrlKht Paul Neyron with his heavy head of pink has seemed to rule the place, : The g'ant ot the garden plot, and scornful of Frau 'Druski's grace. And there's the Kolden Sunburst, too, a Kloi'lotis yellow, short of stem, That table bowl were Incomplete, un less It had n few of them. Old friends since first, this heart was .yoimi?, modest and brave and loyal still, Lighting our roomH from day to day und never sending in a bill. I will admit the florist's art and grant the grace his blossoms possess, But those rld-fashioned roses seem to hold much more of loveliness, And I can bend nhove a howl some Ifentle hand has filled with care, And seem to see once 'more the smiles of all my lung-lost friendships there. . . I need no catalogue or frule'e, In bowl or by the garden wall I.Ike old-time friends I know their mimes, and I'm at home among them all. A. Ciupft Nothing sold 'n a drug store Is put to such severe tests as the so-eallecl "beautit'ui's.'' Every human m'sery and Injustice can be banished if men would only get together and do the rlgn. i.iing. II ez Heck Says: "The law iititiv-indf apply only to aiien.'' ttnt f'Vpn.siiro (jfomn to 1H22, by Edgar KEEP THE CHANNEL OF PROGRESS OPEN cent; outdoor relief decreased 10 per cent; cases of nonsupport! or placed on probation decreased 18 per cent. Diseases in which alcohol is a predisposing factor showed the j following decreases : Cirrhosis of the liver, 47 per cent; Bright's disease, 9 per cent; pneumonia, 51 per cent; tubercu losis, 23 per cent; suicides, 8 per cent. ' j In spite of the fact that 1921 showed a much heavier unem ployment than 1915 the number of deposit accounts in savings j banks showed an increase of 9 per cent. .Can anyone doubt that prohibition played its part, and the largest part, in making so good a year morally and physically ; against the counter influence of the war's industrial after-' math? Rocky Mt. News (Denver). i We think the pioneer days are over, yet down near Vancou ver, Wash., Monday night a bear jumped off a shed upon a woman and she did not get hysterical about it, either. People who deface road signs confess by that action that they belong in the home for the feeble minded. A man can In a story given on the front page of this paper today Senator Capper of Kansas gives reasons why the direct primary should not be destroyed or crippled. Those reasons are ..sound. The direct primary system is democratic and democ , racy is the safety valve of civilization,. the antidote for Bolshe vism and for its twin brother, tyranny at the hands of a reac tionary oligarchy such as Russia had under the czar. Give the people a chance to exDress themsp'vps. tn ka'vn their will executed and there will be no trouble. The people as a whole j'""- aie iiuu rauicai nor are tney untair. . The general public is con servative and believes in square dealing. They may be trusted The' stream that flows freely purifies itself. When empolind ed it cannot. In Russia the old order blocked the channel and when the waters rose high enough and the weak spots in the dam were found the flood broke that has all but destroyed civ ilization in that benighted land. Russia is today a horrible ex ample not merely of bolshevism but also of czarism, for the Lenin regime with all its horrors and mistakes may be laid di rectly at the door ot the old order in Russia. They held back; me water too long ana devastation tollowecl. The true policy in this republic or in any other popular gov ernment is to keep the channel of progress open and. to see that the current moves neither too slowly nor too swiftly. Public opinion will attend to that if the public has confidence inthe government and confidence in the press. Naturally this public confidence can best be had when the people have a direct voice in nominations as well as in election To destroy the direct pri mary and go back to the old order of selectinir rniuliHntpa Viv Dosses ana campaign iunu contributors would undermining, laith in our institutions. Once that faith is gone anything might happen. When people grow resentful over conditions and feel they have no lawful methods whereby they may get redress, they give ear to radicals and may be easily led astray into the paths of lawlessness and sovietisni. Some people think that in fighting the direct primary they are fighting bolshevism. Let them study affairs and learn their mistake, lhev are fia-htiiiB- the stirpst nntirlntn nt ..,.,t,.n success O n.imn.iv, iVl lV 11 Vt'llll UI anct tne misery it would involve for all, be they rich weak or strong. The strike difficulty is a fronting the country. "condition and not a theory' WARNER'S RUST PROOF CORSETS in the latest summer models that wash like muslin and will not rust. Corsets ' for every type of figure from lender to stout, short and tall. We take special pains to see that every customer gets a corset best adapt ed to their figure. Special fittings if de- Warrior's Corsets 1. ... ......$1.49 to $4.98 Trev Girdles . ..... .... ;.;......$1.98 to $3.49 Redfern Corsets .$4.98 to $6.98 A Very Special Value in FINE NAINSOOK NIGHTGOWNS ir'h linfm filet : and crochet laces. This gown is worth $3.00. nriced it at MUSLIN PETTICOATS A splendid assortment of muslin, long cloth and sateen petticoats, all white, trimmed with, hemstitching, laces and embroideries. Each $1.15, $1.69, $1.98 to $2.98. . We've $2.15 WHITE CANVAS OXFORDS AND pumps A few pair left. $7.00 shoes for $3.49. BLAZER STRIPED MIDDIES " ' 1 . Blue, red and light blue, for summer outing wear. Misses and children. Each ... .,... $2;25 ALL SILK MESSALINES in all . $1.75 A splendid quality and finish the wanted colors, nt the low price, yard ..;.:...: CREPE DE CHINES ' - Superior qualities and weaves, a host Osgood colors, the yard ...,.,,$1.89, NEW WHITE BARONET SPORT . SATINS FOR SKIRTS Just arrived, fancy designs, yard wide, at this new low price, the yard $1.95 Chautauqua Tickets On Sale at This Store Buy Your Chautauqua Tickets Now On Sale Here. Inherit dollars hot not I ; i - con-! I . 1 , .... f y ' , 1 , , . , ,', , 1 en TarllT boosts wool mid boosts coal. It will be eool iext winter. A tranHparevit , 1'ulm shows you what Ulnd of i Funny thinKs barM"1". is udveitisliiff pelticoats. the strike iv to keep "Mvstery In lionrder's Death" licndliue' Interview the rook. I lieach HUit man he is. j d (5 One store : Tlie old 'horse trader didn't as many thlnns to lie about as modern auto swapper. , have i m A soeedc-r doesn't l)ieak any rec ords yetting out of the hospital. With sis million things at home thut ure fine to worry about some people keep up with the Chinese go far towards I'1""- - " The outlook Is hrlnhler. We saw a mun liny u new dinner Imsket. You seldom see a bootleyK'er drunk. , no.' e The man mUht as always lurntn up his well turn up his toes. or poor, is K'rttinj; what everyone else wants; huppincs is RvttiiiK' what you want. IN MASSACHUSETTS KorkeCeller Miys lie made Ms dollar ni lliitK' Kcese. Moral: sonielldllf: lo e.l fcl'ese. 'ind 1 rrHE education of the anti-prohibitionist, whose opinions are I oasea upon the chatter of the thirsty and the allegations 1'"''1 11 oi an mieresiea propagnnaa, is a patriotic duty to the per formance of which The News is glad to contribute its help. To iViiti cinrl w'tx noil onr A a... .... n i . v v vmh vui ivmiuin ttlLCIiUUIl lit 1111 IiriU'lP in Tip .111 v When an oTfit'c man It usually sta it: fhhts out Mm to Nook i COItlUltf j Very frv K'mmI old t of mii'tai b w lio Hum. Wuik for Hit1! Ah SIX 'lU'lll'.' ( 'anatl.t lia hnini ttWlUM' Vi iirt' to l way. a Uwx cr lMM-frutacro than any othrr nation, lin, on MOiM-rl any- issue oi tne v orid a Work, entitled "What Has Prohibition Done?" and written by Elizabeth Tilton, chairman of a com mittee named to investigate the results of prohibition by the Family Welfare society, formerly the Associated Charities, of Boston. The inquiry was confined to the state of MassaehusHtt.. nn.i two significant facts are to be kept in mind in considering the ...u. ui.-vuo v. ii.ii,, iu.i.rti HiiM-iiM was a wet slate uetore the passing of the eighteenth amendment and since then has en acted no state enforcing law to sustain the federal law. Second, the comparison of conditions is made between the vears 1920-21 nnd 1914-15, both of which periods were marked by commer cial and industrial depression. Nothing could be fairer than to comnare statistics nf a period with those of a dry period of depression. The state la-i, ' VVP . .. B" bor department's graphs for Massachusetts show that in De-i -cember, 1915, there was 8.6 per cent of the organized labor of a nyw Yrk nnr.- h, the commonwealth out of work, and that in December. 1921 1 Ki ki in V thprp vas27..I ner ennt in a lit o r,li,rV,f 1 1 lo.ii :.i" .' I '" r show c.mes out In , , - ... y,i,t,v. . in c 111 l.'.X IftMUM- trial situation was markedly worse than that of 19 IS this reason we would naturally look for a correspondingly wor.e showing in the social reactions indicated by statistics. nut nere are some ot the facts which Miss Tilt.m n,l WU committee discovered : j In 1921 total arrests were 15 per cent less than in 1915; ar-' rests for d runkenne.s were 4,1 jier cent less; charity cases in' which drink was a factor were 9() per cent less; cases involving ill treatment or neglect of children In which drink was a factsr, were 66 per cent less; children removed from improper homes were 90 per cent fewer; admissions to the Washington home for inebriates decreased by 27 per cent; deaths from alcoholism in spite of the fatal character of bootlegger booze decreased, by 35 per cent; first admission as insane to asylums, diagnosis! aicoholic f sychoyes, decreased 49 per cent; th penal popula-I tion was 5i per cent less; juvenile delinquency was 50 percent less; indoorj-elief to inmates of institutions decreased 57 pert 2 "a 1 i first I U A ol K 1 M lie here when A ' hir a (.rowd A Tlie boss run Ret In- with loafing K on tile Jd by pretendins; he Is fls- 1 r uriilK out soiiietldllK. know A any ? '4 5 ! 0 1 5 5 j r 1 s See the Greatest Magician in the World Here in HURSDAY NIGHT JULY -20 PAUL FLEMING I ft Snfetv arid Service ( Founded on ample capital, ,it . .,, managed by experienced and successful business men, under ;, , the direct supervision of the Federal Reserve System, and . the Banking Department of the' s, State-of Oregon, this bank of- y fers to its patrons and friends an efficient and courteous ser f vice in every department of banking. . ........ On this basis alone, unew ac counts are invited and every person entering our doors whether as a prospective bor rower, depositor or Safe De posit customer is assured a I complete and friendly hearing. The Bank of Community j Interests. The Inland Empire Bank Pendleton, Oregon Tl'o irllU'iinhim will in dm n h I m-I I u ra w.h ti ,'! a tin- lt 11. One half tho worlil doesn't why the other half lives. OF CHICAGO. ABSOLUTELY MYSTIFYING THE KEENEST MINDS AND QUICK EST EYES BY HIS MAGIC. -hit. ntafe ji-st rx;.otly ol.l wi.nirr Ki'Uw'hes. Hut., i'if me. ih "r Partw! unit W9 all hu ll v n remmmm TENT 0 CONSTIPATION BIUOUSNESS Headache INDIGESTION Stomach Trouble -SOLD tVtHTWHtllE- AT INTERSECTION OF COURT AND WEBB STS., CITY LOT. Season tickets for $2.50. Save $8.00 by buying season ticket for thirteen big programs now. Some Day You Are Going to Own a Ford Some day you are going to own a Ford. You may or may not have a large car at the same time, but the fact remains that some day you are going. tobear ora owner, lne universal demand and the universal necessity for a car such as the Ford make it essential that the product itself measure up to the highest -standard. As the -popularity of the Ford car has increased, our effort to keep pace by the rendition of real service has been doubled Isn't it about time that you became better acquainted with the Ford car and with us? ORDER YOUR NEW FORD NOW! Simpson Auto Co. rORD ASD PORDSOX AtTHOKIZED SALES ASH &ERTICK PtMekna, Or. MttV.