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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1922)
TEN PAGES PAGS FOUR DAILY EAST OEEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY EVENING, JULY 21, 1922. EastmQreAonigri) Published Dally and Semi-Weekly, Pendleton, Oregon, oy the AST OREOONIAN PUB. CO. ntered at the poet office at Pendle ton, Oregon, a second claia mall mat tar. ON BALE IN OTHER CITIES. Imperial Bote) News Stand, Portland. ON FILE AT Chicago Bureau, 909 Security Building-, Washington. D. C, Bureau 501 Four teenth Street, New York. Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press Is exclusively ntltled W the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to It or aot otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein Af INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER at SUBSCRIPTION RATH (IN ADVANCB) Dally, one year, by mail 18.00 Daily, six months, by mall .............. 8.00 Daily, three months, by mail......... 1.60 Dailv. one month by mail ........... .60 Daily, one year by carrier ... . 7.60 Daily, six months by carrier 8.75 Daily, three months by carrier.... 1.95 Daily, one n.onth. by carilsr .......... .65 Beml-Weekly, 1 year by mall !.00 Semi-Weekly, six months by mall 1.00 Semi-Weekly, three months by mall .10 TelepbOM WH1 r - " arin - - . jt a i THE CAHV IXCi KM I When I was but a little lad, my father carved what meat we had, With grace and skill he'd cut and . slice the roast of beef or veal With dexterous hand he'd wield the ' blade, no false or awkward move he made. ' And deftly he could whet the knife upon his shining steel, But now and then I'd hear him say: "Who's used my carving knife today? What woman's used this hlade of , mine for cutting wire or tin?" And on this special point he'd harp: "a carving weapon must be , t sharp, Or one can never cut a roast and have the slices thin." ' I "That knife must not be used on string or bread or boards or anything. Hands off my carving blade," he'd cry, and yet I grieve to say, In spite of all his warnings grim, the ' women paid no heed to him, They used his sacred carving knife u dozen times a day. They'd use that knife for cutting soap, old carpets, leather belts and rope, They'd use it too, for pulling tacks and leave it dulled and nicked, And every time a meal began, my father was an angry man, But vain was every oath he swore and every kick he kicked. N'ow like my good old dad I stand, and take the carving knife in hand And run my thumb along its edge and find it dulled and nicked, And like my good old dad I vow, some day there'll be a healthy row, Tint I'm as unsuccessful as my fath er when he kicked. The maid, the youngsters and the wife still take that sacred carv ing knife And use it as a handy tool on wood or lead or stone, In spite of nil I do or say, the hlade is dulled from day to day, I cannot get the women folks to leave that, knife alone. x SB-. V -' BY f Sf i4-Slf-in.li. A,knd.Or6n. Anybody can sing In grand opera in the movies. No one has much sense until adversity beats it into them. ' Those who make use of the daylight never sr em to worry about saving it. City men who go into farming succeed about as well as farmers who go into Wall street. Golfers, fishermen and real estate agents possess a marked genius in the art of avoiding facts. The boy without a college education who can make an hon est living is better educated than a college graduate who can't. Hez Heck Says: "Suspender buttons and steads alius come oft." casters on bed- (Copyright, 1922, by Edgar A. Guest.i GIVING THEM CAKE; DENYING THEM BREAD TT IS very evident from expressions giv6n last evening, by nnirman tJooth and by other members of the state highway commission that the present commissioners are thoroughly impressed witn trie idea that tourist roads are the great need of Oregon. On the other hand they seem to place little stress on roads that serve economic needs. For instance Mr. Booth thinks the John Day highway solves me roaa proDiem tor urant county. It will be admitted the John Day highway is a great road. It is of particular value in caring for east and west tourist business through that section. But it provides for no means of travel north and south. Yet conditions are such that north and south travel is what is need ed. The stockman in Grant county wants to reach a town where he finds banking accommodations, where there is a la bor supply and where important mercantile houses are located. Three places are open to them, Heppner, Pendleton and Baker. The John Day highway takes them to none of these places. It reaches Arlington at one end. and Unity at the other. A heavy share of the Grant county banking is done in Pendleton and Pi lot Rock. Naturally the people wish to come this way. They have made the point very clear many times and the case in com plete. ' , v The policy of the highway commission means that Grant county is to be given cake in the form of an east and west tourist road but is to be denied the bread it needs in the form of a north and south road that would serve the big economic need. That is not sound policy and it cannot prevail indefinitely. It is grossly unjust to northern Grant county and to .southern Umatilla. Those regions are isolated and need help. If highway funds are running short why not curtail on the dessert, in other words, tourist roads, rather than on economic roads. It seems a travesty that this state can secure funds for roads that bring Visitors into the state but can do nothing for a road that would .give relief to home people who have suffered long and the getting tired of the primitive life they are forced to lead. The Grant county people of course appreciate the cake thai they are getting but they tell us frankly and often profane ly that what they desire is a road over which they can haul some Umatilla county flour and other supplies. jxyy One day last week Congress forgot and did some work. Men who long for the good old days would hate to wear rubber collars. Out of 100 reasons fight the main one is why couples 'because." PRESBYTERIAN OFFICIAL 10 MISSIONARY FIELDS Wealth hint: Throwing out your chest never hurts it. Boston woman who thought her hubby dead found him alive at a dance. This happens every night." All play and no work doesn't make Jack wish school would start. Aviators and others who look I down on people have to come to earth sooner or later, ' ) We may hsve a yellow peril and a red peril but Vacationists worry about the tan peril. They are finding new war frauds. It often looks as if the. promise of a Boldler bonus were one. It only-takes two to make a quar rel, but 'thers nlwuya help. Ohio man who dropped dead at a ball game may have seen the umpire make a correct decision. ' There Is a bright side. In hot wealher water is warm enough -. to take a cold bath every morning. One day last week a man didn't ci t himself with a safety razor. They killed a 4li0-pound turtle for Tuft in London. The sea air surely gave him an appetite. Two Americans in the British army went crazy. It was a short trip: 28 YEARS AGO (From the Daily July 21, East lfi!M.) Oregonian, from I.a Hinghum PRESERVING THE ELK A FINE of $750 and costs was assessed recently in a Clat sop county court against a Portland man who pleaded guilty to killing an elk. To some it may seem that the penalty was one of extraordinary severity, but it is going to take just such penalties and heavier ones to protect the noblest game animal of this country from the tate of extermination. Our national museums are filled with the reconstructed skele tons of animals and reptiles which roamed the swamps and fields in prehistoric times. They became extinct when condi tions on the globe changed from those for which they were nat urally adapted. They were victims of evolution. The native elk of America is not in any immediate danger of being a victim of evolution but he is in grave danger of becoming-a victim of civilization. There are now only about 52.000 elk in the United States, according to the United States depart ment of agriculture. These constitute but a mere remnant of Ihe great herds which once roamed the forests from Maine to Oregon. The federal biological survey is authority for the statement that the co-operation of federal, state and all otho' int v ted agencies is essential to insure the permanency of II. ..; : ;.!; mlid animals. High mortality among elk in recent years has beer, iue in part to adverse weather conditions such as periodical summer droughts followed by unusually severe winters. But encroach ment of settlers largely is to blame. .Much of the suitable win ter range is enmmaieo. iiuniers Kill thousands ot elk as gamej ana many 01 me iinesi animals necome tne victims ot tooth hunters operating illegally. Mountain lions, lynxes and coyotes also kill many. The elk is a distinctly American animal. He is the king of the forests. To allow his extermination, if it can be prevented, would be shameful. Too soon he will join the plesiosaurus and thexest in the caverned rocks despite all that man can do to keep the race alive. The department of agriculture urges that limited ranges of j hay land, through which elk would be absolutely protected, bei al ' r.i hocoi r,v t n j ctts rn m nn t t t In any event the time is near when the same stringent efforts as those which saved the buffalo from extinction are needed to preserve the elk. And not the least of these efforts must consist of constant vigilance on the part of game wardens and penalties by the courts upon those persons, who deliberately hunt to death the romparatively few remaining elk. such as will deter other fn.m t : - : i j : . 1 t . . , . . . i . , EnowiIlK Miniiai ui.-iryam ii.r Maiuiury laws and the efforts be-i'or the enum year: iTir.cip.-il. Prof- ing made to keep the monarch of American game animals fn)m! c- v- i'n. Mw crr becoming only a memory, I Kpn. Rown Eppi. cieo Bicr r ud Eva, Wood. N. M. Perkins is home C.rande, where he sold Springs mineral water. ' o. K and P. P. Light and Misses Eda and Gertrude Mi'Connell .of Pen dleton returned Thursday from a trip to the mountains with Mr. and Mrs. J. I.. Hall and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jones of Butter Creek. They visited Hidawny and Teal springs. A plan is in the process of forma tion according to K. V. Wamsley. which will make provision for sick or disabled members of the Pendleton fire department. Ed Weaver, T. F. Howard and n. M. French have been mutinied a committee to devise plans whereby this feature may be put Into effect. C. S. Jackson of the East Ore gonian has signified a desire to con tribute $Scl to this fund. Henry Jackson and George O'Pan tel have returned from Hcpner and Long Creek. . W. liigby Is cutting Marley which will go about r$ bushels to the acre. He expects his seventeen acres of wheat to go about 55 bushels to the acre. Thomas T Nelson has been named one of the stock Inspectors for I'm.i tilla county. Rev. M. V. Howard is here from Walla Walla. Miss Mnble Pauiihtery accompanied her grandmother Mrs. J. O. Scales to Mcacbam this morning. William Turn II Is now bill clerk at the . w. II. X. depot, and Ed Crawford Is car accountant. VANCOUVER, B.'-O., July 21. (I. N. S.) Dr. William Hiram Foulkes, general secretary of the Presbyterian New Era Movement, will sail from here July 27 on the steamship Prin cess of Australia. He will visit mis sion fields In the Philippines.. Japan. Korea and China. His Journey is the result of official action taken by the General Assem bly's Committee of the New Era Movement. As expressed in the re corded vote of fhe New Era, Staff, this is "in order to gather first-hand nowledge of the benevolence work of the church, with that zeal and under standing which have characterized his knowledge of benevolence work in the homeland." This is Dr. Foulke's first absence from the active work of the New Era Movement, in the United States in four years. , - In addition to thus getting acquaint ed at first hand with the work going on In the mission fields, Dr. Foulkes also hopes to present to the mission workers the type of work carried on by the New Era Movement. Presby terlanlsm in the foreign field, notably in Korea and the Philippines, has wit nessed great growth as a result of en thusiastic adoption of New Era meth ods from the beginning of the move ment, and church leaders In the Or- ident will welcome first-hand presen tation of New Era principles by the general secretary. On account of his intimate con nection with the Chinese minister, Dr. Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, in the work of re lief of the Chinese famine, Dr. Foulkes is to be. afforded unusual access to many in Government circles In the Orient. Dr. Foulkes expects to arrive in Yokohama August 7, In Tokio Au gust 14, in Seoul August 22, in Pe king Septembers, in Shanghai Sep tember 26, id Manila, October 3, in Canton October 13, in Hongkong Oc tober 19. He will arrive back In the United States at Seattle November 7. Dr. Foulkes is also secretary of the Committee of the Presbyterian Church on Work in Europe, but has deferred a personal visit to Europe until after the completion of his Far Eastern trip. WHY NOT CHOOSE ONE OF These Tailored Suits While you can buy them at sacrifice prices, The styles are virtualy the same as for fall, the materials are the same, but the prices are very much lower. We suggest that you purchase now. A few tweed suits left at almost your own price. ALL SUMMER DRESSES have been reduced for a quick clear ance. Your-size and color may be here. Boston Bags, brown and black , split cowhide, a real bargain, each $1.69. 1 ; Japanese Parasols used for sun shades, each ................ , . 95c Crochet' Bedspreads, full size, for sleeping porches, rooming houses, etc. Each $1.89 Mercerized TaTble Damasks, pure bleached, fine satin finish, 54 inch to 72 inches wide. The yard 59c, 69c 89c, 98c and $1.29. We Have Athletic Union Suits in Sealpax and other grades. Very cool and comfortable for hot weath er wear $1.15 to $1.95 Cotton Batts, weight s lbs., full size for comforters, stitched, Rock River high grade, each. . ... . .' $1.10 The Best Turkish Towels, large size, extra good weight and finish that, we can possibly buy to sell' at this low price, each 49c Black Bathing Suit Bags, made of automobile leather, waterproof, make good shopping bags, each 50c Bleached and Unbleached Crash Towelings, made of all linen, linen and cotton and all cotton. A splend id assortment of qualities, the yard 15c, 18c, 20c to 33c. NewToiles, in the small dots, several colors, yard wide, special low price, yard 39c Kute Kut Play Garments for Girls $1.15 Koverall Play Garments for Little Boys 98c Wins Award Mr 1.. Tallmnn. Miss Ma How - mnn and K. I low man have eon to Ix'hman Sprint,. r Oat won the matrons contest h Mi'tlio. irt r h u rc h 1 a t n i k h t .atA w rrtnftd fcv Mrs. N. S. lVSiain, who irf"MWI with an ff;nt r.t,v if work Ptitlfi " No Place Like Home." The rrooet!s of the -oni'.t w nr t'wrl pnvinj expends in fwntHif Mi- Kihel Ourfield to the "Hit' Jvni.irwt contest. At the meeting of the Wert on sort "'! director Weimist;iy evening the fol lowing teachers were elecUt to wrve S Iks GIBBON MAN WILL ACI AS FOREST PATROLEMAN (East Oregonian Special.) GIBBON, July 21. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thompson, little daughter Zona and Miss Alta Thompson left Tuesday for Meachara where they will spend the summer, Mr. Thompson working as a fire patrolman tor tne government. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Kuhns stopped over at Corporation Ranger Station last night on their way to Mt. Emily lookout station where they will spend a few days while Mr. Kuhns installs a new fire finder there. . v . Mrs. Mae Wells and George Peter son spent Sunday in Walla Walla, motoring over In Mrs. Wells car. Mr. and 'Mrs. Cecil Hyatt and little son Vernon, spent Saturday and Sun day here from Weston at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dolf Thompson. W. W. Hoch, manager of Bingham Springs, spent Monday in Pendleton on business. Mr. and Mrs. .Geo. Ferguson anil son James, of Pendleton, are visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Ferguson. Mrs. C. E. Fisk and little son Stan ley, of Weston are here for a few days' visit at the summer camp of her brother, Mr. John Banister. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bonifer were in Pendleton Monday on business con nected with their store. Roy Swart, third trick operator hers Is working in La Grande officj for a couple of weeks, his trick here being: filled by Miss Belva Williams. : i S. G. Price of Weston, spent Sun day here at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Henry Thompson. Wayne Williams came . down from Pleasant Valley and spent Sunday hero at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Williams. KM Ann T. Cooliajre, IS, vfectrd tutn - ot NeWiOrln fcsarbe fcr a committer erf bust Bms m. - ts orr.wl - Had Your Iron Today? That Delicious Bread of Energy and Iron SERVE, raisin bread twice weekly on your table for three reasons: 1. Flavor; 2. Energy; 3. Iron You remember how good a generously filled, full fruited raisin bread can be. Your grocer can supply a loaf like this. Insist if he hasn't one he can get it for you. s Full-fruited bread is full of luscious seeded Sun-Maid raisins rich in energizing nutriment in practically p re digested form. Raisins als furnish fatigue-resisting iron' for the blood. Serve plain raisin bread at dinner or as a tasty fruited breakfast toast with coffee. Make delicious bread pudding with left-over slices. No need to waste a crumb of raisin bread. Begin this week the habit of raisin bread twice weekly in your home, for raisin bread is both good and good for joo. SUN-MAID Seeded RAISINS Make delicious bread, pies, puddings cakes, etc. A.sk rou grocer for them. Send for free book of tested recipes. Sun-Maid Raisin Growers F kdfM IVpt. X. SIS-H. Ktvm.. r!if. Ml -4-