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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1922)
TEN PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 5, 1922. ' PAGE THREE " Ntivs Notes of Pendleton fjas McPhail in Charge. Miss Christina McPhail is now in harge o( the work at the Round-Up neadquarters in the Judd building. Miss Laura Schwarz, who has been mployed there, is now employed at he Hartman Abstract Co. CALENDAR OF EVENTS September 18 to 23 Second Annual Northwest Grain and Hay Show. r September 21, 22, 23, Aouno .eaves for Rutte. Dr. Joseph Rrennan, who came to Pendleton recently to- De associ- ted in the practice of his profesron with Dr. Frank E. Hoyden', left yest erday for Rutte, Montana, to attend he wedding . of his sister. . He will -eturn here on Wednesday. $ Library Clianges Hours After one month of being open aft ernoons only, the country library today changed back to the old schedule of hours. Under the schedule which went into effect this morning, the library will be open from 1 till 6:30 o'clock in the afternoon and from 7 till 9 in the evenings. and other similar supplies. Mr. Childs will be purchasing agent for the com pany. - " . Horses Good Itiickers Two of the best buckers noticed in the try-outs at the Round-Up grounds are Minnemucca and Hotfoot. Both are known to Round-Up '. fans and show some novel twists and turns in the arena.. The try-outs ore being held daily. conditions resume a normal some of the buyers say. T trend, Make Business Trip. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Livermore left today for Baker. From there they will go on down in Grant and Har ney counties for a trip of about two weeks. They expect to be back in time for the Round-l'p. The trip is on a business mission. - WWWWVWWWW w WW www Use the Phones Grocery, 2 Phones 526 v Other Depts. 78-79 1 QUALITY SERVICE 3$ PENDLETON'S LEADING STORK Use the Phones Grocery, 2 . Phones 526 Other Depts. 78-79 Ralph Don Makes Kill. Another name has been uanca the list of young deer hunters In th person or Ralph Dein. The young man accompanied his parents, . Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Dem, to Ukiah Sat urday" afternoon. They returned to day and brought with them a buck which Ralph killed on Round Moun tain. The young man is 16 yea-s old. Two Couples Got Licenses. . I Licenses, to wed have been issued to jut the office of the county clerk to Claude H. Jarvis, a farmer,' and Hazel Ely, both of Gurdane; and to Emmett N. Scharn, mechanic, and Louise Mary Brandl, bookkeeper, both of Pendleton. Pl'oeess've lub to Meet Following a vaction during July and August the Progressive Business Clurj will resume meeting this week. . On Thursday evening the club will hold a pinner at the Elks Club, starting nt 7:30. A speaker at the meeting will be Hi Harter, secretary of the Na tional Exchange Club. The meeting will be for members only. I Tinkle Ts Appraiser VV. B. Hlnklc, formerly a resident of the .west end of Umatilla county, now living In Portland, has been appointed appraiser of the Federal Land Bank at Spokane, according to word that has been received from Portland. Mr. ITinkle will appraise land on which the Spokane bank makes loans in Kastrrn and Central Oregon and in Washington. To Live in Los Anselos Mr, and Mrs. Henry Childs and family will leave tomorrow for Los Angeles, Calif., where they will make their home in the future. Mr. Childs, who has been with Wallace Bros, for several months, has accepted a posi tion with the Boyle-Dayton Mfg. Co., makers of gasoline pumps, oil tanks Hearing Is Held George Brewer, charged with" the theft of some tools out of the round-house at Rieth. ' was giv en his preliminary hearing this morning 'before County Judge. I. M. Pchannep. His trial was set for Fri day morning.' Brewer was arrested last week and has been held in the county jail since to answer to the charges. Several Pay Fines Four fines of $10 each were either paid into the strong- box of the city this morning, or their bails were for feited. Gi B. Falkner and Harry Lu tin were, fined for being drunk, and John Doe Reeden and John Doe for feited $19 each on a charge of fight ing. The two men are said to have retired from the business section of the city to settle in privacy a little difficulty of their own. . Their arrest by the police followed.. ' Wheat Hauling About Done. The task of hauling . wheat from ranches to the warehouses has been completed by a great percentage of growers in this county, according to statements of local grain buyers. In those sections where the hauls are comparatively! short, practically all of the grain has already been moved. In those sections ; where the hauls are longer, there Still remains quite a. bulk of the crop to move. i ne market is still sluggish, and compa ratively little wheat is being sold, according to the buyers: , Little change is anticipated until Industrial 101101101101101101101- -101101- We Have Secured the Exclusive on jSprague, Warner & Company x (Chicago) : RICHELIEU BRAND HIGH GflADE FOODS. RICHELIEU FOODS are the highest ac complishment of more than sixty years of constant endeavor by Sprague, Warner & Co., to produce a complete line of table sup plies of superior excellence. - Mrs. C. H.' Tower, special representa tive, will be with us this. week to introduce the line. Let us make an appointment with you for a personal call by Mrs. Tower who will take her samples to your home. "TABLE SUPPLIES OF SUPERIOR EXCELLENCE." Pendleton Casli Market INCORPORATED. GROCEKIKS AND MEATS 301 E. Court St 3 Phones 10L Private exchange connects - you with both depts. i, i - T01 TOI- -xor-io .t-ioi 101 101 101 101 "Finance Corporation Sues. Lee Caldwell and others are de fendants in a suit which has been brought iii circuit court by the Sec ond Northwestern Finance Corpora'- tion. Judgment on a note of ?945.fifl, claimed to be past due and unpaid, is asked by the corporation. Peterson, Bishop and Clark repre sent the plaintiff. Ten Hats Made. Ten hats, for fall and winter wear, were made by Pine Creek women re cently at a meeting at the home of Mrs. Retta Gilliland, under the direc tion of Mis. Edith G. Van Deusen, home demonstration agent. Mrs. Van Deusen is meeting with the Mil ton Girls' Canning Club and will be at Rieth tomorrow, at Echo Thursday and at Stanfield Friday, in, the inter eats of millinery, i Streams Are Muddy. Mountain streams near Duncan nnd Meacham are still carrying: a large volume of mud as a result of the cloudburst there more than a week since, according to the reports of angfers who tried their hands at angling over the week end. One fisherman declares he walked 20 miles' in an effort to get a mess of trout. In a majority of the streams trout fishins was an impossibility! he reports. Checks Licensed Warehouses C. C. Green, employed by the De partment of Agriculture, Is a visitor in Pendleton. He Is checking up licens ed warehouses In Umatilla county in the interests of the U. S. 'Warehouse Act. At present, his headquarters are in Portland, but 'within the near fu ture he expects to move either to Pen dletonor Walla Walla. ' The Washing ton city is nearer the center of the field he has to cover, but he is serious ly considering making Pendleton his headquarters, Mr. Green states. ow About the Boys' H School othes BRING THE BOY DOWN AND LET US OUTFIT HIM FOR SCHOOL. Per haps he needs a suit, sweater, blouse, extra pants, shirt, cap or hat, if so we can please him and fit him. . - . JACKIE COOGAN SUITS;$6 TO $10 To Bring Wife Home. ., Joe Coffman, member of the Pen dleton fire department, has gone to Lewiston, Idaho, to bring back his wife, "Hilly" Coffman, who was one of the carload of persons injured near there last night when a car which Mrs. Coffman is said to have been driving went over a grade. The machine is said to have been turned over, and a number of the occupants were injured. Mrs. Coffman was cut across the breast by the glass from the windshield. Jimmy Osborne who figured in an auto wreck here about a week since, was another member or me party. Johnny Maggart, also of Pendleton, and some Walla Walla people were in the car, according to meager reports. Coffman is expect ed to return to Pendleton some time this evening. Boys will be boys and it's hard to make a boy sit still. He just hates to be a sissy. But he won't have to sit still if he has one of these suits. They J have been designed and tailored especially for boys who are full of life. They will stand the grind; boys like, that; you'll like it too. A big assortment of colors and patterns to select from. Other Boys Suits From $6.00 to $17.50 BOYS'MATS $1.25 TO $2.00 New Fll styles and colorings in all sizes. You ; know the boy would like to have a new hat to wear to school, and if he doesn't like a hat let him try one of' our NEW CAPS at $1.00 to $2.50. ' BOYS' SHIRTS $1.00 TO $2.50 in a wide range of colors and patterns, well made. ; Cut to fit and wear well. We're showing some BOYS' SILK PONGEE SHIRTS too, which are high class at $4.00. BOYS' BLOUSES 75c TO $1.50 The best of quality goods used in these blouses for the prices asked, some plain colors of blue, grey and tan, and then some neat striped ones. All sizei now in stock. Buy him several for school use. BOYS' TIES 50c TO $1.00 Whether he likes a Windsor, bow or four-in-hand we can surely please him. BOYS' WOOL J&RSEYS $2.50 Some boys like to wear Jerseys. Maybe your boy does. Let him have one of these, a good assort ment of colors to pick from. BOYS' SHOES $3.75 TO $5.50 Boys going to school have to wear tough shoes. We have them, and can fit any boys' foot. We also have shoes for Sunday wear too. Let the boy wear a pair of our shoes and he'll want to wear more of them, because they're good. 1 BOYS' UNDERWEAR $1.00 TO $250 , No doubt the boy needs a suit or two to car-y him over, if so, send him down for them. Weve offering many styles for fall and winter in all sizes, Insurance Company Sues The claim that William Ross Alex ander secured a policy for $5,000 on his life by making fraudulent state ments concerning his health lg made by the Atlantic Life Insurance Co. in a suit which has been filed in circuit court by the insurance company against Alexander and his wife, May Alexander, the beneficiary of the in surance. The statement is made by the plaintiff corporation In the com plaint that Alexander was afflicted with epilepsy at the time of taking the policy when he resided in an Eastern state. The family has since moved to Milton, Oregon, it is stated, and re cently the defendant made application mr ine benefits of his insurance on the ground that he was totallv 'dis abled. The comnanv offers to tn ly paying the premiums with inter est and askB that the court annul .the policy and restrain either of the de fendants from making any claim for benefits. Peterson. Bishop and Clark represent the plaintiff corporation. Karl Haig is usually credited with being thorough in all that he does, and he Intends to be thorough In the whiskey business. When he was ask ed to Join the Board of .Directors he consented, it was stated, 'on the un derstanding that he would be no mere figure-head, but would take his full share of the work as well as of the responsibility nttached to the office." He ts like to have plenty to do. The Distiller's Company is planning to in chrease greatly its whiskey output, both In Ireland as well as Scotland. It has.ncquired half the shares of the United" Distilleries of Belfast and ex pects soon to acquire the entire concern. DEATH RATE LOWER BY F 60 VOCATIONS NOW, - ' OPEN TO WOMEN .V LONDON',. Sept. 5. ik. P.) All American doctors are regarded by foreign medical men as more or less expert concerning alcohol, both as re gards the consequence of going with out it altogether; over-indulgence, and the various stages pf Inebriety betwixt and between. ' .' A Picture of Beauty - The many hours spent in your home surely makes It worth while lo have that spot looking beatui ful. That's your first considera tion. The second consideration will be your delight in having your friends ad mire your very good taste. . Tour third consideration will take care of the other two, namely: L. J. McATEE CONTEACTOS AND JOB WOEK 513 Klin Street HAIG ELECTED DIRECTOR OF DISTILLER'S CO. LONTJON'. Sept. S. (A. P .1 FI.M. Marshal Earl Halg has been elected n director of the Distillers' Company at me annual meeting he d In Kdinhnrr- The chief product ot the comnanv is whiskey. There are some people who ining u ratner detracts from the Field Marshal's dignity and reputation to be interested In a business of that sort, but their disapproval Is hardly as vo cal as It would be in America. The Haigs have long been financially in terested in whiskey. , NEW YORK, Sept. 5. (U. P.) A unique exposition of women's accom plishments will be held In New York City September 18-23, at the Hotel Commodore, under the auspices of the New York League of Business and Professional Women. The Woman's Activities Exhibit will present to the public for the first time an adequate knowledge of the progress of women in the business, professional and industrial world. It has attracted national attention be cause of its varied an ddistlnctive fea- tures along both educational and bus-' iness lines. The exposition will be a visualitlon of all the activities of-the "new wo man" In business nnd It will point out to every girl the 60 or more vocations which are now open to her nnd show her the need of training for whatever special work ech selects. Reedsport, after being llghtless for some time, will have electricity again, a company having been form ed to take over the nlunl ami n 'ate It. Therefore, the assembled doctors fit the meeting of the F-ritish Medical Association at Glasgow listened with great Interest to wi.at Dr. John T. .MacCurdy, of Cornell Medical College, had to say about "alcohol In the re lation to human ecenomy." Each one of us In varying degrees, he said, has the same difficulty i: meeting the world as the unfortunates who demonstrate their inrapaclt dramatically. The "normals'' drug ged themselves with cheap fiction theaters, and moving pictures; above all they forgot themselves in social Intercourse. "When, however, a man is tired or oppressed with care," Dr. MacCurdy went on. "how can he forget his ob sensing anxieties sufficiently to be come social. If he be rtormnl a small amount of alcohol will give the news s.-u-y relaxation. Conviviality is more Important for the maintenance of our mental ability and effectiveness than we realize. Innumerable people are I happier and therefore healthles be. cause tney indulge moderatclp In nl rohol. "We live In an Imperfect world imperfect largely because we have not yet gained the capacity to govern onr own Instincts. ' Alcohol Is a crutch thnt man has discovered to help him with this disability." Dr. MacCurdy dealt with what h Q ARETTEW itS toasted! Something New in Rad 10 IPs toasted. This one extra process gives a delightful quality that can not be duplicated r V - n I called the "paranoiac group." In them, he said, a drink or two brought out quarrelsom and dangerous ten dencies. They were apt to imagine slights and insults. Frequently they were women haters, slid affected the ( company of men almost exclusively. "Theso men are not well-adapted people, and rebel at discipline or au thority. Drink brings these anti-social tendencies to the surface. As marriage make the most persistent de mand for social adaptation that we know of, many of those men begin to drink only after marriage. "The innate rebellion at the bond age of marriage appears when alcohol has liberated their inhibitions. They become querulous, and bent or abuse their wives every Saturday night. La ter, delusions and Infidelity- may ap pear, and eventually become fixed. Then the victim becomes certifiable, and Is confined." Sir James Parr, of Liverpool, con tinuing the discussion, said that the main value of alcohol was social. "People like myself," said Sir James, 'take It because they like It. A great deal 'of social unrest is due to the high .cost of alcohol. I notice that cutthroats in Ireland and Pan da are largely teetotalers." Dr. C.. Sullivan, Medical Superin tendent of Broadmoor Asylum, said that "alcohol, as regards Insanity, is a negligible Tactor." Dr. M. Hindhcde, of Copenhagen, discussed the effect of the severely re stricted supply of alcoloh on mor tality In Denmark. The surprising result of the war-rationing system, he said, which Included the restriction of i BLUNDERS 1 Why Is TbM wrong? The answer will be found on the lasslfled page. (Copyright, 192:1, Associated Editors) mortality rate but the rapidity of the , reduction. The most natural explana. tion of this seemed to be that the ef fects of alcohol were not limited to drunkards only. The death rate of the whole country dropped from 18.5 to 10.4 per 1.000, which was the lowest mortality figure that had ever been registered In any Eupropean country ' alcohol, was not the reduction of the at any time. .tlA.OM.3gf.17 tra about Chester Count ir. P. 2. ". tnK. leas ia the rural dutrk-ts. Of wire,. SVKfIKI8 OF TIIK AN'M'.XL tTATKIE.T OF TIIK QUEEN INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA of New York, in the State of New York, on the thirty-first day of Decem ber, 1920, mude to the Insurance Commissioner of the State of Oregon, pursuant to law; CAPITAL Amount of capital stock paid up 13,000,000.00 IN COM!) Net premiums received during the year. ..... IS. 934. 01 1.(8 Interest, dividends and rents received during the year 700,603.18 Income from other sources received during the year 1. 947.60 Total Income , $9.3I,46!.5 OlSliritHKM'KNTS Net losses paid during the year Including ad justment expenses gg, 149,185.(1 Dividends paid on capital stork during the year 700,000.00 Commissions and salaries paid during the year 2,833,3(9.(0 Taxes, licenses and fees paid during the year. 195,g(9.8t Amount of all other expenditures 1.018.031.20 Total expendituie .', AKSim Value of real estate owned (market value)... Nil Value of stocks and bonds owned (market value) 14,(49.174.10 Loans on mortgages and collateral, etc 40.oeii.no Cash In banks and on hand (91,!7(.S1 Premiums In course of collection written since September 10. 19:0 l.S08,341.g Interest and rents due and sccrued 48 k04 79 Othr assets r fi5.702.St Total admitted assets , 1.1 ltlMTlrV C.rom claims for in.-- unpaid I1.3K.999.93 Amount of unearned premiums on all out stsndlng riks . 8,0!.8: 72 Due for commission and brokerage M.4 11. C2 All other liabilities 394.140 08 Total liabilities, ev.-liioive of (ai.ir.i! stork of 8 IlCSLVKtW I OUKtiOS IX)H THE YEAR v.-t premiums r'lved during lite y-ar losses paid during the year loae incurred during the v-sr v oi r.rs inm ittxcK t)mpay or amihic. Rolls V. Watt. Manager and Attorney Psiific !ert.. Ran Frsnriro, Cal. Wut'ttrv rodent ullnrnfv frr service. C. D. Oahrtetson. Portland. THE BEMIKV-Gn-VH IM INsl KAt I: AOIMY, Agents Pondietun. .1 17.125.699.(4 89.S27.427.3S .8 124.299.I1 SMO.M .841.ft t 1