East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, December 21, 1922, DAILY EDITION, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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-I' Tkbt TWO . , : DAIL3 EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREOON, THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 21, 1922.
jiiiii5ja A Strike Result j
TEN PAGES
HOTEL 10 BE CLOSED
Ik . , .'....' i . . - a -it v , I i
Merchandise
Certificates
When in doubt a mer
chandise certificate will
always be proper. We is
stie them for any amount.
Fou give one as gift, the
me Who receives it brings
It here and chooses his or
aer own present, it's
xmnd to please.
Save S. & H. Green
Stamps
It is at a time like this
that S.&H. green stamps
show their real worth.
Many a customer has
cashed in enough stamps
within the past few days
to pay for all of their
Christmas gifts just like
finding it didn't cost
them one penny try it
'yourself you'll be pleas
ed. Save every stamp
you can.
Men's Hose for
Christmas
We are showing the great
es assortment of choice sox
ever brought to Pendleton.
Every wanted kind is here
cotton, lisle, silk, cash
mere, worsted, all wool,
wool and silk mixed, wool
and cotton mixed, the new
fancy wool sox for oxfords.
Smart new styles in silks.
25c, 35c, 50c, 65c, 75c,
' $1.00 to $2.00
A Silk Sweater is
Sure to Please Her
An excellent personal gift
and right in line with the
trend of the day of giving
useful things. Here is an
article that a woman can
wear many months and be
just as stylish and attract
ive as when it was first
taken froni its holly box.
Tuxedo coat and slip-on
styles with braided sashes
rich, dressy, serviceable.
Special price $10 to $23
WITH ONLY TWO SHOPPING DAYS LEFT our
great stocks and better efficiency mean more than
ever to the hurried shopper. Instead of spending val
uable time running from one store to another, come
here first. You'll save a lot of time, because you'll
find what you want here.
Soft silk
negligees
make
gracious
gifts.
Glove Bonds
When you'd like to
give a pair of gloves as a
gift and are not certain
of the size, give a "Glove
Bond," the recipient will
then come here and
choose her own gloves,
they're sure to please.
I
MA
The new
negligee
garters
are
exquisite !
Were Never so Well Received!
Blouses that elevate one's simple suit to the diginity of an afternoon func
tion as daringly brilliant or conservatively smart. Beads, matelasse, gay
prints, embroideries or braid in jade, cherry, bobolink in navy blue or
black our smart holiday assortment includes
Matelasses from $10.00
Beaded Overblouses from
$11.50
(Second Floor)
Printed Silk Crepes from
$8.50
Embroidered Blouses from
$7.50
Gift Suggestions
FROM THE WOMEN'S STORE OF
PRACTICAL GIFTS
There is scarcely an article in this store which is not suggestive of a
gift for some woman. So thoughtfully has this merchandise been assem
bledthat you will find here a solution to all your gift difficulties!
Sweaters
A splendid possibility
for Christmas Gifts,
since they've become
all-year garments.
$2.75 to $8.50
Pillow Cases
Fruit of the Loom
and other standard
brands, trimmed with
lace and insertion
a n d hemstitched,
packed 1 pair in a
Xmas box. Thev are
priced at $1.20 to
$2.G5 per pair.
Her Choice
"Phoenix"
Hosiery
there can be no
m ore appreciated
gift. "
$1.20 to $3.23
Petticoats
are given a promi
nent position on
Fashion's list, they
make splendid gifts.
Jersey Silk
$ 4.50 to $S.30
Taffeta
$3.73 to $7.30
Undersilks
the most delightful
"friend - to - friend"
gift that one can sug
gest. Special values
suggest early choice.
Combinations
$5.00 to $9.50
Gowns
Crepe de Chine
$6.50 to $12.50
Vests Step-ins
Crepe de Chine, Satin
$2.75 to $5.00
Scarfs
Soft wools and bright
colored fiber silks.
$3.00 to $10.00
Make This Store
Your Christmas
Headquarters
Use our free phones, our
rest room, our informa
tion dept., bring your
packages and parcels here
to mail, register your let
ter and insure your pack
ages here. Meet your
friends here. Make this
place your meeting place.
Ask us to serve you, we
are here for just that
purpose.
Neckwear for Him
Always one of the very
most acceptable gifts. This
season finds us prepared as
never before to please you.
Every imaginable style and
color awaits your choosing
here. A fine showing of the
popular knitted styles as
well as a grand display of
cut silks of all kinds, 73c,
$1.00, $1.23, $1.35, $1.50 to
$3.50.
Ladies'1 Pendleton
Bath Robes
The very best manufac
tured and the prettiest. All
wool, beautiful colorings.
The supply is limited and if
you are interested make
your selection now as the
mill is sold up for a few
weeks. Notice the new
price $21.00
Let One Gift be a
Sweater
You certainly could not
select anything more prac
tical than a pretty sweater,
either in the slip-over style
or a tuxedo. In both styles
the collection is broad, while
the range of prices is ade
quate to meet every demand.
8
8
8
owtntfo with hish prices,
fis result o the strike have taven
the poor to the ash taireto
more fortunate to "JicU the
coal.
8
8
8
S
8
5S
8
M
M
8
S5
8
a
JERSEY BREEDERS OF
EAST END WM
irr .
. t,..... l. fi nders' association has
i-.'.... f..'...;,.i Froewater ns a result
ot a matins held there the first ut
this wee!;, according to a .statement
matle today by Fred Eennion, county
agjnt.
Breeders from Walla Walla ana
Umatilla counties to the number ol -
were present at the meeting which
was adressed by H. A. Mathiesou. dairy
specialist of the department of agri
culture, X. ". .lamieson and Dr. 15. T.
Simms, state veterinarian.
One of the chief objects of the or
ganization will he to advance the In
forests of the Jersey breed of cattle,
i,,,t in,, tiers, of vital interest to
dairy industry will also lie studied. A
series of educational meetings will he
held in cooperation with the county
agent's office.
Testinir of cattle for tuberculosis
will be carried on, eneouragemcntto
rnir chili or clubs will be iriven and
testing of cows for their producing
abilities will be pressed.
Tho value of high production in
dairy cows was explained to tho
breeders by Mr. JIathieson. A survey
of nno dairy herds in Wisconsin show
ed the following table of profits: A
cow that produces ion pounds of but
ter fat in a year will net her owner
about $10; a 20 pound producer
earns H2 above her board hill; a 300
pound cow adds $71 net profit to her
owner's purse and those that produce
too pounds annually are good for a
profit of Si (hi.
tiince. the average production in
Oregon is 170 pounds the cow annual
ly, there is plenty of room to increase
the production per cow in the state,
the speaker said. The 7Jnited States
stands fifth in the dairy countries In
the world in the average production of
butter fat to the cow.
BILL PROVIDES FOR
2i. (i-. r.i
WASITlXdTOX. Dec.
M'nator J'orah today oifercd an am
endment to the pending naval appro
priations lull instructing Harding to
call tho world economic conference.
The liorah amendment would replace
the house provision encouraging the
president to call the disarmament
meeting to take up matters left un
done by tho disarmament conference
m Xovember r.iil.
ST. LOflS, 51 o., Dec. 21. (A. 1M
Closing of the planters hotel here Jan
uary 1, will mark the passing of a hos.
aury replete with tradition of the mid
tile west, nnd purticuhirly the sotith
.and. The "old l'lanters House," In
which history has been made, will bo
converted into an office building.
Typewriters will click in rooms
where Presidents slept, office '.'hoys
wiil hustle across floors once ' strode
by stately banqueters, and business
-lien will plan battles of dollars in
rooms in 'Which political battles have
been won and lost, and in whictt the
-apture of Camp jaciison was pianneu
i n 1 i ti 1 .
Ituill in 1817
The Planters, one of the best known
hote'.s in the south and middle-west,
was built by Kvarist Maury In.lS,'.
It then was a two story frame struc
ture, and it early acquired a reputa
tion for the fine "nuts and hay'.' given
guests' horses. The name was chang
ed to "The Planters Houe" in . 1841,
when a four story structure u ouut
at a cost of $100,000. This was ac.
claimed a "veritable palace." .1.0 1804 .
the present structure was completed
at a cost of $1,800,000. under its orig
inal name "Planters Hotel.",
In the 4 0's and DO's the hostelry was
the center of the social life of this
section. Planters of the north and
south brought their families here for
the winter months to taste the Joys
of the hotel's hospitality:" 'The wom
en, with their hoop skirts, gathered, in
circles in the parlors to quilt and em
broider. After supper the tables were clear
ed, the carpets folded, the gas Jets in
their huge glass chandeliers light"!,
and the grace and beauty of Missouri,
Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama, as-
sn-mbled for the minuet and the Vlr
gina reel. There wore Northerners
too, but not in proportion to the num
ber of Southern gaiestsi ,
important In Civil War
Stirring moments were brought to
the Planters by the Civil Var. Hero,
Frank P. Blair and Nathaniel Lyon .
conferred preceding the capture . of .
Camp Jackson, May 10, 1861. On June .
11, 1861, the conference which result- .
ed in the fight of "brother against
brother" in Missouri was held at tho
Planters, when Dyon dramatically de
clared his loyalty to the North, and
departed to enlist Missourians ia the
the I Federal Army.
The Planters became . a political
battleground with the reconstruction
days, and the hostelry has had a gon
er share in every political campaign
since 187o.
Old records show that such person
ages as the following signed the regis
ter of the hotel: Presidents Lincoln,
('rant, Cleveland, Roosevelt and Taft,
-Martin an liuren, King Edward VII,
then Prince of Wales, Charles Dickens,
Jay Goulci, and William F. Cody.-IH-wrilx'tl
by Dickens
Writing of the hotel in his Amer
ican Xotes, Mr. Dickens said:
"We went to a large hotel called' '
The Planters with long passages and
skylights above the room doors for
the free circulation of air. There
wore a great many hoarders in it, and
as many lights sparkled and glistened
from the windows down into tho street
below when we drove up as if it had
been illuminated on some occasion of
rejoicing. It is an evcellent house,
and tho proprietors hive most boun
tiful notions of providing the creature
with comforts. Dining alone with my
wife in our room one day I, counted
fourteen dishes on the table at once." .
As one enters the Planters now he
sees a largo key above tho marblo
desk. It is 4 y, feet long, and tradi
tion says it wan used to open tho first,
door of the Planters. It will be used
in ceremony, in closing the hotel at
midnight, December 31. Below the
key is a gilded horseshoe, welded by
T?ob Fitzsimmons, the fighter, as a
token of good luck to the hotel..
A number of the present employes
have been with the hostelry, for 25 and
30 years. '. .
8
HIGH SCHOOL NEWS
! J
Looks Easy
This Store Will be
. Open Evenings .
Thursday, Friday and Sat
urday till 8:.!0.
PENDLETONi .GREATEST DEPART.HENT.STORE
jJfiQpQoples Wafehous
F'll'';'i!v)!i where it pays to THAnr ".riM:!
This Store Will be
Open Evenings
Thursday, Friday and Sat
urday till 8:30.
SSI
m
BILL HAM) GIVEN
20-S1PE SWEATER
. inilui-t a diviMvr t f'at on tlw Ku- J lolvite tram. Aft.-r
I mnt' It'.un, ihr univn-Mty i-im.'imM him; f.ru!t num'.rs wh.
an an alliU'lu- vouch ami train'i . i .uuli:os in Ihr !'!
I ! tho ilobat-' fourh.
Haa v .u il lias
hatl aol-ii a,s
.(Irs, Ka
rlnvn tho two
Thnv Inn
' tarst-u. ;ls traim r ati.1 i-n.trh w ith Hit-1 t:,(1(
Amrrkun iloU :;atun to tho ol mpu' , v , , v
(taiin k anl. in KM. mti, as traim-
itf tin- ;n it M.tr.' ll.m,l M mm- f...i
Twi iilv ' wrvio;' Mrtius ru en
o Hill Ilayward tlran traimr aril
track couch uf th I'mvertitty ot Uiv
son h'iv.
The award a inai-- hy th- Inurr
wty to Haard in r-xsnitj'n t.f hi
Inu wrvict- i th- t u; K ' m h"o!.
nhcrr hf has handid uth!H. mho
turning tut l n North ih.tm-non-lnit
tr.itk tram during that
Ik fore Hamard titnie t the 1'ni
v. ritv he a ith Atbaany Collo-r0
p Albanv, ici i hvu I l-anij
al ? ri.
t li
rh-tni'-HM:
Hum
w nil r ii-:ims as tho si liiii'i s r'ji 'oson -
Hoth tams i'iv vMi'iic.'s in
i mom on i no i ami ;)ro ni.-oiu tinn
( r. ll- Kr im r. 1 axtoii M i-m, !ar;k
!'v.in lonalif H. ;i;h an.t i'iiodco Urn-
BUILDiNG BOOM FOR
SPRING. PREDICTED
i
l
t v:v:iscit shortly by 1 : jut cent. :inl if.
or dor to oTouto m son for ni xt o.'.
t tho orod'iotum of insuti"; and rot f
injj nia:o'ial is t ' he incrvasoj ty J i
per cont.
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in
HIGH SCHOOL DEBATE
TEAMS ARE SELECTED - '
N.ik mi the
tint tho I'r.il.'.l
shou:,t own amt
wiil t.em ir..-:.'
he!lw.!. As lh
lis. .1 in . I'.is-. ,1. !'
II'" IMlir.
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N'TW YiM'.K. IVr. :!.- I . V.
Vnl'i.li moo in the ontl"ok for an v.n-t
iTo.v.lortt il huiMir.s boom '.a tht
sl'i lni; if I',';; 'it .t oa an . li.iuli,
:r. ,.t -:r..' n.lv.t'.t t ; i , . i: li
t.t.,r..h ..:'t:..-s i.i I!-..- t'n.lo.l S'at. si
u- il i'.i "..iii.l. l:as li.t
ri:i i u i t. VMi:
kaxi:. w.sh.. P.O. 1.. r
!U :-.n :. ar.d '"i f. e.I K f.
i n ii am! iv.Iutwim' prr-tct .n!, ;r
n i';.r.o,i thr.":choi:t Spo.
'lltv lll:.t. i- tho .ii; o.'tt. n v I '. -in:-
.i::u' :'.r.,l fish O' tnmss:. n. i:
;; :y .1 ; c r --
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s-.'i.inl!i
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I ' ot
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madr toda y at j " al
ir.ms tin-
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ir.tndt' m
;l Walia is
w n pi
ll s
rrttH't
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.al do do oa! i
a ios.--i llo Ti'. al t
, ; r,i s x:iin
; to oarly o. ni!
j i n :il AsVM'.s
. oth. r at W"
J Tho working
iat- ii.il. t-. 'id r s.-. 'av.t;a. ( !-nt-
m tho o"t' t of tV:o
.-tin- factories, and to rush c r..iv.v.
t!on two now pla'.ti i .r.is c..n p
V. C:-r ui.t. ,T"'t th-i m;or! al:
ill. j w I- r
to roos n t t h o com- o d to t h
.u-t.M.'s ;uc to W iu. T h- i sr:
ba.-f.-o.t
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Kc d
1 th:
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1
Tver t y
puite a
JIany alumni of the high school.
who are attending colleges In the
state, have visited tho scene of their
early labors during the past week.
Aiming these are tred Rhorman nnd
T.yron Warner, from O. A. C.; Horace
Buyden, from Reed Collesre in Port
land, and Philip Fordyce, from "Whit
man. Other alumni are due to arrive
in Pendleton in the next few days.
Schoor will close this afternoon and
will nut re-oen until Wednesday,
January 3. Members of the faculty
will have various tasks and pleasures
to see to during the holidays. Mr.
Uindreth sues to Portland, Miss Berg
to Colorado, Miss Zable plans to visit
in Seattle, other teachers will visit
in different i.lacvs. while many will
remain in Pendleton.
nun aky corxcii, to meet
CHICAGO. Dec. 21., (A. P.) Th
midwinter nicotines of the Council.
i". o:it:vM n.iard. Editorial Committee
nn-1 Conimittoe on Kducation of tho
"ieriean I.:brar- Association will be
h"M h.;r IVcr mN r 2"!-30. in connec
tion wi'h meetimrs of I'nivorstty, Col
loir an t N'ormal Sv-hool librarians nnd
libranaris of lame public libraries.
Tho .sessions will be de'oted to nieet
n.Ts of the individual firoups.
It is also annn'inced that the Pio-
CM.mhicai fr-cie'y rf America which
:s "a!Iy moots at the same time will
'b s v-ar in New Haven. Conn-,
I ei -m :er ? r.
ItAIt.-s IKOM COPPEK KTILLS
I SPOKANE. Wash.. Dec. II. (A.
P i M:'0"ci-::;..r rf tf. netrthwetit
:.re c.r.Tibminc bi.Ue fir delecatea
to ?h- Nnrtl.v.-. t Association of Sher
:s nr I nent:on ti bf heM
''. rr..m January IS to
u f ..'.-.a a waa? I;'s
H- o is :;rs Je-
t,j--:i. s- .. :
Near Tork cinr.np acsfiemi-. per
UnaiES the foat wiU ecasUirib!
as rd f race.
t rT -.
I--.
Tb"
, -e of:c-rs orff ;r.iitation is
rf ry,irr jii!is and convert-.
"'i i' I" ba.Is. s for the delvsites
'Th-' pfratin" iicmdes In its mom
j ' ers:-..j officers lronr WashinRlon.
Or. con. blaho. ! -.ntan , Alberta nnd
:r-rt:-?i C?l':nb:n
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