THE T?KOTRTEI?-CTTATlD. KTGEN'E.
compositions, including southern and
Irish melodies, and popular marrhes. ,
trous about Hhanchai mn Jnp
otiee bluejacketx numbert-d shout
A portion of the 30V Phinene
waa believed to be the S7r h division.
ruhing in to tolifer up p'Mtioi) held
by the Wtb.
tt.
BASEBALL SCORES
n"iy.:r.?i, i
. jfe.,
AMERICAN
I
New York 3
1'biJaoVlphia 4
". R.
NATIONAL
pertarlnff that with th adwir nf
"more ovriini-nr' Mi nntvrrfciiien
ind foIN-pes wmiM a-m:) greater
rponibiIiir ''n fr Mr, In
U'ayn Mor of th t'nivprsity of
DrfRon Jaw mhnn), put forth a plea .
for trninc(l iffinl at a chamber
forum 'Mr- VriAnf nonn.
On the fTpnninn "f Rv rnmit
function, I'-)in Mor-" nVlared (hut
this hM m)'-'-':i1!t ,r" in nfinl and
jconomie fiH'l. j
He nvi-ionM til rt;i1li-hment '
of rll'xil of l;tw and public fl'l- J
tnininrrHtion at th I'rmiTMiy of ,
Orecon a "cms feit ilizntion of fur- j
rinilum' of the ntitc iiimernity.
'The burrh-n rnnm.t h'm( entirflr
npon the law a'ho-.l." I'rom Mora
ivrreri, citinjr work in th Inw
nrhool hr in tli- past. He nil thnt
public iilrniniftrntinn course at the
rnivcrfitT f Chiniso w,r' niakins
i mimakc in Hn puppet.
finch a aynlem, limp More told
the forum, would b" to.mewhat loose-ly-orpnnizpd
but effc'-ti'e in sir ins
th fludenf an opportunity to aimi j
late knowledge without, restriction.
City, state and frnVnil acrvicc
were nVlnrfd by the speaker to hp
open to (ruined incomer. H fold
of tlif work at lb I'nivprnity of
Wisconsin school, whore student
under trained unpen i-ion assist in
keeping up 'he Inw rode.
"If hiisinrm see thnt It la sup
plied itli t ruined talent," I ejin
Morse asked, "why doesn't jrovertl
ment take the aaitie precautions?"
He said Mint along with Kovernment
eipanM- was hU coniini: B ((renter
demand for ijuiilified tnen --even I
Ihouph tKc pntronfiKc phase of poll- !
tic in not entirely out. j
Touching for n moment on the i
modem trend a way from the idea of
Mhernl edinnlion a an end to itself, f
Penn Morse pointed out the result I
of thin trend in the contemporary
university nnd college curriculum, j
"The tUt thine thnt every pnrcnt
and erery student wihiIr to know i
what he will be able to do nfter lie
finite school." Tienn Morse averred.
"The emplinsi everywhere la on pro.
fealonnl and technical training." He
hinted that the T'niversity of Oregon
might, work out a more practical
program along these line.
Commenting on the completion of
eight month work In n parole re
March project el Washington, H. O.,
ff which he was director, lenn Morse
mM that everywhere he found men
who readily confeaed that they
Deeded more training for their joha.
The chamber forum wna given an
Invitation tn attend the limit F
picnic t Camp Lane Sunday, Aug. 2-.
Brooklyn, ,
Hotion. . ..
Iforr ar.d
Mueller.
I'hilndelphia. ,
New Vork . .
Che rvinlto;
.1
Kftte
and
S. P. AGEWT HERE
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
Investigation of
Labor Dispute Set
Representative of the nnttonnl
lahT relntlona bnn.nl, Oregon divi
sion, will rnniB down Saturdny tn
open Investigation of eevernl lumber
union diaputea involving the nctivl
tiei of I. K. V., It waa learned from
Portland diapatchea Friday.
According to (he story, the party
IIJ alay in Fuiren lo gather ma
terial for n forthcoming hearing,
dat of which was to be announced
later.
serving for aeven yearn as telegraph
er for Mr. Adair and taking over his
preuent position In 10O0.
To Llvt Her
'Tertninly. we ahull rontinue to live
in Kugene. There Is no letter place
to live," commented Mr. Gillette,
j Official of the company in the di
; vision nffjcea at Portland were all
laudatory In their comment a Kridny
on the long and vnricd career of Mr.
(Jillette with the rflilroad in announc
ing thnt he wna retiring voluntarily
from the rompany.
f. J. Crittenden of the TlilNboro of
I fice has heen aent here aa relief em
i ploye until an agent Is named to auc
' f-epd Mr. Gillette.
Mr. Gillette atnrted his career with
i the company aa a telegrapher in
his first job being at Gervnis. He
j was in Crcawell aa agent for a time
in lWH, then to Medford ns tdc-L-rnpher,
then to Brooklyn na agent,
j Inter to Rnletn aa night, operator,
then at. Grnnta Pas na telegrfipher,
nnd from there to Fugene.
Came Weit Early
Mr. Gillette la n native of Minne
sota, horn there June 1!, IHtts, and
mine In Oregon in 1KK1.
He iff the second of long-time ril
rond atnff members to retire here
within recent months, Leonard (Mike)
GroHn having retired a short time ago
after 31 yeara nervlce here.
Other naaociHtea nerving; for many
yenra here include M. M. llolti, ns
fistant agent, who enme nhortty be
fore Mr. Gillette did; Genre Burger,
cashier for nearly 3d yearn here; nnd
I. J. Koupal, warehouse foreman for
more than Jit yenra.
"If I told you all th Interesting
thingn that hnve hnppened in th .'tS
years I hnve been here they would
fill n book," Mr. Gillette Mid, adding
it wni too short notice to think up
n few outaaimling events. Th tre
mendous growth of railroading in this
section nnd the development of the
Liin county section nre two nignifi
ennt movements in the more than n
third of a century of living nnd observ
ing here, It was said.
Mr. end Mm. Gillette hnv n son.
Albert J. Gillette Jr., Portland, nnd
n daughter, Mrs. John Huth, Los
Angeli's,
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
bank, midway between the heart
of Shanghai and Woosung.
'o.rt!. that the Japanese were
O filo'ilitig Woosung persihted all night,
without f-sact confirmation.
Since Woosung's forts are at the
U'liiiiiMioo-YnniMe confluence, their
giniH (-! nt it ii t an obstacle to any
.Ini-fine effort to fei.d ships farther
lun (he Yangtze, and troops at Liuho
ard other strntegir points and at-
tiok "hnpei and other 1'hines areas
of Shiingloii from the rear,
i Kiangwan In Danger
j Greater Shanghai's civic center it
Kiangwan. constructed at the cost of
many millions of dollars and yean of
labor, seemed gravely threatened in
the area north of the main city.
The little men from Japen were su
preme in Hongkew. Thousand of
holies and modest shops, normally
containing a multitude of noisy Chin
ese workers, were without a living
soul.
Uozcus of windows and doors gaped
open aa if with empty, crazy, grins
iiihirlc, the furniture and belongings
stood untouched. The people jujt left
everything and fled.
Shelling Ends Late
A treiub mortnr duel, which shook
Shanghai as Friday's darkness fell,
wns uer by midnight. Japanese bat
teries ii bout their Hongkew head
quarters fell mute.
In t'hiipei, too, the Chinese seemed
content to call a brief halt.
Itut the flumes crackled on. One
Japanese ("Id me the Japanese had
set some of the fires "in order to
dear our vihiou toward Chnpei.-'
One urea of ten blocks of burning
wlructures, the Mines and stores of
the unfortunates who braved Chnpei
again nfer losing everything In
cast a pall of unnatural light over the
city.
Foreigners and Chinese nlike looked
on from the roofs of safer sections,
Hespitc n day of stendy military
activity neither faction appeared to
have gained nr. advantage.
Chinese refugees fro inthe stricken
are poured into the international
settlement in a migration which start
ed with the lens situation two weeks
ago. The crowds were even greater
tiinn those of refugees in the 11)1)2
warfare.
Bring Acute Problem
They brought an acute problem tn
the foreign areas. Thoisiinds of home
less Chinese at on curbstones, ex
hausted and without food.
I' nited States marines and other
foreign defense forces guarding the
interualiounl zone borders kept up a
constant patrol. Their first day pnss
ed without a hostile incident.
F.vncuntion of foreigners living nut
wide th settlement increased rapidly.
Their home areas were left deserted
to become possible battlegrounds for
the conflicting troops.
Seemingly conservative estimates
placed the number of Cbinene regulnr
N"
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
rineville News of an ,arly vin-
the
tag:
"Genflemen:
stove in our
would improve a short stretcn snjom-
ing the ciry, conditions would be
' greatly improved but the county men
naid that fully three-nunrtera of
I mile would have to l denned of
brush and the channel depened to
carry off the water.
! "The county has no money to spend
1 n thx work." County Judge I red
j Fisk Miid. "If we improved this sec-
'ti.in f'i the fOoiish there would be a
demand for such work from property
below and there would be no
When toii spit nt the
office, please do not ,
mnk a target of the stew nan of,'lwl"i'
dried apricots that nre cooking on the I end to it."
top of it. The liquid extrnct of the! The request was made by the city
fruit that feeHs this paper and of ' f f''i' " ,he nty on the ground
your narcotic lunch are first cousins '"t f'"1 conditions on the South
color, but thev don't fuse at irHilyrd street ronl soutii or tne eii)
Salvation Arrny to
Distribute Clothes
The S.Jvation Army will distribute
free of charge everal hundred gar
ments and shoes used toys, a large
easy chair, li matt resset, jars and jellv
glass, garments for quilt making,
magazines, rag materials, etc.. nt '1
p. m. Saturday. Aug. 14. nt t Hive
ktreet tentrnne facing Seventh ave
nue west).
Ali-n the usual rummage rle for th
benefit of the html Army work will
he held. ti'S (Hive street, from f a.
m. to fl p. m. S;ifurd:iy. Friends hav
ing articles for thi purpose are asked
to phone iK!.
Committee Named
For Unit's Camp
A committee to handle arrange
mem a for the one-night encampment
of the sixty-third coast artillery unit
f iSrtn Pedro, Cal., here Aug. 19 was
in the mnfter of taste. Please spit at j would be improved, in that tne water ; n(m(1(, FrWay ny jnnn Durr, secre
the ruspiflori it was formerly a water i w'ml'1 IIOW m"re irP, ,J ir",Q UMU : tary of the chamber of commerce,
bucket, and most likely will hold it P"'nt through the city. 1 1 irville Leslie, junior chamber of
all" I "ners of some farms helow the enmmprre representative, will be in
of Janunrr 2", IMH tnroun wincu uiv .iat"u nos
compinmeu inai since me cny
The Gazette
hroke the bad news to the younger
citizens of Heppner:
"Hereafter boys will not be allowed
to smoke cigarettes and chew tolvtcco
and spit on the floor in the churches
here.
Minor Tragedy
But it was the Canyon City Times-
Mountaineer of September li", JSji.'S,
thnt brought home to the historians
the real nignificfince of "ehewin " ns
pioneer institution with an account
of a minor tragedy:
Tp on M en i din in CreeJ,'' it read.
1-Vyenr-old boy stopped a pnssen-
ger trnin to get n chew of tobneco
nnd wns considerably aggravated be
cause he obtained none.
" '(Jot any tehncker?' he iii'iuired. I
rteceiving n negative reply from the
astounded newsboy he left the enr in !
disgust nnd disappeared in the dark- I
ness with a parting shot that it must :
be 'a hell of n train that had no te- !
backer on loard.' "
hnv
improved the slough a numlter of
years ago the water flows through
the city .so rapidly that it piles up
and overflows iand below the city
more than it did before.
The only solution of the difficulty,
the county officials point out, is to
t might en and widen the slough nil
the way from the city limits to the
point where it flows into the Coyote
creek in the vicinity of Alvmlore, ami
the county has no funds with which to
do any part of this work.
charge. Others on the committee in
clude Dick Kuehner and William M.
Tugman.
iOOF Band Concert
Scheduled Friday
Both "pimento' and "pimiento are
mimes derived from the Spanish word
for pepper.
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE
n
was fully eligible to the hi:h
court.
Mr. Roosevelt aso maile the aV
laration that he ia not considering
stlhmission of a constitutional ameiul.
ment ron'-erninc the supreme court
which would seek the objective of
'"st judicial reorganization bill
:.""c-kf.:
notn tne Austin motion to defer im-: trifn-,1 " "rI,c". ut sT 1
llmninsi I inn ' '. it .Jl
t".rd ,h,
ine ailD-conunittee ro 1 cnl s ,ln
mediate action
Ask for
IKS
THE SOFTER, SAFER
SANITARY NAPKIN
Trout live in wwiftly moving
streams because ofihe great amount
f oxygen dissolved in such waters.
Pimento is a pungent, iromntie
spice, prepared from the unripe ber
ries of the pimento tree, nnd is used
in cookery nnd in medicine.
Another in the weekly series of
bnud concerts will be presented by
the I. (I. . K. band Friday evening
at the Skinner Butte park, beginning
at 7:4o o'clock.
This band, augmented by a number
of younger musicians, will continue
throughout the winter months, ac
cording to Wayne (Jilfry, director.
Larger programs are being planned
for next summer.
Fridny night's program will Include
a number of standnrd, well-known
HAZEL WARFIELD
Says
To Keen Your Hair Lovely Have A
' GPrr.le $3.50 $5.00 7.50
wrr." $4.00 $4.50 $6.50
Oil Tints $1 to $3 9 Other Permanents $1.75 & up
BURKE'S BEAUTY SHOP
In Ideal Barber Shop
Phone 3094
62 W. 10th
WE GIVE S8H GREEN STAMPS-VISIT OUR FOUNTAIN
Late Sports
RYEJ. N. Y., Aug. 13. 01 R .Tad
wira Jedrzejownkn, national chnmpion
nf Poland, gained the finnl round of
the. ennte in gran court lenui chum
pionnhip nt the Westchester Country
flub today when nhe defeated (Irneyn
Wheeler of I,nn Angelen in a emi
fmnl tnnl'h, K M, (Ml. Mi- Jedrre
Jawikn will meet Alice .Murble, na
tional eh.impioii from t'nhfornin, in
the finals tomorrow.
Ancient legend naya that nn Arnb
herdsman of an unknown dale opened
hn bottle mmle of a calf's ntomnch
and founrt that the digestive jnh-ex
had turned the milk into nlint we nww
Cnll cheese.
life
SYM HO L '
Throughout thp ages, men
ht usej fvmboU to reprtv
nt things InipoMant tn
them. The IiuliMim had tiicir
totem pule to pit-tortiiltr a
family bintorlen and nchleve
m rut ft. The aynilud, today, In
Eugene of progrosn and filler
talnment la the rail letters
KORE a nymbol which can
mean a gieat tloal tn you
nd your family If u ll giva
u a chance to come, lutn
your honia.
yA?exo DRUGGIST f(
toys
T. t H brlprj errtr fn
llrn nSfrrt In Ihli mU ntl
prtMiilt mdiww Mrh t ihm m
wlh at pvrrhaM ami vw kr
II of mir fovndt."
im-w k. uncrTr
V Prmf Storm Mrr kvt iKimg
TnK It i,l Plan
TV Krtal flan W itw.
rh....iii h implr rm, yn.U4 ).
tif.TO tn 00.. Minphr
lltn khn.t. K Irntiftf intlrpr"'!'
4i nol Anrf Mtr rim im,
rlwi'' "! fc-llint thru nN (ni(
Hn prnrfwi nl kriirr iIim tnt W-
W Ik ruinttlL. Knill. Vw"
W ith more than 10 thousand
other Kexall Drupgisti, I am
interested in the factories $
that make many of the Rex-
all Products advertised here.
During this sale 1 offer se
lected items at prices that
save you most of the usual
in-between profit, I call it
my Factory -To-You Sale, be-
a cause, in cucct, mats really
...u.. : :.
r I Tllr RF Am: MORE TH KS
J in rm hf m t. pure VTRF
i
'avis
ntU twV f Milimi"!
fin! I mi At pnut(l In RrllH t
111 '! rHurtMnM nl M-rrrK
ftrB fnlwr1 fv.
Wk. mUn kli. r-J t(f mt tw
M il ym m m miM
jptti fad?
lr phll .1. Ml 11
A T I S V. V T I C
SUM TIO
It I it him;
A 1.4 OHO I.
DRUG COMPANY
Ittyrrrin Supfumitorir a,
Atptnn fntittt, Vtt ol SO
fNn .nit. rn k
Aoric -lr.,( rtnlrr
ttnrrt I imHitrwi
J 4f tf Inr Pitt
tUM'lt
rU
tiiN
59c
r:. i7c
Olllll !
r..
r.H Vl Co Fw-4
Milk ff lannm Ttnth Fmttt
I u1rt rnttt
I 1
.Adhrnir Tnp and Hand of
II 04 V.lw D-It
Hot Uatrr tUittl
finintan Synntm
lloutehotd Rubhr Vtnre fptkl
T'w klrnH) wt fwl
$hnpfo prv lut Ftam .ittrfii
ii m-j-i
tntiirt' Syrintr
B ritityt tortia
yv t.:,., CtmtAt
Pountt Pipe
9
isr
ltir tnlh $1.1 il'irt.
r-'leerevc rmpid
TOASTKH
VUI f
WW
Wrl prr.,lt. Ik ttM Ml W
1 O V.. r." l -V
IJI fill mi.
79c
'
c g
'4
till '(rpr IV ll.il ,
.'i r full p'.,n,l
Thrafrirmt
rmld t ream
furl pint !
I'rtrmfot
dnrtf iAii Ml
reel I'ane
o04j Am mM
lie twwt
Krrm X.Wr.rrf
UAOll HI. API S
V.t t.l. H4 tvw e-t at !l
I KM 4rmrm pari v
I9c
M mm avm yir- Jf int. Mff I
M Im O C
cue
I r
S u
1
'j
A MM
BLACK
'BLUE
BROWN
GREEN
BURGUNDY
5r"
only
The Season's Smartest
Genuine Crepe So'es
Just RigSt for School
Business or Country.
I
Ski
Mm
997 WILLAMETTE ST.
Corner of Tenth and Willamette Sts,