PACE TWO.
DAILY EAST OREGQyiAX. PENDLETON. OREGON. MOX1UY. JULY 21. 1013.
EIGnT PAGES.
Summer Comforts
, For Men
Summer Weight Pajamas
Made of fine quality muslin, soiesette and madras,
some plain and some fancy trimmed. Plain white
and solid colors . . $1.25, $1.50 and $2.00
Cool Night Shirts
for hot nights. Snappy styles, made expressly for
us of fine quality muslin. V neck or military col
lars. Plain or nicely trimmed with different colored
braids
The cool,
Mens
airy kind.
. 75c to $2.00
Union Suits
Strictly high-grade goods,
economically priced. Fine quality lisle, in white
andcru and nainsook. Long and short .sleeves
and knee and ankle lengths drawers; just what you
need for these hot days, per suit . $1.00 to $2.00
Men's Shirts
Made of madras and soiesette, neat patterns and
plain colors in all of the newest shades, soft French
cuffs or plain cuffs, regular and military collars.
$1.00 to $2.00
Work Shirts
of genuine Blue Bell Chambray . k . 50c
Hi
Premium I
COOK
Tiio Fooplos Uorehouso
Where It Pays to Trade.
Save Your T. P. W. Trading Stamps
PREMIUM
ANCIENT ARENA
TO BE FILMED
Motion Picture Company Rents Site
ami Will Take Series or Won
derful Stories,
VERONA. Italy. July 21. Contracts
were formally closed today for what
is believed to be the largest and most!
expensive moving picture productions
ever undertaken. The city of Verona
Itself has leased to the cinemato
graph company the ancient arena
which compares almost In size, plc
turesqueness and antiquity, wIUi the
coleseum at Rome.
For the score or more of produc
tions that are to be staged In the are
na, the cinematograph company has
aso engaged 1000 performers, includ
ing nearly all of the best moving pic
ture artists in Italy. Sixty lions also
have been secured for the productions
together with a nassortment o ftlgers.
leopards and other wild animals that
would shame many of the American
municipal zoological parks.
The first production to be staged
wi'.l be "The Last Days of Pompeii."
For a portion of the scenes the entire
company will be transported to Na
pies in order that some of the scenes
may be taken on the actual site of
Pompel. at the foot of Mount Vesuvi
us The company will later produce
a number of other historical films of
similar nature.
Woman and Her Varied Interests
Bamboo Baskets.
Baskets of the smoked bamboo are
always In good taste, no matter to
what use they are put. according to
the Newark Niws. At Just this sea
son the shop." have a large supply of
the low, flat backets, with or without
handles They are designed primarily
to be used for the table, as sandwich,
cake, roll or fruit holders. Some are
woven quite close while others are
made with the open star pattern.
Canned Whole.
Select small, round tomatoes, scald
by putting In wire basket and plung
ing once or twice in boiling water
Remove skins and put tomatoes in
Jars, add teaspoon salt to e'ach Jar.
fill the Jars with cold water, put Jars
In boiler, the bottom of which is pro
tected with strips of wood; surround
them partly with cold water, cover
the boiler and boll 10 minutes after
reaching boiling point. Janesvllle
Gazette.
Novel Favors.
So many bnn voyage luncheons and
end-of-the-season affairs are being
given at the present time that favors
for these occasions are largely con
fined to trifles which indicate a sum
mer trip, says the New Tork Times
Tiny hat boxes of paper to be filled
with bonbons are to be had at 5 cents
each and dress suit coses at 24 cents.
Trunks which hold a larger quantity
of "sweets" are priced at IS cents
and the little red picnic baskets cost
10 cents. These are rather newer
than the others. But the newest of
all these small Items are the utomo
blle hats. Made of colored crinkled
paper these' are 5 cents each. More
carefully made of tan and black
leatherette lined with silk. In which
the candles are placed, they cost 24
cents each.
SHOE AND LEATHER
31 EN IN CONVENTION
PHILADELPHIA. July 21. The
National Shoe and Leather -Finders"
Association, composed of a member
ship that Includes most of the promi
nent shoe manufacturers of Ameri
ca, opened Its five days convention
here today with the meeting of the
executive committee. Several thou
sand shoe men from St. Louis, Bos
ton, Brockton and other "shoe cit
ies" and representing both the whole
salt anil retail parts of the trade at
tended the formal opening of the con
vention this afternoon in the Bellevue
Stratford. Mayor Blankenburg will
officially welcome the delegates to
the city tomorrow at the first business
session at which formal reports from
chairmen of committees will be sub
mitted. The afternoon will be given
over to boat rides on the Delaware
and sight seeing trips about the city.
CUP HACKS SAILED IN 1911
Series of Contests Between I.lpton
and U. S. Held a Year From
This Fall.
NEW TORK. July 21. A series of
races for the America's cup will be
sailed In eastern waters during Sep
tember. 1914. This was formally an
nounced by the cup committee of the
New Tork Yacht cTub'. The Royal
Ulster Yacht Club of Belfast, acting
for Sir Thomas Llpton notified the
New York Yacht club committee that
the conditions prescribed by the New
York Yacht club had been accepted
end signed and were on the way to
America.
It was also stated that the races
would be sailed under practically the
i same conditions that have governed
j former America's cup matches.
BOVINES MUST HAVE
BILL OF HEALTH
W. H. Lytle, state veterinarian and
secretary of the Oregon Livestock and
Sanitary Board, has caused a circu
lar letter to be Issued to the secretar
ies of livestock shows and expositions
which sounds a warning to all exhib
itors of bovines to subject their ani
mals to the tuberculin test in order to
qualify them as entrants to said
shows or expositions and prescribing
a penalty for violation of the provi
sions of the law regulating such ex
hibits. The following is a copy of a letter
he is sending out to fair secretaries.
"Section 3i of Chapter 14 of the
Laws of the 1913 legislative assembly
provides that no bovine animal over
one year of age shall be exhibited at
any state, district or county fair, or
any livestock exposition, within the
state, unless, within 12 months prior
to such exhibition, it has been sub
jected to the tuberculin test and re
ceived a certificate of health from a
qualified veterinarian. No entry for
exhibit shall be accepted until such
certificate is filed hence you will see
that it Is necessary for all cattle that
are to be offered for exhibition at
your fair, must be first tested for tu
berculosis and proven free from said
disease.
"If you are in possession of the
names of parties who except to exhib
it at your fair, kindly advise this or-(
flee of their names, and we will make
arrangements with them for this test, 1
should they desire same. j
"In all probability we can arrange
to have your county veterinarian, to
make these tests, and should this be
done by that officer, or any assistant,
stae or other veterinarian, the same
will be done free of cost to the own
er. "Kindly advise partk-s expecting to
exhibit of this matter.
"Very respectfully,
"W. H. LYTLE.
"State Veterinarian."
tearch. For the last two years', the
work has been going on under the di
rection of Dr. W. T. Cummings of
the Southern Pacific general hospit
al at San Francisco. Dr. Cummings
has devoted his time to a study of se
rums with special relation to typhoid
fever and tuberculosis, and has con
tributed seme valuable experimental
data to the existing store of scientific
knowledge.
The fund is placed in the hands of
the Union Trust company of San
Francisco, the Income being turned
over to the hosp'tal department as it
accrues.
3IRS. 1IABRIMAX GIVES
ENDOWMENT KOIt RESEARCH
PORTLAND, Ore, July 21. Mrs.
, I (l.. txf tVio lfltp
- a. I..,, A rr r. n art '
railroad magnate. a ju'i s"cu
additional endowment of 110.000 to
the fund .Of ;'). sne e"""""
1911 for the foundation of a bacter
iological and pathological research la-
. . . . t ( . n w 1 1 Vi tViA Vina.
ooraiory, in TOiinnii-u ...... ......
pital servlse of the Southern Pacific
n n n nil nfim tn t VL'AHl
company. in
made bv Dr. F. K. Alnsworth, chief
surgeon of the railroad, in whose
hands the disposition of the funds Is
placed
The purpose of the endowment is
to further the progress of medical re-
3IARITAI, COUPLE IS
TIED AS TIGHTLY AS
PARENTS KNOW HOW
CANTON, O. .July 21. The
holy bond of matrimony will
not be the only bond that Joins
Miss Elizabeth Bold! of Canton
and Casian Bartt Jr., of Youngs-
town, when they are wed. To 4
Insure the wedded bliss of the 0
young couple an ironclad agree-
ment. backed by bonds pledging
a $700 farm and $700 cash, has
been put up by the fathers of
the prospective bride and bride-
groom. The young people
themselves have no doubt that
their marriage will prove a hap-
py one. They have sworn eter-
nal love to one another and de-
clare that the agreement and
bonds are entirely superfluous.
but the old folks, noting the in-
crease of the divorce evil, de-
cided to do all they could in a
legal way to make the marriage
stick so tight that it can never
become unknotted. By the
terms of the agreement the
bridegroom's father promises
that his son will never loaf,
gamble, drink, play pool or
dance with any young woman
other than his wife. The bride's
father, on the other haid. prom-
Ises that his daughter will make
her husband a model wife, will
not gossip, run around with
other men, and w ill cook to the
husband's satisfaction. A for-
felture of the $700 bond is to
follow a vlalation of the prom-
ises made by either side.
Pleased With Baker.
BAKER. Ore.. July 21. Rev. 3. E.
Horn, now a resident of Portland. Is
visiting Baker Rev. Horn still has
business Interests here. He observed
that he was impressed with the splen
did outlook of Baker and thought the
people of this city should be well
satisfied, considering the complaint
of dull times elsewhere.
TROUT FRY TO BE
PLANTED IN COUNTY
Between 150.000 and 180.000 trout
fry will be planted In Umatilla coun
ty streams tomorrow by the state fish
and game commission assisted by a
committee from the Umatilla County
Fish & Game association. The dis
tributing car "Rainbow" will arrive
In Pendleton tomorrow morning and
every one of Its 180 can, holding be
tween 500 and 100 fry each, will be
filled.
Half of the cans will be unloaded
at Gibbon where a local committee
will have an auto ruck to receive
them. Stops will be made between
Gibbon and Bingham Springs and the
fry liberated in the Umatilla river.
Between Gibbon and Duncan, the car
will "oe stopped three times along I
Meacham creek to unload part of the'
remaining supplies. At each stop a!
local committee will take charge of
the cans and attend to the stock-'
ing.
The restocking of the streams by
the commission bids fair to perpetu
ate the fame of Umatilla county as
a paradise for anglers.
UNDER ARREST FOR FRAUD.
BAKER, Ore., July 21. C. A. Rog
ers, wanted In this city on a chargo
of obtaining money under false pre
tenses, was arrested In Chlco, Cal., ac
cording to Information received by
Sheriff Rand. Rogers several months
ago, claiming to represent a religious
publishing house, secured a number
of subscriptions to religious journals
and took orders for Bibles, securing
about $200 as near as the authorities
can learn. He will be brought back
to Baker soon.
LITERARY PRIZE IS
GIVEN BY 31 U. HYDE
PARIS. July 21. Announcement
was ma,de today that an annual lit
erary prize of $200 has been given by
James Ilazen Hyde to be awarded to
the rench Society of Letters, the na
ture of the work to be preferably his
toric, literary, scientific, social or ar
tistic relating to an exchange of idea
between France and another country.
VACANCIES IN ENGINEERING
CORPS ARE BEING FILLED
For sale or trade 3 seat runabout
In good running order. Call at Com
mercial association rooms or address
P. O. Box 40.
WASHINGTON. July 21. Exami
nations are being held today all over
the country to fill vacancies in the en
gineering corps of the army of civil
ians There are a dozen or more va
cancies In this branch of the army to
be filled. Only two civilians passed
the examinations last year for second
lieutenant.
INDIAN SKELETON IS UNEARTHED
BY CONTRACTORS AT WEISER, IDAHO
WEISER, Idaho. July 21. Al
though contractors digging the sewer
trench between Third and Fourth
street west unearthed a bunch of hu
man bones and skulls last Saturday,
the find did not exlcte local people
very much, although quite a number
of the morbid curious ones had to
take a look at the grewsome relics In
order to satisfy themselves The
number of the bones and the manner
in which they were lying In the ground
I the only curious feature about
them. There were four skulls of
adults and were evidently buried with
the heads In a kind of a. circle and
within a radius of two feet. All of
the other bones were distributed pro
miscuously about. Indicating that
they had been removed at some re
mote date, whl'.e the skulls remained
in the original positions.
Soon after the bones were dug up
they were examined by Dr. G. M.
Waterhouse and Dr. C. C. Conant and
the physicians agreed that they be
longed to Indians that were doubtless
Interred many years ago. The skulls
Indicated that the owners were all
persons of extreme age, since the
teeth were worn down and other
marks pointed to this fact The skel
etons appeared to have been men or
women of considerable size and par
ticularly height, and possessed the
characteristics of the tribes that fre
quented this territory in former years.
It Is not 'an unusual thing to dig
up human skeletons In this locality
since In early days the Indians, the
.rigors of the Oregon trail, and bad
men claimed many victims who were
burled without regard to location. The
Indians themselves possessed many
peculiarities regarding their dead and
the bones recently found here are
doubtless those of braves who were
killed in some tribal conflict and lat
er given scant attention from their
fellows. Again that particular spot
may have been the graveyard for
seme tribe since many human bones
have been found In the western part
of town during recent years.
It
TEXAS LEGISLATURE
' IS IV SESSION
'
AUSTIN, Texas, July 21. To
pass a law regulating the direct
election of United Stated sena-
tors as provided for In the last
amendment to the constitution.
the Texas legislature convened
In special session today. Other
legislation which wi'.l be asked
Governor Colquitt will be a law
governing the management and
control of the state prison sys-
tern; passage of an approprla-
tlon bill, and consideration of a
score of minor matters.
EUROPE GOING
TO GET CHINA
DISMEMBERMENT OV THAT
COUNTRY SURE TO COME
Turkcy-ln-A-da Also Will ho Sliced
Among the Great Nations French
MinUter of Foreign Affairs Make
lredlction Genera! European War
is Round to Come.
(harming foulard.
An ussuming but fetching little fou
lard frock Is offered for consideration
in the drawing above. A noticeable
feature Is the arrangement of the two
shades of ribbon, the colors, of
Course, matching those In the gown.
These cross the shoulders In suspend
er fashion following the "V" opening
of the blouse and terminating In a
two looped how front and back. A
yoke of tucked cream net and vestee
of heavy lace fill the center front.
The blouse has the drop shoulder
joined to the wide sleeve by a piping
of the darker silk. The skirt is se
verely plain but nay be elaborated
with lace used on the cuffs of the
blouse.
ill
YOUNG MRL'S GINGHAM FROCK
In the drawing above a' frock Is
pictured whoso youthful lines make
It especially appropriate for the girl
from sixteen to twenty. One of the
many dainty ginghams, batistes or
linens with which the shop counters
overflow at this season could be eas
ily fashioned Into a smart frock. If
this design be followed. The deep
pointed revers, wide collar and cuffs
may be cut from heavy all-over em
broidery finished with a narrow edg
ing or cut from plain linen and em
broidered by hand. A chemisette 'of
tucked batiste fills the front of the
blouse to the bust line where It meets
a band of machine embroidery, which
continues without break t the knees.
The skirt Joins the blouse without a
glrd'.e but Is piped with plain self-tone
material which terminates on either
side of the center embrolderv panel.
! (By William Philip Slmms, Parts Cor
respondent of the United Press.)
PARIS. July 21. That Europe Is
preparing for the dismemberment of
China, Tuikey-In-Asia, and the Colon
ies of Portugal, and. the ultimate di
vision of the spoils, was the conten
tion of former Minister of Foreign Af-
, fairs. M. Emile Leopold Flourens, In
1 ,. ..I . - t . ! . . w . .
a pi it me uuerview given ino united
Press correspondent here today. This
diplomat, who Is credited with know
ing more of European motives and
politics than almost any other man,
tells the reason for the monster stand
ing armies which the great powers are
now creating with a rapidity hitherto
known only Immediately preceding
war. And Germany, with her con.
fessed need for elbow-room, and de
spite recent eulogies sung of the
"Peaceful War Lord." Is given the
blame for starting the ball rolling. The
Interview took place at the home of
the statesman, flnd M, Flourens called
a. spndc a spade.
"At th$ outbreak of the Balkan
troubles some months ago," said M.
Flourens, "I told you that a general
European war was preparing for the
rear future. I still think so. For the
moment, however, the ambitions of
! the great powers are holding them
In check. They don't want war Just
at this time and for a very particular
reason. That is why every ounce of
their influence Is being exerted now
to prevent the Balkan difficulty from
dragging them into a fight
"Two years ago," the correspondent
suggested, "the world was Informed
that Europe was on the verge of a
general war. Americans find It hard
i to understand what It's all about and
"The general squaring of accounts
between the nations of Furonn la mm.
j Ing," the diplomat replied. "You may
be sure of that. Something has hap
pened to postpone the action, that is
all. The reason Is this: There Is short
ly to be considerable territory divided,
and when this begins each of the great
powers wishes to be at Its strongest.
A war now would weaken the nations
engaged, and those which kept the
peace would find themselves with a
(tremendous advantage over their rl-'vals.
"In the first place, Turkey-In-Asla,
Is doomed. This empire is shortly to
disappear Just as Turkey-in-Europe
has disappeared, and the powers are
preparing to divide her among them
selves. Secondly, Portugal Is in a de
plorable condition, and It Is certain
that before long the colonies of that
republic are to be portioned out am
ong the nations of Europe. England
will get the lion's share. Lastly there
is China. - The republic does not seem
to have solved the oriental riddle, and
Europe is laying its plans to have a
good hold on the situation when the
break-up arrives.
"Does it not occur to you as peculi
ar that although not a single one of
the great powers of Europe has rec
ognized the Chinese Republic, they
have made that republic large loans?
Why?. The answer is extremely sim
ple: If China breaks up they don't
want any stumbling block in their way,
such as a recognition of the present
government might create; they want
to be sure of collecting their money,
and China herself Is security for the
loans. Diplomatic history to my
knowledge has never recorded a sim
ilar" situation. The- United States Is
the only world power not directly in
terested In China. The United States
withdrew from participation In the
loan, and alone of all the world pow
ers, the United States has recognized
China as a republic."
"Where Is this race for armament
to end?" Flourens was asked.
"Just where It is, in my opinion,"
he said. "The tax-payers are tired of
the game and they won't let things go
much further. Europe, has about
gone her limit. The powers have de
manded bigger armies and more mon
ey, and the people have met the de.
mands, of late, It must be said, with
great reluctance. This Is proof that
the limit has been reached. The next
move belongs to Europe. She must
Justify her demands; prove her war
taxfc? Justified, that the sacrifices of
her citizen soldiers were not In vain."