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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1914)
I DAILY EVENING EDITION , TO ADVERTISERS. The Rait Ortgontan bas ths largest paid circulation of anjr paper In Ureguu, eaat of lortland and over twice tut circulation In DAILY EVENING EDITION ForrcaMt for Eastern Oregon, by tbm United State W rather Observe at Portland. muieion ot any otner newspaper. Fair tonight and Thursday. COUNTY. OFFICIAL FA PER COUNTY OFFICIAL PAVER " 1 "" "' " "- pi jwmVy ; - JH?!?i VOL. 26 Hiinnr Tim! inn nnmnnnn n r v -w- "" . .? IVIUKt In AN IUUGUWHITS ANU ) V Ctf U o)lF mimi p.nwmm .9 fwtfr for miiniliip Iuuli U mm U eIIaiuvj yguMt VWIIUIIII.U L-illl.ll I Ull llUUIlL Ul l Big ShowStaged Beginning Tomorrow Sees Large Number of Well Known Performers Ready ForThe Contests Drawing For Places Will Take Place This Evening. More than 100 cowboys and cow girls had entered In the various Round-up contests up until noon to day and a crest many had not yet entered. The entry books will be closed st ( o'clock this evening and the drawings for places will take place at o'clock this evening. In the list or those already entered appear the names of the best riders, ropers -and bulldoggers In the country inJ It is the concensus of opinion that the .Round-up contestants this year will represent the superlative In wild west performers. The following are the names and addresses of the first SI entrants and the numbers they will wear In the contests. The list should be cut out for reference by those wishing to keep informed ss to "who's who." 1 John Thomas, Pendleton, Ore. 2 Buffalo Vernon, Pendleton, Or. .' 3 C A. Byers, Mulhall, Okla. 4- John Spain, Telocaset, Ore. ; t Sam Garrett, Mulhall, Okla, J. Henry Warren, Hamilton. Mont. " Ple Wsrren, Hamilton, Mont. I Otto Kline. Mulhall, Okla. W. H. Garrett, Onelt. Nevada. 10 Enos Camett, Ephrata, Wash. 11 Earl Mandelnelo, Penawawa, . Wash. 12 John Jedd. San Francisco. 11 O. 8. Seldel, Bltbee, Aril. 1 Jaae Bernoudy, Snnta Monica. 15 J. H. Strickland. Gainesville. Texas. ! A. Parker, Blackle, Alta 17 Dun Clark. Portland, Ore. Id Bill Ridings. Pendleton, Ore. 1 Silver Han, Cheyenne, Wyo. 20 O. U. Mitchell, Cheyenne. Wyo. 21 Elmer Fetters. Mesa, Colo. 22 Sam Browne!!. Slbylle, Wyo. 23 Chas. Merchant, Belllnghani, ' Wash. 24 J. H. Taylor. Pendleton, Ore. 25 C. .S. Tipton. Denver. Colo. 2 C. E. Runyon, Pendleton. Ore. 2 7 Hurry Harmon, Cody, Wyo. is Frej Brenum, Gillette, Wyo. 29 Harry Bobbins, Cheyenno, Wyo. 30 J. c. Mabce. Gilford. Mont. 31 Geo. Francis. Havre, Mont 32 G. Mnnrlqurc Fan Jose, Cal. 33 Alvln Coles. Pendleton. Ore. 34 Hurt Galtlff. Pendleton, Ore. 35 Paul Heln, Pendleton, Ore. 3 Hilly Clifford, Pendleton, Ore- 37 Jack O. Bryant, North Pow der, Ore. 38 BUI Morris, Pendleton, Ore. 39 Dnn Thompson, Toppenlsh, Wash. 40 Louise Thompson, Toppenlsh. Wash. FURLONG LECTURE PROVES TO BE TREAT TO PENDLETON FOLKS A lecture of absorbing Interest up on a country little known was lis tened to Inst evening In the Oregon theater by en audience not large In numbers but extremely appreciative. The lecturer was Charles Wellington Furlong, noted author and traveler who is here to see the Round-up thnt he muy again write ot its glories for national periodicals. He spoke upon "Fertile Argentina and Her Vast Patcgnnlnn Pampas," and illustrated with strreoptlcon views from pictures taken by himself, the lecture proved a revelation to the audience. The purpose of the lecture was to start ft fund for the erection of a monument to the cowboy In this city, n project about which Mr. Furlong Is very enthusiastic. Before commenc ing his lecture Inst evening, he urged thnt the cltlxens of Pendleton "get busy" In order thnt some other west ern city may not first seise upon the distinctive Idea. He also suggested Hint the best statue obtainable should be secured and urged thnt proper con slderation be given the matter be fore nny sculptor Is employed. Preliminary to his lecture, too, Mr. Furlong pnld a glowing tribute to Pendleton. "I have been In nearly every section of the western hemi sphere," he snld, "and have traveled more or less on the other aide of the globe and there hns been no one point that has over gripped me the way DAILY 41 Halter Carter. Pendleton, Ore. 42 Orvllle Adams, Baker, Ore. 43 Isaac Williams, Pendleton, Ore. 4 4 Luclan Williams, Gibbon, Ore. 45 Zibe Morris, Union, Ore. 4 8 F, H. Stephens, Pendleton, Ore 4 7 O. I. SanJers, Pendleton, Ore. 4 8 Olive Osborn, Pendleton, Ore. 48 Skeeter Bill Robbins, Chey enne. 60 Everett Wilson, Boyd, Ore. 51 Glenn Falrchtld, Graas Valley, Ore. (Continued on page five.) Tonight sees Hsppy Canyon open. The replica of the early towns of the frontier Is rady for the crowd and It promises them something unique In the line of entertainment All Pendleton and her visitors are an ticipating the opening of the town with an eagerness that Is all but Impatience. So much enthusiasm, In deed, has been aroused over Pendle ton's novel evening show that the town, large as It Is, will probably be taxed to accommodate all of the vis itors. The program, which will last an hour, will commence promptly at S o'clock and It will be a hummer. Judging from the rehearsal held last evening. .Nobody but the committee knows Just whst the euhia are going to be but It has leaked out that there LONDON'. Sept. 13. -Stunir bv the loss of the cruisers Abouklr, Rogue; mid Creasy It was believed trie Brit-1 Ish navy would take the aggressive' Immediately against the kaiser's sea! forces. I That besides the three cruisers lost, other Brltbih shlp8 were damaged was widely rumored and there was a tre mendous clamor throughout the Brit ish Isles for speedy vengeance. Few details of the disaster were made public. It was' understood the British dead numbered 1500. Confirmation was lacking of reports that the British destroyed two of the five German submarines said to have been In action. Pendleton has. I do not ask you to take my words alone as proof of my statement. offer the fact that 1 have come for the second time across the continent to attend your Round up and I should have been sorry. In deed had I been forced to stay In Boston while the Round-up was un der wny. There is no place that 1 feel more at home, save In my home city of Boston, than right here In Pendleton." Commencing with his lecture on Argentina, Mr. Furlong carried his audience with him by means of pho tographs and word descriptions through the length and breadth of that great South American republic. By means of maps he first made clear the geography and physiography of that country and to most of the audi etice this was educational In Itself. The Mews of the beautiful cities of Buneos Aires and Rio Janeiro aston ished all and the speaker's state ment relative to the enterprise or the citizens of those metropolitan centers In developing the "city beau tiful'' idea proved thnt the United States can profit much from tho ex ample of the Latin Americans. From the cities Mr. Furlong went on Into the heart of the pampas, showing the great stretches of almost barren land where millions of sheep (Continued on paga five.) HAPPY CUIIM TO Hill I I UHII I Ull I II I oil inn BIS TIME ASSURED (Continued on page elg.-t) ElluilSOEio QUICK ACTION FOR LOSS Of VESSELS i EAST OREGOXIAX, PENDLETON, OREGON, WE ONES DA GENERAL INFORMATION FOR VISITORS AT ROUND-UP The afternoon exhibitions at the park begin at l;3u and close about 5. The FrlJay morning show will 4 commence at 9 o'clock. The Westward Ho parade will start at 10 a. m. Saturday. Happy Canon opens at X o'- clock Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings, the program commences at 8 and the general festivities at 9. Grandstand seats for the aft- ernoon Hound-up performances sell at 1. 00, bleacher seats for 75 cents. 4 Admission to Happy Canyon Is 25 cents. 4 GarnJHtand tickets may be purchased at the portable booth 4 on Court street near Main every ! I morning. 4 Bleacher seats may be se- cured only at the box offices at the park. 4 Programs sell In the park for ten cents. Pay no more. The information bureau at the park will be In the judges' stand. Ask for Lee Drake. Round-up headquarters are over the American National Bank. Accommodation headquarters and entry headquarters are in the offices of Manuel Frledley and Norborne Berkeley in the Fast Oregonlan building. Telephones at accommodation headquarters are (50 and 661. For general information relative to the city stop . sny citizen wearing an "Ask Me" or "Re- ceptlon" ribbon- That's what thy wear them for. 4 4-0- Th.poUcs .station, is la the 4 city hull on Alta street. Just off Main. Telephone number Is . 4 The fire department number Is 171. The postoffite Is In the Hotel Pendleton building. Round-up Park is on Court 4 street, eight blocks west of Main. 4 Happy Canyon is opposite the Bowman Hotel, one block from 4 the O.-W. R. & N. depot. Everybody Is Invited to cele- brate at both places. Let 'er buck! WAR BULLETINS KAISlllfS SONS WOl'XDKD. KOMK, Sept. 23. Four of tlu kulncr'g sons are wounded and In hospitals it was stated in a message quoting a bulletin from the front tc Tagvhlatt. AUSTRIAN SHIPS IIAMAGEI). IAMM)N, Sei. 23. Badly damag ed from an encounter with a French squadron In tlte Adriatic, tho Austrian crulsr-m Maria Tlierwa and Admiral Simliin have taken refuge In SebciUeo, imlmnUa. according to a news agency dlxMtU'li from Rome, JAPANESE LOSE HEAVILY. PEKIX, Seit. 23. Heavy Japanese Ioshcm as the result of an explosion of (icrman mines about Kluo citau was reported on authority of ClUncao of ficials on tlie shang coat. One entire Jsnnncwe. Battalion waa said to have been deHtroycd, BRITISH LOSE 1021. LONDON. Sept. 23. The admiral. ty's official estimate of the numher who itcrbdicd through the loss of Uie Abouklr. llogue and Creasy was plac ed at 1621. This estimate was made following a compilation of nil the i nvailnble Information. It Is believed to le correct. The cruisers wore sup- hsc1 to carry crews of 700 each. This would make tho survivors nuin- ler !. The dead wehe understood to Include nearly ull the three ships orricers. GERMANS CLAIM ADVANTAGE WASHINGTON. Sept. 2:1. A cable gram from Berlin to tho German em bnssy said tho French center In the battle of the Alsne was retreating af ter suffering tremendous losses and that the 1'Ycneh offensive was weak lug. The cablegram said Verdun has necn Nuct-cssrully iMtmliarded. The dispatch also reported tho sinking of tho l.crnian surveying vessel Mocvel by the British cruiser Pegasus. GERMAN GENERALS KILLED. BERLIN, Sept. 23 (via The Hague) In today's cnsultv list llsinM here apcar the names of, ( I.ll..tul. V.h.t 1'M.ktlta. .... . 1 a I ..... tin .irooii mill ' Von Wrochcm. as killed in .t... ! i.enernis von wiuiseti and Von Hue hue as wounded. Ireland now has 1508 cooperative toilettes, with 3,011,390 members. Iji EwssuMMARYji flFSPFBATF mm- NEWS SUMMARY General. . British forces have turned German I army (n lriM and retreat la saitl to Ik n atu r of, short time. Kngllsli demand revenge upon Ger man for Uie sinking of three British waolijpg. Hire mum of Uie kaiser are said tit U- wounded. Belgian take offensive. Local. More Than hundred cowboy and cowglrlrt entered at noon for Round up. . . r, - Small Imy struck by auto and hurt. Happy canyon open tonight. Interesting lecture by C. W. Fur-i long mart fund for cowboy inonu naiit. liarlc Wellington Furlong will contribute dally stories of Round-up Ui Ft Oregonian. . SI 00.000 for Heart Balm. SEATTLE. Sept. :J. Alleging breach of promise. Mrs. Annette Lo der sued Albert Hansen, a wealthy Jeweler, for S 100.000 It is th hleh. est value ever 'placed on a broken j heart In Seattle. Hansen says she is ' an adventuress. j What the Visitors Will . - M'Jfcf- ' ,W. 'KJCWSWJI it'll ?l W WSJ L I -n rlUlVR VL 1 I I v v if f4w fl V, SEPTEMIiEU 23, I'M. wi-Wl Ulll II U UJIIUMI.I MILES OF DEFENSE POSITIONS STORMED AND TAKEN Aeroplanes Direct Gunners and Shells are Thrown Into Lines of Kaiser's Forces Lit erally Piling the Trenches With Dead and Wounded-Allies Have More Than 1,000,000 Men in The Field With Half Million Held in Reserve-Military Experts Say That Nothing Can Save Germans From Being Forced to Retreat, LONDON, .Sept. 23 After Ihe fierc- est artillery fire since the war began British forces northeast of Paris have, succeeded In turning the German line' - . I Just Bouth of Saint Quentln and Pe ronne. Such was the statement made today from unofficial sources but It is re garded as reliable. As a climax to the bombardment the British troops made a. desperate! bayonet charge, capturing nine miles j of the German trenches which were literally filled with dead. Aeroplanes gave the British gunners the German range so accurately that A FEW 6UMPSES OF STIRRING EVENTS AT See Tomorrow When Great Frontier the British shells burst directly over the German trenches. Twice the Germans tried to charge but tn deadly artillery fire of the Rrltluh .Irnt' Iti.tn Valr Finally the British rushed forward and swept all before them. In the trenches the dead and wounded were found so intermingled that It was difficult to rescue the lat ter. The movement, it was stated, was a complete success and the capture of the German position constituted the first really important gain from the Germans' main force. Though It was admitted reinforce- THE ROUND-UP Show Gets Under Way : NO. 8303 LLLIuvJ E FOLLOWS AND NINE menu were being rushed to the kai ser Iiom Belgium, military experts said that nothing could save his forces from being encircled and forced to retreat. Tho German wing was outnumber ed by the allies two to one, it was said. The war office announced that the French and British had mora than a . trillion men in the field with half n illicn more being held In reserve. PARIS, Sept 21. Confirmation of reports that the allies partly have turned the German right wing on the Aisne was received from the Bor deaux war office. . By violent fighting along the bank of the Olsne, it was stated, the allies left accomplished an advance of more than ten miles. The Germans made another fierce attack from northeast of Verdun but by a brilliant series of counter at tacks the French repulsed them. "The allies left wing." said the war office report. "h steadily progressing against the Germans commanded by Von Kluck, having succeeded by a determined and at times hand to hand fighting, in gaining ten miles alon the right bank of the Oise. The al lies movement at this point was an enveloping one and was progressing exactly as planned by the commander-in-chief." "The Germans violently attacked the French positions from the north east of Verdun," the statement con tinued, "but this attack was first checked and then repulsed in a se ries of brilliant counter attacks by the French armies centered there. "No change of moment was no ticeable at any other point on the line of battle. The Germans hold the district south of the. Woevre region from RIchecourt through Seicheprey to Lerouville. In Lorraine and the Vosages the Germans have evacuated N'ominu and Arracourt." BORDEAUX SeDt. 23. Declaring that the German right wing on the river Abme had been turned th . . r effice asserted Von Kluck's army was t :n imminent aanger of Isolation. After a struggle of IS Vpar f ha engraving companies of New York have settled their difference, with the phcto-enzruverv nnlnn CHARLES W. FURLONG TO WRITE OF THE ROUND-UP FOR EAST OREGONIAN Charles Wellington Furlong. F. R. G. S. and noted author and traveller, will be a contrib uting member of the Bast Ore gonian staff during the Roundup- Mr. Furlonsr will writ story each day setting forth hi impressions of the show. U,. qualified to write up'.n the sub ject for he has watched th cowboy and hi work In many lands. Hi experience h; tint been limited to this country n-.r to attendance at the IloumJ-np lust year. He has been in Af rica. South America. Australia, and must every place where nien ride horses. Those who heard his lecture l.i.st evetiinir on Ar- Kentina and Patagonia mill i- predate the truth of tills state- ment. Last jmr Mr. Furlong cover-d the Round-up for the World Work and hi article K-ni-r- ally considered the h-Mt story of tho Round-up ever written. This yeur he is here represent- Ing Harper's Weekly atnl (hit- Ing, two of the big nutu.ixint-N of the east. The Kust Oregon- Ian feel fortunate In securing Mr. Furlon's ser ices and known that reader of the paper will appreciate hi work. It would be a Sph'MilUt ihu lo have the Round-up l-mies of the Fast Ort-ifoiiluti rninli'd to your friends or rt-Utivrs. The series for the three das may be hud. wru(r-j, niMremrd and mailed for 55 cents.