Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 4, 1915)
PAGE FIX DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 4. 1915. EIGHT FACES Telephone Our 1'iea of a hustler Is a man who -n work as fast all day as he can dress In a cold room In the morning. TIADN'OR, Thin White KXTON, White Madras AR.R.OW COLLARS for W Cell ta rtJ'FTT PP..BriT ft CV. t'H-. MAKERS nmgB- '1,1 ' . 00' E l3 "GO WHERE YOU CAN ENJOY YOURSELF AND KEEP Under New Management and Thoroughly Renovated. FURTHER INFORMATION FURNISHED UPON BINGHAM SPRINGS, Hoch 6 SSItSnV"0 - , , , . LmmJ L-J -S L J I i .f..r J Ln , n J L. ,J L-i ".n . i- 66 (o) 99 (Q) The Car That Needs Nothing to Fall Back Upon THE CADILLAC "8" is built to stand upon it's own merits alone. It is a deliverer of facts and needs no backing nor alibis. Whats in the car and not whats be hind it has made CADILLAC a popular car the nation over. It is not a local favorite in one locality alone. When 10,000 CADILLAC owners, net dealers nor professional drivers run year-in and year-out with the minimum of up-keep ad operation cost,, which any fair minded man expects to pay for transportation, comfort and safety, it must be acknowledged by every thinking man that this is accomplished alone by what's in the car instead of what's behind the car. It's a Proven, Built-in Fact CADILLAC enjoys the greateset driving radius without expert mechanical help. If garage service departments depended upon CADILLAC troubles alone they would ALL soon be bankrupt. Another FACT. Every Buyer His Own Salesman CADILLAC is sold by its own performance, not by the claims of fluent talkers nor special inducements. Every owner is an enthusiastic and voluntary salesman. In Comparison, CADILLAC is a 1920 Model It Leads, Others Follow. Ride in one and be convinced. Demonstrations by appointment. 62125.00 F. O. CITY AUTO 4S. BURNS & PETERSON, Props. Pendleton Boy Won Yet He Lost Event diet Kw Vaulted Higher Tlun Wash, inston -Man lint Only Got Second j,,n,,r. saved Meet for Ills Col late. It doesn't pound reasonable, but it happened to "C'het" Fee in the con ference meet at Corvallis. Fee actually vaulted three Inches higher than Thompson of Washing ton, yet' the latter was awarded first place, and the Umatilla Jack-of-all-trade was forced to content himself with second. This is how It happened. Fee, Thompson and Cochran of Washing Ion, qualified at 11 feet 4 Inches. ' 1 . t . B.XSHAtt SPHIKGS, GI23CN POSTOFFICE, OHEGOH B. Pendleton COMPANY , Cottonwood St. Then Thompson cleared the bar at 11 feet 6 Inches. His two rivals took their three trials at this height and failed to get over. This left Thomp son the winner of the event. Then Fee and Cochran started to vault off the deadlock for second honors. The bar was left at 11 feet 8 Inches; both men cleared It. Then it was shoved up to 11 feet Inches. "Chef gripped the pole and grit ted his teeth. A dash, a lea$ way up! Over! The Oregon man skim med the bamboo gracefully. But It was too late to win the event. At that, "Chef took more points in the meet than any other partici pant, amassing a total of 13, and that without a single first place. - Depriv ed of his services, Oregon would have been heated by O. A. C U. of O. Emerald. NGHAM 99 COOL THIS SUMMER. low Open! RATES $2.00 to $2.50 per day. $12.50 to $15.00 per week. Mineral Bath. Swimming Pool I Automobile stage from Gibbon. Good accommodations at hotel, and reason, able rates to camp ers. APPLICATION TO Van Dusen, Props. Pope's 80th Birthday. ROME, June 3 Today the pope Is celebrating his 8th birthday and be cause of the unsettled condition In Italy he passed the day very simply In his private quarters at the vatlcar. A few of his relatives visited him. Neuralgia Pains Stopped. You don't need to suffer those ag onizing nerve pains In the face, head, arms, shoulders, chest and back. Just apply a few drops of soothing Sloan's Liniment; He quietly for a few minutes. You will get such re lief and comfort! Life and the world will look brighter. Get a bot tle today. 3 ounces for 25 cents, at all druggists. Penetrates without rubbing. Adv. BATTLE ROYAL PLANNED. Free-for-all Scheduled as Preliminary to Bennett-Mascot Bout. As one of the preliminaries to the Bennett-Mascott 20 round go at the Oregon theater on June t, Manager Farrell Is planning a battle royal with half a dozen boxers battling, with each other Indiscriminately. It prom ises to be a whirlwind affair with plenty of excitement. Another good preliminary will be the six rounds between Joe Farrell and Jimmle Hay. Farrell Is working out every day with Bennett and Hay will finish training Mascott for the bout. With the main event, these two preliminaries will make up a card that will be hard to beat for a night's entertainment. Smoker of Turkish TRormss Cigarette fitter year ago are smokers of Turkish Trophies Cigarette today I I . ! j r-v r F""3 r J rSjj JOHN M'GRAW FACES PROSPECT OF HAVING A TEAM OF IRlf BS BY BARRY FARIS. (United Press Staff Correspondent.)' NEW YORK, June 4. John Mc Graw has his back against the wall. The doughty little manager of the four-time pennant winning Giants Is at last faced with the prospect of piloting a trailing team. That the outlook doesn't set well with the "Little Napoleon" is plainly evidenced by the cyclonic shake-ups that ho hands his line-up. He hasn't quit yet. The word quit doesn't appear In hli vocabulary. The pounding that his club Is getting from the others In the Tenor loop will only serve to make McGraw fight harder than ever. But even his moat ardent supporters admit that this year his fight looks like a losing one. To many It looks like the old Gl ant machine has crumbled. And it Is an odd circumstance of fate that the once powerful aggregation Is with erlng away Just as two famous ma chines of other days that cracked a few years ago are getting back Into power. These two are the Tigers and the Cubs. The Detroit outfit Is run high back to the fore as a contender in the American league under the same leader that piloted it In the win ning days of the past "Eee Yah' Hughle Jennings. The Chicago gang Is being pulled back up the ladder of fame by one of McGraw a old lieu tenants, Roger Bresnahan. Frank Chance guided the destinies of the old time pennant copping Cubs and he was there when they hit the skids, too. It is the indefinable "something" which Is missing from the Giant ranks that "something" which a club has to have to stay on tor through the long, hot days of August and September when the weak sisters who flash In the spring wither away. The old stars are mostly with the club and seemingly they still deliver the goods. Their batting averages all look good but when you watch their work day after day you see that the "punch" is gone. They are not able to rise up and crush the opposition In the crisis anymore as they used to do. Probably the hardest Individual blow McGraw got was a wallop by the National league club owners. They reduced the number of players any club could carry to twenty-one. McGraw was the hardest hit of any National league manager. Last year when the Feds were raiding the ranks of organized ball McGraw, to protect himself, signed most of hi veterans under long-time contracts Now he hasn't room for the young sters that he needs In order to build up a club for the future. Obituaries have been written about the Old Master Christy Mathewsor year after year. Already he has been consigned to the boneyard this year. But he is still out there on the Giant bench and he will be on the firing line many times this season. And when the hot sun of July and August melts the kinks out of his arm the "Old Master" will chalk up many a victory on the Giants' slate. Big Jeff Tesreau, the least flashy of the Giants' twlrlcrs, but the moat de pendable, is working like a trojan these days. He Is big and capable of working often and McGraw Is pushing him to the limit until some of his others get going. Rube Marquard flashes a few great games and then slumps. There Is still the chance that he will et right and stay there and If he docs he is unbeatable. Aft er he handed the Cubs a beating In the first game of the last series here Roger Bresnahan was heard to ob serve; "No club in the world could beat that fellow the way he Is going to- Itlay. If he keeps that up McGraw won't have to worry." Young Stroud, a rookie, surprised McGraw and thousands of others, by breaking a losing streak for the Gi ants. Since then he has worked often and he has pitched good ball consist ently. STANDING OF THE TEAMS. National League. W. L. Chicago 23 1 Philadelphia 21 18 Boston 20 19 PltUburg 19 19 St. Louis 70 21 Cincinnati 15 20 New York ' 15 20 . American League. Chicago 27 15 Detroit 2 1 Boston 1 I5 New York 1 17 Washington . ... 16 19 Cleveland 17 21 St. Louis 17 23 Philadelphia 12 27 red em 1 League. Pittsburg 24 17 Newark 22 17 Kansas City ..23 18 Chicago .-. 22 18 St. Louis 18 17 Brooklyn 20 19 Baltimore 1 24 Buffalo 1' n Northwestern League. Spokane 24 17 Victoria 24 19 Tacoma 23 21 Vancouver 20 21 Aberdeen 20 24 Seattle 18 25 Pet. .590 .538 .-.13 .603 .475 .429 .423 .C43 .619 .659 .628 .457 .447 .425 .308 .686 .564 .r,t .550 .614 .513 .400 .317 .586 .t 58 .623 .415 .455 .419 inolfle Coast League, San Francisco 31 23 .674 Los Angeles 35 29 .641 Salt Lake 80 26 .638 Oakland 28 34 .64! Venice ' 26 32 .448 Portland 23 29 Ail PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE. At Portland Portland 5 8 1 Oakland 1 8 2 At Los Angeles. Venice 1 S 1 Salt Lake 0 1 1 At Oakland Sank Francisco ,. 4 9 2 Los Angeles 2 3 1 FEDERAL LEAGUE. At Kansas City Plttabufg 1 7 0 Kansas City 1 t At Chicago St. Louis 3 t 1 Chicago 2 8 6 At Buffalo Brooklyn 10 15 2 Buffalo 7 13 S Second game: Brooklyn . t 8 2 Buffalo 1 6 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE. At Brooklyn Philadelphia 1 0 Brooklyn '. 1 6 2 At Boston New York 10 16 1 Boston 3 13 4 At St. Louis Cincinnati 6 11 2 St. Louis 8 All games In the American league postponed because of cold or wet grounds. NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE. At Aberdeen Spokane 4 10 0 Aberdeen t 8 3 At Seattle Seattle 12 4 Victoria 1 0 At Vancouver Tacoma 8 7 1 Vancouver 6 11 Prince, 12, Is Soldierly. HOME, June ,3. Crown Prlnc Humbert, nlthouKh enly 12 years old, is showing a keen and Intelligent In terest In military affairs, which Is winning the affection of the people of Borne. He visited the barracks of the Ber sngllerl and returned with military perctslon the salutes of his father's soldiers. The little Prince asks scores of questions about things he saw at the barracks. When he left to return to the palace, he was cheered by a large crowd. "Hi far 'GETS-IT' Vhsn I Have Corns" Simple As Saying It; Never Falls. It does your heart good to see how easily and qtiirkiy any cora cornea out when you put "(ririS IT" on! And then wheo you've gone along for years trylug everything, when you've sat up nights wrapping up your tnm In bandages, smearing on salves thut Vitb off or awell up the com, pasting on cotton plnstpr that make corns pop eyl. alaiiKhtring your toes with raxora, JahhltiK tlifm with knives and pruning to the quirk with srlHgors and then you put on 2 ilrnps of "(;KTH-IT'( and see your corn fall rlKht off why, It jmt looks Ilka s miracle. Just try it. "ORTH-IT" never falls. No pain, no trouhln. V It for any corn, enllus. wart or bunion. "(JKIM IT" la sold by druiridats evsry where, 2.V a bottle, or sent direct by B. Lawrence Co., Chicago. Bold In t'endle ton and recommended aa the world'a best corn cure by l'enilleton Drug Co., and V. I. Donaldson. COMB SAGE TEA INTO GRAY HAIR DARKENS BEAUTIFULLY AND RESTORES ITS THICKNESS AND LUSTRE AT ONCE. Common garden sage brewed Into a heavy tea, wl'.h rulphur and alco hol added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant; remove every bit of dand ruff, stop scalp ltc'ilng and falling hair. Mixing the Sage Tea and, Sul phur Recipe at home, though. Is troublesome. An easier way is to get the ready to use tonic, costing about 60 cents A large botle, at drug strres, known "Wyeth's Bage and Sulphur CompO'inl," thus avoiding t lot of muss. While wispy, war, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractive ncss. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, no one can tell, becauie It does It so natur ally, so evenly. You Just damped a sprnge or soft nrash with It and Craw this through jour hair, taking ore small strand nt n time; by morn. Ins- all gray hairs rrve disappeared After another application or two your hair becomes Vautlfulljr dark, glos sy, soft and luxuriant and you ap pear years younger. Jl Xi GETS4T V I llnatl V....J ' 4 ' 1 ... J Crackers are used In alrnoHt-every home. Think of how many hundreds of thousand pounds It takes annually to supply the demand In Oregon alone. Think, aim), of how many additional thounands of men, women, girls and boys it would employ, and how many thousands of dollars would be kept at work here at home If you and your family would always prefer and ask for Oregon brands of crackers. They are Just as good and Just as low priced as any made elsewhere and they are fresher. Think over these truths, and put them Into practice for your own personal welfare. Patron ise Oregon industry, and especially remember the following concerns whose subscriptions make this cam paign possible: "AUTO-LAC" TOP DRESSING. Top and body building, painting. Auto Top Co., 626 Alder, Portland. AUTO REPAIRING AND REBUILDING. C. B. Miners & Co., 16th and Alder, Portland, Or. ' BANKS. The United States National Bank, 75 Third St., Portland, Or. CANDY VOGAN'S CHOCOLATES. Modern Confectionary Co., Portland, Oregon. CEREALS "GOLDEN ROD," Golden Rod Milling Co., Portland, Oregon. CRACKERS ""SUPREME BRAND," F. F. Haradon A Son, Portland, Oregon. ELECTRICITY Made In Omm, Portland Railway, Light ft Power Co., Portland, Oregon. FURNITURE IIAND-MADB, F. A. Taylor Co.. 130 Tenth St., Portland, Or. , GAMBRINUS Brewing Co., Portland, Or. GAS APPLIANCES AND FURNACES Hesa Mfg. Co., (13 Williams ave., Portland, Or. IMPLEMENTS FARM, R. M. Wade ft Co., 322 Hawthorne ave.. Portlaad, Or. MONUMENTS MARBLE, GRANITK Blaeslng Granite Co., 2(7 Third, Portland and Salem, Or. Oregon Life Insofince Company "Exclusively Oregon." Home Office, Corbett Bldg., Port land, Oregon. PAVEMENT "BITULITHIC," Warren Bros. Co.. ' Journal Bldg., Portland, Or. RUBBER HEELS. MECHAN'L GOODS. Portland Rubber Milts. 363 East Ninth St., Portland. Or. J. DR. DARRIN LEAVES FOR PORT LAND NEXT SUNDAY NIGHT. It Is seldom that the afflicted of this vicinity have the opportunity of consulting such a high-class special ist as Dr. Darrln, whose visit here has been such a great accommoda tion for the sick who are unable to visit specialists In the large cities, or to travel for their health. His visit to Pendleton expires next Sunday night, June 6th, and It U to be regretted that he is going away, as he has made many friends and has been a great benefit to the com munity, having relieved much suffer ing and misery and treated the poor free. His apartments In the Hotel St. George have been dally srowded with sufferers from far and near and he has met with -his various success In curinK many of their various ail ments. The only sufferers he leaves will be the cranks and skeptics who have noi taken treatment, and those who have hesitated, put off and neglected the opportunity of consulting him. Some Bargains in second-hand FORD CARS Kelley's Auto Repair Shop Cottonwood St., Opposite City Hall. Phono 181. Con Dung Low CHOP SUEY rllrrkl f? C -Chmeie I lV Ulb&J Style HOT TAU&LES CHILLI COn CARflEi -SPANISH STYLE LUNCHES COFFEE Everything clean and up-to- date; FIRST CLASS BERTIC1 TEA 5c Package Under State Hotel Cor. Webb and Cottonwood 8ta Pbona 617 Pendleton, Or Going flivay