East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, June 29, 1915, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    EIGHT PACKS
I'AC.i; MX
si r FT TJh O f , J
If ' W I I f
WEDDING TO BE HELD IN NEWPORT
Cornell Crew
Wins Varsity
At Detroit
Prtroil . . .
Cleveland .
At Chicago
Chicago .
St. Louis . i
TIIOl SWPS,
IMI (illKKKI'SIK. X. Y, June 19
triangular name oi niaaes un-,
(I in American rowing history,
Hi
v.u s ty four-mile race
by eight
"oi toil
.e?v from Inland Stanford
i'in Sr:n- iso, exhausted by the
-lriii uK-. slid over the line two lengths
In fr.iM i f the Columbia crew, which
tiad wrested fourth place from Fenn
yh,i,ia in the last mile of the great
lIuiNxti regatta.
nor uie urs nine, m'aii k"v inurs,
from home and practically overlooked
h a contender in the predictions of I
spirts, fnrced the Ithaca veterans, j
favorites in the betting, to a last ef j
Tort of nerve and strength to win.
From the time Stroke Maurer, of
tMf,ir,t .lrrtvo h baile int. the
aler, Stanford was a factor in the
..trundle and as the rrow of the car- j
iinal shell crept up on the faltering j
"o;nell oarsmen In the terrific drive i
t the finis thousands were shrieking j
ml cheering the far-Western crew on.
Syracuse, which had been fighting
villi Cornell for the lead, was unable
to stand the terrific pace of the last
mile. When the Stanford coxswain i
railed for a last desperate effort from j
ttis Kiant crew, the cardinal boat'
vwept easily by their salt city rivals.
tiut Coach Courtney's oarsmen
rrnade of 'rr.r stuff and
TIOXAI. I EAGl E.
At New York
New York
Host on
Second game:
New York
Hoston
11
(
1
I
Brooklyn . .
Philadelphia
At Cincinnati
Cincinnati . .
Chicago . . . .
vedeual
Brooklyn
Chicago
Brooklyn
At Baltimore
St. Louis
Baltimore
At Buffalo
LEAGUE.
II
i
11
I
J
Pittsburgh
Buffalo ..
Sportland Sparkles
-wabbling and exhausted had Just en-1
ouch strenuh to hold their lead until I Horn
i player.
Pendleton Is to have a Fourth of
July baseball game. Manager Henry
Hobson of the Pendleton Colored Ti
gers has made arrangements for a
game between his team and the
wer4 1 Moose "Paps'1 for that day. The
though I same will te caitect at
the fin'sn line was passed.
AMERICAN I.EAGIE.
At Boston
New Tork 3
rWtnn 2
Second game:
Boston S
New York 3
At Washington
Washington I
Philadelphia 0
i in
RICA'S
Greatest
Cigarette
Haworth, former Pendleton
again the leading sticker of
the Northwest league. .His average
at the end of last week was .345. he
having rapped out 55 safe blows In
1ST times up. -The way Homer Ha
worth Is going some big club in need
of a catcher that can do yeoman duty
as a pinch hitter could do a lot
worse than give him a chance," re
marks the spokesman-Review. Oth
er former Western Tri-State players
in the Northwest league figure In the
percentage column as follows: John
son, 2M; Stokke, .290; Sheely, !83:
Leonard, .273; Grover, .252: Kelly,
.230; Henry Peterson, .237; Peet,
.2rt-,; Mclvor, .200.
President L. D. Drake of the Blue
Mountain League will go out to Pi
lot Kock this evening to present the
uennant to the victorious Pebbles at
a banquet which will be given in their
honor this evening.
With the Athena club having the
pennant cinched by the defeat of
We.ston Sunday, 7 to 2, the final
game of the season has been cancell
ed by mutual agreement The Athe
na club will keep in practice for the
championship series with Pilot Rock.
f ; jt V: i
! ip?
NEWPORT, R. I., June 2:
present season has brought
many interesting engagements. One
recently announced was that of Miss
Margaret Adrews. only daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Andrews, of
Newport and New York, to Morgan
Belmont, a son of August Belmont.
Though the date of the wedding has
not yet been set, it has been definite-
. The i Iv announced
forth I hpre.
that it will take place
Miss Andrews was introduced to so
ciety three years ago and has been
prominent in the social life of New
port each summer.
Mr. Belmont, who is the youngest
son of August Belmont, was gradu
ated from Harvard last year. He is
one of the best known polo players in
this country.
li!Sl 10 HAVE
IG DM 01 JULY 5:
PAOGMfJ PREFAB
VOLl'XTKKU F1UEMKX ARRANGE
EVENTS TO CKIJCRRATE
IX DEPEX DKXCE DAY.
Program V 111 H'VIii at 8 OVhxIc In
.MoniiiiK and Continue. I lit II Late
Hour All Kinds of 1 taring Events
M ill He Held ami In Evening There
Will He- l)am1ii.
(Special Correspondence.)
HEIiMISTOX. Ore., June 29 Mon
day, July f. promises to be a day of
strenuous pleasure in Herniiston, the
volunteer fire department having
prepared for the Fourth of July cele
bration for the past two months. The
program, beginning at 8 a. m., will
continue until late evening. A tennis
tournament will be the first feature
In which some of the local champions
will battle.. At 10 o'clock will be
the address of the day. From 11 a.
m. to 12:30 p. m. there will be a
boy's race, girls' race, free for ull.
three legged race, sack race, potato
race, holster fight, tug-of-war
In the afternoon the Umatilla nine
and the Hermiston baseball team will
meet.
Following the baseball game the
hose race will start, Including a pony
race, free for all and ladies hose
race.
After supper dancing will be the
Important feature.
Good purses are up for all events
and fun is promised every minute.
Mrs. Joseph Ralph was delightfully
surprised Saturday afternoon at her
home on Gladys avenue by about
twenty of her friends. Mrs. Ralph
a recent bride, was the recipient of
many lovely gifts for her home, the
surprise being a miscellaneous show
er. Dainty refreshments had also
been prepared as a surprise and were
served on the (pen porches.
Messrs. R. C. Walber, Harry Malt
by, H. K. Dean and I. C. Campbell
motored to Pilot Rock Sunday to at
tend the ball game
Mrs. Thomas Campbell leaves Tues
day for Sun Francisco where she will
visit several weeks with her sister.
Miss Marie Hobbs and Miss Fannie
Todd will be in Pendleton this week
taking the teachers' examination.
Miss Gladys and Althaea Smith en
tertained a number of their young
friends, Informally, Friday evening.
Had Cash on lee.
SEATTLE. Wash., June 29. The
ice-chest of the Seattle Press club was
broken into by burglars who got away
with Is9.90. The icebox was used by
the night steward as a hiding place
for the cash for the night.
'Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'llllllll!"1111
A Bank of Personal Service
' " h"
because you will not always be able to earn it.
You will not always be able to save money,
Save now while everything is favorable and
build up a reserve fund to fall back on when
your earning capacity ceases, as it surely will.
We pay interest on savings ac
counts and time deposits.
American National Bank
Strongest Bank in C astern Orefoa
MULE PICKS PLACE
TO DRILL OIL WELL
DALLAS, Tex., June 29.
This yarn a true one is about
a mill onaire with enough coin
to choke the Hoosac tunnel.
and a plain ordinary old mule,
"Maud's Brother."
The millionaire is Col. E. H.
R. Green, who owns a few rail-
roads, some land and other
more or less valuable goods of
this world including "Maud's
! Brother." The colonel wanted
I to drill for oil at Cash, Tex. Be-
ing a gentleman with a strain
of sportng blood In tits system.
'. the colonel decided to let
"Maud's Brother" determine
where to start the first drill.
i The gentleman mule was
' turned loose, and where he stop-
' ped to graze, the drill was
made. If the colonel strikes It
rich "Maude's Brother" gets a
nension and should worry.
WOMAN SAYS HER SEX
I NOT UP TO STANDARD
MEN' fil.KA.VEK POLITICAL FIGHT
ERS THAV WOMEJf, DE
CLARES SUFFRAGIST.
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FacS'uub Signature of
lux, Centaur Compass
NEW 1 UK iv
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
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For Infants. and Children.
The Kind Yoa Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
In
Dso
For Over
Thirty Years
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WARREN, 111., June 29. "Men
are cleaner political fighters than
women are: women are more Jealous
than men; women are hastier in their
judgment than men; women are more
revengeful than men; women are less
forgiving than men; women are morel
vindictive than men."
No; you're dead wrong. That isn't
propaganda sent out by the National
Association Opposed to Woman Suf
frage: Those rather biting observa
tions came today from no less a per
sonage than the first woman mayor
or mayoress the state of Illinois ever
produced, and a life-long fighter for
suffrage for women.
That word "personage' was care
fully chosen, Mrs. A. R. Canfleld,
mayoress of Warren, is one of those
things. Unless you knew what she
has accomplished here, and what she
says she's going to accomplish, and
that she is the mayor, you'd never
think it of her. She's about the most
loveable, snuggling kind of grand
mothery looking old lady you'd want
to meet. Shes 75 and brags bdoui
it. Everyone here calls her the "Good
Grandmother" and she brags about
that, justifiably.
Vnhndv actually took Mrs. Can-
field's candidacy seriously, except her
self. There were, naturally, a major
ity of the voters who wanted to see
her elected. But they didn't know
they were in the majority until the
votes count sent "the Good Grand
mother" to the mayor's chair, for
which Mrs. Canfleld most of the time
substitutes! a comfortable rocker.
Then when her election was certain
the vicious elements cheered. They
cheered too soon. Here are some of
the things Mrs. Canfleld has stopped:
SuEKestlve and sensational movies;
ImnroDerly conducted dances; park
spooning, and to a great extent, au
tomobile speeding through Warren
She had also carried the fighting to
niin.. oiier until thev're out of
breath and helping her to stop sale
of liquor to already intoxicated men.
Here are some of the things she is
going to give Waren:
Public superintended dancing halls'
public readings for young and old; a
centrally established hall to be a
meeting place and bouse of enter
tainment for everyone.
"Some of the women who opposed
my election," said Mrs. Canfleld, "used
weapons I never supposed they pos
sessed. They actually accused me
of drinking. They said I used opium.
The astounding part of It was that
some of these women were leaders In
the Y. M. C. A. movement.
"Many opposed me because I be
lieve in young folks dancing. The
evil in the modern dances Is not in
the steps or movements, but In the
minds of the dancers. Surround
Vale is Turning Dry.
PHILADELPHIA, Junde 29. "I
never saw a keg of beer on Yale cam
us," said Louis 13. Runk, Yale. '93,
lawyer, who Is president of the Phila
delphia alumni of the New Haven in
stitution. He presided at the weekly
luncheon of Yale graduates at the Ho
tel Adelphia, where G. F. Gundel
finger's recent book, "Ten Years at
Yale" was a common topic of conver
sation.
In th's book the author, who was
once an Instructor at Yale; said some
harsh things about the university, its
students and factulty, and referred to
Us campus as "beer-soaked."
"That's sheer rot and piffle," said
Runk. "Students, graduated at Yale,
always first -class, have Improved
steadily In the years since I left Now
Haven. The classes which are com
ing out now number a large percent
age of total abstainers. Within the
last two years our local alumni asso
ciation, at Its annual dinners, has
been furnishing far more ginger ale
and club soda than beer to the young,
cr graduates '"
I
Austrians Entrench,
ROME, June 2S. Alarmed by the
advance of the Italian invaders, the
Austrlans In the Carnlc Alps and In
Austrian Tyrol are strengthening all
the defensive work Inside the frontier.
From points miles away, the Auatrt
cans can bo observed dragging heavy
batteries up the steep slopes where
they are being mounted behind bar
riers of rock. The passes up the
slopes cannot be traversed by horses
or mules, and hundreds of men are
hauling the big guns up the heights.
Drew a Rotten Strap.
SEATTLE. Wash., June . It's
bad enough says Arthur Ruppel to
hang onto a strap In a streetcar, after
a hard day's work. Hut to get handed
a rotten strap that's the limit. He
is therefore asking the Puget Sound
Traction, Light and Power Co., for
12900 damages. He filed suit alleging
the strap broke and threw him against
the seat and severely injured him.
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OPENS TO THE PUBLIC THIS YEAR ON JUNE 15th.
LEHMAN HOT SPRINGS'
FRANK L McNEIL, Manager.
THE BLUE MOUNTAINS MOST POPULAR HEALTH AND PLEASURE RESORX,
HOTEL RATES $11.00 and $12.00 Per Week
FREE CAMPING GROUNDS
AUTO STAGE
Makes regular trips between Pendleton
and Lehman Springs.
See Frank Murphy or leave orders at
Pendleton Auto Co.
MAIL STAGE
Starts thia year on June 15. Connects
with trains at Pilot Rock and leaves
Monday, Wedneday and Friday.
Hauls Freight and Mail.
3
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SWIMMING, DANCING, HUNTING, BOWLING, FISHING, HOT MINERAL WATER g
them with proper environment ana
the dancers won't think evil.
"t am firmly convinced that Chi
cago some day In the near future will
have a woman mayor. When that
enmes fhlcaeo will have the best
municipal government In the world.
HORNED ROOSTER IS
THE LATEST FREAK
CLEVELAND, O., June 29.
Brookslde park zoo here has the
very latest animal freak a
horned rooster. Zoo Keeper
Muldoon believes Dick Is the
only "deer-rooster" In the world.
Dick's antlers are about two
Inches long. Curving grace
fully outward and upward they
end In notched points where
they are just beginning to fork
like the horns of an elk.
Students of American fauna
are stumped. They can't ex
plain the phenomenon. And
the oddest part of the freak Is
that the bird Is kept in a deer
park.
"Maybe Dick's environment
brought the horns," says Mul
doon. "But he has 'em all
right.''
n
63
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In metallurgy a flux is something
used to promote the fusion of
metals.
In the business world newspap
er advertising is the flux that fuses
production and demand.
And the fused products are sales,
satisfaction and profits.
Nothing else is quite like news
paper advertising.
It acts almost instantaneously. It
cuts out all in betweens. It is com
paratively inexpensive.
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