I'AGK FIX DAILY EAST ORKC.OXIAN. rF.NP1.ETON. OREGON. TUESDAY. AUGUST .1. 1915. EIGHT PAGES IIMSTISOER IVAY AT ECHO: CROP YIELD IB BE LARGE 'MMIIIIls m:.ix orri: ATIOM AM l;l l-OK IX I'ltOM MK11K i I txi h ,ic;. Aliliontli lian m !jr Was Done H ll.it MIikU nriiiT In the Smwin. the IH,I Mill H. lrs,T In VldiiUyj f 1rv Tlwn in lU Otlio ! of K-ho Yilbigr. I S.. .-I.il Correspondence.) Ki-IU". ire.. Aug. 2 Harvest is in f.ill ! iM In this vicinity and re lHirls from the gr.iin fit-Ids are very i. u: iicn.B Although there waa xi:.sid.ril'U d. image done the crop by the hot winds a little earlier in t hr si';iwin. tile stand w so he:ivv ih:.t the iehl in the vicinity of Kclio will be greater than that of 1914. Jus. Uethlefsen returned home Kri laj evening from a nine months' vis it in the middle west. He spent the wli.ter with his daughter. Mrs. Lena Mathers at Mason City, Iowa, During tit atwence he visited Illinois, Ne braska and Colorado. He report a very pleasant trip but says there is no place like home. Mr. Rethlefsen t Ichly-five years of age. He made the entire trip alone with as much -Ase aa a far younger man would be expected to do. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Stapish of Walla Waila. are here visiting with Mrs. itpish parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Wattenburger Mr. nnd Mrs. J. T. Hopkins return M home last week from a three weeks' visit at Tillamook, Ore Claude Scrivener, who has been -visiting several weeks at Glenns Fer ry, Idaho, with his sister. Mrs. James TMeador. has returned home. Mr. and Mrs. J S. Panforth are -voting with friends at Vincent, Ore. Mrs. Hneh of Portland and Mrs Ka Clnssen of Walla Walla, both cousins of Mrs. J. Frank Spinning. e;e week-end visitors at the Spin wing home and returned to their re 3nM'tive homes today. J. C5. Thomas returned home Sun laj tnnrning from a short business visit in Pendleton. J. W. Reese for many years a far mer of this place, but now of Wen- Idaho, is here looking after his (Tils rests here Mr. Reese and son (hi,- year have eisht hundred acres of wheiit to harvest. SEBALL IS SLOWER THIS YEAR THAN AT ANY HE IH PAST NATIONAL (iAMK IS TAKING M.l'MP AtrOKDlNU TO JOHN M'tillAW. .les Ri-nson Why the Cubs Ever Slaved mi Too as Loni as They Hid 4n the Other llaml Then- Arc Indications to show That Met. raw .May In" Wrong In Contention. i BY GEORGE R. HOLMES. i United Press Staff Correspondent ! I NEW YORK. Aug. 3. Is the na- I tional game slower from n playing standpoint this year than in former years? John McOraw swears it is. So do a lot of other veteran baseball men The only reason the Cubs ever stayed on top as long as they did is because the National League is play ing the rottenest ball It has played in a decade," opines Jawn. "And the same goes for the Phils." Some caustic individual may come back with the assertion that Mr. Mc Oraw is prejudiced, inasmuch as his Giants have loitered around the sec ond division and the cellar most of the season. They cannot, however, say the same regarding such utter ances by other persons long connect ed with the game. who. in support of their contention, cite the many pitch ing come-backs of this season. Of these probably the most glaring is that of Jack Coombs. The Iron man was considered through for two years. When Connie Mack unloaded him on Charley Ebbets at the start of the present season, the wise ones gave Ebbets the laugh. Those guf faws now are strangely stilled. The veteran has been chucking one of the best brands of baseball seen this sea son. ' Nap Rucker is another example. The famous old side-wheeler has kept Brooklyn on the baseball map almost single-handed for a decade. Last year he slipped and the wise ones be gan printing obituary notices. He has i been fairly successful this season. t.a Walsh Is still another. It has friends left here Saturday morning tor Lehman Springs. SEI.HS STOl.KX (.PAIS EOl M IN PAWNSHOP oeen several seasons the Supreme Mr. nnd Mrs.W. R Hinkle of tills I Chancellor of all flinger held the r.Ue. and a party of their Hermiston ! m)' ,0 sijt bloW8 an his Same. uumi. i ei ne went out against the Athletics not long since and did that very thing, and the twenty-two odd thousand fans who saw him put it over went home convinced that the Pig Moose was right again. George Chalmers of the Phillies, is also cited. The debaters point to a whole raft f batters in support of their theorv. The most prominent of these is Chief Meyers. McGraw's veteran Indian mask man. The Chief finished last season with a slugging average of -6. ' He's done." chirped the dope sters. Since June the Indian has been slugging the ball at a rate of .365, although his season's average is a good bit below that, due to poor work at the start of the season. Fred Merkle and Larry Doyle occu py similar positions. Merele ouit j playing in 1914 w ith a .258 mark, and ST. PAl'L. Aue. 2 Jewelry valued vi t more than J15.'""i, stolen from the home of John Solig. motion picture film manufacturer of Chicago, has tieen found in pawn shops here. The jewelry' was stolen by a servant who M'aj- arrested in Oakland. Cal. Three American Killiil. Ql" E EXSTOWN". Aug. 2 The of ficial list of the dead of the British starrier Ilrian. shelled by a German RUhmarne. accounts for six men three Americans and three English-; ley' ' Boston: John Carroll and P'" above him. They lUdan; the Englishmen. ProuGfoot. H J'"1" a clip i i n-K-eef. ahme .340 and are crowding Jake Welsh. Charles Hansbury and John ; 1!" ' Art Fletcher is another. The hH.., - ,., Ta.nu ln!nn .1 Rerrv and U. .. ...utiaie wmi tkiltnn. .the game is slower or not, the affirm . ative debaters have a powerful argu j ment. 1. ATI ST PKTLP.K OF WIFE OF LATE N. Y. OFF1CKK LEAGUE '.. i v ' , , .. . ' . . i; : N'OltTHWF.STETSX At Spokane Tacoma 9 Spokane j At Seattle Seattle 4 Vancouver 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE. At New York New York 3 Chicago 2 At Boston 5 Boston 3 Detroit 5 At Washington Washington 5 St Louis 1 At Philadelphia Cleveland 4 Philadelphia 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE, At Cincinnati Brooklyn 4 Cincinnati 0 At Chicago Chicago Philadelphia ... Pittsburg-Boston double postponed. No other games uled. 9 0 1 0 7 1 4 7 0 1(0 header sched- This jiliotogriiph of Mrs. Charles linker, wife of Hie condemned New York police lieutenant was made as li- rame from the chambers of Jus tice Foid of the supreme court in JJew Tort, following the plea of He, ker's attorney for a new trial on Jul. CHARLIE SPENDS MONEY TO GET WHAT HE WANTS CHICAGO, Aug. 3 Charlie Com iskey's idea for acquiring a real ball team Is diametrically opposite to the idea concealed in the dome of Cor- nelioijj. M'-Gilllcuddy. Mack gi-ts the raw material and develops It, Comlskey buys It finish ed and delivered. The White Sox owner has spent close to $200,000 for the finished product In the past few years. His most recent purchase of Eddie Murphy for a sum some where near J10.000 calls to mind some of the real money he lias hand ed over to the finishers for ball play ers For Eddie Collins J50.000; for Ray Schalk $12,500; for the lute lamented Chanel I $18,600; for Russell Black burn $ 1 1 000; for Ping Bodle $, ""0: for Hobble Roth IstOOO; and for ltollle Zeider. bunion and all $8000. This Is an Incomplete list. If the whole truth were known the amount probably would total more than $:0.00. And If It were not for some up to the present minute un- NOTE So much comment has been aroused among cigarette smokers by the sensible suggestions in this adver tisement that we have received several letters from Pendleton men, suggest ing that the advertisement be reprint ed for the benefit of those who missed seeing; it in last week's papers. Clip this out and keep it as it will not ap pear again.- LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. 1 Get all the smoke-pleasure you pay fori Find the right cigarette-a SENSIBLE one that fits your own likes and dislikes. J Tastes differ in fashions, foods and pretty girfs. Also in cigarettes. A cigarette that started out td please every man's 'taste would end up by pleasing none. Most of us like our cigarette smoke deliriously cod and rtfrtuhing. The Mexican likes his hot and dry. with nice little peppery tting in it. Some men like a cigarette wholesomely, fragrantly , tittbf. Others of us hunt for a cigarette almost as heavy , as a black cigar. Most of us want an "easy" cigarette a SENSIBLE I one, so that no matter how steadily or how many we smoke, we'll feel as fit as a fiddle. Other men. though, don't care about that. They smoke only a few so the want a kick like a mule's in each puff. All of us want our smoke "full-bodied" it must tatitfy that smoke-hunger. But the cigarette that just fills the ,bill for you may not do at all for your next-door neighbor. Somewhere among all the Irrands on the market u the one just-right cigarette for YOU I Maybe it's the very one you have now in your pocket-W are you SURE? Maybe it's some entirely "different" cigarette it may or may not be Fat i ma. But "find it I" Until you do, you're cheating your self out of a whole lot of smoke-pleasure. Also you're wasting some money. How to Find "yours" To avoid blindly trying too many different cigarettes, ask yourself, first of all, this question : "Just what do I like in a cigarette ? " If you smoke only a few every day, you may prefer a cigarette which is rather rich or heavy and "oily." Or you may like one which has a rather strong "oriental" taste with a pungency almost like perfume. Or you may want a cigarette with that noticeably "sweetish" Egyptian but this will help you find it.- flavor. But If you smoke qnite often if yon Would Hkef to smoke whenever you feel Jike it nd without any effect on the tongue or throat or any fear of a heavy or "heady" feeling afterwards then you should choose some cigarette' such as Fatima," a cigarette composed of all-pure tobaccos' of considerable aroma, mellowed by being aged and care-' fully blended to produce a fragrant and wholesomely mild,' y juu-o&ue a, smoke, ana tne smoke must be notice- , ably COOL. For otherwise your tongue or your throat will soon signal you to stop smoking so often. If you will ask any Fatima smoker, he will tell you ! that Fatimas never make him "feel meaa"--no matter how many he smokes. 1 That Is why Fatimas are considered the most sensible cigarette by such a large majority of smokers. And that is probably the main reason why hardly any Fatima smokers ever switch! They like a sensible cigarette and one with a good, pure taste to it. ? But the Taste is up to Yoa All cigarettes are pure, but when it comes to the taste, nobody can help you choose. You simply hav to decide for yourself. Of course, Fatima's taste may not appeal to you. But most men who try Fatimas like the taste so well that they seek no further otherwise'Fatimas could never have won and held their enormous and growing leadership' amounting to over one and a half BILLION cigarettes ft year. www The one purpose of this advert'tsement is to ask you in a fair and square way to give Fatimas (29 for J5c) a good trial. If they don't happen to suit your taste, you'll quit smoking them of course. But if you like Fatimns as well as MOST men do, you'll be mighty glad you read this advertisement and ACTED ON IT I Below are two simple tests which you can easily make and which may help you find your sensible cigarette. It mny or may not be Fatima. But be fair to yourself I U Js;rt vol 7 " Mere 'e , sir.ok "- if the t0o":.10n of ","'rh"eupr-jL "H -r Tbo fit l f0rt to HrauftVae.ana W1 of tt w iWoke Ph V , - &?r&' - . Larxest curette OMPufarturer in the L. S. u ihovD bj Internal llerenua report. Wt. mi. Until 4 hWn fV - .-Hi- -. . 1 explained vagary on the part of Con nie Mack we could add $60,000 to Comlxkey't player expense account That's what Comlskey offered Mack for Old slam 'em Out Baker. Wena telle Italia mi to War. WENATCHEE, Wash., . Auj. 2. Italy ia dally taking lu countrymen back to fight agalnrt Austria. Rail road official lay that already 15 Italians have answered the call of their country and many more are ex pected to follow. They go direct te Seattle, where the consul furrlshei them with transportation to Italy. On their way to San Francisco from New York by auto, J. C. Penny and party arrived In Wenatchee to day after having been on the road since June 1 with 2 actual running days; -They left for Seattle Via Blewett pass. Mr. Penny Is head of the J. C. Penny company, which con trols 83 stores In the United States, each known as the Golden Rule. The Golden Itule In Wenatchee to under his supervision, Gift for liHUsh Captain. LONDON, Aug. 2. The lords com missioners of the admiralty have Just presented a hunter gold watch with Inscription and their appreciation on veluum to Capt. Charles Fryatt of the O. E. R.'s steamship Brussels In recognition of the seamanship he dis played when attacked by a Germ in submarine off Maas light on March 29. Gold watches have also been pre sented to the chief officer and chief engineer. The submarine passed un der the Brussels' stern and came up against the port rigging, with the per iscope right right along the port side. The captain declared that: "You could have easily hung your hat on the periscope as she was hung along side us." Then the submarine dis appeared and was not seen again. Captain Fryatt had three weeks be fore been presented with a gold watch from the chairman and directors of the Great Eastern railway for eluding a German submarine on Mach t. Slilcs Many In Germany. BERLIN, Aug. 2. The. measures against the presence of possible spies In Germany are continually becoming sharper. They started, so far as the public's cooperation Is concerned, with an appeal to travelers to help guard tunnels and bridges by giving care ful attention to the actions of their fellow-passengers. Some weeks ago a placard was posted In all public places, warning citizens to guard their conversation. Another placard, warning soldiers against permitting themselves to be questioned by strangers Is now posted In public resorts and at the railroad stations, and a special warning has been published In the press declaring that spies In great number are con stantly present In Germany. Most of these, It Is declared, come from neu tral countries, but there are also ren egade Germans among them,