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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1915)
PAGE FOUR PAILY EASTOREGOyiAy. rEXDLETOX. OREGON, FRIDAY. AUGUST 6. 1915. EIGHT PAGE3 the a instance, there is "Set." the "ea' in "head fri in heifer, tr.e iiH.iti..i.r .nesi aiei ; "leopard," the "a" in r.ibd I' f at"! tl 1 at PW '- "rC' tj APS OkMroMAS i hLI.h;sj CO. lifMl C ! !lfr VhM ln.tea A wo tarlnw aten-t at lb f"tcr-l- at l4.taav. lflf. M aX.J aaa SA.i Butter. the eo m many." the "av" in "favs," and the "ai" Jin '.'said." And there are the j numerous ways of pronounc ing "ough." the long "u" of "through." the "uff" of -J it. wh; it t :n to torsxk h or,, e ;-r. t.-.e:r w arc-Jra it. n;!e tt t tin- (.rcpii..'.; fvr 1 trt wM. h ! d The Kan! ; r!.7ii ti-'l ,.f c:! omen It un!u k.r.e, tua twn invented fr by u fiis the on!' bird h; h d:d n..t into tie rk witn Noah. I( you have any h.te mark on Tour nails, commonly called gifts" NO CHANGE TO BE MADE ' IN FAMOUS SPEEDWAY ivmiNAhius ntuisK win. MU sMK HKM'ITK. Mtt MMDYKKY. O ALR IS OTBrS CITIES. lriai Uel News ub4. -urt'.AB4. atai antau km Ca . rr-!ae4. Ottjow t rit.s at OIr Parav le. lrsrftj Rai'41ac Atertna. I' C-, bocaaa ul. Faw aaaata street, X. V. CWWaUrTT" tATU US Al'VANCE) allf. aw yaer. ar auil Ueiif, alt : 7 aMll lajnt, tkn aunts, by atall Im j, a avwta. by aui Ial.f, oee ?r. ay cmr tau.t, ai avietfca. or carrier Hai'r. ti-e avetti. kt nr lair oe avnata. b? nmf PaabiVaeft.y. oo ?rr bt aai! anal afi!, t .:!. fc eiaU... eetfwerti?, tvt Bombs, by Ball.. INDIANAPOLIS. Aug. 4-The In dianapolis Speedway w.U n 't l r amfWNj bfca u. of the n .wssibih- V v. .. l. ". r... - uiv.rmi in nip nr the "OW" Of "bough." and the " '"""V; " ,h cour Sr. York mky ah.tr long "o" of "though." And' I'Z'm rr,h '"' Chic rfC"rd- but "!d;n one should not forget the "$"( a m .ho. rua upon . uie fo,'"" sp" " - -and the "k" sounds of the lette m.irtin .u i,.d the r '?T' Jc on cours' 'ct,- both Of which are found, '"1 Pt!l ... I AU apecuUtion on thi, n.att-r u th, nnt UmbTn the .prta, h, n-i ' ' ,C" hth,r ... hd or ua U tumej o-iIUhP- fr"ld"1 f. '' to ward him. If th former, ha have plenty of rr.eat to eat durin the, year; if the latttr, he looki for noth-l Inr beyond milk and bread "C, in the word "circus." The tyranny of the English dictionary is complete and the foreigner is not the only one .ISM . 1M . 1 ; T!who feels the yoke 1 v. 5 1 Vi AN UNPARDONABLE OFFENSE l0 j1E water commission is to I U j be commended for its de- way and pioneer of the auto racing game. The mother course will continue to present the human element in auto- mooiie rmcitir This course, with its and Veaetable without beef nA urh.i m 1 him ' , low turns requiring extreme skill tojE; If'vou the new moon .hmu.a ' brin PJ. will tund out g ill hae 111 lu. k through axaio.t me conn-aram ei safe bowl courses, where extreme IS MV I.lt.IIT. Tti.-u art a t.cht unto rr.y l.f. ' thou d-r fner.d' The ra. that f:i ujnn my 3th; and duth end Ker Into the darken sot I kni.a i thine. Ken a n w my friendship di th to thee incline. ru.s you tne month. I If you see it in the open and turn',"d ' "'aintained with mechanical the silver ,.!.(- Hn., t ,v. i Pr'on- M- RaiKl Ia Pal- Cision to prosecute the t you will be wealth for the month, i1"- wh masterful drivinr brourht T man who broke open a man-i -- -- i ' "e recent n- hole on the nine line lf the! SI MM l.RS rAHl(. ; "tional race, are known to prefer ,1-Oie on me pipe line 01 mei Coure where the skill of the driver ; gTavit.V System that he might! The Bent..wn KaM i hit.'i J-t-rmining factor. Thev are iSUPply his tanks with water! m Pher. sines of JjIv in the P.Altim..re'knon Ui lh- if the b..l courw Pendleton has invested; -a,,n: ! Great old habit of July , If we want to melt or not. THE FALL 0F WARSAW fS HE fall of Warsaw before ti the assaults of the Teu ton armies is one of the most notable happenings of the European w ar. It has a re markable significance although that significance is probably not so great as the Germans profess to believe. That it means the end of the war with' Germany triumphant before the winter is the prediction Fent out from Berlin. Thel very fact that the German! people entertain this view in dicates the tremendous moral effect that the victory has had upon them. Warsaw, lying near the Ger man frontier, strongly fortified and being a railroad center, made an ideal base of opera tions for the Piiissians in their campaign against Germany and Austria, and its fall is a severe blow to the czar. Its occupation by the Germans forms a strong protection for the kaiser in the east and per mits him to withdraw hundreds of thousands of troops and tend them against the allied army in the west. The war has been in pro gress for a year and the advan tage seems to have been all with Germany. Her armies oc cupy Belgium, northern France and Russian Poland and no hostile band has set foot over her borders. Does the fall of Warsaw presage a year of still greater advantages? PHTHOLOGN r 0, it's not a typographi cal error nor the name of one of those Polish towns w here the Germans and Rus lians are battling. It is simply a possible way of spelling the word "turn," and that, too, without violating the principles of the English language. Prof. Brander Matthews is responsi ble for this synthetic ortho graphy. For instance, he says, you get the "t" sound in "turn" by 'ieasilv. i somethinir liVe a niiflrtfr of a' . I ;n:, : i "Summer's fashion to be hot wiiuijiiuii uuuars in uus system in n r.l a p tViot Vw. - I I -r dnnk without endangering' i not to reason why. their health. Outside of the ' Sink ,h' orrow of our thought. tvt tne grim complaint aside. ,the lock Off personal property.! With some beauty, starry-eyed. ttha flffirtCa ia rr a tVtaf et-IStllj4 ! Ulrins hm tjml,l Ik. rfl "V V A A V AO ll V1IUV OliUUlU I -, aMiO ""lltl llll" 1 ' i , not be condoned. Such an art! Bul rom ut ,h 'thing heat. cvco ek f,--, ... I Life evolves from air an soil It c.m- to fall lite petal soft itTMin mv head o let that light chine ..n. and principle involved in breaking: Fv.,A. mine wn leet te lea In path mure l ively than I yet have dreamed i.r n, Beca'jee thv presence comes the dark and me between' Marian Lz-ngwellow. in Na tional Magaiine for August. Something Infinitely sweet." Blade. tem to contamination and, if allowed tO paSS Unheeded,j Trouble ahead looks bigger than mignt result in SeriOUS C0nse-i troul.le we have pas.ed T. quences. A Portland pastor is singing in vaudeville to secure money with which to pay his debts. It isn't every man who can get rid of his debts for a song. drive out courses such a the one here the remarkable drivers ill disappear I As one driver expremed It today. t auto racing is in one way similar to j golf. If the low score is the only thing to be de-irtd. golfers would flock to the easy courses that are noa (shunned, he said. The human ele ,' ment" and the element of risk, so ap parent in any 500-mile race here, are all that save auto racing frnm the I humdrum. I Auto racing Is about to be nrcan I iied. Following In the path of orsan i lied baseball, leaders In the motor racing world have banded tnrether o 3o laws ui iouittiia into ine .Speedway Association of America with CA tf rt mi WE HAVE ! The next thin in ord.r i a aool.tv i'oa courses in tne league to help societies that help society,- courses are: The Indianapolis Pittsburg Pun. (course. Sheepshead Bav. Chlcaro. i Minneapolis Sioux City. Tacoma and j Omaha. These "big league" cities RKA1 A KXK A DAY ; promise to systematize the game anfl IX SUMMER S M(M)I, plan their events so as to prevent con- 1 flict of dates They will also boost UNIVERSITY OF OREOOX. Eu-; the game by advertising it properly gene. Aug. J At the University U- They have planned to send a shrewd brary during this year s Summer Ses- auem to Europe to interest driver, onri A Walla Walla paper is rrlAniiH 4 1 A, 1.1 A. D " J : L 1 e rf- hich "" week.! makers who have not yet sensed A i cuuiciuii lias a Haunonum UUUjtne ivj students in attendance have erica. In other words, co-operation is no Water to USe in it. Even if '" an average of 15 books a 'expected to provide the lubricant to that renort were true u-hiVh it uay' or mor lnan OD' ice certainly is not, it would ill be come anyone in Walla Walla to laugh at Pendleton for such a cause. They should bear in mind their appeal to local of ficials and local courts to pre vent the pollution of UtO racinfi- on a i.m.(nth i,r.t ! r uuring tne winter and spring permanent basia months, while the University as a, But with organization, conflict Is I whole waa In session the daily circu. ; already seen hy a few of the Inter lation was. of course, much larger but ented. especially In Chicago. New; tne daily average per student wai , York is expected to object to another only '35- 1 race at Chicago on Oct. 9 fhirniro this basis, the summer school expects Sheep.-head Bay to lower rec- On drinking water by their bathers. ... .... ii,. ..in in.ftr "iui" ano wants anriiner unnt at tfm their; times as many books as the average In case Xew York objects and wins in own undergraduate. Strap-hanging is wrecking the anatomy of the American people, declares a lecturing 09. teopath before the national convention in Portland. . The jitneys score again. Milady's jewelry is to change in style as often as her hats and gowns, declares one of the lead ing retail jewelers of the coun try. The jewelers are evident ly awakening to a great com mercial opportunity. THIS MA Y ENTER TAIN ! STICK TO THE BATHTUB, MAUY Since. Mary went out on the beach She's been as red as blazes, And cranky: Gee, but she's a peach, Her peevishness amazes. For Mary took a dip one day Into the briny ocefen; Fince then poor father's had to pay For lotion after lotion. Ton see, she dallied in the sun In suit abbreviated; While at It Mary thought It fun; .She's changed her mind, she's stated. Now home's no pleasant place to be Rebukes we get are scathing; We're hoping that hereafter he Will stick to bathtub- bathing. tkioi:s KUPRwrrnoxs. If you shiver, someone Is walking oier your future grave. When your nose itches something employing the "phth" Of "phth-j napen to vex yon isiq " fnr the "nr" uimrilv o-n tni Wher Jour ri?M ih l the word "colonel" and bor-; ' , t'l row the "olo" and finish up with the "gn" as in "gnat." So tht-re you have ft. p-h-t-h-o-1-o-g-n r-pt'l!.s "turn." He could go even further to demonstrate the absurdities and inconsistencies of the Eng-1 ''""'3 '" h,Jrn blue an,J dlm unen when your left eye When rooks desert a rookery It fortells the downfall of the family on whose property It Is. A sjii'ler desf endlng upon you from tiie roof i a token that you will soon have a leg k y from a friend. Candle and other lights are .up- Schooncr founder. NEW YORK. Auk. 5. Caught in a gale of Scotland lightship the schoon er II. V. B. Chase foundered. Captain Tuttle and a seaman meeting death. Sand Hook coast guards saved other members of the crew. Its protest to the A. A A. contest tniard. it is hinted Cfilcaen may break away and cast its lot with the West ern Automobile association. Telephoning to Ios Anreles. San Francisco, an.l other western cities the from the east Is almost an everyday occurence now. i TO WED SON OF LEADER OF THE "400" L i . ; ' -' .K:: -, f t -' - ' t ' ' i'-l . ' : r!'-"- ! 4 . that says we can beat Mr. McCor mmach s time from Walla Walla to San Francisco, and we'll drive In an advertisement in yesterday's pa per, exploiting a private trip to San Fran cisco made by Mr. J. W. McCormmach the assertion is made over his signature "I am betting odds that no auto other than Frank lin can cover this road in as short a time using all the gears he can think of." We have $1000 that says we can take a $500 FORD and beat the time made by his $2,300 Franklin. Money talks! Let's see if he will back his claims and self laudatory telegrams. Oregon Motor Garage B. F. Tromblcy. Prop. is it lish language. P'or the short "e" vowel sound, we have any number of combinations. For Iftvulhle beinKS are present, eapec tally If they be evil spirits. It Is a good omen for swallows to take possession of a place and build! '-X LI II i t " JorMo Hall THE "GREATER OREGON" Willi nw dtnct, hmttmr Mtnlpmunt, n larrd cm-n'tt, and mmnf Aridlttoii to It farultr.Ut tnlvenillr of Orua will berln lu fortieth yr. Tumutimj, Kpt-ihir 1 4. I Ml A. Mm-IkJ tnttntnc la :ommr, JourtvalUm, ArrhiUtmrm, Law. MMllrlnr, TmrMng, Libra ry Work, Mailt, Rhr-al Tralnlnc and rtn A rim. IJtrg and vtroDK d-Mirtruf nU of Mbr aJ Kdufation, M brary tf more thaa ftft.000 volumes, thlr-l-ca ulMlav fallr qutpp'l, two plrndld gftft nikJtl BaBaV. Taltioa frw. fUtrmiVtrif for mmn and for woaaa. Kapnrti Lawaat. Writ.- for f rr iMalftff.addrvMlnc R'-ciatrar UNIVERSITY OF OREGON riOK.NK. OKIXOM I ,-. .'",,t ...f V ; ' 'A ' K ' "cv.rSh oa ere v I Cry Tells of Itobltery. BLOOMFIELD, X. J.. Aug. 4. "For God's sake, send the police!'' These were the words shouted from the root of the Bloomfield Savings Institution. 11 Broad street, one afternoon recent ly by Frank Hochstuhl. a bookkeeper in the institution. Then it was re vealed that two thieves had entered the building and, after holding up Al exander liaMI, the assistant canhier, and Hochstuhl. compelled them, at the point of revolvers to go down In to the basement, where the thieves bound and gagtted both men. Returning to the banking office, the thieves cleaned up to the tune ol between 15000 and 110,000 and es caped by a rear door. After making the bank clerks helpless, the thieves gave each some kicks and punches for good measure as they lay on the floor. After tying their legs, the thieves turned the bank clerks over, face downward, and tied their hands over their heads and then proceeded t rifle the place. It was fully 20 min utes before Hochstuhl was enabled to free one of his hands to get a knife from his pocket and cut the cord that bound his feet. He then quickly released Dahl. When they got upstairs into the banking offices they found that the thieves had made their exit impos sible by locking both front and rear doors. The men were able, after much difficulty, to get to the roof, where the alarm was given. Hundreds of persons, when they heard the cries, rushed to the scene. Police headquarters were notified and all the men available were sent to the bank A general alarm was sent out to all the nearby towns and cltieK, but the 'thieves had a good 20-minute start be fore the robbery became known j That the thieves were profession ials is the opinion of the bank offi cials. Boy Falls From Bridge. ALBANY, Ore.. Aug. S Mark Duedall. 19 years old. fell go f.-et frnm the Albany steel bridge into the Wil lamette river here when he climbed on the railing to watch boys In swim, mlng. lost his balance and fell. Ho struck the river in water seven feet deep, but was rescued uninjured When Duedall fell, A. H. Weather ford pulled the boy Into a power boat after he had floated about K0 feet and took him to Bhore. Duedall nald he became diw.y while sitting on the bridge railing and lost his balance. ataVa'Vl "GO TO BINGHAM WHERE YOU CAN ENJOY YOURSELF AND KEEP COOL THIS SUMMER. Now Open! The wedding of Sidney Webster F!h, son of the late Mrs. Htuyves ant Fish, last leader of "the 400'' of New Vork and Newport, and Miss Olga Wilborg, a descendent of the Fish, secretary of state in the cabinet of President Orant, was a relative. Miss Wiborg Is the daughter of Frank B. Wiborg of Cincinnati, who retired from business with a fortune Shermans of Ohio, will be a national some time ago. He has a natloal He event Since the death of Mrs. h ' 'lualntance. Her mother was Miss tor. Mis. Fish was the best known Adeline Motilton Sherman, daughter woman In society In the United of Major Hoyt Sherman, the young States Her husband, Stuyvesant est of the Shermans of Ohio, which Fish, was a descendent of Peter had other distinguished members In KtuyVeaant. governor of the Dutch Hcnator John Sherman and General tulony of New Amsterdam. Hamilton William Tecumseh Sherman. fell) I aw . "-v . ..vV ' ij i , . . . - r '." wr . .. i - 't 0f - '.-'. - ' , ' " 5 r Z"' 1 RATES $2.00 to 2.50 per day. $12.50 to $15.00 per week. Mineral Bath, Swimming Pool Automobile stage from Gibbon. Good accommodations at. hotel, and reason able rates to campers. Under New Management and Thoroughly Renovated. FURTHER INFORMATION FURNISHED UPON APPLICATION TO BINGHAM SPRINGS, W. W. Hoch, Proprietor On SCC W.W.HOCH, PENDLETON OREGON, TELEPHONE 410 BIXGHAH SPRIXGS, GIBBON POSTOFFICE, OHEGOK iyaVyVajiaae'VaaafVvM