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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1915)
DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. SATURDAY, AUGUST 21. 1913 EIGHT PAGES PACE ?IX coni) FARRELL DECLARED mm over clark IN IUE 6TH ROUND T! -ere is the almost ocr- : ; i' v .:i w .i.n ra. i the ii .1. ; wt-m.u t nampn-nship l.y po'- uliir mvlain if ho In. ThJrd There is the glory, if he I wins, nf being iho only boxer of hi Mr.d in the world a boxer who after I li.m: absence from the ring came hack and defeated a man who .as ! admittedly the lest of his class In the j country; in short a "come-back " I Some purse! Aye, Aye. I Jim Oorbett ami Jim Jeffries tried !t come hack after several years' ab sence, bo did a lot of others. And they all got the same thing an ep itaph on their pugilistic tombstone In the sixth round of a scheduled "n on Save mtormation mat hl m-ioumi bout, liillv Farrell, Fendle-jI!AD bf,n a Sreat fishter In his day. .,i lhtweiSlU. last night was I'ackey left the ring weighing wwt.nHd the decision over Tommy nrnd 1ST and 13S his best fighting tThn f Seattle when the latter hurt we'Kht- In hl8 tvv0 'ars "t running f.w leg in a fall and failed to rise. j b"fwerles and automobiles he has The fight was staged in Athena and l'l't probably 20 pounds. He only was witnessed hv a large crowd of "1,n,fI 10 of !t off- This is going to f:ns. manv of whom were from Pen-;' lfl ,,ler thfl can sall to be ll0ton. I an accumulation of two years' l.lie- The' fight while it lasted was a n,ss- Hp doesn't need It, and before vhirlivlnd. slamband affair. Clark is he hns Pepped through thirty min n clover boxer and with a stiff punch "' with a man as shifty as Mike nd was willing to mix it. For the'wns is. it is a safe bet he's going first three rounds he appeared to to wish he didn t have It. Vinve a slight advantage over trie ' Veteran ring men can't see Paek rendleton boy who fought his usual , e.v's chances at all. They base their conl-headed fight. assertion that the stockyards wonder Clark tried the baiting game upon ' L in for a lacinS n the no Fum-ll, taunting him from the lirst. i boxer ev" nas come back- " on In the third round, he started rough-!"1 fa0 ,hat Pack(,r hasn' been Ine tactics and. in the end, this led ! " very much in the past two years. o his undoing. He had a weak leg ; ""eas the shadow-like Mike has to legin with and. when he fall over;1'" fighting pretty steadily in that Farrell in the sixth he hurt it so,tlme that he could not get up. The two! "A man can't fight unless he'a been men had been wrestling about and ' fighting." said an old ring man to- Varrell slipped, falling on one knee. This threw the other man over him violently, Many of tne fans are not satisfied day. "It doesn't take two years tor a loan to lose his judgment of dis tance and his hitting eye when he's not in the ring. Didn't I sit in Car- sis to which Is the better man of the --J u ioium p two and would like to see them meet,1" smack on Jim Corbett, simply again. Clark won many admirers'11''"" had befn fighting for i,. f.--.il-. i th hist ! two years steadily where Jim had it':tp rounds, when he landed sever-i ,een idling. Fitz's condition wasn't but his eyes ,1 ..i w.i nn.ho t iho hend. iary better than Jims, convinces his backers that In 20 1''1"' rounds he would nnt the Seattle boy : "Again. Fackey is going to meet a awav. L. G. Duff refereed the bout Far rell will fight Al Hosier in this city in the 2ith and is confident of an other win. McFarland to Try to Come Back in Bout With Gibbons nsTir wcovnter is sched- II.LD TOR SEPTEMBEK 11 FANS INTERESTED. ET GEORGE R. HOLMES, tl'nited Press Staff Correspondent.) NEW YORK, Aug. 21. Packey Mc Far land has a lot to fight for when he steps into the ring with Mike Gibbons, the St. Paul wraith, on the Slight of September 11. He will be battling for three things, for any one , whic h "the majority of boxers now adays would be willing to have their jonh caved in. First There Is vhe J 17.503 which l ecomes his property the minute he elips from his bathrobe and steps on to the resin. man in Mike who is at the zenith of his power. The St. Paul lad has been coming up for six years and he'a now at the top of his career. Packey was at the top of his when he left the ring. "Tes. we'll admit that Packey has lived a mighty clean life. He hasn't boozed, nor smoked, nor any of that stuff. Neither have a lot of other j oung chaps, but they couldn't stand 10 rounds of Mike Gibbons' game at that. " x ' But she's going to be a bird of a scrap anyhow, ain't she?" Yhtt's what all New Tork thinks that "she's going to be a bird of a scrap." NATIONAL LEAGUE. A Philadelphia Philadelphia 4 Pittsburg 3 At Brooklyn Brooklyn 6 Chicago 5 At New Tork New Tork 7 Cincinnati 0 At Eosto'n Boston 1 St. Louis 0 i-MllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUlllillllllll'll'llll'lllll"11111111111""1111111""1"' 1 HOODIES. CHOP SUEY, CHINA DISHES f I rOPY' KWONG HONG LOW 1 yJlL4 W 1 16 West Alta St., Upitain, Phone 433 llllllllllllllllll!l!llllllllllllllllllllllll!illli!:ilI!lll!lll!llllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllH RECORD OF DEEDS AND OTHER INSTRUMENTS Satisfaction of Mortgage. A mortgage executed by H. A. Dear- and L. E. Chalenor to C F. Colesworthy August 20, 1914, for 11300, is paid and satisfied. Cluittcl MortSHjre. H. A. Deary and L. E. Chalenor to c. F. Colesworthy, $1500, on nil the equipment now installed in the Alta theater, Chas Hlbbard to First National Bank of Pilot Rock, J50. 2 mares and their increase. H. A. Deary and L. E. Chalenor to Norma Alloway and Edith John on, $779.17. All the equipment used in connection with the Alta theater. Mortsaso. Henry G. Casteel et al to North western & Pacific Hypotheek Bank, $500' Certain tracts of land, title descriptive. De1. Minerva Morse to Caroline QUI. J500. A tract of land in Pilot Rock, title descriptive. J. W. Earl to Geo. W. Haw, 50. Lots 7 and 8, block 288, Reservation addition to Pendleton. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE. At Portland Salt Lake 4 11 Portland S 4 At San Francisco Los Angeles 6 11 San Francisco 2 10 At Los Angeles Vernon 3 S Oakland 0 4 AMERICAS LEAGUE. At Detroit 'trolt 11 13 .' Philadelphia 1 S 3 At Chicago Boston 4 11 1 Chicago 1 9 0 At Cleveland Washington 8 11 0 Cleveland 0 4 S FEDERAL LEAGUE. At Brooklyn Brooklyn 8 15 2 St. Louis 1 1 4 At Buffalo Buffalo 7 11 0 Chicago S B 3 At Baltimore Kansas City 8 12 3 Baltimore -4 7 3 OF WOMEN FAILURES IS A NEW EXPERIMENT EFFORT TO PLACE THEM BACK IX SOCIETY HAS AROUSED MUCH COMMENT. Teu Wealthy Chit-ago Club Women Take Into Their Homos Street Wan derers lit an Endeavor to Make Tliem Physically and Morally Strong Plan lias Drawbacks. NEW YORK, Aug. 21. The recent ly announced experiment of ten weal, thy Chicago club women in taking into their homes the women of the streets in an endeavor to return them to society physically and morally strong, has aroused a world of com ment in New York sociological sir cles. Opinion apparently is much di vided as to the probable success of the venture. One of the most interested in the I experiment is Miss Lucille Pugh, a I leading woman lawyer and ardent supporter of a single standard of FLOATING HOME OF 50 GIRLS IS ABANDONED morals According to Miss Pugh, the success NEW YORK, Aug. 21. The old ship Jacob A. Stamler was due to be abandoned by the fifty working girls who have made it their home for some years. The vessel, moored in the East River near the foot of 23rd street is needed for other purposes by the Arbuckle estate which owns it. The girls have a sentimental at tahment to the ship where they have lived long and been happy, and the prospect of moving also means a serious financial problem. On the Jacob Stamler, charges for board have tanged from 12.80 to $3.50, and the girls say they can't get accommo dations elsewhere for that amount. Some of them earn only 34 a week and none more than $7 or 38. Some are out of work. Fifty-nine years ago the sailing ship Jacob A. Stamler was one of the largest passenger vessels plying between New York and Havre, of Chicago's experiment depends on whether the experimenters have se lected "sheep'' or "goats" to work on. immoral women, sue contends, can be divided into two classes the un fortunate kind and professional street walkers. For the unfortunate class, Miss Pugh thinks the experiment stands an excellent chance of turn ing out the way the experimenters want it to, but she considers the lat ter class well nigh hopeless. "The one great problem before these women," she said today, "Is separating the professionals from the unfortunate. On the latter class the plan is excellent, but the profession al undoubtedly would consider It bad business. The reason is apparent. The professional makes too much money to give up a life of ease how. ever Bhameful for the more prosaic existence of a wheel in the cog of so ciety. She cannot so easily forget the glamour asain, however shameful France Later, she took cargoes to of a life underneath the white lights, and from nearly every large port in with the music, the laughter the the world. John Arbuckle, the coffee wine, and all. There is no denvins 7 PJ30NEY Plenty to Loan Come in and See Us MATLGGK-LAilTZ INVESTMENT CO. 112 East Court St. king, purchased her In 1901 and turned her into a traveling hotel, making nightly trips from the Battery to Sandy Hook. In recent years she has been moor ed r.t East Twenty-third street and that such a life has a certain fascina tion for certain women. "The professional street walker makes money. She has to. More over, she is independent. She lives easily and without charity from any- Intained with the yacht Gltana aS( one. She asks nothing from anyone, nit: a flnfitins dormitory for men, at the expense of the Arbuckle heirs. Frank D. Fheeley has been skipper, mate, pilot and forster-parent for the "crew" of the ship. His wife is call ed "mother" by the girls and really acts in somewhat that relationship to them. who thinks. Tomorrow is not ours. Today is. MIX'S NAME CAME A clean, beautiful resort at which to rest and enjoy H yourself during the hot summer. HP NEAR CAUSING ROW CLEVELAND, O., Aug. 20 hours. but the right tn ply her trade. The Chicago experiment, I think, would smack too much of charity to attract this class. "In the first place she couldn't stand for even one day of the quiet home life offered her by her bene factors. Even should she make an effort to do so, her nervous condition would preclude her from remaining without her usual drug or drink. The professional street walker must have a stimulant of some kind. It doesn't take long for drink or drug to get its tenacles Into the system of those wno lane it witrr a chaser of ciga rette smoke, white lights and late What's your name?" Joe Phil- atroet renalr department lips, man who under- AWAY 1 SPRINGS I In the Blue Mountains of Southern Umatilla County. H. M. CULTER, PROP. 3! Dancing, Swimming, Hunting, Fishing, Etc. g Hot Mineral Water Pool and Baths. Hotel Rate, 810.50 Per Week H INCLUDING BATHS. ?M COTTAGES FOR RENT. FREE CAMP GROUNDS j :A GOOD INCLOSED PASTURE. Auto staire. carrvinsr Dasseneera II "j and mail, connects with regular II stage at Ukiah every Tuesday, 1 J Thursday and Saturday. Ill ' Round trip automobile fare from Pilot Rock $5.00 timekeeper, asked a came for his pay. "I wonder," Phillips slood him to say. "Come on, chuck the comedy, what's sour name?" Phillips said. "I wonder. I wonder!" Phil lip? thought the man repeated. Phillips looked him up. His name was Hy Wonder. The Port of Profit Lincoln used to tell a story of a Mississippi river steamboat that had a four-foot boiler and a seven-foot" whistle. Every time the' boat blew its whistle it stopped. His steamboat was great on "atten tion getting" but poor on progress The advertising steamboat has lost interest in the mere noise of whistles. Its owners have ceased to measure results by sound. They are insisting that quick transit to the Port of Profit is to be their test of efficiency. And so advertisers are turning to newspapers for their voyage to the desired harbor. According to some scientists this primitive people were more advanced and also more peace loving than the Indians who over-ran the country later. These ruins, in some spots are said to be in good state of preserva tion owing to the fact that they have for centuries been covered with earth like the ruins of Pompeii. in some instances the charcoal and ashes of fires have been found In what remained of fireplaces, togeth er with the fragmentary remains of crude cooking utensils. Near Rock Bluffs traces of what appears to have been a populous vil lage have been uncovered, much of the remains being under fifteen to twenty feet of earth. wreck the Windsor armories. At the time of the explosion the factory was turning out supplies for British soldiers. He that Is careful in Ilttlo things can lie trusted with the big ones. Investigating Warden. TOPEKA, Kan., Aug. 20. Investi gation of the charges of Inefficiency agUnst J. D. Botkln, warden of the state penitentiary at Laming, began here before a legislative committee. m - mi " - r: J I' 1 ' "The unfortunate woman one who was forced into the life through a combination of circumstances, who desires to turn back on it if she has a chance, Is in a very differen situ ation. A few days of quiet and se renity will restore her physical con- l dition and the friendship of other women will restore, her self-respect. ! "Aside from the practical irood which may or may not come from the experiment. I think it an excellent one, for this reason: It shows the growing feeding of sisterhood among women and their capacity to Judge from a woman's standpoint instead of a man's. "Peoule afraid of contamination of the unfortunate woman would do well to remember the equally unfor tunate man. Lnfortunate woman may come and unfortunate woman may go, but the unfortunate man we always have with us. He dines with us. he is in business with us. he golfs with us, he rides with us, and he takes our daughters to the theater. "There should be some way to help the unfortunate man, or to get rid of him. "When the attitude of the world toward the unfortunate man is as rigid and uncompromising as it Is towards the unfortunate woman, then It Is that the question of the unfortu nate woman will be largely settled." Fish In nroadwny. LITTLE FALLS, Minn , Aug. 21.--As a mute protest against what they considered Inadequate drainage of East Broadway, business men declar ed a "day off." and "went flshln' " In front of their places of business. When the city council failed to take anv action to rid the street of Its surplus water the business men got several small fishes, threw them Into the pools along the street and hen halted up their lines, and grimly waited for bites. The council met In special session, ' and decided upon drainage for that street USIE iWtl wILSDN w"Tnt U'HI Of THE MA5H, Vu.., MUTUAL MAtr.MPtC.aak PRIMITIVE NEBRASKANS BEING INVESTIGATED LINCOLN, Neb., Aug. 20. Scien tists from Harvard university are in vestlgatlng ruins of the homes of primitive people who lived In Ne braska, Kansas, Iowa and Missouri, I along the Missouri river before the i advent of the red man to the middle ; western plains. The Harvard party, under Dr. Fred H. Sterns, has recent Iv been working in the vicinity of Ne braska City and the villages of Rock THE ONLY CURE FOR CATARRH Is liy Obtaining Free and Equal Breathing Through Each Nostril. THE BENEFITS ARE, comparative freedom from fre quent colds, headaches, acute ear, sinus, and throat dis ease. The arrest of a slowly increasing deafness from the closure of the eustachean tubes. The restoring of the voice to its normal quality and the freedom from a troublesome and annoying disease. The treatment is operative, there are no failures, and but little if any pain. D. N. REBER, M. D. Eye, F.ar, Xoso and Throat Specialist, Schmidt Bldg., Pendleton. Ilrlngs Io Frank's Ring. ATLANTA, Ga., Aug. 20. An uni dentified messenger brought to Keeler, an Atlanta newspaperman, the wedding ring of Leo Frank. With the ring he delivered a note say ing it was Frank's dying request be fore he was lynched at Marietta that the ring be given to his wife. Warn ing was given that no effort should be made to learn . the messenger's Identity. Factory Wrex-ker Sr-nU-nord. WINDSOR, Ont, Aug. 20. William Lefler, of Detroit, was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment In Kingston penitentiary for causing an explosion In the Peabody overall factory here a few weeks ago, and for conspiracy to M lilt r ii Americx's Greatest Cigar ETTEJi y v nmu tickets to the East, the West, the South, from W. Adams, Agent, Pendleton. Via NORTHERN PACIFIC RY. ' The "Great Big Baked Potato" Line. 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