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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1915)
r PAGE SIX DAILY EAST OREGON! AN. FENDLETON. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1915. EIGHT PAGES C" - : : : EEKXETT GIVEN DECISION LAST KIGHT OVER MASCOTT IM-l I.AH KlUMtT, HOWKYKK, won.it iiwi: iii.KN' iiiav 1llTI..Ml'.lt CI.EVEIt. Jm k.y lVnnetl, Pendleton' grand nlil l..im.im, lust night defeated Billy Ww. .11, the Portland boy, In a 10 nwrxi Unit at the Oreiron theater. Ttt is, aronrJinif to Referea Frank lali-Tari-oll, he did According to the majority of the spectators and J... kry ha l more frienda In the housa han KHIy lie did no such thing. A popular verdict would have made the o a draw, perhaps, and, If a decision had been Insisted ujon, there Is little Sorlc d Start Oot. 9. I'lWlNNATI. Sept. 22 Au- Kut Herrman .chairman of the National Baseball Commission. in a statement snid the world series probably would start on Saturday, October I. Mr. Herrmann said the cham- pionship season In the east does not close until October 7, and It is the custom to give the con- tending teams a day to get ready for the big event. Mrs McFarland Says Packcy Will Fight no More esmo heals babies' skin troubles Babies with eciema,' teething rash, cliafinp, and other torment ing skin troubles need Resin. J Ointment and Resinol Soap. They soothe and heal the irritated skin, stop all itching, and let the little sufferers sleep. "Babies bathed repilariy with. Resinol Soap sel dom Lave sun eruptions. Resinnl Ointment 1-xi Resinol Snap hawe keen uacct by physicians and nuna t.if inane yearn and contain nothing tnich cx.aidpon.st. illy if.,r nr irr,rf ,1 jrrrl fl bf ail druista. Con Dung Low CHOP SUEY NOODLES HOT TAUflLES CHILLI CON GARNE -SPANISH STYLE LUNCHES COFFEE Everything clean and up-to-ctaW; FIRST CLASS 8ERVIC1 TEA 5c Package Under State Hotel Or. Webb and Cottonwood Sta. Phone 117 Pendleton. Or. Lotiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuir I Mow Openf IlongKongGafei 1ND NOODLE PARLORa E i Noodles I AND Chop Suey! Ej Outride Tray Orders Specialty. S Boies for ladles and gentlemen, j E OPEN' DAT AND ALL NIGHT ! MKAI.S 25c AND CP. S fctiecial r.'hlcken Dinner 2 2 Sundays. E 548 Main Street f S Nt to E. O. BIdg. Phone 608 E iiiiiiiitiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinl PHOTO SUPPLIES Ansco Cameras and Films The court decreed original film and Cyko the prize win ning paper. Take &n Ansco on your vacation Tallman 6 Go. 1 doubt but that the Portland boy j would have been declared the win : rer. ; The battle was not as Interesting as some fights that have been held ( in the theater recently. The style ot fighting did not appeal to the fans. Jockey is a great little defensive ; battler, and last night showed a ; fondness for riding, clinching and hugging that made the match look like a wrestling bout For ten rounds there was not enough doing In the hitting line to keep the spectators from yawning. Oc casinally one of the midgets would land a blow that would provoke a few exclamations but neither was harmed. In the thirteenth it began to liven up a bit and the last five rounds were perhaps the most enter taining of the lot. Mascott preferred an open style of fighting but had little opportunity to execute his preference. Even when the two boys did stand off and spar, Mascott could not land many blows for Bennett Is clever In blocking and ducking and his long experience stood him In good stead. It was only in the close-In fighting that Bennett landed but he did not hurt his opponent. On points It looked like Mascott had more rounds than Jockey but the referee couldn't see It that way. PrHlmluarios Best. The preliminaries created twice as much excitement as the main bout Earl Snyder put Curly Smith of Port land to sleep in the third round of a four round bout. Smith started after the local boy In the first round like he intended to pulverise him but Snyder showed cleverness In dodg-j ins and covering up during this short period. By the end of the first round he had the advantage and in the second had the Portland boy! groggy. In the third he hit him sev eral hard blows and, when Smith' started another wild lunge, caught' him on the jaw with a sleep-producer Smith took the count. Joe Farrell had not the least trou ble in the world disposing of the "dark horse from Spokane." The Spokane boy would have done well to remain In the dark for he didn't look well in the light. After Farrell had chopped him for two rounds, he fell through the ropes and Referee Stevens stopped the fight Wright Here Today. Billy Wright, who will meet Jack Carpenter in a 28 round bout on Fri day evening, arrived from Seattle this morning and will work out thia afternoon and tomorrow in the Com mercial gymnasium. Wright la an Al fighter and promises to mix It lively with Carpenter. i :f I " 1 . is I i , ' x C- I I I ' ''AI LEiiiis 4it i 1 t SPORT DOPE. Columbia Begins Practice. NEW YORK, Sept. !!. Football practice began today at Columbia university, where school begins to morrow. After the seemingly long absence of the sport the students were more interested in its revival than in the opening of school Itself. For five ears Columbia schedule will not con tain the names of any of the Big Five colleges, though West Point and Dartmouth are included in the plans for the next few years. Football Today. WI.NFIELD, Kan. Southwestern vs. Cooper. THRESHING AGAIN ON IN THE UKIAH REGION ONLY A FKW WAYS MORE WILL IJK KKOnitKB TO FIMSH I P THE WORK. (.Special Correspondence.) UKIAH, Ore., Sept. 22 Irl Terry and wife of Alba were in Ukiah a few days ago on business. Threshing Is again ln full blast, after the rains It will take only a few daya'ijf good weather to complete it. The Mettec-r thresher had a break down and Friday Tom Reeves, Char ity Metteer and Jim Constance were in town for repairs. W. a. ISarr, the Watklns man, came in to t'kiah Friday for a few days KciMng the Walking Remedies. Mrs. M. E. Gibbs Is assisting Mrs. Peterson at the Peterson hotel. .Mrs. Nora Osburn left Wednesday fur Portland to Jnln her husband. 'Jus smith of Galena passed through Lklah Thursday morning with a fine bunch of beef cattle. Bert Garrett was in Ukiah Tuesday from his homestead after supplies. Ira Arbogast was in Ukiah Wed nesday nlKht on his way to Pilot Rock with six four horse loads of fat hogs for the market George Baldwin of BusanvlIIe, was ln Ukiah Thursday night on his re turn from Gaston, Oregon, where he had been to place his daughter. Bea trice, who had won a scholarship ln the high school there for the winter The United Artisans will give a dance n-xt Wednesday night in the new Chamberlain garage for the ben efit of the lodge. Supper will be served in the halL Henry Lazlnka accompanied by hU daughter, Mrs. Lowell Ganger, left for Pendleton Friday morning for the Round-up. Mr. Ganger will fol low soon. Mrs. Packey McFarland, wife ot the boxer, at the left, and Lois Thiery, daughter of his manager at the right. NEW YORK. Sept 22. Packey McFarland may not know it, but his fight with Mike Gibbons Is the last that the clever boxer will engage In. No less a person than his fourteen months bride is authority for the statement Mrs. McFarland accom panied her husband east for the fight, but she has never seen him in training and will not witness the fight. She doesn't like anything con nected with the prize ring and has never seen her spouse (not her loard and master, for Mrs. McFarland Is very much the master ln the house hold) in fighting togs. The 117. BOO which Packey will re ceive as his end of the ten round bout with Mike Gibbons has already been spent, according to the bride. Two lovely hats and one high power ed automobile have been purchased by Mrs. McFarland. All that Packey will get la the glory. Mrs. McFarland doesn't know a thing about boxing and doesn't want to, either. It was not so very long ago that she graduated from the ex elusive girls' school of St. Mary's, Notre Dame, Ind. Then came a few years In the social life of Jo! let, 111., where her father Is one of the weal thiest men ln the city, and then just fourteen months ago her wed ding to the boxer. She met him at an "at home" merely out of curios ity, she says, about three years ago. They did not fall in love at first sight, by any means, but Packey must he just as clever at lovemaklng as he Is at boxing, for she soon capitu lated. "I married the man, not the box er," she concluded, emphatically. 15 Cents Causes Pursuit. OREGON' CITY, Sept 22. Just how much Washington county will have to pay to bring to justice a wo man who filched 15 cents from the pocket of an Austrian will be deter mined later, but it Is believed the In stitution of criminal proceedings for such a small amount established a record. A band of gypsies passed Get Rid of Scrofula How? TakeS.S.S. Fifty Yean' Use Prove S. S. S. Will Relieve Stubborn Cases You have noticed the little fester log pimples on the face and body swelling of the glands soreness ln the legs and arm muscles. These are the symptoms of Scrofula. Tou mar have some of these symp toms, possibly the taint of Scrofula Infection. But in either case, It is a dangerous condition. Tour blood Is Infected, Impure, and you can never Frco Jlij Angla you view our fixtures the result Is the same perfection. Perfection to the slightest de tail. While very ltfw in price, they are high in quality. No matter how beautifully your home may be furnished, our fixtures will enhance that beauty. If you'll step in we'll gladly show them and quote prices. J.L. VAUGHAN D good-natered boy may be H "processed" into a dern fooi by the wrong educa tion an tobacco can be iC 2L 2ZZ2L 21 aliai IVTATURE sometimes makes perfec' things, but "processing" spoils 'cm. A spoiled similar. mi The Smoothest Smoking Tobacco, VELVET, is naturally right. Its two years' ageing simply mellows and refines its natural qual ities. The secret of its wno bite" is first, right tobacco; second, right ageing. 10c tins and 5c metal-lined bags. 2Z 3CZDCZDC 2L through Wllsonville on their way to Canby, where the county fair Is ln progress. An hour later Deputy Sheriff Redmond of Hlllsboro, ac companied by the Austrian who was relieved of 16 cents, arrived at Wll sonville In pursuit of the woman and they were Joined by Deputy Sheriff Murray, . of Wllsonville. The gypsy was apprehended and taken back to Hlllsboro. Bankers Are for Defense. DENVER, Sept. 22. Hearty sup port of the national administration was pledged In a resolution adopted by the convention of the Investment Bankers' Asociatlon ot America here. The resolution urged "a complete program for national defense" and urges employers to give "employes sufficient time for parlclpatlon In an nual military or naval maneuvers without loss of pay or prejudice ot position," In addition to their reru lar vacations. Jitney Drivers Convene. YOUNGSTOWN, O., Sept 22. A state organisation of jitney bus driv ers was to be perfected at a conven tion opening here. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature of hope to gain perfect health until the impurities are washed from the sys tem. If' you feel badly all the time, you must crave health. If you want to feel renewed spirits, the glow of perfect health, bright eyes, clear skin, the knowledge that you are well, you can do bo. Cleanse your blood by taking S. S. S. For fifty years It has been the standard blood purifier. It relieves the trouble by renourishing the blood, renewing its strength, and stimulating the flow so that the blood regains its lost vitality, and throws off the poison. Even long-standing cases respond. But ypu must nse S. S. S. Take it for all blood Infections. I Get It at your druggist's today. If you need special advice, write the S. S. S. Co., Atlanta, Ga. Upper Snake River Idaho Lands We have been Belling Idaho lands to Pendleton and Walla Walla people for three years. Many yields were over 50 bushels per acre this year. We have some good wheat farms in large or small tracts. Also stock ranches, and some small irrigated tracts close to town. Have three good wheat ranches to rent for a term of years. If our lands can not be bought for less than half price of lands here on an average, and if they do not produce more under thorough cultivation per acre, we will pay your expenses to see the lands. Will be at St. George Hotel, Pendleton, all this week. C. C MOORE, H. G. FULLER. 1 Our Great 1 . if ramuy oargam KiiiuuwiuuuwuiaiUaUU THE S. W. 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If you desire McCall's Magazine in connection with the Daily East Oregonian, cither by carrier or mail, write or phone us for special clubbing rates. CUT OUT AND MAIL US TODAY East Oregonian Pub. Co., Pendleton, Oregon. Enclosed find $1.50 for which' please send me the S.-W. East Oregonian and McCall's Magazine for one year as per your special offer. Name.. Please state if new or renewal.