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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1920)
rAnr; CIOHT , ....... . ... , : 1 '- ; 'V " ' DAILY KVST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1020. r SIXTEEN PAGES How Roosevelt Overcame Difficulties THE qualities that made Roosevelt successful were apparent in him while he was still a little boy. These qualities were developed, year by year, through intelligent direction. The CclontTs father was largely responsible for the great American's remarkable career - his example .taught the boy self-assertion, self-reliance, personal inde pendence and integrity. This month's Cosmopolitan publisher a startling analysis of Roosevelt's character by Doctor X, related l y Harvey O'Higgins in "Yourself and You." He tells of the boyhood incident that prompted Roosevelt to learn how to box. Why the Colonel went into politics. Why Roosevelt was a poor judge of men. Why he was called "Teddy" and why he liked his nickname. There's a wealth of new light on Roose velt in this article. There are valuable suggestions as to how you may yourself use the sarrte theory Roosevelt employed to overcome apparently insurmountable difficulties and, better still, how you may help your son to grow up to be the kind of a man you want him to be. Get the new Cosmopolitan today and read the conclusions reached by Doctor X in his study of the life of one of the greatest Americans. Edna Wasn't the Least Bit Shocked BUT how she shocked the folks at heme with her letters from Somewhere-in-France I As Rupert Hughes sr.ys in "The Spilt," h s shcrt-story in the latent Cormcpcirt; n: "What Edna cid to the war is not worth mentioning, but v. hat the war did to Ed. a ". Til; pastor read E.'na's first letter right cut in church, but the secend letter and the third well, you'll have to read the story to find out w! ut shocked the Carthage foils. It? What Does "Living" Mean to You? LIFE means all things to all men. Each interprets J h:s aims and his ambitions differently. Yet there are certain fine fundamentals to living, and nowhere have they been so finely expressed a3 in Edgar Guest's poem "Living" in the current Cos mopolitan. Mr. Guest, though long a favorite of the American people, new appears in Cosmopolitan for the first time. If you love the simple, kindly sentiments that poetry inspires, read this new poem by the bard cn whom the mantle of James Whitcomb Riley has surely descended. "You Can't Please Everyone" THIS is an amusing story by Frank R. Adams of the "today" that ycu worried about yester day and that never happened. Conover Collier was going through life chained to the fear that he might lose his job or his sweetheart cr his savings account. Then, when it looked like ha had lost all three, he was surprised to discover that "it might have been worse, " as inveterate optimists are in the habit of saying. The Most Interesting Human Being in the World HER name is Liiy Becker an American girl and you can read the story of her career in "Star Dust" Fannie Hurst's first novel. Her fight against an all too apparent destiny the forces which molded her character the desires which fought those forces all form the back-ground against which Miss Hurst has written a really great, a really important novel. In Lily Becker you will find a sin cere interpretation of the instinct for self-expression in woman asserting itself through the repression ex acted by too indulgent, but too little understanding parents. Lily Becker's fight is the fight of every modern young woman who must face the world. Miss Hurst has drawn a remarkable literary portrait of the girl of today. Get the current Cosmopolitan and begin this novel tonight. "Star Dust h Fannie Hurst America's Greatest Magazine 9 No Villain No Revolver YET it's a crook story ! There's a counterfeiter, a beautiful girl, Boston Elackie and a detective. There's a new, counterfeit, hundred dollar bill every week and an entry in a bank-book to p'ove it. Looks like a regular cut and dried case for Uncle Sam. These are the ingredients, or most of them, of the plot for a mighty good story. Jack Boyle wrote it for the current Cosmopolitan. Read "Grandad's Girl" and find out why no villain or no revolver was required. if What Eke Could You Expect? ZEKE PARSONS, weal.hy young scion of an old New England family, married a Broadway show-girl. Hi loved hsrj s-he loved him. They were happy. That's where the old-fashioned story teller would have fclt them. But Dana Gatlin, in this month's Cosmopolitan, takes us along with the bride and the groom on the:r honeymoon on Zeke's yacht she gives us a glimpse into the intimate life of the young couple and we see the inevitable outcome under our very eyes. And the finish- what else could you expect ? v What Would You Do With a Million? DO you tliilA: you would act as the poor folks in Text's act id when inches fairly rained down upon them? In the new Cosmopolitan Frazier Hunt con:ir:ucs his story of the oil-magic millions that have trar.u: : rrr.ed a wilderness into a metropolis. He tells about -.-rxle Wash who was going to the government en i make all "them drillers stopruinin' .ill that when?." But wheat was forgotten and now but rei.L. .he story. It's all true and amazing! reiyn to jincijand maketh' Jftuitful - "Nearly everybody worth while reads Cosmopolitan ' ON BAM! AT I fl WWUOXKB It K. I1M M. c.KK.i.K CKiAU STOHF TIIOM ls' ' DltfJO ' to I. IHM f. WV.IA II ItllOS.. I.I l lV K K.AII srOKK, ' ' I 1 AKIJ It, H VKUt, OKI--, IHSTItllll TOKS.