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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1921)
-' M ,mmm W 'W' W w Vim' W i... j , '4i ' -y- y -y -.aoy ',1- nMf : J p)AD THE EAST OREGONIAN SPOUT PAGE AND RECEIVE THE NEWS TI1AT IS FURNISHED BX THREE SERVICES, A. X, U. f. AND I. N.& T-r-.r- TEN PAGES TEN PAGES SECTION TWO FAGES 7 TO 10 I reoiniEtaii SECTION TWO PAGES 7 TO 10 DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 13,' 1921. Eye on the Ball, Prince! ABOUT PROCESSES THAT PUT ROUND-UP r """"""""" .a slT yrf-ssrs 1 f" ) ONE OF TOWN MAKERS TELLS FRED LOCKLEY Irfon Cohen arrived In Pendleton prominent lawyer of Pendleton, and A tit 1 1 alDbattt.. ( '. " : . an uooKKceper made a most Insulting remark to Mr. for Lehman Ulnm. After two years Cox. Ileforc Hunk, could reach for his w. Luni-n una another Tierfe In- Ihn . rtoro. Mr, Falk, bought the store. At that timo the store Was 'where the In- land Kmplrc SaVlnge bank la now lo j tatod. ... .. ,, . , , "Pendleton ta years ago wus a preU t lively town," said Mr, Cohen; "llvo , J' not only. In a business ,way but in other ways as well. Cowboy, sheep men and miners would eotnb Irf, after month In ths opcu, to paint the town red and spend tho savings of months in . n few days of night, lfank Vauphan nt that time -was very much in' evi dence. He had a playful habit of rid ing Into the saloon on horseback nnO ,. shooting things tip. lie rather gloried iij his reputation as a bad man." , Marts People's IVarrJioUsp y'When I started tho People's Ware. ' hquse I atartet with very small capital. .We made two rules one, never to mange a price, the other to sell for Cash. One day Hank Vaughan c4me into our store and wanted to buy a milt ' 01 gray serge. , He was particularly attracted by a gray Prince Albert cont we had in the window. It filled him. so he said he, would take it. Ho told nip to charge it to him., J told hlni thst we:dld a, cash buHlueis and that I wotiffc Sid It for TtlnCTf fcS llkdtlll' I.e had the money. A few night after this Judge Bailey and I were iilaylng blllurdH in the WHIard hotel. . Hank Vaughan came In. Seeing nie. he gave me an ugly look, and said, 'The drinks are on me; come on up to- the bar, buy. I'll pay Tor the drinks for every cne except him he added, as he point. to me. 1 knew if I let thl insult go by I would tone my standing in the town, so when they had had their drink on Hank I said, 'And now tho drinks are on me. Come on up lot he tar, boy. I'll pay for everyone's drink except his,' and I polnttd at Hank. STlis worst of It was that a Chinaman had Just come in and I Invited him up al., while Hunk stood seowllng by the bar undecided Just what he ought to do. Hank Has Couragr ' "Hank did Ijot lack for t on go, for one time he and Charlie Long arrang ed to settle their differences by shoot ing it out across a table tn a -saloon. Each of them slid under the table with three or four bullet hole through hi body, Strangely enough, neither died from, 4ii-,WH,-v Hank once" vnt Into ilio office of T ft. Cm. a gun Cox caught him by the throat, backed him into a corner and threat ened to kill him If he didn't take back the remark. Hunk decided that dis cretion was tho better part of valor, nd apologized. Once when b.o hud been drinking he was racing his hnrc down Main street. The horse stumbl ed and fell, throwing lUink hoavliy and fructurlng his skull. Hunk lived only a short time.. As he was being carriod into a nearby hotol he suid, 'Somebody pull off my boots. Every "no has always said I would die with my boots on and I am going to fool them." He died a few minutes later. IVndlnoii Uvrtjr Town "Although Tendleton was a lively town. In th.it way, it wan then, as It is now, a wide awukp and lively town in u business' wuy. Tho citizens, then n no A', worked together for the good of the city. We wanted to capture the trade from the country south of us. Mid to do so we realized that it would ls necessary to get a road over which freight could be hauled. Judge Fee, Sam Sturgls and 8am Juckson were the inline movers In an effort to secure money for t'.ila road. We finally got tl2,(IOQ from the legislature and with tills sum we were able to locate a road from Pendleton nouth through Pilot Hock, Alba, Ukiah and on to Long Creek., This pened up a large trading tenltory. We also improved the roads from Pendleton up the Wild Horse to Ccntervllle. w hich brought us the trado tf the farmers In that end of the coun ty. The Kast Orcgonlan led the move ment to secure a wool scouring mill for Pendleton, which proved a big fac tor In the growth of the city. Chamber of Commerce Organized "In about 193 boards of trade and chambers of commerce were being es tablished nil over the West. On Febru ary S, 1RK3. Jesc Failing and I Issued a call to the buncs men of the city to meet In the city council rooms to or ganize a commercial association. T. F. rtourke, ono of the leading bankers, was made temporary chairman and 1 was chosen temporary secretary 1 fcsOiC 1 "By,'lU"'lil;i I SMMHSVVBMMHHHSBMiLHBHBsiRIIW The Prince of Walw put up a trenuou pnmc of tennis. He is here shown on the courts of the estate ot Una. Dosborough. Kotice where he Is looking not at the ball! charter members: T. F. Kourke, Jesse Fulling. C. S. Jackson. E. D. Hoyd, It. It. Bcutle, It. Alexander, F. W. Vincent, H. L. Hexter, S. P. Gould, J. It. Dick son, Frank Frazlcr, H. O. Thompson, George Ah, Ed Kctsch, W. P. Lath- rop, W.'H. Curnlric, T -C. Taylor, J; H. Itobbins. J. V. Tallmnn, S. Itothchlld, It. T. Cox, C. H. Carter, J. A. Howard. H. Shuithls. It. P. Korstcr, J. F. Robin son, Frunk Wamsley, George Hartman, Harry Bickers, J. A. liorie and myself. Our new commercial association gut back of tho movement to secure a scouring mill and placed $6000 worth of stock umong Its members. The mill was located in Pendleton in 1893 and later a woolen mill was added to the scouring mill. I had the honor to be appointed first secretary of the com mercial association. I served, of course without puy. Newspaper Is Progressive "To the Kast Oregonian a great deal of the prosperity bf Pendleton is due, lor is originated many of the plans for civic betterment and It backed them Tom I wltn cnHn a8' we" s the printed Xutionul League Mainline W. L. Pittsbur r32T New Yuek .......... Boston ft. Louis . ." Brooklyn . '. Chlcuso Cincinnati ', Philadelphia Anicricuii Ijcuguc frinct Alhvjt it oM in ljrr. fflf hays, tidy rt-i ting, handnome pttnnA and hall pound tin humidors and intha pound cryttal flag t humidor with tpongt moisttnar top. ' - . .48 . .42 . . 40 . 41 .33 . .28 21) . 32 38 39 41 48 .22 53 .Standing Taylor, Jesse Failing and S. B. Gould were appointed to arrange for a per manent organization. On February 111. 1893, we met again. The report of this organization committee was adopted nnd the commercial aroela iion was organised, with the following QUALITY SERVICE SANITATION Black Caps, per crate $2.75 Red Raspberries, per crate . $2.50 JJoganberrics, per crate . . . . . . . $2.25 Apricots, per pound 10c ' Jars, Lids, Caps, etc. Pendleton Trading Co. , . , Ehone 455 . w At u. sign-of sei v "If It's on the Market We Have It" w. .52 1. word. Just as an Illustration, there used to be a private system of sprinkl ing the streets. Waller Wells ran a sprinkling wanon and charged each person In front ot whose place he sprinkled, so much a month. - Onn d.iy C. S. Jackson and I started out and by ve'hTii?' Ve fiad secured subscriptions for $1400 to buy a sprinkling wagon and to maintain service throughout the summer. Before long the city took this over nnd It became a regular part of the civic activities. The same thinq happened in the ease of the wagon rond to Grant county. The commer cial association realized that so Ions as It was a toll road many were kept away from trading In Pendleton, and so, through the efforts of the com mercial assoclallou, the Grant county toll road became a public road. Th' ramc spirit of cooperation and team work that secured the scouring mill nnd Pendleton academy, thai improv ed tho roads and secured many oilier betterments for Pendleton, animates ! the directors of tho Pendleton Round- ! I'p. The directors give their services Hygiene j without charge and the money made ' from this unnunl exhibition docs not go ; into any private individual's pocket, I but is spent to make a bigger, a busier and a better Pendleton. It is going to continue to grow and prosper till it be comes the metropolis of, the Inland Empire." Cleveland New York 48 31 Washington '.....43 40 Detroit 41 41 Boston .36 42 St. Louis . . 33 46 Chicago 33 46 Philadelphia 31 47 . American Association Kcsults Milwaukee 10, Toledo 1. Mlneapolis 9, Louisville 13. j St. Paul 4. Indianapolis 7. Kansas City 11, Columbus 7. Southern Association Results Birmingham , Chattanooga 4. ' Memphis j, Atlanta SI . ; Nashville 6, New Orleans 6, 10 nlngs.. ' v. Little Rock 6, Mobile 9. I'cl.1 .603 I .623 I .5C!s ' .513 .513 i .410 .368 .293 Pet. .650 .608 .529 .500 .462 .432 .415 .397 ifll " Buy a pipe and some P. A. Get the joy that's due you! We print it right here that if you don't know thd "feel" and the friendship of a joy'us jimmy pipe GO GET ONE! And get some Prince Albert and bang a howdy-do on the big smoke-gong!. For, Prince Albert's quality flavor coolness fragrance is in a class of its own ! You never tasted such tobacco! Why figure out what it alone means to your tongue and temper when we tell you that Prince Albert can't bite, can't parch! Our exclusive patented process fixes that! Prince Albert is a revelation in a makin's cigarette 1 My, but how that delightful flavor makes a dent! And, how it does answer that hankering! Princ6 ' Albert rolls easy and stays put because it is crimped cut. And, say oh, go on and get the papers or a pipe 1 Do it right now! V tr R J. Reynold Tofeacc Co. .Winston-Salem. N.C. SIRALBEfr the national joy smoke i i WOMAN SPORTING EDITORiCONDiTlONS OF TREATY Western League RfMilts . Joulin 3, Sioux city 6. Wichita 7. Des Moines 6. Oklahoma City 7. Omaha "3. Tulsa 3, t. Joseph 1. j tho conditions of the Versailles trea-. ! ty and relative punishment of war cri- ! minals, Premier Briantrtwht th wm-1 ate. He characterised the findings in Lclp2ig court as "scandalous."' INFANT DEATH RATE T PARIS. July IS. (T. N. S ) Thej I distinction of being one of the first) i women editors of a sportin I PARIS. July 13. (A. P.) France ! A man ninety-seven years of aire. I living near Augusta, Maine, is cutting teeth for the third time In his. life.; LOWES T .NEW YORK, July 13. tU. P.) It Is safer to he born 4u the West than in tho East. The report of the American Child Association for 1 920 lists mmtm FORD The Universal Car WHETHER COTTER PIN OR COMPLETE ':: ", OVERHAUL Tou can fei It In our Kales and Service station. We are au thorized VoM dealer. In our stockroom we carry every part that toe Into a Koid'car or Kord truck. They're genuine Pord parts too -each made of the same tough, durubln Vanadium iteol as Ita counterpart In the Ford car. Our nperlal l''ord re pair shop is thoroughly equipped with socially designed tools and up-to-the-minute muehlncry so that repairs, adjustments or complete overhauls for Ford cars can be handlod promptly and cfficieiitlyj Our. luechunlca who will do the work on your Pord car or truck, understand Ufe Ford mechanism and know the right way to tune It up. And for the work you will pay only the reason able Ford prices. ( We are a part of the Big Ford Family und not only repair Fords but sell them as well. We have more than a passing In terest In tho service we give you. Drive to our Garage when your I 'ol d needs repairing. For Safctys Sake Have the Authorized Ford Dealer Do It. Wc Can Rcbora and Polish Your Cylinders Too. ;' JACK CHILDS, Foreman Simpson Auto Co. Phone 408 Water & Johnson St v Service According to a report to t lie iinani welfare society in Cliicugo, the chil dren of wealthy parents are not on a par physically with those of poor par ents. In one school in an exclusive neighborhood half1 of the children ex-' amlncd were not up to normal weigh! and many were seven per cent undei weight. One Hollar Snicri Represents Ten Dol lars I jirin-d. The uveragu man docs not save t. exceed ten per cent of his earnings He must spend nine dollars in livinf expenses for every dollar saved. Thai being the case ho can Hot be too care ful about unnecessary expenses. Ven ni'tei, i. few cents properly invested, like buying seeds for his garden, wil save several dollars outlay later on It th 'he same In busing Chamberlain'? Colic and Uiurrhoea Ueniedy. It costt but a few cents, and a bottle of it in tlie house often saves a doctor's bill ol several dolfars. The Sumo Kvitj w hero The editor of Palsa Akhbar, a nativt newspaper of ljihore, India, says, "1 have used Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy many times anipnr my children and servants, for colle a.nn diarrhoea and always found it effec tive." lllioiiMic-H nnd Constipation "For years I was troubled with Ml leusnrss and constipation, which madi life miserable for me. My appotiti failed me. I lost my usual force am vitality. Pepsin preparations alio cathartics only made matters worse. 1 do uot know where I should have beet, today hud I not tried Chamberlaln't Tablets. The tablets relieve the ill tccltng at once, strengthen the diges tive functions, helping tho system te do its work naturally." writes Mrs. Itosa Polls, Hfrininghiim, Ala. A Splendid MrdMnc for Uiu Stomach ami IJvur. "Chamberlain's tablets for the stom ach and liver are splendid. I neve! tire of telling my friends and neigh bors of their qualities," writes Mrs William Vollmer, Eastwood. N. T When bilious, constipated or troubled with Indigestion, give them a trial cities of over 10.000 population accord ing to the number of infant deaths per thuusand of population. ' Seattle, Washington, is first among cities of over iSO.OOO with 56. Port land, Ore., following with 00 and San Francisco next with 62. Among cities between 100,000 and I'dO.OOO, Houston, Texas, is safest for babies, with 37, then Spokane, Wash ington, with 71 and .Oakland, Cali fornia, with 72. The West holds its supremacy as the 1 region of healthy babies with the three pitioM ill lh .".0 1MM1 to ItMllMMl ,-lass -i,i,.h h,iv ih.'i-i Inf..,,! rio:,!h ! ample In all Franc-there are fifty i,.! ,,n uiiH.,t.., I ,, rh,. r-.-.r-ifi Ponst. i two spurring clubs of women Tacoma, Washington comes first with 37, Uerkeley next with 45. and San Diego, with 51. Horace Creelcy was said to have ad vised, "Co West, young man, go west." He might change it now to an address to newlyweds. newspa per in France has fallen to Mudemoi- isello Merte Bouveret who has been ap , pointed editor in chief of Le Sportif dr- 1'Alsne, a new sporting weekly, pub lished at Soissons. This publication is the official organ of all the sporting clubs of the department of the Aisne. Mademoiselle Bouvert is an enthu siastic sportswoman, only twenty-four j ears old, and one of the original j founders of "Aeadeniia," the first j sporting club for women, organized in; I Paris in 1 PIS. She typifies the new-; I type of French woman a woman who j I appreciates the value of physical ex-. ercise for women as well as for men. j i Mile. Bouveret has already organized : j sporting clubs for women at Vic-sur- j ! Aisne. Blerancourt, Crouy, Anizy-le- , Chateau and Soissons. In a leading editorial in Le Sportif j de I'Alsne, Mile. Bouvert says; "In ' I England and in America, especially. ;' the women hav- found in outdoor i spurts a path to good health which is j far more effective than al! the invtn- . lions of medical science. It is time i our Flench women followed their ex- j has informed Germany she will con- j Healthy, white teeth are working up tinue the occupation of the Hhlne re- through the gums with four teeth In gion until Germany complies with sight. ' . ' j. with a total membership of 6000. Sports do play a' pari in the life of some French women, but in !be life of far too few. If, we wish to have a vigorous, healthy race, it is necessary that our women as well as uui men indulge in outdoor sports. "You may be Sure" says the Good Judgs That you are getting full value for your . money -when you use this class of tobacco. The good, rich, real to bacco taste lasts so long, you don't need a fresh , chew nearly as often nor do you need so big a chevv as you did with the ordi nary kind. Any man who has used the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. ' ' Put up in two styles W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco A. . 1 J Hiibbv Wears Bridal Wreath, Too f ' -t'jwi-J; '- - i- ;: I t iSkjf In Polsnd It a proper to iaclud; In the report of a wedding: "The ,100m w-'ve apses anit foi M rae-nota." When he's led to the altar tie v..r$ a wraith r paper nowera, euppiwd by the bride from fcer enor t m tlvrat neadntect. . ' CONROY'S CASH GROCERY PAY CASH AND WATCH YOUR HANK ACCOUNT GROW. Sugar, 12 lbs $1.00 Tomatoes, large cans, 8 for $1.00 Wesson Oil pts. 35c, qts. (wc, i gal. $1.20 Crisco 1! lbs. 10c; 3 lbs. 70c; G lbs. $1.23 Carnation Milk, 2 for 25c Carnation Milk, 8 for : $1.00 Olympic Pancake Flour, large size, 3 for... $1.00 Cantcloupes, each 10c Best Crepe Toilet Paper, 3 for 25c J They ill do you good.