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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1921)
t READ TIJE EAST OREGONIAN SPORT PAGE AND RECEIVE THE NEWS THAT IS FURNISHED BY THREE SERVICES, A. P., U. P. AND I. N. S. EC TJEN PAGES SECTION TWO P1gES7T010 TEN PAGES SECTION TWO PAGES 7 TO 10 DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 8, 1921. B 4 -Vi. V STAT- ,,Jk W JT ' 'Round the Sport Circle WITH JACK VEIOCK, liilcniotloiiul News Spurting lOdltor NK'V yoiMc, Aug. 8. (. X. s.) Cn by bno the veterans whose names iiuve ueen fixtures in the box scores for years oro fading out of the mujor Jlmollght. News of tlio release of such pluyors 1 h Lefty Tyler by the Cubs. Clint 1'homus ly the Indians and Eddie Aln. miiltli by ,tho Tigers has recently como drifting over the wires to remind u that Old Pop Tlino Is Rtlll up to his pranks. These players, great In their hoy itay, have outlived their usefulness In the bl show, and there nro nuiny others mho will soon be drifting buck to tho minor leunucs or into perman ent retirement. . Such tld bits on the sporting pages must surrly furnish tho young fellows In the minors with new inspiration. They know, or should know, thut the coming of, another spring) will sec many of their number trekking South ward with thvo majors, und thcro Isn't a hushcr of promise but who has dreamed of graduating to-big time. It will not bo so very long until fully CO per cent of tlio'i real veterans now wearing tho big Iea,'.ruo uniforms will pass along. Huch pluycrs as Konetchy, Ctitshaw, Klllifor, Milan, Johnson, Do die, Xunamakcr, IIuhIi Young, Foster. Orancy, Dnubrrt, Hullfie and Toney will come to the end of their strings us mat ,1or league regulars In .from one to three more seasons. Hmno of them will pass along with the fading out of the present pennant races and next sprlng.the major Irngue owners will no doubt experiment with a greater number of minor league recruits thnn at .any tlmo since before the war. Itusi'bull needs the fire sjijI speed of mw and yuunger blood. The grand old pastime must be made speedier and more attractive, for this Is. a fast age and the fans dejnsnd the best. w The Down Trail lie was full of vim when he first cume up. This vet with tho sun-tunned brow; He was swift of foot and his eye was keen, They said he was good us they'd ever seen, But he's treading the down trail now. Ho could run like sin when he first ., . came up, m . Ho could hit 'eiii most anywhere! Ho could nab a fly in the garden deep. Or sponr n drive with mi ngile leap As It whizzed through tho sun-baked air. ' . Hut now ho is plodding the down -h ill trull, Tho seasons have claimed their toll; Ho lias lost his speed and his old-time snap. Ha falters when fielding a lusty rap. And they cull him a game old soul. 'Twill not bp long till he passes on. Unable to go the pace; And where he played some husky tad, With the strength and vigor he once had, Will be shining in his place. Another American battler Is going across tho pond to help keep the Kng llsh knuckle-duster where he will feel natural on his back. Joe Dillon, the Italian flyweight, has been matched to fight Jimmy Wilde In September.. Joe will leave our shores with the best of intent Ions and he may emulate Her man. Morun and others. But we have n suspicion that Joe will find sonie whut of a different assignment ugalnst Wlldc than he has been led to expect. iT E RE TACOMA, Aug. 8. (IV P.) Judge Clifford sustained the demurrers filed by J. E. Chilberg, former president of both the Tucoina and Seattle .Scandinavian-American Banks, now defunct. Chilberg is being freed the necessity of standing trial in the superior court on five felony Indictments. Chilberg Is accused of allowing a Tacoma bank director to borrow from the tank's funds without first obtaining permis sion from the bank's directors. Chil berg claimed the loans were not new, tut the note renewals were given the bunk In 1917. to (;irr 7 text taiu: PES MOINES, Aug. 8. ( L'. IM Pes Monies people want the street ears buck and the council abandoned their Irreconcilable attitude toward trolleys and virtually agreed to a seven cent tare, tho continuance of the old fruio chlse and the elimination of buses from the enr track streets. r QUALITY SERVICE SANITATION Bartlett Pears Box $3.25 CARMEN PEACHES $1.25 APRICOTS, Lug $2.50 TOMATOES, crate $1.00 Pendleton Trading Co. Phone 455 At tho Sign of a Sct-rica "If It's on the Market We Have It" ALBANY, N. Y., Aug. 8. (By War ren YVhouton, I. N. S. Stuff Corres pondent) Are people generally re signed to prohibition? They are not. They don't want sa loons, but they do want to drink. That's the answer given by Supreme Court Justice Henry V. Burst, of Ani stcrdaw, after several weeks In New York City, where lie was sent speci ally by Governor Miller to bundle dry I law violations exclusively. Other observations of the jurist, who disposed of hundreds of viola tions, but found himself nearly inun- daled by u dully amazing incrcuse, are: You could never get jurors to con vict 111 prohibition eases If they knew defendants were to go to prison. Elnes uie a sufficient penalty In prohibition cases. Soft drink dispensers should be taxed. New Yorkers will drink even if they have to manufacture It. In many fuses arrests were not justified. liut Here s wliat justice IJorst says: "I shull recommend legislation pro viding for an excise tux on places where legal beverages arc sold. Many former saloon keepers are operating soft drink places. They never take a chance themselves, but their waiters, former bartenders, run risks for them by currying Iq their pockets u smui: container, with one or more drinks or whiskey, which they sell to trusted customers. We inuy punish the wait er, but the proprietor will prove his innocence legully und hire another waiter. Will Manufacture Tlielr Own. "These soft drink dispensers are charging excessive prices. To ussess u tux on them Is the only way of re covering part ut least of the unjust profit for the public. New York City has u great prob lem before it ill the state dry law. The problem Is greuter thun In the country districts for the reason thut defendants in cases In other commu nities plead guilty by udvice of coun sel and thus save the cost of triul. "Conditions ure. different in New York for the reason that the police place a man at a point where arrest arc to be mude on the ground that it is a nuisance, und so attorneys nat urally hesitate uliout uilvlslng their clients to plead guilty. . "Klnes ure u sufficient pcnulty In prohibition cases, und one never could tret Jurors to convict if they knew de fendants were to go to prison, so ffne. facilitate convictions. New York Is u great cosmopolitan American Association Kcsnlts At Louisville S, Minneapolis 3. At Columbus 4, Kansas City At Toledo 'l-U. Milwaukee 1-1. Ar Indianapolis 4-4. St. Paul 3-11. Southern AsniM-liiiimi Ko-nlls Mobile 2, Little Hock 4. A' New Orleans 6, liiriiiinidiaui '1. At Chuttanoogu 4. Atlanta 1. At Memphis I. Nashville t;. Pacific: oust Ix-agne Standings San Francisco Angeles 1-1. UUUUULbLb U CrV fIP (C "AFTER j Y EVERY j J J ' ( rX MEAL The new sugar coafed 5l chewing (jfm which everybody JMkK A-SJ on,;, sr-.fix m - kLLULM 'L Emm' JFifff S3mM fSff l& II LiLnUL! W f. im&M?Lk I os Angeles (is 5 3 .r, 6 2 Sacramento 7" St! .5"n Oakland CS r, .r,49 Vernon B7' Salt Lake 4 4 l:t . 3 r, n Portland 31 :iO ,2.',6 Vcterdaj's Jloults At Portland 6-6, Salt Lake 5-K. At Seattle 5-4, Sacramento 7-3. At Los Angeles, Vernon 7-7, San Francisco 2-6. At San Francisco, Oakland 6-4, Los liv ItUSSELL DROWNING (Culled Press Staff Correspondent.) j WASHINGTON, Aug. S. Tho Lnit- j ed States will be a Dutch host to the i delegations attending the disarma ment conference. Some doubt as to the cthiuettc of allowing euch guest to settle with the hotel keeper "on his wn" was at f:rst expressed by officials here and the advice of "Helen .Maria" Dawes, d rec tor of the budget, was sought on thjs point. A document from the files of "paid bills" at the treasury department was put in evidence delicious peppermint flavoredsufiar Jacket around peppermint flavored chewln cum that will aid your appetite and dtees- tion, polish your teeth and fsotstea vvr throat. B122 WR2GLEV5 THE FLAUOR LASTS in its. Also no objection will be raised i.y their bringing over us many scaled trunks of "papers" as desired. A flock of special constables will be This document, it is i added to the Washington police force ' semhlages in history, rivaling in bril liance the noted Versailles treaty party- said, was a little item for a million I dollars or so for American use of the Hotel Crillon during the 1'aris peacemaking. during the conference. j Th's will be a precautionary slep to ' , city, and Its people will drink. If they -mong capital society moth kr of i cini.miKX TACOMA, Aug. X. (A. I'.) Mrs. D. Shaffer, aged SS years, today as vp birth to her sixteenth child, a 12 rrevent the revival on American soil ,.,,,. Tne e,,t child is 2U of obi worM fetlds as all the tribes of I , ....:.. ah rhnrt. I. Cook m.,l,.l ,.l,iof ' .. ... ... . . ..m. . . ine palm are expecieti to senu un - i of the state department, is as busy as r,u,.,-s ,,t hn oartev mid ancient ene- I a cranberry merchant arranging ac-( nlie.s are 1nlnd t0 meet in the shadow commodations for the foreign vlsi-'of Washington's monument, strolling lanlH- I down Fennsvh'ania avenue or rubber- According to present plans, each i necking at 'the while house, delegation will be installed in a scp- 1 Hooked nosed men from the Hed arale establishment. Several hotels UiZ tvzwl Turks, turhaned Hindus, will be taken over outi ight and lirl- ! prince, anarchists, statesmen, pick ate mansions offered for use by their I pockets, and newspaper reporters are owners will be accepted as hcadiiuar-L.V,.,., t hrinir ebiss. color und nnh newspapermen excepted on the last named possession to. what is confi dently predicted will lie one of the most spectacular and momentous as- the children are healthy and helpful. I Shuffer is a shipyard worker. JAPAN At ( KITS DATF. TOKIO, Aug. S. (A. P.) Japan agrees to November 11 as the date for Ihe disarmament conference, leaving all the invited powers in accord. passenger will be connected with his office telephone in London or New York just as he now gets his connec tion on land. tirs for the distinguished heads of the ' delegations. j Considerable rivalry has developed can't buy their liquor they will men ufucture It. "It we go after the shIooii keepers properly they will soon know that we arc serious in the .enforcement of the luw." Justice Horst believes that lliiior sales will diminish day by day and that many urrests mude for dry viola- I drinks it may lions have been, unjustified. How-, and make i ever, he says, thut 70 per cent of the ('"ore difficult. Again it would never cases lirought before him resulted In I do to let the visitors wet the impres- matrons as p whose home Premier Lloyd George of Gieat Britain mil inhabit during his slay. The iUcstioti of liquid refreshmenl for the visitors has como up. This is u delicate question. On the one hand it is realized that if super-diplomats are deprived of their accustomed upset their dispositions round -table discussions Wireless telephones will soon be op erating on all great transatlantic lin ers, according to an American wire less expert, who predicts that all main staterooms be ctuiped with regular desk phones from which the Ortgon'i Hither Institution el TECHNOLOGY Eifht Schools; Sevetjr.Dpfti FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 19. 1921 for HifonniliM rM W II" Oregon Agricultural College corvallis 'convictions. SKXATF, 'll.ii:s IULL. WASHINGTON, Aug. S. (I. N. S.) Tho senate agriculture committee voted to umend the anti-grain gamb ling hill so no restrictions would he I placed on the use of private wires to Hie "bucket-shops" and blanches of boards of trade. sion that our boasted legal desert is i n sham. Some scheme which will appear a wet mirage to the natives but a. real oasis to the foreigners is being worked j out. j A partial solution to this problem , has been found in a decision by the j slate department that nil the delegates will have diplomatic status which en-j lilies them to a supply of liquor per- j TAX K1A ISION TO WAIT 1 I WASHINGTON, Aug. K. I'. IM j House republican members, of the ways and means committee tentatively i say nu (axes will be replaced before j .January 1, l'JSS, on account of the need of the revenue from excess prof its and high surtax levy. They proli- I ably mean business and wealthy hull-j viduals must pay during l'j22 taxes on their profits of 1921. Nippy' t stun FORD The Universal Car Urmemlirr that when yon liriivn your Vurd car In tin for mo. rhnnh-al attention Hint you get the gnmilna Fort service im lerlHls, cxM!Tencel workmen una l ord fuclory nrlees. 'our linl tit lno UHrful, loo vuliiahln to take i-haiictw with poor mo. cliunhn wllli tipially ismr vuallly iiui(U'Wils, Bring it to us and wv IhiIIi Unto and iimne.'. We aro autJiorlexl I'orrt dealers, truslcd ly the l)rd Io(or Ci. l look after Uie wants or IXirtl owners. Thul s the assuriim o we offer. We are getting a few Ford cars and the first come, first to receive delivery. Have you thought Ahout that Sedan or Coupe for this full and wlnterT They are mighty comfortable and cozy when the wind blowa and the rain Is fulling. Come In and look them over and place your ordor in advance so that we can be sure of ordering enough to go around. This will be tho closed car year. Simpson Auto Co. Phone 4(NP" , Water & Johnson St. ! Service Mime Old Story Hut ti Good One Mrs. Miihula Hums, Savanna, Mo., relates an experience, the like of which has happened In almost every neigh borhood In tills country, and has been told and related by thousands of oth ers, as follows: "I used a bottle of Chamberlain's Coli6 und Diarrhoea lieinedy about nine years ago and It cured ine of flux (dysentery). I hud another attack of the same complaint liner or four years ago and u few doses of this remedy cured me. I have rocoiniiiended It to dozens of people since I first used It and shall continue to do so for I know it is a quick and positive cure for bowel troubles." Hot Woallier Diseases Disorders of the bowels are extreme ly dangerous, particularly during the hot weather of the summer months, mid In order to protect yourself and family against u sudden utlack, get a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea ltemedy. It can be depend, cd upon. Many have testified to its excellence. Cause of Appendicitis When the bowels are constipated, the lower bowels or large intestines be come packed with refuse mutter, that Is made up largely of germs. These germs enter tho vermiform appendix and set up Inflammation, which Is commonly known us appendicitis. Take Chamberlain's Tablets when needed and keep your bowels regular and yoii have little to fear from appendicitis. Hunger, tho llcst Saiuv Sauce is used to create an appetite or relish for the food. The right way Is to look to your digestion. When you have good dlgestHm you are cer tain to relish your food. Chamberlain's Tablets Improve the digestion, create a healthy appetite and cause a gentle movement of the Vowels. . ''!V: riS J f yJ I . j JL i ; It s nippy hut it's nice. That is, of .ourse. if you have a figure adapted to "nlppinoss " The new fall walk ing suit Is nipped in at the waist wdh t ftare out of ihe ceit skirt thJt would satisfy the most extreme col- The APPEARANCE of ybur printod stalionerv reflects the cliarnrler of vour lnineb8 FIIIST imprcssion.s' arc usually lasting, and . you should no more think of representing your busi ; mss with ill-arranged, poorly printed stationery than with an uncouth, inexperienced salesman. The psychological effect would be the same. THE SNAP and vitality of our "distinctive" print v ing registers instant approval. Ask a user. SHIFT your printing troubles over to'our shoulders thry are a burden to you a pleasure to us. fEasf forcAonian) I'endlcl on's. l?est Job Printers Telephone 1 I a--t Ort'coninn Itltlg. Corner .Main and Webb St.