" ' : ; 11 ' . ' : ' , I : ; : '' . mJ 77 tUttT EAST GRr.COWIAN. PESTJlXTpiT, OSEGMI, pWH iliHH IIIIIISJ Ml CGreftonifirii rubltsned Dally ml 8eml-Wkly, at Ptndletna. uregon, by to BAST OREOOHNIAN PLBLI8HINQ CO. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. -. ? . t- t UBSCR1PTION RATEe' ' (IN ADVANCE) ' ' Ent-rwl at the pot office at Pendle ton, Oref oa, m eecoad elaas mail mat- ' ' ON ALB in other ctties Imperial Hotel Nwe Bland, Portland, ON ILK AT .fhleago Bureau, Of 8urlty Bulldinir. Aaablngtoa, D. C Bureau 101 four tenth Street, N. W. tra-i f the AMtlaM Preea. Tba Auoclated Proa I alclualyelT totliled to tba uh for republication of e.U ml dispatches credited to It or m otharwlM credited In thla paper and aura the local newa jiubHalied herein. Dally, ona rear, by mall Daily, aix monlb,. by mall Da i I y, three mo in he, by mall . Daily, one month by mail IMily, ona year by carrier . MOO . I.1 1.19 T.5 Daily, aix months by carrier 1.71 Oatly, three niontha by carrier 1.91 Daily, one month, by carrier .65 Semi-Weekly, 1 year by mall . 1.06 Betnl- Weekly, aix montha by mall 1. semi- w eeaiy, urn moniua By man ,ef I Veteran of Civil War" , Still Hale and Hearty a .ij, t. ,T. tsit" Teleokona . I T"l IL . ei T - - J I BO) PISCISSRS LIFE , It'a, a funny old world, as my father hat (aid, And I can't understand it at all. Whenever there's sugar spread over "! my bread That- the time It la certain to fall; Vhen tha tablecloth's soiled and an . accident them t Wouldn't matter. I'm seal as ean be. But I'm bound to spill eras; the gravy boat when . v Ma's put on a clean cloth for tea, There's nothing- toes wrong; when t ' we're living; alone, . but whenever there's company here And Ma want my good bri aging up ' - to be ahown tm bound to do something- that's queer;" I can play all day long- an' not get in f " the dirt When tumbles don't matter at alt But when Ma rigs me out Id my beat suit and shirt.' , I There's always Wet mud where I fall. . . ;- There's always a lot of folks hanging about '- When I'm not tiding things as I should, I-ttt nobody's looking at me, I've found put, The times when I really am good. If I can be neat when there's no one to see, . Why must all of my. badness be seen? Why can't' I be good when (ft proper to be ' 'c . And clean when ' tha tablecloth's clean? ..- - - PENDLETON'S PART WILL BE A BIG ONE o vNE of the pronounced features of the 1925 , exposution in .Portland wili be the number of people traveling to the show in their own motor cars. It requires very little lm- .. ; - , - . ! 'iv." S. ' . " GEORGE HV.SIIAW, Springfield, Mom. ' ainnation to foresee a mammoth wave of auto travel into the " jiorthwest that year. The people of the middle west and the Jpast want to see the northwest This is new country, to., them and the are interested in it for many reasons. For one thing athey are hearing of a wonderful road program in Oregon and i Washington. ' They know thAe is beatftiful scenery here. They .know that the climate of the jporthwest is delightful as com .pared to many other sections. There will be countless thousands t?ho will say, "I have been wanting to see that country and this 'looks like a good time." The exposition will focus attention on Oregon, providing" an objective for an immediate trip., Every party that comes will bring others in its wake because the en thused visitor will teirhis frienas and neighb'ors all about it. On , this assumption and the further assumption the trip and the ex i position will be appreciated by the average tourist, we may ex- a. . i it. : li.- .. r 1 xr X'u pec i BiaiuiiiK icsuiu lit me w ny ut uavci. iuhliuiik uul a yiu- tiounced business depression can stop it and by. 1925 the country ? -should be clear of all depression. ' v - Pendleton's part in that year of activity is not going to be j small. The Round-Up of that year will actually rival the expo i eitiori as a crowd producer. The exposition authorities will use ;the Round-Up to help lure people to the northwest and they will be wise in doing bo. But we will have our hands full through out the whole season and not just during Round-Up time. We are on a main transcontinental highway which will be improved to the Idaho line by 1925. We are on the route people tfill us who wish to reach the exposition city via the famed Columbia drive. It is going to be necessary to prepare extensively for the accommodation of this travel. The advantages we derive from the exposition business will be largely contingent on the extent of the arrangements we make. - v" t ' "Let's undertake the job in a big way and plan for tpurist ac ; commodations along lines that will be in keeping with, the city's (reputation for doing things. . r .'. i eeeeeeeeOeeeeee .j " . WHEN THE SCREEN STARS ARE UNSCREENED ( ,V THE mess in which Fatty Arbuckle finds himself as a result of a wild night of immorality focuses attention.again upon the private life of a star of the screen. .. ' J"" 4 ' Scandal seems to have claimed the mdvie folk as its own articular company It has tiot been so long ago that Olive Thomas, actress-wife of Jack Pickford.'died after a riotous orgy in Paris, and it is an open secret that many of the idols of the silver sheet not only have feet of clay but souls corrupted Dy moral decay.,. , Partial responsibility for this deplorable condition must be ' Elated uDon the hih salaries paid these play" people." Many of them are rewarded with a lavishness that is staggering. They ,'cet what they do not earn and easy and excessive income is nearly always a breeder of soiled lives. r. The injury they do in their disregard for the standards of , common decency is not confined to themselves.. Through their "pictured acting they win thousandsof admirers the world over j i , , t i i . u i , nu oecome ine neroes ana Heroines vi many a maiu auu a iuau. The lifting of the curtain which shuts out the view of their pri ' vate lives is attended by a shock and a sickening reaction upon those who have worshipped at the shrine of their art. Recovery from shattered ideals or misplaced homage is always a slow matter and never entirely accomplished." Scandal which is oft en only a temporary inconvenience and embarrassment to peo pie in public popularity may easily be a tragedy in the lives of ' some of their adolescent admirers. . .-. . , . .; . -There has been much said and written lately about the ele vation. of the standards of the motion picture and the Fatty Ar buckle episode suggests again that the elevation of the picture j4ayvs should be predicated upon an elevation of the morals of I tfcose who make them. - . . . ; 'Many motion picture playhouses have pointed the way, to a form. of penalty which would dobtless prove salutary. They nave canceled their contracts for Arbuckle releases and will not feature that star. If the play-loving public would follow this lead by withdrawing their patronage from those pictures star- ring an actor or actress who besmirch themselves with licentious , 'living, then, w think, would these people regulate themselves a little tnore by the laws of respectable society. At least they ,wouJd be a little more discreet when they stray fronj the paths of rectitude, for decreased earning power is often an argument for clean living where moral preachments and statutory laws tail.- -.... . The Round-Up ts a clean and wholesome show and Happy Canyon likewise. The officials are right in standing firm for a high standard and for removing objectionable features when they appear. The people who come to the Round-Up from far nnd near, are not looking for license and they want no hoodlnm Ism. It would not take much in the way of debauchery to hurt the show tremendously. It would be a blunder to catertto an element seeking lawlessness and by so doing offend our best customtrs, the farmers and farmers wjveg of Eastern Oregon "To .y that - I feel twenty-five years younger, twenty-five, years heaUhter and twenty-five' years stronger expresses what Tanlac has done for me better than any other way I can put it," said Georg D. Shaw, yeteran at the Civil War, who now lives at 321 Walnut street, Spring field. Mass. "I am now seventy-eight years old and I don't hesitate to say I have never known a, medicine to equal Tan lac. . For fifteen years I was: sub ject to attacks of indigestion . that were so bad at times I would have to lay up for . week or two. For a long time t lived on crackers and milk alone as nothing else agreed with me. . "When I started on Tanlac I weigh ed only one hundred and seventeen pounds and my days were thought. to be numbered. I've been so wonderful- Woolen; Jidai Allowing the most fashionable colors and designs in all AVypl, 54 inches wide, c . A-cs yara lengtns; no two.aiiKej niany of theft) English, imports.. Priced &v Kirt length ...... .....vVi.; W.:,f v.v.Vr;, . $9.00 to 912.75. Costume Velvets, 8finches wide, in navy; brown and black, the yard. $2.75. Silk Costume Velvets in black, the yard i. ' . . ; . ... . . . . .... . '. , 3Sc Silk Costume Velvets in black, brown and nawat. . . . . 15.89 anrl SfLO'd ; AU Wool Broadcloth, 52 inches wide, navy, brown ,andjb:k .r. , , ; $3.63, ; ly built up, I now "weigh one hundred and fwvty-three pounds and my stom ach is as sound aa a dollar. In fact,)! I .believe I could eat the old army ra tions again without it hurting me In the least. . - -., -, "'I never miss a chano of saying a good word for Tanlae ai I would Jike, to urge the bpy8 of the "Sixties" who are not feeling right to give It a trial, for I am'nure It would put them In line again, just aa It has me. For a man of my age to have no physical ail ment, to be well and strong and en joy life as he did twenty-five years sao, 'is certainly something to be thankful for and there Is nothing too good I can say for Tanlac"'" Tanlao Is sold in Pendleton by Thompson's Drug Store pnd by lead ing druggist everywhere. " ,,' Il?,YOUJNEED NEW DRAPERIES before' the Round-Up. see, these new Colonial Drapes, cretonnes curtain nets, madras, Swiss, scrims and mar- quisettes, in white cqeam, ecru and colors. A splendid showing of these, at our. new low prices, fceginnir-g at 15c 18c. 25c ud to $1.95. Sheets and Pillow Cases, for your extra requirement during Round-Up week.' . ' ,' i;. . Bleached Sheets of best quality double bed sizaat. ; ; . . .. $1.49, $1.79 ; Pillow Cases at ... .. .25c, 39c, 45c Unbleached Muslin Sheets, ea. $1.00 . Huck Towels, ourv splendid .'V?oft; ' Spun" quality, even hem, each 15c and ' 25c i -V;,yS4y. v.. 1' '..'''t : Blankets, Warm and Comfortable Lakeside. brand, insuring quality arid' service. Cotton heet blankets in the various Bizes ; . : . . . . . . $1.98 to $2.9S Woolnap Blankets in plaids $3.59 to $4.98.. Part Wool Blankets $5.90 to $6.50. AU Wool Blankets in plaids. $8.25 Pendleton All Wool Bed Blankets in a complete assortment at $12.50 to $25.00.' t ;;...;!.. . , icq Bed Comforter) filled with, pure white cotton, large sizes $2.98, $3.75, ' to $9.00. ' Star " Brand all Lea ther Shoes for Chil dren. 1 ; , Ford Shoes for "Women, New Fall Styles. FROM THE PEOPLE THE PEXPI.ETOX ROrM-0 (Colorado Springs Gazette) :' ' With a population of 7,000, Pendle ton, Ore,, for a few days' every year plays hostess to 70,000 -people . wj)o come to see its Round-Up. Since 1910 when as a city of !00 it started its frontier exhibition, it has collected $1, 500,000 in gate receipta; of whtch J3a.0i0 has been clear profit, used to finance succeeding performances and to build up Round-tp Park. "One may Well ask," says Charles Wellington Furlong in his recent book, "Let 'Er Buck," "why this little thru track town draws such a stream of hu manity on such a pilgrimage and holds them in a tense grip for three days and then sends them away, satisfied ana enthusiastic. First and foremost,' the Round-L'p Is clean, pure sport, and makes its appeal to the thousands who Journey to Pendleton every year to see (hose three primary attractions of, a, frontier exhibition the 'riding of a bucking horse, the roping of wild steer, and the bulldoglng5 of a Texas l.OAghorn." Second, because It Is "not a. money-making "schheme." . but is tag"d - by" a Volunteer' organization paying neither salaries nor dividends and supported-by an. enviable public spirit' ' - . . Conceiving the idea of the Round- Up, a, handful of Pendleton business men formed the Northwestern Front ier Exhibition Association to take charge of the Show. ' This was com posed of tome 250 men who elected six officers, these, with nine directors, comprising the executive board. Shares of $10 each weie sold and but one share to a man. The most careful at tention was- given the first exhibition, the extent to whch details were work, ed out being shown by the fact that the original program is used now with slight change. ' The crowd at this initial performance was almost double what the most enthusiastic had ex pected. Profits of $3,000 on an In rastment of not much ' more sent shares from $10 to $50 ,nd brought an offer from New York theatrical syndicate to buy controlling Interest at that price. Right there, says Mr. rFurlong In his- book, "Pendleton sat . up, "and took notice, and right here the Pendleton spirit manifested Itself." Thf stockholder were asked to give up their stock, give their show to the city and to dig down In their pockets' for an additional $10,000 to buy and build permanent- Round-lTp ground. Any they replied, "Let 'er Duck!" The association continues a corpora tion in name only. Directors, devoting as much time and labor to the Round Up as they do to their own tmslness, serve' without compensation and with out hope of profit. It is an honor in Pendleton, eagerly sought, to be vn the Round-Up board, which, with only a few changes from year to year, con tinues its work of staging the biggest frontier exhibition in the country, backed by every citizen In the com munity. .. Colorado Springs can well take a lea,f from-the book, of Pendleton. What that city of 7,00 can do the Pikes Peak region can do on a larger scale. Its advantages are many; its opportunity great. It remains only to go at the problem in a business-like manner. The effort will bring an extra 100,000 visitors every year. .Every citizen knows what that means,. fHIrtJOT.ESS, SO ENDS LIFE. BERLIN, Sept. 14-He'lnrlcn. Bag gehmaclir, a multi-millionaire, eighty six years of age, who owned numerous factories, mills; breweries and restau rants, throughout tha country has committed suicide. , ; In a letter -which was found on his office desk, Haggenmacher, who was a chlldlem widower, stated that his lonely life had become unbearable. . 28 YEARS AGO -- ll. Ml i ,, , '. ,.t ' 11 ' iwe . i i pi . i a mm i - i ' i 1 a ' "' ' S ; ; 1 i i ' . ' i i ii i r ' pom otf of the bom V.- doris pulls A surprise. v vt mmx; - VOIXIELPME A MtTte-v .... fit. ( A, 1 -.; " 11 ' '.-r. THIS MORNING - I WISH VOUD J ft' j V y. a " I ' '' ' ' ' - WST OFF THE PIANO ff"; qh i'ii, PE 1 j 'MttSM ' h " FORME ? VERY GLAD- 'if 1 " SL "TO HELP' t -' ,iPft f , , :i a A K ; 1 n1 OKt CAN PlAV ANVTHlhlGl JV3T nfHflC. Iri VOW WOULD LIKE! .&HE'i. I MM wilBoR NEVER I Tot-0 U5 ' i i t i OH, WHO 15 THE WONDEGfVL PIAnO PLAtER VOU HAVE VISITING VOW, DLIWIAV . ' SHE 15 ON? OF OUR FAM LV, M?l SAI LEV : it's wRS.waeuR port AVERV FAMOUS ARTIST! r in (From the Daily East Oregoman,' September 14,' 18JJ.X ' .'- V .' A iiiew furnace Is being placed In the M. E. Church. '. . " J. W. Rcheer has purchased frdm"' August Lindcrman a house and several lots near the mill race' for a consld- eratioa. "ef f t AOv. ' i X. . W. R ISye rs left on Monday or Port- land, on business. . ' V. w:.- Tlllard has returned, after-a several months visit in Jlepprier. , . : ., : - , . A ' F. M. Kemper is building.' a new (Uncfc counter . , , ; ? a . l - : ' f -; " - , A frisky colt harnessed to Wllllomi P. Tmpl's buggy' conclude' to run awty an Mr. Temple was driving home lasUnlftht. i Mr. Temple and 'Waltef rsitney were (hown out. each sustain ing a few slight briuses. The buggy landed In the ditch, bndly wrecked. , ; jvvMMli,MlMMMMMMMMMMMMIMMMMj '::TaGoiTect;-i'':' 'Of FacU'biisii. ui$atiir!8. Issue . i 'I ; of East Oregonian. r ai- .'-! '. A local automobile firm'made the statement that they sold, 21 ftew automobiles in the month of July, 1921 in Umatilla Co. ; M ; , 5 : I '.'."..'' ; ' - ' ' ',''' y ' '. This is not true, according to the registration figures of the Automobile Record as published by M. O Wilkins for themonth of July, 1021'. ; . . .''..vrVV-J."-. -:V'7t rY:: We defy any dealer or firm In Umatilla county ' to prove that they sold and deUvered 21' ne Au tomobiles of any makei including Fords. . - . ; " -: ' ',.-'',.:. . ...v 5 r ' , It would be assumed from the Saturday eyen v ing ad aboveVef erred to that there, were sixteen , new Chevrolet automobiles sold and registered v in Umatilla county In the mont of July while y is a matter or fact there was ot a new gne , irolet automobile sold in .the month oi ' iyly:in. , this county. -: ':' , '"'V- ,f'----t'X?:'. , You can draw your own conclusions as to the ', truthfulness and value of thl balance of their ad. 1 "Yours for honest advertising . Oregon Mentor Garage : - U9-121 West Court St. A BCICK AXp CADILLAC APTOMOWLKS . . ; . V f GOODRICH ANI GOODyAR TIRES . ". ' ' V r' ' . ''"jr." Phoni it " ' ; - ' 'l ? i o