East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, October 21, 1921, DAILY EDITION, SECTION TWO, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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    READ THE EAST OREGOMAN SPORT PAGE AND RECEIVE THE NEWS THAT IS FURNISHED BY THREE SERVICES, A. P., U. P. 'AND L N. S.
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'e&onia
TEN PAGES
SECTION TWO
PAGES 7 TO 1C
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SECTION TWO
PAGES 7 TO 10
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DAILY EAST OREQONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY EVENING, OCTOBER , 21, mi.
II I ' " S ffWM NLBMILLMI VT"1 Tfc .n 1H
'
THERE'LL BE SOME SNAPPY FOOTBALL SATURDAY
- t
Enterprise . is ; Expected
GiTe Real Battle; P. H.
Second Team vs. Hermiston.
Pendleton footliall fans will have an
opportunity of seeing a real melee Sat
urday afternoon at llouiij-Up park
when Pendleton tends her hopefuls
against the crack Enterprise football
aggregation. "Coach. Dick Jlanlcy la
anticipating a tough battle and is pre
dicting anything but, an easy victory
for the' local fighters, fur various rea
sons.' .A
In the first place, -by comparative
scores Enterprise hasSone of the snap
piest teams In Eastern Oregon. They
held La Grande to a 7 to 0 score early
In the season after 1-4 Grande had
trounced the X'nion grldders to the
tune of 65 to 0. Up to that time Union
was Reported, to be represented this
year by a very strong team.- '
The next cause of dismay from a
reiidlcton standpoint is the fact that
Pendleton will enter the game without
the services of Clayton Hogcrs, 17j
pound powerful tackle, who Is Ineligi
ble to play this game on account of
being down slightly in some of his
grade;. This cuts down Pendleton's
average weight and the team which
lines up for the whistle Saturday will
not average more than 146 pounds to
the man.
As a ruttain raiser to the main
event. Pendleton will send her second
team against Hermlston high school.
This game will be a fight from start to
finish as Hermiston has defeated u
number of teams this year and is con
fident of walking oft with Pendleton's I
second team s scalp. Hanley has a
lot of good materia! on tho second
team which will be seen for the first
timo this year In action and it will lc
worth the price .of admission alone
to his list of substitutes.
The Ilermiston-Pcndloton game will
be played at 2:30 p. m. sharp" with 10
or 12 minute quarters if it can be ar
ranged satisfactorily. The main go
will commence then about 3:30 thus
. permitting both games' to be over be
fore and ghost .balls need lie brought
out. . t
Tho line up for the Pendleton team
against Enterprise will probably be:
Snyder, u E.; Fordyce. L. T.; Stone
braker, L fj.; Lawrence, C; Ernhart
or Pyers. It. O.: P. Kramer. It. T. :
Adkinson or Holmgren. It. E-; Cahill.
Quarterback; W. Kramer, t'npt., K
II.; Ilayden, It. If.; Newtson. fulllnek.
The Pendlclun second team which
will do bottle with HeriiiMon will
probably be Saunders or Morton. 1..
E.; Minnis or Molstrmii. I.. T.; Ilar
rah, I.. :.; Ijitnc. Center; Pyers or
Crawford, ft. G.: Warner, li. T.; Me
Culley. n. E.; Meflee, tpiarterback;
Vaughn, l If.; Temple or WhUeman,
It. II., and Ulliettc or Uyers. Fullback.
IE
(East Orcgoninn Special
GI'RnAN'E.. Oct. si. A strange
man who was herding the Farley
sheep on the Charles Ely ranch at this
place accidentally shot himself Tues
day morning shortly after turning h's
sheep oi t. The coroner was called
froin Pendleton where the body wag
taken la'cr.
Mrs. Decker and two boys who have
ben boarding at the Due AVymore
home moved to the Hack place where
he will keep house this winter. Mrs.
Decker Is the teacher at the Gurdanc
school. , . . . ,
Joe Pedro made a business trip to
Pilot Rock Tuesday.
QUALITY
SERVICE SANITATION
Saturday Specials
Boiling Beef, 5 lbs. 25c, sold in 5 lb. lots only. !
, i Stew Beef, 5 lbs. 25c, sold in 5 lb. lots only.
Beef Pot Roast...... 12 l-2c Clioice Steak;. 20c
Cross Rib Roast 15c Round Steak . 25c
Fresh Red Meatcd Salmon, 8 lbs. $1.00
Large Fat Hens, Spring Fries, Baking and Roasting Qiickens.
- v Fat Milk Fed Veal, Young, Ten der Pig Pork.
Applt
Celery i
SPECIALS
Weston Potatoes $2.00 sack; 10 sack lots, per sack $1.85
1
Ips all varieties, per box. $1.00
rj 2 bunches for . i ............. . ; 25c
Sweet Potatoes, Cauliflower, Brussel Sprouts, Turnips, Cab
bage, Carrots, Lettuce, Radishes? Tomatoes, Cucumbers, Celery
grapes, Grapp Fruit. '
STRAINED HONEY, 13 lb. cau for
PENDLETON
TRADING CO.
If it's on the market we have it
$2.25
Princeton -Chisago Game is
One of Big Features; Pcnn
and Harvard Will Battle.
Uy HKNItY I.. FAllllKlJ, ,
(I'nited Tress Staff Correspondent!
NEW Yt'l'.K, Oct. 21. What' a
football menu for tomorrow!
Fossessed of seven or eight person
alitbs that might flit hither and
thither over the gridiron may. the fun
mirht not make a mistake in his
choice of a game.
Look at the list:
Chicago and Princeton, Tcnn Stale
and Harvard. Army and Yule, Syra
cuse and ruisiiurgn, umo siam aim
Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois.
Notre l'ame and Nebraska, and Cali
fornia and Oregon.
The feature battle of this first de
luxe Saturday of the season is the big
Intersections) match at Princeton be
tween Chicago one of the leaders of
the Western Conference, and Hill ltop
cr's Nassau Tigers. Prtucton has a
team that should win the eastern
championship this year, and for the
first time the middlewest will have a
chauco to compare one of its greatest
with perhaps the greatest In tho cast.
From a purely martial standpoint,
the real fight or the day will be bo
ween I'enn Stale and Harvard lu the
Cambridge stadium. I'enn tflate lias
been yearning for years to get u game
with one of the "liig Three," and the
championship of the cast may Illusi
on tills battle, as lingo lcsdck has
mother one of his great elevens.
For the first time in history, the
Cadets will get away from the West
Point plains for a game oilier than
with the Navy when Coach Charley
Haley's soldiers Journey to New Haven
to meet Yale. The I'iiilcts have the
makings or one of tho strongest teams
In the east nhd tho chance for the
soldiers lo add tin elite sculp to their
belt is very bright.
Syracuse and l'lltsbiirgh arc tradi
tional battlers and the game Is bound
to -bring out tho host in each I cam.
Ohio Slate, after being ricl'ealeil by
Olieilln, an Ohio conference eleven, is
not thrilled over the prospect of meet-
Ine Michigan. . The other big buttle of
the western conference between Wis
consin and Illinois should be one of
the best games of the day. '
l -.J v . vr 2 -
t . r Vl J
. CilM!
1 r
To the Workers
of Oregon
By Otto R.rHartwig
President, Orefjon State Federation
of Labor
DURING these days of reconstruction and
uncertainties, it becomes more than ever
necessary for the citizens of Oregon to patronize
the industries of Oregon by buying such prod
uct as. are made in this state.
Industries of Oregon cannot be expected to
grow and furnish continuous satisfactory em
ployment to the workers of Oregon if we spend
mir money fur pr-odatt iiinufnctuted due- .
where. .
It is a well known fact that on the whok-Ore-gon
workers are receiv.ug better wages and
working under more satisfactory conditions
than is true of the workers in many ' of tha
eastern centers where a good deal of the prod
ucts that the careless purchaser buys comes
from. It is the height of atlTidily and selfish
ness to demand decent wwl.it-.s conditions
from the Orct'on einp'oytrs and then turn
around and use the money earned, in Oregon
to buy products made under sweat-shop condi
tions that exist in many of the eastern and mid
dle states.
Let's buy Oregon Products I
ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES
OF OREGON
701 OREGON BUILDINO
PORTLAND
INMIANAP01JK, Oct. 21 (t. N. H.)
plpnly of liiimr is lo be had in In
dianapolis if the consumer is not
particular about quality, it ia estimat
ed there are C.U0 bootleggers In the
city peddling the product of Ilttfil
stiilH. Drunkenness lias not decreased
since Indiana went "dry" in 1917
and til" Stale's prohibition laws arc
more slrinaent Ihun the Kederiil aels -if
figures from periods In the years
1917 and 1H21 may be accepted as an
average, (me thousand unrt ninety
four arrests for IntoxleHtion were
made here from January I to Septeui'
herS'J, this' yeur, an'iiveraBC of 121
month. During tho ninety-day perioi.
'preceding ,th closing of the su loops,
In 1817. tho uveruge was 1"H a Jnoilth,
Kew Intoxicated persons are seen
downtown, however. Most arrests are
made in the foreign and negro guar-
teis. ' :
"Anybody" can buy wine or ''corn
lidiior" In the foreign uuurter, but at
most "dry" beer saloons where boot
leg whiskey is dispensed an "introduc
tion" expedites the sule.
Su plentiful is the supply of moon
shine, which sells at about tu a quart,
I and bonded si off, which is quoted at
$l; from the hip, that the police navt
virtuully Ignored the Infant Indimtrj
of home brewing of beer, which also li
in "bad odor."
CHASUU SYSod HOl'NDMUKS
ST. CLAllvSviu.i:, Oet. 31. (I. N
H. ) The Ohio synod of Hie t'nlted
Presbyterian Church, which Just con
cluded Us sessions here, voted In favor
of Hsklng the Oeiier.il Assembly which
meets In Cambridge next May lo
change the boundaries of the synod to
conform to tho limits of Ohio. At
present, Pennsylvania, Michigan mid
West Virginia churches are Included.
PRINCIPALS IN HORSEWHIPPING..
DR. LYNN K. BLAKESLEE
Chronic and Nervous Diseases an
Diseases of Women, X-Ray Electrl'
Therapeutics.
I TAT
THE UNIVERSAL CAB
The Ford Sedan h the favorite, family car,
seats five comfortably. While an enclosed car
with permanent top, it has large windows, and
may in a minute be changed to a most delight
ful open car with always a top protecting
pgairtst the sun. In inclement weather it is a
Hosed car, dust-proof, water-proof,, cold-proof.
Finely upholstered. Equipped with electric
starting and lighting system and demountable
rims with 3-'nch tires frontandrear. A real
family car. Won't you come in and look at it.
. ' Tk eliahrs of the electric
car with the economy of the
I: I
SIMPSON AUTO CO.
Plwue 08 Water and Johnson St.
E
Tmp Bld.
Room II
Phoos 411
gillie
aaos Srup aq)
aaos "Siup aq
il .. v. . -
k i I'M :
SOMETHING NEW
We have Just received the mos bcatitlful design and pattern In
Ivory, Just what you have always lookeij for and wanted, a very neat
edge of blue on every article. When engraved the, blue Is seen In I ths
background. Hmk in our windows, you will i ee a small
. ., i.,.1ir,,i ivnrv. The nrice Is no more than' the old. style Ivory
which everyone lias. Uo one of the first lo be up to date.
ful Xmus gift.
A wonder
i
AT Til l! IIOM.K or GUTS THAT LAST
HOTWI; PENDIiliTON UlXJCK
rENDJETON, ORBOOIf
i tu.. r.i.1:. I. is iifiniitlcd Mrs. ('.Gorge Thomas, a wealthy
i - ..t u ,.f :,u,iilt u ii.l tiHtt. iv broiiKtu by Hllli Dallev, a
...R.,i...... - - ,....,. .u...-.,..
.t:. M.i,r. h,i-co,i tiitit Mrs. i icorue lnomuu anu i.nn. wivmo
lured her to a secluded spot where they tied her to a tree, d.srobd her find
horsewhipped her. Ilillle Dulley la shown above (right) with Mlsa Irone Wella.
a chum, who took the stand as a state's witness. Below, left to right, are
Mrs. Orvllle Thomas and Mrs. George Thomas,
rasTraitBffi
of Pendleton
MEMBER
Offprs n unexcelled banking service to in
dividual and corporations; transacts a
general banking business maintains
Bpecial departments with f&abties of the
highestcharacter,
PENDLETON, OREGON
t 1