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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1922)
- ) - TkCZ TWO DAILY EAST OEEGON1AN. PENDLETON. OEEGOK. WEDNESDAY EVENING, J ANUAEY 25, 1922. EIGHT PAGES J! SAMUEL KALISK1! Todav . and Thursday Todav and. Thursday SHORT LENGTHS OF ALL THE NEW SEASON'S PATTERNS AND WEAVES CAUSED BY BRISK SELLING GOES ON SALE WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY AND CONTINUES WHILE THEY LAST. EACH PIECE HAS BEEN CARE FULLY MEASURED AND RETICKETED. MANY WOMEN WILL FIND MANY REMNANTS IN TllE ASSORTMENT FOII ALL MANNER OF HOME SEWING, WHICH CAN BE PURCHASED AT A MATERIAL REDUCTION. v SEE THE ELABORATE DISPLAY IN OUR SHOW WINDOW. (Co ntisrain : the 5 J Clearance ale We still offer you quantities of good, cold weather wear fron which you can yet enjoy many' days of comfortable service. ' '. , LI and reduced to make a 'JjLaat price that every item is a most inviting one. Y Officials Tell runnyOarns of What They Hear From Van tage Points During Games. BY HENRY L. FARRELL (United I'ress Sua? . Correspondent.) ' if Mk all iMl Depariahent iffy Offers-' iii its' displays all its remaining season's end merchandise. All of that reliable quality featured by Pendleton's Greatest Department Store. v " PENDIETONS greatest department store 3 1 fop Mjrf'fffiq WHERE copies PAYS Warehouse TRADE IT to ulack Mm iian amuck. LAVlt:NCK, Mass., Jan. 25. Black Jos has been granted a reprieve. ' Hlnck Job for sixteen years propelled ' fire rppnralits about this city faith fully. However, having killed one flremnw, crippled two others and se riously Injured more than a, dosseu, the city council felt It Its duty to nounce a death sentence. The sentence would have been car ried out had It not been for Mrs. Hen ry C. Novln, millionaire widow, who raced hero In nn autombbllo just In time to Intercede for tho cqulno of fender. Rho was Riven permission talio Jno to her Mothuen form. 21 VAItllTU-S 'oic SOIL ST. Louis, Jan. 2!. (Pnlted Press) There are twenty-four kinds of soil In Madison County, Illinois, uacordiiiK to a soil test made Ut the state expeii- montal station at" the University of Il linois. The luaps.show a great er part of the land Is desirable, but that sec tions are badly in need of limestone and phosphutq. The rank In fertility Is wide. In one section the soil Is en tirely sand, suitable, only for wnter inekyii, eanteloupes und sweet corn. OXJ3 1IVK COOLED 'EM OFF LORAIN, O., Jan. 25. With the thermometer hovering near aero, Earl Meister, seventeen, and Buster Jen nings, also seventeen, opened the 1922 swimming season with a plunge into Lake Erie. One dive was sufficient to "eool off the lads." Ifi A t . . -1.1 Viv. Children 10c LI Today Adults 35c and Thursday i 50c Tnv Tnf1nrlf4 P VEW YORK. Jan. 25. When two speeding figures crash Into encrf other on the gridiron, go down with a rock ing thJd and come up glaring at each other, the Btands often wonder 'What are they saying to each other?" Through the samo desire to l et "in side stuff that is denied those on the outside, theater f:ms always listen with the greatest Interest to what goes on between the acts and what Movie actors say to keep their lips moving when tney nave no lines. Recuiixe they are the only ones close to play, officials at the big tames are the little private audiences for tho interesting bits of by-play on the grw iron and the diamond. Several interesting stories are told bv offlfials of happenings during the big football games last fait Stan Keck, captain of the I'rinceton football team and All-American lacKie of 1S2o was out in the middlewest last summer and someone told him he would have a Job when he faced Char ley McGuire, star tackle of the Chica go team. According to the story. Keck said: "Ho may be a siar out here, Wit he wouldn't last five minutes in the east." Xo one who knows Keck believes he ever made such a statement, but it is told nevertheless and It add. greater interest to the story told of the meet ing between Keck and McG'uire in the Princeton-Chicago game. , Keck and McGuire were playing op posite each other. To every one s sur prise, Quarterback Romney shot the first of Chicago's assault a at Keck and (he play 'went through. Several more gains were made through the I'rince ton star. Keck finally was taken ivX out on a particularly nnrn hiniikh wlW'n they lined up again, Mcflulre miM to h:.m: "You'd better get on your toes and ninvr hnH or the coach'll send Keck in." i Another one has to do with the Yale-Harvard game. ' Buell got away for his sensat onal SU yara run unu was thrown by O'Hearn with terrmc force on Yale's 15-yard line. The em pire rushed to the prostrate pair anu leaned over Huell with: "Are vou hurt? How do you feel . ISuell looked up and with wha'. little breath was left replied: ' " "I'm not hurt, just d disappointed-?" - Ralph Gtlroy, Princeton's brilliant defensive back and captain-elect of the 1922 eleven, has the reputation of belnir one of tho toughest players In the game. In every hard tackle, un der every line smash, he t.hvays comes Ul). . Tho midshipmen from Annapous play hard football. In the Princeton Xnvv s-iime Gilroy charged mio one uf the Middv backs, brought mm aown and came up with a pretty sjner under his eye. The refcre"e gave the eye the once over and yelled "Time out, Prince ton." Gilroy moving back tohla position retorted: ' "Time out, hell! This is your party! Let's go!" Vim, Vigor, Vitality ' and Red Blood FOLLOW THIS ADVICE Lob Anso'-es, Csl. "T will g'ady tell of the relief Dr. Picrc"s GolCea Medical Discoveiy gave inc. 1 "row eick with troubles of stomach, liver, , etc., and La Grippe itti all ita ttt tendiug ailments. When all else faiied Dr. Pierce's Goldea Medical Discovery did the good work. I also took Dr. Pierce's Tieasant Pel lets for biliousness, witU grand suc cess. I write with gratitude to tell others ol the relief that Is in store for them. Do not delay but hasten to get the above mentioned reme dies if suffering from similar indis position." Samuel Kalisky, 978 Euclid Ave. ' Obtain this "Discovery. of Dr. Pierce's in tablets or liquid at your nearest drug store and you'll quick ly find that it builds you up, beside correcting your distress. , Write Dr. Pierce's Invalids Hotel Buffalo, N. Y, for free medical ad vice. Send 10c for trial pkg. tablets. ncter; on the other, the strong lum berman, whose hard life with men had estranged him from the tenderness of women. The inevitable girl comes -between them, and the result is a startl ingly powerful melodrama. As In Mr. Lloyd's previous (jOiawyn pictures, "The S.lver Horde,: Aiau- ame X," "The Grim Uumeuian, a Voice in the Park." and many others, tho director has achieved several dis tinctive touches in his handling of tho action of groups and massing his characters to suggest the mental atll tlude of the minor persons In the story. Particularly this effect Is obv, Inlned by never permitting the main characters to be long absent from tha screen. The story i thus unified and the interest maintained throughout. "The .Man From Inst River" will be shown at the nivoli Theatre for two days, beginning today. Gensel at the Organ sasra Classic of the North Woods. HOUSE PETERS FRITZI BURNETT ALLEN FORREST In ' r PATHE NEWS MONKEY ; -COMEDY WITH 1 'SN00KEY' A GOLDWYN PICTURE BY THE AUTHOR "THE BRANDING IRON." OF s!'.rin-T of a coon disposition A woman who carefully safeguards her health benefits her disposition: She will be happy and attractive to all. The world unfortunately is filled with sweet women 'who are unhappy be cause they are held back from useful ness by troubles so common among them. Fret fulness and nervousnesj rapidly destroy good dispositions, , Sickly, nll-worn-ont women cunnot make happy homes. , Lydla K. 1,'inkham's Vetfefa'bie Co'm-" pound is a safeguard of women's heu'lth. This Is clearly proven by the many PMters wo are continually pub lishing In this paper, from women who have been restored to health and happiness by Its use after years of suf fering. Why don't you try it? IM'ltK AMBElt DISCOVERED VAXCOVVKU, B. C, Jan. 25. (U. p.1 What was considered worthless dross In the mines of the Coalmont collieries at Nicola, B. C, has been liVcovercd to be pure amber, accord ing to n, dlvpntch from that part of the country. The deposit is said to be the first amber deposit ever found on the North American continent. The dis covery Is credited to R. C. Oliver, a field chemist. Large quantities of the amber are said to be in sight. MOTION PICTURE NEWS - . A swirling, eddying drama of life enacted within the sound of ringing axes, falling timber and rushing water. , The story of a brawny, hard-fisted giant of the lum ber camps, who laid his heart on the altar of love. F, ? ' 'J-'siS V$kL A tale of romance and thrilling adventure in the , . - ... v - shadow of forest giants, " v ' : , - 4M WW AltCADE TODAY The Arcade Theatre feels honored to be alii-to present "Hurricane Hutch" to Its patrons, ns it is some thing entirely new and distinctive in tho continued form of cinema enter tainment. In spite of its thrills, Its tensity, its swift action, it Is not a ser ial of the blood and thunder type. There is no shooting or knifing from the first to the fifteenth episode. Mothers can feel perfectly safe in bringing their kiddies, or letting them .erne by themselves. The first episode introduces a silver lace scarf, in which is woven, in a sec ret code, the biding place of a formula for making white paper from seaweed of which there is an inexhaustible sup ply. Only two people cun read the code. This chapter also discloses a plot to obtain possession of the paper mill of Nancy Kellog, whose ever ready champion is the fearless Larry Hutchdaic, known as "Hurricane Hutch." T5IVOII TODAY FRANK I.UYD WUECTS ANOTHKIt POWER Fill DRAMA Frank Lloyd, whose productions, for Goldwyn have earned .Individual praise for the excellence of their di rection, has made from a story by Kutherino Newlin Burt one of the most Impressive dramas of western life that has ever been achieved. "The Man From Lost River," a Gold wyn picture. Is far removed from the false pictures labelled "western." It is not a slapped-together tale of u troupe of cowboys whooping about a ranch, o pursuing a villain. Mr. Lloyd had a genuine story of char acter conflict to present. On the one hand was the rich man's nephew charming of person, but weak in char TODAY Children 56 ' Adults 20c A NEW SERIAL STARTS TODAY V'. V.vV 8 U FT- HraiUrhea from Slight Colds Laxative BHOMO OUIN'IXE Tablets re- Hove tne Heaaacne or curing the Cold A tonic laxative and germ destroyer. The genuine bears tha signature of E. w. Grova. (B sura you Ket EROMO.) Gharles -? Hutchison s T THiti-A MmuTi Stumi Kmc HURRICANE HUTCH A Serial of lightning-action-ed thrills. Clean, speedy, and nerve, gripping, WINNERS OF THE WEST With ART ACORD '" COMEDY AROUND CORNERS' too, , . . . . . J' 1