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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1922)
READ THE EAST! OREGONLVN SPORT PAGE AKD RECEIVE THE NEWS THAT IS FURNISHED BX THREE SERVICES, X P., U. P. 'AND L TEN PAGES SECTION TWO PAGES 7 TO 10 DAILY EAST OREGON1AN, PENDLETON. OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 16, 1922. 1 I j T 3 'MT X TEN PAGES i iTEilMwfi'sAonisiTO . section J 1 r " Wsd?iSyWW!0 HMBcy"y PAGES 7 TO 10 J S i - LIVE SPORTING NEWS RE E SPOKAXE. Wash., May 11. Golf , In Spokans this ytir boasts ' SS 'per cent mora converts than last year, fr-ith the immediate result that two of the three greens of the city are be ing; standardised, and the third length ened, at an aggregate cost of nearly 130,000 for land and improvements.. Golfers of the Manito Golf club - have given up the nine-hole green , leased by them for a number of years, and have bought a new green site at a cost of $21,000. Work of building the links is already in progress. Play on- the first nine will start probably sometime In July, and the second nine will be finished In time for the 12S season, . . Ground for an additional nine holes I on the Downriver municipal links has 'been purchased by the park board for 18,500. The second nine, completing the 18-hole standard course, will be : finished by December 1. 1923. Local golfers contributed $2500 of the pur- . chase price as a community gift, the board not being able to include the . first payment on the land In this year's , budget The upper nine - of . the Spokane , 'Country club course is being-lengthened about S00 yards. The course al ready was standard, but the increased ' distance is expected to help Improve the play. y ,s Plans are being made for organiza tion of women golfers on the munici pal course. ; , ' Woodring Is Fastest Man In The World E BY HENRY L. FARRELL , ' j PORTLAND. Ore.. May IS. Track (Cntted Press Staff Correspondent.) and field sturs of the Pacific North ., .. 'west will have an opportunity to cou- NEtt YORK May Vhik i t(.nd for cw nonon at th(J anllua, sprint records and field marks have , rac,f,0 Northwest track and field been consistently shattered In the past championships to be staged here bv two years, the quarter-mile record ofithe Multnomah Amateur Athleti'e Coiiimvrclaf League Standings Peoples Whse 2 0 i.000 Klils-Schlllor 3 0 1.000 Woolen Mills ..... 21 .66T Troy Laundry .... 0 2 .000 East Oregonlan ... 0 S .000 Yesterday's Result Fendlntqn Woolen Stills lti, East Oregonian.2. 47 4-0 seconds made by the great Tea Meredith In IMS is one of the few that have remained beyond the reach of the present day super-stars. club June 8. as the athletic feature of the Portland Rose festival. The event will be an open meet. Individual athletes holding member ship in the American Amateur Ath letic -union will be eligible without representing any club or school. In vitations have been extended stars f-om the University of Washing, Washington State College. University of Idaho, University of Oregon and Not excepting Charley Paddock, the j ' gon Agricultural College. erne Windnagle, former Cornell distance man. now chairman mid coach of track ut Multnomah !ub here, has been placed in general charge of arrangements for "tho meet. How long Meredith will remain us the fastest man of all times at 440 yards seem to be up to the willing ness of Allen Woodring, of Syracuse University, the Olympic 2U0 meters champion, to go out for it. Pacific Coast flyer. Woodring has been regarded as the fastest man in the werld today at 220 yards, but ow ing to his rather slight build he hud not been considered a record-makins possibility at a quarter-mlie until .the Pcnn relay games recently. Running as anchor man for Syra cuse in the one-mile college relay championship, Woodring got away seven yards behind Bill StevcnBon, Princeton captain and the national quarter-mile champion, Woodring ran him off his feet and won the race I after doing a quarter in the unorriciul i time of 47 4-5 equalling the world's record. Considering the fact that the timers all caught him the same and that the event was run lute In the afternoon, when the track was chopped to pieces by two days of incessant pounding and cutting, the performance was phenom enal. If he maintains the form he hud in that ruce, there is little doubt that Woodring will be able to make a new record for the quarter on the Har vard track in June, if he goes out for that event in the intercollegiate championships. 3000 Htnws of Softd Comjjottr Your legs are the two best reasons for wearing . PARIS Garters. You can be sure oi 300O " hours oi trim socks and happy legs for 35 cents if you say PARIS when you nest buy Garters. pmS MRTERS NO METAL CAN TOUCH YOU Paris Garters work for you lb hours a day A STEIN & COMPANY P M : 1 ; 'si 1 lac 3D 4-VV -4 QUALITY SERVICE SANITATION WARM DAYS CALL FOR COLD MEATS You will find every known cold meat here. Nice for luncheons, dinners or picnics.. You should keep some on hand at all times not only as a lux ury but for convenience. Pendleton Trading Company i Phone 455 The Sign of Service Pi "If It's On the Market We Have It" OFFERED AT SHOOT SACRAMENTO. Calif.. May 16. IA. P.) More than $3,000 in prize money hus been offered winners in the Cullfornlu-Xevada trap shoot In Sacramento Majv 23-28, during tho "Days of '4" celebration. Invita tions have beVn sent sportsmen in all Parts of tho Coast and from reserva tions already received it is thought the event, will be the greatest of Its kind ever held on tho coast. In addition to money prizes,1 a $20,0 diamond medul, a lion's skin and u tlOO puppy, as well rb a long list of novel prizes, have been offered. George Wlngfleld, of Keno, and Al den Anderson, Sacramento, are sinong prominent trupshooters who will participate. He-Flappers Are Not a Trick Photograph 1 p wh Fit- YJiS i;! The Fish Are Biting And right here is where you ' want to come so that you may me an even match for them. My fishing equipment is complete, and what's more, effective. They're thf. one the "old timers" are using and will use, because they're built for FIQHT. , SOL BAUM "LOOK FOR THE FISH" Phone 656 Hotel Pendleton Building 1 I You might think this double exnosure nhotoersnhv . hut it' i.n Scrambled twins Lawrencs Blockstock, Winston Doty, tester Block stock and Westos IJoty Just two of ths nine pair that iCtmd oci school in Los Angtisa. ' . lmb Feeding ITofltrtblc ' Lamb feeding experiments conduct ed for two seasons at the Eastern Ore gon branch stutiun by Robert W hlthy combe, and reported by H. A.. Und gren, extension specialist In livestock, were not only highly profitable but they shed light on the problem of what constitute a proper ration for fattening lambs. The summary of the results as they apply to the food are lis follows: . 1 . ,, 1. Alfalfa hay and burlcy constltuta a very satisfactory ration for fatten ing lambs. . , S. ' Ijumbs fattened on alfalfa hay with and without silage made satisfac tory gains und whila the slluro in creased the- gains slightly the advis ability of Its use in the fattening ration must be determined by the cost per Ion to produce It. Uimbs in.the feeding tests this year returned a clour profit of $6 a head The spread in prices between leoders . 1- , and finished lambs however, was larg er than normal, the price of lambs having doubled ths feeding time. O. , A. C, Experiment station. FOR SlJOMfr Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Just What You Need Don't worry about Eczema or other akin troubles. You can have a clear, healthy skin by using Zemo obtained at any drug store for 35c, or extra larg bottle al $1.00. . , Zemo generally removea Pimples, Dlackheads,Blotche, Eczema andRm worm and makes the akin clear and r healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating, antiseptic liquid. It la easily applied ' and costs a mere trifle for each applies- t tion. It is always dependable. . , DC 30 Bigger Yields on Fordson Farms THE big yields Fordson farmers enjoy are the envy of the community. The only reason other folks don't get at . many bushels is because they don't work the land so well. Plow and disc and culti-pack without delay. That's what makes the perfect seed bed that brings big yields. Every farmer knows that is the thing to do, but those who farm with horses can't seem to find the time. t. ' s' ' . The difference is all due to one simple thing; the man who uses a Fordson Tractor and an Oliver No.' 7 Plow will plow seven or eight acres while his neighbor is plowing two acres with a team.' The Fordson farmed land can be plowed at just the right time. Over 200,000 Fordsod Farmers Use Oliver Tillage Implements) - London's Latesti "' BY WILLIAM M.' SWEETS (United Press Stuff Correspondent.)! LONDON, Muy 10. London 'hus'j discovered the hc-flupper, A trouseN j oil but no othorwise over-masculine' prototype of the American flapper hus I k sprung up in large numbers. Cartoons and conversations dwell upon the lutest link. Male vumpps of tender years arc making miserable the lives of film producers. Each thinks his plastered locks destined to glisten on the cellu loid screen. And aren't theso youths, persistent, though? Simply won't take ho for an answer. These he-shifters are not to bo con fuBed with the Nut. The Nut is an old established British tradition,' like Nel son's telescope or torslng the pancake at Westminister College. . He Is the young im .who sets the fashion ana follows it assiduously. lie Is the one excuse for tho supersltlton that. Eng lishmen are weldresBed. The he-flapper is of a different category. He ' Is stage-struck and makes lounge lizards soem hard work ing business men by comparison. The he-flapper runs to: Sandals. ' ' , Long, sometimes Jewelled, cigarette I Sport shirts with string ties. Purple vclour hats. , Absinthe and vermouth at Regent street cafes. Wide colored scurfes about the waist instead of 'braeeH" or a belt. The pest Is most prevalent in Lon don's West End, but out in the sub urbs the police unearthed n sort of trolnlng school for he-flappers. Head- liiarters of a bund of boys, sworn toij secrecy, and pledged to preform one IT "exotic" deed a duy was raided, and! 5 Homn sound snankintf administered. ? . ?yr-:--r.'. V Simpson Auto Co. FORD AM) IX)RDSO.X IITTHOIUZBD SALES AXO 6RTICE Fbone t9 Fcadclton, Ore. otw iriac ii Is Mere sua N4) This store for men is acknowledged headquarters for , Hats of , all types at prices thai will please your purse : , 4 . ( Sailors are the right style this year in Senits and Rough Braids with soft innerbands t fit every head. Sailors $3 to $ 7- 1 V Waistline at Hips cotiI?oAi V i 1 a i I, "sliij.ij l The waist line seems to havt sat ' tied at the hips and is secured then by means of ths Ue-on bkniat so popular for sport tbl aummer. i 1 i i ASK TO SEE BOND CL0THE$-$17J1, $23, $25, $30 TO $50. IT WILL BE A PLEASURE FOR OUR SALESMEN TO SHOW THEM. li III Vassar Athletic Union Suits $1.00 and up ALSO MUNSING AND MANHATTAN. New Cloth Hats and Caps ALL COLORS TO MATCH SUITS $1.50 to $3.50 BOND BROS, PENDLETON'S LEADING CLOTHIERS t