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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1922)
READ THE EAST OREGOxNTAN SPORT PAGE AND RECEIVE THE NEWS THAT IS FURNISHED BY THREE SERVICES. A. P U. P. AND I. N. S. , JEN PAGES' SECTION TWO PAGES 7 TO 10 TEN PAGES SECTION TWO PAGES 7 TO 10 re&onian DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 2, i922. rggJFyr:.K - LiyE SPORTING N E WSj mnri n m n not IV GOLFERS WILL HAVE CHICAGO LABOR UNION OPENS ITS OWN BANK 1.. OPEN WiNTER SPORTS HILO, Island of Hawaii T. H., Jane 2. One more modern innova tion golf has invaded the sacred regions on this island which compose he kingdom of "Madame Pole," Ha waiian goddess whose .. fabled resi dence is in the crater of Kllauea vol cano, for a nine-hole course near the crater has been opened. Considerable difficulty was encount ered in laying out the. lings, as hun dreds of pukus or lava, holes had to be covered with 4 thick wire netting to- prevent" balls frpm falling into the crevices. Now and then golfers may bo startled to see a. cloud of steam arising from these holes or vents but the danger is negligible, unless Madam Pelo becomes enraged at the latest molestation of her domains and causes the lava of Halemaumau (The House of Everlasting Fire) to bverflow, vol can'ologists said. CHICAGO, June 2. Chicago has set the pace, in the expansion of the I trades unions co-operative movement! into the banking field. The Amalgamated Bank & Trust j Company, which is the product of the J Amalgamated Clothing Workers o America, soon will open its doors to some 40,00(1 members of the orgari- zatlon in this city. It will have o-i capitalization of $200,000 and a sur-j plue of $100,000. j In addition to handling the funds i nf mn,Q thnn 100 Incnta in fhlfnBrt. ! th u.iti h. th nhiof rtonnsitnrv! have visited' many renowned for the national organization funds. resort say there are finer and longer The national body has a membership! national toboggan slides hack in ben of 150 000 " I ti'nd Itoi k than anywhere else in the Sidney Hillman. president of the I world. Unilding of the "dream" rail National Union Bank here; " V. O.J road will make these toboggan slides York, and Peter and aiso plenty ov uiner snuv infu sible from the valley floor, j ne trans . YOSEMITF, I.aDOE, Cul., June 2. ( p.j a plan for popularizing win ter sports Is being formulated by Yosemite National Park company. Officials are looking far ahead and see in the future a railroad up from the valley floor to Glacier Point. This will necessitate extensive tunnels to avoid the snow slides of winter. Those who winter Mm en;: h-V L $Mst S. S. S. Thoroughly Rid tha Body of Rheumatiim Impurities, Hftw florlona yon will feel, mother, tt-hen your rheiumit ism lit oil (tone. J.t P. S. S. da it. It will build you op. toot Somebody's mother Is suffrlng "to nlnhtt The scourge of rheumatism has wrecked her body; limping and sui'fei-iiig, bent forward, she sees but tit common ground, but her aged, heart still belongs to the stars! Doea anybody care?. S. S. S. Is one of tha greatest blood-purifiers known, and it . helps build more blood cells. Its med icinal Ingredients are purely vegeta ble. It never disarranges the stomach. It is, in fact, a splendid tonic, a blood maker, a blood enricber. It banishes rheumatism fiom joints, muscles and the entire body. It builds firm flesh. It is what somebody's mother needs tonight! Mother, if you can not go out to get a bottle of K. S. S. yourself, eurelv somebody in your family will. Somebody, get a bottle of S. S. S. now I Let somebody's mother begin to feel ; Joyful again tonight. Maybe, maybe it's your mothoj'i S. 8. S. is sold at all drug stores, In two sizes. The larger size is the more economical. Thompson, of New Slssmnn, of, Chicago, will be among i the bank's directors. I nndii'oacls to Glacier Point n re closed by snow during the winter months. : HAS SIAMKSK-TWIN' Kfi , CAMBRIDGE, Ohio, Vunc 2, Wil liam Hardy has a Siamese-twin egg. It was laid -by one of his Bflfrred Plymouth Hock hens. ; It consists of two eggs, varying in size, attached by Albert Fuhrer, an Inmnto of the state training school for boys, escap ed from the instltptlon Wednesday. He Is 15 years old and was committed to the school from Portland. 31 QUALITY SERVICE SANITATION Money Saving Specials for Saturday Country Lard in No. 10 cans , each . :. . .... . . . ... $1-75 BABY BEEF Baby Beef Stew ...... 10c vauy ucci uuu ...... nv on Baby Beef Roast . . . . . 18c Veal Roast ..y.. ...... 20c PRIME VEAL Veal Stew ........ 12 l-2c Baby Beef Shoulder Veal Steak ..22c Steak . . . . . . . . . . . . 20c vl T.nin 32c STRAWBERRIES AND GOOSEBERRIES ' Strictly fancy Milton and Kennewick Berries and lots of them, Califor nia Canteloupes. ' ' i Spuds, sack . $1.15 Green Peas, 2 pounds . . . C. W. Soap, 20 bars ......... $1.00 New Spuds, 2 pounds ... . Peaches, large tin r 25c Flour, sack Apricots, large tin 25c Lettuce, 3 heads ... 25c ... 25c . . $1.80 . . . 25c Carrots, Turnips, Beets, Tomatoes, Cucumbers, Radishes, Onions, Aspara gus, Green Beans. , 1 PENDLETON TRADING CO. If it's on the market we have it The Sign of Service In order to better accomodate Ford owners we have extended our closing hours. In the future we will be open fiora 7 A.M.TOllP.M. You win like our new storage service. Drop in and make arrangements, whether for a day or by the month. Simpson Auto Co. ford avt ixmnsox , a rroo ri7.fi salks ajtd witick OUR TAXI CABS insured agrainst personal accident. Whv ride In others? Parker Taxi Co. 11 It W. Court I'lione 70 All Who Wear Glasses and All Who Don't Want ' to Wear Glasses SEE US AT ONCE THE EYKK must he protected from the heavy glare of the electric liltht.1 Th- Sunlit nd Daylito Vnlts will ftirpriw yon. They all say: Who would believe it without weine tt themselves? Fo muh more littht where you nr-ii it at the name cost and every color in the room o beautiful. We are Proving the Merits Every Day AVs Illuminating Store WAnr.rvs ni sk; norsr: MIM Main St. r.Ai:i. . iom: STANWN6S ConnnonHitl lA-aS'iie Stanrtliias , . .. . - Y, 1.. :S"'7 Peoples Whse. 6 1 .857 Troy Laundry . . i .' 3 East Orcsnnlan .....3 4 .429- Woolen -Mills ..,.v-3 .37 5 "t Ellis-Schillor 3 5 .375 Yeslcnluy's Itcnult Peoples Warehouse 5, Ellis- Schiller 1. Today's Game . -Troy L.aunury Vs, East lire- Ronton. Pacific; ("oast. liCasuo Standlints AV. 1.. Pet. Vernon 32 HI .1104 . Los Angeles ..... . 32 . 27 .542 San Francisco .. 31 27 .534 Portland , ..' 28 2B .519 Oakland ......... 2S 32 .467 Seattle .......... 26 31 -.456 '. Suit Lake ....... 24 23 .453 Sacramento . 25 33 .431 . . Yesterday's Results At Portland 6, Sacramento 5, (13 innincs. ) . . At Los Angeles 3, Vernon . At San Francisco 4, Oakland 3. t At Seattle ,8, Salt Lake 12. I, 4 ' j Asks Liberal Care j for Ex-Soldiers ECHO BALL TEAM IS CHALLENGED BY HELIX 1 A challenge has hoeh Issued by the ; Helix baseball club for a return game with KehoMo be played at Hound-Up park. Following is the challenge: Helix, Oregon, , ' May 31, 1922. To the Manager of the , Echo Kasehali Club, Reho, Oregon. ' Dear Sir: ,' . We, the Helix Baseball Club hereby challenge your club for a game of Baseball to be played at Pendleton, Oregon, on any day between .the 1st. and 8th. day of June, inclusive, upon the following terms and conditions: . Winning team to take all gate re ceipts, less expense of Umpires, balls, and ground rent It any. Each club shall post the sum of $500.00 (Five Hundred Dollars) which shall go to the winning team. Umpire, ltoberts of Pendleton and Dyer of Milton. Each club shall use same players as used In game Helix vs. Echo on Tues day,. May 30th., as evidenced by offi cial tally or score sheets used at said game. Yours very truly, HKLIX BASEBALL CMTR. , By CHAS. ALSPACH, .- . t-U r '.'. Manager.. ' INDIANAPOLIS, Iiul.. June 2. (I. p.) The Worst cuHiialtieR suffered by Ihe American soldiers during tno world war are just beginning to show themselves,!, according to C. J. Harris, on offici.nl of the American Legion's national headquarters here. ' There ia; an average of two px-sol-dtor suicides ni day, Harris declured.' These men, almost without exception were In thi- battle-lines in France hn returned to the United Slates .'with their nerves i-aifged from. their experi ences. ' ' ' . These, combat soldiers, the IRlon officials contdnd. showed no sign of shell-shock," and were discharged by army doctors as norma!, with appar ently no ill results from military, ser vice.. The strain of fighting fur exist ence is responsible for tho Increasln number of suicides acrnqng ex-soldiers. Harris declared. There are two ways in which the Legion hopes to minister to these mental cases and to prevent their in crease, Harris sard. Tho Langley bill, now law. provides J17.ft.'0 for the construction of new hospitals. The larger portion of this money Is to be spent in creating facilities for treating the peuro-psychlatrics, mental pa tients. The. Legion also is preparing to pe. m ion conu-rpss to l.berallzo the pres ent Sweet bill. This bill now makes it Impossible for nn ex-soldier to ob tain government treatment for wat Injuries which show up more than two years after his discharge from mlll lary service. The le gion contends that it might eas ly be five years aft er an ex-soldler's dischenrge Wore In- lurious physical and mental effect or hi. .n.M.iA u'niilrt snnear. and will de mand a liberalisation. f t!'o bill's pro vision.' 3 Ti , SAN FftANCISCO. June 2. (V. P.) Shipping men here nre Interested In three separate treasure-hunting expe ditions now going forward In vatlous parts of the world, and there Is much speculation when old waterfront men get -(together as to. whether any trea sure will ever be fouud. The expeditions have set out from London to attempt to recover "King John's treasure," lost long ago in the tidelands of "The Wash," on tho coast of the North Sea. Another is attempting to locate treasures reported to have been bun led a few centuries ago in the sands of the Irish coast, marked on a torn map which the treasure-hunters pos sess, by the crew ot one of the Span ish galleons of the great Armada. The ship In question, carrying tho trea sure, had bQen wrecked on the coast. The third expedition, sotting out from New York, is more recent In his tory, it Is the atiempt to recover the treasure carried on the Ill-fated Lusl tanla, torpedoed off the English coast In 1916. Over Ji.noO.nuo In gold and gems was. reported to have been on tho Lusltanla. " The treasure will be sought with divers and grapplers. i5 tox roit ;.pks SANTA HOSA, Cal., June 2.- U. P. ) Several vlnyard owners neur here recently refused $125 a ton for their dark wine grapes. The offers were made by Boston firms. The owners offered to sell at tb! price if the Boston firms would take th. complete crop, black and whlto grapes, at that price, and It is expect ed the deals will be put through on this hasis before long. Could Your Baby- Stand .This? IT'- ' 1 ' Thi, naked Eskimo toby U n.tl In fcto dad'. catc". of fur, la .a Jttoo. or hou of Ice, where Umj-t.-uur.s- owuw , Biates sr t.td dof puus- ' Clover Leaf Dairy and , Market rl Successor to Clover Nook Dairy. Watch for the CLOVER LEAF WAGON which always carries ex- X tra supply of RICH CREAM and I MILK for you. AT THE STORE you will always find us at your service for the best Milk and Cream, GIVE US JOUR ORDER. Phone 869-W 521 Main St. LATIN PEOPLE HAVE ; DIFFERENT VIEWPOINT SA.V.FKAN'CISCO, May 25. (A. 1. ) Differences. ,ln American and Spnnlsh-A'inerlcan viewpoints were exiilalned recently by Herbert Beln, l.'Wvcrslty of California alumnus, now business man of Mexico, at a Cham ber of Commerce dinner , here. ' Ho quoted tho following proverbs; Where Americana say: y"Mako hay while tho sun shines," the '. Spanish American says; "Knjoy life while the sun shines." . ' '. ; The Amerlcants'ni:' '.'Marly to bed, early lo rise, tnakes a uan healthy, wealthy and wise," s offset by Ills southern brother's axiom: . "Not by rising early will tho sun rlso earllor." "He Is as good lis gld," says thn resident of the United states, whore as the metaphor of southern climes Is: "He is as good as bread." . . 1 : 1'eople of. the JJnltod 8(utc are characterised by the valun they place on tlmo and money, said .Mr. 8eln, but Ittin-Amoricans are Kwnyed by their pools, and often choose' poets to bo their presidents. j ium. (9 flie Sun aesif "Why the sun of course" you will sav. But remember vou can hold the cent so close to your eye that you lose sight of the sun. Some baking powders can be bought for a few pennies less than Calumet but don't hold these cents too close to your eyes you will not be able to see the quality the purity the dependabilityof BAKING POWDER In other words, don't be de ceived by a few pennies the cheapest baking powder in price is often the most expensive. When you buy Calumet you know that it will produce pure, sweet, and wholesome bakings. You know that you use less be cause it contains more than the ordinary leavening" strength. Buy it try it be convinced. ' A pound can of Calumet contain, full 16 ' ounce,. Some baking powder, come in 12 ounce instead of 16 ounce t n. Be sure you get pound when vou wnt It. u O iC-t T UN BY sJtT Altff "Knee-Deep in June" That is, in June business. This describes the con dition at our shop, but doesn't argue that we would like to be neck deep the really pleasant depth. High quality work has brought us the recogni tion of many of the most exacting buyers of printing, most of whom have .been constant pa trons for years. They are being added to our list every day. You are invited to join the throi g and note the good results in YOUR business. pp Tendleton, Oregon