READ THE EAST OUEGONIAN SPOUT PAGE AND RECEIVE THE NEWS THAT IS FURNISHED BY THREE SERVICES. A,, P. U. P. AND L .NS, 3Sr9 - ' 1 ' .... ii " jjl TEN PAGES SECTION TWO PAGES 7 TO 10 TEN PAGES SECTION TWO If PAGES 7 TO 10 ' . DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 12, 1922. ma- i i' VNd- WITH M :,. By HKXItY I,. FAilRELL, (United Press Sports Editor.) XEW YORK,, July 12. (IT. P.) .Two years in succession the Pacific , Coast has sent a rowing eight east to ; mingle with America's best crews. Twice in as many years, the far . western crews covered themselves with glory by finishing second., ahead of some of the best combinations In the game. . In both races, . finishing second meant something. It so happened , that the California crew of 1921 and the Washington eight of 1823- Avere forced to compete against a superqrow that comes only once in a decade. Had not these westerners, who came three-thousand miles to row a race of little more than thirteen minutes, been forced to row against the Navy, recog nized as about the best crew America . o'er produced, both would have won their, races. ' '. . ' - . It is to be hoped- that the "coast" can send another ere;.' east next sum mer, i If , it is as good as the last two visitors, it will win, v ..J i T' ; " With seven members of the cham pion crew loaf by graduation and with ' Dick Glendon, the great conch, talk ing ,about leaving, tho Navy's future on the water is a matter of conjecture. However, the Navy has a firmly es tablished rowing policy that might be continued by any of Glendon's pu pils. The academy gets handipieked the finest young men in the country and their life at the institution is such that won the Olympic and intercolle giate championship of 1921 and the midshipmen might put seven new ones in the shell next season that can keep up the prestige of their predecessors. . .. After being beaten twice by a sup posed inforior crew from Yule, some changes are expected in the Harvard coaching body. Tale also is not satis fled with the crew organiutlon. Ru- next fall to help his alma muter get back on her football feet. The nicest tribute thut could have been paid to unyone was voiced last fall after the Yale-Harvard garni: when the Harvard captain said: "V writ- all glad to -win, but Ave haled to see MucAldrich lose." ' I In the midst of the sordid stench of ! processional sports, it is like a cool ! breeze in the middle of summer to re- call an athlete of tho type of Aldi'ieh. mom have it that Jim ltice, the Co lumhia mentor, is scheduled for Tale, und that Glendon is going to Harvard. R. Heber Howe, faculty member and coch of the Harvard crew, was i subjected to severe criticism all season from the campus, When ho was an- j nounccd as the successor of Jests Haines, 1 Hl coach, McXabh, the Har- 1 vard crew captain and Ktith Kane, one of the star oarsmen, stepped out of the shell and wouldn't row. The great victory tho Yale crew scored over the Harvard eight and the victory of the Eli baseball nine in the series with the vaunted Crim son team, tvil lhelp Yale to forget that heartbreak on the gridiron last fall. There is something that strikes way, down deep on the left side when a col- iese star is making his last appearance on the field. ' I When MacAldrich, tho great Yale athletic hero, came to the bat for the last time in tho deciding gume of the recent Yale-Harvard series, Yale, Har vard and neutrals alike rose und gave him such a demonstration that he went back to the bench witht tears streaming down his cheeks. Aldrich, as cajitain and All-Am-erican halfback of last year's Yam eleven and as captain and -shortstop of the 1922 nine, was a hero of un bounded magnitude. i He was a leader on the field of sport, on the campus and in the cluss room. Hejhad a personality that made itself felt like electricity when he ap peared on the football field. He. was of the type that deserves to bo put on a pedestal and looked up to as a real American boy in everything that the American admires and wishes to be admired for. - Several major league baseball tenm:i were after Aldrich, but he is going into business and will return to Yaio By ai.ec uicnw I'Vinicr Golf Champion of tin Uritish Jsles. (Written for the United Press) .r.v. Q E QUALITY SERVICE , SANITATION i , ' , DO IT NOW! J' :-' Bing Cherries, pound '.- .... 18c Royal Anne Cherries, pound 15c ; Fancy Large Apricots, box $3.25 Loganberries, crate $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 Raspberries, crate ...... Black Caps, crate . . ,. Currants, crate . ... . . ' - Pendleton Trading Company Phone 455 The Sign of Berfloe , "If It's On the Market We Ma? e It" $75 Cluiptev r. ! There is ajjegimiiug to everything, i und inereil'ufiy, perhaps, there is an I ending to everything. Not a very pro- I j found statement, you will fay. True ! enough, but what I wish to point out I , if that a good beginning in golf, us ' I in life itself, is more than half the I ! battle, llegin badly, or, in other j words, .begin in the wrong way, and i you are simply storing up trouble : which wilKprobably never be cured, j This is why, in the series of articles j which 1 am writing for the Dully Ex press und Vnited Press, 1 am going j to nddrcHs myself to the absolute bo i ginner. I The beginner ut golf is. like tho j poor, always with us. Kvery tluy I bring its new recruits, und it is be- ! I cause so many of them the major- I ity, I might say have such very j hazy ideas how best to embark on I this most fascinating- and difficult ot I all games, that we are rapidly pro- ; during a raeu of C 3 .golfers. . The i average novice sallies forth burden- cd with a number of o-jweasions and ' an equipment ' nliout -which he knows little or nothing. I do not know which is the more harmful, his brand new bag of brand new clubs or his obsessions.' , Not So Pil l 'colt "Keep your eye on the bull" is one prepossession which has probably permanently injured the, stylu of more beginners than any of the others. II: Is a definite injunction to put down a ball and try to hit it. You frequently hear of people who surprise themselves and their friends by tile x-ase with which they get the I ball away at their first attempt. The game Is not sodifflcult, after nil. I tiey declm-e "buoyantly ,und then j comes the awakening. The ball be . comes infinitely small and extraordi narily elusive when next they try, j und in a panic of despair and disap-i point inriit they slash away anyhow, i lon in the This is when .the disillusioned be- ' hit u ball, ginner should be taken firmly in but.a golf bund. , No novice at golf should be trusted with a hall in his first fortnight, un til lie- has learned how to grip the club and how to swing it. Many beginners seek to acquire the Inter-iockert grip under the impressi on that it possesses peculiar virtues. It is used of course, by many great golfers, but 1 think that for the ma Tlio Ideal PacLige for the Home Picnic andOutind 5f : -MM kk N . mk A Now in caitons of . - ' 'km&zr' ' ; One Dozen Bottles !; .1 mriim "Ts.ui.-z. M'' : Gillanders & Local Distributors , Burroughs, Inc. Pendleton, Oregon beginning of liavlng to J li:Al.TV" TISANSl'IOIlS. I do not know why II Is, j (.'has. Hibbard to K. A. Thumak ball exercises a hypnotic ; lanO. Lots 6 7. 8. Sec. 17 and Lot .i: 3 a with years of experience practicing ut dalyy hcuds round the first tees. Their swing is practically all tlitu j could be dosired. but when their turn i J comes to play, they snatch at tlte I ball like the merest tyro. - These are the people who have bc gun wrongly. Their aim is to hit the I ball somehow, anyhow. The' true. iorily of people with hands ot aver-(golf swing, full of grace und rhythm, acre size the nalin crin is th safer. I remains with them as a kind of sub- Personally. I find that, it gives me a conscious ideal, an ideal which they I securer hold on tho club, und for the are incapable of putting into execu- novice 1 think the shall I suy, some- "on st the moment ol the lest, what complicated? arrangement oil This is why 1 insist on, a fort the fingers In the Interlocked grip is j night's practice at swinging as u ait to be disconc erting. Two of the start, so that control of the club greatest of the many exponents of11"'1 be perfect rhythm of the stroke the palm grip are Mr. John Hull tovm the natural basis of the game, in my opinion the finest amateur When these have been acquired the golfer who ever, lived and Abe -Mil- "" inunn-e ii.mihk u jh "-i .3 I to a net, but,, r' do not advise too ' IVrfect Ithvtlini. I much work atthe lets. I gg Having -definitely decided on the! (Knd Chapter I.) ! 53 ; mo'-t suitable grip, the next thing is' - ' r5 , to .acquire the correct swing. This' Maklnjj pounds of cheese a day. rFS lean only be done under the guidance j H. Thurston Is operating ut Thurston : 3 I of a proficient couch, and. as I have the first exclusive chei se factory in previously said, without the distract-' Lane county. H. F. Walden to 1). L. Achillea ! Lots 1, 2, 18, block 1, ilays Add Weston. - U V. Hoberts to J. Kirk $300. Mete Fractional part BW 1-4 NW 1-4 NW: and bound tpet .Sec. 10, Tp. 4 -. It. 3 7. , C. Harris to C. H. Harris t. Mete and bound truct Orcland's Addition, Milton, , 1 H. B. Msheriug to G. C. Akers, t. -4 1-4 See. 4, Tp. 4. .V. It. 29, lyln north' 17. (4. It. ti. canal "A". 3;, Dale Blusher, trustee, to Cnscy tiUtn-.. ber Co., 1D0, Alerelmntable tlmlie on 8V 1-4 8K 1-4, tiec. 12 and NK 'lit NW 1-4 Sec. 13, Tp. 1, a It. Ii. I J I J i i ' - II - ... -11 UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM HOPMEH Some Day You Are Going to Own a Ford Some day you are going to own a Ford. You may or may not have a large car at the same time, but the fact remains that some day you are going to be a Ford owner. The universal demand and the universal necessity for a car such as the Ford make it essential that the product itself measure up to the highest standard. As . the popularity of the Ford car has increased, our effort to keep pace by the rendition of real service has been doubled. Isn't it about time that you Lccame better acquainted with the Ford car and with us? ORDER YOUR NEW FORD NOW! Simpson Auto Co. ronn avd roiasox ACTQOIUZED SALES A-I SET.V1CK rradchoa. Ore. WORLD'S TENNIS CHAMPION. WANTED For Railroad Service and at Wages as Follows: Machinists 70 cents per hour nnilprmakers 71 cents per hour Blacksmiths 70 cents per hour ; A r. I it 1 - 'A s r 1 I 70 cents per hour 70 cents per hour 63 cents per hour 63 cents per hour 63 centsper hour 47 cents per hour i g Electricians i ' Sheet metal and other workers in this line. . , ' jl ,.. Freight car repairers g ' Car inspectors H .' ' Painters, freight cars H Helpers, all crafts , ft These men are wanted to take the place of men who are striking against the H decision of the United States Railroad Labor Board, and their status, and '11 the FULL PROTECTION GUARANTEED, are explained by Mr. Ben . g Hooper, Chairman, in his statement of July 1: ' -In the past a man who t'.ok up the work of another man who a on strike against 'S ww nd workiiiK n.ndiiions was termed n "scab'' or a -'strikebreaker" terms to S which miifji oppniprlum was attached. In the present situation created by tho strike of Bbopeiatt workers, men who assume tho work of the tnker cannot Juntly b re. iS luoached with such epitho's. Wi "This Is not a cuH'.oiiiory strike In which the employer tries to (mpose upon the em- ' ,.e unjiist wsK's Kiel imreasonahle workliiK rules. In this case the conflict la not E-f between the employer and the oppressed employes. The people of this country, through : an act of cnngrciw. ig'id by 1'resnli nt Wilson, t-tablishcd a tr'.liunal to decide Kucfa U iiu.,uts o.er nii( und working conditions, which are submimd to it In a. proper 3 HMitiirr. it is the decision of tin tribunal against htch the iihop craft are ktrlking. f ' "ReSrdks of any ipH-stlon of the right of the men to strike, the men who take the 3 linkers' plac-s are merely arcrptinK the wages and working condition prescribed by . government tribunal and are performing a public service. They are not accepting the iL:3 ,7,rin nd orking condition which aneniployr Is Irving to Impose. KOIl THIS 3 i:k.in ; i i im.Ii-hkxtimkxt am. kci.i, '.ovkt;nmi:vt powki: m ti.t. i-ito- l TKlT T!IK MKX WHO KEilAIX IX Til K 1 1 1 PfXITl' i. .Sl TUK m:V ii KX WHO 'r3 MAT C'l.i.MK IX." Apply to ' , II r . Jt I i i i ii I! i i F. D. HALL Thi Action i u-tur. ! Cuvmif Tji ;.l-'i t het h l- fni'd Jliw. M'.Ii i M. .!: ! ' In U'irnl.l l-n. l-:!iL'i.ipd. ( ...:,r..,v Mi tufc V i !! p '. ,r I Agent, Depot. '. y.ni- iil. 1 h.- re '