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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1922)
s DAILY EAST OBEQONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON. SATURDAY EVENING, JULY 29, 1922. TWELVE PAGES. 1 On Edge BLUNDERS DOUBLE S. & H. GREEN CASH, DISCOUNT STAMPS THIS EVENING . 'after six o'clock: this offers you a wonderful cash dis count on YOUR NECESSARY CASH expenditure. aiming With arrell , if 1 - . .. .. - . - ' i r I - VS. P' : : ... . ,,.JDDi Madras Shirting 75c to $1.25 ; 36 inch shirting ma dras, in plain and silk stripes, .wonderful col or ; combinations that tvill not fade when laun dered. Black, blue, la vender and rose, are1 s,ome of the colors; pri ces range from 75c to $1.25 yard. - , Sport Skirting at t r $2.95 , 36 and 40 inch sport skirtings in a beautiful assortment of blues, whites and combinati ons. Just the fabric for. summer wear and very reasonably priced at per yard $2.95 Ruben Infant Shirts No buttons, no trouble, the Ruben shirt Is the only garment that guar antees this protection. Perfect fitting, adjust able easy to put on or take off. Cottons, wool mixed andh silk and wool. Sizes up to 6 years. Priced from 85c $2.00. Serpentine Crepe Serpentine crepe in plain colors and kimona patterns. This splend id fabric is known the world around as one of "phe most satisfactory fabrics in the market. Made with a permanent crinkle that is guaran teed never to wash out. Neat styles that make it adaptable for kimonas, wrappers and house gowns: prices range from 35c to 50c per yard. Organdie at 75c -to $1.50 y 40 inch transparent organdie in a wonder ful color assortment of orange, yellow, white, green, orchid, lavender and rose. Sheer and dainty, whether used as trimming or ' made up into dress, you will al ways be cool and com fortable. Priced at per yard 75c to $1.50 BLUE BONNET APRONS We are showing a very choice assortment of the famous "Blue Bonnet" Aprons at prices that will appeal to your sense of eco nomy. , Ginghams . . ... . . $3.95 Cretans. $3.95 to $4.95 Sateens ..... $4.95 to $5.95 Crepes $5.50 to $5.95 See our window display. Lm for itti Clftnnn Mm pur nTwtary Oroamy . Ripe Tomatoes Per Crate $1 Local Watermelons Per Pound 3y2c Men's Palm Beach, Mohair and feather weight suits, One Third Off. Double Stamps This Evening trmmiNS uwjarsr bWAKMEHT sTonr. PfioPeoples Warehouse 'wiijjwrEi.PAxs .to t n Aoiajafljaso3r Double Stamps This Evening ""fJ """ i pi lv n Yt Q. L. Patterson in play against Lycett in the Wimbledon tourna ment In which Patterson won the tennis singles championship. -?ou may Judge how hard he was play ins by looking at UU tongue. K w Mum it. Onef the principal foundations of the Six Nations, and which has come in conflict with Canadian law, is the tribal law of maternal descent and women's control of tribal affairs. In all the Six Rations the mothers of the J youngster, is back on a Bulky- seat do various clans direct all Governmental affairs indirectly in that , they select the chiefs. , By HENRY L. FARRELL (United Press Sports Editor) NEW YORK, July 29.(U. P.) Somehow or other the boys will talk. It's good business to keep in print, but sometimes the boys open their mouths so wide they put their foot in it. Frankie O'Neil, prominent Ameri can Jockey, lias to pay for doing some big 'talking, according to a recent story from Paris. . O'Neil has been going big on the French tracks and, in a burst of en thusiasm, he told a newspaper friend how much . money he was making. Without malice, the correspondent wrote a story announcing Frankie's entrance into the millionaire's class. Some one in Washington story ana round that nis return did not show such prosperity and Frankie is busy telling them that Jockeying is the poorest paying busi ness in the world. , ..-'' Several o the big American dancers and cabaret performers in Paris are said to be writing the same address on the same kind of envelopes. - y Among the sensational rises of youngsters to the top in sports, the name of Eddie Geers is seldom men tioned. . 3eers, the seventy-two-year-old saw the income tax M is. RTRACl'Bn. N'. Y, July !. firicviinpii'of he' Canadian lrwiuols Indians, fulling of settlement through union nf il Intnt arbitration council. 'ill 'b aired before The Hague Inter mix tribunal, provided tn I'nna- tjovernniem Hcoepu the offer of .'V , .v j ? , v - . . 1 1 f 1 - which Chief Frank l.ogan, of the Onondaga tribe, Is head chief, by vir !u of ljls office, religious leader. The offer has been duly forward ed to the, Dominion authorities. Ac companying It Is a protest against the Canadian Government plan to submit th jrrlevnnces to a three-headed Ju dicial commission, SI Nations Want. I-Ycodom The proviso that the difference be referred to The Hague carries with It the pronouncement by the Iroquois that there must be no iuetlon In such ounell of the Six Nntlona, of ' submission of the rlirht of the Six Na tions to full political Independence or r 1fV,",te, ,m,,,"n ?nd 08 T'V," ... AnlUlo tn .lienor rVkoi, fvivn ri,c:t I home rule within reservation tracts, For over a year Onondaga chief tains have been attending confer- ences In various plures at which the problems of the Indians llvl- g on the Grand Klver have been discussed. These are a branch of the St. Regis, who established a separate tribe with in the Mohawks when the St. Regis embraced Catholicism. All of the Six Nations Indians are theoretically pn.amns, though many have embraced Christianity and all reservations have Christian missions. The Indians claim their sovereignty, holding that under the treaties they Mem Wanted Tlio JiorUmrn rnelflo Railway Company will employ men lit rate prcM'tibed by the I'nlird Slate Iibnr Iiiuird as foljowg: , Maciilnlsls Dluuksntlth . . Rluvt metal workrrn Mnriclaiu ... Staukinarj Ivrinocrs SlaUoiwrjr FlrraiMn . 70 cents per hoar .... 10 cents per hour , 70 rents per hour - 70 renin por hoar various rates . various rales J nilrr makers 70 to 70S renin per hour l'asmrr Car Men 70 renin per tutor rXSirlit C1r Men S3 rents per hour lleliicrs, all rlawrs 7o Per Iwnr Machinists and llrllen am allorl time ami one half for time murkrd In rxrra at S hours prr day. Younc mm who akvsrie to learn tlier trailes will he rniiAoyrd and rimt an o.rtnily to do so, "A MHkr now exists on (lie Northern Pa1fk Itailway' Appt j to any round house or shops or Snprrmli'SMVnl. Northern Pacific Railway at Pasco, Wash. entitled to direct their own destinies through tribal councils. When the tribal laws run In con flict with the white man's law, the Indians hold to the tribal decrees and Thomas Fair, mixed up in an illicit whiskey transaction and shot Uy an officer near Coburfi? several months aeo. died at a Eugene hospital, Friday, for years have successfully defended 1 after a second operation on his their rights. wounded leg. ,This etistom, which has coma down since the establishment of the Ironucjls Confederacy, Is the very basis of the Six Nations government, and is in constant conflict wit lithe white man's government whero paternal descent Is followed. The old unset tied claim of tribnl autonomy amon gthe Six Nations in thoir relations to the United States and Canadian Governments afso Is in volved in the Dominion dispute: The Indians also demand an accounting of the money Which the Canadian Gov ernment holds in trust for them. The funds nccumulnted from the sale of lands originally allotted to . the red skin:'.. ' I Indians b'd property only as tribes, and the property rights on both sides of the international line are in volved in the many complications Which maternal descent brings about, in that cousins become brothers and sisters, and uncles and aunts become fathers and mothers of children of sis ters and brolhers. In this connection the fact that In dians take the clan nf their mother, ttnd not their father, In their relation to the tribe adds to the complications. i "The Canadian Government is try ing to imitate the ruthless Imperial ism of Congress in its treatment of American Indians," declares Attorney George Decker, counsel for the six Na tions. 'Americans at one moment make wonderful phrases about ttK rights of small nations and justice, and ut the nevt totally ignore the wrongs done to small groups of Indians whose tribal existence is threatened.. "Some tribes allow their rights to be invaded and soon inter-marry with whites and aro dispersed, committing race suicide. Rut the Six Nations do not intend to do this." ' rremium lists for the I.inn County fair, which will be hent at Albany Oc tober 3 to 8, were distributed Satur day, showing that from 3onn to$4000 will be given in prizes to exhibitors. ing the saims things on the Grand Cir cuit tracks that he has been doing for forty-two years. - , ( "Pop" says he's good for fifteen years mora if the reformew do not get out a prohibition against cigars and when he is to feeble to pile Into a buggy, he 11 still be around to pat the ponies. i The veteran old driver has been enough Jams, to kill a dozen ordinary drivers,, but he always comes up. Sev en years ago he was'given up for dead after a. bad spill In.ColnmTius,. but he was back on the seat before the band ages had dried. ,. , Alex McLean, veteran fight trainer, who handled Jack Johnston in his prime is one of the experts who be lieves that Harry Wills has a good chance to take the heavyweight title from Jack Dempsey. "Wills has every, physical . advan tage In his favor and if hs can use his strength properly he ought to win." Strength isn't the all Important fac tor, however. Jss Willard is the biggest and strongest man in the ring, yet the feeble little Dempsey mauled him in Toledo and ho'll probably ruin him if he ever meets him again. Johnny Dundee, the only Junior champion extant, has one of the greatest records in ring history. . Ho has been one of the busiest fighters that ever put on the gloves. In twelve years of battling he lias engaged in 566 fights and he has met every leading fighter under the" light heavyweight division. The Italian lias cashed in large on his labors and has been successful in a venturesome little side line of racing horses. s Tex Rickard Is ready to produce a birth certificate that Jess Willard only S9 years of age and is therefore not effected by the forty-year-old ban of the New York Boxing Commission. The real difficulty will.be coming in getting some legal papers to show that Willard is a good fighter. The general run of opinion seems to be that affidavits will be necessary at a coroner's inquest if Dempsey and Wijlard ever meet again. Rickard says that Willard didn't have a chance at Toledo, but he fails to describe the Tu-ocess by which Rig' jess woum nave a chance in a second meeting between the pair. i . I. Why Is This Wrong? The answer will be found on the classified page. , (What "Blunder" do you suggest?) Copyright, 1922, Associated Editors) MOTHER CATvRETRIEVES HER KITTEN FROM WELL, PUNXSUTAWNRY, Pa., 'July; 29. An old cat's mother love was greater than hef aversion to water. Under the. rear porch of Mr. and Mrs. C. K. McCartney's house is an old aban doned well. The water dS sixteen fe9t below the ground surface1 is hi several feet deep. . : . ' ' ' ' : While "the mother cat was watch ing one' of her kittens at play an other little toddler' gave' a "yip" asNi It tumbled into the well The old cat heard the "S. O. S." of heir off spring, tore under the porch and without any hesitation jumped into the depths of the well, . sixteen feet below. In a couple of minutes sho came from under the porch, drag ging, the wet kitten by 'the scruff of the neck. ' GOLF COURSES FURNISH FEED FOR MANY BIRDS WASHINGTON, July 29. A - golf course in many respects makes an ideal community bird refuge and golfers says the Depadtnient of Agri culture, should co-operate In the preservation, encouragement and in-. crease of useful birds. I The broad expanses of short grass on the fairways, officials point out, furnish excellent feeding gnpunds for robins, me.idowlarks, startlings, flick, ers and killdeers. In rougher spots there is an abundant insect population for bird food. .Most golf courses have water hazards at which birds can drink and bathe and may are protect ed to a large extent from trespass and nr relatively free from natural enem ies to birds. - Thus, officials assert, birds are af forded ample protection, fbbd'and wa ter. Rut nesting sites may ba liwkinB and must be supplied by artificial next boxes or trees and shrubbery along the sides of the course. 1 -, ' k HILL A Select Non-Sectarian Hoarding School "i- ... . ' . Hoys between 6 arid 20 years Social Advantages, Homelike Atmos phere .. , - Small Classes and Men Teachers Detailed U. S. Army Officer Opens Sept. 1$ 1(121 V . PORTLAND, OREGON PUZZLE: FIND. THE CASUALTIES. il Sf Y J j LADIES When Irreenilar or .nnnfu iiba Triumph Pills. Safe and dependable in all proper cases. Not sold at Drua Stores. Do not experiment with others; save disappointment. Write for "Relief" and particulars, It's frea. Address: National Medical Institute, Milwnukee, Wis. . - . X- .-" CHICHESTER S PILLS W-r-- TIIK IIAMON BRAND. X T-V bow, sekd wit blue kfbb.V vsrsrla run ViiHJwii uficst. &aiert.Alwyi ItcJLibM SOU) U DPJjGOISIS EVEmMUS, CATARRH of BLADDER Gurd Ysur Hesjtij S, Sura Ta Hm 1 rntvtniivE. lut VC Kif 14 tl ,1 Ai i-t,t , .Can-T 4Cit Cm. ,1 B-,l.f.iA'i St.. We are in the market for grain and hay and grain of all kinds. We sell and deliver nay end grain to any part of the city.. Grair o( all kinds wanted In carload lots PKXDlitTO.V ITAH'R CRADT OOMPAXV 1300 West Alls . 5 '2 D: O. K. K. You are l-equested to be present at 8 o'clock 5 ' ' sharp . - : f y K. OF p; HALL 5' Siwial Meeting " Monday. July 3L ij