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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1922)
TWELVE PAGES PAGE EIGHT DATI.Y EAST OEEGONTAN. PENDLETON' OREGON. MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 21, 1922. GREENWICH VILLAGE ENTRANCES FAMOUS ENGLISH INVESTIGATOR By CLAIIA WOLD International .News Service Staff Correspondent. T1NPOV. Ag. 21. The short- hoiine between lvy-f overed brick wall. It seemed to express a con I traillelion of spirit In the one who ! had arranged the room. . On all tho walls hung amazing naintlnxs and ntatured English woman BcittlnK op- drawings by her Bon, P. It. Nevlnson, poslte me solemnly poured a irreat tne modernist artist paintings of si ream of milk Into a cup or erj HnBer )0w(r showing aeroplanes of Hrong tea and most Interesting family was In the hospital suffering from poisoning except a four-year-old child that had been dragged In from the street. "The second cafe, I heard was In the Domestic Kfclations Court and was that of a man whose wife com plained that he drank so much that It was Impossible to live with lilm even for one day. Jn 'dry America.' The Judge forced the man to sign ;tlie pledge against drinking before J I he allowed him to go home to his jwife, whom he did not wish to leave. OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE remarked: I he ho war. machine guns In action. place I found in workers in munttlo.iH factories and The walls New York sky-scrapers. were filled with these. The room was filled with charming old English chairs, covered with an tique English tapestries, smugly .lean ing back under old-fashioned tidies. A man's overcoat hung on u chair waiting for a button to be sewed back on It "true bodge of feminine i America was Greenwich Village." I looked at her sharply to discover if she were laughing. After all, Am crlcanR are not accustomed to hear ing dignified Judges speak so kindly of Tho Village. And here was an elderly woman, Mrs. H. W. Nevln son, first woman Justice of the peace In England, returned from a trip to America to Investigate Inferior crimes efcpeclally domestic ones giving oil" Village x good reputation. "The most serious thinkers I met In New York lived in Greenwich Vil lage," she continued, "and apparently the most happy and well-regulated .families also. I stayed there myself much of the tlmo." Contradictory Atmosphere, There was an amusingly contra dictory atmosphere about the long, nnrrnw rnnm Inn klne- onto the Eng-lln New York was In the llsh garden that ran back from the courts an 'Illicit still case. Hord With noitetitttn "After many more cases of the same kind J was so bored with the repetition that I went to aa higher- courts case. The case on the docket was an Illicit still a still discovered on the top floor of a large hotel. The hotel manager, the waiter, the cooks, the hotel gue.sts, the chamber maids In short, everyone who had feudalism," my companion luushlw- ,volve( ln the f.asf, Te j,K,Ki r re- Ll"3t(SM To THIS OtveT, MRS. Tf9oe; Ia)hat uetee. last hjor&s 3eFoRs He Posset) aijak X" ' "F-4rHR HVD NO -AST KOrTDj; MOTHCER WA IvlTH H'M TO TH- CAST." Disliked Prohibition. "The one thing I didn't like abontj your America was prohibition1;" Mrs. Nevlnson continued, "I don't believe In Interfering with individual free dom ln that way. And, besides, you haven't done anything, so for n I can sec, but pass a law that no on keeps. The first case I heard tried inferior All the rsa - ' 1 THE OLD HOME TOWN By Stanley j (HOLD tRNEWT Z ' JLJRtrr IgsIrKpd .wjf,. gilt f HEYil-WHATLl THAT) ffigt? fs)8 1 NEW DRESSMAKER HKH ER1 -TME V SAY WHEN SHE SEES I g. i?j UgB fesv i- v-if V SOME JOKERS AT THE FEED STOGE ALMOST ftHJIrtEP MAPS HAL OTEY WALKERS HAND : PAINTED THE NEW DRESS MAKEW GAVE HIM. " On a record of cour teous, efficient and con structive bank service, which dates back for Thirty-three years, this bank solicits the busi ness of ranchers, farm ers, business-firms and individuals. Directors AV. It, Thomson F. K. Jmld I, It. Mi-Cook U C. Scliurpf K I j. Mniiii J. II. Haley TtlON, TllOIUPHOII II. V. Oillins . F. H. OiH The American National Bank Pendleton, Oregon. J3 Ymr3 Of Continuous Banking. Overstuffed Sets SEPARATE CHAIRS AND ROCKERS. Prices which heretofore have never been seen in Pendleton. Let us show you. 33- CRUIKSH1 NK & HAMPTON -4CMrt,lTt NOUSE-rURNISNeRS 124-28 E. Webb Phone 548 Ton Old Fsrntlar Talua EzcJianm ma rut PajraMt K luMn Aftmt hi rdlBo for McOoOl Klirbra CiMiMt call, was so bored that he chewed and slept through most of the testi mony." I tried to push the discusolon of women ln America, but Airs. Nevln son , refused to make any general comments. "IVkoow about our own women, nut in America you have so many kinds very active and modern ones in .New York; who are not bound by the old customs and antiquated ideas, ad strangely reactionary, seri ously rolitfious ones around old Ros ton, and still another kind in Washington. "J can t talk about them all, there i are so many. At least, you never I had the kind of militant suffragists I I In America that we had hi re In j j-.MKiuuu. rtiiu tin me ihi ((iijurei of the Womim'i Freedom l.e:itf :i. of which ilrs. Nevin..oii i.. ,i i ... r, with llrs. I'ankhur.st and l r r,.,t, w ors, sprang forward. "I'm not with most of the f(mi nlhts who are trying to put through silly laws either." "Ho you think, then,' that getting suffrage for women in England was worth while?" I asked. "Certainly it was. It was only a fortnight after we won suffrage that the paternal maintenance' of illegl-l tlmate children was doubled. It was only a few months alter suffrage came that women sat on the bench in England", and the Lord Chancellor, who hud been most unjust to women previously, eissed the opportunity to state that the rights of women are as important as those of men. All politicians in England agree with him now that women have votes. We have changed many un just laws, und we will change more. ' At this point my friend, Jlrsfl Pat rick II. Hepburn, better known in England and America as the Austra lian poet, Ann Wickham. interrupted to ask Airs. Nevlnson if she intends to stand for Parliament in the next elections. "1 have been urged to stand by many of my friends," answered this feminist, "but I don't think 'polities Is ever clean and decent. No, don't want to stand." Urtt," said Anna Wickham, "that is why you should stand, ami any way I think you should stand, be cause my husband says you are the only woman who ever made him laugh Willi ironical remarks. He in sists that you are the only English woman with a sense of humor." "Politics l.s HlncU." Surely it is not a little thing to have Patrick II. Hepburn, the great est living authority on the .plant Sat urn, call you the only womkn humor ist of his country; but Mrs. Nevlnson only smiled and Insisted that "poll tics Is black," and "no nolltlcal lend er can remain both honest and suc cessful." Hhc suddenly changed the subject by showing us a patchwork cushion mi.: mane a year ago. when she was III. liemnants of a good old-fashioned age, I thought. Hut she told us with great satisfaction that her son, C. R. Nevlnson, the modernist, greatly admires the pollow and con siders It a remarkable expression of modernism. And sot It Is. 'Am we rose to go rhc mentioned the Itnssell divorce cnie that Is oc cupying tho niimlH of all London. "Think of the cleverness of that little woman." she chuckled. "They say that His Honor, Hlr John Simon, I HA I ha L HA - HA ' - HA I- y-"vji:r i i vVHT'S TO WlGH AT is that ivtrcs fvshtn fux O Tou V.'. -r 911 m WIT!-! Ml NEW YORK. Aug 21. (I. P.) j easy since he loft the decisions Gene Harazen .the twenty-one yearna: ry wtu ... .. old American open golf champion, is i re: dy to get back in the ring-. .) nif Mtmks and he knows; iHbbons. wants another crack to is counsel for Mr. Russell, is turning white haired through his effort to compete with her." She fairly gurgled with the thought of one of her own sex thus con founding the male dignity of the courts, and so, too, did we. OFFICE CAT Conference Called On Oil At Sea AVASn-'INOTOX, Aug. 2V. (L P.) An international conference of the principal maritime nations of the world will convent here this winter, nt ! the invitation of the United .Stutew, to i conHiilKT measures to' be taken to rid! the 'world seacoastH C the menace toi fiwheries, property ami migratory hlrdu in the increasing pollution of coaatul watera by oil ejected from sleaniHhlps. President Harding, acting" in compli ance with legislation enacted recently by Congress, has authorized Secretary of Ktate Hughes to Issue invitations to i lie inimi iiiwr, uuu in nitfi in itu u- mental committee representing the j Departments of State, War, Navy, Commerce, Interior, and Agriculture and the shipping JJoard is at work de termining which nations will be in vited and formulating agents for the conference. BV JUNI1US-? it. He is a cocUey youngster with all the confidence, the emnsiam aim energy that an American youth car ries into sports. There is nothing of the enlarged cranium apparent in ma bjj.,, actions, however. What symptoms he shows of liking his own game are not inordinate. Tney are uut mo tendencies of a winning temperment that make him the champion that he is. : Recently one of the clubs around New York offered Sarazen $500 for an exhibition match and gave him the privilege of selecting his oppo nent, He surprised tha club officials by asking them to get Jim Karnes for his opponent. . Joe KIrkwood, the Australian trick shot artist, was kidding the young champion about it. "Kinda pick 'em big, don't you Gene?" he asked. ' "Well, it'd be better to be knocked off by Harnes than some little bird, wouldn't it?" Sarazen replied. In Walter Hagen, the American winner of the H'ritish open champion ship, and Rarazen the United States has two real champions who are a credit to themselves, to the game and to the nation. Both stepped into fame gcaciousiy and vboth minimized their success with, the statements that they had all the good breaks and their oppon ents went down through hard luck. Speaking of bobbed hair for men. we have decided that it is a fashion as old as the eternal hills. If me mory serves, Delilah first suggested it and evtn went so far as to save Samson the price of a haircut. ! The, young lady next door says her j father always strains home brew and If he finds splinters, lie knows there's wood alcohol ln it. The truly righteous man goes to sleep In church' rather than let his mind wander. Wa One of the big differences between ff man and a woman Is that a man .J can't shop without buying something. A 1 A Free Thinker, Mlllicent, I man who isn't married. . . is a Representative T. V. Appleby, New Jersey, In whose state are some of the finest bathing beaches on the At lantic Coast, notably that nt Atlantic City, is the father of the conference. He introduced and secured passage by Congress of a bill authorizing Pres ident Harding to call it. - It Is intended that the !-., It of the conference will be an international agreement whereby each nation will pledge itself to see that masters of ships flying its flag will exercise every precaution in the ejection of oil from their ships and In no case will eject It where It will drift sliorewards. Tle- camie no nation has Jurisdiction on the i An electric power plant to supply high sens beyond the three mile limit, j light for the Oregon caves in Joseph an aereement is the sole manner injlne county will be planned by P. H. which the object can he attained, do-j Datcr, district engineer of the federal mesne legislation being inoperative. forest service. While the preponderonce of evi dence Hhows youth ft be coming in to supremacy in all sports, some old fellow Is always stepping up to take a sock at the old theory. "Red" Russell, the old White Sox pitcher, who hail been cut out of the record books, is back again doing big things in the Pittsburgh outfield. He is batting fiercely, hitting plenty of home runs and fielding fine. When the pressure becomes great enough, John McGraw may call upon Amos Rusie to do a little pitching for the Giants. Amos keeps' stowa ways from getting into the grounds at night and he might be nble to keep a game from getting out of tho park. at ti e light heavyweight crown which, Greb is weoring and he is willing to take on a stiff bout to prove chat he is entitled to a return engage ment. ' Gene Tunney formers champion, and Gibbons have both challenged Greb throught the New York state boxing commission and" Gibbons sug gests that he and Tunhcy meet to decide the challenger. Very fair proposition and the com mission Is in favor of it? ' ' WHY RUSSIAN FACTORY COST ARE SO HIGH If you like to be one of the dls. eoverers of champions, just tell the boys to keep their eyes on Emil I.ieffler, the young Pittsburgh hold er of the Pennsplvania state open golf championship. Tis said he Is MOSCOW, Aug. 21. (A. p.) Pro duction charges in many Russian fac tories have become so high that the Soviet government would now find it cheaper to import certain manufac tured' articles than to make them at home. For example, it Is said that harvest er machines can be purchased and transported from Germany, or even from America, to Russia or much less than the cost of producing them, in the plant of the International Hark ' vester company, near Moscow, This Anieriran factory, one of the few industries In Russia that was not nationalized by the Bolshevikl, Is one of the most. efficient In the country, but. Its production costs per machine manufactured are almost twice those of the German and American plants ef the company.. Tl.is is chiefly due to the high prices of raw material, but the unusual Russian labor laws also are an important factor. ' For example, a workman whosi wife is expecting a child Is paid 25 per cent additional salary for nine months, and In the month when the child is born receives still another full month's pay. If the workman is sup porting a sister or a mother or any other woman In an interesting condi tion, the same rule applies, while a feminine "employe receives even more liberal treatment, amounting to seven full months extra pay.' j The average daily pay of a Russian workman is about 1 exclusive of ex tras, but is has been estimated that five Russ'ans, who work under less ef ficient conditions than in America, no matter what their individual ability, produce only ns much as two Ameri cans working in the United States with more improved machinery.' "Wheat Growing After Fallow In Eastern Oregon" is the name of a new bulletin by I). E. Stephens, su perintendent of the Moro branch ex nerlment station, and O. R. Tlyslop, going largo in th0 coming amateur I chief of farm crops at O. A. C. It fracas. gives methods and results of the I most profitable practices so far de- Tommy Gibbons, St. Paul light i veloped. Copies free ta citizens of heavyweight who has been taking itj Oregon. - 'fc- '''A'm'm'm' ' j argains It Isn't bo -much the unemploy ment of the idle, as the idleness of the employed. Ike See any change in me? Mik e N o wji y ? Ike I just swallowed a dime. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS DANNY DECLARES HIMSELF. By Allman S'"3 N . SU" i . M A I m .m. 3lookattheY tvhm 1 fAW 6E8, I WANNA ) 1 lirTJ S 7 SISSV FROM TAKE HIS t:HOES j k KIDS D ' V"TH Bcry5 JUST J hA-HA-HA? V-rTt CO-riE- A VJ- TE5AME' Vv3JA2 '3 IN. WINONA WAGON $142.00 3'4 IN. WINONA WAGON $157.50 3'2 IN. 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