East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, September 22, 1922, ROUND-UP SOUVENIR EDITION, THIRD SECTION, Page PAGE TWENTY ONE, Image 21

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    LET 'ER BOCK '? " East Oregonian Round-Up Souvenir Edition PendletonOregon, Friday, September 22, 1922. Page Twenty-One
12,500 FEET OF FLOOR SPACE
12.500 FEET OF FLOOR SPACE
FOSSILED BONES DUG VP IN WASTELANDS OF
MONGOLIA PROOF OF SCIENTISTS PET THEORY
THAT ASIA' WAS THE MOTHER OF CONTINENTS'
Furnish MOW For Future Economy
. -
NEW TURK, Sept..21.-r.(A. P.)
jrtui in mo paieomuiogisi s pet tneory
that Asia was the "mother, of contin
ents" and the cradle of -life on this,
globe carrying with Is great promise
of tha; discoycry in the wastes of the
Gobi desert of the longlsought "miss
ing link" in 'the evolution of mankind
has been found by tthc. Third Asiatic
Expedition led by Roy'Chapman An
drews for the American Museum of
N..atufal History, . Henry Fairfield
Oisborn, the Museum's director, an-1
nouncea today.
The. "priof" to the uninitiate,
would appear to be Just a heap of fos
silized bones, dug up by a band of
curious men' in the frozen wastelands
of Mongolia; Ihit to the mind trained
in groping b,ack through hundreds of
thousands of years for history of the
days when rtian was not, these fossiliz
ed remains , of dinosaurs and other
prehistoric beasts and reptiles furnish
a conclusion? simple and inevitable as
"two times two."
The discoveries, barely hinted at in
cable dispatches, are fully reported
and interpreted by Dr. Osborn oris-
mai proponent of the "Asia, mother
or continents," hypothesis in the cur
rent issue of the magazine Asia. The
magazine cooperated with the Museum
and the American Asiatic Association
in organizing this most ambitious of
all similar expeditions,. toward the fin
ancing of which liberal contributions
were made by J. P. Morgan, John I).
"octterieuer, Jr., Mrs, , Willard T.
Mih it ii n k j If
Mt 41 it iU Iff 1
. 1 ' Jlf J
mm
mm
O
ir5
BEDS
You will find as
large an assort
ment here as you
could wish for.
Wood beds in light
and dark or iron
beds.
MATTRESSES
Indians in Round-Up March.
the winter headquarters, September 15
to get first hand reports and aid in
Straight, George F. Baker, Darwin p I nlafPlnK ".t the campaign for the
Kiflgsley, Dwight W.i Morrow, Childs
itick, w. A.Harrlman; the late H. P.
Kavison and many others.
The hypothesis put' forward by Dr.
Osborn in 1&00 and? now confirmed
to his satisfaction was based on the
lact that two great deposits of re
mains or animals at the dawn period
of mammalian life on the northern
hemisphere had been found previously
at wiaeiy separated polnts--the pne in
x-.urope, ine otnep in the American
Rockies'. f . . it '.; '.
They coul not have .; originated
where the remains were found, Dr.
Osborn reasoned, else they would have
spread westward from Europe and
eastward froin the Rockies during the
period of early dispersal. Hence, he
held, they1 have originated at some
half way- spot on the less explored
side, of the globe, traveling as far as
the .Rockies Jon tile one hand and
Ivurope on the other, before the sun
set on the lat of their line. He then
drew up", a series of charts locating
Asia as the dispersal center, and plot
ting out with a nicety;' remarkable in
view of the." expeditions' discoveries,
the . spots where the first'"' centers
probably were located.
A llttlo further on then the expedi
n.-tmu yvnr 01 me live-year program.
Writing, with elation, on the report
received from Mr. Andrews. Dr. Os
born said of the fossil deposits:
"This discovery gives the answer to
one of the lour great questions which
the expedition sought to solve: name
ly, whether ancient Asia is the moth
er of the life of Kurope to the far
west, of North America to the far
east. It is a kind of realization of a
palcontologic Garden of liden of tho
birthplace, or Asiatic homeland, from
which many kinds of roptires and
mammals spread 'westward and east
ward. "The existence of such a center has
long been a matter ofpure theory
We have waited until Ili2 to verify
it. This verification has come with
unexpected suddenness and with a J
Walter Granger, Charles P. Berkey
and Frederick Morris began pros
pecting, and within a few yards of
camp, discovered some bones of dino
saurs. This was the first discovery of
giant reptiles In northern Asia.
The region promised to be so in
teresting that Mr. Andrews left the
geologists at work and Rushed on to
Turin, 132 miles south of L'rga, with
other members of the party, to meet
tho caravan. He accompanied the
caravan to l'rga, planning to plunge
deeper into the heart of Asia. But
at Ursa he received, a letter from the
fossil-hunter-in-chief, Granger, telling
of such rich discoveries that he hur
ried back.
The dinosaurs, remains of which
were discovered in great profusion,
were found to belong to the Upper
C retaceous period the very close of
the Ago of Reptiles and to be
i.ui.
re still remain four
years in which the greut expedition
under Hoy Chapman Andrews will
fill out the details."
Mr. Andrews' report was made in a
letter dated May 9 at Ursa, in uppei
Mongolia. .The party had set out from
Pew Ine a month before, traversing the
desert by motor truck toward Turin,
where they planned to meet a caravan
tlori has gone' so far is the. section la- of 75 camels with supplies, which had
belled "primate"" -the species of aoe been sent on ahead
held by paleontologists to have been 1 Halfway across Mongolia, between
the; first ancestor of man. I Kalgan and Urga, the attention of the
So enthusiastic has Dr. Osborn be- explorers was caught by some, lnte
come over the. pxpeditipn's'dlscoverles, esting geological exposures, and camp
to date, ana trie promise for the fn- was mane, unne supper was cooking,
tnre that he plans to sail for Peking, tno tnree geologists of the party
KEPPO TUBES
A medicated foot powder put in tubes
for tender, Bjtharting, sweaty feet. Mot a
foot case but a foot remedy. Different
from anything on the market different
package, different preparation, and differ
ent action, beausoit does remedy the
trouble yhile other preparations only re
lieve.
es in America and those found
n Europe.
On top of thedinosaur beds Were
'uyers of mammalian fossils, belong
;ng to the dawn period of mammal
life the Eocene. Above these were
'osmSIs belonging to the Lower Mio
cene, or middle period, and mingled
wiih these 'were the remains of a!
ylant mammal not found either" in
Europe or North America, but similar
fco one discovered some years ago. in
Baluchistan, southwest India, and
dubbed Baluchitherium the largest
land animal known to have existed.
Other findings included fossils of
rhlneceroses, immense tortoises, large
cfirnivorea, crocodiles and turtles and
enough others to make a Barnum
weep that none such still live.
These bygone animals, said Mr.
Granger, bore unmistakable resembl
ance to those found in Wyoming, in
cluding two kinds of flesh, eating
dinosaurs and a similar running fel
low called the ostrich dinosaur.
There wero other fossils, of the din
osaur known as the Iguanodonts a
tall, two-legged herbivorous beast
which ranged from southern England
2
o
There is nothing
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Only The Hoover combines these three essential operations.
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terms. You may ulso have it demonstrated for you any time,
either in your home or. In our store.
Ii msiir iniaWis I 1 T.lini.n. a 1 jA J&iM T.f.'UiitM' ' . " ', 1 , S'
THE AVERAGE HOISEWII'E
prepares more than a thousand meals every year, takes mile.i of
needless steps, spends hours of time in her, kitchen that a Mc
DOUGALI, Kitchen Cainet would give her for more pleasant
tasks. Our show windows offer a pleasing display of McDougulls
right now.
Will You Let Us
Put a
Radium Heater
in your home this fall?
Lots of heat for a little
money burns wood or
coal.
m
124-28 E. Webb St,
Cruikshank & Hampton ,
"Quality Counts"
Phone 548
Round-Up visitors are especially invited to visit o ur large double show room, and to' make them
selves at home in our home.
12,500 FEET OF FLOOR SPACE
12,500 FEET OF FLOOR SPACE
to the New Jersey coast.
Describing his trip, Mr. Andrews
wrote:
"We reached Tilrin without a single
accident and, as we approached tho
outskirts of this Mongolian town, wo
sew a large caravan and decided to
across the plains, was it not? Wo wenti the head. It mado mo realize, as
over to tho great rocky outcrop and! nothing else had, that the Third Asia
pitched our tents. The caravan f ol-1 tie Expedition was really an uecoin-inu-i
! jiml reached our encampment ! Pllshcd fact, that all tho long days
on the way from Kuigan and had Just one hour later. It was an inspiring '" " " i. P epa.a ,o,. n - ew
camp. Then I suddenly recognized tho
American flag and realized that It was
the caravan of tho Amcrlcun Museum
Expedition. It had been five weeks
arrived an hour before us. Preltv fine slKht 11s the
connection for a 700-m!le jowncyr the plain with the American flag at
dream como true.''
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This preparation toughens and relieves
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those offensive odors produced by perspi
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Sold under a guarantee.
Send us one dollar and this advertise
ment and we will send you a package of
"Keppo Tubes" to be used according to di
rections on he .package and if it docs not
do ail we claim for it we will refund jour
money without any questions.
A. C. KOEFPEN & BROS.
Manufacturing Imggi-t
rend let on, Oregon
While In the "Round-l'p Cltj" IM ur
drug store andtry our famous Cltooolatc
Ice Cream.
Our prescription depart mnit under per
sonal supervision Tf a graduate of the Phil
adelphia College of Pharmacy.
KOEPPEN'S
Tue Drug Store That Series You Best
125 East Court Street
N0NAME HARDEST HORSE
OF ROUND-UP, OUTLAWS
TO RIDE, HORSEMEN SAY
AVhich Is the wickedest horse
in the string: of Round-Up out-
laws?
That question ' was asked of
several Judges of mean horses.
Sam Thompson, who is director
of livestock for the big show,
expressed the opinion of every
man asked when he unhesitat-
ingly replied:
"Noname."
This horse is an interesting
study In hoss temperament. In
the stable he is as gentle as the
old family driving horse that
the kids used to use in days
gone by before the gas wagons
became the childrens' pride and
joy. When treated with kind-
ness old Noname Is as docile as
one coulH wish.
'Hut
Wait until the day comes for
him to appear as horse actor in
the arena. Iet him get raked
a bit. with the spur, or fanned
with a big hat.
It isn't profane in the least to
fay that at this stage of things
hell breaks loose. When it
comes to twisting and bucking
under a haJed saddle and a
yelling cowboy. Noname Is in
u class by himself. He has
earned this distinction by his
activities all over the l.'nlted
Ftatf-s ami Canada.
And there is some rash repre-
seated in thi- bide of the horse,
too. To thiie who se th- show
und think thai it costs vt-ry little
to get horws. it may be enliliht-
ening to pass along the informa-
lion that when Nonaine came
into the possession of the Ivn-
dlctoti Itound-l'p association. f r
Just ll.oeo in cold cash went
out of th- association coffers to
g' t the horse..
And as a card he has been
worth it. the directors Ray.
.
;
41
The--
in
EMPIRE
AI
"Tfte Bank of Community
Interests"
Capital 8250,000.00
Surplus $27,000.00
COMMERCIAL ' AND SAVINGS
' Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent
Electrically Protected.
Owned and Controlled By
Umatilla County People
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS:
J. W. MALONEY, President. L. L. ROGERS Vice-Pres.
R. M. MAYBERRY, Cashier
W. M. Rlakeley
Frank Gritman
J. A. Guderian
A. W. Rugg
Alfred Schneiter
II. J. Taylor
jlpW"',w,.,,,,w,,,w,,MWt