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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1913)
11 DAILY EAST ORECOXIAN". PLWULKTOX. OP.IXIOX. Y.WX LKjliT PAULS. SE , ir AN INUEl'ENDENT NEWSPAPER Publnlied Dull j and Semi-Weekly at Pen dletuQ, OrejjoD, by the CAST OKEGOX1AX PUBLISUIN'O CO. F.uterod at the piwtofflt'e at I'eodleton, Orrgi.n, iiH'on t'iasi mail matter. Tbe Pally Fast Oresnlan l ke.r on a!e t the ru.i.'himu Nph i'o., 41 UI:igtoD lirfft. Portland, Us ((.-u. liri.eilal UoIbI News Stand. Portland. t"hli-i.o r.i-.ros'i. 0!''0 Security IliUMlng Wasl.lnctiin. I'. O. liuri'SJ, 5ul, lour trcDlL 8'.ri.'.-t. X. W. Pl!y. one rear, by mall $." 00 Pawy, six months, by mail '-.50 Paliy, iliree m.inths, by mall 1.23 Paliy, one niuutU. by mail .fU PI'y. cue year, by carrier 7.50 Pally, ix month?, by carrier S.75 Pal'y. three months, by carrier 1.P5 Pally, one mouth, by carrier tt5 Peml Weekly, one year, by mall 1.50 Semi-Weekly, six month, by mall... .75 Penil Weekly, four months, by mall... .SO Official City auJ County Paper. Member United lYesa Association, f nephcue Slain President James of the University of Illinois has advised the 300 young lady graduates A Matter of of his school Vrnal Ircftiviut'. this year to marry. He said: '"The woman vhn cho.-u s this tar-j e r when the opportunity o.'fers itself,! or when she can ni.ike ii tor herself, as every woman can, is chosing a . highway to social service which is far! ahead of all teaching or legal or meji cal service she can possibly render to! ..ck;y." . ! U is advhe that Ls true in a great ! r.nasiue. Yet it is advice that could j more properly he given to younsr men than to young women Furthermore, the udvh e for a young woman to mar ry is not always sound. It nil depends upon the sort of marriage. A young woman has as much, or more right than a jotins man to remain single and earn her livlihood. For doing so she is often censured when she is en titled to praise. No fiKTTYMlUtti. thrilling bugles more the call The charging lines of Blue and Gray; No more the cannons rage and roar. As men with men contest the day. Xo more at evening's tragic close The roll call holds the silent name; No more the dashing legions press To win their cause in Victory's flame. Peace be to them on battle ground. Where deeds in marble rec ords tell The story of a Nation's fate, When none but heroes fought and fell! O. D. Gorman. Atlanta, Ga July 1. 1913. True to its record as an unfair and vicious sheet when it has a political end to serve Senator Chamberlain the Oregonian Anil the s n e e r i ngly Tariff on Wool, seeks to dis credit Senator Chamberlain for his attitude with ref erence to the tariff on wool. "As a matter of fact," says the Ore gonian, "it is in Senator Chamberlain's power to defeat the free wool provision of the Underwood bill. The two Loui siana senators who intend to vote against the bill because it places sugar oh the free list will join any other two democratic senators to defeat the free wool clause and they have given this assurance time and again." But the Oregonian carefully omits to mention the obvious fact that if Senator Chamberlain should get the Louisiana senators to stand with him against free wool he would be obliged to vote with them for a tariff on su gar. In other words if he should get their support he would have to bribe them and cast his own honor to the winds. He would have to cease be ing a legislator and become a sena torial pirate. He would have to sink to the level of the old guard. leaders such as Payne. Aldrich and Cannon who passed no legislation on the score of merit but whipped their bills through by sandbag tactics. In presuming to critiei.se Senator Chamberlain as it has the Oregonian confesses its own low standards of political morality. It upholds gov ernment by Jobbery and attacks Sen ator Chamberlain because he keeps his record clean. The senator has taken the logical course with reference to wool and he cannot be subjected to honest criticism. He did everything he could honorably do to retain some tariff on wool but he has refused to go farther. He will not resort to ekulldugery to carry his point. He will not sell his soul to the sugar trust In order to get votes for wool. If he did he would betray the interests of many for the benefit of a few. Senator Chamberlain's position on wool has been absolutely sound. He can look every man In the eye and say "I dare do all that becomes a man; who dares do more is none." If the senator is to he defeated for reelection because of his wool tariff attitude he will be beaten for no other reason than at the crisis of hU political life he displayed elementary honesty and was Irwi.- to the spirit of the oath that rr-ade him a sc-nator. In his financial reviews Henry Clews reflects the Wall street view point and it is interest Not Afraid ing to note what he Of Revision, says of the tariff re vision. The following Is from the review of July 5: "Our tariff is now in the last stages of preparation, though it may be some weeks before actually passed and months before going into effect. The worst in this respect is already known, and any changes In schedules are like ly to be a relief rather than an ad ditional impediment to manufactur ers and merchants. Once the bill is passed, the disposition will certainly be to make the best of it, though for the last six months the Inclination was naturally the reverse. In any event the proposed new schedules have al ready been largely discounted. Com paratively few concerns will be in jured by the new rates, and it is fre quently overlooked that in many re spects the lower schedules will be a positive impetus to trade activity." Nothing pessimistic about that Wall street always howls whenever any sort of reform is attempted but when the deed is done regardless of such wailing Wall street acquiesces in the action, knowing It to have been justified. It is reported that the Pacific Pow er & Light company does not look with favor on the Tliey Should construction of a Keep HaiKls Off. gravity water- sys tem for Pendleton and has been busy with others in cer tain obstructive tactics. Is the electric company doing this because it will lose the $3000 or 14000 annual reve nue it now derives from pumping wa ter for the city? If so the electric company is getting away from the role of a public servant and is trying to be the master. An antidote for that sort of trouble could be found in a municipal electric plant. The Tacoma wild west show seems to have been even more of a failure than the Los Angeles attempt. It is an impossibility to pull off a genuine cowboy carnival In a large city. It is always a dried fruit affair. No matter what happens in Eng land these days the blame Is always charged up to the militant suffraget tes. The next thing on the program will be the harvesting of Umatilla county's bijr wheat crop. -- The searchlights at Washington are revealing much that should have been exposed before. Summer Par&sols cut way below cost price to close out. The 'ii tiro stH-k di vided in two lig Jots. 95c and 82.48 (iimmI oss.irtmont of style? . colors and handles in natural shades wiih colored Wdcrs, filso solid colors, stripes and embroidered stylos. Worth to $2.50 go at 95c Worth to $7.50 go at $2.48 - Wash Goods Go at a Sacrifice WORTH TO C.-.e, NOW 23 Natural colored linens, also brown and lav endar; some piques of the wide welt variety in neat patterns, suitable for two-piece dresses 25 CREPE CHILLS, T1IK 50c KIND NOW 27 Just the cloth for present warm weather needs, in a good variety of patterns and in colors that will wash .. 27 Corsets Worth to $5.00 Now $1.95 XEMO AND PL & G. STYLES, practically all sizes, mostly low bust and long hip. Silk Poplins Worth Regular 75c Now 48c A good material for plain one-piece dresses, with small stripes and figures. 14 Table Length All-Linen Cloths, Worth to $2.50 yard, AT ONE HALF PRICE Pendleton's Greateit Store Bier rl Headquarters for S & H Trading Stamps. BY THE SCISSORS SPIDER CATCHES HSU. IN A LIGHTER VEIN Can Have Twenty. She Jack, when we are married I mast have three servants. He You shall have twenty, dear but not all vat the same time. Iter School. "What finishing school did Miss Bridge attend?" "The School of Scandal, I should Imagine." Judge. In Boston. "When we were In Boston," said Mrs. Twickembury, "we visited the public garden and saw that splendid pedestrian statue of "Washington on horseback." Overworked. "The hour of 12 has struck," hissed the ghost. "I don't blame It," replied the ma terialist. "It was worked to death l'ng ago." Boston Herald. rp 'Forget It XO MOKi; 1 X DIGESTION XO MOKE CONSTIPATION XO MOKE I5IMOISXESS If you will only ke-p the di gestive system working prop erly by the regular use of HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS You should try it today As Usual. Boss Where's Jones? His vaca tion Ik up this morning. Fellow clerk It was, sir; but he telephoned that he would have to ask for a few days to rest up before he could possibly go to work. Ohio State Journal. r3 111 Vuontion. Sir Archibald Oelkie tells a story of a Scotchman who, much against his own will, was persuaded to take a long holiday. He went to Egypt and visited the Pyramids. After gazing for some time at the Great Pyramids he mut tered: "Man, what a lot of mason work not to be bringin' In any rent!" (The Pathfinder.) This is not a nature-fake story or! a fisherman's yarn; It is an authenti cated account of actual facts, report-1 ed by a minister in South Africa to London Xature. He relates how he caught a large spider, whose out stretched legs covered a space about three Inches in diameter. He took this spider home and placed it near his aquarium, in which he had a num ber of small fish. What was his sur prise shortly to find that Mr. Spider was sitting up on his hind legs on the edge of the aquarium, complacently holding a little fish four times his own weight in his paws and munching away at it with great gusto The spi der continued to eat till nothing was left of the fish but the backbone. The minister then made It a point to watch the spider, and his patience was rewarded by seeing him later In the very act of fishing. The insect spread his legs out over the water In a sprawling position and waited for his prey. sugar, cannot rnlse cane without it The opposition to our colonial exten sion is from tariff Sugar has money to spare to advertise against the su gar refiners, who are the real manu- ! facturers. The present senate Is the last elected by collusion and corrup tion, and It is the hope of the robber barons. THE VALUE OP RESEARCH. (Popular Science Monthly.) According to Dr. W. R. Whitney, In charge of the General Electric Co., re search laboratories, the advances in incandescent lighting alone In this for her not likely. Why, when her father came a-courtln' me an found the door locked, he climbed the back yard wall, strangled the bulldog and knocked the old man silly wT a clump on the jaw. Then he grabbed hold of my hand an shoved a ring as big as a cartwheel on my finger, and told me that the bunns was already up. That's the sort of husband I want for our Lizzie; not a shlverin' milksop that ain't got sense to come In out of the rain!" William J. FUSED. Burns, the detective. country in the last 100 years repre-1 Proposes to train up a number of sent a saving of $240,000,000. a year or nearly a million dollars a day. He also calls attention to the fact that as a result of Investigations with the mercury arc. his company has already had a sale of over a million dollars extra. There are a great many con cerns In this country spending over a hundred thousand dollars annually On research. THE TORY TARIFF. (George Alfred Townsend In the Bos ton Globe.) The tariff puts the United States at a disadvantage. Seventy years ago England was Tory as we are now, jealously guarding her patents and home markets. A manufacturer. Peel, threw down her barriers, and ghe remains free trade, though her colonies are high tariff. Protection Is a commercial substitute for old Af rican slavery, and as we settle farth er west every new state wants tariff, while the old states have not Inde pendence enough to call It off. Lou isiana, after 100 years' protection on SPOKE PLAINLY. A sharp-featured, determined little woman popped her head out of the door and indignantly demanded the business of a bashful young man who had been hanging around the house for hour in a pitiless downpour of rain, hoping against hope that his adored one would invite him In. "Now, then, young feller, what do you want here? Tryln' to wear the pavement out or what?' she demand ed, sarcastically. , "I reckon I've come a-courtln' your daughter." the shamefaced youth ad mitted. "Oh, y're after Lizzie, are ye? Then take my advice, young man, an' run away an' lose yerself. My gal ain't goln' to marry a chap that hasn't the courage to knock at the door an ax young college graduates in the detect ing trade, relates the Chicago Record Herald. Talking about crime to a group of college graduate applicants for posts on his staff. Mr. Burns said: "It doesn't take me long to decide on a lad's suitability for this career. Only the other day. for example, I dis charged a Yale first honor man after twenty-four hours' trial. His first case proved him valueless." "What was his first case?" asked a Harvard oarsman. "Theft of a box of soap," said Mr. Burns "Theft of a boax of soap fom a freight car and the Idiot arre-ited a tramp. Iay In Coul. The Johnsons, according to a re cent story had an old hen which In sisted upon neglecting her comfort able nest to lay a dally egg In the coal cellar. "I can't think," fretted Mrs. John son, as she and her small son, Joe, together - hunted for that particular egg, "why this one hen Insists upon using the coal bin." "Why, that's easy, mother," ex claimed Joe In astonishment. "I s'pose she's seen the sign: 'Now. is the time to lay In your coal.' " 1 Don't Make Your Home a Bake Oven This Summer PACIFIC POWER & LIGHT COMPANY Always at Your Service ..... Phone Main 40 VAUDEVILLE For an evening of HIGH-CLASS FUN SEE THE HARRY WATSON', Proprietor. Something Doing Every Night. Every act has plenty of "pep," and the entire program a refined one. See the Amusement columns of this paper for changes of bills. 2-Shows Flighlly-2 1st Performance 7:15; 2nd at 9:00 Genera! Admission 15. t 0M-ra Cliairs 25c Children 10c TIT'-'? WW? iJuhn ,m,H 'n-i hi, iniwA2aL Pastime Theatre "The Home of Good Pictures" ALWAYS THE LATEST in Photoplays :: Steady, Flickerless Pictures :: Abso lutely Xo Eyo Strain. A Refined and Entertaining Show for the En tiro Family. Kext to French Restaurant Changes Sundays, Tuesdays and Fridays. Adults 10c. Children under 10 years 5c. rp hleum Theatre J. P. MEDERXACII, Prop. High-Class Up-to-Date Mo ion Pictures FOft HEX, WOMEN AND CIIILDKEX Program changes Sunday's, Tuesday's and Friday's. See Program in, Today's-Paper. PENDLETON'S P O P U. LATt PICTURE SHOW THE COSY Where the entire family can enjoy a high-class motion picture show with comfort, Fun, Pathos Scenic Thrilling All Properly Mixed Open Afternoon and Even ing. Changes Sunday, Mon day, Wednesday and Friday. JNaxt Door to ot. (ieor.o-ft I In- ' n tel. Admission 5c and 10c