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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 4, 1914)
DAILY EAST OTCEGONIAX. rF.XPT.ETOX. OREGOy.KlPAY. PKCEMTtEtt 4, 1014. FTP.UT PAOES mmimmMmmmi V liJiMLuiJ.liliMMiMiliji.iilallllh.nia.illliUiiiij.llii,;, t-.S II i-i f 1 THE ALTA THEATRE 101 ALTA THEARTE ;jp Home of Quality y FAnE roun !IM!!,!!M!!1l!!!,n!M!!ll!!!M!M!l!!M!tl!!!l!MMMH!h,!im!!!!!!ll!M!!iiil!!iMII!!ll I m iiiiii iiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiii iiiii! i i i ii I in i i i i i ii u i i l i t; ' 1 I fogy,- The House of Comfort ' .yi r. J i r i t-3 Prominent Among the Beautiful Pageants Shown arc tin-e reiimny of lite Marrinjre of the Sea the Orini velliu: jnvoion. The beautiful ceremony firt r; f erred to reminds one that from nny point Venice villi it l.'O canals, 72 inlands and 4."0 bridges, one inav mult tlie great oeean by way of the Adriatic Sea without setting foot on ground. In this historically correct pageant we see the IVge and his Council of Ten, in their nles of office, marching out of the beautiful Church of St. Marks. To their left is the noble Ducal Palace. On they pas until the Grand Canal is reached when they Iniard the hargc of state to be rowed down to the mouth of the Canal on the Adriatic. The gondola is ( v( tv v here. The grandeur of this picture is beyond description. SATURDAY "We Llylf SATURDAY Veifcs99 Admission Only 15c MADE IN VENICE, ITALY Piefore work was begun on this picture a contract was drawn by the City of Yeniee re quiring "that the sceiQrio must be undersigned by an eminent writer of Yenetian history and the costumes, properties and settinps le supervised by an eminent artNt who will warrant the artistic value, the truhfulness and seriousness of the film." Big in Conception Big in Execution Big in Educational Value MADE BY PKODUCEP.S OF "QUO YADI SM AXD "AXTIIOXY AXD CLEOPATRA" IheMojtjeauUiujLpi All Old WorldCities is Brought to You A YEXETIAX EOMAXCE OF Tllf FIF'JEKXTH CENTURY. Although we are paying a larger sum for this picture we will not advance our prices Synopsis Captain Eienzi commands n small Yenetian fleet at Cyprus which he defends against the Turks, lie returns to Yen ice for reinforcement. and finds that his ewcet heart has been forced to marry the jtowerful Count Orsini who succeeds in plotting the ruin of Ilienzi and getting him sentenced to death on the charge of conspiring to surren der his fleet to the Tuvks. Kicnzi escapes and Incomes a leader of a hand of pirates throwing his strength with the Turks. As his vessel sails straight for the Yenetian Admiral's vessel that has Imvohic stranded his sister elimlw aloft and raises the flag of the Lion of Venice. Kicnzi and his crew ltccoine fired with patriotism at sight of the flag and turn on the Turks saving the day. Count Orini who receives his death wound in the battle confesses his crime and gets a pardon for Ilimzi. Admission Only 15c will fret either until the general world I (KY 2.1 mmORXXW standard Is raised. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. rcblUbed Pally and Semi Weeklj at Pao- a let on. Oregon. DJ me KaBT OKbUUMAN 1'UBLISUINQ CO. OfflclaJ County Paper. Member United Preaa Aaaoctatioo, Entered at tbe Oregon, aa aecood-clM mail matter. poatofru-a at Pendleton, clepbooa 1 ON SALE IN OTHER CITIES. . Imperial Hotel Newa Stand, Portland, O'ecua. iivwman Neva Co., Portland, Oregon. ON KILE AT Cblcapo Bureau. WS Security Building. Waahiorton, I). C, Unreao, 501, four teenth atreet, N. W. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. Dalfy, on year, by mall 13.00 Iwlly, alx id out ha, by mall 2.50 llly. three moDlba. by mall 1.25 Daily, one moath, by mall 54 lnr, one year. tj carrier t.ou Dally, alz months, by carrier S.T5 Dally, three month, by carrier 1.93 IllV, one month, by carrier 6.1 Keml-Weekly, one year by mall 1.30 Keml-Weekly, alz montba. by mall 73 bemt-Weekly, (our moutha, by mall... .50 BOUNTEOUS. way. Then seized upon my youth one day; And later middle age he seized Aa though with hunger unap-peased: And as the year now onward j Pendleton Time first my childhood took If the United State accepts Tresl dent Wilson's advice and establishes povernment operated steamship lines to South America we can do effective work towards improving the lot of the seaman all over the world. As this country would be operating Its lines for the purpose of extending ouf commerce and not to make dividends we could afford to pay decent wages and give seamen a chance to live as men rather than as dogs. Such a course as that on the part of the Uni ted States would compel other nations to grant better treatment to their men who follow the sea. At the present time all the profits of the sea go to men who stay on land and there is very little for the cap tains or the men who risk their lives upon the deep. It Is not a Just ar rangement This is the fourth day the Civic Coffee Club has been open and up to latt evening there had been all told but 15 applications by men A Favorable Showing. and art, to say nothing'of awful oaths; do not respond to the foot bath . .. I. .... 1 1 V. - l . . .1 i.. I ...... I II Cdiiiiriii Aiiuum Lit guru 1IHI11UUH1 and women seekln work. That record furnishes the strongest compliment that could be paid to the prosperity and stability ol roll bit From each he takes some of toll. In strength, perhaps; in dally zest For toll whatever suits him best. His tax I pay, but willingly However much he asks of me. For in return for all his strife He's granted me rich drafts of life. He's taught me how to love and shows The path to prizes all may own, 4 He's lavished gifts of Joy on me, And dried my tears with sym- pathy; 4 And for each year he's taken he's Knriched mv store of Memor- les. Until my fieart runs o'er today With the rich bounty of his swa-. Chicago News. The Interests opposed to the admin Intrusion's shipping bill claim that In Head of providing Thou- Wlto fur government op- JXWIow Urn- Sea. erated ships con gress should change our laws so as to permit American owned ships to be manned on the same basis as Kuropean ships. In other words our seamen should be forced down to the European wage level and standard of living which is so low th average American worker won't stand for it. He will stay off the ocean and Is doing so with the result we now have no American sailors. The truth of the matter Is our standard for seamen has not been too high but the European standard has been inhumanly low. The European a I lor has been little more than a slave. Po poorly have they been treated that (0.000 British seamen are now striking for higher wares. They deserve higher wage and better treatment but it is doubtful If they CASTORIA For Infants, and Children, fti Kind Yea Kara Always Esugh: Boars t&a ttttaaturt This is a town of about 7000 people and it Is an important railroad point with the result many transient work ers stop off here. On top of this is the fact this is the dull season of the year for outdoor work because the farm work Is finished and much con structlon work has closed down for the winter. Under these circumstances the showing made here Is remarkable. The employment feature of the cof fee club has been widely exploited by the newppapers and by conversation on the street It Is therefore proper to say the Institution has become well known and It may be assumed that those out of work and desiring work very badly have heard of the place and made use of Its advantages. The fact there have been so few appll cations is creditable to the town, Nevertheless the Coffee Club fills a valuable need in many ways. It is a splendid thing to have an organl zatlon that will serve as a free em ployment bureau. It is a good thing for the worker who is out of a Job and it is a great convenience to those who need men or women for work Such a bureau should be maintained here permanently if possible. Then the Coffee Club provides place where unemployed men may make themselves at home under good surroundings and that fact alone Jus tlfles its existence. This feature of the club will b more important later In the winter than at present because as outdoor work closes down more fully a larger number of idle men will congregate here. Reports more than once confirmed from London and Berlin reveal a hatred between the Brit- Everlattting ih and Germans that Is Hate. almost incredible "a holy hate" (ein helllger Hass), as a writer In one of the Ger man reviews expresses it It extends to all circles of society, but Is especi ally noticeable among the more en lightened and highly favored. Members of the royal families have renounced honorary titles and re turned decorations. L-earned profes sors have retiigned positions of dis tinction and profit. There are boy cotts upon music, drama, literature that never again shall there be any commercial or social intercourse be tween the two peoples. War of course Is the highest ex pression of national oncer, but It Is not often accompanied by such child ish manifestations as these. In most cases war Is waged with peace in view; jet there never can be any peace if hatred Is to be etrenal. Enmity between nations has rarely survived war except where the con queror has been harsh and unjust in the Imposition of terms. Powers which have oppressed weaker states have merely sown the seeds of future strife, but those which have made Teace in reasonable terms have dis armed malice and revenge. England and Germany are Just near tnough of kin to hate fiercely. They are now exaggerating each other's faults. While the lust of carnage Is upon them they probably believe that, however the present conflict may end they will always be foes, refusing to recognize each other and never ne glecting an opportunity to inflict an injury. It is morally certain that this spirit Is as mistaken as It is venomous. There will be more wisdom, if not more charity, on both sides before this war Is ended and it Is safe to say that when it is ended the implacables of royalty, aristocracy, art and letters will not make the settlement. As brave men quit fighting when they lay down their arms, London and Ber lin will be surprised in due time to notice how much virtue each has overlooked in the other. Nations cannot hate forever. New York World. The Rev. James Owen Hannay Canon of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dub lin, has written a book in which he says that If he could die and be born again he would prefer to come forth as an American woman. It sounds like the gentleman Is much impressed or else had been at one time in the vicinity of Blarney castle. But in another paragraph he reveals the fol lowing thought: "Very clever women sometimes frighten me; I am never frightened in America," which is not good Irish at all. Irvln Cobb's experiences in the Ger man war zone have been singularly Interesting and his Saturday Evening Post stories give a very graphic plc ture of the conditions he found there Two bit wool won't be surprising. STATE VETERINARIAN .SPEAKS , before; woolgrowers treatment In the form of applications of butyr of antimony after which a tar dressln? Is applied to the hoof. A quantity of tar placed In a short foot trough may be beneficial to the henl- Inp of the hoof after the disease Is under control. "Lip and leg Involvements are a result of the activity of the same or ganism that causes foot rot, except ing that another portion of the body is assailed. The peculiarities of the organism, the bacillus necrobaclllo s!s, are that It exerts its disease pro ducing effects, tissue necrossis only In the abence of oxygen, hence the heavy adhering 8.'ab Is necessary In order to keep out the air and when remov ed Its fortifications, figuratively speaking, have been largely broken down. In order to kill the Invading germs It Is necessary to apply a bac tericidal agent that will penetrate deeply enough In the tissue to come In contact with all of the germs. For this purpose one part nitric acid to seven of water, tincture of Iodine and vitrol water are more efficient than less severe medicinal agents. After the disease germs are finally killed healing agents such as carbol ized vaseline and antiseptic ointments will prove beneficial. Those animals which do not respond to treatment either for foot rot or Up and leg ul ceration after two months' time may best be slaughtered unless they are valuable breeding animals. "Parasites of an external nature of the sheep tick parasite has been given much attention of late, how ever laudable the subject, the prac ticability of the same at the present time Is questioned. All new nnlnials would necessarily have to be dipped twice unless the arsenical preparation I la effective, upon arrival. Two dip pings ior sneep tick should be twenty days apart, this would Interfere se riously with the handling of breed ing sheep. We nro at the present time unquestionably In great need of Improved bloods. If one of the two Innoatlons must be forgone, let the eradication of sheep tick give place to Improved bloods, during which time each owner can practice flock eradication of the pest. Sheep scab and lice are the two other parasitic ailments of Importance to the range owner. Both infections respond to rroper dipping and with the new roir.'.I ruling providing that only those dips be used which the manu facturer can supply a testing appara tus to determine the relative strength under field condition for scabies erad ication, the present Infection In Ore gon and the west ought to be early eradicated. "Internal parasites outside of the .beep tape worm cyst, which devel ops into one of the tape worms in festing the dog are of negligible im-l portance In our range districts. The tape worm cyst seems to be quite prevalent In certain bands and by some it Is thought that the stiffness seen in many of our lambs on our summer ranges, is produced by the is I ii i We Hhve Ready I 8 for Christmas Shoppers lay be classed Into three or more burrowing of this larva in the large (Continued from page one.) at the present time one of the shep herd's greatest disease obstacles. The characteristic offensive odor always associated with foot rot serves to identify the ailment when accompan ied with lameness In sheep. Treat ment is best applied by hand when small numbers are affected and by foot bath troughs when considerable numbers are involved. Troughs ten to twenty feet long, six inches high and twelve inches wide, will best serve the occasion. After separating the diseased from the well and driving all members of the band through the foot bath which is best made by us ing a solution of blue vltrol or some of our standard sheep dips of the coal tar derivative, the visibly diseased should after their hoofs were care fully gone over with a pruning knife, removing all diseased tissue, be forc ed into the foot vat and allowed to remain there for two minutes. This treatment of the diseased animals hould be carried out dally. The ex posed remnant of the herd can be run through the vat once or twice during the week. Those animals that biting Insects, chief among them sheep tick, which Is a species of fly that has lost Its wings. It does not live for any length of time off of the host It Is amenable to eradication by means of dipping. Various remedies are popular with the sheep owner as agents that lessen its prevalence In Infected bands, which include prac tically all sheep In the west. Feed ing of sulphur Is reputed to cause the parasites to leave sheep so treat ed. Certain arsenical dips are ad vertised to kill both the parasite and eggs with one dipping. We hope to carry out a number of experiments along this line In cooperation with the Agricultural College In the near future. The shering of sheep Is one of the most potent methods of re moving ticks and eggs at the pres ent time. Were It not for associated Iambs harboring and carrying many seed parasites through the season shearing would prove very effective. Dipping after shearing will tend to free the- Iambs of their Infection and if practiced only every other year will result in much good. "An agitation for the eradication muscles of the loin and legs. The infection can be eradlcatetd from all bands by quarterl treatment of all dogs with vermifuges or agents which cause the expulsion of Intestinal and certain tape worms, "Liver fluke Is a parasitic infesta tion common to certain low districts of western Oregon. It can only exist In altitudes less than 1000 feet, as the particular water snail the (linn eaus) In whih the einbreyonal fluke passes part of its life cycle Is not found above altitudes of 1000 feet, hence the non-Importance of this ail ment to sheep owners of the arid sec. tion of the state. "Many of the intestinal parasites, such ns roundworms, stomach worms, secum worms, bladder worms, and several species of the tapeworm are occasionally seen in western Oregon, as Is also lung worm. Sheep under range conditions where arid soil conditions exist and loose herding' Is practiced are almost Immune to these ailments as well as radically all (lis eases of any consequence to the gen eral well being of sheep husbandry and the public health." g 5 with the greatest and grandest line we have ever displayed Hfr vnii will find Prpspfia' Sense, worth and Lasting Quality DIAMONDS, CUT GLASS WATCHES KINGS CHAINS SILVERWARE .CLOCKS UMIJIIELLAS CHARMS TINS lAW u,V -,i'i'Lj'h' Jr oil mi(u re 1 Betters your breakfast Your breakfast pancakes, waffles, biscuits or frit ters (see the recipe below) will taste far more deli cious if served with TOWLE'S CABIH CANE AND MAPLE SYRUP. Uok Horn. "Suntt" Horn, lruU4 It givei yon the delicious maple flavor at its best, and is rJ always told in the lojf-cmbin-baped cans your guarantee of purity, quality and full meaiure. The Towl Maple Product Company aaiaa nndqurtmi PaepU Gaa BoiUina. Oluft IUfiarfat St.Paat.MIn4 LOG CABIN FRITTERS Mis two teaspoonfuli baking powder thoroughly with four cupa flour. Add two cups sweet milk, one tablespoon sweet cream, half a teaspoon salt and three well beaten eggs. Fry in hot lard until brown. Servo with warm Towlc'a Log Cabin oyrup. , Toilet Amdo?, Souvenir?, Etc. Select your presents Now nnl have tlietn laid away for you. Our Engraving Done By An Expert A. L. SCHAEFER Jeweler aivl Silversmith. 72G Main Street. Telephone C28J "Made in Pendleton " EVERYBODY'S SMOKING LA TIMA The home made all Havana cigar. 2 for 25c It's ihey way it's made 2nd nhafi In It. Memorize the name and ask for it at your cigar dealers BOOST for Home Industry i? 8 3X 8 8 8 8 3 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 3 Vr.