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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 1915)
TMP.E F0TT7L ANIM'i:ri;MEXT newstaier. lliblkhN) ImUj end Keml Weekly St I0- ) i ! on, Oregon, by the KAKT OhM.o.MA.N I I UL18U 1X0 CO. OfflrUI County Taper. Meeibtr lolled I ron AMotlatioa. Entered t the ruwiofflr it lodltoa. oreiron, eroiiu- ism nan matter. lribD 1 DAILY EAST OKEflOXTAy, rEXDLETOX. OREGON, MONDAY, VKKKrAnV Sf, 101: ETflTTT PAGES. ON 8AI.K IN OTIIKR CITIKS. laiMVlal llmrl Nfi Stand, i'urtland, Oregon. lUiwoiaa N Co, Portland, Oregon. ON KII.K AT Cklcairo lnn-fiu, 1ou Security Building W anhinctnu 1 C, Hurean 001, Four teenth street, N. W. FlttKCJillTION FATES ' ' (IN ADVANCE) lally, one year, by mall $5 no "ally, li iutntliK. by mall J .so laliy, three tuonih. by mall 1.25 lally, cne nontu. by mall.,.. 60 I wily, fine year, by carrier 7..'i0 ally, i month, by carilr 8 7ft lally, three mouths, by carrier 19A lally, one month, by carrier M rVml Weekly, me year by mall 1 ,'.o nemi weenj. (ii month, by mail 75 Heml Weekly, four months, by mall... .50 TIIK WANDEKLVST. The Wanderlust ha lured me to the seven lonely seas, Ha dumped me on the tailing- plies of dearth; The Wanderlust has hailed me from the morris chairs of ease, Ha hurled me to the end of all the earth. How bitterly I've cursed It, oh, the Painted Desert knows, The wraithlike heights that hunt; the rallld plain, The all-but-fluid silence. yet the longing grows and grows, And I've got to glue the Wan- derlust again. The Wanderlust has blest me ... In a ragged blank- et curled. I've watched the Gulf of Hea- ven foam with stars; I've walked with eyes wide open to the wonder of the world. I've reen God's flood of glory burst Its bars, I've seen the gold a-blindlng In the riffles of the sky, Till I fancied me a bloated plutocrat; But I'm freedom's happy bond slave, and I will be till I . die. And I've got to thank the Won- derlust for that Robt W. Service. out a board at will and appoint a new one. He can do the same with the game commission uny time he may boo fit. This places tremendous power i the hands of the governor and it I power that can be used very effect Ively for political purposes. I'nuues tionably the senators who drove thl bargain through had visions of the political machine that could be built up under such an arrangement. vnat makes the Moser bill the more remarkable is the fact the sen ate refuted to stand for a law giving tie governor power to temporaril suspend snenrrs and district attor r.eys who failed to enforce the law in objection was thnt such a law would give the governor too much power. Yet the Moser bill goes 10 times farther In the way of making the governor a ciar. In other words the senate refused to give the exe cutlve power where power Is heeded if the prohibition law Is to be enforced out gave mm unlimited power In fields where power Is more likely to produce harm than good. CURRENT THINKING The speed with which the German submarines have started their work of plucking merchant Submarine vessels bound for Eng Sueroe. land rives indication that the underwater blockade may be effective. The submarine has a greater advantage in being able to move with stealth and being cheap of construct and requiring smell crews Germany can keep a perfect swarm of such boats in operation for less money than a big battleship fleet can be maintained. Laying all senti ment aside it is a highly Interesting water game England and Germany are engaged in. Incidentally this game may demonstrate what is to be the war craft of the future. If a few hundred submarines can blockade the British isles under the very nose of the greatest surface fleet In the world will the fact net show that for mod ern sea fighting the submarine is the craft for use by the nation that wants to win. In a few years time, if gunboats remain in fashion, the world may be building submarines ex clusively and sending the battleships to the boneyard. If the Moser bill, enacted on the closing night of the legislative session, Is as sweeping as The Mow IU1L reports indicate the house was forced to pay a heavy price for the safety of the workman's compensation act and did not make that act very safe either. The Moser bill could well be called a measure for the upbuilding of a po litical machine through the governor's office. The governor Is given power to remove any appointee at will. He has the appointment of a large num ber of officials and members of com missions, some of them of great im portance. He names among other boards the regents of the university, agricultural college and normal school. Vnder the new law the governor Is complete dictator of all those boards and commissions because he can wipe fr. , . juoss mediaeval-minded persons who think the only way to maintain peace is for every Hread Mightier man to carry arms, Than Cannon, and every country to surround Itself with forts and ships of war (writes Stnn ghton Cooley, in The Public) might "ell ponder the words of the Burgo master of Louvaln, Alfred Xerlnex. speaking or America's aid to his stricken countrymen, he said: e cannot buy food, even if we have the money, when the doors are closed to imports. Feed us now, and we will pay you back in industry when the war is over. We are pay ing back now in gratitude for the ... mes America has saved, gratitude which will endyre, as. proof that hu man affection Is .stronger than any treaty alliance. ' The ' most powerful army in the world cannot Teutonlze Belgium, but America, armed with bread, is Americanising Belgium." Swords may rust, rifles and cannon may be superseded, but the effect ot a kindly act goes on forever. We boast of our large and ever-Increasing foreign trade, but of all the items that make np our exports nothing is so much to our credit, and nothing will redound so much to the permanent Kood of the country, as the foodstuffs sent to prostrate Belgium. And when this war is finally brought to an end, and the fighting men return to their homes to shoulder again the burdens of life made doubly heavy by this w ar there will be 'still other oppor-. tunities for Americans to aid the vlc- times, not alone in Belgium, but in the other countries that have fought to the point of exhaustion. And the price of every cannon, and every ship of war, and of every fort that is put Into food and clothing to be sent to those people will fortify this country a hundredfold more than if expended for physical armament The price of a battleship, sent to each warring na tion at the dawn of peace, not as craven tribute, but as fraternal aid, will furnish more enduring protection than did the Great .Wall of China, u n.n s SIGNAL. (By Bret Harte.) William Guild was engineer of the tiuin which oti the 19th Of April. 1S73, plunged Into Meadow llrook. It wax his custom, as tften as he pass ed his home, to whistle an "All's well" to his wife. He was found, arter the disaster, dead, with his hand on the throttle-valve of his engine. Two low whlstls .quaint and clear; That was the Blgniil the engineer That was the signal that Guild, 't Is said Cave to his wife at Frovldence, As through the sleeping town; ond thence, t Out in the night. On to the lidht, Down past the farms, lying white, he sped! As a husband's gieetlng, scant, no doubt, Yet to the woman looking out Watching and waiting, no serenade. Love-song, or midnight roundelay Said what that whistle seemed to say "To my trust true. So, love, to ou! Working or waiting, goodnight!" it said. j Brisk young bagmen, tourists fine. Old commuters along the line. Brakemen and porters blanced ahead. Smiled as the signal, sharp, intense, Pierced through the shadows of Providence. "Nothing amiss Nothing! It is Only Guild calling his wife," thej said. Summer and winter the old refrain Bang o'er the blllcws of ripening grain. Pierced through the budding boughs o'erhead. Flew down the track when the red leaves burned L'.ke living coals from the engine spurned; Sang as it flew, 'To our trust true. First of all, duty. "Good night!" it said. And then, one n'ght. It was heard no more From Stonlngton over Rhode Island shore. And the folks In Providence ami ed and said As they turned In their beds, "The engineer Ha.i once forgotten his mldlnight cheer." One only knew. To his trust true, Guild lay under his engine, dead. S3 Another Week Has Started, off AGAIN r-1 rd n3 r ir QLT E1 c J3 you It's impossible to make a purchase here without realizing that saved big money on the deal. We have what you want and at the want to pay. New goods have just arrived and been addad to our lines have f f ?3 price you 1 1 DON'T PAY MORE-COME TO THE HUB THIS MA Y ENTERTAIN UACSCAL. They were sitting on the star In a very narrow space. Gazes he with lovesick air On her half-averted face. Knows he well she Is a wife, Yet his adoration is The devotion of a life. For she happens to be his. Two Extremes. Pill How was the show? Jill Very tame. , "And the audience?" "Wild!" EXALTATIOV. There is nothing that can make you feel your superiority more than ycur having been delicately polite to some person unfortunately unable to understand it Reckless. (jrooa gracious, man! Didn t you notice? There goes your chauffeur, elcplng with your wife!" "Too bad! This recklessness of these chauffeurs la something aw ful!" SMOOTHING IT OUT. (Pittaburg Chronicle Telegraph.) A young Parisian, noted for his grace and readiness as a second in many duels, had been asked by friend to accompany him to the mayor's office and affix his signa ture as a witness to the matrimonial ceremony. He consented, but when the scene w&i reached he .vkwardly forgot himself. Just as the mayor was ready for thu last formalities he broke out, to the astonishment of all parties, with the remark: "Gentlemen, cannot this unhappy af'alr be arranged? Is there no way of preventing this sad occurrence?' BAP.OXESS IX IlltEAClI OF PROMISE SCIT A FTER the House hold Expenses are Paid, Should the Hus band and Wife Divide Earnings Equally JL 1 .M: h if h 5" :-. K.'t," y 1 : NEW YORK. Feb. 22. Further details in the alleged romance of Mi chael Hurley, St. Louis financier, who was made defendant In a breach of promise suit by Baroness Ursula Bar- brra von Kallnowski have been re vealed in the supreme court at the hearing of the suit of George Flem- ng her former counsel against Mrs. Jessie B. Bacon, formerly of Lincoln, Neb., widow of Francis Bacon, from whom he wants 123,000 as counsel fees. He says Hurley proposed to his client and to the baroness when all three were living In Hie Continental H'jtt 1. Paris. MEN'S SUITS Your fliuico of any Suit in the store, nolh- s nip rescrveil, for Sj$50 j A larjrc line of sizes and patterns to select H from. !Manv of them worth as hih as $10.50. . ' 5 HOYS' KXICKEniiOCKEU SUITS nice line to select from and some of 5 the latest styles. Xorfolk Coat. and full jo pnnts. now poine for $135. 91.93, ?2.t3, ?3.33, ?3.S3, $3.95, 94.33, 9 1.63. E HOYS' shoes I Hiitton and lace Shoes for Ikjvs' tan and 5 Made, for 91-00 5 H MEN'S SHOES e Hijr lot of Men's Shoes in heavy and dre, H worth up to .4-'0 9105 1 LADIES' HOSE j Ladies' Mercerized Black Hose, these are H imperfect but are regular -'5c values to be sold at 10 I CHILDREN'S HOSE H Children's Cotton Ribbed Hose 5 I MEN'S SHIRTS H Men's Military collar Shirts in lipht pat- 3 terns and fine material, to be sold at wf ; 3 for 91.OO. LJIilllllllllllilllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'- I now Spring Shoos I Just Received JM.ANKKTS All our Wool-nap Illankets, larce size, 70xSO, heavy weight to lo sold at 92.45 pi C .3! 1 -1 , 5 t3 Ladies' patent leather button shoes with brocaded top, regular $1.50 shoe for only , 93.45 Ladies' patent leather shoe, mat top, regular $3..'0 for 92.85 Ladies' patent button, regular $3.50 shoe for 92.65 Ladies' black suede Goodyear welt, reg ular $1.00 shoe for 92.85 Ladies' button or lace vici kid, regular $4.00 for - ?3.20 Ladies' kid button shoe, regular $3.50 shoe for 92.05 Ladies' gnn metal button shoe, low and high heel latest lasts Regular $3.00 Shoe for 92.65 Regular $3.50 shoe for. $2.05 Ladies' pin metal, plain toe, with cra venctte tops; something snappy: reg ular $4.50 shoe for $3.45 Ladies' tan button shoe, Goodyear welt, high or low heels, regular $3.50 shoe for 92.05 Ladies rubber heel Juliets 65 PANTS Men's Pants, of good quality, worth up to ee iri.25; all sizes - ROYS' HIGH CUT SHOES High Cut Tan and Rlnck Shoe, in sizes S 1-2 to 13 1-2 91.25 MEN'S SHIRTS Golf and Negligee Shirts, of the quality; regular $1.00 and $1.25.- best g SUSPENDERS jj Our entire 6toek of Men's Suspenders to le g sold at, the pair 15 HATS 1 1 Men's HaU of fine quality and up-to-date :f shapes. We have 300 to be sold at 91 MEN'S SHOES I! Good work Shoes for Men, all solid leather and we can give you any size. Our loss is your gain. Get a pair at 910 Every pair of Men'g Shoes in our entire store, including all our sample Shoos, will be sold at a low figure. E3 gill Roys' blue bib overalls, sizes 4 venrs to 15 -TinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllltllllllllllllllllllUc years, pair .....H.':: 35 i 3 I 3 1 a E 3 T-'7 iimtmimmmti lUUtuiiiiiitiiltiWIiMtlU 12 M TWO MEN AWARDED MEDALS I 1 1 U -KVAMITH . NtW YORK. CENTRAL. Dennis Josepn C.issln, an aged en gineer of the New York Central Rall nud, and A. H. Smith, the president, of the company, have been awarded medals by the American Museum ot Safety In recognition of their efforts to protect life in :14. The E. H. Karrlman medal wis established five )ars ago by Mri. Jlarrlman in mem ory of the binges', railroad man the country has produced. . President S'mlth received thi gold medal for the road, while a silver medal was given the operating department. Then the bronze medal went to Mr, Cuss In who entered the : rvlce of the road In 1861 and has I f en an engineer since 1S67. For .niiny years he op- eiated the engines on the "Empire" and other fast trains without acci dent. He attained the age of seventj September 1, 1914, und was retired by the board of Tensions. President .Smith says of him: VPW'Pfk'fi '-' - Toy depends entirely on what you mean by the word lunch. A load of plck ler, naiad, cheese r.nd other formid able delicacies wilt certainly Invite retribution If eaten late In the even Inr. Hut a simple Unch, like a bowl of bread and milk, or a sandwich, eaten before retiring, tends to make onn uleep better. People whose wtlght Is subnormal and whose clr dilation Is poor and whose sleep lif,ht and unrefresh.'ng, will do well to acquire the midnight lunch habit a a permanent thing. Without make no mistake about that without brer. WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. imiTAIX FACED BREAD FAMINE HARKJMAN MEDAO-. "We feel that his many years ot successful and careful service stand out as a remarkable example, the recognition of whloh should be an Inspiration and stimulus In further Ins; the safety spirit In the minds ot all employes." LESSONS IN RIGHT LIVING THE RESTLESS NIGHT. Mr. Edison's dictum that we sleep toe much has just a (rain of truth In ft. The habit cf sleeping is like the habit of eating no man feels thit he ever gets more than be needs. It is like pulling teth with tfie u gar tongs to persuade the hearty, florid, stout person of 40 or 46 with eurly signs of arterial degeneration that he should cut down on his fod der that he would really be heal thier and stronger and feel more fit on a smaller ration. . And so It is a task to make the cverage Individual rwlerstand that a few sleeplessness A remarkable thing about Insom nia Is that, an hour of wakefulness when other folks ' are peacefully slumbering beraues a whole night In the telling next day. And a still mc re remarkable thing about It la that a four or five hour nap after a struggle to obtain sleep at all when the Individual files his complaint with the doctor the next day. There is a serious discrepancy be tween the nurse's icports and ' the patient's reports upon the hours of sieep In every case. ,,..' To open the subject let us here swash a few of the old time trttdl tlins refrarillnjr Inscmlna. The most (The London Chronicle.) Britain was on the verge of bread famine during the Napoleonic wura. and In 1800 a law was enacted pichlbltlng the sale of bread till It hmi been out of the oven at least Z4 hours. "Food was so scarce and dear," writes F. W. Hackwood, "that a portion of the population refused to starve In silence, and rioting broke out In many rrts of England. . . . A royal grant of 600 pounds was made to one Thomas Toden, to eViable him to prosecute a discovery made by him In a 'paste' as a sub stllute for wheat flour. . . . The unfortunate seamen fighting Great urliains battles 011 the high seas had to subsist on biscuits so badly made that when the weevils were knecked out (here often remained nothing but empty shells." A plcn t!lul harvest the following year saved the situation. OK LA HOMO CONSERVES ITS NATURAL RESOURCES OKLAHOMA CITY, Ok.. Feb. 22. Taking of crude oil or petroleum from Oklahoma at a time when there Is no great demand for the product or a fair price, Is prohibited in the "oil conservation" bill passed by the state legislature. The corporation com mission Is empowered to fix the prlc of oil, the law stating that the actual value shall be the average value as near aa may be ascertained In the United States at retail of the by- pro ducts of such crude oil when refined, less the cost and a reasonable profit In the business of transporting, re fining and marketing the same. Overproduction In .the state oil fields last season, resulting In the price per barrel dropping below 'BO, Cents, resulted In the pawage of the bill It is considered the most drastic piece of leglstutlon ever attempted lrr Oklahoma. During the debate on the measure. Corporation Commissioner Qeorse Henshaw was quoted as having saiJ that the Prairie Oil company had tak en from Oklahoma In 1914 In profits no, 000.000. Entire City Con f owe-. . BIRMINGHAM. Ala.. Feb! 22 Birmingham today observed her first city-wide confession day. The move- ment is interdenominational and li promoted by the Birmingham Sun day school association. CASTORIA For Iafuita and Children, Tfca Kind Yea Hare 'AhraisEtJ Bean the Signature of l 7 SPECIAL 9 Manufacturer's Advertising Uffer on PALMOIJVE SOAP For a limited time we will give away with each purchase of Talmolive Cream, 3 cake Falmolive Soap Free. Tollman & Go. Leedlnl Dniffltts 1 ixhts will not necessarily bring ca- terrptlng targpt Is the maxim that n llii Ity in their w.l;e. lute lunch means a bad n'ght. It L I- i Pi "'"'''mIIIHMIIIIMMMMIIil.lf)inWL1MlimiiiiWiiWIIWI iiUIUIUIUUiUUWlUIHtUMHIUIWHIWinUilUMMMUUIUMIIUUilllUIUlliiiltU For SALE CHEAP 10 Head Good. VM Polos For Further Particulars Sec E. L. Smith & Co. Pendleton, Oregon I 1 3 FS- Illillll