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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1918)
-""-" W'-v,n"''(!""";.,,1'y " '1 , i ji "i .. .. wyw-ywt jaWWwyif .7fi TOWWiiWig J(.vntmrtiwrin4ii tHM .t Sphinx. PAGE FIVE EIGHT PAGES DAILY EAST OKEGON1AN, PENDLETON, OREGON,' WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1918. colors CASH GROCERY B25 Main St, Free Delivery. Phone 640 Sunkist Lemons, dozen 50c Big Head Lettuce 10c Pink Salmon, can 15c and 20c Red Salmon, can 20c and 30c Van Camp's Soups, cart 11c Van Camp's Pork and Beans, can 15c. 25c Best Shrimp, can 20c Best Iowa Corn. 2 cans : 25c NOODLES, CHOP SUEY, CHINESE DISHES $ rnPY' KWONG HONG LOW 4 W nt Wert Alt St, Upstairs, Fbona 4SS Poultry and -Tonics, all Kinds. Colesworthy's 127-9 E. Alta Phone 134 ft.; !f,T MOVES , rASTIMK TODAY. Miss Dana Presents Spirited Dance.. A "conventionalized fandango" In the way Viola Dana describes a dance she does in "The Only Hoad," a Me tro All-atar Herlcft picture which will be presented at the Pastime theater today. MiHB Dana Jh no novice In the art of dancing, as oil who have seen her spirited pan Inn dance In "The Winding Trail" will doubtless attest As Nlta. In "The Only Road," the tiny star flings her toos about in thor ough abandon atop a rough table In a western saloon. The reason she calls her dance a "conventionalised ! fandango' Is because It Is a sort of rhythmic potpourri. It is part fan dango, part tarantella, part cobra de capeilo and part Hawaiian hula. In other words, Miss Dana does not do all of the dance with her feet. and (XWV TODAY. At the Cosy today will be shown Eddie Poll In a chapter of the Bull's Eye, an exqftfng and thrilling drama. Also will be shown Pearl White In The House of Hate," that mysterious and creeply play In which Is featured the hooded terror. Mack Ken net t com. medy ends the bill and Is called "A Mix Up in Affinities." A good pro gram. Let's go. urn it in In "Tine lilue' Bill at Alta. William Farnum In "True Blue'1 will be the attraction at the Alta the ater commencing today. This la a William Fox production and is said to be fully the equal of "Les Mbier- ablea,"" A Tale of 'Two Cities' "When a Man Bees Red." In "True Blue," Mr. Farnum por trays the part of a western ranch owner a human, manly man. The siory Is out of the ordinary and deals with a phase of life new to the cine ma. An Rnglteh "remittance" man, sud denly becoming posaessed of title ana estates, deserts his American wife and young son, to return to England to claim his Inheritance. He does not take them with him for the reason that he believes he married "beneath his station." This young son grows up on a ranch In the boundless west and becomes the central figure In this orama of life. This character is flayed by William Farnum. Over In England the titled father, on learn ing of the death of his American wife, has married again and has another son a dmsipated, profligate young man. Through a strange series of Inci dents the half brothers are brought together on the western ranch on with deep resentment In his heart; the other, weak and unconscious of the relatlonHhip William Farnum, as the strong brother, begins the re for. mat Ion and regeneration of hiB weak relative and this accomplished, sends : him back to his people In England j a man. Running through the entire pro-1 dttctlon is one of the sweetest love! rtorles ever produced a story that j brings the half-brothers Into appar ent rivalry for the hand of a charm-' ing young woman. . )NGR All of us are talking about den-ocracy. The soldiers whose names are printed In tills casualty list have suffered or died for It. Carpenters Uantcd At Onco For work on flume of Company ditch above Milton. 70c an hour BOARD AND TRANSPORTATION. PHONE 40. PICK POWER S LIGHT CO. A PATRIOTIC DUTY Ilave you put in your winter's fuel? To aivoid a repetition of last winter's coal shortage, the consumer must put in the fuel now. Let us quote you on CoaD and TJood PHONE 5 B. L Burroughs E3f v East ,Webb and College Streets. Wsj AdTrrtlM and offer war Savings Hlampa for sale with every purchase TODAY'S CAKrAIriFS. Released for afternoon papers. Killed In action 84 Missing in action f8 Wounded severely 118 Died of d incase 7 Wounded (degree undetermined) . 10 Died from wounds 36 Died from aeroplane accident.... 1 Total 320 Xort 1 1 west Casual! Icm ( Morning and Kvfiilug) Edward H. Keel. South Itellingham, Wash., died of wounds. Frank Jacobs, Ocdarvillc, Wah., wou n d ed e vore I y . Harold W- Veach, Rlodgett, Ore., wounded severely. Stanley J. Wolfe, Walla Walla, Waxh., wounded severely. Sidney T. King, North Yakima, Wash., killed In action. Max Grlnsteln, Seattle, Wash., ; missing Inaction. ! Walter R. Gudopp, Spokane, Wash., missing In action. 'j I Rexford Culberson, Olympia, I Wash., missing In action. I Sgt. George Eugene Mitchell, Ints, Ore., killed In action. Fred T. Merrill, Portland, Ore., killed in action. William D. Martin, Sandpnlnt. Ida ho, killed in action. Fred K. Rube, Kelso. Wash., killed in action. Jesse J. Houser, Seattle, Wash., wounded severely. Roy B. Misener, Hot hell, Wash., wounded, undetermined. W 1 1 j TODAY CHILDREN 10c ADULTS 25c WILLIAM FARIiOM in "TRUE BLUE" Well, I've just been to see "Bill" Farnum,. . The best of the scouts on the screen, And while I ain't up on play actin' You kin bet I just "fall for" that scene; Why, he took me right back to old Tombstone The days when the town was still new, When census was black-and-tan tinted, But all of the gang was "True Blue." ... "Bill" Farnum was called "Bob McKeever" I sure knew that lad on the range He hadn't the same "running brand" then, . . But the ear-marks ain't likely , to change. . And Farnum was that breed of fellow The pride of the big, breezy West, 4.1 With never a streak of the "yellow" And a big heart hid under his vest. His Dad turned him loose as a yearlin' Alone on the range like a stray, To "go to the bad" with the "rustlers" But the lad wasn't headed that way. He stuck like a leech to his mother, And after he laid her away, ITe brought up his "noble' half-brother, And made the Earl "eat crow" one day. Now, Bob had first call on the title, But loved his own homeland the best He sent the Kid back to Old England, And struck to his ranch in the West. Bob "fell for" a pretty young school-marm I reckon I'd do the same, too, The kind that just makes your old heart warm, And her eyes, like the play, are "True Blue." So that's why I "root for" Bill Farnum, The best of the scouts on the screen; And, boys, take a squint at this picture The best film-play I've ever seen. IN ADDITION, ALTA SCREEN TELEGRAM Late War News. lolls. Fifty dollars will be vhe minimum for members of boards with 1U!J0 regiHtrants or lefts. I i:it IiOAIIDS ItKCKIYI i.VKW $1 1 RAISE HY T. S. OltDK.lt A XI) $- rjRiM. HACKS AltE ISSrEI WiBHIVfiTOV Cr.t to T" WASHINGTON-. Sept. 1 . Increas- ...lwnbl,.k...ir ',.h' ,,.. e.l pay f"r local draft boards has b-er. . -,,.- ,,,. , .,.. authorized by Trov.ist Msrshal-Gen- !They ar(, the tl and ,2 Federal Re-t-ral Crowder. Under an order re. ; wrve Bank notea planned especially cmtly tinnounced members of all : t( replace the silver certificates with boards will receive from $r.O to $200 j drawn from circulation as the treasury a month, the amount varying with .silver reserve is melted into bullion the number of registrants on their for export to the allies. I Buiapcr"WIieatCiDp5:.' 'V: H: -.-....wm- .J f-m0'Y 4,-tfirr . nT Ni ' "fT n'Tr - mtirt s "l '" 4.. . , , f V(" "H 1 -4 f'mmmv. ADULTS 25c foday CHILDREN 5c A REAL DRAMA OF THE WEST Viola HJauM -IN- Tli lily mooi! A Wholesome Photo-Drama and One We Are Sure Will Please. IN ADDITION, A BEAUTIFUL SCENIC. CKHMAXS ;KT WltO(; tthe Germans had ben told that Ilia RKI'OHTS )X JXTCII ; rtwrvM bad been extl'iii!-loU. Thll 1 showr by a Wolff Itiireau dispatch NEW YORK, Sept. 10. I,on be- published in the Berlin Tugeblalt. fore Aarshal Fooch bevan hlji brll-' v hlch d'scribed the fiKhting about liant counter offensive on the Marnft i CI Mtau 1 Merry- 0 V. al T aa-u. m -A, x Kansas Women Figure in Bloodless, Bulletless Bat tie to Save the Wheat Crop While Male Harvest ers Are Fighting in France. One of th most romantic battles of th Great War wu not fought on the other side of the Atlantic: men had only a part In It- not m shot was Bred; the people for whom th battle waa foucht were half a world away! Tet this battle was won without the lose of a einicle lire, and with In calculable pro tit to humanity. Its objectives were the millions of bushels of wheat froir the fruitful acres which are the broad bottom of Kansas: the fighters who harvefftej the grain were women, stria, chil dren and men. The enemies wer? the elements, tire, air and wnter: the nations for whom the battle was w aired were starving BMplum, France, England all of frlenttv Kurope. In fart and our own Americana over there. Tt will be noticed tiat the men are mentioned last In the order ol battle formation. And thai is where they belong. For hed it not ben for the women end children. larae part jf the bumper crop would hav rotted on the around. The depleted ranks of male workers, ranks thin even In times of pen re hud not the man oower adequately meet the situation. There Is in Moment of humor In this story of how th women came to the rescue ol Knnss. When the matrons end the ladles snd the flapper' and the little hoys and rtrl ofTered Inst January to aid In the harve-tin thin sum mer, the Kansas War Council de cllned their proffered help. The) thing; seemed impossible. The offer had far different aspect, a few weeks aco, whea the War Council faced the situation of a bumper wheat crcp and man power entirely Inadequate to handle It. The fate of the crop hung- la the balance. Then thousands of women -the tame women whose January offer "f eld had been ecorned. with their irmy of child-en and rlrla, spranc up from all over the tate. and the wheat crop was saved. If this volunteer army had nt. on bidden, come to the rewru. 9 fcieat pert of this trememloua crop would have been lost. New Floors For Old No matter how ugly your old floors are, you can make them look fresh and attractive with VERNICOL Floor and Varnish Stain Vernicol does not show heel marks, is easy to keep clean and withstands rough every day wear. Easy to use and economical. Made in desir able finishes. I J. Me AT EE Tlx lractkal Palm Man A 1.-4 B MS Main M. TKitl4MM iUnvri ? w VERMCOL i mmr aavat T ..:,. i) a - i :. itn IK -J-l VI '!' ) r m ni.i tut T M li' ,1