TEN PAGES DAILY EAST 0REGO2TIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1912. PAGE SEVEN kl Was a Hero Too" Sung by SAM BERNARD in his new Musical Farce ' . . . ., NEARLY A HERO" CHORUS. Xotdt by HARRY WILLIAMS Music by EGBERT VAN ALSTYM P (7W Hrics.) i I don't know Dan -iel Wb-ster, From Booth or El - Icq Ter-ry, To 4, a wui nomv laio lor uiu ocr, du mui - ug - ij -uv mc uiv, mgu. 3. My wife - y had birth t day, And I gave her a col - lr, Shs 4. I bought. hand-tome au - to, My friends told me I ought to, I -j Nf- . X-ii 0 1. A man is a he-ro when he roes to war. A man is a he-ro when he's brave - A J. A man is a he-ro when he goea U war, A man is a he-ro when he's brave.... A 3. A man is a he-ro when he roes to war, A man is a he-ro when he's brT.... A 4. A man is a he-ro when he buys a ear, And you are a he-ro that is plain?. Tot! :f-r fafcl- -jf.fr SI ; if - tell the truth I've nev - er ev - en met his die - tion - a - ry, They say the word call'd "He-ro,' Thie then I said, "I'll bet a cook -ie something's going to get me." Said she, "I've bak'd a pie, dear, And yell'd with joy,"You dar-ling boy," andgrabb'dme by the col-lar, Said she," We'll go to Ma-cy's, It's ought-n't ought to, but in -stead, I ought to have been shot, oi I ran the car one morn-ing, But 1 1 u jj n . t . mt -J 4 ? -g j j u -i - J j -3 I 1 I -2 -l I- 1- r 1 tr - j . 1 v issi 1 11 aw 11 aw aw - 1 r.. .1 - - -r man is a he-ro when the can-nons roar, And he fights his dear life to save,...,. man is a he-ro when the can-nona roar, And be fights bis dear life to save, man is a he-ro on a bar gain floor, And he fights his dear life to save, won't have to push it tho' so re - ry far, To get it in - side from the rain, r But It I Bat aaaa t 3 Hr -L 8 -at-l-gfX Web-ster has de - fin'd, it's a mince pie, too," bar - gain sale to - day," could-n't work the switch, But just how he ex -plains it, Does-n't seem to fit try mind; Said I, "I'd die ' if I should eat a pie that's bak'd by you." She dragg'd me down to watch her spend that dol - lar right a - v.a?, I fin - ish'd with the au - to and the fam - 'ly ia the ditch, 7 She The Just ESF5fias. 5riT J J . .k? s-- IglF1 tH2 Z. I -p-l-rrrt:- 1-Zrzh.n-c i3 3E J I knew a she-ro and it was my wife, And what I say is true, Let her said twen-ty dollars on my doc -tor's bill, I set-tied nest year for ten, Let oth got fif - ty hat pins in the eye that day, Feathers and el - bows, too, Let Bob I push'd that au-to half a mile that day, And what I say is true, Let oth ac er Fit! er SX-tt-J fr- wCTj 1 -jtTTTj- - 1 v- 1 I . - ai , :7J- -1' it de - fin - i - tion may not sound like his, got a butch-er knife and held it high,.... store was stuff'd as full as it could be then a farm-er's boy came up to me, 3-e- JfJ.JJJ .J But this is what I think a he-ro is: Said she, "old man go on and eat that pie I" Said she, "old man.come on andfol-low me!" And whisper'd in my ear most ten -der-ly: ( s r -1 &- i - - i - - - i tm . gjr7 'f I" "I -nJ i 1 y-. m i i 3 it quain-tance - be mince meat be Cor - bett, be "shov-ers" ' be for-got, For I was a for -got, For I was a for-got, For I was a for-got, For I was a he-ro too.... he - ro then., he-ro too... he - ro too..., A A A A 1 too.. then too....... too w m Canadian Rights Secured. Copyright, mcmvih, by JEROME II. REMICK & Co. Pe-frrming Rights Reserved rulilikheil by MURRAY MUSIC CO., New York. Used by permission o. A'6. jrjJd- : -Jla- JTHz f-rr 1 Was l Hero Too. Ab. . I GOV. WILSON DULY t)T!IKIl DEMOCIl.TS DO NOT ACCEPT CHALLENGE Neither Ctark, Harmon or I'imIctwoOI In on Ilecord a Favoring Ciloe of rrtwldentlal Nominee by 0c Public at Lau-fTe. Washington, D. C. March 30. (Special.) Only Woodrow Wilson among the democratic aspirants for the presidency has endorsed the pres idential preference primary. As yet neither Speaker Clark, Oovenor Har mon, Chairman Underwood, or any of ls others excent Governor Wilson haa suggested that the nomination be left to the will of the democratic vot er The challenge Issued by Mr. W. F McCombs of the Wilson campaign managers for a presidential primary has not been taken up by any or wu non's opponents. Neither Clark nor Harmon nor Underwood Is on record in favor of the election and Instruc tion of delegates to the national con vention by a vote of the paty voters On thR other hand. Governor Wil son Is plain spoken In advocacy of the presidential primary. He believes in thA direct nrlmarv as the cure for tho evils of bosslsm and machine politics and he believes that It snouiu govern the nomination of all candidates fot office from president down to con- Htable. That this advocacy of n preslden tlnl nrlmarv Is not a new thing engen ilwrpil hv Governor Wilson's present nation-wide popularity and taken up as a sure means to get the nomination. Is proved by the fact that it was a feature of the first legislative fight Governor Wilson undertook after he became governor of New Jersey. Since Governor Wilson Is the only demo cratic candidate who Is a candidate in every state of the union, and since he In opposed by a field that has di vided the states in sections and are allied against him, his friends natur ally believe that a primary would nominate him. His enemies believe the same thing, that is why they are not for the primary, and that Is why no reply has been received to the Mc Combs challenge. But no such motive of expediency can be assigned as explaining Gov. ernor Wilson's attitude. When he was elected governor and the legisla ture convened, his first fight was to persuade the legislature to respect the will of the party voters who had nominated Jame9 E. Martlne for sen ator In a direct primary. James Smith, Jr., the old-time boss whom President Cleveland had connected with the perfidy and dishonor of the emasculation of the Wilson tariff bill, wanted to set aside the primary and come back to the senate. Governor Wilson stood for the primary and won. 1 The next thing he did was to get a bill introduced to change the election laws and to provide for direct pri mark's for every officer from presi dent down to constable. The ma chine leaders told him they wouldn't let It pass, and a democratic confer ence was called to vote the bill down The bosses had the votes to do It, too. That Is, they had th(n when the con ference was called. Governor Wilson got himself In vited to the conference. He made a three-hour speech in favor of the di rect primary bill. When he had fin- Lumber and Building wj . 1 A Large and Complete Stock Al rl8tCri3l ways on Hand and PRICED RIGHT The Best Mill Work to be Obtained in the Northwest Let Us Figure With You on Your Next Order Pondloton Planing Hill and Lum- hnr Vnril J.i. B03IE LUUBER CO., Proprietors UUI I Ul (1 PHONE MAIN ? Ished. the conference that had . met to vote the bill down voted it up as a party measure and carried it on to victory. The people and not the bosses, therefore, will Instruct dele gates in New Jersey this year. It was an effective speech and it showed not only the power of Governor Wilson's logical eloquence, but also it showed how deep is his faith in the people. how firm Is his conviction that nomi nations ought to be made by the vot ers in primaries, and not left to co teries of bosses and machine leaders working behind closed doors, even when they work according to "the rules of the game." NOTICE OF PROPOSALS FOU LUMBER. Notice ia hereby given that bids will be received at the office of the City Recorder in Pendleton, Oregon, ud until April 11th, 1912, at 5 o ciock p. m. for furnishing to the City of Pendleton of one carload of red fir lumber of the following dimensions, viz: 2000 feet 2x12 inches 20 feet long, and the balance of the carload to be 4x12 inches 20 feet in lengtn, the lumber to be delivered F. O. B Pendleton, nil bids to be sealed ami to be accompanied by a certified check In the sum of 5 per cent of the am-. ount of bid, payable to the order oi the mayor of Pendleton. The Com mon Council reserves the right to re ject any and all bids. This notice Is published by order of the Common Council made March 27th, 1912.. Dated this 29th day of March, 1912. THOS. FITZ GERALD. City Recorder. Vachal, both of Saltsburg, became en gaged to be married two years ago. Vachal presented a diamond ring to his fiancee, following this with an other ring later. Vachal some time ago told her of a circumstance that temporarily would prevent their marriage, and asked for the rings, promising to re turn them at her request, as she did not consider the engagement broken. Mips Graham later requested the re turn of the rings, but Vachal Is al leged to have refused them. Suit for their recovery was brought by the girl. At the hearing before Justice Geib the rings were returned to the young woman and Vachal paid the costs of the suit. BURIED ALIVE IN SNOWBANK. Boy Caught In Swirl of Rotary Plow Dies or Suffocation. Smith Center,' Kan. To be burled alive by th spray ef a snow plow was the fate of .arry Agnew, 12- year-old boy of this city. Harry was playing in the wake of a big rotary snow plow oiOthe Chicago, Rock Is land & Pacific railroad. With other boys he was allowing the clouds of snow to fall over him, running from under when the snow became too heavy. He was not missed until to night. Searchers dug his body from nder a mass of snow. His thigh was broken, and it is believed the weight of snow crushed out life al most Instantly. LA GRANDE CLUB PLANS FINE HOME ODD DEATH LIKE FATHERS. Son Is Hurled Front Ono Railroad to Another, as Parent waa. Allentown. Pa. Rudolph Surber, a Lehlghton liveryman, was struck by a fast passenger train on the Jersey rpntral railroad In this city while walklnr on the viaduct over which the Central tracks cross those of the Lehigh Valley. He was hurled twen ty feet In the air, fell a corpse on the Lehigh tracks, sixty leet Deiow, ana was picked up dead with his neck broken and practically every none in his bodv fractured. Surber, who was 38 years oia, nao come to Allentown on business. When a shifting engine had brought his body to the depot he was Identified by an accident policy of tne Amen ran Insurance company of Phlladel Dhla. found In his pocket. The en gineer of the express whistled violent ly, but Surber kept walking oduvious of danaer. although he could have stepped aside to safety. His father was killed in an exact similar manner several years ago. RINGS BELONG TO GIRL. Given in Token of Betrothal, She . Need Not Wed to Keep Them. Blalrsvllle, PaA girl owns her ensrajrement rings, whether or not they lead to her marrying the donor. So rules Justice Geib of this place. Mlsa Josephine Graham and Charles one day three years ago the police entered his house in search of stolen property. She confessed to him that she had been a thief. "To save my wife," said Tully, "I pleaded guilty to the theft and was sentenced to six years in the peniten tiary. I served until a few days ago, when released on parole. One of the requirements of my freedom was that I remain in Pennsylvania. I have broken my parole and so I must re turn to prison and Berve the remain der of the sentence." The woman now Mrs. Dotty Frank is living at a well known hotel here. She was out She is described as a handsome brunette, small of stat ure and possessed of a refined and retiring manner. VILLAGE GIRL GYMNASTS. City Council in Kansas Town Encour ages Wrestling Among Students. Clearwater, Kan. The city fathers of this town are a different type from those of most country vlllaces, r.nd especially Kansas Tillages. They are encouraging their schoolgirls to in dulge In wrestling. The high school girls here have equipped themselves with sweaters, bloomers and tennis shoes' and practice wrestling in the school gymnasium every afternoon." A few of the girls-learned the com; moner holds in the catch-as-catch-ca;i game from their brothers and have taught them to the other girls. They are becoming quite proficient with, the half nelson hammerlock, toe and leg holds. No effort Is being made to prevent this form of feminine athletics, the authorities believing that the girls will find therein valuable physical development. LOST MADONNA IS FOUND. Painting by Raphael, Stolen When Na .polcon Sacked Italy, Is in Boston. . Boston. A painting of the "Ma donna and Child," said to be by Ra phael, which it is declared has been in this country since the days when Napoleon sacked the principal Ital ian cities and robbed them of their choicest art treasures, has been found in Boston. The picture la so valuable that it is held in the vaults of a trust company. Burroughs. Main S. Fuel. If FIyo Story $100,000 Rulldimr for llUHiness Men is Contemplat ed Tills Year. La Grande, Ore. La Grande's commercial club will construct a J100.000 office building and club home this summer on the unit plan, unless unforeseen hindrances arise. A Portland architect has plans drawn and the building is to go up at Elm and Adams streets and will be five stories high. CONVICT "ENOCH ARDEN" BEGS FOR PRISON AGAIN Man Who Confessed to Crime Coin mitted by Wife Finds Her. Married Again. New Tork. The old story of man lost to his wife and friends and the wife becoming the beloved of anoth er, came to light when Francis Tully convict No. 5266 surrendered to the police. He Is bitter against the world, for he Imagined during his many weary years in the eastern pen Itentlary at Philadelphia that the bliss of the past would again appear when he saw his wife. Instead he found her the happy companion of another man. And then like Enoch Arden he turned his face. He told his story to the police and now he will return to prison. Tully told the police that he had been a clerk In the employ of the Standard Oil company In Philadelphia and lived happily with his wife until Savo Your Carpots eetts,le" It is hard on your carpets to sweep them with a stiff broom or a carpet sweeper. They tear and injure the nap of the carpet more by one sweeping than walking over it a month would. Beating a carpet on a line is ruinous too... It breaks the warp, takes the natural stiff ness out and causes It to wear out much quicker than it should. If you run over your carpets and rugs every day or two with a DOMESTIC VAC UUM CLEANER (runs like a carpet sweep er) you will keep them as clean as your table linen every day and you will never have to take them up off the floor. Not only this, but you will add many months and years to their life. Think of the sav ing in money, time and hard work It will mean to you. The DOMESTIC rolls over the floor and sucks up the dirt without the slightest wear to the carpet no brushes no bristles Just a strong blast of air rushing through your carpet up Into the cleaner carrying all the dust, dirt, moths and microbes with It and not one particle of the dust escapes from the cleaner to settle again In the room as It does ' with the old fashioned meth ods. It keeps the nap raised, making the carpet soft to walk upon and the original colors are kept bright and fresh as new. Thousands of housewives who are now using DOMESTICS are en thusiastic in their praise of them and would not part with them at any cost. Call and see them. There Is nothing to get out of order nothing to wear out. For Sale By JESSE FAILING Main Street Near Bridge.