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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1913)
PAILY EAST OREQOXIAKV PEyPtETOyrOREOOIT. TRIDAYr FEBRUARY 21, 1913. EIGHT PAGES, PAGE FOUR. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. PvbllatMd Dally and Sml Wkty at ren dition. Orco. by the CAST OREGON US PCBLISHINQ CO. Estered at the postofrk at IVodwtoo. Oregoe, seoood-ciass nail matter. These further French names appear in the roster of another regimental organisation : Col. -Thaddeus O'Brien. Capts. de Fitxmauriee. De Walsh. O'Neil. De Nagle. O'Brien, D'Orcy. O'Croly. O' Connor. Lieuts. Plunkett, O'Riordan. O'Gorman. MacCarthy. The names of these old Frenchmen have a familiar sound in spite of our neglect and the roster indicates the allies came largely from that part of Tb Daily Eaat OregonUa la kept on tale 7 U Bowman News Co., 44 Wasaugtoa OrST' UOt" St"4 r0rt!D1 France contiguous-to the Blarpey Chicago Bun a. 809 Security BoUJlng castle. Furthermore the information Washington. U 0. Uunci. 501. tur-. tortus trt. N. W. jmade public by Congressman Curley 7 fJi , throws light on the ancestry of the Daily. ee year, by na.il t-5.w Dal'.y. u njocib. by mail Daily, tbree toootta. by mall. Dally. e joa;ii. by axi raUy. ece yr. by carrier .Daily, m coosi. ty carrier Daily. Uree Bvc;i. by rrr:rr DaLy. eoe bc:Su by carrier Seoit-Werty, oe yyar. fcy catl Sc-w.t..5. ii st.c:X. by aaall... at-Wt. fvNLT DvMCii. &J Bail... : gentlemen who manage that Parisian .So railway, the 0"V randn. 7 50 3.75 Madero now has time to reflect on VJojthe difficulty of trying to provide an J' ; enlightened government for a benight- CCTkHiai C5:y aa4 Cvcaty Paper. V rather Tarred Preaa Assoc ia: loo. f Mala je.1 people. THE RECKONING. THE RITKOMXG. I. A Judgment Day I hope there'll be. For friend and foe. for you and me Unto us all the same; Misunderstandings cleared away The hidden brought to light of day. The censure and the blame. II. The wrong that triumphed over right. All bitterness that left its blight And marred Life's little span! How each for self and petty gain Strove heedless of the grief and pain Borne by his brother man. III. For such as this, come. Dawn of Right! Illume our doubt with Faith's fair light, And clear the mists away! Aye, 6ure am I for you, for me, For friend and foe. for all, there'll be Some time a Judgment Day. Augusta "Wall. Dr. Friedman wants entirely too much for his tuberculosis cure. Pat ent medicine manufacturers are of fering similar cures at much lower prices. It will soon be time to get the grounds in shape and adorn the cabs with the baseball park signs. John McCourt got ahead of the gong. SHE I LVD TO CHOOSE. TRY SOME OF THIS POINTS OX POPULATION". Mrs. Champ Clark, who is well known for her brilliancy in conversa tion as her husband, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, is for his fame in politics, tells this story: The late Bishop Potter of New York had a most unclerical relish for prac tical jokes and pointed anecdotes. His rusmonnlitan snirit IiivaH mpn and j things, and nothing pleased him better ! than to gather a group of congenial spirits about him and swap Jokes. One day he met a friend, a distin guished Jewis rabbit, and said to him in great seriousness: "Rabbi, I am greatly worried about a dream I had the other night. I dreamed I died and went to the Jew ish heaven. And who do you suppose were the only occupants?" "I don't know, I'm sure." said the rabbL "Pawnbrokers and secondhand clothing men," laughed the bishop. The rabbit said nothing. Shorty after, however, he met the bishop. "Why. bishop," he said, "1 had a dream myself the other night." "Yes," said the bishop uneasily; "and what did you dream?" "I dreamed I went to the Christian neaven. "Well," pursued Potter, bracing himself, "whom did you find, there?" "Nobody," answered the rabbi. Popular Magazine, . ' NEWS FROM nOGWALLOW. Washington Hocks' watch got be hind last week, but is rapidly gaining, since he got to stirring around some. Cricket Hicks says if the water in the creek would freeze over right af ter the big rains it would prevent all this high water. Sim Finders has swapped around until he has a tolerably respectable team. While one trots and the other paces, they manage to get to where they are going about the same time. The Rye Straw storekeeper has de cided that in these days of competition and high tariff, he can make more by cutting an inch or two off of his yard stick than he can In regular profits. While waiting for a Jug to .run full of sorghum molasses yesterday, the storekeeper at Rye Straw made the statement that If he carried as big and complete a stock of goods as Sears ft Roebuck, Mrs. Frisby Hancock would come in the next nay ana. can ior something he had never heard of. Hogwallog Kentuckian. If Pendleton does all the paving work that is proposed for this spring the total cost of the Too Gentle, work will run into a big figure and the city should be an attractive field for paving con cerns. There will be abundant room for competition and competition we should have. It is the life of business and tends to reduce prices. The only trouble about paving competition in Pendleton is that we do not have enough of it and when we do get a little war underway the rival com panies are entirely too solicitious about hurting one another. They whet our appetites for blood and then give us the spectacle of a pillow fight. In the state senate yesterday one senator, Dimick of Clackamas, made some very pointed Dimick's Offence, statements about another member Farrell. In substance the charge was that Farrell was afraid to be a real legislator and vote his convictions for fear he would lose some business he has had with an Oregon City corpor ation affected, by a proposed labor law. For this criticism Senator Dimick was called down by President Malar key who urged that such charges if made should be made privately to the senators. Is that the sort of senate we have? Is it alright to be false to the people but wrongful to expose corruption If the senate is to be a private club devoted to the protection of the shady work of its members the East Oregonlan can see no reason why it should retain a room in the state house and draw pay from the people In New England where people de light to trace their ancestry back to the Revolution consid-1 Our French erable sentiment has Allies. arisen of late to the ef-' feet that the United States should honor in a more person al way the brave Frenchmen who came so nobly to our aid at the time of r.ei. It has been pointed out that this country has long honored such names as LAfayette. Rochambeau and De Grasse but that the names of the humbler soldiers of fortune who cast their lots with the' colonies hare been neglected. Congressman James H. Curley of Massachusetts has risen to tne occas ion by securing and publishing the'1 'J-1 epplkatioi. fnD2l rci ' " ;tn diseased portion of the ear. There is names of leaders and subalterns of .only one way t care deafness, and that is one regiment sent over by Iuis XVI LAND VALUES IN LONDON. (From the Pall Mall Gazette.) In what part of London is the most valuable land to be found? .The ques tion arises out of a statement by the Daily Mail that a strip of ground ab utting on the Charing Cross opening to the Mail archway is to' be sold in two lots, the price of one of which works out at nearly 24 pounds per square foot, and that of the remain ing piiece at upwards of 32 - pounds per foot. There is also a question of frontage price. This amounts to no less than 170 pounds per foot. But this reckoning of frontage alone in estimating the whole amount to be paid is more sensational than exact in conveying an idea of the real mar ket price of the land. In comparison with the values at Charing Cross, inquiries made in the city by a representative of the Pall Mall Gazette show that ground in the most valuable part of the "square mile" fetched a price far higher than that recorded further westward. Some time ago a piece in Lombard street, near the Mansion house, was sold for 40 pounds a foot. This, however, is rot the highest price that has been re- Mr. A. C Plowden, who, after a somewhat severe illness, has resumed his seat on the Maryle bone bench, is by way of being one of London's institutions. He tells about the wife of a notori ous burglar whom he was once cross-examining. "You are the wife of this man?" asked counsel. "Yes." "You knew he was a burglar when you married him?" "Yes." "How came you to contract a matrimonial alliance with such a man?" "Well." witness admitted. "I was getting old. and I had to choose between a burglar and a lawyer." M. A. P. alized during recent years, for another site in the same neighborhood brought a return of 58 pounds, and even this has been exceeded by a tiny bit close to the Mansion house, which formed a good bank site, and changed hands for 60 pounds a foot. But this was exceptional on account of, the situation. In Lombard street the letting value of ground is gener ally recognized as 2 pounds per foot and this, taken at twenty years' pur chase, marks the selling price at 40 pounds. In another instance at the corner of Lombard street, near the Mansion house, where there was some difficulty, in getting a site. 48 pounds per foot was the price reached. In King William street there is on record the letting value of a piece of land at 35 shillings a foot This. taken on the basis of twenty years' purchase as before, equals the rate of 35 pounds. As, however, this par ticular piece was wanted some years ahead, the purchaser had to pay 1,000 pounds as premium. It is clear, therefore, that on a ques tion of comparative value in the mar. ket the city price considerably over tops that attained at Charing Cross. FAIRY TALES. "Pleased to meet you. Mr. Borem "I can take a drink or let it alone." "I was detained at the office." I will never say a cross word to ycu, sweetheart.' "I enjoy your sermons so ran:!' Doctor Windy." "Yes, sir, lots of mornings I have syrup; oftigs is BEST FOR A CHILD If Its IJttlo Tongue U Coated. Breath Feveri-sh, Stomach Sour and I Vowels Clogged. Every mother Immediately realizes after giving her child delicious Syrup of Figs that this is the ideal laxative and physic for the children. Nothing else regulates the little one's stomach. liver and 30 feet of tender bowels so promptly, besides they dearly love its delightful fig taste. If your child isn't feeling well; rest ing nicely; eating regularly and act ing naturally it is a sure sign that its little insides need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When cross, irritable, feverish, stomach sour, breath bad or your lit tle one has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, full of cold, tongue coat ed; give a teaspoonf.ul of Syrup of Figs and in a few hours all the foul, constipated, clogged-up waste, undi gested food and sour bile will gently move on and out of its little bowels without nausea, griping or weakness, and you will surely have a well, hap py and smiling child again shortly. With Syrup of Figs you are not drugging your children, being compos ed entirely of luscious figs, senna and aromatlcs, it cannot be harmful. Mothers should always keep Syrup of Figs handy. It is the only stom ach, liver and bowel cleanser and reg ulator needed a little given today will save a sick child tomorrow. Full directions for children of all ages and grown-ups plainly printed on the package. Ask your druggist for the full name, "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna." prepared by the California Fig Syrup Co. This is the delicious tasting, genuine old reliable. Refuse anything else offered. to break the ice in the tub before I take my cold bath." "We have never had a quarrel since we were married." "We have spent a perfectly delight ful evening, Mrs. Gabby." . "My, isn't that a pretty baby! He is the perfect image of his father." From the Cincinnati Enquirer. POLK'S OREGON and WASHINGTON Business Directory A Directory of each City, Town and Village, giving- descriptive sketch of each plaee, location, population, tele graph, shipping and banking point also Classified Directory, compiled by business and profession. . R. L. POLK CO, SEATTUB Youll get the bet meal in Pendleton at the QUELL Particular cooks Attentive Service. For Breakfast Ranch Egg Buttermilk Ho teak ee Good coffee Every day W Invite your patronage and aim to please yoa. A dean kitchen Regular Meals 25c Gas.La Fontaine La FonUlae Block. Mala Street. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED. to assist us In our great war for free dom. The roster follows: Col. jt Comte Dillon, Col. Theobald Dillon. lieutenant Colonel Barthel emy Moncarelley,. Maj. J. Moran, Capts. Moore. Purderi, Eancks, Nu gent, Swingley, Shea. Moore. 0Neil, O'Brien. Taafe, Mandeville, McGuire, Macdennott.' Kelly. O'Reilly, Noolan, O'Doyer. Leltck. Cochlea. b roastitatiooal remedies. Deafness is caused by aa Inflamed condition of the mo coos lining of the Eustachian Tube. When tbi tube is inflamed yoa have a rambling sound or imperfect bearing, and when it Is entirely closed Deafness Is tike result, and unless the inflammation, can be taken oat and this tube restored to its normal con dition, hearing will be destroyed forever: nine cases oat of ten are caused by Catar rh. wbVb Is sothlng bat an laflased con dition of the mucosa surfaces. We wtll give One Hundred Dollars for any ease of Deafaeaa (eaosed by catarrh) that cannot be cared by Hail's Catarrh Care Sesd fee circulars, free. T. i. CHEXET CO, Toledo, Ohio. BoM br Druniats. T5e. Take Hairs iassis rWa tut HoveYonr House Wired for Electricity It's cheaper, safer, far more pleasing and savea much as necessary eye-strain. At the present rate" for light ing yoa get one kilowatt more for $100 than was formerly given for 11.50. By using the new wire-type MAZDA lamp yoa get three times more light than from the ordinary lamp and your light Is as bright and clear ae day light. This new MAZDA can be used on ordinary drops and cords without breaking. SAVE TOUR ETE3. 8AVB TOUR HOUSE. SAVE MONET. BE COMFORTABLE. Electric and gaa supplies, elec tric light wiring, bell wiring, gas piping, motors and dynamos. SEE J. L. Vaqghan . in St. Phone Mala m. Nyals Kidney Pills FOR Backache and Kidney Trouble NO RELIEF NO PAY At Koeppen's THE DRUG STORE THAT SERVES TOO BEST. ar Look 1L at this )l We help you to keep things clean by furnishing you with A Garbage Can Free TO ALL RESIDENTS THAT PUT IN AN ORDER THIS MONTH AS WE WANT MONTHLY CUSTOMERS. The best of service at lowest prices. WE nAUIi EVERYTHING In our line by the Job or month. Phone Main 471 for the City Scavenger Co. 729 Johnson Street. Pure Foods Are no more essential to good health than the Pure Medicines Our prescription department is operated along the most mod ern lines; our stock Is fresh, and ourprices are the lowest consistent with Quality. WE INVITE A TRIAL. Tollman, & Co. "MERXTOIV AGENTS. 'First in war, first in peace and first in the hearts of his countrymen.1 Tomorrow, Feb. 22nd, the great American people commemorate the anniversary of the birth of our first President GEORGE WASHINGTON 'pi M1 j WE GIVE S. & II. TRADING STAMPS Hi Special im mm TODAY AND TOMORROW In this sale are included Percales, Ginjrhams of all kinds, Galateas and Children's Wash Dresses The stocks are now at their best. Remember with every dress pattern 6 yards sold you rct the Trimmings Free. Special Value Gingham 72C a Yard Plaids and stripes in good quality Gingham suitable for children's school dresses or house wear. Always sold at 15o yd. Nemo Corse! Demonsiralion Monday An expert Corsetiere will be with us for several days and will be glad to show you the new styles in' this popular corset S disicxio rr I HArl ssok I- 3 CHICAGO They Are Here The new "WooleyBoy" Suits for Spring. Mothers, bring the boy in and see the pretty new models to be worn this season. The new Norfolk style is in the lead for boys this year we can show you a most complete line, of patterns and new models-select yours while the assortment is good. Bp Alexander Depf . Store PENDLETON'S GREATEST STORE. Make Out Your Shop ping List To-night Reaj the advertisements in the EAST OREGONIAN carefully tonight. See what the manufacturers and merchants are offering you. Make a list of the things you need. Many of these items are advertised at special prices. All are quality goods. The mak ers' and sellers' names are your guarantees. Tou will save time and strength by selecting everything you buy from the advertising columns of the EAST OREGONIAN. Tou will find more pleasure in shopping when you know where to find the best qualities at the lowest prices. The advertisers In the EAST OREGONIAN are the most reU able merchants of this city. When their nomes are on your shop ping list you will be certain of securing the most satisfactory mer chandise at the most reasonable prices. Read their advertise ments in the EAST OREGONIAN closely and constantly every day. (Copyright. 191J, by J. P. Fallon.) Perfection in Crown and Bridge Work Is a sign of success In the entire field of dental work. That In signia of merit was granted our operators long ago. We don't want you to have tooth troubles; but If you have them we will be glad to nmko them vanish with the lonst possible pain, incon venience and cost, (Examination free. MODERN DENTISTS TAYLOR HARDWARE DliUG. 743 Main St.. Over Hub. . - 1'KNDIJCrON. OIUB. . . , i