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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1914)
paoe srx DAILY EAST OKEQONTAK. PENDLETON. OREGON. TTTUUSDAV, MAY 21. 1014. EIGHT PAGES L si? ET the children have all the Tea Garden Syrup thevwant. It is Dure, health ful, delicious and nutritious. Scientifically refined from the choicest imported sugar. At all reliable grocers. Xtme jcity Grorer's Name. FREE PRESERVES These coupons will PP'' week. Save 10 and take them to your grocer properly filled u t and he will give you bsolutely frea a l-ox. Jar of Tea Oarden Preserves. Pacific Coasts Syrup Co. PORTLAND. OR. T Ell 10 BE EXPLORED "TIZ" FOB TIRED SORE, ACHING FEET FOREST FIRES SEASON BET EARLY START THIS YEAR WASHINGTON". May 21. The first reports of forest Cres have begun to come in to Washington from the na. tional forests and they Indicate to the federal officers an early start of the fire season, with unfavorable weather conditions from the very beginning. Jn the northwest there was less snow on the mountains at the end of the winter than for many years past. Railroad rights of way which were last year deep in snow are reported clear now and dry enough to burn readily. From the Canadian border to Mex ico the reports are similar, and there have already been extensive fires in California and Arizona. The chief forester reports, however, that the fire-fighting forces of the service are organized better than ever before, particularly in respect to the tire detection system of lookout sta tions. Ey means of these stations fires rereiK'rted quickly and accurately, so that the control forces may be on the fciound at the earliest possible mo merit. In those states where the gravest danger threatens, especial efforts are being made by the government for esters and by cooperative fire pro tection associations organized among timber owners, to secure care rw him own I' fiS 1 1 JSe--rS T !&w it II EDMONTON. Alta.. May 21. Ex ploration of the hinterland of Alberta and the vast untraversed territory be tween the 60th parallel of latitude and the Arctic ocean will be continued this season by officials of the geolo gical and meteorological services, the fisheries department and the geologi cal and topographical surveys of the dominion government. Several par ties are already in Kdmonton to out fit' for trips of from five to eight months duration In the northern wilderness. One of the parties is headed by John Paulson of the Toronto obser vatory, who is journeying to the Arc tic ocean in connection with interna tional work in the study of air cur rents In the Eskimo region. vHe is ac companied by George Hall Ingram, w ho is studying the natural history of the far northern areas with a view to placing his discoveries at the dis posal of scientists. The outward trip will include a voyage of 1,000 miles by- canoe on the Athabasca and Mac kenzie rivers. Charles Camsell of the geological survey, who was born at Fort Simp son, at the confluence of the Mac kenzie and Liard rivers in northern Alberta, will make a map of the un explored mineral territory In the Mackenzie river basin. . He Is accom panted by Francis Harper, dominion biologist, and F. J. Alcock and A. O Haultain. The party will also endeav or to find the source and cause of Thelon river, which Is supposed to rise in a chain of unknown lakes, several hundred miles north of the Dubawnt river. C. D. Melville of Edmonton, will be head of a party of three explorers on an expedition to the east coast of Hudson and James Bay. illllll HANG OUT YOUR 3 I! m Ah!, what relief. No more tired feet; no more burning feet, swollen, bad smell ing, sweat- feet. No, more pain in corns callouses or bunions. No matter what ails your feet or what under the sun you've tried without getting relief, just !e "TIZ. "TIZ" draws out all the poi sonous exuda tions which puff up tlie feet; "TIZ" is mag ical; "TIZ" is grand; "TIZ" will cure your foot troubles so you'll never limp or draw up your faca in pain. Your shoes won't seem tight and your feet will never, never hurt or get sore, swollen or tired. Get a 25 cent box at any drug or department store, and get relief. 3 I i ; 1 : ; Coos Bav lumber shipment to San Francisco for the. last two eek; of April surpassed all others on the coast 8,240.000 feet. The ice wagon started making regular daily, in cluding Sunday, trips to residences Friday morning, MAY 15th Hang out your card by 7 a. m. as the wagon will make but one trip daily, and that in the forenoon. If you have no card stop the driver and ask for one. Local Playhouses What the Press Agent Has to Say of Present and Coming Attractions. Pondiofon Doo 3old Storago So. ST.-2 fe 11 if C 3 11 fe3 ADAMS LOCALS. Colonel John Edward Bernard See ley. who concluded his speech in with Parliament by formally announcing lire on the part of campers, prospect- his resignation as Secretary of War. ors. loggers and by railroads. The northwestern forestry and conserva tion association, with headquarters at Portland, Oregon, is one of the leaders In this campaign. - THE WIDOWS THIRD 1 A New York lawyer tells of an English widow, who. by reason of certain legal complications, found it ' necessary to retain a distinguished at- Woman and Son Killed. torney. to represent her in the ad- ST. LOUIS, May 21. Mrs. Rebecca Justment of her late husband's es fiolz, 24 and her three year old son tate. met death in a fire which destroyed "Tou will," said the attorney, dur st three story frame building. ing the course of their consultation. "you will get you third out of the es- VrM,.J nrUhrVfl HAVE YOU . - A CHILD? Many long for children, but became of Kane curable physical derangement re depmred of this greatest of all happiness. The whose names follow were restored to normal health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Write and ask them about a. "l took your com pound and have a fine, Btrong baby." Mrs. John Mitchell. Mas- sena, N. Y. " Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound is a wonderful medicine for expectant mothers." Mrs. A- M. Myers, Gor don ville. Mo. " I highly recommend Lydia E. Pinkham'g Veg etable Compound btfore child-birth, it has done so (much for me." Mrs. E. M. Doerr, R. R. 1, Con- i shoWken, Pa. "I took Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Com pound to build up my system and have the dearest baby girl In the world." Mrs. Mose BLAKELEY, Imperial.Pa. "I praise the Com pound whenever I have a chance. It did so much for me before my little girl was born." Mrs. E. W. Sanders, Rowle burg, W. Va. "I took your Com pound before baby was born and feel I owe my life to if '-Mrs. Winnie Tillis, Winter Haven, Florida. tate." "Oh. exclaimed the widow aghast. "How can you say such a thing, when mi. Kornnd la acarcelv cold in his ...j grave!" Green Bag. A lake Lablsh drainage scheme l i being worked out In Marlon county at an expense of $20,000. (Special Correspondence ) ADAMS, Ore., May 21. The third annual fair of Adams school was in several ways the best. Especially in the gardening was excellent improve ment made. On a plot adjoining the school ground the little gardens 12 feet by 12 feet were planted and at tended by about twenty pupils. Prizes were awarded upon the general ap pearace as well as upon the variety of productions. The chicken exhibit contained more and better selected broods. Onli Buff Orpingtons, Buff Rocks and Leg horns were exhibited for competition. One fine brood of Rhode Island Reds was brought just for exhibition as was two nice Calves. The carpenter work consisted of chicken coops, clock shelves, dog ken nels and quilting frames, and was a great advance on last year. The sewing contained more spec! mens than ever. Nearly all was just plain work, nicely done. The cooking fell below former ex hibits. Still there were several cakes and pies and some nice biscuits. The contests in sweeping, table set ting and bed making attracted more entries than all the other departments and showed more skill in house keep ing than is exDected of children of the common schools. Being primary election day the at tendance of the fathers was small but nearly all the mothers and big sisters were present and assisted as judges. The interest is Increasing in industrial education. Faithful work has been done by the principal and teachers Saturday. May 16. at the city hall the school gave a fine entertainment Thev were assisted by the local musl pinna. Mrs. McCollum playing the piano, Joe Papant the violin and A h virbv the cornet. There were three drills which were well perform ed by the younger pupils and a play well executed by the older pupils. We have had a pleasant and suc cessful year of school.. becomes "A Lady of Quality." lr John toys with her heart, and subse quently spurns her love, leaving her soul filled with a great and tragic desolation. All the sorrow of her later history, the grief-laden years. her noble resolve to remain faithful to the old Earl of Dunstanwoldo, whom In pique she has married, in spite of a sudden overwhelming love for the manly Duke of Osmonde, are Illustrated In thrilling and appealing episodes. The production is mounted witn settings lavish even for the famous players. The various characterizations are faithfully rendered, and the tensely woven story never loses Its enchanting continuity. "The Water Dog." Keystone. Th Keystone Kid company and a bunch of dogs In a real splashing" comedy. Orplieuin For Thursday's change a most in teresting two part Kalem Indian ro mance , featuring Princess Mona Darkfeather. "The Navejo Blanket," the story is told by the design woven on a Navejo blanket by Mona, an Indian maiden, who Is wooed and won by Goulzo, the chief. Later he goes hunting and the camp is attacked and all are killed nvnnnf tIiaba at 4ha rmntlnt, - 11 t"i A ra nniii rv v.ncMnco Cosy, Wednesday and Tliuwuay cn the attacking tribe. This feature Is Johnson and Wells, colored com ik. mo ..i int.Mn.tino edlans. international singers ana of th vp, Don't miss it. dancers and originators of "The One "Th Soul of the Desert. BloKraph. Man yuaaruie. win- .... --a -.-I ., K. dnv and Thursday. They have re X J mo uuy oiiva 5111 at. . u-,6iuiwB - 4-1- of life, love and friends meant more cently completed a six gonitis trip than wealth, but the uncle, after nan way .rouna , 7" ,, ' " I .1 ' 1... niavoA vrv "h a- time' circuit in warning mem or me penauy, upi-iiu-i j-- . " . , .,i, prlated the estate for himself. On every civilized country of the world .1- .v.- . ki . Watch for the ouadrille. their mountain home, the exhausted -FootprlnU of Mozart. 2 reel i . T-n.l American, winnurea urmi, ooy anu s nusi wuiwomia. i .. v- tha like the self-centered uncle, they sac- Coxen ana ueorge x .u. - riflced their all that the young lives leading roies m - mlaht live ' Prt allegorical masterpiece. arm - a- TTI-U T'v f .Datha. aft Mutual Weekly. No. 9. An Oregon animated cartoon comedy as funny as man invents a boat that could be conceived. Manila, capital land Oregon 90 foot r th Phiiinnines. Pathe. an Inter- dive Into the Willamette. Atlantic . th wav to Mexico; rnna of the Philippines. Pathe, an Inter esting half reel. pastime. Tliursday ami Friday. Famous Player Film Co. presents the noted character actress. Cecilia Loftus, in motion picture version of "A Lady of Quality," In rive parts. The subject is an Idyllic blending of the romance, beauty and daring of the days of knighthood, and the film version has developed Into a brilliant reproduction of the warmth and color of a picturesque period. rwnia Loftus who during her stage career has enacted many diffi cult characterizations. Infuses into the role of Clorinda, the headstrong, tern pestuous hoyden who Is the heroine of the tale, a degree of cnarm ana sentiment that is at once rare and deliehtful. Throughout her strange on 1 fRilnatlnsr career. Miss Loftus invests Clorinda with a dash and vi vacity, a naturalness and artistry. difficult to imagine and Impossible to resist. The story centers about a young hoyden who grows up among her father's dissolute companions, clad in male attire, and who arrives at ma turity with all the attributes of a man. She falls in love with Sir John Oxon, a dandy of London Town, un der whose derision she abandons her mioiiiina manners and dress, anJ Ai.in nlav ball in New York; and many other events of world-wide interest. Alta Theater Today. A fascinating work of high artist ry, "Judeth of Bethulla," will not only rank as an achievement In this coun try, but will make foreign producers sit up and take notice. It has a sig nal and Infinity of detail, embracing even the delicate film tinting and toning, marks an encouraging step In the development of the new art It is modern in penetrative interpreta tion it Is a vivid history of one phase of the time It concerns, and is re demptive as well as revelatlve, a les son from one of those vital struggles that made and unmade nations as well as individuals, yet It is not with out that inspiring influence that ap peals powerfully to human sense of justice. The entire vigorous action of the play works up to the personal sacri fice of Judith of Bethulla, a perilous chance she takes for the sake of the lives and happiness of her people. She dares expose herself to over whelming humiliation and dishonor In a challenge of beauty to strength, struggles through a conversion of sen timent that makes the high crisis more acute, and sets at defiance the "better death than dishonor" platitude escaping both through that all-conquering combination In a woman, great physical beauty joined to lofty intelligence. This 4-reel Blograph feature will be shown at the Alta theater Thurs day and Friday. CHICHESTER S PILLS in. 1. U.a .ad iloia nwulllc ln, KM tih Eli KtM. Taks m M. Hmr fr?e l.rti.ri-l. Mimi iim utn.r... DIAMOND IIIl.tNBi riLUSIvM ran kmon m DM. baton. Al r rilN SOLD BK CRICQISIS EYtKYUTiLRE SEE 11111 FcrHcodlss Chop Sudy and China Dishes of all kinds, served to order. New hard wood fixture; private booths for parties. We cater to the high-class trade no rowdyism allowed. Ktrong Hong Lon 116 West Alta St Upstairs. Back of Tallin an drug store. Phone, ,431. "It liias mo holes in-it says Lincoln Beachey 99 MICKEY FLANNAGAN, U. S. MASCOT AT VERA CRUZ V.. 1 III f WW 'Wiiil fill l..VtJ?Tt That is why the dare-devil aviator uses V3 - -ti4y r. The GASOLINE of Quality And he doesn't get his Red Crown free. He pays the market price for it. His remark is the forceful ver nacular of his profession for saying: "There's power . in every drop. It never fails me." fj As an automobilist, you are vitally interested in a '.j - gasoline so full of power, so reliable, that it is bought i . and used by prominent aviators as one of the means for . 1 safety in their perilous work. Such a gasoline means greater power and greater reliability for you. Dealers everywhere. Ask our nearest agency re garding bulk delivery. 3 mm Tlie youngster who wandered Into the camp of Company I. of the 7th Infantry at Texas City made such a hit by his cheery smile and ready wit that he was Immediatel adopted as the son of the regiment. He calli'd himself Mickey Flannlgan, and told of having knocked about the country since he lost his parents In the Ti tanic disaster. When the troops were crdered to Galveston. Mickey wa smuggled along. They kept him un- I der cover on the transport and the greaser kids. officers of the regiment were dumb with amazement when they saw Mickey keeping a sentry company in I the streets of Vera Cruz, as is snown In the uhotosrraDh. Mickey "don't hold no hard feeling's against the Standard Oil Company (California) Pendleton : ' A va i '.WWVtt m .-. 4J 1. -4 v