East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, January 04, 1915, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    DAILY EAST OH Fd ON TAX. PTvXPLETON, OKEGOS, MONDAY. JAMTAKY 1, lOl.t.
EIGHT PAGES.
VAGK TOVH.
AN IMK1K.MKXT NKW8PAPE1U
ftbllabcd Pally and Kml Wikly t Issv
rtlHnn, Orrfon, bj tf
UI1 OJtfcXloNUN IttiLiaUIXa CO.
O metal Countr PPr.
MBBr t'oltH IT Aaaoclatloa.
Baurad at tMstorrir at Ptadlataa,
Orasoa, a sacoad rlaaa Ball MttM.
WapkM.
ON AI. IN OTHER CITIKS.
latprrtal Motel N tttaad. lortla4,
terMa News Ca., Partite. OKfoa.
O.N F ILK AT
Chk-afo Rnraa. KworltJ Building.
Waahlnrtt. U. C ttnrcaa, 501, four
ttMtfe ilmt, N. W.
BVfcWtirTION KATES.
(IN ADVANCE)
DaJty, ort yar, aiU 15.00
Uallj, !i Bxialhk, by mall .M
11 lx, un aioniba, by mail 1-23
lal)j, oua bioatb, by mall 50
Paul, una year, by carrur T.5o
Illy, an Booth, by carrier 5 75
Dally, tbr mouth, by carrier 1.65
Dally, oo Bontb, by carrier A5
MtaiWertlj, tne year by aaail 1-50
asl Weekly, ail aioatha, by mall 75
ml-Weekly, (our oaouiaa, by mall.,, M
GLADNESS.
4
I am the elfin spirit you heard
in the springtime glade,
I am the wisp of wonder you
took for a dancing maid;
I am the dewy sparkle of the
young grasa in the spring;
I am the fairy fancy that flies
on an April wing.
I am the silver bubble you saw
on the rippling stream;
I am the childhood chatter you
heard In a day of dream;
I am the bloom on the meadow,
the delicate green of the
rye,
I am the violet morning that
blooms In a sapphire
sky.
I am the song forgotten that
slips from the vale of
sleep;
Light aa a whimper of moonlight
over and on the deep;
I am the length unmeasured, I
am the height unknown
Between the gates of the portal
and the arm-post of the
throne.
Boston Post
4
Under cover of conditions brought
about chiefly by the war there seems
to be a widespread
Not The move on the part of
True Ilemedy. the railroads and
other large corpor
ations to make capital for themselves
and to lay all the troubles of the in-
duKtrlal world upon reformatory leg
lslatlon.
In some instances ther is a meas
ure of reason in what they say be
cause unjust measures may be pro
posed. But of course the chief troubles
are cf their own making and the pub
lic Is not responsible excepting that
by neglect it has permitted such abus
ea to arise. Overcapitalization more
than anything else Is at the seat of
present economic difficulties. Kail
roads cannot be expected to make
profits when, as many of them are,
they are capitalized at several times
their true valuation. Where over
capitalization prevails the remedy lies
In lancing the boil not in seeking
measures to make the evil permanent
But even at that it is a surprising
thing that with all the talk about the
Inability of the railroads to make
any money there is no disposition to
sell and every suggestion about gov
ernment ownership Is met with hys
terical objections. Plainly the groans
of the transportation interests are not
to be taken too seriously.
Ever since the start of the war re
ports have been frequent about bay
onet fighting. Tet
The Artillery loes reports from the
The Business, field hospitals
khow there are no
men with bayonet wounds. In other
words there has been no bayonet
fighting to speak of. There has been
some of course and the press reports
technically speaking have been true,
though eiwenlially false because pet
ty bayonet charges have been empha
sized beyond all reason because of
their spectacular features.
Unquestionably the real serious
work on both sides has been by the
various branches of the artillery. In
the big sieges the heavy guns have
done it all, so to speak. In the
trench fighting the machine guns have
bn very effective and bomb throw
ing guns have been used at the great
er distances. In the artillery branch
es both the Germans and French were
well prepared. The Germans have
done more with their siege guns than
have the French but the French field
artillery Is dd to be superior In
many respects to the German. Had
the French not been well equipped
with good modern artillery the march
to Paris would never have been
chacked.
The relative efficiency of the dif
frent branches of the service during
the wur in F.urnpe. Is of Interest In
rtinnwlliin wl:h the frenzied appeal
some rnakp for war preparations In
this country. There Is little bnsls for
that clumor and the propoganda be
ing carried on may well be viewed
with suspicion. Put If this country underwriters have given him a con
wihhes to do anything towards
strengthening Its military establish
ment the thing to do is to build up
the artillery branch. The artillery
tequires few men but they must be
trained men and there must be mod
em guns and ammunition available
for use. In case of war a well equip
ped artillery service would be worth
more to this country than a stand
ing army of a half million men. The
mere fact this country has a very
small regular army numerically speak
ing Is of little Importance. We can
get Infantrymen by the million with
in a few months time. The real ques
tions pertain to the chances of get
ting equipment for these men and
above "all to the status of the artil
lery branch.
The United States is In no danger
of Invasion at this time. The Sun.
Lese-jingolsm! The
Lr-Jlngolsm. Hun Is at the gate,
and the jig Is already
up. We are a conquered people, and
what Is worse, we never were anj
good. An army colonel named Hels
land, out In Chicago, has been telling
us all about It
To begin with the beginning:
We did not whip Great Brit
ain in the War of the Revolu
tion. Great Britain was busy at
home and quit because she hadn't
the slightest idea what kind of
real estate we had here.
As for the Civil War:
In the war of the rebellion two
great mobs of the finest citizenry
that ever stepped up to the can
non's mouth went to the front
without knowledge of organiza
tion or warfare for four straight
years, and at the end the one
with the longest purse and the
greatest number of men tri
umphed. It was scarcely a war.
It was a conflict of mob organi
zation. Somehow, we had not thought ot
regarding the troops commanded by
Grant and Lee and Stonewall Jack
son and Sherman and Sheridan and
Stuart and Thomas and Longstreet as
mobs, and the great soldiers of the
North and South as mob-leaders; but
hitherto we have not had a Heistand
to illuminate our history. Sheridan,
who accompanied the Prussian Gen
eral Staff, was disposed to the opin
ion that the Union army on the
whole was superior to the German
army; but Sheridan was no such mil
itary authority as Heistand, and prob
ably knew nothing at all about armies.
The thing to do, of course, as this
Col. Heistand shows, is to turn the
whole country Into an armed camp
and make everybody do military ser
vice. Then instead of winning our
wars with "mobs,' as we have done
for nearly a century and a half we
can break our backs with military
taxes and finally be licked scientifi
cally. New Tork World. .
Very frequently profound advice Is
given by people who know little
whereof they speak aa Is shown by
the following yarn: Coming out of
church after listening to a sermon on
"Married Life and Its Duties." two j
old Irish women commented on the
address. "It's a fine sermon his rev
erence would be after giving us," said
one to the other. "It Is, Indeed." was
the reply; "and I wish I knew as little
about the matter as he does!"
Those who have been away from
Pendleton for several years upon re
turning are struck with the great pro
gress the town has made.
tract to do thin salvage work. The
'Merda' carried a large quantity of
silver bars, besides a safe full of Jew
elry In the purser's cabin on the up
per deck."
"How far can 'ou go down with
the tube?"
"Competent engineers say to a
depth of eight hundred feet, and to
ro even deeper Is merely a matter of
structural detail. A depth within our
Immediate reach is twe hundred and
fifty feet We call that our com
mercial depth, and there are wrecks
enough within that limit to keep men
working for a hundred years. The
'Empress of Ireland,' for instance, lies
In only two hundred feet of water."
"Suppose the treasure was shut up
in the hold of a wreck?'
. "We would blow up the wreck
with dynamite and then use the grap
pling and hoisting apparatus. The
great point is that the tube will allow
us to reach the bottom of the sea,
where the depths are not too great
and to stay down there comfortably,
breathing good air. The rest is mere
ly a matter of engineering detail,
which will be easily worked out by
human ingenuity. How difficult
would It be, for Instance, to load
sponges and pearls into lowered bas
kets, if you had the sponges and
Pearls right before your eyea?"
"And the same applies to bars of
silver and chests of gold,' I laughed.
"Exactly," said Williamson.
THIS MA Y ENTERTAIN
THE GIUL GAMISLEH.
"Most women." says an ex-bookmaker,
"are mighty poor gamblers
A young friend of mine had a very
pretty cousin. One day, long before
the closing of the race game, he was
about to set out for Belmont Park,
when cousin calls him up on the
phone and asks him to put $10 on
Forest King for her.
" 'Well,' says he, hesitating, '1 11 do
It if you'll pay me back.'
"'You horrid thing'" came from
cousin at the other end of the line.
'Of course I'll pay you back.'
"All right.' said the young fellow.
'But you didn't the last time, you
know.'
"'Oh, well,' said the girl, 'the last
time the horse didn't win, you see.' "
HADE IX AMEKICA."
"Can you beat it?"
"I get you."
"Nobody home."
" Pipe the- skirt."
"Tour honor, I move we postpone
the execution Indefinitely."
"Fellow citizens, If you elect me to
this high office I will"
"Plenty-er-seats-up-front. Stepllv-ely-please"
"French sardines."
"Russian caviar."
"Italian macaroni."
"Turkish rugs."
"Havanna cigars."
Delaware "peaches" every other
state also.
XO ROOM FOR A THIRD.
All Pendleton feels real sorrow over
the df-ath of Mrs. Marshall.
CURRENT THINKING
Ex-President Taft was, on one oc
casion, in consultation with Senator
Penrose of Pennsylvania. Now, as
everybody knows, Mr. Taft la gigan
tic and the senator la taller and
weighs more than any other member
of the senate.
While the two were in earnest con
versation an aggressive politician en
deavored to enter the room, but an
alert secretary politely Interfered.
"What are they doing in there?"
asked the politician. Inquisitively.
This pertinent question nettled the
secretary and he answered tersely:
"Holding a mass meting. I presume."
MOTION
PICTURES
SEA.
UXDER THE
WHICH?
Mrs Smith-Jones, taking a villa at
Palm Beach, engaged for butler a
stately old colored deacon.
"Now, Clay," she said to the old
fellow, "there are two things I must
insist upon truthfulness and obedi
ence." "Yes, madame," the venerable ser
vant answered, "and when yo' bids
me tell yo' guests yo's out when yo's
In, which shall it be?"
Her Performance .
Why don't you get married, my
dear?" asked the matronly chaper
on of the debutante.
"Not for mine, please. Courtship:
honk, hong, 15; marriage; ding ding,
nickel."
In the January American Magazine
Cleveland Moffett writes a most in
teresting account of fi. new invention
by which moving pictures of sharks
and other sea life are now taken af
great deptha The Inventor, Charles
Williamson, is a sea captain of Nor
folk, Virginia, whose sons, George
snd Ernest, are carrying on the work.
The essential of the Invention Is a
tube which Is lowered Into the water
In which human beings are enabled to ,
remain and do the photography with J
the assistance of powerful searchlights ,
which they carry. In the following I
extract taken from the article Mr. Mof-I
fett relates his conversation with one
of the Williamsons as to the .proba
bility that this new invention opens
the way to regain lost treasures at the
bottom of the sea which amount to
many hundreds of millions of dollars:
"tfome y there is more gold at
the bottom of the ocean than there Is
in circulation." remarked George
Williamson. "It Is certain that gold
and silver have been sinking in the
sea for centuries, millions a month, ;
going down like rain and never com-j
Ing up again. We think we have a
way of getting some of this treanure,
up" ;
"With your deep sea tube?" i
"Yen. My father Is now working
out plans to salvage the 'Mereda'
which was wrecked off the Vlrgl
coast a few years ago. The board
Why He Was Flnd.
"I understand that Sparker was
fined for speeding."
"Speeding nothing! He was fined
for running his car so slow that he
Impeded traffic."
A man who will Insist on drawing
his own conclusions who would never
think of drawing the plans for his
own house. Deseret News.
If It were not for the men, women
would doubtless be the most gossipy
sex on earth. Columbia State.
F1
ran
n
Something to Amuse and Please Them.
The "Little Ones" Best Friend.
T" -A.
V
eunudL Moit -TTwo JDoila
A Great Big
Beautiful Doll
and 2 smaller
dressed dollies
for. every boy
and girl in
the city.
Hurry
and get
yours!
These 3 dol
lies are beau
tifully printed
on one large
piece of mus
lin all ready to
cut out and
stuff. They
have gold
en hair, big
brown
eyes and
are very
life-like
indeed.
I if
If M
L ' A
.M& Bigger ;.p y
ACTUAL
HEI6KT, 71 INCHES
Than a Baby
ACTUAL HEIGHT, 71 INCHES
mm
Hot Chocolate
Hot Chili
Hot Tamales
made to your tatte
FRESH CANDIES
EVERY DAY
ill 14
da r-j
nia I I
of L-
HOW TO OBTAIN ANNA BELLE BOLLS'
4
The EastOregonian is going to give away several hundred
of these dolls as follows:
Any girl or boy bringing or sending to this office
One new paid in advance Subscription to the daily Cast Oregoni&n, by carrier for one month;
65c, will receive free "Anna Belle" and her two dolls.
Or for one newjp&idjin advance subscription to the daily Cast Oregonian by mail 1 1-2
months 75c.
Or for one new paid in advance subscription to the Semi-Weekly Cast Oregonian 6 months 75c
Or by cutting 5 coupons from the Daily or Semi-Weekly Cast Oregonian and 10c.
If dolls are to be sent by mail add 2c for postage.
Hurry and go! your dolls now, because SSiis effor is for a limited timo only
Coupons to be clipped will be'found elsewhere in this paper each day.