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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1915)
TACK FOUR DAILY EAST CKEGQN1AN. TEXDLETCW. OVFGOX. WEDNESDAY. AFF.IL IS, 1915. TEN PACES rITH men s clothes of the ordinary kind, all too often, if there is quality of fabric, style is lacking or vice versa. Or if both are evident, hurried tailoring spoils the result. In a word, there is usually omitted some fea ture or features necessary to make that close ap proach to perfection that you will always find in BOND CLOTHES S15 to $30 If ever there was a Spring season when we were better equipped to serve your apparel needs than now, we have no record of it. New Shirts, Hosiery, Neckwear, Hats, Shoes and such in cidentals to a man's dress are here in such great variety that your personal taste is bound to be met. J -v j z fc & 4 !f5'-: A 1 h N ,1.1 i -my v. w 1 ' O A.B.K.C0..191J PENDLETON'S q Leading Clothiers AN INDEPENDENT XKW8PAPER. r-uUbbea Dally and 8ml-Weekly at I'eo- d.eton, oregoo. by the KABT OKKfcONIA.N J'lULliiHINO CO. Official County Piper. Member United 1'rea Asaoclatlaa. ntwed at Um poetofflce at Pendleton. Utegua. aa secuud-clasa mall natter. Telephone 1 ON 8ALR IN OTHER CITIES. Imperial Hotel Neva Stand, Pvrtlaad. Orecoa. Bownuui Neva Co . Portland, Orejoe. ON FILE AT Calcage Boreas, butt Security Building. wuBingtoo. D C, b urea a SOI, Four tent street, . W. SCBUOtlPTIO RATES (IN ADVANCE) Dalit, m year, br aull j 0 lJlr, an sooths, br aull 2 V) Kelly, three months, by mall 123 lai!jp, one vanoth. by mall .50 llliy, on year, by carrier 7 Ml laliy, ati month., by carrier 8-75 llly, three montus, by carrier 1.95 laHy, one month, by carrier tr, Demi-Weekly, one year by mall 1 Ml Heml-Weekly, all month, by mall 75 feeoil-Weekiy, four months, by mall... .50 merits of the good roads move in Umatilla. Here we desire roads not merely for convenience and comfort but because by con necting with the open Colum bia river we can reduce freight rates sufficiently to soon make up for the entire cost of the permanent work. The raad problem In Umatil la county is not a question of expense but rather one of eco nomy. . Can we afford to pay high freight rates based on rail ser vice when by a little energy we can get the benefits of river transportation? A BOLD PIECE OF WORK c jiiT: axd death. A little blindness needed most; A little kin'lnem In lous time; A littff Halting at a post; A little lie when truth half a crime. when 't' wayside A little anger that have quelled; A little bitterness that writes its tale; A little word unsaid too long wlth-held; A !iMI- 'oumge when we f.fally fall, A little meeting of the Hps' in l')M-; A lttHr Burrow, and an hour to Y.fvp; A HHie hol.i.nir of the hnri'ls of flu li'is. "A Utile folding of the hands tu sleep " H' Henderson liland. UNION AND UMATILLA ONSIDERED from the standpoint of the prop erty involved the most important action taken by the recent legislature in Oregon jwas the passage of the resolu- tion regarding the Oregon & r i r t 1 ,. i. a trottb- ainoriiia lanu giaiii, case. , J he property involved is .worth $50,000,000 and as a Z I consequence of the resolution inoucnrl tVtn otfArnoir orinprQl nf .Oregon has been required to we should jg0 to Washington and in effect against the people and in favor of the Southern Pacific rail ;road. k But this resolution was pass- red so quietly on the last night of the RPKsion that few knew of its real meaning. It is said the attorney general did not know of the duty imposed upon him until a few weeks ago. Since the matter has been given publicity numerous sen ators and representatives have denied all knowledge of the resolution. Several senators who are re corded as having voted for the measure declare thpy had no knowledge of any resolution with such meaning. One mem ber of the house, Mr. Lewis, who is recorded as having vot ed for the resolution declares he could not have done so as he was not in the house when the vote was taken. Another member of the house, Mr. Home, who sat close to the reading clerk and was in read says he heard no such res olution read to the house. What sort of skullduggery was followed in order to "put over" this strange deal? Who will want another "harmony" legislature? pM HE news that Union county al.-K) is preparing to bond for permanent road work and that it is plan red to bond that county for $750,000 shows the growing rirength of the good roads move over the state. No doubt there are many good reasons why Union coun ty Hhould have permanent roads. Hut the case for good rendu in Union county amounts to nothing compared with the position to hear everything A NEW ERA OF PROS PERITY -WS Wall Street's stock-mar-II ket boom a flash in the Dan, or a true herald of the country's entrance upon a new era of prosperity? The answer to this question is to be had, if at all, through an appeal to facts established by long experience. We have always had a great business re vival when preceded by pro longed depression and liquida tion. We have never had a prolonged depression which was not preceded by a period of great extravagance and over-extension of credit. The latter conditions cannot be charged against recent years. It has been a time of liquidation from the excesses which brought on the panic of 1907. The Payne-Aldrich Tar iff Law of 1909 supplied an ar tificial stimulus in arrest of the liquidating process, but it could have and did have only a mo mentary effect. Readjust ment to a bed-rock basis for a new start continued and was not well over until the war broke out. It is over now. The indica tive facts are everywhere ob servable. Both corporations and individuals have been 'wearing their old clothes a long time. Their expenditures have been limited to actual ne cessities. The bloat induced by heavy indulgence in trust and tariff stimulants from the Spanish war to the panic of 1907 has been largely eliminat ed. Readjustments to a natur al and legal basis have been widely effected. An extended period of cheap money tells the story better than anything else. It means huge bank reserves and a wide margin of unused credit facil ities within the bounds of san ity and safety. It means a great accumulation of floating capital seeking or to seek investment. If there had been no war, the natural rebound from a liaui- dated position would undoubt edly have started last iau from the marketing of great crops at good prices assured by shortage abroad, but a war which has striDDed the country of foodstuffs and horses at pri ces not dreamed of as possible a year ago has almost doubled the buying power of the west ern sections over what it would have been. It is this amazing condition of farm prosperity which started the upheaval in Wall Street, and it is a condi tion which merchandise mar kets will hear about next in a practical way. The country is not only out of debt at home to an extent not known before since the de pression from the. panic of 1893, but through an enor mous excess of exports it is in relatively smaller debt abroad than at any time since the Civil War. These are fundamental con ditions of industrial revival They are certain to make themselves effective whether or not the war goes on. New York World DRAMATIC CHAT. BY BEAU RIALTO. (Written for the United Press.) NEW YORK. April 2. Tabloid, abbreviated musical comedy is the newest addition to menu of Gotham's lobster palace. Today the chefa are being backed off the menu card to a large extent by the footl ght Dottle Dimples. Of course, the bon ton cafes are still retained In action as places to eat, but the cabaret craze has now ' gone a step farther and real musical i comedy provided for patrons. The cafe musical comedy troupes are composed of really, truly actors and actresses (mostly of the feminine i variety, however), and not one cab . aret or vaudeville principles disguised jas "artists." Home of the cafe troupes are offering dinner condensed m jslcal comedies with as many as a doz ' en players in the cast, a real, plot, and songs and costumes especially prepared for the dramatic vehicle. This put those who have) Inaugurated It In the role of theatrical managers . as well aa restaurnnteua. The latest to adopt the musical , comedy fad is Wulliir.k'a, center of Times Square Jollity. There are Com Ic operas (with food) at the) Hotel ,McAlpln, the Clarldge, Han Houcr. , liustanoby'a and other popular re sorts. I The musical comedy vogue is said to be the natural development of the cabaret, in which it la expected cafe proprietors will reach farther than ever Into the realm of the stuge for attractions to lure the thirsty and hungry. With the opera season at the Met ropolitan waning, the season of spring opera Is upon us. The Aborn com pany opened at Boston this week with sixty artists, chorus and ballats. On the Aborn Itinerary are the Greater New York theatres, Baltimore. Brook lyn, Providence, Pittsburgh, Newark and Washington. "A war of the Comstocks " is hou the rialto Jests over the popularity of Edward Lock "The Revolt" at the .Valine Elliott theater. F. Ray Corn stuck is producer, and Anthony Corn stock of the "pure morals'' squad, are believed to hold widely divergent views regarding the morality of "The Revolt." , CHAUTAUQUA LECTURER HAS BRILLIANT TALK The force, capacity, breadth, vir ility, unselfishness and generosity of the American business man are all represented In Nelson H. Darling, a perfect example of his type. Darling lu called the town expert for he an alyzes conditions in a town and then talks straight about Its streets, parka, schools, water system and business affair. All this la done In hi lec tures under auspices of the Chautau qua, lie makes every on laugh and think and take hi advice. He will be here thli summer when the Pen dleton chautauo.ua opens. Kiim Denied WaUr Foror. ' EUGENE. Ore., April 21. Eugena la a "dry" town, the Eugena water board, has prohibited the uae of li quor by its employes, both off duty jnd on, dismissal being the penalty for violation of the rule. Twenty employes are in the water service. Members of the board ay most of the employee are abstainer. The action la said to be the flrat or the part of an Oregon municipality to enforce prohibition among em-Joyes. HISTORIC MEETING BEHIND FIGHTING LINE r5 obffcMW &m i r ' i ;; -f. 1 I ' "5 i J ti 1 www w v - mtit m tvn -avf KlMG ALBERT OS" BELGIUM & C&H Joil17 Much ha been written of the hls tcrlo but Impromptu meeting of King Albert of Belgium and General Jof fre, leader of the French force In the field. The photograph shows them as they stood, Just behind the fighting line on the southern end of the little strip of coastline that rep resent RelKlum all that I under King Albert's rule today. General Joffre ho paid flattering tribute to the wonderful work of King Albert' army of Belgium, the tiny force that ataved off the German edvance until the French troops were mobilized and until England had put her expeditionary force on the main land. J-aniy to luy Wormwood Plants. ARIS, April 2. The Minister of Mnance, Aleander Rlbot, appointed a commission to assess the value or wormwood plants producing abointhe. This step Is preliminary to the pur chase by the government of these plants under the act recently adopted by parliament, which prohibit abso lutely the manufacture of absinth. If you find It difficult to tell twins apart, tell them together. Cosy Theatre News Did you nominate your favorite candidate In the $1000 prize con test? This contest started off In full blast today at noon. Now boost for your favorite candidate and help her win the new model 1915 Maxwell automo bile. Kindly look up what the paper near to you are saying about the Mutual Master Pictures that are advertised In the Saturday Even ing Post. See any Morning Oregonlan, Ppokesman-Rcvlew, or Oregon Dally Journal for thl Information. Rend about The Quest, The Ixwt HoiiBe, The Outlaw' Revenge, The Devil and the Outcast In any of these paper. They will be at thl theater soon. Tonight' program: The Boundary Lino, a two part drama that Is Interesting and well acted. Mrs. Cook' Cookliur, a refined comedy. Music Hntli Ctiarnis, a comedy drama featuring Fay Tlncher and Augustus Carney. The- Mutual Weekly, the latest war new and other Interesting subjects told In pictures, Tomorrow, "A Mnn of Iron," two part dra ma Thanhnuser production, with Frank Farrlngton playing the lead ing part; alno "The Secret of the Dead," an inspiring two reel dra ma and a Keystone Comedy, "Love and Armor," will bo shown. f