DAILY EAST OREGONTAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. THURSDAY, APRIL 29. 1915. PAGE NINE TEIP ALOSG TREKCBES n n . r or v our oaov. I EOT PASTIL'E FOR ut vour ear The Signature of very mm PERSON TEN PAGES is the only guarantee that you have tht Q nis i no 2 prepared by him for over 30 years. YOU'LL give YOUR baby the BEST mom Your Physician Knows Fletcher's Castoria. Sold only In one size bottle, never in bulk or otherwise; to protect the babies. The Centaur Company, 1 Praat SOUTHERN COMMERCIAL CONGRESS IN MEETING Mt'SKOGEE, 111., April 28. Offl clala In all hranrhea of the govern ment service and prominent citizens of the southland have prominent pla ces on the program of the alxth an nual convention of the Southern Com mercial Congress, which convened here. Senator Flecther of Florida, presided. Various experts are here to dkeuwi development of Dixie along agricul tural, manufacturing and Immigration line. Hep. Mom of Indiana will tell of the administration's rural credit legislation program. Senator Ransdell of Louisiana., president of the Nation al Rivers and Harbors Congress, and Mra. Julian Heath of New York, pres ident of the National -Housewives League, are among other speakers. A greeting upon opening of the con gress was received today from Presi dent Wilson. (iwientl Scott Advances. WASHINGTON, April 26. Brlga dler-Generil Hugh L. Scott, chief of' staff of the army, will be advanced to the grmlp of major-general upon, the retirement, for age, of Major-Gen-' -ra Arthur Murray, commundlng the western department at San Fran cIkco, Colonel Frederick S. Strong ot the coast artillery at Charleston. S. i C, will be advanced to the brigadier-! gcneralxhlp made vacant by General Scott's promotion and will be assign-j ed Inter. Although General Murray retires next Thursday, he will perform his present duties until the close of the Panama-Pacific exposition at San Francisco. i: v.s niot Gii vor ake in thk ItKAIt KTIUY IHIXET AIT TO (JET YOl". l olled ITpw ('orrrMponrirnt Ikwcrtb e H1h Journey Actww Open Spare Party In (Ytnilm-Uxl While EiurflMh Oilonel Talk I'l-oantly Shells and (iermani. About (i. A. K. Veterans Celebrate. WASHINGTON, April 27. The ninety-third anniversary of General Grant's birth was celebrated here by the Potomac department of the G. A. R. with a "campflre" and speech es. - Against Substitutes Get the Weil-Known Round Package C CAUTION . IVvold iuln1ltutflSg V Ask For THE ORICUAL MALTED r.llLCl Made In the largest, best equipped and sanitary Malted r.'ilk plant in the world We do not make"millc products" Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, eto. Butoni, HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made from clean, full-cream milk and the extract of select malted (rain, reduced to powder form, soluble in water. Best Food-Drink for All Age, Used for over a Quarter Century Unlena you may "HOnUCfCS" you may get a Substitute, fZJ'Tnho a Paoharjo Homo yfSa5lMAl.U0MllCQ' ZE ROLEN E iAefianJanJ Oil for Noor Cars has just the rieht "body' body enough to keep the metal surfaces apart but not to be a drae on rag the power light enough to reach the places where needed and quickly. And it maintains body at cylinder heat. Dealers everywhere. Standard Oil Company Pendleton Open Day and Night Meals 25o and up. Special Evening Lunches. THE OuqIIo RESTAURANT Qua LaFontaiiif, Proprietor. Fine, Clean Furnished Rooms in connection Steam Heated (By William O. Shepherd, United Press fitaff Correspondent.) (Copyrighted. ' tm, by the United Press. Copyright In Great Brlt- al.i.) WITH THE BRITISH A KMT IN NORTHERN FRANCE, April 16. (Ry Ml to New York.) A mile buck from Neuve Chapelle we got out of our automobile, (jn our left was a farmhouse with the roof blown off, on our right a wayside shrine, the floor covered with straw, on which soldiers sleep at the foot of the altar. An English colonel takes the three or us In tow. "We'll go In twos," he said. "Keep ycur distance apart. They never shell a collide of men 1ml if thev of us together they might try to drop a shell on us.'" We plunge along through the mud of the road. "They shelled this building we are passing half an hour ago," exclaims the colonel. The building In Question has been shelled dally for many days; Its roof Is almost gone I hear a man whistling In the bulldine. "That's the cook." said the colonel. He's going Into the kitchen where there's a sink to wash his dishes." Sure enough, there stood the cook In khaki; you can see him through a hellhole In the brick wall. He la working and whistling the English Tommy's latest tune, "Good-bye Dol ly, I Must Leave You." Howits Amid the Ituins. We pass three ruined farms. In the yard of one, hyacinths are bloom lug at the doorway of the roofless house. "Now over across this farm," says the colonel, and we turn off the roa! and follow a broad, beaten path. This path is going to be written down In history sometime. It was beaten down by the feet of the British sol diers who marched to the trenches that night of March 9, and waited un til the signal was given in the morn ing to rush the trenches that spread before the village of Neuve Chapelle. I Frederick Vllllers who has drawn sketches in sixteen wars and is now on his seventeenth, Btops to make a sketch. "If you don't mind," says the colonel quietly, "we won't stop nere. 'ineres a Mouse ahead of us there and we can stop behind that. "Why, are the Germans near here?" says Vllliers. "They're right over there," says the officer. But he doesn't hurry us on. He's used to It, but It's hard to follow his conversation. He asks why the American military attaches were withdrawn from Germany. I have him to repeat his question. I ' can't keep my eyea off the trees n mile away, and It's hard to keep my mind on American military attaches -i)U those problems. That house ahead will hide us from the trees and there's nothing to keep us from running for It, except that the colonel is chatting very coolly and striding along at an ordinary gait. (M't Tell a BaUlefleW. The trouble about this war is that you never know you are on a battle field until someone who knows about it, tells you so. The English artillery Is booming behind us. the shells drill ; their long, hollow, echoing tunnels' through the air. But in all the flat land around us. broken only now and then by the wrecks of shelled houses, there is not a sign ot human life ex- j cept ourselves. You are not afraid ' of the English guns behind you, and , there is not the slightest sign ahead of you, Just now, that indicates dan ger. It takes a guide like the col one, whose daily pathway to the trenches lies along this route, to tell you all about it. He knows the road, the clumps of bushes beside it, the Ir rigation ditches, the hollows, the few trees, like a commuter knows his way to work in the morning. We reach the shelter of the house and while Villlers does his sketch the colonel says; ''That's a rather bad stretch across there. I lose a man every now and then from bullets that fly over tho embankments of our trenches. It's worse along toward evening than it is now because then the Germans can't pick our trench line so well in the gloom and many of their shots go wild at dusk." We start off down a road. We come to a portnl; huge pillars of sand bags form a gateway and walls of sandbags stretch to the right and left of the rood We pass through this gateway. On our right we see that the pile of sand bags shifts and runs parallel with the roadway. Sol 40G ' , t Mi close to the ground every time you see a man drawing real joy out of a jimmy pipe, for it's better than a five-to-one shot he's smoking Prince Albert, the tobacco high spot You, like a whole lot of men, never will know what a barrel of fun can be dug from a pipe or a makin's cigarette until Prince Albert passes your piazza ! For it can'r bite your tongue, and it can't parch your throat That's why men the nation over know their business when they demand Aliemt mm PW. Copjn tv tit It! 5 Sl j. Keynote TobswsuCo. 4 1 ; s Ttiti li Charln Blow, of Dundee, 111, who tips the age scale at 94 year. Mr. Blow ia today, and alwaye has bwn, a man who amoked hia pipe liberally and entoyed It mightily. Mr, Blow qualifiea for the Prince Albert "old-time jimmy-piper club and haa been elected to full -fledged membership. We would like to timx trout other cld-uooa tmofctrf t the national joy smoke You should know this brand is made by a patented process that removes bite and parch. And Jet it drill in that you can fire-up P. A. until the cows come home and it just won't makfi vmir tnnonift tino-lff I Fr So, you men with a sad pipe past come around somemore and sort of get acquainted with Prince Albert Let the light of jimmy- pipejoy break into your souL You 11 wonder why you didn't wake up earlier and hear the robins sing in the old cherry tree. Get started on the tidy red tin, then you'll graduate to the crystal-glass pound humidor with the sponge-moistener top that keeps your P. A fine like silk. A lot of men do that thinS ! 0 . Bay P. A. in any neck of tht woods. 5c toppy ndbagt; 10c tidy red tint; handsome poand and half-pound tin humidor and that classy poand crystal- glass humidor. if r R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO, Wiratonalem, N. C U WILL WED CHECK PA&aER WHEN UK IS FREE AM) DIVOKCED r 4? ft 1 5 ! yj- n- I I terns .Mssifigs ! i German Report Disputed. LONDON, April 87. Replying to the German account of the British de feat 1 f TaBDlnl rnMv.nn T.' .. . l . ca, on January is and 19, tne Brltloh commander reports that the total British loss was 280 men, of whom 240 are missing. An official statement received In Berlin fiom East Africa on April 21 said that the British lost some 200 kilied in this battle and that the to tal British casualties amounted to 700. These Included the capture of four companies of men. Gorman Ship Catured in Pacific. MELBOURNE, via London, April 29. It is officially announced that a British warship has captured the Ger man trading steamer Effrledq. which is believed to have been the last Ger man ship free in the Pacific. representing one-tenth of 1 per cent on Federal, state and municipal bonds and other property not used in the banking business. The other banks asked for the return of smaller am ounts of taxes. 1 War Tax Ait Attacked. CHICAGO. April 27. Three suits attacking the constitutionlity of the war revenue act, passed last Oc tober by congress, affecting the tax on the capital stock of banks, were filed in the United States district court here.v The result of the suits will affect 23,000 banks in the United States, ac-; cording to Ivey Mayer, of counsel for the three banks concerned in the suits. The banks are the Continental , & Commercial National Bank, the Continental and Comerclal Trust and Savings Bank and the Hiher-i nian Banking Association. The Continental & Commercial Na-j tional Bank suit asks for the return of JS1.657.34. which is alleged to be the amount of taxes paid by the banl' to the internal revenue collector as: Jim. r v April 29. Doris Bran- am aittiniv nt tho fnnt nf the : " ,ii .v,.. i, don may be deported to her former CHICAGO, .i. o. . .... , c.,...i 1,,., ,!, trJrol fussing around little charcoal nl""0 " I officials cannot kill her love for Harry A. KUlthorne who Is charged with forgery in passing worthless checks. Kllithorne has a wife and two chilldren but Is being sued for divorce. The man was a well to do salesman and met Miss Brandon abroad. Ing or stoves. In the Trendies. We turn and walk over towards them across a green, sunlit clearing as big as an ordinary frontyard. We follow along In the side of the big wall. Suddenly we notice that we are walking in a ditch, clothes hang from the earth walls here and there, a shoe sticks out from beneath a cloth, you trip over It, you discover it isn't an empty shoe, it Is Jerked out of sight, you heard a grunt from beneath the cloth, you've r.iilish StKivr Cliaiitplonslitt. MAXCHESTKR. England. April 27. The flnil tto for the English cup, the blue ribbon soccer football cham- of Britannia, will be aiscovereu, niMi,i,, trnnhv I so youve nwasenea a sonuer wnoso ,,,,, Manchester United rt,.h nt ni.l work hours are at night, and whose Traffonl The finalists are the Chel sleeping tlmo comes when he can'sea and Sheffield United Teams. It find It In tho daylight, j ,VIU, thp first time in 21 years that And then It dawns upon you that'ihn iWi.timr enmn h.is t i,An r,iv. ed nt the Crystal Talace In London war conditions causing the change. of the trenches. litis Just Natural To Admire Babies Oir nltniPtic nature Impels lnve fur the ouing Infant. And at the sjinu' time t h e subject of motherhood Is ever before us. To know vhat to do i h;it will add to the physical comfort of expectant motherhtotl Is a sub ject that has inter ested most women of nil lime-. One of the ril helpful thine.' is an external abdominnl application sold in most irug stores under the name of "Mothers Krientl." We have known so many grand mothers, who In their younKer days relied upon this remedy, and who recom mend It to their own dauKhters that It icrtainly must he what its name indi cates. They have used it for its direct Influence upon the muscles, cord, llim ments and tender. as it aims to afford "ellef from the stmlu and r,n so often jnneoessarlly severe during tho period of 'xpertancy. A little book mailed by PrndfieM Rel ator Co.. 305 Uimar Atlanta, lia.. refers to many things that women like to rend about. It refers not only to tho ;clief from muse!.- strain due to tlK!r ?xpanslon btit also to nausea, momh;i? ulekness, caking of breasts uud many jther distresses. The Cooperative Tire Goodyear has always built co-operative tires. Every sav ing has gone to the user. The more men bought the better we built them, and the lower we sold them. That is why Goodyear has held top place, outselling any other tire. 3 Reductions Note that in two years we made three big price reductions. The last on February 1st brought the total to 45 per cent Yet in costly w ays these tires have been bettered. In nut one iota were they ever skimped. Our Fortified Tire is still "On-Air" cured to save blow outs. Yet (hat one extra costs us $430,000 yearly. It still has our No-Rim-Cut feature. It has in each base 126 braided piano OOEMpYEAR C' AKRON.CMIO Fortified Tires NvRintCut Tire "On-Air" Carrd Wita AD-WthrTredior Smooth wires to make the tire secure. It embodies hundreds of rubber rivets, formed to combat loose treads. Gir All -W eather tread is still double-thick. It still has the sharp, tough, resistless grips. Those extras all exclusive to Goodyear are all retained, despite our price reductions. And we still spend $100,000 yearly to discover new ways to better them. Your Ally In all these ways, Godyear is yotir ally. Y ou do injustice to yourself when you f.iil to secure this advantage. Never in tire history was such value given you get in Goodyear tires today. No smaller makers can ever give so much. Any dealer will supply you. cx-7) Goodyear Service Stations Tires in Stock Pendleton LONG & WELKER OREGON MOTOR GARAGE PENDLETON AUTO CO.