East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, May 21, 1915, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PACE FOUR
DAILY EAST OREGOXIAX. PEXPI.ETON, OREGON. FRIPAY, MAY 21. 1915.
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KS.
1'urtlsDd,
OK MI.E IN OTHER CIT
!mpTll Uuicl Srwt SUDd,
Bowman News Co. fnnUnd, Ortsoa.
OS Kll.K AT
Chlrn Barrel. tiv dworlty Building
ublnrtoa, ii C, liureas 501, lour
tawoib nrrri, Ji. W.
1 Every newborn baby should
i have the eves caref ullv washed !
out bv the nurse or doctor im- Ti Lmatilla county would
mediately after birth. This J) celebrate a Good Roads
may be done with any simple,! Pay each spring and if
non-irritating antiseptic, like ; farirs and townsmen in the
boric acid solution. In some, different sections would gen
states it is legalh prescribed J "ally turn out to do a day or
that an antiseptic shall be two of volunteer work it would
dropped into the eyes, and the J help considerably in solving
one most commonly advised is! the road problem. Then if
a 1 per cent solution of silver; these same men would consider
nitrate, a dron in each eve. 'themselves responsible for the
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F!!)lHtnftlltH',iMTl'HfMt'Mt""'T"Hl;tf?,"l'"IMt,tt'H'
IlilitiillimHU!
PrUfM'HIITKiN RATES
(IN Al'YANCK)
lllly. i ynr, lij mall $. On
l"lir. alt month. ty mall iwi
!Iitw month, by mall 12.".
I'ally, im month. tiT mall !i
Hi"y, on frr. by carrier 7 M)
Illy, all month, by carrier ....... . j.75
laHy. (l,r month.' bf carrier l.lr
lallt. cna m..nih, by carrier .s
Mral-Weekly, one year by mall 1 50
This is an almost certain pre
ventative of the serious eye in
flammation known as ophthal
condition of the roads in their
neighborhoods all the time the
county would not have to
IX HOHKMI.V.
I'd rather live In Bohemia than
In any other land;
For only there are the values
true.
And the laurel gathered In all
men view.
The prizes of traffic and state
are won
By chrewdness or force or by
deeds undone;
Hut fume Is sweeter without the
feud.
And the wie of Bohemia are
never shrewd.
Here. pilgrims stream with a
failh sublime
From every class and clime and
time.
Aspiring only to be enrolled
With the names thatare writ In
the book of gold;
And each one bears In mind or
hand
A palm of the dear Bohemian
land
The Kcholar first.
book a youth
Aflame with the glory of har-
vented truth;
A girt with a picture, a man
with a play,
A boy with a wolf he ha mod-
elled in clay;
A smith with a marvelous hilt
and sword.
A player, a king, a plowman, a
lord
mia neonatorum, the infectious ! spend so much money in order
inflammation which has termi-jto obtain so little in the way of
nated in partial or complete !w'ork on dirt roads.
blindness in so manv cases. , " " " VT" .,
........ I If Italy gets into the war
ENGLISH NAVAL STRATEGY j Germany will be left without
I communication with the outer
HE English pnblic is dis-, world save by Zeppelins and
s satisfied with the con-'submarines.
duct of their navy duringj
the war yet how much justice! Work will soon be underway
there is to their complaint is on the new hospital wing and
not easy to determine. jthe federal building, with th
iiDrary not lar oenina.
:!
Eno-land has a navv vastly
I superior to that of Germany
!and it was anticipated at the
J outset of the war that the Ger
jman fleet would soon be de
stroyed. But this has not been
! done. Comparatively few Ger-
"Rain, rain, go to Spain.'
man warships have been sunk
CURRENT THINKING
IUCHKST FUKNCH LANDS HELD
BY GERMANS.
The importance of the 5 per cent
of French territory held by the Ger
mans is strikingly set forth in a
? ! naval battle.
! Is this because of incompet
ency on the part of the English
i admiralty or because of Ger-
i , : 1 : v.;.
iiuoiiiieincssm iccjjuig iuui statement given to the press todav
! battleships and Cruisers OUt Of.hy the National Geographic Society.
j harms Way? The logical View i It shows that while it is coniparative-
!is that the German navv has : !ysma,!1 n area It is very large Indeed
m inuuMriai ana agricultural import
ance. It says;
been safe from John Bull's'
w ith htj ; reach or he would have given j
"Holdin? itrilv nlumt iriftnn amicro
i 1 . 1 0 .vvy
Ilgni long ago. miles of French territory, or leas than
England, however, has COn- one-twentieth of continental France,
trolled the sea sufficiently tO;the Grmans have behind their ad-
Ferhaps this was all that Lng-. tenth of her population. Here are
land desired and the navy i the mines, the foundries and factories,
leaders took the View that Ger- and tne dairies and farms which are
me price, tne wealth and tne strength
of modern France. In this narrow
man warships could do no
uarm as long as uiey remameu
And the player is king when the j in port. Again the Kiel canal
door la past. ,mav hp thp pnlanatlon for
and
The plowman is crowned.
the lord is last!
By John Boyle O'Reilly,
a a
GRAIN SHIPS NEEDED MOST
aT their conference in Seat
tle the western governors
asked that more warships
be stationed upon the Pacific
coast w .
That is alright.
But the ships in which the
fanners of the inland empire
are most concerned just now
are not fighting boats but grain
ships to carry this summer's
wheat to the export market.
With charters ranging up
wards of 72 shillings there is
room for anxiety. Such figures
mean it now costs in the neigh
borhood of 60 cents a bushel
to carry w heat to Europe. In
other words the ship owners
charge almost as much as
wheat is worth to take it to
market and the situation tends
to depress prices to the farmer.
These high ocean rates are
due principally to the lack of
ships and this very situation
was foreseen by the adminis
tration when it pressed the
shipping bill for passage by
congress. The measare would
j-iave relieved the tension and
with the government operating
the business our export com
merce would have been free
from hold-up charges.
f But the republicans in con
gress opposed the measure and
while in the minority were able
to block the bill through fili
buster tactics in the senate.
We are now getting the
fruits of that filibuster in char
ters at 70 shillings and higher
with every expectation the sit
uation will be worse before tne
summer is over.
If our farmers this summer
get but 75 cents a bushel for
wht-at that sells in Liverpool at
$1.50 they should not forget
who stood side by side with
the shipping trust last winter
and slaughtered the ship pur
chase bill.
THE NEEDLESSLY BLIND
"j( T is said by authorities that
11 one fourth of the blind in
country are afflicted because
f easilv preventable eye troub
les which appear shortly after
birth. Think what it means to
8v that 25 per cent of blind
ness could be avoided merely
through she work of a moment
by a nurse or mother.
The following advice as to
the precaution that should be
take n is from a reliable physician:
that canal makes the German
navy hard to catch.
In submarine strength also
England surpasses Germany
but with the German fleet in
hiding and German commerce
off the seas there has been no
work for English submarines.
On the other hand English
merchant ships have been
tempting targets for the Ger
man undersea fighters.
To the English the naval sit
uation is exasperating but they
can afford to wait for the Eng
lish position is vastly better
than that if Germany. Instead
of being open to censure the
English naval strategy may
have been extremely wise.
After the war is over it will be
possible to judge of this more
thoroughly than at present.
NO
ROCKEFELLER PRESS
FOUNDATION
V v j
iillH
4-
ADVERTISE
p jl N the past, the majority of the better class of dentists have been against the advertising dentist.
Wniicn tho nnhlic- nrpss was nRpd hv mpn who could not do a first-class Diece of dental work.
This was
They used the newspaper advertisements to get peo
ple into their office, get their money and let them go.
They located in the cities and depended on the
transient class of people for patrons.
The public is waking up to these conditions. The
days of the advertising grafter are numbered.
A great number of incompetent dentists of today are
hiding themselves in the ranks of the so-called ethical
dentists, and are trying to make all manner of excuses
to their patients for their failure and poor work.
They cannot come out before the public and guar
antee to make good, in a small town where every one
would soon know all about these failures.
1 am advertising, because I have taken post graduate
work in the different branches of dentistry, including
the different methods of painless dentistry. I know
people are losing their teeth because they are afraid
of dentists. c.llj?l
I know what I can do so am not going to sit back
and see you have your teeth pulled out but am going
to let you know there is ONE MAN in Pendleton who
can deliver the goods.
Come in and let me talk it over with you. I will not
rob you, but will give you honest, painless dentisry and
honest prices.
DR. F. L. INGRAM, Dentistry
Suite 3, 4 and 5 Schmidt Bldg.
Lady Assistant Always in Attendance
fi!!!l!I!!I!!II
We sometimes hear of a woman j
who is said to he worth her weight in
gold, but we never heard of one who
was worth her weight in dollar bill?
?rS press agent and general
vJ adviser to plutocracy on
DUDiiciiy mt. ivy u. imv
does not seem to have any il
lusions as to the usefulness of
a trust-controlled press. While
planning a bold stroke in a
merger that would make the
state of Colorado an append
age, a subsidiary, as it were,
of Standard Oil, and discussing
with Mr. Rockefeller the form
a letter from Gov. Ammons to
President Wilson should take,
he found time to embody the
following sensible conclusion
in his letters to 26 Broadway:
I do not believe that I
w ill ever come to the point
of thinking that you
should establish and be
come responsible for a
string of newspapers.
So it seems that a string of
Rockefeller-owned daily news
papers was a part of a plan
strone-lv urtred a year ago to
champion big business and
place it in a more lavoraoie
light before the public. An
other feature of the plan seems
to have contemplated an in
crease in the issues of the na
tional organ of the Chamber of
Commerce of the United btates
and its employment in the pro-IE
paganda. j
A trustendowed press would
be ruinously expensive and piti-
fully futile so far as any per
manent influence on American
sentiment is concerned. Rock
efeller foundations will be
wisely reserved for fields other
than that of journalism. St.
Louis Post-Dispatch.
strip under German occupation there
ia produced 70 per cent, of all coal
mined in France, 90 per cent of all
of the native-mined Iron and nearly
half of the republic's output pf man
ufactured articles.
"The Iron and steel industry of the
great republic Ilea almost entirely
back of the German trenches. France
stood fourth among the nations of the
world as a producer of Iron and steel
with an annual production of 3,600
000 tons of pig iron and of 3,100,000
tons of steel. This industry was cen
tered and contained in northern
France, for here were the raw mate
rials. "With the French and Belgian iron
and coal fields in their possession, the
Germans would hare almost a monop
oly of the Iron and steel industries of
Europe. Germany is now second
only to the United States In the pro
duction of Iron and steel. Before war
conditions set In the United States
oroduced annually 24,500,000 tons of
3teel; Germany, 12,300,000; Great
Britain, 6 040,000. Germany is third
amung the third great Industrial na
tions of the world in the production
of coal, and with the French and Bel
gian mines behind her lines might
easily equal the output of Great Brit
tain, second upon the list Thuj, un
usual interest attaches to the small
strlpts of foreign lands back of the
German lines.
"The stretch of a bare 10,000 square
miles, with its population of 4,000
000, its bounteous agriculture, its rich
roal and Iron mines and Its teeming
manufactures, is one of the most im
portant districts in all Europe. Some
idea of Its richness can be had from
the fact that while the average per
acre value for all France Is about
SI 50. that of these northern depart
ments is $235."
HAVE YOU
A CHILD?
Many women long for children, but because of
torn curable physical derangement are deprived
of this greatest of all happiness.
The women whose names follow were restored
to normal health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound. Write and asit them about it.
. - i ... -
i iook your ixm
pound and have a fine,
strong baby. " Mrs.
John Mitchell, Mas
sena, N. Y
Lydis E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound is a
wonderful medicine for
expectant mothers."
Mrs. A. M. Myers, Gor-
donville, Mo.
" I highly recommend
Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg
etable Compound before
child-birth, it has done so
much for me." Mrs. E.
M. Doerr, R. R. 1, Con-
shobocken, Pa.
' ' I took Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Com
pound to build op my
system and have the
dearest baby girl in the
world." Mrs. Mose
BLAKELEY, Coal port, Pa.
"I praise the Com
pound whenever I have
a chance. It did so much
for me before my little
pirl was born. Mrs.
E. W. Sanders, Rowies-
Iburg, W. Va.
"I took yoor Com
pound before baby was
born and feel I owe my
life to if '-Mrs. Winnie
Ttt i tci Wintor Haven.
If you would save on crisp new white goods, come to our
Everything
iElEflT m UIIIT
E SALE
White
SATURDAY IS THE LAST DAY TAKE ADVA NTAGE
THESE EXTREMELY LOW PRICES.
TABLE LINENS
75c, White Sale 55
$1.00, White Sale 86
$1.25, White Sale 950
$1.50, 'White Sale.. $1.17
$1.75, White Sale.. $1.39
$2.00, White Sale.. $1.59
$2.50, White Sale.. ?1.9S
BED SPREADS
$1.50, White Sale.. $1.29
$2.00, White Sale.. $1.59
$2.50, White Sale.. $1.93
$3.00, White Sale.. $2.45
$3.50, White Sale.. $2.79
$4.00, White Sale.. $3.29
$4.50 White Sale.. $3.69
Reduced
NOW OF
WAISTS
Lot No. 1
$1.29.
Lot No. 2
$1.59.
Lot No. 3
$1.79.
ALL SPRING SUITS PRICE
$20.00 Values, This Sale.... $10.00
$22.50 Values, This Sale.... $11.2"
$25.00 Values, This Sale.... $12.50
$27.50 Values, This Sale.... $13.75
$28.50 Values, This Sale.... $14.25
$30.00 Values, This Sale.... $15.00
$32.50 Values, This Sale.... $16.25
$35.00 Values, This Sale.... $17.50
$37.50 Values, This Sale.... $18.75
$40.00 Values, This Sale.... $20.00
$42.50 Values, This Sale.... $21.25
$45.00 Values. This Sale.... $22.50
$47.50 Values, This Sale.... $23.75
$50.00 Values, This Sale $25.00
9 J
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I IJMI. Pure Food Shop I
3 PHONES 15.
1 "If It's From Our Pure Food Shop If Clean."
STRAWBERRIES 100 CRATES on sale here Saturday.
Extra fancy Clark Seedling variety, the box 10
Per crate $2.25
Some Other Good Table Berries, special 3 boxes. .. 23
SALE
Fownes Gloves
98c
Charming Dresses for Summer Wear.
Just in by express, all the newest ideas
are worked into these splendid garments.
They come in silks, cotton voiles, lace
cloth and all the very newest fabrics shown
for summer wear. Moderately priced.
See Window Display.
SALE
Silk Petticoats
$3.19
Save
Green Trading Stamps
ALEXANDERS
. . l-&t jbfr )J sSssttMB
nrw nr r&
The trouble about the exter
mination of the coyote is that
this pestiferous family does
STAR CUT WINE
GLASSES
Set of 6 $1.75
STAR CUT COCK
TAIL GLASSES
Set of 6 $1.75
STAR CUT SHERBERTS
Set of 6 $1.90
42 PIECE SET
DINNERWARE
Packed to insure safe de
livery, the set $5.00
RIPE OLIVES
Special, qt. cans 35
DAIRY BUTTER
Full weight, fresh butter.
2 pounds 45
T. P. W. SPECIAL
BATH TABLETS
Dozen tablets in box,
the box $1.00
1 The Peoples Warehouse
I Where It Pays to Trade Save T. P. W. Stamps
HILL CLIMBING CONTESTS AT
SPOKANE AUTO SHOW
Not only winning over cars or its class, but it made faster
time than the winner of the second event for cars selling
from $1000 to $1550
EXTRACTS FROM SPOKESMAN-REVIEW.
"The first event was for stock cars
costing under J1000 at the factory and
there were seven entries. The Dodge
and car were started first and
the Dodge immediately showed that
as a hll climber It left little to be de
rlred by slipping up the grade in
49 2-5 seconds. D. R. Rlegel who won
two of the stadium events with the
Dodge last Thursday drove the Dodge
and got away in lightning style. He
no more than held his own on the
level, but when the Dodge hit the
grade it quickly drew away and fin
ished five seconds in front." The
nearest rival's time was (4 i-i sec
onds. The Dodge won the Washing
ton Trust Company Cup.
"After the regular events the Dodge
and the car taking second place went
up the hill In a special race for $26
side bet and the Dodge won again
having a five secohd margin over 1U
rival." Much money changed hands
on the result, as both cars had many
willing backers.
"The 100 yard dash was won by D.
R. Rlegel in a Dodge car. Mr. Rlegel
was compelled to compete In five
heats, but each time he had a safe
margin, his best time being 1 sec
onds. In this event tne anver was
required to stand by his car, enter it
at a signal, start the motor and then
stop the car over a mark 100 yards
away. It required skill in starting,
quick acceleration and sure brakes."
AITO SALES NEAR
RECORD FOR WEEK
DODGES SELL RAPrDLY
Child A Duffy Dispose or 14 In 15
Mlnntcs,
"That the first Spokane Automobile
Show Is bound to boost the number of
sales far beyond the highest expecta
tions Is the opinion of the majority
of local dealers. The method of hav
lng their cars side by side gave a fine
chance for comparison and bringing
out the fine points of each ear."
"To the Dodge Brothers car, long
termed the "car of mystery" goes the
banner for quick sales. Fifteen min
utes after the show opened Wednes
day morning Hal Chllds sales man
ager, and W. L. Duffy had closed con
tracts for fourteen cars. To make the
taking of orders more difficult the
dealers could not promise delivery
prior to July. The Dodge car is one
of the centers of attraction at the
show.''
LET IS SHOW YOU WHY.
Pendleton Auto Co.
Phone 541
812 Johnson Street
5 3
3
5 3
i
II
1 i
i 5
If
not practice race suicide.
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