v ',r row. DAILY EAST ORF.f.OXIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. FRIDAY, JUNE 4. 15)1; EIGHT PAGES trf"" ' ;umor. It rr,av bo fair'.v as- pends more money each vear sumni that the piloe of wheat i than any other organization in' in the northwest would now be i the county save tne countv court. ' Financially speaking r. . o. t'vuri, t v tf - O'fL'tl Coonry IHp-r Efpfd at lb li(fi at lcvitoa. Oragea, aa iteeobti cia.i Butter. taicpbaoa 1 ON SAt.K IS t'THKR CiTlKS ImcMvial Htit N Stand, t'wrtiutd. toHrsua Srvw Co. Torrtand, Orejoo. on hlk a r Oiln.ro Bor a. yv Scrttr Building Wssfcirurtoa. Ii (, buraaa iol, tour tcita nrm, N. W. l"BWR!T!iS RATES (IS At'VANCE) lHjr, one b; mail imv.j, mi aoottA. bt natl It!r. ttirva stb. br icail lUy, oa sinctit. av maii tat:j, on ?-r, by earner ai nth. by carrier , I'sily, three miciha. bj rarriw..., imuj. no Bunta. o carrier.. wail K r NEwsi-AVER. i higher to the extent of 40 or it i 50 cents per bushel couid the co 'brokers secure ships at norma! prices. Yet when the administrati on's ship purchase bill was be fore the senate some north west papers were very vehem ent in criticising it as social istic and one Washington sena tor participated prominently in the filibuster that kept the bill from passing. I" aij, one rar br mall eml- H, an a.iths. bj nail., aai Wai.r, four muo-.iia. br Bail. . 2..W . IS . .50 . 7 50 . . 1 95 . 65 . 1 50 . .75 IRRIGATIONISTS NEED GOOD ROADS J fkom rt W KESBVRT ROAD" CURRENT THINKING SFXl-'-lfcFK.!E AGAINST MILK (From The Philadelphia North Ame-i erlcan. ) ; ChrlstoDher Hareraws a Ru.-ks'HF County farmer, pleaded elf-defemj j ra tnargea win oeating an "oner l f mule with an a hutt.llo anA n,1 I N A fin ui. 1 - . . i t a. .two. aim uwi u r 1 V 1 l-C l, U C 1 1 i - , rralgned r Lang ! a t 3 F as Mr. Hodgen says the farmers in his section of the east end are favorable to bonding for permanent roads it will not be surprising. The people in an irrigated section j are usually progressive mind- ; rTl- a r At it i od to i out on the road. ! cu- . iIlls may account ior me and goir.g one know not 'sentiment spoken of by Mr. hre. I Hodgen. A still more potent! 1 ..t!reason is the fact that no' village, one knows not farmer needs good all-the- hither nor why; year roads more than does the iirrigationist. v Tnrougn tne grey isgnt drirt 01 the dust in th kn rAAl rush of the airr 'ject of "Good Roads for Irri- ' gated Regions" in the May is- rnder the flying cloud, and sue of the Reclamation Record, the broad blue lift of the i. . -nr r j- i. Mr LKan W. Page, director, Office of Public Roads for the Ana to halt at the chattering ;U. S. government says: brook in the taU green ( c,ood road are especially Important " ":' --ito the welfare and fullest me scnooi ooara is o more im portant body than the ci; council because it costs more to conduct the schools than to conduct the regular city gov ernment. The schools are a big asset to Pendleton and they should be conducted in a strong manner along modern, i'd eaterday wn?n r ef"ii-ifnt linea I before Magistrate Tomlinson, at , , , " home on a charge of chuelty tti an In order to secure the best mais. results it is necessary to have! "Thafe mules got a bad streak. upon the board men who will ; Hargravea told tne magistrate, -ai fi !!!;d stauvdy to . :b:i:z i n.o ucwi c mcni aim w ho in i time I didn t have a whip handy. oe iree in every way to do their ti used the ax handle duty as thev see it Mr. Strain's of elf-defense. record as assessor of this coun ty and as a member of the city council shows him to be of that calibre. He is fit in every way for the position his friends de sire him to hate. N LP? If- t ft In an able article on the sub- THIS MA Y ENTERTAIN so It was pureiy the The agent of the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals waoppa niirairu 11111 ara Dliu no nuuiu withdraw the charge on that plea, and Magistrate Tomlinson dismissed the case. INtWiSlDERATK. tr. Gordon church, Boston a of the Old Scuth probably has as large When a fool hen takes a notion to sit she doesn't care a rap whether there are any eggs In the nest or not Lazy men are built on the same plan. Can The Bucks Beat Those Greedy Pebbles? AT LESS 111 E2lnjl me the gorse, and the fox glove purple and white: Where the hy-eyed delicate deer come down in a troop to drink When the stars are mellow and large at the coming on of the night John Masefield. WHEAT AND SHIPS develop ment Of an irTjfi'fttfi roB-inn. (r lr. Where the harebell grows, and rigated districts are, or soon become. thickly populated. Cultivation of the land Is intensive and the crop yield i per acre high. This at once places a heavy demand on the roads. Every argument in favor of the need of good roads in the great farming areas of the humid regions holds with equal or greater force in the Irrigated sec tions. Aa to how to make good roads Mr. Page, who by reason of his position, is evidently something of an authority', does not share the view held by some of our local people that the split log drag is the pana cea for all road troubles. In his advice to irrigationists he says: "The split log drag, so useful on the clay and heavy soil roads of the humid regions, finds a much more restricted field in the dry regions. The light, volcanic and very sandy soils in thisrlimate are seldom benefitted Dy dragging. In general the less these soils are disturbed the better." The class of soil described above is identical with that be tween here and the Columbia river. A hard surface road is the only class of road that will maintain heavy traffic such as will go to the open river if steamers and barges hauling at low rates are operated on the Columbia, as is anticipated will be done. VHY has the price of Tj wheat been declining day by day until quo tations now are not greatly dif ferent from normal prices at this time of the year? There must be a scarcity of wheat because the European crop has been neglected and there is unusual demand be cause of the war. There is no prospect for peace in the near future because the war is plain ly far from ended. The strug gle is constantly growing deep er and more bitter. What force then is operat ing to depress the wheat mar ket when conditions logically call for soaring prices? There is but one answer apparent at this time and it is found in ex orbitant shipping charges. Under the latest figures at which ships have been char tered it will cost 63 cents per bushel to transport wheat from Portland to Liverpool. This is exclusive of the war insurance, hence the high charges are not due to the dangers of the block ade. The high rates are due to the fact the international shipping combine has a glori ous chance to make big money and is proceeding to do so at the expense of the American producer and the European TO DEFKAT PILOT ROOK IX THIS CITY OX SUNDAY. Cirri of admiMra b an.. in that 11, r, " , . rUULtlUl ILlS UM lll.lt large congregations, who are attracted ! not only by his personality, but byi nia IntpllAftiiot an1 .,!.. u.. . ,,. " "U- Ca be done, A that ,. the On a recent Sunrlav he mmfc Gdnp.' timonious. Dsalm-sinelnE nrooerf 1 Can lhe plIot Pebbles be lick- Christians who have no real religion ed by the Pendleton Bucks? Or will in their make-up a target for his wit ,ney add another victory to their un A liUle boy who heard him remaiked bTok string? Will they go through after he returned home. (their whole schedule without once "Mother, I shouldn't have thought tatlng the quinine of defeat? Will Dr. Gordon would have spoken that o11 Arm Darling emerge from way about Christians this morning. ,he wu1" wl,h a clan record of vie There might have been some of them tories t0 his credit In church!" I These and similar questions curve their backs and stare in the face the Pendleton fan as he contemplates the game Sunday In this city between the Pebbles and the Bucks. The Pebbles have not been here since the opening game of the season but twice In their home town they took the measure of the Bucks. This will be the last clash between the two teams and. from bat packer to manager, the Bucks will go out after that game. Strengthened as they are with the new yet old material in the lineup, the locals feel that they have not carved out for themselves an Impos sible task. The old line-up was able to make the Pebbles hustle and the new one should do even better. PROSPERITY WEEK BOOST-Hit. WELL FITTED FOR THE PLACE ROM the standpoint of ability and experience Mr. Strain is a big man and the biggest men we have are none too big for service on the Pendleton school board. Therefore it is fortunate he will run for director. The local school board ex- Tlio Post Efiieionf in Aii.or.ea Car ., 3- - : I I 1 I n k j -v 4 m 'v CASTOR I A . for Infants and Children. Tin Kind Yoa Have Ahrajfs Bough. Signature of fcMa WESTON-PENDLETON AITO STAGE A. M. Lv. Weston Lv. Athena Lv. Adams A. M. Lv. Pend'n Lv. Adams Franklin 6-30; weight 2750 lbs. LET US SHOW YOU Pendleton Auto Co. Phone 541 812 Johnson Street J Tyrone Kelly. Tyrone Kelly, one of the best known newspaper men of the east and mid die west, has become prosperity week booster. He Is hard at work on the plans of the Society for Electrical De velopment to make the week of Not. 2 to Dec. 4, remembered In the his tory of the country. He succeeded a.i publicity manager In the east for the Panama-Pacific International exposi tion In making that undertaking pret tv well known. The Society for Electrical Develop ment is incorporated under the direc tion of James W. Wakeman. one of America's foremost electrical men. The vast electrical industries of the nation support the society. The week of Nov. 29-Dec. 4, will close a national trade movement, probably without parallel in America's business history. Mr. Kelly will handle one of the branches or the national cam-talgn. Very much Of the knowledge that! pB.i'ern ceoDle have gamea in n last year of the west and Its possibill ' ties is due to the progressive publicity ! method adopted more than a year ago by Mr. Kelly. While hie appeal j has been largely directed to women and children, the exposition's publi: I ity chief centered his readers on the I lessons of the west they first ab sorbed from their school books. He I created In their minds the incentive to go west, where the opportunity Is ! present. Tnder the writer's name of ! Gilbert K. Harrison, the stories of the west, and what California and the Pacific coast and the exposition offer to the traveler In education and scenery, have ben widely read In newspapers and magazine pages oi the country. Mr. Kelly was a star reporter on the N. Y. Evening World and devel oped In Park Row offices along with Irvln 8. Cobb, Barton W. Carrie. Mar tin Green, Raymond O. Carroll sna. other newspapermen, conspicuous in various fields of newspaper and mag azine work. Before Joining the World, Mr. Kelly j was sporting editor of the Buffalo Courier. St. Louis Republican, and Washington Post His column "The Wide World of Sport," gained for him national repute as an authority on sports. . Schedule. Going West. P. M. 8:00 Lv. Weston 1:00 :15 Lv. Athena 1:15 8:35 Lv. Adams 135 Going East P. M. 10:00 Lv. Pend'n 4:00 10:50 Lv. Adams 4:50 Lv. Athena 11:15 Lv. Athena 5:15 ' Fares. Weston to Athena, 25c; Weston to Adams, 50c; Athena to Adams, 25c; Weston to. Pendleton, 11.00; Athena to Pendleton, 75c; Adams to Pendleton, 50c. Round trips, if made in same day: Weston and Pendleton, (1.50; Athena and Pendleton, 11.25. Headquarters: Weston, at City Drug Ftora; Athena. St. Nichols Ho tel; Adams, Inland Mercantile Store; Pendleton, Trench Restaurant. A. M, Boyden, Proprietor. The Vogue Millinery will change hands about July 1 , and in order to reduce the stock Commencing Tomorrow I WILL OFFER ANY HAT IN THE STORE AT LESS THAN ONE HALF PRICE FOR CASH. This is a bonafide sale and the hats are marked in plain figure which I guarantee have not been changed for this sale but ' are ex actly what the hats were marked to sell for. WE HAVE THE LARGEST LINE OF WHITE HATS INCLUDING PANAMAS IN THE STATE OUTSIDE OF PORTLAND. These will go at the same reduced price. ; I guarantee every panama to be this season's shape and style. If you don't believe it, compare them with the old style ones to be found in some department stores. i Eemember this is not an old or bankrupt stock worked over but the goods are stricly new and up-to-the-minute in every detail. Call and examine them and you will find them exactly sented. as repre- THE VOGUE Mrs. L D. Idleman, Prop. mm iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiuiiiiiiiiiiii IF YOU HAVE FREQUENT HEAD ACHES WHICH MEDICINES DO NOT CURE; if you see distant objects more (or less) clearly, or need to hold printed mat ter nearer to or further from the eye3 than formerly ; or need more light. If you have observed any of these things, your sight needs the aid of correctly adopted glasses to assist aa well as preserve it. Accurately fitted glases are only possible when the sight has been scientifically tested. We have every facility for doing this and exercise the greatest care so that you may receive the utmost benefit from wearingglasses. A thorough examination and explanation of your con dition will cost you nothing. W. H. HILL r Optician I With Win. llanscom, Jeweler, lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllll Protect Your ROSES get a bottle of NICTONE for sale by Koeppen's The Drug Store That Serves You Best 17 entiftry ithout Pain Dentistry that will make you healthy and happy. I am offering the people of Pendleton and Umatilla county a class of dentistry never before offered in Pendleton and to be had in only a few offices through out the northwest. DENTISTRY WITHOUT PAIN. Painless dentistry has come to stay by those skilful in its use. Painless dentistry is a reality. This is one reason why I am able to do you a su perior class of dentistry. Other dentists will tell you this is not possible. I positively guarantee to take the nerve out of a tooth or prepare a cavity in the most sensative tooth wihout pain. I do not use cocaine or arsenic. If I start to do work for you and you do not find every word in my ad the absolute truth, you are at lib erty to discontinue having me do your work. If you have a tooth to be extracted I will do it with out pain, ' If you have pyorrhea, sore and bleeding gums, I will cure you without medicine. I am a graduate under Dr. C. M. Carr of Chicago, the greatest pyorrhea specialist in the world today. This is the only treatment known to science which will cure pyorrhea. Pyorrhea is caused by tartar collecting on the roots of teeth. This causes an irritation of the tissues around the root. This causes a slufing of the gum. Microbes get in at these places and we have the for mation of pus, next the teeth get loose and later fall out. Other dentists use medicine, injected around the teeth or in the arm, to kill these bugs. They never touch the real cause. As a result your relief is only temporary. I remove the cause on the roots and in over 99 of all cause I have treated I have had a positive cure, a cure that will last without the use of one drop of medi cine. After experimenting with other dentists come to me and I will give you the names of some of your leading businessmen I have cured. DR. F. L. INGRAM, Dentistry Suite 3, 4 and 5 Schmidt Bldg. Lady Assistant Always in Attendance, n: