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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1915)
EIGHT PAGES DAILY EAST 0REG0N1AN. PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1915, PAGE TIIuT All this week, a grand opportunity awaits the men to get the best clothing in America at greatly reduced prices at QND BROS. SUIT SALE LdT ONE Benjamin -Society Brand and Kirschbaum Suits, regular price $20.00, $22.50, $25.00, $27.50, $30.00. SALE PRICE $7.50 LOT TWO Benjamin - Society Brand and Kirschbaum Suits. Box back, conserva tive and English models, regular price $17.50, $18.50, $20.00, $22.50, $25.00. SALE PRICE $11.50 Stories From BY WILBUR 8. FORREST, (t'nlted Press Staff Correspondent.) LONDON, June 21 (By Mall to New York.) The war to killing thou, an da of babies In England. In London alone, according to re turn furnUed the reglatrar-general, Infanta are dying by hundred. In 95 other large cities In England and Walt, statistics Just received show ,that the present Infant mortality la the greatest In history and Indirectly lne to the war. Children In Oreater London have lieen dying at the rate or 200 a week for the past thirteen weeks excess of tha mortullty rate for the correspond. Ing period In 1914. The situation Is directly traceable to the scarcity of physicians, thou sands of whom are serving the coun try, according to health officials In London today. Those doctors who HOW TO HEAL SKIN-DISEASES A Baltimore doctor suggest this imple, but reliable and inexpensive, home treatment for people suffering with enema, ringworm, rashes and lira liar itching, burning skin troubles. At any reliable druggist's get a jar of rcsinol ointment and a cake of resinol aoap. These will not cost a bit more than seventy-five cent. With the rea inol soap and warm water bathe the af fected parts thoroughly, until they ire free from crusts and the akin la soft ened. Dry very gently, spread on a thin layer of the resinol ointment, and cover with a light bandage If necessary to irotect the clothing. This should be done twice a day. Usually the distress ing itching and burning stop with the first treatment, and the skin soon be comes clear and healthy again. A HINT FOR SHAVERS If you want refreshing shave, with a thick, creamy lather, try a resinol having stick. It ocntains the toothing, healing resinol medication which make It especially welcome to mca with tender laces. Bathing ..... Caps 50c to $1.00 Plain and fancy styles; tight fitting models and flaring ef fects. Practical caps that pro tect hair and ears. Suitable for bathing In ocean, luke, river, tank or tub. Faultless quality meaning the best. SEE OUlt WINDOW DISPLAY I1EFORK BUYING. Tallman & Go. Leading Druftlitt tntn iw in jinn First National Oonh PENDLETON, OREGON 1 ESTABLISHED 1882 -a i 53 1 3 Known For LOT THREE Benjamin - Society Brand and Kirschbaum Suits. Worsteds, Chevi ots, Cassimeres, Home-spuns. Regular price $22.50, $25.00, $27.50, $30.00. SALE PRICE ? 15.00 LOT FOUR Benjamin - Society Brand and Kirschbaum Suits. Showing all the pre vailing style tendencies, roll lapels, patch pockets, English, Conservative and Box Back models. Regular price $25, $27.50, $30.00, $35.00. SALE PRICE ... ?21.50 the War Zone remain In London and other British cities are worked to the limit of en durance. They have time only to give slight attention to patients. Nurses available for civilian duty are at a premium. Practlcalyly all of them are caring for the wounded soldiers. A virulent outbreak of measles am ong London children Is still In force, hundreds having died from this cause alone. Other child maladies, not dangerous In normal times, have ex acted a great toll among children un der ten years of age whose resistance is less than older children. Another cause of child mortality, for which the war Is Indirectly re sponsible Is the great Increase in the Industrial employment of married women and the lack of agencies for care of children during the absence mothers from home. Day nurserler that existed before the war practical ly have all been converted Into Insti tutions for the care of the wounded Thejie Institutions previously safe guarded and fed the Infants of work ing mothers for two cents a day. Within the punt four months In Greater London alone, 6631 children under the nge of ten. years have dl"ii. Many prominent English social workers have taken cognizance of 'he Infant mortality situation and In ad dition to private efforts to relieve the situation, are appealing to the Lon don county council and the govern ment. Mrs H. B. Irving, wife of the fa mous actor. Is one of those who Is making a study of conditions. She is prominently connected with the schools for mothers movement, ind has become rccognlnzed aa one of the first authorities In England upon all that concerns child life and mother hood Not only is the war killing children but It Is also responsible for an alarm ing death rate among persons past middle age, according to health -tu-tlstlcs today. War worries that sap the vitality and break down physical resistance to disease have caused thousands of elders to give up to mM adleB that invariably mean death. j Mortality figures for aged persons who have sons on the firing line or who worry about Zeppelins show that war's toll Is not taken by bullets and shells. Speaking of the general situation a well known student of London's health said today: "It Is not exactly a cheerful sub Ject. but It is one which must be fac ed with cheerfulness. It is quite nat ural that, in the midst of a war of such magnitude, we should, to some extent, lose sight of the health of the civilian population; so much Is pushed aside by military necessity. But. after all. It is the civilian popu lation who carry on peace pursuits, upon which the machinery of wrr- fine Help far , Expectant Hcthsrs A valuable aid la aa sxtsriul ntudr known and used succwsfully by woma everywhere for a generation. It h culled "Mother's Friend" sad Is sold in all drur ftorrs. It li applied externally. Begin about the afth month. Th. musrlos are made (Iriu and pliant, exisuulon crimes without strain, tha nerret ara relieved of tension and thorough comfort Is en(oyd. Dont fall to get a bottla of "MoUwr's Friend" tndav. fioM0hy droarlirts everywhere. Write fur valuable bonk, arnt free by RrsdfWd Reiit kttor Co, 101 Lamar Bld Atlanta, do. tin nim 3 M E3 m It's Strength lll!l!lirflj'Hffi!ll!lll!llHW!!l!!ll!SIIIIIIIII!ll!lllilirra iuiaaiiiiiiiiiuiaiiitoiuiiijhuiimtiiuiiiiuiuiiiuiii.,4 m 3 S-3 -4 fare depends. It is a military neces slty for every man and woman to keep fit, to watch over and guard temperamental weaknesses, to keep healthy and strong. "The business of all of us now Is 10 amve to Keep nt, to drive worry to the dogs, and preserve a cheerful countenance even when Zeppelin raids on London are talked about, or actually come about. There never was a time In history when cheerful ness had a greater value than it has today." SAYS WILSON SHOULD BE PRESIDENT AGAIN PORTLAND. Or. July 20. "If there were no war, the 1916 presi dential campaign would be a close contest between Woodrow Wilson and! some strong repuimean, such as Weeks of Massachusetts. But underj the circumstances, the people realize' that Wilson Is handling the interna - - i tional situation admirably and they -....,..., iuu.nnii, Krep nim in me. ne Mouse wnne tne war and the Nil hMtknnent nlii.tm.iit. .... , I I Thus did Winfleld Scott Hammond. ! democratic governor of Minnesota,! ' " v,r"8 lo in" Journal on the presidential situation. He pro. fess.d to speak without political bias. though a democrat, because he has , ,he cultivation of qualities and served In congress before his gover-j ha,,ts of Rood citizenship. Instruc norshlp from a district that always tion ,, traning muat Ka ham, ln has ben overwhelmingly republican, j hand The ,Htu,r L, largely maUer No Tiiiie for Politics. of practice." Pupil participation In "The people are realizing also now,"j school management is a very real cominuea tne governor, "mat tnis la not a time for politics but for patriot- ism. "I know Senator Weeks well and 1 know President Wilson well. Both are admirable men und represent the! best there U In American citizenship.' people could make no mistake in people coul dnmke no mistake In choosing either. But the war Is a fact and the whole structure of ln- ternatlonal negotiation should be mulntttined Just as It has begun. Aft er the war, I would be willing to see the old partisan method of choosing a president go on." REFUSED TO TESTIFY Evelyn "Nesbit Thaw wife of Kar at the recent (rial ln New York at w free pending an appeal of the case b poor health would not permit her t i V " !:-,. - v X' 1 I o - .".v J ' - . .A f : '-! t -.- i f' - fft' ' .v.. . r . . I tj.fc, :jl " '-' "', ' - V CHiLDEEH FOR PAST I AFFAIRS OF LIFE IMI'OKTAXCK OI' ItKKPOXKIRILI. TIKS OF ITIZI.XM1H' IS TAl'fillT. ImllunulMills ScIumiI IIHp puirtN to l mk-rwtand the .Nature f Their Own Community jre Develop Right Altitude Toward Government 1'iuler Willi Ji They IJve. How one Community trains !U children for the responsibilities of clt. Izenshlp la described In a bulletin Just issued by the f. H. Bureau of Educa tion on "Civic Education In Element ary Schools as Illustrated in Indian apolis " "The practice In the Indianapolis schools." says Arthur W. Dunn, au thor of the bulletin, "Is to help the pupil to understand the nature of his own community life, his depend ence upon it, and his responsibility for it; to develop a right attitude toward government as the means by which all members or the community may cooperate for the common Interest; and to cultivate habits of right ac- tlon as a member of the community.' The bulletin emphasizes the fact that "civics is not taught as a sepat ate subject until the eighth grade. but that civic education Is a phase of ail the work of the school. The aim seems to be to make of education, not a process of Instruction In a variety of subjects, but a process of growth, during which the various relation of life are unfolded." Incidentally It Is pointed out that "there is no 'subject' of ethics or moral education In the Indianapolis schools, but the direct moral training afforded by the course here outlined Is peculiarly virile. So, also. while there i. nn tt.mnt t -u-. hi,.. catlon training In the strict sense of ihi. t . ,-,.., ,. ,i..i ...w, Hi..., u, at,.. vt$nniM:ii iorm or "vocational guidance.' never theless the fact lit always taken In'o account that the citizen must be worker and ,ne worker a citizen. Instruction through the course of Mu,lv , however, onlv a part of the training for citizenship given in these schools. "An understanding of ;om- munitv life and of government" de clllr(,s Mr. rjunn. ..a frutPs. with. thing in Indianapolis, and In some schools It is carried to a high degree f of effectiveness. It manifests itself ln lne method of preparing and con- ducting recitations; In the care of school property; In protecting the rights of younger children: In main talnlng the sanitary conditions of the building and grouuds; In beautifying school grounds: in the making of re pairs and equipment for "our school in fact, in every aspect of the school life. In Indianapolis pupil participation In the government of the school leads naturally into pupil participation in AT HUSBAND'S TRIAL ry Thaw, refused to appear in court hlch he was declared free and set y the state. Evelyn declared that o appear In court. Popular the larger civic life of the community of which the school itself is a part. Maintaining order on the playground naturally extends to maintaining or der on the etreets in the vicinity of the school. It is common for com mittees of older boys to look after the safety of younger children In crossing streets near the school. So licitude for the cleanliness and beau ty of school grounds develops equal solicitude for the cleanliness and beauty of adjoining streets, alleys and vacant lots School gardening quick ly stimulates home gardening, and whole neighborhoods have been transformed through the influence of the schools. Whether the children who are now undergoing this training for citizen ship will In reality be efficient cltl sens 10 or 20 years hence can not be foretold, according to Mr. Dunn. But he adds: "There is apparently am ple evidence that they are better cit izens now; and, moreover, that the present life of the city Is appreciably affected by it. Where Immediate re sults are so apparent and so far reaching, the effect upon future cltl. zenship should certainly be appreciable." DON'T FORGET to Attend the Opening of the New Popular Cash Store WEDNESDAY, JULY 21st, 191S A Store that has founded its principles on high modern merchandising ideas. A Store that will serve you with highest standard quality merchandise and always at Popular Price. A Store that commands the Lowest Purchase prices by paying Ready Cash. A Store that today is busy unpacking and arranging the season's rfewest and best styled merchandise. GqoIi Sforo Better Goods for Less Money. ROOSEVELT DENIES HE MADE 1916 PROPHECY PORTLAND, July 20. Referrius to a newspaper statement from Seat tle that he would support the repub lican nominee for president in 191$ if that nominee was progressive. Colonel Roosevelt said here yesterday: "That statement is an absolute fake. You will notice that no one stands responsible for It. In newspa per language It is not 'hung' on any one. "Any statement I make about my position will be made over my own signature. "Any man who claims to represent me, accept his statement as a pure Invention or a misrepresentation of what has been staid. "The only correct statement that has been printed is the one that I made this morning. Has Discussed No One. "I said, 'If you will tell me the conditions In 1916, I'll tell you my po. sition ln 1918,' and I have yet to meet the man who is prophet enough to tell me what 1916 will bring forth. "I have not discussed and shall not When the Spot Light Shines WR. RETAILER, when the iVA manufacturer advertises his product in this newspaper be is turning on the spot light in this city. If you get under it people will see your store. Not hard to do and the re wards are good. Co-operate with the manu facturer's newspaper advertising. Let the public know your store has his goods. Put them on your countermand in your window. Bring the public to your store. discuss the claims of any man to bo president." Referring again to the mollycoddle, the colonel said that the only human being of whom ha thinks as little Is tha crook. Turning to Colonel Emmett Calla han, progressive county chairman. In when he joyously recognized his old friend, the colonel of the Second Montana. Colonel Roosevelt said: Moytyooddlea Ara SlasieM. "Colonel Callahan can tell you my views on mollycoddles who sr really grown up sissies of either sex." PURE, RICH BLOOD MADE BY HOOD'S Pure blooo! enables the stomach, liver snd other digestive orjtans to do their work properly. Without it they are sluggish, there is loss of apiwtite, sometimes faintness, a de ranged state of the intestines, ami, in general, all the symptoms o dyspepsia. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes pure blood, and this is why it is so very successful in the treatment of so many ailments. Get it today. Niililillir""""'"1""