' PAGE FOUR 3 AM MKl'hMk,.M NKWUl'ArKR. war and marine insurance on wheat from Portland to Liver- ! pool is less than six cent a I hllcbol roblUhM luiiy t"i Semi Weekly it Pen-: ' ' , . . , . , ,),, orgon. bT tbf Through the behavior last a.i oKhuoxuji iiBLi-suisa co. I wil)ter o Messrs Burton, Root orfk-iAi ronnty i-pr J ancj others, warmlv lauded by BaurM it ihf p.torfi, n l wdirton. ' the torv press of the east and tmm. """ jWpSt. the national government bobcat i was prevented from coming to " on iai.k in other cities, the rescue of the producer by rlKJ"" aoX" "WD i the only method of rescue open, ttowoAa nci co , r!i oro. j and the northwest farmer is nirt Borfo. o s-oritT Buiidin j now paying the penalty and WMhlnrtoo, I" C, Bureau IX'l, Four- C . . - ! thii cnm nwnarc n ra tAOnincr !No surer barometer of trade exists than steel. As it now reads, that barometer forecasts an immediate area of excep tional prosperity. New York World. THIS MA Y ENTER TAIN oU street, N. W, the ship owners are reaping their expected harvest. Wonderful indeed is Burton SUBSCRIPTION RATES (IN ADVANCE) . . 1 it A iti .ii iout'tii. bj mtii!""";.-; aw;and wonderful the tory press " m"""- 1 -St:that spps ska mnrri TIIK FOOI. AM) OIK DOLLARS. (E. T. Allen.) Goodbye to the tool with the empty fun; Foi gotten his bid for fame. ltall mi mitnth. bv mill. miiy. oie jr by ctrrier t so and glory in the plundering of IVIit. m nuinihK. by cirner l it , , .... tiiy, thre m..nth, by crrir io the wheatraiser bv the milh- tllj, auDin. oy carrier w V.: ,..V:V ISO v'linnc fiuu LUinuiliC nuillt happiness T"ough he kl,ls his triena, it only vhuiiis one. And that, nowadays, iiy. 9m Weekly, one year by null. nl Wefkly, four mouth, by mall. Vest W'eekir. sli mnth. by mill 7S without nlnwino- -- c - ' .-.I Dnii'iTlfV i narvesting is making tortunes i this year out of the wheat bus- TIIK Al MUiHTY VOICE. The wind to me Us an almighty voice, Vnto the clouds the waters and the trees Fr faking a thousand infinite decrees. And hiddltig men by turns regret rejoice. No exhalations v.igue anB pur poseless. Born of contending currents in the air; But speech of One whose Soul is everywhere. Hut oftenest speaking in the wilderness. The voice that spoke of old on Sinai That upon Horeb's holy hill was heard. ' Speaks yet aeain . . . and 1 am strangely stirred Saddened or gladdened by the Mystery. For I. alas, am deaf; I cannot gain More than a little of the truth Divine; mess. j Umatilla county farmers this year are being robbed of not less than a million dollars be cause of the filibuster by Bur ton and others against the ship bill. No wonder people in a certain quarter like to make a! 'fuss over him. Is tame. The A DISGRACE TO GEORGIA fool who playfully rocks the boat Is on the front page no more, lie may rank high with the fools afloat . Hut his glory Us gone ashore. 1 There's the fool with women, the fool with 'wine, And the fool who games with strangers. And the joy-ride fool (he does well in his line By combining these ancient dangers). But down in the tly're all still primer class. I Jlere novices takine a fiver. tin -v i- j ii. Compared with the prize-taking HE Civilization Of the criminal ass lynching of Leo Frank an unjust and cowardly act. There may be faults in the ad ministration of the civil law but at its worst the law is in finitely preferable to mob rule. In the case of Frank, the law found the accused man guilty, but there was a shadow of doubt so he was saved from the extreme penalty and given a life imprisonment sentence. The governor took cognizance of the fact the evidence against i am no prophet and i have no Frank was not absolutely sure ; key the mnh made nn allowance "'not1'" 1 dafe for a Pssibility of innocence, n Arthur ooodenough. but rushed headlong to its work i of destruction. It disregarded the constitutional rights guar- ......... j anteecj t0 every citizen the HE COST THIS COUNTY A right of trial by jury and the MILLION DOLLARS. j right of appeal for executive klemency. It was dangerous V1TH Theodore E. Burton business and there was nothing fjPf of Ohio a visitor in the manly or courageous about it. state a Portland morn- it was many men against an ing paper heaps high praise up- unarmed and helpless individu on him for his alleged magni- al and whatever the real facts, ficent work in filibustering may be in the Frank case the against the rivers and harbors WOrk of the Georgia mob last bill and in helping block the night has only added to the ship purchase bill. j horror. I A fine recommendation in-! deed. Had the rivers and har-READING THE STEEL BA bors filibuster succeeded fully ( ROMETER. the Celilo canal would still bej unfinished and a vast amount rm HROUGHOUT its exist of Oregon river and harbor , ence of fourteen years, work would have been blocked net earnings of the Unit to decided loss of the state. j ed States Steel Corporation As to the ship purchase bill , have never been so small as the sequel of that filibuster is , they were in the six months found in extortionate charters including last fall and winter, for grain ships. With harvest j These earnings are now rapidly underway we find the fanner rising to normal. They prom robbed outrageously by a sys- ise for the current quarter to tern that holds him almost help-J equal the highest previous less. We have the spectacle quarterly record ot $45,000, of wheat quoted at $1.70 in ,000. Liverpool and less than 90 It is thus apparent that the cents just now in Pendleton. ' Steel Trust can "come back." This differential is due almost Can it ever do much better entirely to the ship situation, than that? It can undoubted It is due to extortion, not to ly consolidate and hold this po war dangers, because the total sition, as they say in the trench 1 warfare of Europe. Can it ex tend that position in relation to , the whole steel industry of the PHOTO SUPPLIES Ansco Cameras and Films The court decreed original film and Cyko the prize win ning paper. Take n Ansco on your vacation Tallman & Co. Ladu Dru(bti The fool in the woods with fire. the deeds A few hearts break for they've done, In their pitiful amateur way, Rut fire slays dozens whese they slay one And srourages a state in a day For the ruined home and the smoke less stack And the worker unemployed. vnow a nunnreo: years snail never bring back The things that his match de3trov ed. ci.ock mc.iits streets. An ordinary alarm clock lights the streets of the village of Leetonln, Ohio. At the proper time the clock snap? on me street ngnts and at t later hour it turns them off. A circular piece of metal soldered on the alarm winding key acts as a revolving drum and winds up a heavy cord which, acting on a lever, trips a weight. The falling of this weight jerks a light rope which throws the snitch for turning on the electric lights. THE GOODS OS PAPA. Farmer Stubblefield was gathering miifhrooms. "Are you sure them things ain't toadstools?" inquired Neighbor Jones. "Wal. no, I ain't dead sure," was the answer. "But It's all right. The boarders won't know the difference. PHONE FRENZY. "I believe." said the impatient man as be put aside the telephone, "that I'll go fishing." "Didnt know you cared for fishing." "I don t ordinarily. But If the only chance I have of finding myself at the end of a line that isn't busy Washington Star. RECORD OF DEEDS AND OTHER INSTRUMENTS Satisfaction f Mortgage. A mortgage executed by Oliver Dickenson, adm., to Farmers' Bank of Weston, Nov, 19, 1914. is satisfied. A mortgage executed by Win. J. Mills to State Land Board. May 21, THOU, for f 24Q0. Is satisfied. Mortgage Oliver Dickenson, adm., to Fann ers' Bank of Weston, 11000, a tract of land, title descriptive. lvun Carr to Western Loan & Bldg. Co., 11000. The W 1-1 of E 1-2 of lots 1 and 2. block 222, Reser vation addition to Pendleton. Deed. John T. Grlswold 10 John Orls wold 1500, lots S and 10, block 2, in tho city of Helix. L. A. Chapman to Frank V. Chap man, 1.00. The W 1-S of w 1-8 of W 1-2 of sec. 29, and N 12 of N 1-2 of sec. 31, T. 2 S., II. SO E., Y. M. wide distribution of the scientific In formation it has collected at large ex pense of time and money, and many of the bulletins and circulars issued by the government are now affecting directly the everyday procedure ot education. The Boys' and Girls' Club work In the departent of agriculture and the circular letter service of the bureau of education Illustrate two different types of the information service of the federal government,! loth of recent development. In the two years ending June 30. 1914, the bureau of education issued 112 num bers of its bulletin, representing about a million separate copies, and covering nearly every phase of edu cational endeavor for the direct use of school officials. "A host of other organizations mak'ng no claim to a place in the formal school system are nevertheless doins active work of a directly ed ucational nature. The Boy Scouts the Girl Scouts, the Camp Fire Girls, women's clubs, parent-teachers' as sociations, musical societies, art ccn-j ters; these are doing a work whose educational Importance Is only be ginning to be apprehended. The In fluence of the fraternal organizations Is directly educative. The whole vast field of religious instruction In Churches and Sunday schools repre sents an educational problem that Is seldom viewed as such because cf tiie larger spiritual issues that are felt to be Involved, and because ot the traditional separation of church and state In America. Chautauquns, fanners' institutes, lecture courses, tbe Grange, Young Men's Christian Association and Young Women's Christian Association, social settle ments, summer camps, the periodical and newspaper press these are as trjly educational agencies as the schools " "The outcome of the present war can only be a peace which by ex-' pnndlng our frontiers east, west and over seas, which protect us mllltar-1 l!y, politically and economically against new attacks and compensate' us lor the enormous sacrifices which the German nation already has made and is determined to continue until a victorious conclusion." j Complete confidence in Ernst-Bas-, sormann, leader of the national liber- al party, was expressed in the reso lutions, which announced that the party would stand solidly back of any movement pursuing with unbend.! Ing firmness the aims outlined in the resolutions which were adopted with only two dissenting votes. I Astronomers hav discovered an other big sun spot, but It doesn't act as an umbrella for this sunbaked earth. In the meantime, bumper crops means So much prosperity In thH country we can afford to send some out of It. THE FACT-BACKED n iMii nnn SB i. h" n If 1 U UUL-dUVJU SERIES 8 in UUU now on display at our garage mm delivered to you with full equipment Phone or call for demonstration Pendleton Auto Company Phone 541 8 1 2 Johnson St, LEHMAN HOT SPRINGS FRANK L, McNEIL, Manager. THE BLUE MOUNTAINS MOST POPULAR HEALTH AND PLEASURE RESORT. HOTEL RATES $11.00 and $12.00 Per Week FREE CAMPING GROUNDS WIDER FRONTIERS ARE DEMANDED BY GERMANY BERLIN, via London, Aug. 17. Resolutions calling for the extension of German frontiers as the result of the war. were adopted by the execu tive committee of the national liber al party which met at the Reichstag. The resolutions made the following declaration: MAIL AND PASSENGER AUTO STAGE Makes regular trips between Pendleton and Lehman Springs. MAIL AND PESSENCER AUTO STAGE II Leaves French Restaurant. Pendleton, :30 a. m. every Monday, Wednesday, Friday, with round trip on Sundays. 14.00 one way; 17.00 round trip. Hauls passengers, mail and freight See II. Stubblefield at French IlmtaaranC m SWIMMING, DANCING, HUNTING, BOWLING, FISHING, HOT MINERAL WATER m ss : CMipBpMMMfl fl, i1 "What ure you crying for, Willie?" "I've got a toothache, and there ain't no school to stay home from." Ttw Way Out of It. T.jinmy Tucks, after tucking away three portions of glorious plum pud din.i. passed his plate for the fourth. I;ut Mr. Tuck said firmly: "Nr. Tom. No more plum pudding tonight, my boy. Dont you know yon can't sleep on a full stomach?" "Well,' whined Tommy, "can't 1 Meep on my back?' KlH CmON OITSIDF. SCHOOLS. The educational significance of other than school agencies Is empha siz d in a current survey of educa tional progress just issued by the V. S. bureau of education. "Libraries, museums and art gal leries are unlocking their treasures, ami peeking to establish a very di rect relation to organized school wirk " declares W. Carson Ryan. Jr., editor of the bureau. Numerous oth er agencies and organizations are do Inir h work whose direct educational Influence must In the aegrega'i- be ttuit iniiiiLMiiiiiii ii iiiii milium iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiig I Uliy is flic Fruit from I ! East End Grocery j Always the choicest of the eason? Because this store is h.'udquarters for practically all fruitmen. They not only I m'11 us, but buy from us. Take the tip, and call 1 JOHN DYER Phone 536 fiimiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiinMiiiiHiiumiiiiiHiiiiiiMiiiiiiiimiiniiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiitiii: country, whose steel consump tion is much greater than in 1901?. Perhaps it does not want to under the Anti- Trust Law as now administered. Its most powerful argument against the j government dissolution suit has been that its proportion of the I whole industry is now less than half, Where before it had been enormous. There are the 300 i-dti calional associations, many of thm, like the National F.diicntlnn Associa tion and Its branches, doing d red nurk in the professional educati'fi of teachers and school superintendents; rthera. I'ke the National Socleiv for the Promotion of Industrial Educa tion, carrying on a propaganda for i 'location among the general public: ;nd still others, like the Public Kd- ii -ot Win Assoclatkin of New York yid Philadelphia. Investitrating city con dition? and 'stimulating an Interest In i-ducfitinn among the people of the lofil communltv. Orgnnlzai !ons tii .. rj....An Ua.ih :. ! the New York Bureau of MunWipal Research, the rarnegie Foundaiion. nnd tbe general education b.vrd, have brought Into the work of 'dii" oitWiri the welcome Influence of an I'lip'-rn'iral, Hclentlf'e Judgment No record of the year In educailon would be complete that did not ot,y trilni'e to tbe Work these orgs na tion nnd others of the kind are do ing. . i "Colleges, universities and normal schools are going fur beyond their j o vr, walls In rarrvlng education to j ti e local communities. Nearly blf j the colleges in the I'nlted States did' (!relon work last year. The fed em I government Itself Is realizing, as iiciei' before, the deenrablllty of a Special Subscription Offer THE S-W EAST OREGONIAN AND THE PACIFIC HOMESTEAD 1.50 Goth cb for P much more than half. I Perhaps it cannot if it would. ;The boasted "economies" of vast industrial combinations have as a rule proved a delusi !on and a snare. It is the smal ler independent steel compa nies which are now making; most of the noise in the trade. Eut there is every evidence of business piling un enough to tax the capacity of them all. This in turn reflects an activity affecting all lines of industry. The PACIFIC HOMESTEAD THE GREAT WESTERN FARM PAPER TIIK Pacific Homestead is recognized as the leading farm paper of the Northwest. It is published in the interest of the farmer who believes in up-todate and modern fanning methods. Lach issue contains valuable'information on dairying, agriculture, horticulture, stock raising and articles on poultry, kes, garden and the home. Edited by men who are recognized as leaders in their particular lino. No expense is barred in putting out a clean, newsy and wholesome paper. It is printed on a fine quality of book paper, illustrated with real cuts and photographs. The fact that it goes into more than 18,000 homes in the Northwest each week and is read from cover to cover by every member of the family is the greatest argument in its favor. If you want to keep posted on all phases of the farming business suWrilie to the Pacific Homestead. It will como rcsnilarly enoh wk, 52 big issues a year with four special editions, each one of which is worth the subscription price alone. "1 The East Oregoni&n TIIE Semi-Weekly East Oregonian is an eight page paper with seven columns to the page, and is issued on Tuesday and Friday of each week, making 104 issues in a year. If you wish to keep just a little closer in touch with lo cal happenings, or with what is transpiring in any part of the country, be it city, county, stato or nation, you could not choose a lietter and safer method than by obtaining that information through tbe columns of the East Oregon ian, the official county and home paper of Umatilla coun ty, the paper that prints the nws th day it happens. Also remember this offer includes our Home and Farm Magazine section which apjicars in each Friday's issue of the Semi-Weekly. Send at once if you wish a newsy, reliable newspaper and a leading farm journal, all for ?1.50. Send all orders to the East Oregonian 's of fice and order now as this offer is too good to fast indefinately. East Oregonian Pub. Co. Pendleton, Oregon iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii! 5 Fill out this blank today and enclose with money order or E cheek to the Eat Oregoninn, 5 Enclosed find $1.50 for which send me the Scini-Woekly E East Oregonian for one year and a full year's subscription to the Pacific Homestead, to this address: 5 Name E s Address - r Hi 1 1 1 1 1 1 H 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f i m 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 riii ti i mu 1 1 1 S3 m