p.vt. rnn '!.V oniv.oxiAX. rrxni.r.Tox. own ox. : ";iiwy. ittfmcfr 10, ioi.-. KIGHT I'AGKS T B,MilM I in llss! I 3 LjlJ MM Rrv- Y F- i EDITH STOREY As the Castaway puM' ,11111 i' pmwmJgagrfflm''tiT'"" rB3H juuL SUNDAY AND MONDAY V. L. S. E. THE BIG FOUR Another Great Vitagraph Blue Ribbon Feature THAT COST $1 A SEAT IN NEW YORK A Pictured Romance of fho South Sons A Six Part Piclurization of Rev. Cyrus Tovnscnd Brady's Powerful Hovel n8 t7fn a r t ON I think Edith Storey in the diving scene of "The Hidden Cave" is more interest ing than even Annette Kellerman in "Neptune's Daughter." I consider it the most wonderful film I have seen in the past two years. Signed, Mayor of Atlantic City, N. J. i Any Seat 15c Continuous Performance from 1 p. m. to 11 p. m. Any Seat 15c I AN lfiDEi'KNDfc.NT MkWSl'Al'gR. rwiWMd Dally and Semi-Weekly tt Pen dleton, Oregon, by tbe All OKEOOMAN 1'L'BLIbUISa CO. Official County Paper. Member United Press Aaauclatloa. atered at tbe postofflce at 1'endletoa. Vngam. a second-class mail matter. laykoat ON BALE IN OTHER CITIES. Imperial Hotel New Stand, Portland. Weaia. bow mas News Co , Portland. Ortfoa. ON FILB AT Cakaio Boreas, tX0 Security Building. aablniruH), U aaaata ium, N. v C, Bureau 501, four SUBSCRIPTION RATES (I.N ADVANCE) felly, eaa year, by nail Dalle, all Booths, by mall I "ally, three months, by null 111, on month, by mall fally, ant year, by carrier Caliy, an months, bj carrier Dally, three months, by carrier Uafiy. one month, by carrier ml Weekly, one year by mall asl Weekly, six months, by mall... eaalWeeily, four montba, by mall.. .13.00 . 2 .M . l. . .SO . 7 .50 . Hi . IM . .65 . 1 SO , .75 . 0 ciuncxsM. lt'a easy enough to pick out the flaws In the work that othern have done. To point out the errors that others have made, When jour own tank you haven't begun. It It" eay enough to fuss and find fault V. Inn others i.re doing their beet. To sneer at the little that they have achieved. ! Wl.en 5-ou have done nothing but rekt. ! It's easy eno eh to cavil and carp, To criticise, scoff and deride, ! For few 'if tm ever have done perfect work. No matter how hard we hava tried. It Is eauy enough riot to apeak 4 of the best. And to dwell all the time on the worst, And perhaps it is proper rorne 4 times to find fault, But be sure that you've done 4 something first. Somerville Journal intolerable. It would mean to grant foreign governments the right to step into this country and do things absolutely out side their sphere of activity. If one foreign government can openly work to create strikes in this country and bring pressure to bear on their former subjects any foreign country has that right. If they have a right to intimidate former subjects at one time they have that right any time they see fit. If they have a right to interfere with one form of personal activity they have a right to dictate to a former subject in any manner they desire. They could co erce a former citizen into re turning to Europe to enter the war. They could levy a tax upon him or make him stand on his head. Not for a moment can this country permit any foreign government to reach its hand into strictly internal affairs of this nation. We have a coun try and a flag of our own and when a foreigner seeks citi zenship here in good faith he acquires all the rights of citi zenship. His former king has no more control over him than he has over his former king. The sooner Austria and the whole world learns this the better. There would be more sanity in a war to assert Am erican soverignty in this coun try than there would be in a war to avenge the loss. of a few Americans sunk aboard some British liner running the sub marine blockade. Rip Van Winkle. The Bible. Don Quixote. Boutet de Monvel's Joan of Arc. . Hale's Man Without a Coun try. Sir Thomas Malroy's King Arthur Stories. Kipling's Jungle Book. Tom Brown's School Days. Pyle's Men of Iron. Robinson Crusoe. Treasure Island. Ivanhoe. Franklin's Autobiography. Hiawatha. . Tom Sawyer. r Oliver Twist. Lamb's Tales From Shakes peare. Swiss Family Robinson. Alcott's Little Women. In the foregoing there are some wonderful books, yet there is need of a twenty fifth and possible several others to make the collection complete. There is need of more adven ture if the average boy is to be pleased. Something irom James Fennimore Cooper and something more by Washing ton Irving would be apropo. Then there should be a civil war story and if there is noth ing else satisfactory take the "Crisis" or the "Clansman." They will be read while some of Mr. Lesrler's volumes re main unused. THEY BOOKS FOR BOYS 4 THIS 15 OUK tuuniKi i JTIIE swift, emphatic action l of the president in de manding the recall of the Austrian ambassador will be approved by every loyal citi zen and it will be endorsed by very sane thinking foreigner in this country. To acquiesce in such behavi or as that of Dumba would be 0 ascertain the 25 best books for boys is the ob ject of a quest started by the New Jersey Library associ ation and the responses are of interest. In reply to the in (juiry H. E. Legler, head of the Chicago Public Library, has furnished a list of 24 books but is in doubt as to what should be selected for the 25th The Legler list of 24 books is as follows: Mother Goose Rhymes. Anderson's Fairy Tales. Aladdin and the W'onderfu) Lamp. Perrault's Tales. The Pied Piper of Hamelin. LOSE THEIR ZENSHIP cm- HOULD an American cit izen who takes the oath of alletriance in one of the European armies lose his citizenship here? This is a point that comes in for discus sion since the solicitor in the denartment of labor has ruled that a citizen taking such a course does lose his American rights. There is logic in the solici tor's ruling because a soldier takins the oath of allegiance to a foreign power swears he will fight lor tnat country against all its enemies whom soever. That oath may lead him into warfare on the Unit ed States. Why should the United States accord citizen ship to a man placing himself in such a situation. This government could eas ily be involved in difficulties should it allow its citizens to enter foreign armies. Sup pose an American enlisting in a foreign army did not like the treatment accorded him or did not relish the particular man-: ner in which the enemy might I wish to kill him, could he not appeal to the American consul for help? Yet the present ruling will be hard on the soldier of for tune. . Had such a ruling been in force some years ago Fun ston could not have helped the Cubans fight for liberty with out sacrificing his American citizenship. Had Europe ob served such rules in 1776 La Fayette, Baron Von Steuben and various other friends in need might not have come across the waters to aid us in fighting for liberty. It is needless to say, however, that the general laws of the United States cannot be framed with the sole idea of pleasing sol diers of fortune. THE RIVER AND ROADS eNCOURAGED over good news from the Columbia bar the Journal, a true and enthusiastic friend of the open river and lower freight rates says: "And the river will never cease to flow. It has not ties that decay. It has no costly rails that rust and corrode. It has no vast cost of upkeep. It requires no huge expenditure for replacement. According ly, it is the cheapest means of transportation in the world when once brought to a proper standard of improvement. It is nature's great highway, and as such it is of priceless value to the people of the Oregon country." It is true. There is no up keep on the river and no big overhead chargea. The river flows to the sea and that is the way most of the tonnage is to go. But to get the tonnage to tidewater there must be such rates as will justify the build ing of good roads to the river so as to take the wheat and other product to the Colum bia. The immediate need on the Columbia is a reduced grain rate by water so as to get the wheat to moving by steamer or barge. It is a common cause. The river cannot succeed without roads. Roads cannot well be built unless there is assurance of river rates that will justify the road expense. THIS MA Y ENTERTAIN SOME DIFFERENCE. "What is the difference between gross and net?" asked young Billy a his father stepped off his boat. "In my case," replied the sunburn ed parent, "the gross was what I ex pected to catch on my fishing trip, and the net was this.' And he held up a four-inch blackflsh. Don't Ever I.et Anyone Tell This as a Xcw One. Yon Patience Will said he was in a railroad accident, but he didn't mind It. Patrice He didn't? "No; he only kissed the wrong girl in a dark tunnel. MAN LIKE TIIE SEA. The thought has Just occurred to me How much a man Is like the sea. He's sometimes smooth and. some times rough, And sometimes he goes by a bluff. He looks at times sedate and well, And then appears a heavy swell; He runs this way and sometimes that, And then again runs on a fiat; He's often green; alas, 'tis true! He's often, too, confounded blue! He seems to go wher'er he wishes And always lies about the fishes; He hugs a-shore like many brothers, And sometimes seems more fresh than others; He'll go for miles without a Jar, And then he'll run across a bar. He looks at times all ruffled, tossed. Because he Is so often crossed. Then after all his fond enedeavor, He goes out with the tide forever. Yonkers Statesman. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Signature WESTOX-PEXDLETOX AVTO STAGE Schedule. A. M. Going West. P. M. Lv. Weston 8:00 Lv, Weston 1:00 Lv. Athena 8:16 Lv. Athena 1:15 Lv. Adams 8:85 Lv. Adams 1:85 A. M. Going East P. H. Lv. Pend'n 10:00 Lv. Pend'n 4:00 Lv. Adams 10:60 Lv. Adam -4:60 Lv. Athena 1 -: 1 5 Lv. Athena 6:16 Farea. Weston to Athena, 25c; Weston to Adams, 60c; Athena to Adams, 26c; Weston to Pendleton, 11.00; Athena to Pendleton, 75c; Adams to Pendleton, 60c. Round trips, If made In same day: Weston and Pendleton, $1.60; Athena and Pendleton, 11.25. Headquarters: Weston, at City Drug Store; Athena, St. Nichols Ho tel; Adams, Inland Mercantile Store; Pendleton, French Restaurant. A. M. noyden, Proprietor. tlllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllMIIU I More Than 25,000 I n I 1 0 Con Dung Low CHOP SUEY UntMM WC -Chine,. Style HOT Tm.iALES CHILLI CON CARNE - SPANISH STYLE LUNCHES COFFEE Everything clean and up-to-date; FIRST CLASS SERVICE TEA 5c Package Under State Hotel Cor. Wabb and Cpttonwood St Pnont 117 Pendleton. Ore bge Brothers I I MOTOR CARS Have Been Sold Since i January 1, 1915 EVERY OWNER IS TELLING HIS FRIENDS WHY I THIS IS FAR FROM AN ORDINARY CAR. 5 They are all emphasizing its steadiness, the freedom from gear-shifting, the quick get-away, the absence of vi- 5 bration and the low maintenance cost. I The consumption of gasoline is light and the tire ex- pense is reasonable, because the size of the tires is right 5 for the weight of the car. The Motor is 30-35 Horsepower The Price of the Car Complete is $900 1 f. o. b. Pendleton. Pendleton Auto Company fmuiiiiiiiiwiiuiimniwiwiMiiwiMwiiiiiiminiiiMim