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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1915)
PA nr. YOVR DAILY EAST GREGOXIAN, TENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 25, 1915. EIGHT PAGES It 'M'UI KM IVT NKWHIAIEB. r.,'.4 fii and pml WwtiT at Pta det', orwgwn, by tba Alt OKbuuMsM i'LliLlHUINO CO. orririai Oootity Paper. fcfeabr lolled I'i-pm Anaortatloa. ird at the ptofftre at i'eodletoa, Ongna, w cocidiu nail matter. aiae4iaM ON SAI.K IN OTHK 01T1BS. I iwu Ui'tel News bund, forties, Newt Co , Portlanl, Orecoa. UN FILE AT ftnrcau, Ikih 8ersrHy Bolldlof. loo. l C Baraaa &01. roar. ita uwi. N. W. Chleaso WaatJartoa. l BTIIKCRIPTION RATES CIN ADVANCK) !?. cm year, by mail 15.00 li, an uooiha. bj mall tM t'ij. threa months, bj nail 12 KtUf. one m..Dih. by mall Mi ei;f. year, by carrier 7 SO laiii. an m..mh, by carrier g.75 lliy. ibre uioiiilia. by carrier l.M leiy, one month, by carrier to Mmi eekiy, one year by mall 1 : Weekiy, tlx month, b? mall 7IV itail Weekly, four month, by mall... .60 T1IF. PATH THAT LEADS. 4) Qat from the noisy town It leads, where malice and deceit are rife; Out from the realm where pride ia queen, -Where men contend in heart- leaa strife. No voice disturbs the quietness That thrills me as again I roam Hy flowery fields, a boy again. 4) And seek the way that leads back home. Let those who will leave homely paths To find heart's east in lands afar; Let those who will, contentment The robin choir glad welcome gives. Clear calling in their lofts of green; The melody of singing brooks Is mingled witti the summer sheen. 'Mid quiet vales my way leads on Through aisles of emerald and chrome, Foretelling Joys soon to be mine For 'tig the way that leads back home- seek On rolling seas. star; But give to me. I humbly ask. The Joy I know, as through the gloam 1 turn from all the world can give To seek the way that leads back home. People's Home Journal. neath alien 4) THEIR GOOD TEAM WORK year as usual much of the pleasure of the Round-up comes from the snap and efficiency with which the show is handled on the track and arena. Seldom is there a wait long er than a second or two and frequently there are several events transpiring at one time. This does not come about through chance. It is the result oi well laid plans executed with precision and attention to business. Take the same performanc es and handle the directing end in a careless or indolent manner and the Round-up would become a bore. Since the Round-up was started six years ago it has always been directed by men enthused with the idea of making a first class show. They have never been grandstanders seeking to ex ploit themselves in any way. Toani work has been the mot to always and it is the way to win. President Taylor and the other directors of the Round-! up deserve cordial thanks from the community for their services. They work hard and with loyalty to Pendleton. They are the type of men need ed to make the show a con tinuous success. OVERPLAYED ASSERTING that the anti conservationists overshot their mark at their well staged water power "confer ence" in Portland the Spokesman-Review makes the follow ing pointed comment: "Senator Smoot's speech was an insult to the intelligence 'of the American people. Think of the irony of an oldline re actionary republican senator attacking the conservation pol icies of President Wilson and secretary Lane by conjuring up the ghostly doctrine of state rights. State rights for what? To turn the public do main over to private grabbers, with no strings upon them, no safeguards against future mo nopoly and extortionate prices for power, coal, oil and fertili zer against that coming day when our now fertile lands will need commercial fertili zers. "Do you want your children to be tenants of the govern ment, or do you want them to be home-owning citizens?" sobbed the Utah champion of special interests and the church of Mormon? "Nothing could be wider of the mark, for the homestead laws, the agricultural domain, is not al all involved in this is sue. The lands under consid eration are water power sites, areas rich in coal, oil and ferti lizers. These are the resourc es which Roosevelt and Wilson are striving to save to our chil dren. "The raiders have gone too far for their own game. They have boldly proclaimed at Portland designs previously vehemently denied when friends of conservation charg ed them with their now avow ed purposes. They have dis- credited their own case before congress and the country. At last they have come into the open and an open field is where the friends of conserva tion long have wanted to meet them." All this is true and yet this travesty was concocted and pulled off through action by the legislature of Oregon, as sembled professedly for the purpose of serving the inter ests of the state. At the time the move was instigated in the legislature last winter the East Oregonian branded the affair as a scheme to aid the electric interests at the expense of the public. The behavior of the conference thoroughly supports the charge made, at that time. Never was Oregon more thoroughly berayed than in this instance. 3 i!imill!l!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll!tltIllllllllllllllllltlllIlllllllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllllllt! ODGE BROTHERS I ROADSTER "HE KEPT US OUT OF WAR" T is easy to foresee the slo gan of next year's Wilson campaign. It will be the words in quotation marks over this article assuming that they are still true. And that assumption acquires increasing strength in the latest news from Berlin. If the European war ends, as it seemingly must, before our ballots ot 1916, and we have kept out of it, and if joint action of the American republic results in some sort of a stay of anarch istic proceedings in Mexico and we have kept out of there, too, President Wilson will go be fore the country as a man who though badgered and bended by Roosevelt and the whole military crowd, has kept the greatest republic in this hemis- phere out of hostilities into which nearly everybody else had fallen. This is evidently what he is working for. It is no unworthy ambition. Its re ahzation will afford him no small place in history. Any one who thinks "he kept us out of war" would be a weak and unattractive cam paign cry makes a very low es timate of the mind and heart of the American people. We can think of fewer greater ac eomplishments. One of these, perhaps, would be to bring the world war to a close, and in the mediatorial office the pres ident s turn may yet come With war no such chance would have been possible. Since there are times when loy alty to country, with every right-minded citizen, should greatly outweigh any concern over party welfare, there should be no faint response in any quarter to the tribute which all Americans owe to a president who, in troublous times, "kept us out of war." Boston Herald. Portland has always been loyal to the Round-up and is to a large extent responsible for the success of the attendance ; when the rose festival is held we should reciprocate. The Round-up is not a prize fight, let those who want to fight get behind the barn or go to Europe. uimmiMupnm?' 'MIMMHIMI'HiMMttMMMtl llfliMiMt(ini!MiiipiMt(MtM!f j!)(u')irtMHMM!(MfMM'ii!! MMf!11MJII!nt(1tMM!H1!IMItiMIlTUH Bakerites are the style day, all the while. STEER CAUSES STIR. to- (Continued from page one.) A roadster designed to be all that roadster i-hould be. A car capable of carrying two Die in continuous comfort peo- Tou can see better than we can tell, how beautiful it is. Modeled In clay, when it was first conceived, it was re-modeled, again and acaln, till the last harsh line was eliminated. The body is built of steel, with the usual useless framework entirely eliminated. As a result there la extraordinary storage space at the rear more than sufficient for all the luggage two might take on a long tour. A light car, with all the advantages which that lightness adds to the powerful motor but a stoat, staunch, strong car, and a steady ne as welt. on the Saturday night of the 1914 show. The crowd last night Is con servatively estimated at 4500 and a great portion of them did not leave for their beds until long past the midnight hour. At 12 o'clock the big dancing pavilion was still packed and every gaming table was sur rounded by a mass of men and wom en flirting with fickle fortune. The hour program, which preced ed the main festivities, was again an unqualified success despite the fact that a thousand people or more were standing on the street side of the pavilion. The singing of Miss Reber and of the cowboy quartet again met wih hearty applause and when the quartet sang "Pendleton's the Place for Me," they were greeted with wild cheers. The hold-up of the bank scored another dramatic suc cess, the bucking burros and horses, the amputation operation, the fire scene and other comedy features threw the audience into spasms and not a feature but caught the fancy of the crowd. Big Wedding Tonight. The "mayor and council of Happy Canyon" have saved one of their big gest features for the crowd tonight. It will be a horseback wedding with Fred Dupuis and Miss Leota Dunnick of Weston, as the principals. All of the attendants, the officiating Judge, the band and everybody participating In the ceremony will be on horseback, too. The wedding is scheduled to take place at 10 o'clock. f"? 9 O Ml H n Those handsome cars you see on the streets are 'SIXES' Hi 3 3 And handsome is as handsome does. BUICK has proven best by years of actual performance on Umatilla county roads. 1916 MODEL Valve-in-Head LIGHT SIX, $1150 1916 MODEL Valve-in-Head BIG SIX, $1650 These Prices F. O. B. Pendleton. OREGON MOTOR GARAGE Telephone 468 B. F. TROMBLEY, Prop. 119-121 W. Court Street m 1 Rosalind in "A Matrimonial Tangle'' will be seen In one of her best roles. . This play is one that la different from j the usual run of comedies and Is full of bright lines and situations, a clev-jo HELPS DETROIT I XANT RACE. PEN- er story well acted and staged with pretty settings. All who enjoy a good show should not miss this at traction at the Alta. Prices for this big double show, 15 and 25 cents. First show starts at 7:15. j Pendleton Auto Company F. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 u 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 m n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1-1 m 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 in NEW YORK MILITIA HAS A NEW GAME OF WAR NEW YORK, Sept. 25. Those New Yorkers who were Interested in see ing what a hostile army marching in to New York would look like, gath ered at Van Cortland Park today and saw. The army was composed of about 10,000 national guardsmen from the New York city boroughs and their maneuvers were said to be on the largest scale ever attempt ed in the United States. Having em-ller in the day marched off into the woods to the north of the park, in the afternoon the army marched back, while Goveraor Whit man, 2000 other special guests and many thousands of the public looked on and cheered. First came the screen of cavalry and the advance guard, with their flanking parties and after them the regular Infantry advance guard, followed by the main body of troops, the rear guard trail ing all. The men .horses, artillery, ambul ances and other equipment occupied UtoB ( nrl.,r.nA ........ III. Park. Van Cortland looked like an arm- Sunday at the Alta Theater, 'd camp as early as 10 o'clock. Some The Kenworthy Players with Helen of the cavalry and field artillery Duffy open an engagement Sunday started operations the night before, night presenting high class plays' the latter giving a demonstration of staged with all their own scenery,! the noise that probably would be etc., at popular prices. An entire, heard the night before In case a hos change of show each night and a se lection of popular plays to please all. Each play Is entirely different, mak ing a variety. Two shows will be glv Amusements What the press agents say about Pendleton's pres ent and coming attractions. en Sunday night and the charming and laid mines, tile army actually did Invade the city. During the morning there were shows going on in a dozen rings. The engineer corps built pontoon bridges three-act comedy, "A Matrimonial Tangle," will be presented. This Is a play that has had a big success In the east and has met with the highest praise in all towns where the com pany has appeared. Miss Duffy, the clever little leading lady who made many friends in Pendleton on the former visit of the company, Is at the head of the present organization and and fired blank the artillery drilled cartridges from be hind neighboring hills, one squadron of cavalry gave rough riding exhibi tions, twelve ambulances dashed if )-- K i . f i t'f IfA It A GOYLiSAt. Covaleskl, the Polish pitcher of the Detroit Timers, who has proved to be one of the pitching sensations of the season and Is now helping the De- about picking up Imaginary dead nd j tr,)UorB n th(.r fKnt f()r tn() ppnnant mi in.- inn irii ii it'.iKiir. i ne picture furious fashion. It was a very warlike day and very successful for purposes of demonstration. was made In New York Just after the Detroit hnd trimmed the Yankees for three straight games. Mining Men Are Accused. VANCOUVER, B. C, Sept. 24. The attorney-general of British Co lumbia has laid Indictments for man slaughter against Thomas Graham and J. H. Tonkin, two of the most prominent mining men in the coun try. They are charged with carelessness that caused loss of It lives In the Re serve mine near Nanaimo 15. Graham Is chief Ing depots In San Francisco and oth er coast cities Britain's Enemies Taxed.' WELLINGTON, N. Z., Sept. !4. A supertax of 60 per cent on all In corporations from countries hostile to Great Britain, was announced by the minister of finance, Clr. Joseph warn, in introducing; the hurim in Februaryi parliament. inspector of I A number nf In riff r.Vt..it.. mines for the provincial government, to be raised. Automobiles, c nasals Tonkin Is manager of the Pacific-, and bodies are to pay 10 per cent ad Coast Coal Company, which has large valorem, and kerosene and petrol collieries at Nanaimo and large sell-1 eight cents a gallon ji 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 nil km i inn ii mi iniif irii mi n i mini iiiiiiiiiiiiih-' "d) LAl I? in UUC-J quarters Visit this store before leaving town as yon will find many values here that yon cannot TnA elsewhere. We operate 23 Cash Sample stores and specialize In Sample Shoes, Clothing, Sweaters, Mackinaw Coats, Underwear, etc., and you can buy your winter's outfit here at a saving of one third of better. Investigate this. MACKINAW COATS Here you are and a big sav ing on every one. 15.00 Coats $3.4.1 $7.00 Coats $5.85 $8.60 Coats $6.50 SAMPLE 8WEATEH8 All kinds, styles and colors and err one a saving. Worth while to see these before you buy. Men's Heavy rants of every de scription.. $1.00, $1.65, $1.05 Every one worth double the price. Men's Prince Chap Suits $9.50 and $12.50. Men's Tailor Made Suits $11.73, $16.50 and $18.75. Why pay more. Sample Shoes for the entire family and every one at a sav. Ing of one third. Men's work shoes $2.45 to $1.50 Men's dress shoes $2.65 to $1.25 Men's high tops $2.45 to $6.50 Ladles' shoes ,..$1.35 to $.1.45 Boys' shoes..., $1.00 to $2.45 Girls' shoes 65o to $2.25 Overalls 60c Work shirts .,-r.r.U Underwear 45c Ladles' unions 8o Wool mixed. THE HUB 23 Sample Store. 745 MAIN ST. .IIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!llllllllllllllllll!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIir