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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1915)
PAGE SIX DAILY BAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26. 1915. EIGHT PAGES p CASTOR14 fc:v 1 PrnmolfsDisSi-stlonnmfJ- rii ss .i art Rp".Contns iriaw 05, Opium Morphine ncrMntnl 8?. Not Narcotic. H j flwhiW- . - g Ik K M : J Apcrfrvi Rfwifdy for Ccmftp lti i!o:;.SojrStoiMch.Dlarrtiota K ; AVonssfonvnkwus Jroislt Knct ncss ami Loss or Sleep. fso" I I TacSin sifnamtt of Pi- ck0& hcZ The Cektalu CompasxJ Exaa Copy of Wrapper. KiigcnK- Pla to Be Staged NEW YORK. Oct. 16 The pro duction of Beulah Poynter's eugenic pla. "The 1'nborn.'' Is calculated by leading physicians, financiers, au thor.'., business men and citizens to accomplish much for the betterment rh.-ically. mentally and moraly of the average American of the future. "The Unborn" will be produced for the first time in New York Novem ber 5 It la claimed to be of more ft THE QUELLE RESTAURANT Open Day and Night Mgaalc and Special Evening Lunches lflCttlO dJK, Up ".S! S Gus LaFontaine, Prop. Burn THE CHEAPEST FUEL FOR HEATING. ORDER YOUR WINTER'S SUPPLY NOW AT THE SPECIAL PRICE OF $5,00 PER TON IN FIVE TON LOTS FOR THIS OFFER Pacific Power & CASTOR A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years Tni ciT4us eiin. mtm toss city. vital social importance than Brieux's "Damaged Goods." Among the spon sors who are fanancing and otherwise assisting in producing this play are: Elbert H. Gary. James Speyer and Henry Morgenthau, rtnaneiers; John Burroughs, the American naturalist and writer; Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont. Princess Troubetxkoy (Amelia Rives, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Judge Ben Lindsey and Dr. C. H. Park hurst. The Medical Review of Re views, and its president. Frederick H. Robinson, also are responsible for the production. LW ilyv GUM Government expert, engineers of Packard and Ford companies, and other authori- tes, declare o;l from asphalt-base crude has greatest efficiency. And it was on ifficiencj that Zerolene, the oil made from California asphalt-base petroleum, was aw rded highest competitive honors, San Fra tco and San Diego Expositions. Standard Oil Company ICagnnaa' Pendleton ZEROLENE ike Standard OU for Motor Cars Coke CASH AT GAS PLANT. FOR 30 DAYS. Light Company HOBllfZELL OUT - ffJKrn Hit He WL frOBL7Z.ELL 6UT STtrtUhG, ZIP rsr HHNi-. . At the second game or the world's Hoblitzel singled, but wai caught at srie.s at Philadelphia, after Hooper tempting to steal second. The pie had made home on a double steal In ture shows Hlhby sliding into the 1 which Speaker was caught at second, bag. with Niehot'f making ihe play. ! riim irtl ! ir-l I . rt I rs -m imaiit af 1 HI! 'I III I lull M III 1 1 II Mill II iiMionivim nuLU lUKibmur IE SPEECH BY WILLIAM G. SHEPHERD. . j united Press Staff Correspondent. ) : UUNUOH, ;ept. I. (By Mailt j 1 hp war nasn 1 Kinea nee speecn m r.ngland When an Englishman world meaner than the men who wins a right, he holds to It. j govern the police department." Here's a scene at Trafalgar Square He P'nts a long arm down White last Sunday. 1 mi" which is the Pennsylvania av- A huge crowd gathered around enue of London as much as to say: Neilson monument; a tall man with an iron grey beard standing on the 1 historic pllntth; a banner either side j him: his strong Voice fills the square. You crowd up to hear him. One banner reads. "These police men were fined for trying to start a policeman's union.'' Graves. McRae and Smith, it appears, were the names of the unfortunate coppers. Another banner reads, "What about war bonuses for policemen and pris on warders?" The man is talking about oppressed policemen! Being an American an I coming from a land of free and em ancipated policemen, you laugh But this thousand persons listens intently to the woes of the "Union of Policemen and Prison Warders." "They won't let us have a union." STOMACH MISERY QUICKLY VANISHES Your money back if you want it is the way In which Tallman & Com pany, the popular druggists, are sell ing Mi-o-na, the great dyspepsia rem edy. This is an unusual plan, but Mi-o-na has so much merit and Is so al most Invariably successful in relieving all forms of indigestion, that they run but little risk in selling under a guar antee of this kind. Do not be miserable or make your friends miserable with your dyspep sia. Ml-o-na will help you. "If It doesn't, tell Tallman A Company that you want your money back and they will cheerfully refund It A change for the better will be seen from the flrstfew doses of Ml-o-na and Its continued use will soon start you on the road to perfect di gestion and enjoyment of food. Mi-o-na has been so uniformly suc cessful that every' box is sold under a positive guarantee to refund the money If It does not relieve. What fairer proposition could be made? Tallman It Company give their persoml guarantee of "money back If you want it" with every box of Ml-o-na that they sell. A guarantee like this speaks volumes for the merit of the remedy. DULL SPLITTING, SICK HEADACHE Dr. June' Headache Powders re here at once -10 cent a pMka. Too take a Dr. James' Haadaebe Powder and in jvmt a few moments jour head clears and all neuralgia and distress vanishes. It's the quickest and surest relief for headache, whether dull, throbbing, splitting or nerve racking. Rend someone to the drug store and get a dime package now. Quit suffering it's so needles. Be ure you get Dr. Jame' Headache Powder then there will be no dwap-poiotment STEALING SECOND DESPITE THE Wi j in the midst, he shouts. "England of a great war. with a country that-ii 1 ruled by tyrants. But 1 want to tell ou mat mere are no tyrants in the! "Who will go down Whitehall with me Hn(' ,,'ow up police headquar- j ters?" 0n ,hp same spot where he stands! tne suirrage riots were started; from tnis same place thousands of English- men. at different times In English; history, have massed their way down "Government avenue" to the office of the unhappy erring official. . he talks now a score of policemen are standing by to see that no one In terferes with his free speech He may curse the government all he pleases, even though the govern ment Is knee deep In war. For an hour he talks about the woes of the unhappy policeman Not a word does he say about enlistment, or England's need for men. Then he rolls up his two banners, climbs down off the plinth and goes away. LONDON. Sept 6. (By Mail, t "Three cheers for American bacon!" "Larde Amerieatne." the French call it. hut. by any other name. It Is as apeptlzing. They did not know of bacon before the war. That Is by that name. The Belgian relief committee has Informally let the pnekers of Chica go know that the Belgians and the northern French war sufferers have become enthusiastic boosters of this by-product of the American hog. Each new consignment of bacon that reaches the Belgian or French relief stations Is taken quickly by the war sufferers. The head of one of the big Amer ican packing companies, now In Eu rope says: "American packers are getting bet ter advertisement for bacon here In Europe than they are at the world's fairs. "When the war is over and the people In Northern France are able to tell the people In southern France what they think of American bacon, I think the French will add another delicacy to their cuisine.'' Inline Alarm Costs fl. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 25. Two men were arrested at Fourth and Callow streets when one was over heard offering the other SI to pull a firebox and treat the visiting fire men to a demonstration of the ra pidity with which the city apparatus can turn out. The prisoners, who were arrested by Police Schrandt of the Seventh district, gave their names as William Rauck, 3i years old. and David Donnelly, 32 year old. According to Deputy Fire Marshal Caldwell, Hauck was coaxing Don nelly to accept a dollar bill and ring an alarm of fire. A passerby over head the conversation and walked to the opposite corner and told the cop on i hat beat. Schrandt walked into a nearby store and donned civilian clothing, thpn returned and stood be hind the two men. Upon examining the box the policeman found the glass broken and he took both men Into custody. Bryan QortM Campaign. STECHENVILLE. Ohio. Oct. 26. Bryan opened a week's campaign In behalf of prohibition and against the state constitutional amendment lim iting the Initiative and referendum. He Is scheduled to make 4S speeches without pay. EPWQRTH LEAGUE OF ECHO HOLDS "TRIP i AROUND THE WORLD INTERESTING I N l l RTAINMEXI I- I N UN 1 KIHW EVENING. VutorBobllM t ;iit ilu ''Tourists" Front Place l rlCC Former Pen dleton Man Mi Secured Free Year f Caw on storeroom Oilier Newsy Note of Echo. 1 Special 'orrespondence. I RCHO, Ore. cut. 2.". The mem bers of the Kpworth League Kave un Interesting entertainment last Fri day night, a trip around the world, America. Hawaiian lsl amis, England i'.nd Spain were represenied and ap propriate entertainment given at each place. Several automobiles were donated lo carry ihe patrons from pilot to place. H. a. schui., formerly of PeadU- ton has secured a five year lease on a store room, adjacent to the Ob and Fob store building, which he will use for a bakery and confectionery store. Mr. Schuls Is experienced in the ba kery business and will conduct a first class establishment on a large scale He has already ordered a carload of brick and will tear out the rear of the building and build an oven at an ex pense of about $350, besides othet improvements. Mr. BchUl will move his family here soon. ". It. Green and Tamily returned last week from Frcewater where the? spent the summer and are occupying the Koontz cottage on Garden street. Mrs. Rosa Webb Is building an ad- ditlon to her residence on Buckley ! street. I The Methodist Sunday school of this 1 place held a Rally program here yes- terday instead of the regular preach ing services of the morning. A pleas ing program was rendered to the Mrs. It. K. Hubbard visited last week with her mother. Mrs. Keller, who lives near Pendleton. i Mrs. A. K. Flnley of olex Is here I Visiting with her daughter Mrs. A. O. I Garden. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hosklns and I daughter Vashtl. spent Saturday in Walla Walla to witness the football gajne. yt r ij,wis Is home from a lengttn visit Portland anil other Wllla- I mette valley points. Mis Dorothy Hewitt is visiting with relatives In tne Willamette val. ley. Thomas Richards, one of the pro prietors of the Echo Auto company, has moved his family from his fruit ranch near Stanfleld t" Echo and thev are occuplng apartments In the Horn building, F. Z. W. Garden of Gibbon. Ore.. ; visited here last Wednesday with his brother A. O. Garden. Mrs. Harry Reese of Stanfleld made her regular weekly visit here last Saturday to Instruct her music pu- pi Is. Prof. W. W. Green's llible class of the M K. Sunday school held a so cial last Wednssday evening at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Wat tenhurger. G. H. Hranstetter is . tearing down the charred remains of his hOITU Dupont street In preparation to build. George Coppinger was a business lsltor in Pendleton on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs, Claude Sloan spent yesterday in town with friends. RIG SUFFRAGE PARADE HFI.D I MAY YORK (I'nlted Press Staff Correspondent.! NEW YORK. Oct. 22 What probably Is the blggrst suffrage pa rade on record was scheduled to start up Fifth avenue this evening. Twenty-five thousand women and 30no men. carrying 2S.0fin fluttering banners, were forming In marching order to inspire enough favorable New York voters to give suffrage a landslide at the November 2d elec tion. Among the 3000 men marchers were such well known personalities as these: Will Irwin, author; Qeorgt Mlddleton. playwright; William M. Mackay. artist; Allen McCurdy, cler gyman; Samuel Merwin, author; Wil liam Rose Bennet. editor; Wytter Blnner, poet; Sinclair Lewis) and Charles Norrls, authors. These were supplemented by law yers, doctors, actors, business men and Just citizens. Gigantic banners declaring "Wilson Is for Suffrage." "Suffrage Means Better Babies." "Suffrage Means Pure Milk." "Suffrage Means Glean Streets.'' "Seven Million Women Vote Elsewhere In the World; Why not in New York?"; and costing about $2500 made the parade a veri table river of gay colors In the midst of all the bright banners, how- Coffee There is coffee so full of satisfaction that the day takes care of itself! You will like the flavor of Schilling's Best; you will like its economy goes further. It il packed evenly ground and ready (or use, in airtight tint. Schilling's Best JiliftiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiliiiilllliiHiiiiiiiiiiiliii 11111111111 iniijl B E PREPARED OF OPPORTUNITIES AS THEY ARE PRESENTED. THIS CAN BEST BE DONE BY ACCUMULATING FUNDS IN OUR SAV INGS DEPARTMENT. A LIBERAL RATE OF IN TEREST PAID AND YOUR DEPOSIT IS ABSO LUTELY SAFE. The American National Bank OF PENDLETON Corner Main and Alta Streets. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $400,000. ever, will be this solemn cry In a deep, black border: "New York Women Have No Vote at All!" Mrs. Leonard Thomas, Newport society leader, will carry the Inter national Woman Suffrage Alliance's banner that will head the big pa rade. She will be the first woman In the entire line walking In advance of Mrs. Carrie Chapman Oatt. This section will Include a "proxy procession" of the twenty-six nations represented in the alliance, but no national colors will be carried except I v -that America and Vncle Sam will lead. The women are to wear pure i white. The main division of the line, which starts from Washington Square at 3 p m., and marches up Fifth avenue to Fifty-ninth street, will be the International section, the I National l Woman Suffrage assocls- Hon, the Empire State campaign I committee, headed by Mrs Raymond! Brown, the state president; Ihe Woman's Suffrage party, divided In to boroughs and sub-divided Into assembly districts, and occupational groups. The largest of these will he the city employes recruited by Com missioner of Correction Katherlne Ft Davis. W VI! OIHMTII v LONDON- England's new muniti ons ministry already has six tele phones and a telegraphic address which Is "Munlsupply London." LONDON British toy maniifnchir ers are preparing for Christmas trade a miniature submarine that will sink a toy dreadnaught. HE KLIN To prevent the exporta tion of gloves and hosiery the minis ter of the Interior has ordered all dealers to submit an Inventory of their stocks. Healthy Old Age Brings Happiness SIMPLE REMEDY PBOMOTIS HEALTH BY OVERCOMING TENDENCY TO CONSTI PATIOX. Advancing years Impair the action of the vital organs. Old age should j be the period of greatest happiness. but good health Is necessary. Con stipation should not be tolerated t Is often the direct cause of 111 health. Headache, belching, biliousness, bloat, drowsiness after eating and other symptoms of constipation can be readily relieved by the use of a simple laxative compound sold In drug stores under the name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Mr. J. H. Bristol, 1412 Oeddes Ave., Ann Ar bor, Mish.. who is 83 years old, says "Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin Is the best remedy I ever used for consti pation and I always have a bottle o It In the house to use when I fee. the need of it; it never disappoints" Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Papain is n mild laxative preparation, positive In Its effect, acting easily and naturally without griping or other pain or dis comfort. For over a quarter of a century it has been the standard First National Bank I PEIDUTON, OREGON I Lo 1 AdLISHLD 1882 Known For It's Strength TO TAKE ADVANTAGE STOMACH ACTS FINE! NO INDIGESTION. GAS HEARTBURN. ACIDITY ppi:s DiAPKPsnf" roues sick. sunt, iipsjst stomu iis in WVB MINITES. You don't want a slow remedy when our stomach is bad or an un certain one or a harmful one your stomach is too valuable; you musn't Injure it with drastie'drugs. Rape's Dlapepsln is noted for It speed in giving relief; its harmless nesa; Its certain, unrulllng action In regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs. Its millions of cures In Indigestion, dyspepsiu, gastritis and other stom ach trouble has made it famous the world over. Keep this perfect stomach doctor In ydur home keep it handy get a large fifty-cent case from any drug ' store and then If anyone should eat something which doesn't agree with them, It what they eat lays like lead, ferments and sours and forms gas: causes headache, dtixlneas and nau sea; eructations of acid and undl- algeated food remember as soon aa I Rape's Dlapepsln comes In contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes Its promptness, certainty and ease In overcoming the worst stomach disorders Is a revelation to those who try It. lone tails itoad Election. IONE, Ore., Oct. 25. Nearly 150 citizens met in the Star theater from the road districts of Heppner. Isl ington and lone and listened to Phil Pates, of Portland, who was sent up as a representative from the Portland Chamber of Commerce lo further the Interest of good roads. MR J. H. BRISTOL household remedy In thousands of homes. Druggist everywhere sell It for fifty cents a bottle. A trial bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin can be obtained, free of charge, by writ ing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell. 454 Wash ington, St., Montlcello. Illinois.