Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1915)
PAGE THREE EIGHT PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1915. SUNDAY LAW HELD PRESIDENT 10 AID ! FOI'KDIJXU NW lIKIIt TO 1. 1 . II Mil. I, ION- 6Y CIRCUIT OF Fall in Line 10 BE IN FORCE FOREIGN COMMERCE and become well-dressed by attiring yourself in one of our smart Winter suits or Winter overcoats, in Bond Clothes 115 to 130 A good dresser always com mands respect, no matter what his financial condition may be. Our "Bond Clothes" are the talk of the town and you can see that our prices are very moderate. Bond Bros. Pendleton's Leading Clothiert DAN KKI.I, llllt convicted koh KEEPING OPEN STORE ON SABBATH. Pino of $2." imiMMtl on Grocer; WW Appeal tiw to supremo Coon m Ted viiUi of i.iiu: Judge Day- ton (im p Derision In Case V'-toi -day. PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN FOR INDIGESTION OR l HVK MINI TB8I no DY8PEI'-j si ii l ' K TIll I! n oit ANY ctomacii Misruv Sour, gassy, upset stomach. Indi gnation, heart hum. dyspepsia; when the food you eat ferments Into gases ml stubborn lumpi: your head tekM and you feel sick and mlrcr ahle. that's when you realize the Riagle In I'ape's Dhipepiln. It makei all stomach misery vanish In five minute. If your stomai h In In a. contlnu OIH revolt! If you ran t Itet It regu latad, please, for vour sake, try rape's Plapepsln. tfl M needless to have a had stoma h make your next meal a favorite food meal, then take i little piapepiiln There will not he any distress- eat without fear. It's beeMM Tape's Dlnpcpsln "really docs' regulate weak, out-of-order stomachs that gives It Its millions of sail- annually ' Oft a large fifty-rent CAM of I'ape's Dlapeimln from any oh almo! harm irath liomf drug II Is the quickest, surest stom llef and cure known. It MM like magic it Is a scientific ss and pleasant stomach prep i which truly belongs In every ( MINIM iffoHd market roil AMERICAN 1 i Miti'it WAflHINOTON, o.t 2 -For many months Mr. Franklin H. Smith. a commercial agent of the nureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, department of commerce, has heen traveling In the far east and Austral asia, conducting a thorough going In vestigation Into the markets there for the product of American forests. In his report on rhlna. which ha Just come from the press, he revlewg In detail the lumber situation in ths real oriental republic Mr. Smith l. opUffiistkl with respect to China, helievlng that the future will wit ness largely increased use of Am erican woods. The population. he says "Is slowly shaking; off the old order of existence and turning to ward the new toward greater agri cultural and Industrial activity ab sorbing new Ideas and adopting modern methods. With increasing development along many lines and with the extension of the railroad!, with their civilizing and trade-creating effects, there mint of necessity come a larger, wider call for lumber. The 1'nlted States with Its durable, esaslly worked, and comparatively cheap timber, will, with proper pre cautions, control this trade " Yet. notwithstanding the ronfi dence here expressed and the fact that the I'nlted Slates already gets about half of he Chinese business, Mr. smith sounds a note of admoni tion. He points out the desirability of a standard list pric e, advices clos er adherence to grades, touches on the possibility that new competitive sources of supplv may come up. and emphasizes the need of direct repre sentation in the Chinese field and til a campaign of foreign education to acquaint prospective purchasers with the superior qualities of American woods. Mr. Smith's new booklet Is en titled "China and Indo-Chlna Mar kets for American Lumber" and Is No. lot In the special agents series. The practical, pertinent Information contained in It Includes many tables of import and export statistics end a careful examination of the situation In each of the principal markets. Attention is given to railroad demand for timber, the market for boxes, barrels and shooks. and practically all other aspects of the trade that are of Interest to American manufac turers Five cents Is the price of this publication obtainable from the Superintendent of Documents, Wash ington. D. C. PORTLAND, ore.. Oct. 2S. There Is a Sunday-closing law in Oregon. Deputy District Attorney Mov.iv proved this to the satisfaction of Dis trict Judge Dayton yesterday after noon. Dan Kellaher. up on a charge of keeping his grocery store open on Sunday, was thereafter found guilty and fined lit. Judge Dayton wurted to make it $!. the minimum, hut Mr.) Kellaher wants to appeal as far as the .-'upreme court of the United States, he announced, so the larger fine was Imposed to permit of an ap- pent being taken. Overruled on his contention as to: the non-existence of the closing law. Mr. Kellaher fought on. interposing; Mary possible obstacle to conviction. The Judge had actually Imposed th fine and thought It was all over when the East Side grocer broke In with "Just a minute, your honor" I temptloti as Bomber Asked Then began a fight which kept the court In session fully two hours long er. Mr Kellaher c ontended that he was entitled to the exemption given butc her shops under the law for the reason that he carries fresh and all kinds of canned meats In stock. In this Connection he urged that condi tions have so changed "that the butc her shop and bakery of 1831. when Sunday-dosing legislation w..s first adopted In Oregon, are the gro cery of today, all meat and bread products lieing furnished to retailers by big packing houses and baking es- I tnlillMlinients ' In answer Mr. Mowry brought out that Mr. Kellaher is a member of the Portland Itetall QroMIS1 Associa tion, and Introduced In evidence the city and telephone directories in which he is classified as a grocer While the argument over this was going on Mr. Kellaher read an ar ticle from the organ of the Retail Grocers' Association In which "Com-mbn-l'ser Dan" was arraigned sar castically because of his arrest, the burden of the article being that the common people had so failed to pat ronize their champion that It w ne cessary for him to remain open Sun dais to make a living. HBBBBBBBBI M - i K mm . . . ... .... " NEW l.i;.lM,lloN I'KOI'Os TO MAKE FOREIGN ill HI NT s EASIER. t lay ton Anti-Trust Ijtw May Is- C Ui Prevent Humping of I'ore Coods Into America I'ollow War's ( lose. When Italiy Has the Croup. When a mother is awakened from sound sleep to find her child who has gone to bed apparently In the best of health struggling for breath, she Is naturally alarmed, yet if she can keep her presence of mind and give Chamberlain's Cough Remedy every ten minutes until vomiting Is produced, quick relief will follow and the child will drmp to sleep to awak en In the morning as well as ever This remedy has been in use for many years with uniform success Obtainable everywhere. Adv. TOHN D0,1C Utile four year old Finley Jay Shepard. Jr., the adopted son of Mr. and Mrs. Finley J. Shepard (the for mer Helen Gould I who until his ad option on Thursday was known as John Doe 1"4. alias Austin McCleary. The little blue-eyed, fair haired lad. who has been taken Into the Shepard home at lrvington. N. Y . Is a foundling. He was discovered by a policeman in September, 1914. sitting on the steps of St Patrick's Cathedral In Fifth Avenue. New York, and after all efforts to estab lish his Identity had failed, was sent to the St Christopher's home at Dobbs Ferry. In visiting the home. Mrs. Shepard became much attached to the little fellow and finally decid ed to adopt him as her sdn. WASHINGTON'. Oct. lion to aid American merchants in t..king advantage of trade opportuni ties developing from the European ( war and to protect home Industry against foreign competition on the restoration of peace was considered today by President Wilson in confer ence with Secretary ltedfield. of the department of commerce, and Chair man Davles, of the federal trade com mission. As a result 'if the conference the secretary of commerce will re. om inend to congress the enactment of a law making selling by foreign firms at less than the cost of production here "unfair competition." punishable under the anti-trust laws. I'orolgii Trade Combine- favored. A similar recommendation will be n ade by the federal trade commis sion in its annual report to congress, which also Is expected to propose an amendment to the Clayton anti-trus: law to legalize contributions for the operation of co-operative selling agencies abroad. Both of these subjects have been j exhaustively investigated by the de partment of commerce and by the federal trade commission, it is prob. aide that they will he dealt with by the president in his opening message to congress. The federal trade commission has held numerous hearings throughout the countrv to develop information as to the need of co-operative selling agencies and. w hile no report has been made, it is understood that the com u ission is practically unanimous in favor of an amendment admitting their establishment. Tariff Amendments Rejected. In considering proposals for legis lation to prevent foreign manufactur ers from flooding the American mar kets with products at prices below the cost of production at the close of the European war, officials have rejected plans for calling for tariff law am endments. Secretary Redfleld made it appar ent that he believed the "anti-dumping" problem could be best met through changes in the Clayton anti trust act. I "W. B." CORSETS THE WOMAN MOST PARTICU LAR ABOUT HER CORSET la Um woman we are most anxious to know W. B. NUFORM Corsets. In tht- shim mering, lavish silken robes of the most formal social event, or the restful negligee W. B. Nuform Corsets are correctly appropriate. There are so many variations of W. B. Nuform Corsets, that all figures are equally well corseted, with Style Comfort Quality Tailoring Trimming, and most of all, moderate price advantage SI to $3 POPULAR CASH STORE Better Goods for Lest Money. For Indigestion. Never take pepsin and preparations containing pepsin or other digestive ferments for indigestion, as the more you take the more you will have to ' take. What is needed is a tonic like I Chamberlain's Tablets that will en able the stomach to perform Its func tions naturally. Obtainable every where. Adv. SAN FRANCISCO BELLE TO III' WAR MRSE 1i!,ld fa"U: car Kill-. NORTH YAKIMA. Wash., Oct. 2. - As Frederick Mercy, proprietor of the Majestic and Empire theaters in this c ity, was starting with his fain- LA GRANDE COACH TALKS BEARISH OVER THE P. H. S. GAME LA GRANDE. Ore.. Oct. 28 Coach Reynolds is stymied. Next Friday one of the very hardest games of the year will be played by the high school eleven at Pendleton, and his first-string team Is knocked all awry. Some fast physical repairs will have to be made If the coacli Is able to drum up anything like a win ning team. When the squad goes to Pendleton Friday morning. It will carry with It dubious prospects for victory. Were the game a week lat er, the mentor might get his hospital list back into the game, and be at the heighth of striking power, but this week, not so. Andrews, one of the best defense ends In the game this fall hereabouts, is out with a lame shoulder and very probably will be out Friday. If he does get to play he will not be at his best. There Is some question about Che nault. the man who has advanced fastest among line pupils, being able to play Jlmmie Rosenbaum has a bad knee and it appears im possible t ing of sugar beets, and this Industry was being developed when the demo crats passed their tariff law placing sugar on the free list. Naturally the owners of land in that section dis continued their development of tha sugar beet business and considered other uses to which the land m'ght lie turned. If the democratic party, centers out there Is scarcely a vessel treasury suggests continue the duty on sugar there Is every reason to be lieve that the sugar Industry In Mich igan wil Ibecome an important one " Itriton Sentenced As Spy. LONDON. Oct. 28. It is officially announced that a British subject has been tried in the Old Bailey court on three counts of an Indictment charg ing espionage and was sentenced L life Imprisonment. Safe mm Infants aad Invalids HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK day. With the side pass, a center has added responsibility, and though his BStKni gs fi!rn iW-IIlJI f ration took PP for Colt't on food door. Wow! Cold as the Dickens! Why do you put up with such a nuisance? You don't have to if you furnish your house with Cole's Original Hot Blast You build only one fire each winter. It is never out from fall till spring. You get up and dress in rooms warmed with fuel put in the night befote. This is not possible with other stoves. Burns anything soft coal, hard aosl or wood. Come in and see this great Are keeper and fuel saver. I "CoU'o Hot Blatt makti your coal pile fail." Taylor Hardware Co. Agents and Distributors. 741 Main St., Pendleton, Oregon SAN FRANCISCO, ict. 2S. Mrs. Humphrey Da v lea, who was Miss I Ethel Patton, a prominent society girl of this city, is to go to the front as a Red Cross nurse. She will as sume her duties the day her hns who is a captain In the Windsor Life ifiiards, one of England's crack regi ments. Is ordered into active Service. Mrs navies will he a valuable ad dition to the corps of nurses, having Hospital of New York, where she trained as a nurse to carry on her social settlement and philanthropic work in which she was interested with Miss Elizabeth Ashe of this city. Her marrlace to Captain navies In September, init. came as a great surprise to her friends in this city, as well as In Washington, 1. C. where she was equally prominent in social ir'les. It was known at the time of the wadding that Captain Davles would ito to the front, and on the the wedding the hrlcle an 1 that she would devote her the wounded while her hus band fought for his country Mrs. Davles Is a sister of Mrs Leonard Chenery, and aunt of Mrs Lloyd Baldwin and Miss Dorothv Berry. Captain Davles and his wife are now In London awaiting orders Premier Rescues Woman. MONCTON. N R. Oct. 2 Pre mier Borden saved the life of a wo-1 young McDonald has been drilled man who had fallen on the railway j some, he has not had the experience track here. Sir Robert was standing I of a big game on his shoulders yet ily for an automobile ride his two-1 n the platform when the woman Furthermore. Rosenbaum has devel-year-old daughter fell from the earl thrust on the rails by the crowd , oped into a splendid kickoff man Bd and w as run over and instantly kill-j Which had congregated at the depot ed. I to see him. Two children were in the tonneati. The woman was rolling toward a Mr. Merc y was compelled to turn moving train when the premier res Sharply in getting away from the cued her. 'Urb In front of his home. Thel ( clutch engaged suddenly and the car ascoe.,e(.f Jerked violently, causing one of thegc m rear doors to fly open and permltlng LINES linn nv liltmmi The Food-Drink for all Ages center. Rjcn milk, malted grain, in powder form, rs im-i For infants, invalids mi erowing chikfrem. get him into the play Fri- j Pure nutrition, upbuilding tot whole body. Invigorates nursing mothers mi tha agaav Mora healthful than tea or coffee. Unlet yew say HORllOtCS -you may jat a swosif tmte. the child to fall. IN SALIENT ABOVE LEX'S Mum 1GHTINO WITH REBELS IN HAITI the -Admiral law de- tlouuc self t WASHINGTON, Oct Caperton reported to partnient that BghUttl I'nlted States marines rebels was resumed w ties. Marines from tl reinforced the Pahon i t hron e Constipation. "About two years ago when I be gan using Chamberlain's Tablets I had been suffering for some time w-ith stomach trouble and chronic consti pation My condition Improved rap Idly through the use of these tablets Since taking four or five bottles of them my health has heen fine. writes Mrs. John Newton, Irving. N Y. Obtainable everywhere Adv NT COPPER l!l is DISCLOSED BY SI X'S WORK SEATTLE ! II. The hottest summer known in Alaska, melting the snow on mountain tops for the first time since the purchase of the territory from Russia, together With action of a receding glacier, uncov ered and exposed near Valdez and within 11 miles of tidewater what Charles L. Pea body, experleced miner and pioneer of the country, declare to be the greatest low grade copper ore deposli In all Alaska The exposed ore belt Is 1000 feet wide and three miles long. iia versing this ore zone are eight dis tinct stratn of schist and QUartSKt from 4 to 100 feet In width, freelv impregnated with chalcopyrlte. car rying values from J copper, Also in the fecund a ureal quantll s ipc per cent belt Is malachite e of 170 a ton Pea body came from Alaska on tb steamer Northwestern not to sell lo cations, but to purchase inachinerv and tramway sqttlptneni with which to develop them. will be felt severely. It is j Just possible that a couple of these : men will be able to play parts of I the game, but it Is doubtful. There fore we say. Coach Reynolds is sty mied Another actual fact that adds to j the worries of the coach is that Half- ; back McOinnis has not recovered ' and will be unable to play Friday. Of ' that there is no question but in the i other cases, hope still remains that ; the men will be able to play at least ! s portion of the game. UseV Seattle Hears McAdoo. SEATTLE. Wash.. Oct, II. Secre t.ir ccf the Treasury McAdoo deliv ered an elaborate address at a lun cheon of the Seattle Commercial Club in advocacy of construction and operation of a merchant marine by the federal government, the vessels t be available for naval auxiliaries in time of war. Secretary McAdoo and Assistant N'evvton today visited the site bought several yean ago for a new postoffice at a cost of $170,10111 and which the treasury department has rejected as unavailable. The tide waa In, and thi she was covered by eight feet of salt water, it is planned to sell the groum for what It will bring and to buj other land better suited. Secretari McAdoo and his party v ill depart for the east at T ic) o clock Oentral French has described the tonlgh:. making no stop until Helena Mtn driven by the British into the Mont.. Is leached tomorrow night. Ocrmau lines north of Lens, and It Is shown In the accompanying map ReooinmcmU Chamberlains Cough ' ' Will be seen that the summit of Remedy. ' Hill To and Hulluch wcr. not held "laist winter I used a bottle of; The recent violent battles have Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for a been fought on the north line The bad bronchial cough. I felt Its bene- British have- tried to capture the flclal effect Immediately and before; whole Hohensollerr redoubt, ot I hid finished the bottle I was cur- Which they now have the main trench ed. I never tire of recommending 'and the quarries, In which ihex have this remedy to my friends." writes' a foothold. Herman attacks have Mrs. William Bight, Ft. Wayne, Ind. been delivered here in an effort to obtainable cveryw here Adv. I smash the whole salient. MltiWgsisi'n Passat Gone WASHINGTON, Oct. 2S. "The, visitor to northern Michigan after a: I quarter of a century would be start-, led at the changed aspect of the! 'country," remarked C. M. Loud, ol ' Alpena. Mich , at the Raleigh. "Twon- tv-t'ive years ago the forests of Mich-1 I bfan were a magnificent sight, but I i they have heen almost denuded of I j trees, and today there are thousands i of acres stripped of everything re-' Sampling forest. In many instances ! the land has been turned into sugar j beet cultivation, and ultimately I presume, the forest land of that , I part of Michigan will be used fori that industry. Twenty or 30 year ago thousands of carloads and ship loads of timber were shipped from ; Saginaw. Bay City and other lumber however, does as the secretary of the. engaged In the lumber Industry now. "The soli of northern Michigan i seems peculiarly adapted to the rals- T his is the Stove Polish YOU Should TTS different from I others because mure c is taken in tin making ana tne materials used are higher grade. Black Silk Stove Polish HflfcM a trttlnt. stTVy polish that do Dot nib off or dust off. aa 1 the ulnoe last four times as Ion? as onlrnarr stove poltsb. Used on ..:ni MMM ao4 sold by hardware an t jrocrry dealers. All ws isatrisJ. L'sr it on jour nwfc stow. rsin' park v or your gu rmrgn. If poo aVm't find it t v fcartt staww poll ah v , ever OM-d. yjsjr Jea t I atrthonifilto n fmn jour BSorsPT IrtAt on I'U- k Sik Stove KutMb. ftUtie in liquid or cm quality. Black Silk Stove Polish Works Sterling, Ulioou t' BUca Silk aJr-Orykv trust tm4 SS gfnitr. rvist. rsj. at v-rat IVs-rerta rjgtirtsj 1 -c Mk SUk MUI Pe ,.h - -I,, or onus. H no SSjM M u.-c: .l: iHnnmrenrTi. i STOP CATARRH! OPEN NOSTRILS AND HEAD Says Cream Applied In Nostrils Relieve Head-Colds at Once. If your nostrils are clogged anC your head Is stuffed and you. can't J breathe freelv because of a cold or catarrh, just get a small bottle ol Kly's Cream Halm at any drug St It Apply a little of this fragrant. antl- septic cream Into your nostrils and let It penetrate through every air , passage of your SSSlI. .'othing end I healing the inflamed, swollen mu cous membrane and you get instant l relief. Ah! how good It feels Tottl Bi -trlls are open, your head Is c-lear no more hawking, snuffling Mowing . no more headache. dr nsSB or Strug gling for breath Kly's Cream Balm Is Just what sufferers rrom head pol ll and catarrh need li s c delight POftrLA.W.QMGCAi' in rortiana, with ae t Joyable llfmslun Make Multnomah vour hsaisjM era. Service better rstss latent !y lower. .Ml Nesaa Iimi rooms a-t'l IM ro-.Tis IU 2"o lange c.c Haiti, per i Y. ' -a !' guinael . . pr CUT