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 FOUR DAILY EAS1 OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1915. EIGHT PAGES an imiki-knuent NKWSI'AI'KR. I'aMi.lird I'Mlj and Seail Weekly it I'm .! etna, bj the Hit OKKUONUN I I ULISUINU CO. 0 metal Ceutj l"aper. llrmtwi I lilted rr-M association Kntertsl at the postoffliv at 1'endleton, oragtsi, its wmM Iuk mall matter. lelepltoiif I ON BALK IN OT1IKR CITIES. lmM. in 11, a, i New Stand. Cortland. Oregon. Huffman Mem C' . Cortland, Oregon. ON I ILK AT rtdragu I'.iiri'an. !kw Security Ilulld'.ng Waablniit.il. It C. Hureau 5U1, Four teentb Slrw.. N. W SI IIS( KlITKlN HATES (IN ADVANCE) Unity, one rear, by mall Llelly. ait months, by mall Dally, throe moutha, by mall IHUly, one rattnth. by mall IHtlby, one year, by carrier Dally, alx mtniha.' by carrier 'telly, three moniha. by carrier thilly, one month, by carrier Semi Week u . out' year, by mail Heml Weekly, sit months, by mall.... Semi e"Uy. tow months, by mail.. .VO0 bone of the opposition to the shipping bill is the ship trust. What the trust wants is a gov ernment subsidy, this subsidy I to be paid over to them for their own uses in their own I way without giving the gov i eminent the slightest power to regulate rates. Mr. McAdoo i said : "What is the real fight in 'this merchant marine contro versy? It is a fight for subsi dies. "What are subsidies? They iare a gift from the United States to favored corporations. tirms and individuals who op ships. hy Stories From the War Zone fe .J I w w w BY WILBUR S. FORREST. United 1'ress Staff t'orrespondent. LONDON, Sept. 39. (By Mail)-"-Wottten tram conductors have coma to stay.- at least In England. In her fight for emancipation, the J Knglish-woman has established her j right and ability to hold the rear I Platform. Serious consideration is I even being given to ceding her the I front platform. Motor-Women seems la question of but a few months, j Since the beginning of war. womer. j have been employed as conductors in I Uermany, France. Italv ad Should WS Nearl - "'HI now have permanent po 2 50 1 e rate jo give away millions of dollars 1 5,,'ons' A""t1"'1' imm have ppu- U8 at th na , 'Cations on file. From these every va. 8.73 "v K1"!"1 a muuc.v rawi : cno is?. year to pay these snip owners. 'men. UH ' vor whose rates and 2 we have no control? i cancy is being ' ne of the few complaints regis tered against the women was their I lack of appreciation of the value of ; time. They find It difficult to reaj I isse that the matter of being a few I moments late in signing on or in tak ing up a relief Is serious. The com panies are trying to overcome this difficulty through Inspectors. tine of the most frequent cause.-! tor this delay it was reported was 1 that "a woman conductor had some thing to say to another woman and v, mild not go on dutv till she fin- England. , Igh-J If At the dlasgow school, while one woman is being put through her reel, tatlon the others listen. This ac quaints them with all routes In the city. JOHN DDK, NO. 101, NOW HEIR TO GOt LI) MIL -I. IONS. crence to service The when crowning ouifnlnatlo the seal of official appn me ! val HUTU Is i.noi (.11 Of We The No No irth have here the -we have enough: other stones to We men of stuff Paradlse need no build stairs into the Unfulfilled other Ivory for the doors other marble for the floors No other cedar for the beam And dome of mans immortal dream. Heie on the paths of every day Here on the common human way It all the stuff the gods would take To build a Heaven, to mould and make It was agreed that women between1 I and 5.1 make the best conductors. "Would it not be rriiire pn- was Waved upon her employment by j Their influence has been all for the ilkLa v n . iJ,he Municipal Tramways association lest. Even oh the "roi of the I'nited Kingdom, in annual It, conference. There was not a single protest against her employment and when the proposal for "motor-women" was made cries of "Why not?" rang from all parts of the room. The assembly found that woman lble tor the trovernment to i spend these millions in build- j ing up a splendid auxiliary merchant marine which can be w j! position to the shipping bill, as . stated by the secretary of the I treasury. It was the ship mo- l.opoly of subsidy hunters that J beat the shipping bill in the j last congress, and it is now garnering its profits by con- controlled and operated in the interest of all the people? I Every ship owner and every ship monopolist wants sub sidies. They would profit by them, and they are going to make a desperate fight for them in the next congress." i C,t..L to tl,., l...l ., .1. , i "..v. a w.t The ,;klsK,v corporation to remedy this by rurnishmg the wo men conductors with gaiters. roughest and ughest" routes they can control ob streperous passengers better than the men conductors. So successful has been their work that the congress decided to ask the county council of London to remove its ban against their employment. Holly car conductors brought certain London is the one city in the British problems and these ware discussed, j Isles that so far has held out against The delegates from illasgow. where! them. nearly l.uno women are employed. stated it was feared the skirts of the LONDON, Sept. 24. (By Mail) conductors would prove an impedl-1 England's first royal "chauffeuse," or ment in w inter In running up and i whatever you call a woman chauffeut , I lime To build Eternity in time! Edwin Mark!. am New Edens. ours the stuff sue- troling the seven seas in wheat rates at 10 times what they were before the war from New York to Liverpool and at four times their former rate from Portland to Liverpool. Port land Journal. A TIMEl-VA WAKENING Glasgow has been so won to the woman conductor idea that a perma nent school of instruction has been opened. A ticket-inspector is the teacher Each pupil is put through the pro cess of inquiring the destination, is suing and punching tickets, and call- proposes j teer Aid Detachments the war called Into being, has the honor not only of being the first woman chauffeur to drive Queen Mary but even to be complimented by the latter on the achievement. Queen Mary decided to visit Tarn iiousc ai vtniisiaoie. i nere was not Finlev J a single male chauffeur to meet Hef Heien c Jiajesiy at the station. .Miss ( arson took this assignment, acting not only IP 'ji.i.i.i.mii.iii.i.iiiiihii.iiiiii mini ii iiiiiinii i iiiiiiimiiiiiini I Dodge Brothers ) MOTOR CAR In nine months more than $25,000, 000 worth of these cars have been bought by the American people and still the one problem is to satis fy the demand. Extraordinary claims have not, as you know, played any part In creating this demand, which must therefore be directly due lo the performance of the car. The motor Is 30-3,1 horsepower The price of the Touring i'nr or Road ster .complete Is 1900 (f. o. b. Pendleton with extra tire, tube, chains, etc.) Ask us about the new Dodge detachable winter bodies. with ing stations until she is letter perfec I as a chauffeur but also as footman. is 18. In her route. I She things a state may THE END OF THE TRAIL" HERE is a movement on foot in San Francisco to HERE are signs of grow ing interest in the mayor ality contest and in the selection of good men for the ! city council. The campaign is j ti-4- ntiflni' fiiir inaar) qc Hilt1 there is a quiet tenseness about P1' castmto bronze and the situation that shows the Pa"J f t the western terminal people are awakening to the .fQtthe Jncln highway. The importance of what is before Jf. ul ha bee" very popular t h zm ' wth San Francisco visitors and Surely but with certainty , if?hj'.f fto the forces standing for clean, if."- the idea of plac businesslike government for i " dJe en.d .; the Lincoln Pendleton are rallying to the YSSL tv, altTether ap: candidacy of J. E. Montgom-'; . n tl a"1- ery for mayor. Thev do so be-fc hav,e appearance of v.v rnfAnc initeing ready to drop from ex- his purposes and his ability. They know he is a fit man to be at the head of the city govern ment during the next two years. They know that if he is elected Pendleton will have a mayor of whom people will ever have reason to be ashamed. It is well for Pendleton there is a man of Mr. Montgomery's calibre available for mayor. It is well his candidacy is meet ing with cordial approval am ong the rank and file of the people. There has never been a time in the history of the city when the people of Pendleton needed more than at present to seek a mai of sound charac ter and sound judgment for the mayor's chair. The duties of the mayor will be more diffi cult than usual. The position will demand good business sense and above everything else a man of unquestioned in tegrity. Without such a man as mayor Pendleton may find herself facine misrule and graft with the stench andj dissatisfaction arising from Men conditions. The biggest town of its size in the cannot afford to take those chances. possible to deprive the sex of that inalienable right. Here are some of the woman of the Sunflower legally do: Can take back her maiden name after her husband is dead, .without any legal process or legislative act. Can keep her own name when she ! is married. have "The End of the ! Can persuade her husband to take her name and give up his family name, if she does not like it. Can keep her maiden name and her husband can keep his. Can retain her maiden business transactions and use her husband'.- name for social affairs. If wife does not like either her own or husband's family name they can change to a name that does suit. A woman can wear men's clothing without any restriction except that she must not pose as a man. She can vote at every election. She can hold any office in the state and run for congress. As Kansas probably puts it, a THIS MA Y ENTERTAIN haustion. The sight will be discouraging to tourists if it causes them to wonder of they look the same way on reaching the Golden Gate! After hav ing negotiated western roads it is argued tourists should have something to cheer them up; nothing to touch the springs of sadness. NKWs KOK HISTORIANS. The Inspector was examining a Cleveland school and all the class had been specially told beforehand by of ,lis Parents was found there us teacher, ::Don't answer unless you are almost certain your answer is John Ioe. Xo. 101, abandoned child, aged four, whose parents, it Is believed live in Philadelphia, has be come an heir to millions, because Mrs. Shepard, who was Mis uld. worth perhaps ? 1 0. - 000,000 from the fortune left by ner famous father, has adopted him. The Shepards have no children. John Doe was found on the back steps of St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York by a policeman about a year ago. He gave his name so far as he could be understood as Austin Mclary. He talked about Broad street and mum bled about a ride on a train, a "big boat" and a "railroad in the air." So It was thought he had been taken from Philadelphia. However, DO trace 11. was sent to St. Christopher's Home it Dobhs Ferry, near the home of the ji Pendleton Auto Company (lllliiiimimiiiimimiliiiliiMiiimiiiimiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiMi iiim ii correct." : Shepards, and Mrs. Shepard adopted The subject was history. ! him Now he is Finley J. Shepard. "Who,'' asked the inspector, "was Jr- He has found not only a fathet the mother of the great Scottish be. a"d mother, but a fortune and social name for, ro and king, Robert Hruce? j position. He pointed to the boy in front of him, then- around the class. There! was no answer. Then at last the1 heart of the teacher leaped with joy. The boy who was standing at the' very foot indicated that he knew "Well, my boy," continued the In-' spector, "who was she?" "Mrs. Bruce." said the lad. Elevating. "I asked the boss for a raise day," said the elevator boy. "What did he say?" askd friend. "Going up!" hla i to take advantage of opportunities as they are pre sented. This can best be done by accumulating funds iir our Savings Department. A liberal rate of interest paid and your deposit is ab solutely safe. The American National Bank OF PENDLETON CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $400,000. Women are funny. The more they hate each other the more f faction. woman there can do almost anything ately they kiss each other. Columbia a man can. That's so The men's State. clothing provision even permits her to scratch a match as some men do. Only thing she seems debarred from e)ao is "posing as a man," which U Im- . TWICE sWALlxnvs POISON possible, of course, for most of them IIK.V YOI'TH RJ3F081BS "t TO MAItltT HKR. THE IKILOMITES. CURRENT THINKING SOL'XD, SAFE. LARGE AM) PROF ITABLE BUSINESS. 'The ghostly Dolomites, the wildly splendid ruin of once mighty Alps, where all the forms the architect ever designed and many more, cut in chaotic profusion into the skies, were a year ago a cherished playground of the world, while today, among their crags, iiraks and rock splinters, their weather-worn crests and weather fretted precipices, an inferno of mountain cannons, machine guns and rifles have transformed the play ground into the most savage war theater to be found m all wsr-ridden Europe " Thus begins the bulletin issued by to THE SHIP SITUATION ff ANY opponents of the 4)fil ship purchase bill who went to hear the Port land speech of Secretary Mc Adoo, came away converted. It was the speech of a man who went to New York, an un known lawyer, and by the pow er of his genius, coaceived and built the Hudson river tun- nebs. Only rare ability of the dred of thousand highest type could have per wade New York investors to undertake the great enterprise. It was the force of intellect and powers of rare compre- kni..n Ii . liftAl th. Iin. ""- " . . T ... most favorable conditions for aniiwn uanuin irum puamuu f,jrein an, domestic business (Cincinnati Inquirer. ) When the primary basis of sound and large business is sought and found it always proves to be tne purchasing power of the masses of the people. When there ie at one and the same time an increase in the purchasing I the National Geographical Society to power of the agriculturists, through day. which deals with the terrifying large demands for their products at battleground where Austrians and high prices, or even moderate prices , Italians are contesting mountain pln and in the purchasing power of skill-j nacles, sheer walls of barren rock, ed and unskilled labor through steady' glacier crests and narrow, twisting employment at fair wages. then valleys. The nucleus ' of the Dnln there is no doubt of the prosperit) ' mites is the southeastern part of Ty of the country, and both labor and i rid. a region quite as untamed now as when Roman legionaries threaded its dangerous passes with 'heir shields In testudo to guard against rock masses from the heights above. "The Dolomites are in their nature sinister, cruel, uncanny. Their deso lation is weird. The paths among their rags are treacherous. Wind, rain and frost have scarred them with a multitude Of shapes, with teeth and claws and ugly wrinkles. "Vet. dsplte the fierce aspc I of these mountains, they have fascinate, I all who have visited them. "The Dolomites are not the same from year to year. The rock of ! whit h they are composed Is no as durable as that which enters Into the composition of our Rocky mountain' and the Alps Ea h year the thou sands of fantastic modelings ore oarv 1 ed anew. The strsnge Dolomite ne J tiles bet ome more pointed and long ler, while the knlfe-ITKe ridges run to 'hai iter edges. The 'tueks; obelisks.' capital will be contributing rofiting by such prosperity. Th. I ttluta. lu in t V, t r.rtl- world ; tj,in ,0day, and conditions now point with all the certainty that can pel tain to any affairs of this mundane sphere to a long-continued era of prosperity throughout the Country. Orders from Great Britain. Fran e and Russia after the war will still i ome in great numbers, and for great quantities of commodities, to ttm country. They will come not only for war materials, but for many classes of materials utilized 1n peace, for the last 12 months have demonstrated lo the world the ability of our coun'i; to supply quickly and satisfactorily, the needs of the world. Our government guarantee of peace in Mexico will attract bun- Immigrants from war-stricken, tax-ridden Ku rope. while it will cause millions of dollars In capital from all countries to go there to reap the rich rewards it can secure under assured j permanent peace. law and order. Upon every side there are found, pyramids ' 'cathedral spires ' the serrated 'teeth' and etched walls, dis integrate noticeably from year lo year Scattered throughout their NKW TORE, Oct. 28. Pretty 1S-ytar-old Jane Radeck Is recovering from the effects of Iodine, which see swallowed on the doorstep of lohn C Walsh, who had rerused to marry her. The couple had been going to geter for some time, and last Tues day, in order to make him Jealous, of theina d"p ",rw,m "' eroded ma to DOSitioil until he has become Cnlted Staes. and our manufacturers "'"P aaln"t ,h"r h,n'r B famous SecreUrV of the treas- our men hants. our transportation urv of the United States. r h EST f ... . u i Immediate large and profitable tran- Ihf contentions of such I ctioe. man are worthy of the highest respect. He is by reason of his high position, utterly without motive other than the welfare of hip country. ii- WOMEN l KAATHAS, (From the New Vork Telegram i nut In Kansas where they strlv nlease the women ought to have He declared that the back- email muse for complaint if it i th,area are great fields of broken stones MiM Rdeck Hlrted with two young ana deep streams 01 erooeo manei mp a, dlim.B, Walsh, remonstrat ed and ii fight ensued in which he was badly worsted ami taken to Flower Hospital. Miss Radeck call ed to see him and renewed her lm -portunations for him to marry her, but he refused. She drank ammonia, but the quick action of the doctors saved her. Last night she went In Clotdng Out Whole slot k i Walsh's house to make her last ep- For Sale Cheap, on account of peal, but he shut the door In her discontinuing the fresh meal busi- face, whereupon she dank. the eon-ne-w. two nit e t orse. tenls of a vial of Iodine. "Titian, the great master of ors. was born In this mountain re gion. His birthplace Was CaMpO II Sotto or Pleve dl endure At le.iM, he spent his boyhood In the latter village. 1 The Hunting Season This is the in more ways "hunting season" than those marked by the bag of the gun. It is the season when we are on the bunt for new attire, for new things for the home, and for many necessities for personal comfort. It is a sort of prelude to what might be called the "dress-up" season of the year. It is a season when the stores are at there best and when the advertising col umns of a live newspaper like The East Oregonian are bursting with human interest.