PAGE FOUR DAILY EAST OREGOMAN. PEXDLETQX. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 17 1915. EIGHT PAGES ILAHT OMCHOSlkH l'l HUSHING CO 1 County Paper MflbbPr I mted Ims Aseoctattoo. Estend l tb puetofftce t I'waletoa. IK II CI1 SI :n! l. . sat Nf I . ror!nd. Oregon i nui at I'bl.-ago r.srwm. :! SecuritT lijlld ng Washing!..;.. I) r . Bsreau 501. Foot teeetb tint:. N - :.S K!ITION RATES llS AUVAN ! IMIIjr. one yesr bj anil IWIlt n aoatu. try null three Buath. by anil Uallj ro m by aull Iwiit 00 j f: by carrier .- 15.00 .. . isc ; I .Si .So ..... :.su .... S7J 1 tv. oe er. by bi:1 1 w it await, by audi 14 .ar seiotba.. by gull iiO Till I I IT. DOIORT.U Tin.. not ..re the ie world j W This flesh of uurs. Whi. h the foul worm the grave devour. Ii but a garment gossamer thin; Clothing the soul's life hidden III. The is hid as a seed's life chrysalis, cover is n the wings , IV. That Ha tht is good 9 and u ritten HaM in song. The right upholding gainst the wrong: These are the only things The life immortal rnduring whkh spreads its wings. And soars in its heavenward flight away. When death has shattered the Ashes to ashes axtd dust to dust." What shall the profit us. shaft or bust? Time will destroy them, spar ing them not .Soon are the dead by the world forgot. Charles W. Hubner ... A BUSINESS POSITION T costs something like' 53,000 a rear to con.: . . .. . 3 auct tne cuys Dusmess, this being exclusive of the. .iJ KU r.t mmmm oriH it I .iUCIOUIt .'Ulll 'Jl lilUllVJ HIIU i , f - Ls of importance who is at the ade avala ad.fn08- 'h" v,... ,.,.; a .i. in'line will be practicallv contin- uiv.dual or business house ob-!noul to GMipoh; at sea it is; ligedtomake.suchanexpendi.to"tu'?us n,ow- . . . , ture each vear would be care-! Bntfh. ?S"Jn ful as to who was placed interr"Pted traffic in the Helles- c bane. His reputation would ! ntnt 5ussia" shl guard ! have to be good and his hon-jthe Black Sea From Rouma-, tstv unquestioned. He would ft north,.to Rla, r""i bei man in whom there could I Rusia" hne- m.ucJ "ft4" be confidence both H to hk f?" bu,t S . . u.. 'more than 800 miles in length. HfeThr'neee-itj.iThe land lines of trench and for the virtues imrt enumera- mine a,nd, da!', confh tfnd ted are multiplied manv times, '".ncealed artillery, with their The mayor of Pendleton has endings, will alone extend 190 times more opportunity : more f"J 2i?00 .m,les ,f thte for wrongdoing than does the north of Kava a is present- bead of a private business ex-( pending the san money each yea temptations gak they come in ins The place calls amount Of There are and often aoaa form r . Van nf i dean record. ' good ideals and If th- pnoplf of Pendleton ' "VP1?- iuc"' ""'Z" wUl give to this subject the Gntz: in Serbia, for he Bel-; thought and attention it de- Krade-Constantinople line ; in servM they will find powerful Russi,a ch)efl' that connect- unanswerable reasons for ,rf and Dunaburg. The the election of John Montgom-.advantage of interior lines is ( ry as mayor 1 w'th the Kaiser. Within a few for CAPTAIN HOBSON IT i orking prohibition hav DO abler thampion than, aot here Hobson who spoke rtifht As a ipeakei Alaban.a eongrsasmaii and naval her i is logical, forceful iimi convincutg. He prtasnU points in a masterly way and iii a manner that appeals to the intelligence of his hear- Ml ridded rasped W accord-growth hat he says because of his ! rsoaal sincerity antl courage, hist as the naval officer took ) is life in his hands at Santiago ngressman in the line of dntf risked his poUtteal f tore by leading the fight for '' '' prohibition ii eon States senatorship but the fact has not swerved him from his duty as ho sees it Incidentally the Hobson am-' endment is the logical climax of prohibition efforts in the United States and there are : good reasons for believing that . jpmendment or something simi lar is inevitable. Certainly the request that such an amendment be sub-' mitted to the states is reason-, able. Whether or not thej country wants prohibition) there can be no questioning the fact the issue is suffici-i ently pressing to demand a vote. THE 1916 ISSUE z HERE are widely differ-: ent ideas as to what will 1 constitute the chief issue of the presidential campaign; of 1916. Some say the tariff' will be the live topic, others! j preparedness, others prohibi-l die un- eition. others "America first." No less a paper than the Newj me ! e,York World believes the ques-j spare it tin of Americanism will be, the chief point at stake next' year. "Mr. Taft is mistaken when he says that the tariff will be jthe main issue in 1916." savs the World. I "Trip main 143110 in that ram. Jipaign has already been de-l fined by President Wilson in two words 'America first." "Until that question is defi-i nitely settled, no other issue is! important. This country must' determine once and for alii whether in its national aspira- Tjtions. ideals and sympathies it e we have to be all American or half alien." in reality there may be no iLtin -,i - aiu n iA rw t nit isoma -r r ri Jti7 'J ci B1WUV " livuc aiiu the fight may hinge upon the personal popularity of Presi dent v nson due to his well known abilitv and the fact the country enjoys prosperity at home and respect -abroad. A 2,500-MILE BATTLE-LINE INCE the entrance of Bul garia into the war the battle-front is fast tak- t'ing form as a gigantic loop: v 1 nag from Riga and Nieuport' (across all Europe. The Belgian-French line flnuu unbroken from the Chan-; inel to the Swiss border. Be- ginning again near the Ortier. ''the Italians carry it mainly on ! rnnnritnin-trTvs anrl nasspc rn i the Adriatic7 Nava, ' patrol. iep uard to Antivari. whence, Montenegrins, .erbs, French, and Kntrlian in sucrpssion swintr .. " . v, . - it uus ui auuui -'luiiurinrgi u. then south through Serbia to StrUITlltza. If landings are '" J."Iea; as . . , . . ; t'vc,. cuiunci in Hwuuauv ''Stance is for railroad lines:! in .nnct for the network ; K - rvlnK Lille and Sedan or threatening Verdun; in the Adrian mountains, tor the! I - ne can prooaoiy sena a through train from Ostend to Constantinople. He can send one now from Windau to tht- Iron Gates of the Danube. For the allies, the loop cut's, the central power off frorr everv sea except in respect to -ubnarines, and from every grent food source in the world. How York World, The public library opens the t oor of opportunity and for the young of both wxes; no town can have a more deserving institution. It . si pplernents the school ay? tern and its light shines for many who have to work and cannot get the good from the sehoois. Those who labor to. pi .iH t! b.ral librarv are in thanks from all who stand forUlM tjUii lye tun i yrry a good and prosperous town.in',LLM ""LLMIIO BILL ffltCI Boardman will sound more civilized than Coyote. Jupiter P. has been a good j.lugger since he got started. I CURRENT THINKING M'U 1. . Willi or BDEN TK The history of Bahrein, in the Per sian ilulf, is long and interesting. Ancient tomhe found in the interior tell us that the Phoenicians once set tled there. The kings of Assyria fre quently fought there. The Babylon ians called the island Ijlmun Again the isla-.d is the center of interest, for the'e recently has been discovered in Buoylonia a large ciay tablet recording the story of Para dise, the Deluge and the Fall of Man and the story tells u that the island of Bahrein, the ancient Dilmun. was the paradise, the Harden of Kden. where man first lived. The newly deciphered tablet re cording this story was among ih inscribed objects found by the expe dition sent to Babylonia from the I'nivextity of Pennsylvania. Prof Stephen Langdcn. a young Ameri can scholar, who is professor of As sy riology in Jesus College, Oxf rd. England, a chair endowed by an Am erican family, was visiting the n u seum in Philadelphia in the autumn of 1912. At that time he copied a number of the tablets, one of which was a triangular fragment. He took the clay tablet to oxford, where it was shown to the eminent English scholar. Prof. Sayce. and it was dis covered that it recorded a part ol an early Sumerian story of the flood and el the fall of man. The chr.s tian Herald. MODEK.X GKKEKS. Wliat and who are these modern ilreeks? The most skeptical Inves tigators admit that In most of thein is some blood transmitted from an cient Greece, and (here is a propot tlon of Greek ds.ennt ;n Greece about equal to 'hat of Anglo-Saxon descent in America. For the rest, ihe modern Greek are either Alban ian or Slav or Vlach. Beside the Greeks in Greece there are other Creeks who far outnumber them. They are found on all the coasts of the ottoman empire, Crete ami the other Islands until very lately under Turkish sovereignty have no other Inhabitants important in numbers: They are numerous in Asia Minor, in Syria and in Egypt While domiciled elsewhere, thej remain passionate in devotion to the Greece they style H,ellas. the modern kingdom, whose people are called Hellenes: and. being masters il i ommerce and finance, many of them have gained enormous fortunes from which they pour great sums inO Athens particularly, but into Greece generally, for public buildings and endowment.-. Wcii-kiiia on Mhmh WASHINGTON, Nor. 17 Worfc 'tijj MaiOt "t "ta .ueasage io tiu grrn. President Wilson plans to have it finished hy Thanksgiving an I tu deliver it personally on Decemtier Tth lief. ire joint session of the hOlfcM and .-enate. National defence, it is fxpected. will be the main theme In this connection, the pres ident rer-.ninien!efl a five ear .Mhed'iie of strengthening the army and naTy at a cost of a billion -collars, giving the nation an army and navy second to none '"as a defen sive institution" The president "ill not recommend presidential primar ies as he abides by Senator Ponier MM'l opinion thai these are un .in stitutional. fine Randil I- killed SAN JOSS, CW., Nov. IT. Two unidentified men who held up the bar in the Swiss-American hotel here robing four persons and the till, were overtaken by a sheriif's posse at Mountain View. In an ensuing battle, in which many shots were ex changed, one of the bandits vas killed and the other wounded by I charge of buckshot in the leg None Of the officers were Injured The Bandits intrenches themselves In i A SUPPLY . r ..... .. r,,, nnuini iim no oojeci" in nc caaea are in reapiv me deadly derm de This s ippl-, was raptured b. ibe French after Mrtfeatarii h eavr flah- In the c LOCAL HIGH ON FRIDAY CLOMXt; MJOTBA1J. BATT1.K KOI5 t II XMPIOXSHIP Wil l Itl HARD ixm,in. Friday of this week will see the closing football battle for the cham pionship of southeastern Washington and eastern Oregon. Pendleton high will play the Walla Walla high on the local gridiron on that day. It will be a great game with speed against weight Pendleton ha a team that is small but fast, while the Garden City boys are known for their weight and heavy line bucking game In comparing scores of past games. Pendleton should be rand the best La Grande beat Walla Walla by a score of H to 1J. while Pendleton played La Grande a S to 0 game Coach Hlnderman is now tuning his men down to shape for the game The boys will be sent through a long, hard practice each day from now un til the game As there Is no school bey will report for practice at i o'clock. All the boys have recover ed from their past sickness and a team in good condition is expected to enter the game. The boys have one more game besides this one to play. They will meet the Jefferson high of Portland on Turkey day, Nov. 15. The Jefferson boys are fast and heavy but the local team hope- to win in that Uh Portland s m will ba playing a long distance from home, on a new field and In a new cliaiate. As this is the last game ( the season it Is expected to be a fight from start to finish as many of Ihe local boys will see their hurt game of interscholastic football 50 Civilians Killed VIENNA. Nov. 17 That Goritx suffered heavily from the recent bombardment was officially admit ted. Fifty soldiers were wounded and 58 civilians killed whle J00 buildings, largely churches and con vents, were badly damaged. Less violence In the fighting "ii the Isonzo front was reported. lH'iimrrrr Is I led. NEW YOKK. Nov, IT Counsel for Kobert Fay and Walter Bchots, alleged bombplotter., demurred to the indictments against the pair on the ground that the statutes cited in the case attempted to legislate re garding foreign ships at sea Fey, , following his five-hour confession of yeaisftsay, announced he would not plead guilty, as he understood he ' would only get two years' sentence if he confessed, whereas he is new I informed lie mihi tset 11. (tenter liangst iimi-sii. ; north plains, ore. Nov 1 .'Telling his wife to come to him In ' barn in half an hour after she j asuisied him from the house, a fa er naiwd Maas. aged Tm years, i Mountain Yale, hung himself and I found by his wife when she retni th. had to aid him t" the house. .Maas. 1 was a eHpple, hod nen failing ; health rapidly for the past ! months and it is believed that prayed on his mind ;and caused : acL who in few this the ( Bjr'i Une Proniahle. S.Oi FRAii CISCO, tal., Nov. IT. The Bui Fram lsco municipal rail road con tin Mi to lie operated at a profit A report Tiled by Suierin tenlent C'ashin of the city lines, show- that during i tctoher J2.1S -7 was taken in and 1SI,171.M pended. leaving a profit of $1"1 SST.49. AftM the depreciation rr! sinking funds have been apportionej their share of this amount the cttjr will have apiToximatelx $?(.0SI ic-L profit vir Leaving (,ulliioii. BEllLI.V, Nov. IT The Tagbla't claims to have reliable information that the allies have begun retiri:.-: from the ",alli; peninsula. The Tagehlatt state that the First and Se road French infantry and the Tenth British inlantry already haw j withdrawn and that other regiments j will follow at intervals. HtlTTr lane Must I'aj. I WASHlNfJTOX. Nov. 17. Thej j United Stales supreme court affirm I ed th awarding to the government t I of J10.00U damages against th' New ! York & Porto MM Steamship rum- Pany for failure to carry coal from I ulamie pons tin San Franeireo foi 1 OF HEAD Y GERMAN GAS BOMBS HIGH SCHOOL NOTES i I Miss Butler, domestic science In structor at the high school announ?-! es that the cafeteria will be open during the teachers' Institute. Sh.' expects to serve meals to a hundred I each day during the hours from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. Those first to come) will lie first served The hall ls en the second floor of the high school, near the auditorium Yesterday afternoon, Prof. L P. 'Jambee gave the members of the stock Judging, which represented the I high school at Hermlston In the re cent contest, their rash pr'ues fori the work they did In winning the oniest and gaining honors for them-l -clvea and the school. All the boys received a cash prize, while Bene Hamilton won Uie honor of being in-, dividual high point man The other . members of the team were Henry This ontest has stimulated ill great ,cal ,,f Intercut throughout the county In the annual stock show at ; iiermiston and it is hoped that it'i will have a greater success next'! eai. One prominent business ! man Of Iiermiston made th stat-j; ment that the boys' Judging eoat-MMJ will help more toward the future de jj veiupment of ttm-k in thn county, I than any thing life that has been;; promoted by the Hog sttd iair as-js eoclation of HeTmiston. : I c i ricoi- sueit Back. PKTKOiJKAI). Nov. 17. Vigor, iiisly pressing their advantage the Bus.sians on the Ittga front hsve IWepI the ilermans back from three lo four miles north of Hunger. tb j an hand gas gr lampagne ratio i On Saturday, November 20th MR. UPSCHUTZ Custom Tailor and Designer Will be at the Hotel Pendleton With Models and Materials Suitable for Tailored and Novelty Suits Automobile and Sport Coats for which he will take orders. An Invitation is extended to The women of Pendleton, to meet Mr. Lipschutz and acquaint themselves with the latest fashions in Afternoon, Trotteur, Traveling Suits and Coats. Merchandise of Mer-it ijlllllMIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIt ! FOOT BALL Walla Walla VS. Pa Ha Sa Friday, Nov. 1 9 1 Starting at 3:15 j Round-Up Park iMiMNumiiiMi iiimm mm m , mmmmmmM gwwiiiwiiiwiiiiiiiiiwiimHiiiii i minim mammmmmmmm I Dodge Brothers I WINTER CAR will be on exhibition at the Pendleton Auto Co. soon. These can will solve the problem of all-ve;n-round motoring for you. Don't fail to come and see them. The protection from the ffFatBer Is complete. The finish outside ami In side Is In keeping with ihe finish of the ear. The tops are cloth-lined and are electron ll lighted. I The motor is a. horsepower The price of the Winter Touring Car or Roadster complete. Including reg. t'lar n.ohalr top. is $ior,i ,f. Pendleton, i Pendleton Auto Company I ,IM,l,HIIIl,l'l"IMHMIIIIIIIIln,,lln,,,IHmmf()l O. Only" High School I