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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1915)
PAGE POUR DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1915. EIGHT PAGES AN IMiErKNMENT NKWf fleet of 310 superdreadnaughts at $17,000,000 per ship. The actual Quantities of grain and forage involved tn I would feed even soldier under w i arms in Europe and supply grain and forage for their horses for rather more than HUM m toe pisuorrire at Pendleton. ! ton ,-t. ,,A ,,..,,,1.1 . ;,;il. MM mall matter " mmt nuuiu awnnu i t'Stioalml U die Ollfci gAH 1 II. tVeekl t lu, by the PrULlSHINU linn ii county hMr Mem!-! I toted Press Asaoclatlun uragun, as se. ond l'ir(if larmv for nearlv ON LK III OTHKR CITIES. ,1 ih imperial llntri Xew Stand. Portland. or unl" Ine ITegoB Hownan Sea Co., Portland. Oregon. u. I.11-. AT t'hlcago ftarsaa, mat Security Uulldtng. Wgeiuugiaii. U. C. Bureau 501, Four teentn Stree.. V W. feed the entire United States 2,000 year? died of old age.) This year's wheat crop in the United States will probably form one-fourth of the world's total, the vear's corn crop I I s. ItlPTUIX 1UTKS one year, by mall h Mumvwwio ui mc nuuu a lu- tal, the oats crop nearly one- HOXG (I TH Whs 1. I do give thangs for one Who In fife's darkness still un- vellfd Hod's sun: Failing not ever when the rose teemed rue, I do give thanks for1 you! In a sad Jod. for And. 1 dci n. troubled space, life's sake, dreamed of your dear face, dreaming there, made all the dim skies blue! rive thanks for ygy; liaily ally, all tnoiiiha. by nail 2.60 1111 Ihu m,Alha hv mall 1 . naiiy! one mootn. by in '.&o third of the world's total. nany, one year, oy carrier 7.&0 , llly. all Booths, by carrier .T5 . Ueilj, three month, by carrier 106. ANOTHER SECRET SOLVED Uallj, one month, by carrier .86 "a Weakly, one year, by nail 1 60 m NMfcjrwifr. an mSSmTtt nan. 76 AMERICANS have at last Semi Weekly, four months, by mall ;u JJ ... j j , ,u ouvvccucu ill auiviug 111c secret of an extremely f'ne quality of steel, for a sup ply of which our manufactur ers have been forced hitherto to depend on the Krupp works in Europe. Before the great war it was customary to attribute to Ger many a sort of supernatural genius in such matters as the foregoing. 'What's the use?" that was the typical Ameri can attitude. The truth is, i American scientists can do all jthat German scientists can do, 4 if given equal incentive and opportunity. i This country is flooded with young lawyers who hardly 4 earn their office rent; but i there are very, very few de- I voting their lives to solving na Titure's secrets as applied to "In a useful state, the Kurd lives 1 In the hills and herds sheep. He la a1 pastoral tent-dweller In the summer ! In the winter he moves to the Mes-1 potamlan plains and either lives In ! h's tent or turn: the owner out ui a ecloeted house. His tent is of black.! homespun (oats' hair, and its furni-' luie is mats, quilts and cooking pots. Uls children go naked and his worn en ragged His board is set with sour! MUt, and when by chance he build! a winter home it consists of a hole in the ground with a flat root' of wattle or clay airtight, smoke-tight. I light tight. There are small smoke! holes in the roof, hut the whole cf. reel is that of I prairie dog's dwell- ing. V l POEM HV THOM V HARDY III. This is my Life's one thought Into the Light a dying soul Was brought: Heaven was no dream, earth made divinely new, 1 do give thanks to you! Frank L. Stanton. modern industries, let, in view of the vast interests in THEY ARE NOT ALL ALIKE i volved, the latter ought to I have by far the greater prizes; lOT for a moment should Ui offer of the two professions.1 r people have the idea that Steel makers have called at-j the present municipal .tention to the truth of these campaign is a "wet" and "dry" things, If others of our great' light. That subject is not at : industries desire to hold ad-i ifsue now. The question is, anced positions after . the Thomas Hardy, the famous Amerl-j v.... nu, ,u, r, recenty naturalized Is an englishman, has written a beautiful poem in memory of one of his young tr.ends, who went to the front "some where In Flanders." leaving his moth er to wait for him at home, and then died fighting the foe. The poem wmen nas just been printed in the fortnightly Review in London, is giv- en oeiow: BE FORK MARCHING) AND AFTER tin Memoriam. F. W Q.) Orion swung southwart aslant Where the stared Egdon pine-tree had thinned, The Pleiads aloft seemed to pan' With the heather that twitched in the wind; But he looked on indifferent to sights such as these, 1'nswayed by love, friendship, home, joy or home sorrow. And wondered to what he would march on the morrow. The craied household clock w ith its whirr Rang midnight within as ho .stood. He heard the low sighing of her Who had striven from his birth, for his good; But he still only asked the spring starlight the breeze. What great thing or small thing his history would borrow From that Home with Death he wouh. play on the morrow. When, the heath wore the robe ch late summer, I And the fuchsia-bells, hot In the I sun, Hung red by IBS door, a quick comer Brought tidings that marching was tmhe For him who hail joined In that I game overseas A brightness therefrom the morrow. it to die n JTSTICE HTGHES' REFUSAL. shall the will of the people its ; close of the great w,, TZlT expressed one yenr agu ue re- too. win nave to mane h worm spected or shall bootlegger I while for young Americans of government be established and the finest intellectual power to sanctioned in Pendleton. devote their lives to industrial! Nor should people be misleu research work. Boston Post. into believing that when the: " East Oregonian denounces! The United States senate bootleggers and organized vice needs some means of stopping it means to class under that landless debate for the mere head all saloonmen or ex-sa-' purpose of keeping measures loonmen. Not for one moment from coming to a vote. That is such intended by this paper. ; is what the cloture rule means There are some saloonmen and ! and never was a more meri tome ex-saloonmen who do notorious measure proposed. countenance bootlegging at all. Vnr thnao mpn this nnpr has r.n pritirUm tn maVp and Pnter- i unregistered voters in Pendle- tains respect for their pur-jn. They can be sworn in on poseg 'election day; see that they go Such men as that and their ' to th-e P03- K"f ! When the blgeep buy- .uiuKuiiiciy u,i,,u, ..Ui . . The Mont-i"."' vr u" "r.Trt: rr ; gumg ii ue nigiiei u may uc I surmised he is not overstating It is estimated there are 500 Your town vote. the other crowd. gomerv campaign is in opposi tifin tri trip lawless and vicious ', , ' i t ;!tnecase. element oi saioomiien. ii. in opposition to men who open ly violated the law before and are preparing to do so again if they get the chance. It is in opposition to booze peddlers who train with the white slav er and the bawdy house mag nate. It is the class that ha? brought the liquor business in to such disrepute. It is a dis reputable outfit and it would be a public disaster for Pendle ton to fall under their control. But it is not fair or truthful to associate with that element all who may have had some con nection with the liquor busi ness. Nor is it fair to assume that all who have espoused the candidacy of Dr. Best are un worthy people. Some good men and women have been sup Lortinir him. but thev are mis guided and they would not support him if they knew the true conditions. will need your CURRENT THINKING THE Kl'KUS. Justice Hughes' letter to the secre tary of Nebraska Is curt, clear and emphatic. "I hereby notify, you that I decline the nomination made by this petition or similar petitions, and request that my name shall not be placed upon the ballots of such pri mary election." This ought to end the Nebruka nonsense and all similar nonsense. If Justice Hughes were a candidate lor president he would say so. If he hail even the remotest intention of accepting the republican nomination or of submitting to ct-nscription. he would hae retired from the I'nited. States .supreme court and made his plans accordingly. When he sought the republican nomination in 190S he had no hesitation in announcing his candidacy, and if the republican leaders had had sense and courage enough to override Itoosevelt's Impu dent dictation, Mr Hughes would probably be president of the lulled' States toda. The time to draft Charles E. Hughes was then. The republican) ,.,.im, i:,ns w-h.i are clamoring fori him now and asking to smear the bem h of the I'nited States supreme court with partisan poll u s have no mon love lor Justice Hughes than they had in 1908. But they think he would be I safe stepping-stone from which they could climb Into 'j local office. If they had him 101 ' president they would hate him as j bitterly as they hate W.mdrow Wil son and they would have as lime sympathy with his policies. New fork World, WAH TAKES KAISER'S ROOF. The Kurds w ho. report says, arc I again engaged In their favorite occu-1 pation of slaughtering Armenians. I men, women and children, are de-1 srribed by the National Geographic Wnaaasa "The Kurds are a survival from j Jfefal t I'scd III MiiUiii'.' the days w hen self-respecting men lin rr Arm) . lived only, or at least Principally, by I RAKV.t. Switzerland, via Pari the sword. Their wild tribes are -, -rhe copper roof Ii scattered throughout Asia Minor, aci.f(im the Imperial castl ing to thwart the most modest effort -i,. . (Wmany, and Muni- WHAT THE CROP MEANS 4ja HERE is food for optim Ifjv ism in the following re cital oy an eastern paper, the looted shop. 1hp NVw York World a to the Th- Kurd is meaning of the crops for this year: of the land toward modern comfort security and organization. "Although once fabulously rah. ihe country has not been able to bring forth a sufficiency through all trie years that the Kurds have practiced their untamed housekeeping here, a housekeeping that has consisted :n abandoning the summer tent for the winter cottage, alter preliminaries ol killing the owner and his family an I the replenishing "f goods' stores ai the point of a rifle, the transaction usuallv followed by the burning of Nov. being taken at Donaues- I chlngrn, (lermanjr, and win tie nam in the manufacture of munitions of war. This ronf weighs many tons. L'lt. picturesque zen. and. whatever his numbers ma. 1, census matters in Turkey are :n- , iffir.il- he is much more in evl- I'he total value of this dence than the Armenians and olhei The Emperors residence in urp was visited in September b a com mission and a list of metals was de- i ma tided, it was reported reeentl.'. that the huge copper roofs of the ea thedral at Bremen were being dls mam led. Munitions Denier Sentenced, LONDON, Nov 30. Victor My. who has been on trial in the Bo-i street police court in the charge of, having dealt In war materials With out a license was sentenced to four, months in prison 1 , 1, ,t!i if ... U ... U .. 11,'AM Trt. ear k iooo crops in me Lniteo peop.es am. on na States will be over $5..'00.- Kurd ,h' """f llrHt 'mpr'"u'': urtv nn m . . . ,iin Asia Minor, and in most eaaWf he 000,000. Of this total, wheat, rpmain Ul, prwJominate one. makes up $1,135, 100,000, COrtl I The Kurds wear clothes of trivia ! 9 $1,750,000,000, oatd $84 1,000,-'.colors; they also wear rags-that 001) unH hav 1Q7S Oftrt nflO 'the poorer ones- of me most raca- 4 Uncle Sam's harvest for this year would F mailt e the construction of I travelers and th thirteen Panama canals, eoin-l'"?e,T- t 1 lie iu,Ks 11. 1 - uri-n , the poorer ones- of ihe most raca- le. non.le,. riptlon. The Kurds rldi the best horses; th' ed, they bullv the are always arm-Armenian-', the veilord Turks ..I..,.. ,.,, i...- . ..... .1 yiTvc ..mi iaiu, iwi u,.uvn,w ( wmXtWVr mrf,tery over Ihei- at an estimated cost of $400,- g,,.,, Kurds ani nave tmjtorvi UOO.OOO nniece. in adminlstraue pollcv toward um Pay for the cost of the whole European war for more than . . 1 inree montna, both of the Build the United States a right ol Id-Mag them al.me Thus in , Kurd mas'.acres Armenians, robs Ac-, g menians and travelers, and on- . . upallons h'r jo-i Thieves irootn Woolaaen, BAKKIt. ore., Irec. Deter. tlon and prosecution of sheep thieves will be one Of the pnl- icles urged at the coming con- ventlon of the Oregon Wool- glowers' Association ai Pendle- ton la-ginning lJecemOr ;:. n cording to a statement issued t" the members of the assia-iagon b John (I lloke secretary. I'omplaints -ire lieing COh' w tantl lodged with the .ifficers of the ,1 soflation, thai ship- inenls of sheep 10 Ihe -a-t and western points arrive aj theli destination short of the . nunt- ber orlginallv billed out, , , M. Gale & Son's Store Wessel s Old Stand CLOSED! Main & Court Streets To Re-arrange and Mark Down the Prices on 295 OVERCOATS; 400 MEN'S AND YOUTH'S SUITS; 12CC PAIRS MEN'S SHOES, AND HUNDREDS OF FUR NISHINGS. EVERYTHING IN, THE STORE INCLUDED IN THIS CLOSING OUT, QUITTING BUSINESS SALE. THIS IS OUR FINAL APPEAL TO YOU, PEOPLE. l8 - - . - A 1 ' nkJ : : w - A. HUTCHINSON IN CONTROL with Orders to Wipe Out this Stock in a Hurry! ARCHBOLD HIRES ARMED GUARDS MISS BOYLEN VISITS PARENTS AT THE ROCK l)r &pa Hi'; : H tt IVOIXt. WOMAN IS HOMK I'ltOM ! Kt'HtKH, (XTHICII NKs XOTICS Of I'M.OT Itot'K. Harbour returned to his home lu re Sunday Mr ilarbnur has be, n away on business (or a few weeks Mrs. Arrhle West was a visit. r il Pendleton Sund.i evrnlng. iSpeeiai Correspondence. 1 PILOT ROCK, "re, Dec, 1 Mist Vesta Hoylen. who Is attending school at Cheyenne, visited With ber parents here. Friday. Mr. and Mr Herbert Bo) ten, Mrs l.on Ktter spent Kriday il I'eiidleton doing sume shnpi'lng. Dr. nllllland Was railed to I 'k 111 'l Friday. Mrs. Qenrse Campbell ami ntothei Mrs. J. W. Ktter. ere visitors it Pendleton, Friday. Mr and Mrs. ;. A ftobbina visited Sunday evening at Pendleton Willi frlendi Mr and Mrs .1 W Rtter and Mrs. l.on Btttr spent Kunda) the Adams and Helix country, Mrs. Walter Smith was a visitor the county seal PriUsj Mr. Fanning returned to Ills In. In Portland Monday after visit here for a few days. (ieorge Johnston of Xye was town Saturday BOVS OI'TDO (Will. COOK- PORTLAND, 'ire.. Nov. 10. Clyde Peterson carried off the hsnors lit i ake-maklni! and Clifford Hurllnsaine is Ids, ult making at the school exhi bition held by the Falrvtew school A program was rendered In coitnc lion with the exhibit by the pupllf of the srhool Principal J II Lent?! loom mad. ., special enhibit of han diwork, the boys' work being mostlv woodwork and that of the girls eooklaft "'it ihe two hoys won out over Ihe Klrls in iake and biscuits Mr CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Alway.. beari the Signature of 1111111 II I IMMmillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllliiiiiiiiiHiiliMIIIIII'. Ve M&S JOHN . AR.CH&OCD Dec. TARRTTOWN, N, y., the first time In his life, Mr. John D. Archbold, Standard OH Magnate is now golnx with an armed Kuard, an I Kuarda surround his estate in tills community Since the discovery of a bomb Of four stlclus of dynamlt" and percussion catis ' planted In the private automobile nail leadlna from I'r For the house to the highway, overy pre caution is being taken The superintendent of Mr Arch" hold's estate discovered the Infer.ral machlpe and turned It over to Mrs. Artbbold. who kept It In the 'bouse until, under cover of darkness. It could be taken to, police bfavlOjUnl -ters. 1916 REOS Have Arrived j Entirely New Body Designs I On Display at Our Garage I i. London ss,fr Plan made miserable. Meveral prominent bONOON, Nov. .in. British and Iigllshmen also criticised Ihe plan Americans Joined In scoffing at H.n-' In unfaltering terms, saying thai ry Ford's peace ship plans Memlie e hen Kngland desires peace AmeMCn of the American cownj expressed n.n find out what Is minted and (heh fear lhal shouid the scheme tuaterlul- (lo It. hn srer) American business man in "I hope a flertttan suhmiirfiie Jet" 1: ir pe Rill be ridiculed and his life ihnr..'' wu- one man's comment. Pendleton Auto Company iHIIIUIIHIIIIIIIIHIHIHIIIIIIHHIIUIHIIItlllHIIIIIItillllliiiiiiii HIimillllHIIimill-Hfij