East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, January 03, 1916, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    r PAGE FOUB
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1916
EIGHT PAGES
mnrtpinut
Urn: Ik
in! rrea Aaajclatloo.
b ..ifice at I'endifton.
ir.mt, b .is . tid mail matter.
IIAI.K IN OTUKH CITIES
laajN-.iaj H.iei rrt stand. Portland,
oreaw,
hnraiic News Cm., Portland. Oregon
UN FILE AT
ilcaa- r.armii. WOU Se.urltT BuildUu:
Wasting.' l C . Bureau r)l. Four
Rtasita btrrei. N W.
SL'L.s RI1TIHX KATK8
(IN Al'VA.N't'Kl
itaitt, no yeai. ti ioa.ll
lailj. all monilih. by mail
Isailj, three iLontna. by mail
ilalljr. aoe mouth, hy mall
111, as year, ity carrier
U. three at.i.tua. by carrier
..o.oo
alleged weak and ineffective
! notes to Germany and to Aus
' txia on the central powers' sub
marine outrages. That's one
side.
I And the Germans and pro
! Germans in the country are as
j bitterly protesting the adminis
tration's policy and its acts as
insulting and abusive, as well
as coercive at a time that the
Teutonic countries cannot very
well hit back. That's the other
side.
Obviously, both assertions
cannot be true. And. as obvi
ously, this conflict of the ene-
to the humiliation of bestowing
their jewels upon the colonel
after his behavior in 1912.
A ROSY FUTURE
im mies of the president satisfies
1 g the average citizen that Mr.
7 :" Wilson's foreign policy is pret-
ty nearly correct. Boston
Post.
ool n.WKS ixMlV OX.
DON'T WORRY TOO MUCH
THE ROOSEVELT BOOM
Hut singln' of the sunshine an
good timea comln' on:
booked like all was over Jo
o' life withdrawn,
But still he heard the music of
rood times comln' on.
II
Hi knew there roust be shad
ow upon the hill and
plain;
Trmt roses In Ljfe's garden
would all thank God for
rain,
And in the rain descending he
srw a bleam of light:
Rain only nms the roses and
weave their red and
white!
III.
Shadows in the heavens, but
shadows pass away;
Morning is more than morning
that breaks through mists
of gray.
And Hfe to life is callln . even
when hope seems gone.
So, still we hear the music of
good times comln' on!
F. L Stanton.
HE most absorbing ques
tion in national politics
today is that pertaining
to the next republican candi
date for president. It is a
matter that is wholly in the air
at this time and the most recent
feature of the situation consists
in talk of Roosevelt as the re
publican nominee.
Discussing the rumor that
the Chicago convention next
summer may name Colonel
Theodore Roosevelt, the
Springfield Republican says:
"The professional forecast
ers are growing terribly rest
less because they cannot see
anything in the shape of a
candidate of the right latitude
and longitude coming down the
pike. A big man is needed but
where is he? Run over the
list of republicans usually
mentioned and the bottom
seems to drop out when each
name is called. It is not neces
sary to emphasize the fact that
titi f u u tf i the reallv big republicans, like
HILE the city officials Root are
W .absolutely right in whoUy unavailabie, and that
tiiiK Vh, v,m.uw smaUer candidates )00k
like one mouthful, at this date,
lor President Wilson. Justice
Hughes is not included in the
ist because of his positive re
fusal to run."
"We can merely record our
impression at this time con
cerning the significance of the
current Roosevelt talk. One
must assume the bankruptcy
of the republican party, in the
first place, if it must now nom
inate for president the man
. who so mightily sought to de-
cfi-Af if i r fit a loaf n a m r a i trn
F-I- an(J wh has n()t et even
lace serious dangers every- membership in the
hour of the day. W are all bHcan rt or vm the
constantly in line to be killed t . TunT hp
OiiglHVOl llivuiiuvn;ii mwv am
now regards his desperate
warfare on Mr. Taft and the
T a luncheon a few days
agio the Rotary Club of
Spokane received brief
reports from representative
business houses giving the
trend of business during the
past year and prospects for
1916. In every instance an im
provement was shown and
there was nothing but optimism i s
tor the future. What is true
of Spokane is proportionately
true of Pendleton. In fact the
situation here is relatively bet
ter than in the eastern Wash
ington metropolis. It is doubt
ful if another town in the
northwest has a rosier outlook
j than has this little city. It is
only necessary that there be a
continuance of earnest work
for the town's advancement
and that no heed be given the
knockers brigade! if such de
velops here
WAR S EFFECT UPON I
FRENCH STAGE TOLD 1
ry nRiMJTir. rpiTini
u i uiimiiniiu umnu -a
NOTE The following contribution from NEWSPAPEKDOM, acknowledged by all pub
lishers as being one of the leading master publishers' periodicals in the United States, comes
to us unsolicited and without any charge whatever. We were unaware of their interest in our
publication until the receipt of this generous eulogy. It will hardly be necessary for us to state
that we are greatly pleased by this recognition from a national critic of such importance. It
will be our constant aim to always measure up to the stand ant they have alloted to us as well
as give to our readers the best service within our power. East Oregonian Pub. Co.
1
MI l!l( .S SAID IX) BE
SPONSIBLE rYu DBCAD.
mm I N EUROPE!
HI -
has been selected as one of
Newspaperdom's Winning
Dailies"
(The Only Pendleton Newspaper So Honored)
to save Pendleton from a rab
ies epidemic it will be unwise
for people to worry too much
over the dangers of the situa- ,
si
HUB.
Hydrophobia is a dread dis
ease. When it develops it is
invariably fatal. Therefore it
is a sane precaution to have all
dogs muzzled for a few weeks
at least and to kill such can
ines as go about unmuzzled.
At the same time don't lay
awake nights conjuring up un
necessary' pern
by accidents or disease. Yet
we continue to "get by" to use
. i r , i. .. ,
a pnrase in tue siri. .o,,V,i;,or, fir-lrot a th. rnlns-
In all probability Pendleton r , I, r An.
will go through this rabies
scare without developing any
thing alarming, particularly if
the muzzling proclamation is
made to mean business, so
don't make yourself sick
thinking about the matter.
QUEER
sal mistake of his career. An
other impression is this, that
the capture of the republican
national convention for Mr.
Roosevelt next June would be
the signal for a second revolt
that would make Mr. Wilson's
election as sure as it was in
1912."
A more logical forecast at
that this time is that the republi
P HOSE newspapers
VJi are hostile to the presi- cans will nominate some "safe
dent of the United States and sane" candidate and an
are still declaiming about the ticipate defeat, preferring such
uilllllilitlillllHIIIIIIItlllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIilllllMIIIIIIIMIIIIIili:
Those NEW
Dollars the tatix- ihslaro pw ;,, SEr
flitted Pros ( rte-,n.lni AUci
Ote War French suiae Will Bo Up. I
jineiiateil nulgarlnn Stage Is Best B
In Europe.
BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS
(1 nlted Press Staff Correspondent.)
PARIS, Jan. 3 "What effect will
the war have on the theater?" I put
this miestion to M. Lugne Poe, one of
Europe's brightest dramatic lights,
playwright, actor and producer. Said
he:
"The most far-reaching imaginable.
Xo possible event could have a great
er or better Influence on the play
house than this war. The contem
poraneous French stage Is putrid, rot
ten, detestable and you Americars 1 ;
are largely responsible for making it j Hj
an, i asiiea mm now that was so.
"You did It with your dollars." thu . H
great author-actor-manager said. "Oil
course you didn't do it purposely. It
was simply your influence on ts I
Successful plays In the United States!
became mints and the authors who,
perpetrated them almost millionaires i
French authors were contaminated, i
They wrote "popular" stuff, or tried ,
to with an eye to possible future
adaptations for the American stage. S5I
Result? Rotten plays, plays with-1 aE
out the slightest artistic value. Mer:!E
w
I
-
REOS
are going fast
Come look them
over while we have
different
all the
models in
stock.
s
If you haven't seen
the new Reo
you have overlook
ed the swellest thing
in 191b motor cars
1 Pendleton Auto Company 1
mitlllHMtMIHIMIMIIinMIHIIIMMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIhltllllUlir
Junk, piffle. Do you know the coun
try i would like to see America and
other nations copy after? Bulgaria.
'Sounds paradoxical, but I mean it.
Were the I'nited States alone to cops
Bulgaria's attitude as regards the
stage, the world generally would be
better off. We'd get more classics
and less clap-trap. Bulgaria had a
strict renBorship on imported plays.
Plays which were merely sensatlona..
or appealed to the mob only because
of some rich and racy situation, were
pitilessly barred. Few French plays.
! admjr. outside the classics, got pas'
the Bulgarian frontier, and I heartily
approved the ban placed on their.
Bulgaria, being a small Country, nat
urally could not have any great Ift
fluence on the drama of the world,
but such a country as yours undoubt
edly would exercise enormous Influ
ence "
"And how will the war chanee
thing??" I wanted to know.
"Simply by blasting us tjut of ihe
rut Into which we had fallen Wo
had gotten so in the habit of wrltln
frivolous plays that we Just drifted
along too busy to think of a change.
For more than a year theatrical
France has ceased to exist. When
the war is over and the playhouses
reopen. I look for a new school of
playwrights, new Ideas and more se
rious plays. This will almost Inevit
ably be the case; one can not return
from the battlefront wliere he liven
j-ith Ieaih for weeks and months
and write the same petty drivel, one's
thoughts will run to higher, broader,
bigger, nobler things! Things which
to'K-h on civilization itself and made
the classics what they are."
"But won't playwrights drift back
5 into the old. before the war ways?" I
I j suggested.
"That has not been the history o'
slthe drama The new school will have
3 a success of Ms own Just as old
Si schools had theirs. Don't forget the:
5the entire world has done some serl
S,us thinking lately and if playwrights
S write bigger stuff arter tlie war per-
v,:,,H the public will be In a mood for
Silt. That being the case, the tempta
Sitlori to backslide simply will not ex
I
I PORTLAND HAS FIRST
I ARREST UNDER DRY LAW
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 1. The
first arrest In Portland for violation
Oj the state prohibition law was Ifladi
b polio- UMtOBaUM Harms and Pa
tratmOD Martin and Powell when thc
li.i.bd the Baton club. !H North Park
-irct, arrestitig J. II, Heed, a neifro,
the president, and seizin? as evidence
j p'n's of beer, some California hur
laTOItQy. orne gin ano a tioi ii- n
hlskv two-thirds full.
it-.-d is belter known sj "Ptrditv,"
r.d his place as "Blrdlfafr club.''
oirged- with having Ibpior In i
public resort. He was not caught
E feel sure that Pendleton advertisers will be interested m know
ing that the "Pendleton Eat Oregonian" has been selected as
one of Newspaperdom's "Winning Dailies" and that the selection
was made after studying the features which we believe entitled it to
this distinction. The following reasons formed the basis of our judg
ment in the matter:
FIRST We selected the "East Oregonian" a our "Win
ning Daily" in Pendleton because of the general ex
cellence of the "East Oregonian" in news and edi
torial make-up and efficiency.
SECOND Because it has the largest circulation, and be
cause it has a gilt-edged volume of advertising. Be
ing an evening newspaper in a field where an even
ing daily is widely demanded, its circulation must
necessarily represent the purchasing power of the
people of Pendleton, and the territory of which the
city is essentially the ready market place.
THIRD Because of the typographical appearance of
the advertisements and the care which is evidently
taken in the matter of make-up and position.
FOURTH Because of the carefully planned and main
tained circulation distribution facilities and continu
ous effort to have the "East Oregonian" placed in
the hands of its readers at the earliest possible mo
ment and yet carrying the latest and most import
ant news.
FIFTH Because the "Pendleton East Oregonian" is in
all intents and purposes a real "home" newspaper,
appealing directly not only to men but to the women
of the household, who do eighty per cent of the pur
chasing of family requirements.
SIXTH Because the "East Oregonian" is recognized by
men and women in all paths of life as the standard,
competent newspaper of its field.
Newspaperdom congratulates the management of the "Pendleton
.East Oregonian" upon the fact that the "East Oregonian" is justly en
titled to the honor we have given it of being one of Newspaperdom's
"Winning Dailies." Less than two hundred newspapers in the United
States have been given this classification, according to the acid test
applied before making our final decision.
I
Newspaperdom.
I If aaaaiiaiiiiailllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlUlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll .... '
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiim
selling any of it, but ntoxcants kept
In a public pbfee are prima facie evi
dence that the law is being violated
When the policemen appeared Itced
'jenied he had .any Uquof on ihe
premises. The beer was found in
baskets hidden beneath piles of pupet
Ujadoi the staircase, the whiskev In
an ash barrel in the back yard and
the other intoxicants In Hi ld'l pri
vate lo'ker.
The L?RlOn club has been a negr.
hangout for vears. Mam stabbing af
frays have occurred there and there
have been scores of arrests In It for
various violations of law.
Program for
Week at Local
Picture Shows
pled I
tnla-r
allotted U
Hon.
ne member of
of deputies is
of the popula-
Temple
Motafl; ami Tiir-wliir.
Martyrs -of the AIhioo
cngle. Keystone comedy
featuring Hale Hamilton
Melts and Miss Hums w
each performance
. -lo I.. TlwrHlHt
I in account Of the
Wm. Hart we will rut
fla vs.
Wm Kali in a .. re
m two reel Keystone
Hells ami Miss Murns change song
at each change of picture
sntunlat.
Pick of the Mutual program
Sunday.
Triangle program of seven reels.
helictimni IMsnuwri.
C7HICAGO, Jan I, Indictment?
against Jessie Cope were dismissed
Nn reasons were given.
MM.
VMM M NOT HIM l l.
G-reel Trl
two reei4
also HM
ami lYblm.
popularity
same ihtt
Triangle; al
omedy M!
Berlin ami Vienna Pftystcisna iii-tum
to Trai arm tinier,
LONDON, Jan ;i A Itetiter i'Is
patch from Athens, filed Kriclnv - i
Professor rrieiorich nrs us. of tierll (i.
and Professor Klsolberg of Vienna
who attended King CoaatantlM dw-
ItiK his illness last spring have re
touted to Athens to examine Ihe
operation perfoi med In June, whldt
has not healed. The wound Is gtylne
the king some trouble, although m
general condition Is good.
Iloorl River PVkta rrmr.
HOOD ItlVKIl. ore.. Jan 1 1,
i hards and berry fields of Hood flu -er
are frown lo a depth of from two
In four Inches, but no damage Bai
been reported since list berry roots
"ot I n lifted from the soil bv
; the "spewing" process that usually
aci nmpar, Ies a freeze.
The temperature of the piutl four
j days has ranged from Is lo .10 d
grces above zero.
T. It. on Ballots.
'.WHIM!, Mich.. Jan. J. It(.
011s Hearing enough signature to In
sure Koosevelt's name at the presi.
dentlsl primaries were filed.