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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1916)
PAGE FOUR 4reOB, l elcidiei :en ltol I'ldoago I Washlnj treat a ire liady. oae year Dallj. all BOA' lallj, three Bl lluilf, one nnm 1X11). one rear . ii moat llallr. Ure tu. llalhr. one inoni l.M .50 ui- i:ll,t CRKBB. L There n. a Ni. trroi Know the plan Man's dr Then, chei reed hut that of except your own; in earth'! archaic .. was not known l Life for what it Naught with her gifts com- pare. Yet strive to make Its largess sweet, As through the days you fare. 11. Whate er the world may hold for you, Of beauteous sheen, or shade. Of bloom or blight, of good or ill. Proclaims what you have made. The kindly grace, the human weal. Their ministries shall give: But. know that Life will mold the things On which itself must live. 111. Whate'er shall prompt to gen- erous mood, Expressed in helpful deed; Whate'er may cheer a stricken soul, Translates itself in creed. Then. Good as flower of wor- thy acts. Shall sweetest solace bring. And plant itself in human wants As Life's best offering. O. D. tlorman. Atlanta. ........... BRANDEIS ONE OF THE NEW SCHOOL 3N the appointment of Louis D. Brandeis to the vacan cy on the supreme court President Wilson took a long step towards the liberalization of the high tribunal and at the same time he surprised some people who were cocksure he was going to appoint a south ern democrat to the place. Brandeis is a resident ofj Massachusetts and he is notj known as either a democrat or j a republican but as an expon-i ent of doctrines the standpat-j ters generally call socialistic. He is one of the clearest think-j era in the country and severa' years ago he made a masterly and unanswerable explanation; of the evils of trust formation j activities such as this country j witnessed some years ago and! A Refreshing Cup at Any Time ROYAL CLUB Super Quality Coffee There la no better coffee at any art, . There cannot be becauae Keyal Club Is made from the fin aonaea thai money can our It Is carefully blended, men "neutralised" for a whole year before It la roasted, out and parked for sale Ob. yea there re coffees sold at a higher price but none of better quality er better flavor and there's this In Ua favor Koyal riub la roasted fraab daily i" Portland. It's wall worth trying. -Ik. lla lib. lla II i B-lb. Ua fl.TS LANG & CO. Ike -alayal l.lk" (rlle.S Or. the results of which are still I with us. If Wall street had been ask - led tn suggest a man for the su- jpreme court appointment Rboat the last man they would have chosen out of 100,000,- 000 would have been Louis D. Brandeis, The appointment , has probably caused some of .those gentlemen to suffer from i frost bite. Progressive thinkers, how i ever, will welcome the selec tion of a man like Brandeis. I He is of the new type and is t the very sort of man the su 'preme court needs. The court 1 is overloaded with ex-corpor-ation lawyers and carefully j selected representatives of the theory that the rights of pro I petty are more sacred than the j rights of man. The appointment of Bran deis will make a better bal- I anced supreme court. PROHIBITION TO THE NORTH VVJlTH Alberto now in the dry column along with the states of Washing ton. Oregon and Idaho a thirs ty traveller going north would have to proceed ,a "long, long way" before he could find ,i licensed saloon. Unless there are resorts of which the world is uninformed in the Arctic cir cle there is nothing doing this side the north pole. On the other side the Czar has exiled John Barleycorn from the Russian domain, so there is lit tle to lure the booze searching tourist in that direction. Not only that but there is an active move on in Canada to have the whole dominion plac ed under prohibition during the war and for a period of three years following the close of the same. Some very prom inent Canadians have appeal ed to parliament to enact a measure of this sort and they may be successful. At any rate our dry states; seem in little danger of con-j tamination from the region ! northward. THE GLORY OF WAR m HERE is news to the ef feet that France is in ur gent need of agricultur al implements and must de pend upon the United States for a supply. What they want is implements for use by wom en and children, the men being all at the front. It is in the invaded sections of northern France that these implements are most needed. This fact is emphasized in a recent communication from the American Relief Clearing House in Paris which keeps closely in touch with the con ditions and needs in France through the medium of per sonal investigation. This com munication, in part, is as fol lows : "You must picture to your self a country which is abso lutely destitute of everything, except the land. The enemy, in their retreat from the coun- DAILY EAST 0 REG ONI AN, PENDLETON, 'tries and territories which they invaded, carried away withj ; them every piece of metal, tak-i injr. even the iron shares." I The fact is then stressed, that it is the women and chil- dren upon whom the labor of tilling the soil has fallen, and that they must be equiped with tools. An appeal is made for funds with which to purchase and supply them the following agricultural implements: 50 ploughs, 50 harrows. 50! disc ploughs, 50 weeders, 25! seeding machines, 25 1-horsoi reapers, 25 horse rakes, 10 2 wheel farm wagons, 25 ted-1 tiers, 200 churns. 200 separa tors, 1,000 shovels, 1,000. spades, 1.000 scythes, 1,000 syckles, 100 root cutters, 100 winnowers. What a beautiful picture of the glory of war! A land laid destitute, the men being con verted into cripples or corpses, the women working the fields and forced to beg for help in order to obtain the implements with which to make oxen of themselves. It is something for our jin goes to think about. FROM THE PEOPLE TIHISK CALUXntMA I!l)lS. Sherman, Cal.. Jan. 24. 1916. Editor East Orvgonlan; After reading an issue in your paper re garding the Los Angeles county floods T wish to criticize that portion Of the statement regarding the Wolshire I oulevard being washed out. There is no doubt in my mind but what you have published the news just us it was given to you. Nevertheless it is an error. Just two clays ago I drove over every foot of this boulevard from the heart of the city of Los Angeles to the sea. and there is not one foot of it washed out. What I mean to say is the macadam part of the boule vard; but in many places off of the macadam along side it is washed nut very deep and wide. In some placet as much as 20 feet deep. I wish to say further regarding the statement as tn the southern California good loads being destroyed I have travel-, ed over a great deal of the countrj where the flood waters dealt its worst blow, and I found no part of the boulevard gone except where the bridges are washed out. Now I will try to explain the meaning tn the roads being washed out. in this country the average highways are 60 feet wide with a macadam average of 22 feet wide in center. It is that por tion of the highway from the maca dam edge to the outer highway Hue which is so badly washed away. I wish to make this statement in the most friendly manner toward the East Oregonlan, and if any of the Pendleton people wish to come this way don't stand back on account of the roads being gone for they are all here. As you know this state has not yet been entered on the map as a dr one it takes careful driving among the wet. But we are greatly in hopes after the fall election she will plac ed on the dry may by an indisput able majority. If I had the time I would write yotl an item on the construction of oil macadam road which I may do biter. I beg to remain your's in a most friendly way. A T. MATTHEWS. chines- Rebels Defeated. EKIN, Jan. 29. Three th.ouaa.nd I Kk al troops from the province of ang SI have entered Qunnan Prov e and defeated a force of 1000 olutionists there, capturing the ' of Loping. The government is hing troops to Luchow, Sze Ohetin ivince, where fighting is reported be In progress. inc rev eft: rui pre to DOROTHY GI8H ANO FRANK CAMPEAU IN "JORDAN IS A HARD ROAD, ' T TIIK TKMH.I -t IM Wll MoNllAV OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 1916. J. ; MT . .KaWaasaBaaM BKNm. -,BBBBBa -M ? aaSeaHaaBBaSa - wfaaKn9a7-49BBaYJaVBWa1aHftn Oft ?xpm.. 'mi- H ' . v . Frank Daniels .In the v. I.. 9. K., Big The Key to tlly Le Hoy Kenneth in the Febru ary Number of Popular Mechanics Magazine.) The succes or the failure of tru) "Minto," the ice crusher Canada has sent to clear the. way at Archangel, means victory or disaster to the Itus sian army. Uussia is dependent on the outside world for her military supplies, Her Baltic ports are closed bj the tier man navy. Her Black Sea ports can only be reached through the Dardan elles, and the allies have tailed to force that passage. Supplies, through Vladivostok must cross Siberia on a railroad lacking in rolling stock, and not completely double tracked. Arch angel is her only remaining door to the w that d old. The pen Mi pping Last wint breaker, thf new with "Lintri Bus.. 'Karl be "New Bruce" and the from Newfoundland, and 'Me.rrimac" all ice break trie. to make Archangel a winter port.! And laat w inter the Qaliclan campaign j of the Bussian army astonished the world until its ammunition gave! out; then it was forced to retreat and! its defeat became nearly a disaster. I t ne lallure ot the Bussian army t hold the territory It won was the di reot result of the failure of the le fleet at Archangel. When Bussia realized the able louia not succeed at Dardanelles, snei placed immense orders for rails and lolling stock in this country; but the slide in our own Panama canal held the boats carrying the equipment in the Atlantic and forced them to choose between making the long trip around Africa or braving the sub marines in the Mediterranean. The delay allowed the early Siberian win ter to set in. Vladivostok is crowd ed with supplies, and the railroad service to Europe is still Inadequate. Russia must beat the ice at Arch angel or face another monition fam ine. Jack Frost has always been pictured as her ally, but now he Is fighting (di the other side. He Is trying to sea up Russia's only door. The "Minto" is keeping the door op en. The "Kyle," the "Bellaventure," the "Bonaventure," the "Blothlc," and the "Misconoplc have been added to the fleet that failed last winter; they are all ice breakers; but the "Minto" is not an ice breaker; it Is an Ice ( lusher. The ice breakers have sbarp prows that cleave through the Ice, a principle that works rapidly and well until the ice grows thicker than the draft of the ship, then the Ice break er is helpless. The "Minto" has no keel forward of midship; instead, Its bottom slants away abruptly at the water line. In the water It looks like a tramp down v ' l. feature, ustlme Sunday-Moutla Russia's Door at the stern; but its bow and bottom are heavily plaited, and its hull re inforced When it rams an ice field at full speed it climbs onto the flow until its weight crushes through. In the shallow waters of the St Lawrence Quit, where the fresh-wa-j tor Ice from the river sometimes' banks until It rests on the bottom, i the ice breaker Is more useful ,butl m the Hudson Bay and the arctic I the Ice crusher is still king. The White Sea Is deep at Archangel. The "Minto" is a willing boat, and bravo, and the late of Husslu depend! on Jgh forty miles of heavy ice t must keep a channel Night I y the Ice breakers nslMkl th the I and course up near arctic circle. When j they meet the icy they cannot cut, the wireless calls the blunt -nosed "Minto." it bucks a lead through, and Russia's door to the world Is kept open. ote Is for H-llour Day, ' H1CAOO, Jan. 29. Returns from the vote being taken among the 400.-j dot) employes of the 52s railroads Ini ti e United States, which will be com Oltte March 1. Indicate that morel than 90 per cent of the men will de mand an eight-hour uay and time and a half for overtime in he freight' i d yard service. This statement was mad' by excu ihe officials of the unions. I PjllillllllilM uiiiiiiiiimiiimiimiiiiiiimiiiiii iiiiiiiiiimimiimimtiHiiiimiiimmimnmiig From Whatever Angle You Approach the Subject I The Franklin I IS THE CAR YOU WANT Safe and Sane Light. Economical Easy Riding Easy to Drive Easy on Tires ' The freedom from freezing troubles is most important right now, and the freedom from overheating troubles will be just as important next summer when the theimometer reaches in I 100 the shade. Pendleton Auto Company j fluniHIMIMIHIHIMIMUHHIIIIHtlllllllllMIHIIIHtlllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIililllillll: MONKS BATTLING TO WIN MONASTERIES LONDON, Jan. II. A dispatch to the Times from Bucharest says: "The war has invaded the peaceful seclusion of Mount Athos, where Bul garian monks from the monastery ol Zographn endeavored to oust thelt brother Serbians from the neighbor ing monastery of Ohiliandari. The at tack failed, owing to the defenses ol the Serbian monastery, whereupon the Bulgarians set fire to a portion ol the structure. All the monasteries on the holy mountains were fortified In the middle ages to resist pirates." Athos Mountain Is on the afljtarn most of the three Macedonian penin sulas projecting into the Aegean Sea southeast of Salonlkl. The height rises 6350 feet and Is remarkable for the beauty of the scenery. Numerous monasteries are built on it, many of them (biting hack to the Uth cen tury imii.lt lire-men Inland. DETROIT, Mich., Jan. I'H. Tw firemen were Injured, one fatally. In a fire which partially destroyed the Merchandising Merchandising is divided into two parts merchandise and ser vice. Merchandise is inanimate, ser vice is animate, personal. Service deals with the human factor. Advertising letting the public know what you have, is part of service. And swinging merchandise displays in time with public des ire is another service. Such a service is preformed when the storekeeper stocks up the manufacturer's newspaper advertising of his brands when he shows the goods in his windows and on his counters at the time the adver tising is running. EIGHT PAGES I plant of the Detroit Auto Specialties company here. The Monarch Foun dry company's plant was also damat ((1. Loss is estimated at $ru,nn'i The First Principle of Good Health One great medlcnl tlmrl ularea that sluggish bowels are the cauaa nf more limn half thr Ilia that afflict mankind. A constipated con dition quickly affectl the liver and other organs, so that Indigestion And constipation are soon followed by bil iousness, headaches, chronic bad breath and a generally dlBarrang-d condition ut tha mtgflL Foler Ca'bartit Tablets am no Ideal physic, tor their action la Whole sume and thoroughly cleansing, with out griping, nausea or Inconvenience They Invigorate and strengthen the bowel action a,d have a good effect on the stomach and liver. L. L. I.evcy, Green Bay. Wis . writes: "For a long time 1 auffored from roDstipation and Irfef Iron bis. Nothing seemed to help me. I flnallv teemed Foley Cathni ttc Tablet an I am pleased to state they have cured me. They are the finest cathartic to take T have ever Med and their elect la quick and sure." Sold Everywhere.