East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, April 21, 1916, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    page Emm
DAILY EAST 0REG0N1AN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1916.
TEN PAGES
OREGON 9 DAYS STARTING
THEATRE J ONLY THURSDAY
mm
Seats Now Selling at Warrens Music Store
Mail and telegraph requests accompanied by check will be filled in order of their receipt. Patrons will aid us in accom
modating them by naming two dates if possible.
COST
$500,000
AID
Evening's at 8:15
50c, 75c, $1, $1.50, $2.
Note;
OWING TO OVERWHELMING DE
MAND NO TELEPHONE RESERVA
TIONS WILL BE MADE
Matinees at 2: 15
25c, 50c, 75c, $1.50
THE MOST
Tremendous
J
nnnutin Qnp.ntQr.lp. 1
lIUIIIUUU UJUUIUU!U
That the Brain of Man Has Yet Produced
D. W, GRIFFITH'S
O tk WONDER OF Q f k
O III THE WORLD O ill
1
Cities Built Up and Then Destroyed by Fire.
The Biggest Battle of the Civil War Re-enacted.
Ford's Theater, Washington, Reproduced to the Smallest
Detail of the Lincoln Tragedy.
A Series of Wild Rides That Commandeered a County for
a Day and Cost $10,000.
A Musical Score of Twenty-five Pieces Synchronized to
the Several Thousand Distinct and Individual Scenes.
Night Photography of Battle Scenes, Invented and Per
fected at a Cost of $12,000.
Wonderful Artillery Duels, in Which Real Shells, Cost
ing $80 Apiece, Were Used Miles of Trenches Thous
ands of Fighters War as it Actually Is.
3,000
HORSES
..dMb Hi WW I
mum
THE PLAYS MESSAGE OF PEACE
IF THIS GRAPHIC PRESENTMENT serves no other purpose, its message for universal peace mark, it of great importance. Morally and educationally it establishes the futility of armed conflict. A member
of the senate of the United States expressed the foregoing sentiment. "Anyone contemplating war should see this picture," added the Senator. "I sincerely believe it will do more to deter people from engag
mg n war than anything written or spoken on the subject m years." Great care has been taken not to glorify battle. Even the music stops in its motif of glorification to sound the note of terror and desola
twowhich is the real truth of war. Arm.es f seldom settle disputed questions of state. But where they accomplish this much, in the wake of conflict arise newer and more terrible questions. But for the
hatreds engendered in the civil war the suffering of the reconstruction period would never have been known.
NOTE: "THE BIRTH OF A NATION" WILL NEVER BE PRESENTED IN ANY BUT THE HIGHEST CLASS THEATERS AND AT PRICES CUSTOMARILY CHARGED IN SUCH PLAYHOUSES.
"THE BIRTH OF A NATION" Also Carrie Its Own Operators, Machines, Screen, all Effects and Symphony Orchestra of 25 Pieces.
-it. w. (iititmn
DAIRY EXCHANGE IS
TO HAVE
iE OF PRODUCT
MAJOIUTV Or' COOPEKATIVE
'KKAMKKIKS OF STATE WILL
.JOIN IN PLW
Surpsu BuUrr Product Will I' Handl
es! and Arrangement WiU be of
lrl lleneflt to Small Crea merle;
Kanebali League Opens the Season
u suiiiUj.
Kast Oregonian Special. )
UMAPINE, Ore.. April 20. Lou
Hodgrn left on Monday for Portland
as special representative of the Hud
aoa Bay Co-operative Creamery Co..
' at Hie meeting of the Oregon Cooper
stive I tain' Exchange held in that
this week The purpose of this
meeting is the completing of the ar
ganlxmtion, filling vacancies on the
board of directors, and deciding upon
l lsns for starting the work of the Ex
change. This organization when per
fected will handle the surplus butter
product of the majority of coopera
tive creameries of the state. This it
U believed will be of great benefit to
I the small creameries who now al
j times find it difficult to dispose o(
their surplus product.
The newly formed I'matilla county
: baseball league comprising the cities
i of Athena, Helix. Adams and Uma
pine opened the season at I'mapine
Sunday, the Helix aggregation being
: defeated by the local team 13 to 9.
I A good crowd was in attendance. The
home team will be known as the
) "Umapine Braves."
Orlando Hodgen this week disposed
I of his entire band of sheep comprising
ir.5 head to Henry Barrett or Athena
An average price jjtf $9.50 per head
was secured for tneWtir- bunch. Mr
Hodgen expects toAo to Prinevllle
next week where tp expects to pur.
chase more sheep.
Phil Murphy is Improving his resi
dence this week by building a kitoben.
and screened in porch near I'mapine.
Ray Gentry, E. Moore and W. E. Jfc
Daniels are the carpenters.
Mrs. E. Moore left on Sunday for
Nevada City, California, where she
will visit her sister Mrs. Murray who
was formerly Miss Tweedy of Milton.
Fred Comstock and family are vis
iting ar Dixie, Wash., this week.
Found Simple Remedy
That Relieved Child
MII.B IiAXATIVK COMPOUND OOlt
IUKTTR STI BHOItN CASE OF
ooNsrriPATioN
An important duty mat devolves or.
parents Is the regulation of the'r
hildren's bowels Health in later life
depends In large measure on early
raining and a child should be taught I
from Infancy to regular habits.
When from any cause the bowels
become congested with stomach waste,
a mild laxative should be employed I
to open up the passage gently and,
carry off the congested mass A moat
effective remedy for this purpose i'
the combination of simple laxative:
herbs known as Dr Caldwell's j-'yrEp'
Pepsin Mrs. W. D. Bulls, of need,'
okhu. used Dr Caldwell's Syrup Pep I
sin for her baby boy, Harley Dunn;
Hullas, and says "It did bin more
good than anything we lime given
him. His bowels are very stubborn
boat acting, but they act easily even
time I give him Dr Caldwell I
RnfntsV
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin con
tains no opiate or narcotic drug and
I a splendid remedy for children and
oMer people jb well 11 has been on
a si
IIAKLEY WHEN BCIJR.
the market for more than twenty-flvH
year and Is the family standby in
thousand of home ' Druggists ev
erywhere sell It for fifty cent a bot
tle A trial bottle, free of charge
can be obtained by writing to Dr. W
B. Caldwell, 454 Washington St. Mon
tlcello, III.
Leslie Minton of Corvallis, Oregon
is working on the C. E. Simonds
ranch west of L'mapifie.
Guy Young is getting ready for his
hay harvest by building a new swing
ing pole derrick.
Preparations are tinder way for the
second annual track meet April 21st
at I'mapine. Milton. Freewater. Fern
dale, Tumalum, Fruitvale and Vincent
schools will be represented.
The Vincent high school annual has
gone to press and from the copy pre
pared will be a most interesting publi
cation as historical events and photos
of this section will be features.
Roy Ward has accepted a position
with the Hudson Bay Co-operatice
Creamery Co. as helper. He expects
to learn the butter making business.
"The Runaway Match" a lllevly
farce was presented Friday and Satur
day night at the Grange Hall, Uma
pine. to a crowded house. The play
was well presented and greatly enjoy.
ti by pleased audiences.
Mrs. B. F. Harper of Milton spent
Friday evening with her daughter.
Miss Edith, primary teacher in the
Umapine schools, and also enjoyed the
'"Runaway Match" in which her dau
ghter was one of the principal characters.
TORTURE CAGE OF N. Y. STATE CONVICTS
Hock-PHtlng Is Charged.
BAKER, Ore., April 19. Because
he shipped 4000 pounds of sheep
skins by parcel post from the Fox
postofflce he was pelted with rocks
by Gun Dorun, a stagedrlver, was
the charge made by Abe Jackson of
Baker, in a telephone message to this
city.
Jackson said that he was uninjured
but would take the matter up with the
(rant county court at once. He de
clared that he was riding between
Fox and John Day this morning and
met Dorun, who was Incensed over
the shipment of the hides, that an ar.
gument followed and ended with the
driver throwing the rocks at him.
Berlin Hears of Revolt.
BERLIN, April 19. (By wireless
to Sayville, N. T.) The Overseas
-News Agency says that according to
wireless report from Badajos, Spain,
several Portuguese provinces are In
open revolt.
It Is asserted that a mutiny broke
out among the Lisbon Guards in the
Carmo barracks and that marines
were sent to suppress the mutineers.
'jrr '., . ....... ...
J. D. Fnrrell, president of the Oregon-Washington
Railroad & Naviga
tion Company und owner of a large
dairy near Seattle, employed Cllne na
Private cashier and dairy manager.
Mr. Kurrell has placed experts at worlt
on the dairy's books.
Thomas M. Osborne In Iron Head Cage.
Here Is Thomas M. Osborne, former
warden of Sing Sing prison, In the
r.ld time head cage, which refractory
prisoners in New York Jails used to
wear. It was, In fact, worn as re
cently as eighteen years ago. He
ft und it In the cellar of Auburn
prison, one of the New York State
prisons. Mr. Osborne, one of the
foremost prison reformers, found
other means of torture, none quite
"equal to this, when he went to Sing
Sing. He abolished them.
Training Bill Is Passed.
ALBANY, N Y., April 19. The
senate considered out of Its regular
order and passed, by a vote of 41 to 1.
the Walsh-Slater bill to provide for
general miliary and physical training
for boys between the ages of 16 and
IS.
This action was taken after Oover
! nor Whitman had sent a special mes
sage urging preparedness legislation.
SIOO.000 llfoited Taken.
SEATTLE, Wash., April It. t
peri accountants wno nave neen
working on the books of Oliver H.
Cllne, missing cashier of the Pacific
Coast Company, lay they have found
a shortage of more than 1100,000.
Circulars were sent throughout the
t'r.lted States offering 11000 reward
for ('line's arrest. Cllne and his wife
left Seattle March 11, went to Port
land the next day, and were subse
quently traced to Salt take City,
v. here the trail was lost. The experts
believe the taking of money begau In
1901. ,
m ri m sv Ta m .
Mi MM - BW
w ar . rr . v -v-. mi
Send
for
By Mrs Janet
MenzieHill
lis FREE
Our instructions to the famous editor of the Boston Cooking School
Magazine were: "Get up a book of recipe of the things people like best
Find the belt Way to make and bake each one. Then write it out so plainly
that even an inexperienced housewife can't have a failure."
"The Cook's Book" was the result. Some of the 90 recipes were origi
nated, many of them were improved upon, and all were personally tested by
this best known authority on cooking in America, and she (ens so clearly how
she made everything that one cannot go astray.
While some of the cakes and pastry are elaborate enough for any occasion,
the recipes are all thoroughly practical and call for no expensive and unusual
ingredients. In addition to telling how to make them, the book is beautifully
illustrated in colors showing how to arrange and serve the dishes appetizngry.
More than half a million of "The Cook's Book" are now in use in Amer
ican households. Yet the demand is constantly increasing. Many send fot
two or three at a time to give to friends or young house
keepers. Don't depend on borrowing one from a
neiohhnr have one rJt vmir own ikSLJff -CStm
How to Get "The Cooks Book"
In every 25c ai ol K C Biking Powder it packed a
colored certificate. Send us oh of thee cerrinratei (parte
it on a poitsl cird if you like) with your name and ad
dreii plainly written, and "The Cook's Book" will be
nailed free of charge. Only one book foe each certificate.
Adtinut Jaques Mfg. Company, Chicago
UIIrtfu
N000I ES, CHOP SUEY, CHINA DISHES I
! riOFY'S KWONG HONG LOW I
S WaW VsF 116 Wast Alia St., Upstairs. Phone 431
SnHMllMttMtsit-:ilMIIHIIIIIIIIinHltllllllllllllltlllllHIIHIlllHllltgl