PAGE FOUR A N JMH I'l.M'I.NT M.M SI'AI AUT OKI ffiilal . ..msi I'aprr brr I ullrd itnm Aa, latins. num at lb puatoffW at l'mdletoa. -aaroa. aa aevond-rlaaa aaail natter. MM CN KALE IN OTHKR ' lilKS I Maui Sfi stand. Portland. Bcwmaa Nawa Co . Iirllad. Orrfoo ON FILE AT fkh-ac Rorram. HOC Security ButldlBg. Waanlntin l IV. Bureau 501. I our Mtb irat, N. W. IfMCMHIOM RATES. (IN ADVANCE! Dally, otif rear, by Mil IS.00 1X11). all nuBtna. ny null J .'hi llly. three muntha. bj nail 1.25 llli aoe .mill by mall Ml KaJljr, ear year, by carrier saltj. sli month, by car; i.t . . .. telly, au month, by carrier Metal Weekly, aae year, by mall tleml Weekly, all moatha. by mall ... tleaal Weekly, (our month, b mall., telly, tkree aioutha. ay carrier .75 .80 1.95 KA1IB l l SPRINGTIME. Same old prinirtime. same old music. Same old luring call and wish Of the antic fields of clover And to loaf somewhere and fish Sam old vtalon of the river. Same old dreaming, dreaming over Boyhoods down in far-off places, and the sunburned, freck led faces And. oh. that same old spring time, still a gift of gold en graces! Same old springtime with its message Of the wood and of the vale; Same old Ideas of adventures. Colts to break and boats to sail. Same old cherry blossoms growing. Same old apple bloom and peach. Same old golden music flowing Same old robin's nest to reach; Sam old springtime, yes. for. ever. In the heart of dreams and light. But as sweet, as sweet forever through the years that take their flight. Selected. M'ADOO'S IMMUNITY ECRETARY of the Treas ury McAdoo has acquir ed the reputation of be ing a very courageous secre tary. He manifested that cour age in striking ways on several different occasions with bene fit to the country. He was one of the prime workers for the new banking law and he is the secretary who invented the idea that there should be no money stringency at crop mov ing time and he had a plan whereby he brought results, with particular profit to the producers of the country. As secretary McAdoo has been immune to criticism from Wall street sources. The secretary has just been in South America with the Am erican International High Commission and at Callao, Pe ru, the party was confronted with a city under quarantine for the bubonic plague. Natur ally it was not an auspicious place to stop at but the plague did not scare McAdoo away. Though other members of the party remained aboard ship I NO wise man would carry a gun which would hesitate about going off when you pulled the trigger. You've got to be able to depend on a gun. With cigars when you put your hand in your pocket, you want to draw out one you're sure of. We've been trying to tell you that you can depend on the mellow ness and uniform flavor of the OWL. Will you do us the favor of testing the OWL ? Suppose you invest that nickel today ! THE MILLION DOLLAR CIGAR MA.GUN8TiA.CO. INCORPORATED V the secretary landed, held a confab with officials and thus paid a visit of courtesy to the republic of Peru. Evidently no harm came from the stop at Callao and it may be presumed the treasury head is as immune to the bu bonic plague as to the shafts directed at him by critics in i this country. THEIR GOOD SENSE DER TEST UN- AVING sent a large num ber of soldiers into Mex ico to capture Villa or disperse his bands it is logical action for the United States T.5o i government to keep those men south of the border until as i so sured the task is completed. It is unreasonable for the Carranza government to insist upon withdrawal until peace has been restored under such conditions as to insure a per manent end of the trouble. In the conference with Obregon the American officers have refused to discuss the subject of withdrawal. It has been the right attitude and it fhould win. However, there are difficulties involved. There is danger our interventionists may adroitly stir up anti-American sentiment in Mexico, so as to produce a break and bring about complete interven tion. The intelligence of the Mex ican government is going to be put to the test. Yet the or deal will not be more severe than was the situation for Car ranza when American soldiers crossed the Kio Grande in search of Villa. The fact the Carranzistas had enough sense at that time to recognize the justice of our position and our good intentions augurs for a sane solution of the present problem. WHAT IS A HUSBAND WORTH? 3 T is ouite evident, accord ing to a St. Louis newspa per, that some standard is needed for the appraisal of husbands. As it is now, they lnge in value all the way from priceless to worthless, and when an honest attempt is made to put a price on one of them there is no standard. Take the case of Husband Singleton of St. Louis county. Wife Singleton had him a while end then he was missing. She accused her mother-in-law of taking him and brought suit for the value of him which was according to her inventory, S20,000. The case was tried. Husband Singleton was not there but the jurors, in view of the fact that letters read in evidence disclosed that part of the time instead of being ar. asset he was a positive liability, fixed his value at one-fourth the wife's estimate. And the judge would not let even that valuation stand. It was too much, he said, and granted a new trial. At the second trial before another judge, the jurors were " DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. widely at variance as to his value. One said $15,000, an other said $12,000, five others said $10,000 and the rest were scattering. They finally com promised on $7500. This judge thinks Husband Single ton is worth $6000 and not a cent more. He has told the wife that if she will take $6000 for him he will approve the deal and has given her a week to decide. Prom all of which it is ap parent that the present method of appraising husbands is not at all scientific or even satis factory. CITING GRANT COLONELROOSEVELT in a veiled but no less pointed attack on the president of the United States than as if he had used names, told a New York audience the other night "General Grant never said anything he did not mean," and that he had set an example which it would be well for all Americans to follow, "especially in matters of inter national relations." The colonel is correct. Bui does he just now recall that Grant stood more than 200 in cursions into United States territory by Mexicans without making war on Mexico, and that the Virginus case, which involved the shooting against a wall of a score of American citizens by Spain, he settled by diplomatic proceeding which took over a year? When any public talker holds up Grant as a fire-eating, hair-trigger arbiter of foreign relations, he ought to know what Grant really did. Bos ton Post. TEMZOND. The oity of Treblionil, according to a Statement given out oy the National Geographic Society, is by far the most important Turkish port on the Black sea It is situated on the southern shore of that sea, about 560 miles east of Its outlet through the Bosporus. It lies only about one hundred miles west of the international boundary bu tween liussia in Asia and Turkey in Asia. It has always been the gateway of the overland trade passing between central Asia and Persia and Europe. The fortified city of Erzerum, which recently .surrendered to the Russians, was one of the stations on this inter continental highway. The city has no direct communica tion with Asia Minor proper, except by sea, because it is thoroughly hem med In on its western and southwest ern sides by a watershed so steep and forbidding that not a single river is able to break through and thus reach the Black sea. Trebizond got its name from the sit uation. It originally was called Trap ezus, or Tableland. The older part of Trebizond is slill inclosed within a wall built by the Byzantines, but the newer part, which is the Christian quarter, is outside of the walls The harbor is not a good one. the entrame being so filled with slit de posited by the cross currents of th" Blac k set as to shut out any but light draft vessels. The road from this Turkish Black sea port of Erzerum is a very difficult one. It heretofore has been too much broken to admit of the transit of wheeled vehicles. In peace times long caravans of camels followed the trail between the port and the fortress, but in recent years the railroad from Ba tum to Tiflls proved n formidable ri val for the camel, ana the "ship at the desert" Is slowly giving way before the "Iron horse." kKKMAXSHAH. "According to a statement by the National Geographic Society In Its work of following the geography ot the European war, the Russians whe are sweeping through Persia tow.inl Mesopotamia are now virtually at a Junction with the English on the Ti gris at Kut el-Amara. Reports that the city of Kermanshah was taken ;ire confirmed, and from that place It is only about one hundred and twenty -five miles to the Tigris river, at a point about halfway between Bagdad anil Kut. "The Kermanshah district Is an im portant one, and offers' a compara tively easy route Into Mesopotamia The main highway between Teher.in and Bagdad passes directly through it. Bagdad being only two hundreil and twenty miles by inruvan route from the city of Kermanshah "In former times this town whs d" fended by fortifications, the walls be Ing three miles In circuit, but todav the walls are in ruin and rubbish has substituted water In its moat. The town ha u population or about 40, 000, which Is about one-tenth of the total population of the province "The plains of the provinces are well watered and are fertile, while the highlands are covered with rich pastures whl-h support large flocks of sheep and goats. "How Important the highway be tween Bagdad and Te:ieran, passing through Kermanshah, has been in t he past Is shown by tne fact that the caravans traveling between the two' CURRENT THINKING OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1916. MADE RECORD FLIGHT l ieutenant Edgar s. Gorrell. Lieutenants Edgar S. Gorrell and Herbert A. Dargue, now with General Pershing's troops In Mexico, made a record flight the other day when they went from San Antonio In rhlhiiahim to Columbia. N. M , a distant ot more than 360 miles in less than four hours. Thev made a alneU tnn th at Casas Grandea, where they heard reports that Villa had died of his wounds. rnnltnla DtinnilU on S .... 1 (wnaanaai ounuu 1 11 i atTU gUUUB V ' I I rj approximately $4,000,000.' THIS MA Y ENTERTAIN a r,o; CHASE. Necessity is the mother of Inven. tion, and the hunKry Frenchman told about In a biography recently pub lished in Kngland illustrates the old adage anew. He was In an English restaurant and wanted eggs for breakfast, but hud forgotten the F:nglish word. So he gut around the difficulty in the following way: "Vaiterre, vat is dat valking In the yard ?" "A rooster sir." "Ah! and vat you call de rooster's vlfe?" "The hen. sir." "And vat ymi call de children of de rooster and his wife." "t'hickens. sir." "But vat you call de chicken be fore deyare chicken " "Egss. sir." "Bring me two." A srGGKSTIOX. A politician who was seekint; tin vdtes of a. certain community in Oho to ,hp end that he might be sent to congress thought It worth while to Cream Cake Inquiries among a Urge number of women using "The Cook's Book" showed this to be their favorite cake recipe. It is easy to make, certain to turn out well if K C Bak ing Powder is used, and may be put to gether with almost any filling or icing. K C Cream Cake By Mn. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine. One-half cup butter; 1 cup tugar; yolk of 2 eggs, beaten light; 1 cup eifted flour; S level teatpoonfuU K C Baking Powder; cup cold water; white of 2 eggt, beaten dry. Cream the butterj add the sugar, yolks of eggs and water; then the flour, 'sifted three timet with the baking powder; lastly tne whites ot eggs, mxe in two or three layers; put these together with cream filling, and dredge the top with confectioner's sugar. Cream Filling One-fourth cup lifted flour; feo ipoonfid tali; 1 cup hot milk; 1 egg, beaten light; ) cup tugar; 1 teaipoonful vanilla extract; J ounce chocolate. Mix flour and salt with a very little cold milk; stir into the hot milk and cook ten minutes; add the chocolate and stir until it is melted and evenly blended with the flour mixture, then beat in the egg mixed with the sugar, and lastly the vanilla. 1 You need the K C Cook's Book, contain ing this and 19 other delicious recipes sent fra upon receipt of the colored certificate Hacked in even 25-cent can of K C Bakiiur Powder Send to th Jibuti Mfg. Co., j vmvagu. SB 1 I IN THIS AEROPLANE aaWaWaiaaBaeamaV-9 H IJeutenant Herbert A. Darfruo. Lieutenant Dargue said, "There seems to be no doubt that Villa was wounded; conversations with natives and with physicians having convinced me that he was shot through both legs and one of them being broken by a bullet, while another shot lodged In his stomach. A man In that condi tion without medical attention could scarcely live long." Make mention of his humble origin and early struggles. , "I got a start in life by serving In n grocery store at S3 a week, and yet I have managed to save," he an nounced. Whereupon a voice from the audi ence queried: "Was that liefore the Invention of cash registers?" SCWTliV. "The setting for this scene alone," mid the manager to the critic, who v.as watering the dress rehearsal of a new musical comedy, "cose me 110, 000." "I see." said the critic. "That's why you had to economize on the cos tumes." ON THE SAFE SIDE. Jones and his wife were seated at the dining room table perusing the evening paper when the doorbell rang. Jones arose to answer it, when his wife said "I.et me hide those umbrellas be. fore you let them In." "Why. do you think somebody will steal them?" asked Jones. "No." replied his wife. "Someone might reeoflllM them." The mockingbird of the south in sometimes encountered as far north as the Potomac. "Get your fire insurance policy?'' "Yes, in the Hartford, as you advise." "Now I suppose you'll never think about fire again." "Why should I?" "Do you want to have a fire ?" "I should say not ! " "Well, do you know what the Hartford does to help you prevent fires?" "The agent started to say something about that, but 1 was in hurry and" "You'd better go back and hear what he has to say. It's worth listening to. The Hartford is making a campaign for fire prevention. Their experts will investigate any propo sition a Hartford policy-holder puts up to them and advise the best means of fire prevention." "Well, I want to know about that I" If you want to know more about it, we are the Hartford Agents here and can tell you. The Hartford Fire Insurance Company Writ or Telephone 8cc Me BEFORE the lire. Write or Telephone CHAD. K. HEAKD, Inc., (36 Main Street, i'hone 477. Pendleton, Ore. Which Do You Prefer? It is important for reasons of health and practical economy for every housekeeper to ask herself this question: "Do I prefer a pure baking powder like Royal, made of cream of tartar derived from grapes, or am I willing to use a baking powder made of alum or phosphate, both derived from mineral sources?" The names of the ingredients printed on the label show whether the kind you are now using or any brand, new or old, that may be offered is a genuine cream of tartar powder, or merely a phosphate or alum compound. Royai Baking Powder contains no alum nor phosphate. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. New York NEW DRIVE MAY BE MADE ON RUSSIANS PETKOGllAD, May 2 Von Hln denbertt Is brltiKlng gu northward to use agaiiiBt the Kusslans on th" northern front, it was learned today. A German offensive against the Slave under Kmoputkln is forecasted with in a fortnight. Tubantta to Be Hcirta! THE HAGUE May 2. lerman CASTOR I A For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears 0f C&SSl the Signature Bond Clothes $15 to $30 The highest attain ment possible in clothes construction giving superb style, quality and dura bility. Pendleton's Ieadlng clothtrr. Bond Bros jMg&rgadns in Second-Hand Cars WE have six different makes of second hand cars on our floors, all have been gone over and put in good running condition. Priced from 9150 up Chassis and motors are good as ever, making them just the thing for converting into trucks. We have priced them to make them sell first come gets the best choice. GET A GOOD TRUCK CHEAP We are making a specialty of building over old cars equipping them with truck beds and converting the minto cars for light trucking and roust-about work for farmers. Let us fig ure with you. Pendleton Auto Co. 812 Johnson Street, EIGHT PAGES has finally been convinced that th Butch liner Tubantla was torpedoed Mitd not mined. Germany will replace It by a larger vessel from the Ham burg American line, It was announc ed, owners of the Tubantla will pay the difference In cost between the two vessels. GO TO TH.E St. George Grill when you want a good steak. 35c Merchant Lunch Served Daily. We are not cutting prices but are improving quality. Telephone 841