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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1916)
PAGE TEN DAILY EAST OREGON 1AM. PENDLETON. UK EG UN. SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1916 TWELVE PAGBB In Ion A. tin nn ntum. 1 tin nn nrt nr tier ttedfcuw.", "PE-RU-NA" . Mr. WIDUib B. permr. I Park .vrr , Spnnrfli!, Ohio: 'Hr! troubled with ea ter ot the bead. bo, tliroat and e-.omach. 1 am trciilj nSmJ by lxruaa," (Rtfiarm! Trade Mark U. S. Frtrat OSVcl Coughs, Colds, Stomach Troubles and Catarrh Relieved. No Remedy can Compete with Peruna The Ready-to-take JOLLY TOMMIES IN A TRENCH IN FLANDERS France Ready for Peace if Allies are Says Embassy ItKTTIll.M . HOWEVER, STAns one ym all and a Li. nU ON K AS IIKFORE. WASHINGTON, May IS. Com menting on the United Press Dispatch from MMM declaring that France Ml nar opposed to peace than any oth-; r of the entente allies, the Frencti wnbmi said that France is no mor against peace than the allies. It Hud 1 France was still one for all and all for (one The German embassy makes no secret of Germany's willingness to talk peace Attaches said that the terms would be the same as Hollwe- named in his Reichstag speech. Re garding the peace paragraphs in Get manv's last note, an embassy officinl said "that suggestion was a plain dec laration of hope that America may seek to bring about peace." j WOtXD HAVE AMKIUOA DENOUNCE KXHOITIOXS I WASHINGTON. May IS Representative Dyer introduced a resolution asking congress to formally denounce the execution of Irish rebel leaders. He ask- ed the house to "express the horror of the American peopic at the summary executions of Irish patriots who followed the inspiration of the American revolution in attempting to erect a republic." SELIG OFFERS The Sensational Photodrama j of the Canal Zone The Ne'er Do-Well By REX BEACH Author of The Spoilers. The cast that made the Selig play "The Spoilers" famous, enact powerful roles in "The Ne'er-Do-Well." Thrills and heart throbs through this great drama. TEMPLE - BHHasassWBsslB1 -a iisflsllraaaaaHr iHliilw tfi'n ii - , &RTISH SAHOBPG AT ST ElOl . mn!fiV!.' "Strafing" the Germans, as the graph indicates it does not tell on the Tommies call It. seems grim work j 8pirlts ot the men ,ne 'inches as i much as on the anxious mother and from this distance; but the photo-i wife at home. -I PMnimtnnHflimnitmmnHiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiimitiiHiiiiiiiilm increase your hay crop decrease your trouble and expense BUY A John Deere Binder A machine built to go Into a Umatilla county wheat field und stand the strain season after season. Will cut and hind hay from 16 inches to i feet with out clogging. Come in and let us show you -why It is a lighter draft hinder. -why It will cut and tie short grain that you Itave been losing, -why it runs and handles easier, -why It handles light or heavy grain cqiinlly. why II Is rigged with outer reel Mipixiri. why it runs steadier and Is easier on your horses. why It takes up ludgiil -ruin, why It Is easier of adjustment and shown less wear. !, : Stories From the War Zone Wed. and Thur. May 17, 18. Adults 25c. Children 15c GEO. A CRESSY, Of Hermiston. Candidate in the primaries for Couaty Commissioner on the Demo cratic ticket, is the only candidate for commissioner in either party whose residence is In the west end of the county. He promises If elected a careful, impartial and economical ad ministration of the office. Adv. Hong Kong Cafe 4-VD NOODLE PARLORS Noodles AND Chop Suey OclMde Tray Orders a Specialty Boxes for ladles and gentlemen OPEN DAT AND ALL NIGHT MEALS JSC AND CP Special Chicken Dinner Sundays. 548 Main Street Next to E. O. Bldg. Phone 108 R. T. BROWN Candidate at the primaries for Republican nomination For County Clerk. Adv. (By Chas. P. Stewart. United Press Staff Correspondent ) LONDON, May 13. It costs more' to live in London today than it costs to live in New Tork. It costs more to live In the small er cities and towns of England's pro-; vinces than it costs to live in the cit-i ies and towns of the United States j Cleveland, Kansas City, Pittsburg, Milwaukee. Dallas, San Francisco, Portland are cheaper places to live than Sheffield, Liverpool, Manches ter, Hull and English cities like that. Nevertheless Britishers returning from the United State Insist their country still is the meaner for the masses. Their mistake lies in the fact that the English do without many things ' Americans consider absolute necessi ties Most such things are so high in England today that only plutocrats can have them. Practically the only exception in England's favor is clotiiing; and even clothing is higher, a good sack suit, ; English fit, which .usee to cost $20, now sells for $22.50. The price is ! still rising. So are other prices. It Is not a gradual rise. Hardly a day passes that an advance of 54 or 10 per cent is not announced In staple. Beef is 20 cents, mutton 28, port 28 hardly any Iamb is to be had, the killing of calves is prohibited; bread 9 cents a 2-pound loar; good butter 42 cents; tea 52 cents; very soft coal 17 80 a ton; anthrac:te4 111.28. Rentals are about the same as in the United States but include noth ing. Cook and lighting gas In a 5-room flat cannot be kept beiow Jin or $ 12 monthly. Telephone calls are 6 cents each. A fi-mile street car ride costs 7 cents. Cigars which would be dear in the United States at a nickel a piece, re tail in England at 14 cents. The distilleries being used by the Kovernment for munition making. It Is predicted that whiskey which sold as ,8 to 9 cents a bottle will soon re tail at $2.40. The income tax has risen until it In a fearful burden. It hegins with in comes of 130 pounds ($624 year.) Th HORACE J. STILLMAN Of Pendleton, Oregon, DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR COUNTY TREASURER. Subject to the Democratic choice at the Primary, May 19, 1916. assessment increases more than pro portionately as the income grows larger. A man earning $2500 an nually, pays 36 cents on every $4.80. If his income is from invested capital the rate is much higher. The net result Is that an English family, moving to America and con tinuing to live according to the Eng lish standard, would have more mon ey than at home, while an American family moving to England and con tinuing to live according to the Am erican standard, would have material ly less See the John Deere Binder set up in our show room and operated by the famous "NEW WAY" GASOLINE ENGINE. This air-cooled gasoline entitle Is guarantee to go and go rifhl ; of working continually under Its full load, without overheating, In aay rllnialc under the sun, Oooe In and see it do the uork. McClintock 6 Simpson Pendleton's big farm machinery house. Agents for the Famous John Deere Implements. 400 East Court Street, Pendleton. Telephone (10 Thug Assaults 2 Women. SPOKANE. May 13. Just 24 hours after a thug entered the home of Mrs. Morris Martin and bound, rob bed and assaulted her. the same man went to the home of Mrs. James Ste phens and duplicated the crime in every particular. He bound and gagged her. looted the house and threatened to kill her if she sounded an alarm before half an hour. The police were delayed in setting on the trail. V A. I . TO ALLOW Ml UIMM K s RJBOOHD f aiiiHiimii iiiiiiiinimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiitiii iiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiimii ihhiiT: LITTLE HKALTH TAIJiS. DEMOCRATS- MARK YOlTl BALLOT 39 K Barney E. Ante CANDIDATE POB DKMOt'KATIC NOUINBE FOB OOl'NTY COMMISSION EK At the Primaries Htj ivth. slam! for tea economies! tod boalnesa like administration ot the Count! sffN'rs nrd equal ImproTements ever tbe Conatjr." What is Home Without an Heir! This is a subject that has a place In all minds in all times. And it naturally di rects thought as to the comfort of the mother during that wonderful period of expectancy. Mothers who know rec ommend "Mother's friend." It is an ex ternal remedy for the stretching muscles, en ables tin-in to expand without undue strain, assists the organs to crowd against nerves, to pull at ligaments to tliufi avoid naln. Thai restful dam ure uaati. peaceful rights are experienced, morning sickness, headache, upprcheiwlon and other dh- t reuses are among the various things which women, everywhere relate they entirely es caped by tulng "Mother' Friend. And by 1 Its effect noon the muscles the form It re ' tained and they return to Uvrlr natural, j i month contour nfler baby le born. Get s bottle of this Invaluable aid to eipec I tsnt mothers. Any dnnorM will supply you, It Is harmless but wonderfully effective.' Write to Brndfleld Begnlstor Co.. 411 La mar Bldg., Atlanta, Oa.. for a specially wi-IU ten guide hook for women Interested In the subject of maternity. It will prove an liugnC ration. It ronluiu Information that every Human should l;i'.v a", ubcut. Write today. Ml (By Samuel G. Dixon, M. I , LL D , Pennsylvania Commissioner ot Health.) Could you mobilise on short no tice? is your Individual physical equipment always In condition to meet the demands Nature may thrust upon it? Could you run half a mile if your life were at Btake? Could you do half a day's manual labor with satety? Of course you may say with per fect truth that there are not apt to be any such demands upon you. You earn your daily bread by mental ex ertion. But are you sure that your mental equipment is at par? chances are that the man who permits himself to deteriorate physically cannot reach the maximum of his mehtal capacity Nature meant the human animal to have considerable physical exertion to maintain life. Complexities of modern civilization have forced many men and women Into occupations where it requires efrort to find time for even a little exercise. We accept such a condition with some superfi cial expression of regret and move along until Nature declares war. You can make no treaties to Insure your safety under suoh conditions Nothing short of a consistent policy of moderate exercise and temperate living will prepare you to meet the vital Individual emergency. Your turn will surely come! Are you ready? Personal pride should offer BUfii cient incentive to a man or woman to keep in such condition that they can mount a flight of stairs without puffing or button their shoes without contortions. The person who wants to really live should watch his or her waist meas ure and chest expansion with at least the same attention he or she bestows upon the bank account To Build Ills Steamer. PORTLAND, Ore., May U. Con tracts to build a fourth 8810 ton steamer were signed. It will be de livered In 18 months. Flay Checkers by Mail. WASHINGTON, Pa.. May II. John Zak, a checker expert ot tttui place Is, and has bean for th last six months, playing a contest by mall with a crack player of Pasadena, Cal. Each player makes a move, then malls the board back to his oppo nent. As It takes nine days for the mall to travel, the game ta slow. Of French Invention Is a sliding buffer for the end of railroad tracks that has stopped a 200 ton train run ning at a speed of seven miles an hour within 25 feet. 300 INLAND EMPIRE EARNERS VOTE BULK SYSTEM IN HANDLING CROP RALPH MVLFOJSO, NEW YOISK. Mav 15 A next meeting of ihe American Auto mooue ASO01atlOn'l ,nntet hn.nl the twenty-four hour record establish! ed by Kalph Mulford will probably ue given official reeoenlHon Uni. ford has traveled a greater distance in n consecutive hours than any other human being. In his Hudson Suoer-Hlx he cov ered 1819 miles In the period at the Sheepshend Bay Motor Bpeedway. never being relieved from the wheel during the time and ehanains but one lire. He was comnelled t. ... ,.,.r- mo miles for oil and gasoline. This record beats thill made nearly nine years ago by S. F. Edge, on the Broohlandl track In England, by 238, miles. 1 DUInrtlvtl, Mimdml" wfe TURKISH gJK CIOARETTBS Vfl llf"'Hatea'i CmmmkCsNencta If II V. wort. v. W III? Even ths package ill is sensible J (II Pstlmss were the first high III I Hill srade cigarettes to uji s com- llm lllil rnoneense,lnepnslvepscksfe m If II Ihe vsfus it in Me ctfjreffse. mil Hill They're comfortable to throat Hl III 1 and tongue. And no mean after Hill II III sdecte they let you amoks as l III II you'd Hke to amoks. Ill IrftAAw Ok HII Ambition i to Make New Plan Operative This Year by Discarding Sacks. Spokane, Wn., May 7, 1916. About 300 farmers of the Inland Empire assembled in the Spokane Chamber of Com merce Assembly rooms yester day, and with only five oppos ing votes decided to handle their grain in bulk instead of sacks. Committee Recommendations on Wheat Handling. We believe that a successful system of handling grain in bulk depends upon the farmer providing his own storage on the farm, either by bins, gran aries, or farm elevators, where grain may be held until sold. It has been fully demonstrat ed that the present flat ware houses can be successfully ad apted, at comparatively small expense, to handling grain in bulk. Full assurance has been giv en by the railway officials and terminal warehouses that they will meet farmers and interior warehousemen in arranging tor the full handling of grain in bulk. In answer to the argument that grain must be sacked for exportation from the Pacific coast, authentic reports show that less than 25 of the grain from the Northwest is' exported annually, and the Panama Ca nal has removed the necessity of sacking the greater part of the small percentage of the crop that is exported. The grain prices in the world's market are quoted on a bulk basis, therefore there will be no difference in the price of bulk grain or sacked grain when the bulk system prevails throughout this terri tory. Since it is practically the un animous opinion of the 300 grain growers at this conven tion that a change be made in the Inland Empire from sacked grain to bulk grain, we there fore urge the necessity of im mediate action by the individu al fanner and the interior warehouse companies to pro vide the necessary equipment for handling the 1916 crop in bulk. United action on the part of the farmers is essential to the success of bulk handling of grain. Portable Granaries. 1000 bu., No. 1 $46.00 1000 bu.. No. 2 $38.00 Stationary Granaries 5000 bu. Level Ground Type $282.00 5000 bu. Side Hill Type $272.00 We also have 600, 800, 1500, 2500, 7500 and 10, 000 bushel granaries for the farm. Our Track Elevators holding from 15,000 bushels and up are mod ern and low in cost. Free complete blue printed plans and guar anteed material prices are furnished by; OREGON M YARD PENDLETON, OREGON Telephone 8