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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1916)
EIGHT PAGES PAGE FOUR DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY. AUGUST 15. 1916. N 4 a MM trd st ON KAI.K IN OTHER CITIES lapMtal Bote. Newt SiabA. PortlAAd. "jau srn Ca, rnctUnO. orgta .. FILK AT rtktn HifAi. : 1 WAAAlAgf 1,1 " " ' AAEtfc mtKi N caacairnos ratss , IN ADVANCE' DAl.f nM jAr u BAll -Mil;. Hi aoaibt 9J bi 1111; rnr . W " Dtlly OA MMk If tally. oa yr rirriT tally. Alt oothA by "lf nny. " feJ rrT,M tally thrm muattA ty arner -M weteij. y' r " ,r BabI WcriCy. tvnr aoAtbA. At aII , H41HBH OF in li l In nature's workshop but a having Of iMt poem but a word. But a tint brushed from her palette This feather of a bird! Tet set in the sun-glance. Display M in the shine. Take graver's lens, explore It. Note filament and line. Mark amethyst to sapphire And sapphire to gold. And (told M emerald chanting Tb archetype unfold! Tone. tint, thread, tissue, tex ture. Through every ItM scan Conforming KSL developing Obedient to plan Thla but t.. form a pattern On the narment of a bird? What then mum be the poem. Thla but lit lightest word: Alfred E. Wallace. J! 4, THE HUGHES "PORK" RECORD mm HE attemDt of Candidate UL Hughes to make capital -"c I ministration on tne ground oi extravagance has brought from the New York World this caus tic criticism of the Hughes pork barrel record Mr. Hughes is denouncing President wilaon because there is extravagance m September out artMI not Mpect in the government ot the Umtea t) dtapoMJ of the pntire allotment States. M Mr. Hughes gave NeW'iUnt lhe latter part of ,Htober. York the most extravagant adminis- Jn addlton t0 nl8 Montana deals, tratlon It bad ever known. !M atanfield has 11.94)1 head of During the four yeare previous li Mr. Hughes the total appropriations made by the legislature and sighed by the governor aggregated 1112. I II, 1M.1I. During the four years of Mr. Hughes the total appropriations made by the legislature and signed by the governor aggregated 1150. ?9, 919 51. This was an increase Ol I38.974.94ft.il. The governor of New York has power not vested in the President of the United tftatea He can veto aeparate items In an appropriation bill. Tet Mr. Hughes exercised this power to ao little effect that the ap- oropriations for the last year of his adrninlstraion exceeded those of tne last year of the Hlgglns administra tion by more than MMM.9JM. The preent demoralization of th-; i state finanies began with the Hughes, administration, and when Mr. Hughe-, attacks the Wilson administration for; extravagance he inevitably calls at-: tent Ion to one of the weakest points. In his own political career The cry of extravagant ii very common with men who are on the outside and seek to get inride the official circle. At the late primary election in Oregon the self-styled econo my candidates for the legisla iiro were uniformly defeated. The people did not take theii professions at full face. Mr. Hughes' Hew York rec-! ord is such that his extrava gance charges will not be taker, seriously. THE EIGHT HOUR DAY "f IKE most cases of this jPu kind thi two ii the trainmen and the railroads is a two sided is sue. There is merit in the eOB tenliotis' on each side and the country needs ;in umicahle .( tleinent. On the greal eight hour day tne the i M jus-: however, trainmen are right T hi. for thnt pniiit i btu tice and romnnin s(-i ronding bard . rtspofllflble work. Life slid property of i'i at aliu' is iii thtj keeping oi rho mov( The railroad men should have an eight hour day with overtime when they work be w.nd the limit. To give them this m.iy interfere to some ex ten with dividends and it might necessitate squeezing some water out of railroad st-.cks. But what of that? When human rights and pro perty rights conflict prefer ence should be given to the for mer. 654,000,000 BUSHELS 'Tg' HE government's August report on wheat indicates a crop of 654.000.000 iushels as against a yield of over one billion bushels las', year and an average crop of 728.000.000 bushels. The fig ures show why wheat prices have been tending upward, both in this country and in Liv erpool. Offsetting the bullish tendency is the scarcity oi .-hips and the present strike sit uation. Without transporta tion the wheat market lan guishes. . The chief arguments by Mr. Hughes at present are that Wilson appointed a democrat j to office and that congress has appropriated money for other purposes than militarism: he cannot bag big game with such Ishots as that. Were it not for fish and game protection in Oregon there would be no grouse or deer to kill and no fish to angle for. If Wilson is able to settle the railroad strike and prevent in dustrial war it will be a crown ing achievement. ------ It is entirely natural that the -tnke situation should have Dut a crimp in the wheat price. I. 10(1.000 l-MBs BOt'OHT stanflekl fnntuu fine Montana l.'i ill: MAKER. Aug. 15 Deals aggregat j themseves up in stunning seml-uni-ing 11,190,000 for the purchase of ' forms and formally opened the first 200,000 head Ot lambs In Montana, ' annual encampment of the Texa.s Di were reported this morning by K. N. vision, illrls' National Honor (luard. Stanfleld. of Stanfield, who arrived .Mian Virginia Luzenby of Waco, 1A in tre city yesterday rrom MonlAi I state commander. The folowlng accompanied by his brother Glenn captains" brought companies from and Mack Hand, prominent Welser!tnjr reapCtlTA cities: Miss Imola i""-1" rh Mr Stanlieldj the rale ot i frm seven to seven and three- fourths cents per pound, making an, average of li ill per head. The entire 199,999 represents the 1916 in crease to the holdings of 100 Mon tana growers. Mr Stanfleld will In-ain shllMMlK ,.h,.... uissuurl river nomtl contracted for early in the sea- son at varying prices, which will lie assembled in Haker some time in September to be taken to his ranch- es on the Columbia to winter What It Means to j I j i i aa 1 1 may not take more than one minute In the showing? 1 have upH-iired In Paramount Iletum produced by the fa mous Players as "turn" and "Ilella Donna" and a "Audrey." These are all well known I hartctffl and any attempt to enact them without first raNfnUy studying them might prove abso lutely fatal to one'-. Interpretation of the roles. It is not attar at barret tiie director say. "Now, yon are angry " T'Ik Hut Is. bow would Zn.a show her anger; how would Ilella Donna act irbea rB raged; what would Andrey do If riM bt bar lata per? Thay woabj not all show their emotion In the same manlier The llrst Is a fiery, temperamental Prench- aniaan. Ilia aaeond eahl. hard, ealenlattog Kngiish adventuress and the law) I" mi uaaapMatleated young country girl. Their re pactlra manner- "f -bowing their anger would differ as widely ns doe tartfftfcl f i "in iarfcnaaa. OM in' i iul tbaaa myriad typed with Inflnlte care In order to dlffeishtiiite between (bam People af different dispositions ,,d of dllTrretll aaMotUlHtlai beta various ways of expressing the i i Ii , motion. It Is the person who ran catch the"e liner rikadca of npiwilon a be stakes tba most striking success of karai ter work. WAGE EARNERS PI $3,000,000,000 MORE SON'S RULE x-'ihl t hapMf ii raniulim Ikiol. IM kMaWMMI f Admin'" irat.on and Makes vnw Interesting 'miwrl.-u. NKW YOitK. Ail. 15. The aw OHd rtojtir f the uemocratic tent' book.- whtih aid IM be rvady fur the printer, deal.- with wane prob-1 km- Mid vn ih.it the report of thei dip. mm. nt of iafor just completed ' show that during the Wilson admin-: .stration wage earner received BMN than tc.99t.9e9.909 more than in the preceding lour ears under a repub-; lican .i '(ministration. The text book says the average, fttoa wages in 1914 and lsli were lv DAt .tut higher than the average1 lor the six years io7 to 1911, inclu sive under the Dingiey and l"a n tin:; arid republican administra tion. The census of 1910, based on 1U.: data sas the tjck, gae the num ber of wage earners employed Inj m mu:.i t u r . industries onh as 9.9H.VVU and the wages paid II 4J7. 999,999. It is e-tiiiiated on prelim inary return of the 1SH census ot, rnanufa. turers that in 1SI5 Ameri can manufacture! gave employment to T.yj.uoo wa- turners at wages, amounting to 14.401,999,909, or an in llt American manufacturers ar-j ; employing 1 per cent more wage e.cner at 10 per cent h gher wages than in till Thla would bring the hU t.lmne ..f u-uLf.-s t.ii,l in ni.inll. factura only up to ii.tet.eoo.oeo, or I upward of II. silt). U00, 000 mure than the republican census record of 1910. It is estimated that the total ot wages paid in the four years under the WUaea administration was 117. IM,lll,Mt,Mt, compared to 114.320. 199,011 in the four years oi the Tall .cluiUiL-tralion. TEXAS SOCIETY GIRLS IN PREPAREDNESS CAMP Armed With Bon-Bons and Garbed Stunningly Young Women Enter Training. KoitT WoUTH. Aug. la. Miss Texas went camping today. over 100 society girls from all parts of the state- bitten by the w. k "pre paredness ' bug pitched their tents an the shores of l.ake Worth, drew r i emergency rations or Don oona, got L,:nk. Houston; Mi-ss Catherine Franklin, San Antonio; Miss Lttl !jf Morris. Tyler, Miss Daphne Stinnett. AmAIillo; ICUa Charlotte Hesse. Eagle Pass; Miss Jessie Morris. Galveston: Miss Charlorre Taylor, Texarkana: Miss liarbaia Hawkins, Hlllsboro! Miss Louise Triddle, Beaumont; M s' Helle Westbrooke. Laredo and Miss Estelle Herrien, El Paso Miss Kale Leh.ine is commander of the local company. CXHAMtBL TO TAlJi. Continued from Page 1.) form the American public as to the situation that confronts his country , The colonel has been a resident ot Get Atmosphere PAULINE FREDERICK H EN yon Bit com fortably In the mo tion picture theatre anil pass Judgment on the film before you, you may tnrn to your companion and remark that the Egyptian atmosphere Is good, that the French spirit bad been well represented, or that the Ital ian atmosphere was remark able. But lias It ever occurred to you that It took a great deal of study and hard work to bring that "atmon pbere" before you? Did It ever strike yon as being a fact that hours of prepara tion Ve undergone In order to perfect scene which i FIRST WOMAN CANDIDATE FOR FEDERAL OFFICE C " " ' MRS JOSEPHINE MARSHALL- FERLNAND. " BAN PRAKCIKO, Vue II. QUI- the democrat candidate for congress fomia claims to have th.- first w.unan ' represent the fourth district. , , Mrs. Fernand is opposing the prex- to run for election to a federal office. ncumbelt of ,n(1 ffj,.,. Coagrtm. Mrs. Josephine Marshall Kernand Is man Julius Kahn MealCO tor 30 years tune was engineer f tate w hich has a mill I for a long he Clark es acres of land but was born fas Count la me to this in Mexico He is a Pole but in Illinois. His father was I viskl of Poland who came country before our civil war was u soldier in that war. noted Polish lecturer and his mother was ; John Sebeiski was his uncle daughter of Thaddeus of Warsaw. During the boy hood of the colonel his uncle, 8e bleskl was in Mexico serving with the forces of Juarez. He was the jailer of Maximilian. It was through the uncle's influence that CoL Ledwldge went into Mexico. His home is at Monterey During the Cuban revolu tion prior to our Spanish war wldge was in ("uba under Funston, then a filibustered At the outset of m the Spanish war he came to this conn try and Joined the ltoosevelt Hough riders, being a sergeant in troop "E' I recruited at Sante Fee. -New Mexico Cot Ledwldge is a graduate of Cornell ' UttJverilt and for a time was division! engineer on railroad in Mexico. Cot LAdWldgA hopes to be in Pen ) dieton leveral days. MODERATE WEATHER WITH SHOWERS IS OREGON PREDICTION WASHINGTON. Aug. 15 Pacific states The weather will be fair and moderately warm in California, and probably unsettled with local show ers and moderate temperatures in Washington and Oregon. Does it Pay? "POES it pay to advertise in dull season? use answering a question with a theory facts are at hand facts like these: August used to be the dullest month of all the year in the furniture business now it is the very busiest became advertising turned dullness into activity. January was formerly a time when men's clothing store did no business. Now, by advertising, they make record sales. Right down the list instances can be cited where mer chants and manufacturers have turned supposedly dull periods into busy ones. And they did it by advertising by newspaper advertising in moat inatancea. Sitting around cusing the weather won't rimg the cash register, but ADVER TISING WILL Newspaper advertising coupled with good merchandizing will drive any dull month from the calendar. Perhaps not at once, but little by little. Now i.s the time to increase business for the immedi ate present and get a flying start for the Fall. Now is the time to make your advertising plans and to begin an aggressive bid for business. Perhaps the advertising manager of this newspa per can make some suggestions, or if you want in formation about other cities write to the Bureau of Advertising. American Newspaper Publishers Aso ciation, World Building, New York. Your in ANY SILK SUIT ANY SILK COAT ANY VOILE DRESS ANY LAWN DRESS ANY SUMMER COAT ANY SUMMER SUIT No Approvals. No Alterations OneDayOnly August 16, 1916 Rocky Mountain and Plateau Rp-1 gions- Temperatures will be below the seasonal average mr the week. The weather will be fair over thi plateau region and unsettled with lo cal showers over the Itocky mountain region. AdTertfcement Ambiguous. BUEN08 AIRES. Aug. 15 Buen os Aires' English speaking residents, to whom local merchants address lots of advertisements In their own lan guage, were tickled today when one of them announced a new cough mix. Choice ture which he gtiarnnteed would "prove exceedingly adi.nitat:. "is for the undertaker." Severe Quake Felt in Nevada WINNEMUCCA, Nev. Aug 11 A severe earthquake shock was felt here at 6:36 o'clock this morning. The iremblor was the hardest felt In years. Dishes were smashed And many people fled from their homea No dnmnge was reported. No when