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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 16, 1916)
EIGHT PAGES PAGE FOUR DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1916. OREGON'S LOSS fS shown by official figures 1 lNPKI'KMlENT NKWM'ArER. rati MM F.f I grabbers and interventionists. ! EASTERN He has iriven encouragement to tK num svrsA sitv I'hiirirpH with deliberately plotting the raid " averafe salary paw week:, u Pes i II t ollimiHls Tor lire sunt- 01 " . u- V ytb hrinoW ahoiit intervention, about $20 per month higher U'""NUS ----Ui"' Thai was a horrible plot be- than the average salary paid Official ootj Paper ran it mmil nothint? less 01 some Willamette valley lull press Moaritiwi . V , .. .. .,.!;-.. trt M.vn. trj t tbr (HBtom.- it imomrn. ti,ar, nt, niassai re oi me peo- i-wwuww ' D"1 M"" i a viii.j,T. f.ir mouth normal school. At me on balk iii other ma. j The purpose of bringing on a,ame time those counties have JggM mm mm sund. ftrttaAMi i mucn higher percentage of bo?- Mi piL - If' Col. Ledwidge tells the .rmal graduates than does nov Maria miiiaiiis: .,.! u;.. ,.,. utiscouiuv. LACK OF WORD FROM 1 OEUTSCHLANO FAILS TO WORRY OFFICIALS 1 II Hi Clksfo Bureau tnatk street. N Marfan Ml, gCRSVRlPTIOS KATES (IS ADVANCE I Dalli im ar. by ran Mil;, ill months .'. m: Ml;, tkm Bonttie by mi'. Dill;, cm Booth, by Bill Mil;. ose ;. b; ,-arrtfr Ml!; sli Booths by eorrtSi twiia ma Mtth I , ,'ir.vr Dells! tbrw Bib. by carrier 1 I XatlT nnf IfT TT mill sal WeaaiJ. ! Booth, b; ml!'. Four .num. anil n i uiiriiiriiu in i the right of sincerity, it is not 1 surprising that President WO son has throw n down the gaunt let to his foes and savs he will BERLIN, Aug. IS -The lulled Press has learned thai lh DoMMli land has not been heard from simr she cleared the Virginia capes lour Mm ay ado. The outward vununl The situation shows What all lasted sixteen days. The fact thai . u . m : : iv. . 2-30 umpi nit .Ur.Mlilll lMir H WIC chief one of this campaign. It is not surprising that Justice Hughes has turned away from this subject and is now talking of pork and patronage. 1 23 so T 30 ITS Ml !;. four Boattae. t mall . educators now generally recog-. i'urteen .lays have elapsed with no! nize that well trained teach-: W'.T'' submarine louowing a lounaanout course dodge bluckaders. She carries powerful wireless. German admlral- 150 Mi MEN ARE SLAVES OF DRESS ers are generally found close to normal schools and that coun ties far remote from such insti tutions will have a low percent age of graduates among their teachers. In other words Umatilla county is paying full price for iUs teachers but is not srettinc the service that it should from Attempts of Allies to Burn t officials had not expected to re- j receive wireleiss messages. The radio ruight betray the leuischland s ! whereabouts. GERMANY'S FOOD CROPS BEYOND HARMS REACH them. The same thing is true of other eastern Oregon coun- ER summer when the ? j mprrnrv flnnrmicniu Oft degrees multitudes of ties- butJhe fc, not with men declare that the time has wur teachers. The blame is up on ine state ior not providing come for them to emancipate themselves and to vindicate Jheir right to dress rationally in hot weather, says a New York paper. That is as far as their rebellion ever goes. When the temperature falls they sink back tamely into the old servitude to convention and eastern Oregon with normal in struction. It is a compliment to be elected Round-Up treasurer in view of the prospective large receipts for September. Possibly Wilson finds it will O THE HKIJMXG HIST) W put our hands on shoulders broad sometimes. And pat strong backs and say Our hope's best wishes and that sunny climes May mark our destined way Whoe'er he is. he feels It, maybe shows The help it means to him The ay his eye of sweeping vision glows Through vistaa far and dim Then how much more a hand touch to the weak Thus given in human love Shall help them in the way they've striven to seek The path that leads above! Selected. 0 C a. it i a J mrgei meir areams ot treeaom) not be necessarv to make a from the tyranny of clothes. ; speaking tour "in answer to An excessively hot spell will Hughes, prompt a few individuals in their desperation to promenade1 In the wheat market all is Broadwav at the lunch hour j lovely and the farmers won't Fields Result in Only Slight Damage. (Carl Acker in. m BEKLJN. Aug. 15. II is reported' that allied military enters attempted to fire on 'lerman harvest fields. Re i cent French aviation ranis over the Black forests and farm lands near Karlsruhe vere experimental trips, , The aviators dropped incendiar bombs on several Tields intending to i start greut Tires. The damaf-'e wa very slight. Food Dictator Adolpb Van Hatocki said there was little ! chance of the plan succeeding. "In the first place the fields are not dry enough to permit them to start a great fire. Secondly, many crops are already In. Thirdly we have ' no large farms like America. If small farms lost their crops In this manner it would not affecte the total. lMni H foriret that nur aernnlt' 's nr. i:lard- coatless and collarless, seeking jeare if they have to take more in the farms as wen as the trenches pain-1 than a dollar. J Furthermore ..ur bigger , ro, is ; . - jsar. ........... j tatoe and they can't burn'1 naiochi saoi uie ne'. n.uesi ' 'a is Sttppl) was so good the horses rations would be increased. The train cro FIRST HAND FACTS ABOUT MEXICO COLONEL LEDWIDGE. who has been in Mexico for 30 vears and knows the problem from first hand ex nenence. says Huerta nao. vainly for comfort and fully conscious of their ray. If everybody discarded unnecessary weight and cover ing it would not matter, but the few who are bold enough to disregard custom are made to realize that they are sinning ' against the proprieties. Soon ' or late they submit because I of the presence of women, for I instance and cease grumbl ing. Some day a great reformer or social uplifter or revivalist will start a popular movement cr invent a new religion intend ed to restore common sense in men's dress. The present gen eration awaits his coming, helpless to set itself free. It lacks the moral impulse to make the honest effort. For men are born to be slaves, and Our Delivery Service Will Please You We plan to call and deliver so you may have the very least inconveniene. Our courteous representative will be glad to extend every accommodation. "We Wash Everything Bui the Baby" Troy Laundry Co. Telephone 179 Mr. Hughes has the floor in Oregon today. BOYS TO HAVE CLUB was so good bread rations ma be in creased. Fodder prospects are excel lent, (iermany expects t" raise a large stock of pigs that insures a certain apply of pork und makes slaughter ing milch cows unnee.ssary. No milk shortage is near. SHEEP ARE PROFITABLE TO THE SMALL FARMER OBGAXIZATIOS WIIJ, BE IXlllM EO; WILL I'KOBABIiV 08E IJBRARY ROOMS. 16. W. no Only some great outside power plans for organizing the hi more claim to recognition from this country than John Wilkes ; Booth had to recognition from foreign nations after he had as-1 sassinated Lincoln. Huerta was a murderer and did not gain power by consent of the governed but held office in de fiance of the people of Mexico. As pictured by Col. Led- widtre the warfare in Mexico tan liberate them. ALREADY PROSPEROUS fit s anti-administration pa f per carries a story that a Washington man has plan ned to establish a sawmill or the Siuslaw but will not do so if Wilson is reelected president. There was a time when such wr, u stnio-trl on the nart tushwash may have been ef- of the people to obtain the ele-itive in polios This year mentarV rights of humanity. ; j f f at . ndlcu" His story justifies the Carranza i Ius. The lumber bus.ness in course and is a powerful en- i western Oregon is now so good dorsement of the attitude taken .that the Southern Pacific is by President Wilson. Our i hopelessly unable to handle its president is refusing to play; freight traffic. Just a few days r o r orTA t Vi n nnh ip anrripo nnmmid. ih crfiTTiP nf t.hosp who havei0v Lllt yrrr - despoiled Mexico and Chawe ffir itdetahln u.nn in I sion protested vigorously to the j washinoton, Aug. i6.Hepre- loaa aoout lis car snonajfe. , uii"",: "i ""- The Boys' Club of Pendleton is now a certainty, according to C. P. A. Lon ergan, chairman of the special com mittee of the Commercial association which was appointed some time ago to investigate the feasibility of or-1 ganizing such a club. The committee, which consists of Mr. Iionergan, J. Roy Haley and Or. (Juy L. Boyden. met yesterday after noon and decided to proceed with the vs into a junior commercial club, The council has already promised to turn over th present library rooms to the boys as soon as they are vacated and this eve ning the committee will discuss the matter with the council. It is the intention to fit no the rooms a: cluh rooms where the boys may congregate and enjoy wholesome pas- I times. It is the intention also to have the boys' club co-operate with the 1 Commercial association and Civic Club in undertakings for the benefit J of Pendleton. Virgil Fendell. O. A. C. graduate. I who will he a member of the high school faculty this year, will probably j be employed to supervise the boys' ac tivities though the Commercial as- j sociation committee will act as a su-) POr Vising board. The school board j and city council will co-operate to make the institution a success. HOOD RIVER, Ore.. Aug i I. Kirby, who has over 4000 head of sheep grazing over the logged off land in the upper Hood River valley, says the small farmer finds a few head of sheep on His farm more profitable than cattle or hogs. "1 have had a number of orders for small bands of sheep." says Mr. Kir by. "by farmers id orcnardists the berry fields of weeds that during the bearing season" throughout the country', as they find ilt-an them verv profitable on the farm. "row- Even at Hood River, where hay 1 lu.IllarW,W. IMliie. very high, it will prove very profit- During the time of deposition ol able to the fruitgrowers to have a the clays constituting the Morrison few sheep in the orchard. Better shale in southern Colorado there ex have a little of everything than all isted a great variety or remarkable of one thing. To dtversify stock as reptiles of huge size. Their bones. notably the Stegosarus, which had so diminutive a brain that It muc have been very' stupid This animal was undoubtedly very clunis also but Its huge size and protective armor aided in its preservation.- -U. S. tieo oflcal 8urvey. More than 5. 000, 000 men are now well as crops will prove equally sue- which are In places abundant, are the cessful. remains of animals that were mired confined in prison camps of the en- "Some of the strawberry growers in the soft clay of which the Morrison emy, and for this and other reasons are ranging a few head of sheep In formation largely consists. Some of their patches to eat off the berry these creatures, such as the Bronto tops that are usually cut off with a saurus, were 60 feet long. Many of hoe and wasted. The sheep will alsu, them h oi remarkably small heads. the old world Is getting bett' r ac quainted than by any other dngle event since the crusaibs threw the people together. llllliM - ' 1 M at his 1 . - 1 .1 I .nlm. line 10 Keep on mi men "'S"' T, Ut .ae in pt 1 disposal the appointment of a cadet of injustice and tyranny. He is '" , 7 L- i LA ' at West Point military academy early tending for Mexican human- I!- XI" ity and if the American people '00 more freight can Jto U JLiA bn,, tv. wa aa thpv they could secure. The lumbej eon business needs no change of ad ministration to make it pros perous, anv more than does the wool business. The full dinner pail argu ment is on the democratic side ould know the fact as they really exist there would be but one side to the Mexican issue. The experiences related by Col. Ledwidge are highly inter esting in view of the Hughes rriticim of tbp Wilson Mexi can policy. Knowingly or 'his year and it is highly amus otherwise the republican can- ing to hear cheap claptrap from didate has been putting water men who think they can still on the wheel of the concession follow the Mark Hanna tactics. COOUT wt:H ftKtSBIMHH i-lbtirrT 90J MONO I W CMAHQlp F-M ams. sccu3E i bit uo.tcr PO'iAS io dOtTMor w-ecur-. thcL tt TOBCO CxlW.-WHL LAST T.f A? LO At 10 WOtTH 0 CaDIKASy MfmSSgSk THAT'S MOT I eii."0.. m A i RICH tobacco makes a world of difference there's satisfaction in store for the fellow who breaks over to W-B CUT Chewing. Tuck a little bit of a nibble into your cheek and learn what tobacco satis faction is that's Surprise No. I. Notice how long one little chew latft that's Surprise No. 2. Rick tobacco and the touch of Mff that keeps brinfinf out the flavor are what make the big difference. Something doinl fotvdcalers that carry W-B (XT 10c a pouch. MatV t WETMAN BEl'TON COMPArfT, 50 Vmt Sahara, New Talk Cry next year He is giving early notice of the fact so youths of the second gressional district of Oregon may have ample time to "study up" for examinations Mr. flinnott expects to have a com petitive examination held by civil service officials at some point in the district in the latter part of next February, upon the result of which one principal and two alternates will be named by him to take th offi cial examinations at Vancouver bar racks In March. The appointee will enter the academy on June 14. Applicants must be between 17 and 22 years of age. inclusive, at the date of admission, not less than 5 feet 4 inches tall at the age of 17. and at least one inch taller than that if over 1 7 .vears of age. j Tli.il-r Tlninla and irlday. Napoleon Was Too Busy! '"P'WAS a sad day for the French Emperor when he sent out the "loo busy" message to a certain man who called with an idea. He told his assistant to attend to it. They lacked Napoleon's vision and soon after they took down the Gorsican's sign, "Emperor." Napoleon's particular caller this busy day was Robert Fulton, who wanted to show him how he could take his troops to England by steam. Had Napoleon's eye been on the future and not glued to the present there would have been a different map of Europe and no lonely cell at St. Helena. DURING THESE EXTRA WAR BOOM TIMES A FEW NAPOLEONS OF BUSINESS HAVE USED THE "TOO BUSY" EXCUSE WHEN THE VITAL QUES TION OF ADVERTISING WAS PRESENTED TO THEM. THEY HAVE BEEN TOO BUSY FOR THE IMMEDIATE PRESENT TO EN TRENCH PROSPERITY AND ESTABLISH FUTURE GOOD WILL. To them just these words "Remember Napoleon." question of your newspaper plans any longer. Don't w have covered the field. Don't put off the vital tit until your competitors This newspaper will be glad to give you information or you can get valuable suggestions by writinx to the Bureau of Advertising, American paper Publishers Association, World Building, New York. many News- H1 , E SEE EE-'. EH IllllllilillllliljlllillW lilllllilflllilllliillll'llIllllilllW