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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1916)
TWELVE PAGES PAGE EIGHT DAILY EAST OREGOMAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 25, 1916. ffl- ! Indifference is the greatest E V C jeftai 1 obstacle confronting the ren- o-H ' -V'icr5?r"'" I dleton normal campaign. There !are hosts of people who do not understand the subject and to AN IMihrn.M.h..M M-KM-AIKB rbili1 Irllf na Hcml Wwkly it Pm- amim, i. ."j finintp anil rnnvprr tnese reo- 11 nl.lMiliu -v. . inle into active supnorters is uIuSTZ aJ..m. I the task before us. We are it til pHoffh HI iyDdlt.j . , Viea(iw.V. on(J !t I - O I lis trpTiprallv conceded that the ORKi.OMAN .r'N"1'....! drift of sentiment is favorable Buwmao Co. I'nrtuno, viresua. ON FII.R AT Chlrarn nnrNin. P"l Swnrlty BulMlo. mwhlnpton. I C. Mat Hire, N. W. Bureau. "501 For- tMHfcoo """sFbscriition- rates. (IN Al'VANCKl n:iy. one r. tr mail -. lialij, all mooiha. by mall.... rullj, three month, by mall Illf, one tonntu, by mall liallj, one year, p!"" t!l. all months, tiy oarner I500 . 1 2.1 . .50 7 SO 8.75 three monitia. t carrier ' tun,' one mouth. b rrler....- wnlWwklt, on T"ar. w "- -L a i a ii mnntha. b? mall .i mi Wetiy. four mitta. by mall 0 MORXIXG. to the measure. In the next week or 10 days local people may do much to aid the cause. Personal letters from Pendleton will turn thou sands of votes. Do your part and do it at once. MR. WILSON'S WORK FOR BUSINESS HE question of develop ing American foreign trade and the ways and means of doing it are receiving attention from the orators and organs of both leading parties in the campaign. Mr. Hughes preaches the ex panding of foreign trade through the development of American shipping and busi ness facilities. His program is vague and he tries to twist high protective tariffs into harmony with foreign trade activities. Here in this state Walter S. Dickey, republican candidate ' 11. T 7 "I. , .1 C1K1.H nAMnfa . ; ior uie uiuieu oiaica ocuok, ,is making a specialty of a plea ; for the development of a great j f-ystem of water transportation 1 ! inland and foreign, as a f unda w i . . I. me birds are singing in the dis. ' mental necessity io expamnng tant woods; j foreign trade, over hu own tweet voice the President Wilson has a large StotK-aove orooos; The Jav makes answer a the Magpie chatters; And all the air is filled with pleasant no'se of waters. All thinss that lve the sun are out of doors; The iky rejoice in the morn- inga birth; The grass is bright with rain drops on the moors The hare Is running races in her mirth; And with her fret she from the plashy earth Raises a mkt; that, glittering in There was a roaring in the wind all night; But now the sun is rising calm and bright Ti vision of our commercial fu- ture. iNone 01 me leaaera s a clearer view of the necessity of promoting trade abroad and of the best means to this end. He links with a clear vision of what ought to be a record of substantial accomplishments under his administration. According to a report of the Department of Commerce, there are now under construc tion or contract In private ,. ? American shipyards 417 steel the son, wherever she mth run. merchant ships of 1,454,270 Wordsworth. i gTOSS tons, WE ARE MAKING HEAD WAY f?t LL over the state people XV who understand the edu- I ..ii. i ,mg repuoiican laws ana a new This tonnage is more than the total American steam toa nage before the war, after nearly half a century of repub lican control of the govern ment It nearly equals the construction in British ship cational needs of Ore con yards last July. It is 10 times are workinsr earnestly for the! the average annual construe success of the Pendleton nor- tion in American shipyards for mal measure. Educators are 1 10 years past. particularly enthusiastic overj Great additions have been the bill and they are giving! made to American registry such support as has never pre viously been given to a propo eition of this sort. Portlander-i j and potent" factor for further are according loyal assistance increase of 6ur freight "de to Pendleton and the same is; livery wagons" i3 the govern trne of many other communi- j ment shipping law, enacted by ties. jthe present congress. This favorable situation isj The complement of increas due to the fact the need of an' ed American shipping under eastern Oregon normal is gen- the Wilson administration is the uine and it is becoming well federal reserve act, which en recognized that plain sense i&bles American banks to pro calls for locating the institu- vide banking facilities in for "tion Ft the most advantageous f izn lands for American trade, point in the territory. Weston j This fundamental agency is is eliminated from considera- due to the wise legislation of tion because it does not provide the democratic president and enough children for practice; congress, teaching work and cannot hope! With these facilities placed to meet the needs of a standard ! at the disposal of American normal, in this respect. It is merchants and manufacturers, tfoufctful if there is a single President Wilson urges co-op-teacher in Oregon who favors Wive group work, so that the Weston in preference to Pen- j power of combination for com dleton as a normal school loca-,mon ends may be substituted tion. School people know that; for separate individual effort, a normal school cannot give j What the republicans failed the best results if located in a to do during half a century of town that is too smail and that1 power and the republican it is the heighth of absurdity to leaders are now talking about, establish a school in a town , the Wilson administration, in where there are not enough (large measure, has accomplish grnde pupils to afford practice ed. It has done more for the teaching work for even a small legitimate American business normal school. ithan any previous administra- ST i ffVl . .. i . t . it.... V ' In mccaevr.1 cays wuea urmuu iocs t ITlCt in DClilSelCKl MUiC, ivi-Viy tht-rrwa'dof the best equipped, accoutred and I KU Ji.1. 1L.U. I hiiii'iaiui5i ' a l- arrow and lavellrs ef the enemy was the deciding tBiACbpTMksIbltticy Dv Elhs IVTKer BwtW. Ai'ihor V IW uPiif Terry, the Big Cop, paused before i more whiskers than Wood row ha Banana- Joe's fruit stand and looked and there would be less to laugh at over his stock with an experienced eye. "Joe," he asked, "do you want nrace or war?" It would be a clean, straight issue Do you want a whiskered president or a shaved one?' The staunch Re publicans would know what hey I wants sella de banan," p-inned : were for and what they were apramsU Joe. I There would be less seen of the man "I'll let yeu," said he Bis Cop, "Ijin the audience who gets up, when prefer apples, anyway," and he took jthe Republican spell-binder is telling the best apple in sight. With mock what Uie Republicans stand for this deference Joe took the pple from year, and Rays, 'Excuse me for liv him and polished it carefully before ing, but the Democrats have ben handing it back to him. "You must think I'm as hard to suit as a Republican campaign ora tor," said the Big Cop pleasantly. "It looks to me as if they were not satisfied to get everything they want from the Democratic administration, but had to kick because they got it. I was not talking through my hat, Joe, when I asked you did you want peace or war." j "No!" asked Joe casually. "I was not," said the Big Cop firm ly. ' "I thought maj'be 1 could add you to the large and toothful war party. At tile rrpsent imt the in habitants of the United States are divided into two frrand divisions :hose who want peace and those Who vant war. The first consists of Theodore Roosevelt, and the second 'if the rest of us. Barring his sons and grandsons, whom he threatened to enlist, Theodore's war party has not grown much. I hoped he might add a blood-thirsty banana man like you to it. "I have a kid at home, Joe. A fine little lad he is, too, and it is none of his fault he is r. baby. Had he been born twenty years earlier he would be a man by new, but a babe he is and he has all the ways of a babe. You should hear him bawl when he sets his mini! on the job and gives his heart to it! You can hear him a mile. And does he need any thing to bawl about! Indeed, no. Does he want a piece of candy! Waw! waw! waw! The neighbors think we are murdering him, the way he howls. So we give him the lolly- fop he wants. He cries ten times ouder than he ever did before. Waw! waw! waw! waw! He's got what he wants, but he bawls because we gave it to him and did not let him climb the shelves of the closet and get it himself! The little skeesicks, he re minds me of the Republicans, this camoaiim. "Have you heard any of them. Joe! Yo should. You can go in free and they're twice as funny as Charley Chaplin. One-half of them are shouting themselves hoarse for honorable peace and the other half yelling their heads off for adequate preparedness. Hughes is to get all that, do vou mind! "If I was running the Republican campaign, Joe, I would confine the issue to whiskers. On that platform I would be safe. With the naked eye ?ny voter can see that Hughes has for that these four years and Wood' row Wilson and Congress have al. ready done it and done it well. J "Has anyone yet pried into your ' ivory dome, Joe, the fact that the Democratic administration has made twenty-four treaties of peace with all the great nations of the world, agree ing there shall be no war by or against us until the quarrel has been thoroughly investigated by a perma nent international commission, and a report made and for twelve months after diplomacy has failed, if fail it does!' Has anyone told you that these agreements bind twelve hun dred million people! If Woodrow Wilson is so bad there are twelve hundred million glad to be like him. , ' lou see, Joe, Wilson has said, with the Republicans and Democrats in the Senate agreeing, 'Let us have no more citizen-murder if we can settle our quarrels with foreign na tions without it' 'But what if we can't settle it that way!' you say. 1 'Suppose.' you say, 'we have to pick up the big hickory club!' 'What club!' I ask, and you look around for it and all you find is a willow switch, . which is hardly the weapon to tackle t a mad enemy with. a "You see, Joe, the Democrats and , Ronnhltrnna hnth t.hnuirht of th&L To keep trespassers off your lot you ' need a club and not a switch, for when they come they bring a club with them. So, whilst arranging every means to avoid trouble and slaughter, the Democrats and Repub licans together have remembered preparedness and have cut a stout hickory ckb to have handy in case of need. In the national program of peace and war the Republicans are like mv babe the only howl they have is that we gave them what they wanted and they are sore tnat they 1 did not have the chance to give ex actly the same things. To my mind whiskers would be a better campaign : issue, by far. The Republicans are making a great cry these days, Joe, but it worries the nation no more than the bawl of my babe John when '; he has already got what he wants. But there is one thing more close to , the Republican leader's heart than even whiskers." "What!" asked Joe wearily. "A government job for the Re publican leader," said the Big Cop, "and that is what all the pow-wow is about when you come right down to it." now of on, hksi mki AS UK-SVI T RAICTIIQl AKK B.UiKKSKlKUV Cal., Oct. 25. Advices received to.iuy from the Mari copa oil district, 40 miles southwvst ot here, relate that the earth tum blers of last Sunday have caused the resumption of the flow of oil from a Well that had been latent for more than two years. The well is located In the foothills near Maricopa and It Is said thm In the past when earthouakea were fh the various wells in tnat vicinity huve increased their production. FIU'IT iKOWKHS TO I.OSK $300,000 C.Ml KllOKTAt.K SPOKANE. Wash.. Oct, 25. KruU growers in the Spokane valley will lose approximately 1300,000 If shortage In railroad cars la not re lieved within two weeks, was thj statement made to the chamber of commerce here today by J. B. Lott, sales manager of the Spokane Fruit Growers' agency. Resolutions were adopted that pres sure be brought upon the ra'.lroads. Protests have been filed with the rall- rr-ads by the fruit growers together wilh notice that suits for damages would be instituted in the event of fruit loss. , YOl'NG MAX IS GOURD To DEATH DY ANGRY BlTl. tion. It has an extraordinary record of usefulness in behalf of the productive and commer cial interests of the country. Shall Mr. Wilson be defeat ed for the great work his ad ministration has done for American business? St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Though Oregon is a strong republican state the drift to Wilson is so strong and unmis takable that a great many peo ple with considerable informa tion on the subject are placing our five electoral votes in the Wilson column. If the Adamson law does the trainmen no good and wont hurt the railroads a bit why on earth has the tory bri gade been worrying ho much about it? Meanwhile the price of wheat goes higher and Jupiter Pluvius is either in jail or loaf ing on his job. Line up your friends for the normal measure. 28 Years Ago Today II infos laid revtfet- tti. "I..H AM) SKIN DISEASUS: ( to w MUX. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY ICS Swift Baili" AllanU. C. ft ri wit MmWAi Mstfi IS (Prom the Daily Eaot Qregoniun, Oct 25, 1888.) Portland Po nta J. M. Bentley oi Pondleton, is in the city. He is get ting to be a bleed, puts up at the Es mond now. Mrs. B. T. Coffey, with a son and daughter, left on a visit to Salem on laxt night's tram, to remain in the capital for a week or so. Mr. A. W. Nye and family are oc cupying the residence vacated by O A. Hartman, on Knob Hill. Miss Susie Fanning returned from a rllt to her sister, near Vinson and will soon resume her cases In the Kast Oregonlan office. Home aneak thief stole Into the barn of Charles Isaacs last night and ibHlracted a saddle therefrom. If he will return he can procure a horoe ;n the fame manner. Without It the saddle will be of no value to him. -A valuable horse belonging to Charley Krazler became sick last night and for along time was a very sick horxa. indeed. Charley stayed up unt'l the wee small hours administer ing various antidotes. Persons who have seen R. Olcott, the Pilot Rock stockman, In Pendle ton lately have also noticed that the f?nd of his proboscis looks as though It had been plowed up for summer fallow. This would be nearly correct for instead of hl nose being plowed Mr. Olcott has been plowing w th hi." nose. He was In the caboose, of a freight train goinj over the mnun tains Tuesday and waa running around in the car when airbrakes were applied at a station. The sud den stop threw Olcott off his feet and he is said to have slid on h'.s nose the entire length of the car, injuring It (the nose) badly. Versalile Ann p :) M' J '- . Ann Pennington, Famous Player Paramount Star. There are other things that Ann Pel nlngton. Famous Players-Paramoui, star, can do besides dancing In Zlet feld'a "Follies," and playing In motloi pictures, as is shown in the accom canying Illustration. She just loves to get over we wasn tub on a Monday morning and tout away for dear life. Safe Home Remedy for Skin-Troubles ll Eczema, ringworm, and other itching, 'mnirr skin eruptions are so easily nuuie vt'oigu by improper treatment that one lias to we very careful. There is one method, however, that you need never liesitnte to use, even on a baby's tender Bum that iil tin; ns- inol treatment. Itesi-i nil iH the nrcit'Tii'tion of a lialtinioru doctor, put up in the form of resinol ointment end rcsinol snaji. Tliis proved go ri'inurkahly 8in cesful, that thounnnils of other phywi cians have prescribed it constantly for over twenty years. Generally resinol ptops itehlnjt nt once, and heals the eruption quickly and at little cost. Heiinol ointment and resinol sonp can lio bought tt any druggist's. Rcsinol Soap ia not only uniuunlly cleatminpf nnd HofUninj?, but its regular use gives to the nkin and hair that natural beauty of p rfeet health which vosaiflict !!. (!!y imituto. SEATTU4 Oct, 25. Earl V. Vorls, 27 years old, who resided with his parents on a farm near Juanlta on the east shore of Lake Washington, was gored to death today by a young buil which became angered when Vorls was fixing the leash with which the animal was tied to a post. The bull Jerked at the lesh so hard thnt the Iron ring was torn from Its nose and then caught Vorls on Its horns and tossed him several feet. The young man's father and mother were standing nearby but were unablo to prevent the tragedy. tache fell orf and a heavy hand foil 0 the shoulder of Fltwros. The drama ends with Fltwros ur. MUSTACHE DKOPS OFF AT CRITICAL TIMK SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 25. It all came out right in the end when the steamer Ventura nrrived here and F. Fitwros' moustache dropped off while immigration officials were scan- nlng his passports. But It looked for a time as If the hero waa going to -exit- with blasted hopes. Fitwros left Australia with a ttar. ing moustache and a passport Into the United States bearing his picture, "I'll have a shave," said he to him. self one day when time aboard the ship hung heavily. And he did. "You'll never get Into America now," said a fr'end, "your passport shows a moustache." An actress dug a fale moustache from her trunk and Fitkros pasted U on. The Immigration official wa about to pass him when the mous- Worth Careful Thought Do you read the labh o know whether your baking powder fa rmxle from cream of tartar or, on the other hand, from alum or phosphate? Royal Baking Powder is made from cream of tartar, derived from grapes, and adtjs to the food only wholesome qualities. Other baking powders contain alum or ' phosphate, both of mineral origin, and used as substitutes for cream of tartar because of their cheapness. Never sacrifice quality and healthful ness for low price. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. New York rounded by friends, his moustache Is his hand and the chip's barber teutt-fylng. mil mtfk fbQC-VlcTl I? F some folks changed their own tempVments they'd be better satisfied with those of their neighbors'. A neighborly idea pan your tin of VELVET 1Z 3C n n A Q 6 Miles Down River from Pendleton iCres OY Larii MY DAIRY HERD AND EQUIPMENTS, FARM IMPLEMENTS, ETC. OWING TO OTHER BUSINESS I WILL SELL TO THE HIGHEST AND BEST BIDDER ON Commencing at 10 o'clock Sharp 20 acres of the finest land in Umatilla Co., moatly all sub-irrigated and all fenced. This land has a 6 room house on same, a small barn and out buildings. A wonder ful garden spot. A chance of a lifetime to purchase a home in sunny Umatilla Co. Close in ranch to the city of Rieth, the railroad center in Umatilla Co., a growing city which will need lots of garden stuff and many pints and quarts of milk to support its families in the future. This ranch is located 1 Va miles down the river from Rieth. Do not forget the date and come to see the land sold. 9 Head Good Young Milch Cows. 1 Spring Calves. 1 Sow and 7 Pigs. 7 Shoats 80 to 125 lbs. 3 dozen chickens. Milk Bottles, Milk Cans, Milk Cooler. 1 Cream Separator. 1 Oliver Plow. 1 New Harrow. 2 Cultivators. ,s Lawn Mower, 200 Posts, Hoae, Rakes , 1 Fresno and 1 Scraper. 2 Hacks, 1 Pair Bob-Sleds. Scalding Vat, New Centrifugal Pump, 20 fU. of 4 inch pipe. Steel Range, Heating Stove, Perfection Oilttove, Bed Room Sets, Dishes, Tables and Household Furniture. New Gasoline Engine with one inch Centrifugal Pump. 2 Hay Racks and Wood Rack. 1 Cement Block Machine and Stock of CemenL 12 Tons of Alfalfa Hay. 30 Rods of Hog Wire. 1 Spray" Pump. 1 Set Doubletrees and Set of Stretchers. 1 Stump Puller and 50 ft. of 3-4-in. cable 100 feet 1 V4 -in. Cable. Washing Machine, Grindstone, Old Trusty Incubator, etc. And many other articles too numerous to mention. FREE LUNCH AT NOON TERMS WILL BE ANNOUNCED DAY OF SALE, 5. RU. CALDWELL. Owner COL. WM. F. YOHNKA, Auctioneer. E. L SMITH, Clerk. Ant,.