PAGE SEVEN EIGHT PAGES DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2. 1917. ASTORIA NEWSPAPER MAN SUED FOR LIBEL I E Order Your Coal NOW It's a keep warm insurance against the cold weather. The cold days this winter will tell you whether the C o a 1, with which you're filling your bins, will give the comfort and satisfaction yon ex pected. To escape re grets it's wisa to re member that it's the heat producing qualities in caal that count. You can get LONGEST BURNING, GREATEST HEAT-GIVING by ordering your coal from us. Why go elsewhere? See us for ROCK SRINGS COAL m LUMP OR NUT. Good dry fir, yellow and black pine. Dry Slabwood that U dry. All wood comes either four foot or sawed. B. L. BURROUGHS Telephone 5 Jen-Mi It. H'jiinuin, Furmer Employe of I Ik- Eawt Orctfonian, I Mule IX--ftiiriuut in .Suit by F. C. Hartey. Jc-sse R. Hinman, an AKtoria new, paperman, who about six year ago worked for a few weeks on the TM Oregnnlan, Id being sued for J 1 0,000 by Mayor-elect F. C. Harley of Asto ria, who is abo well known here The folowlng dispatch tela of the filing of the suit: ASTOrtIA, Dec. 30. The first of what promises to develop Into a serial of libel suit as an aftermath of the recent municipal campaign was filed in the circuit court today, It Is un derstood that when the circuit court grand jury meets, In February, sever al cases of alleged violations of the state corrupt-practices act by partici pants In the campaign will be la'd before that body. The action filed today was brought by Mayor-elect F. C. Harley, against J. R, Hinman. publisher of the Lower Columbia, and asks for $10,000 dam ages for alleged defamation of ehaf aeter. One of the main charges on which the libel action is based is the publi cation on November 30 of a letter signed by George W Mover, in which Harley was aceu-'ed of being "coarse, vulgar, obscene and profane to a su perlative degree, not a gentleman and not capable of Imitating one for five minutes" The communication further anserted that the writer believed Har ley merely wanted the nfflee of mayor merely for the prestige It would give him and to bolster up his wildcat lot Helling srtTeine, selling lots more thnn five miles from the Astoria postofflcc for 20 times thicr value to eastern vie. i Urns The complaint further recites that the defendant published false and li belous editorials during the campaign in which the plaintiff was heralded as the "open-town" candidate for the position of mayor, and averred that, if elected, Harley would appoint an "open-town" chief of police and Asto ria would become the stamping ground of white slavers This damage suit follows on the heels of the moit bitter campaign ev er waged in Artorla. Enslaving men of Belgium look( like another black eye on tne coume nance of civilization. tJi' ' ( ft?'' Margarita Fiscktr in "The Pearl of Paradise." AT PAST 1MB TODAY 1916 SEI NEW HIGH RECORD IN ALL KINDS OF INDUSTRY any Children Are EJou Enjoying To Each Girl or Boy or Anyone Who brings or sends to the East Ore ;oniaa office one new Daily subscriber by earrier for 1 month or longer; or cne new Daily subscriber by mail for 3 months or longer; or one new Semi-Weekly subscriber by mail for 1 year; or any subscriber renewing their Daily subscription fo three anoBths or longer or Semi Weekly for one year. "Unci Bills" Circus consists of tont, flag, animals, clowns, etc., ready for you to cut out and set up and is the finest "cut out" feature obtainable. Don't miss it, the children go wild over it. Get busy now and don't let the other children beat you to it, as this offer may be withdrawn at any time. Many of the "Grown Upi" are sending "Uncle Bill's Circus to some child rela tive or friends, as they are very convenient for mailing. SEE THE CIRCUS SET UP IN OUR OFFICE (From the Bradstreet's Revkw of the ! Business Tear.) Nineteen hundred and sixteen was a wonderful year, but that character. Usatlon does only partial Justice to tlvs latest and greatest twelve months In the country's history. It was said of 1915 that adjectives were lacking fit ly to portray that year's progress. So it may be said of 1916, in turn, that comparatives fail to describe the re peated examples of high records set up in nearly all lines of trade and in dustry, only to be displaced In turn and relegated to the rear by new and hitherto unheard-of totals of indus trial production and trade volume, of bunk clearings and building erpendi. ture, fij transportation earnings on land and on water, of export and im port trade in merchandise, in gold and in silver, of mineral output and ship construction, of prices of all commodities, and of high levels of wages paid in most industries and of dividends paid by enterprises of all kinds, n would be far easier, in fact to single out the lines that did not break records than to attempt to enumerate the multitude of directions in which trade expanded, industry set up new milestones of progress, and fi nance sought widi-r fields of exploita tion. A Yeditor Nation. In 191S the bogy of troublesome li quidation uf our own slocks and bonds held abroad was finally laid, and war began to ofter a market here for for eign ecur.ties; In 1916 we definitely secured title to our position as a creditor nation, loaned freely to the world, and, do- ipite hitherto unequaled purchases by us of belligerent securities, became possessed of of gold imports in a vol ume sue has waa never before seen. To the spur of foreign war demand, represented by unheard-of quantities of food, munitions and general mer chandise sold abroad, was added a new and record-breaking volume of imports, largely of raw materials to feed our industrial machinery, while at the same time purely domestic trade grew beyond the most sanguine dreams of our merchants and manu facturer A quieting down in mid year, with attendant free predictions of the termination of war demand, merely acted as a breathing spell be fore new and still larger demands were again met In the autumn and early winter. "Not enough cars, labor or goods" was a common description of trade and industry throughout many months. Even toward the close of the year, hen nearly all lines were hooked for nine months ahead, and some iron and steel lines were sold well Into 1918. when prices of commo dities, after rising to new heights, had broken badly, due largely to peace talk being injected into the sit nation, there were but few signs of a let-up in active buying, or Indications that the conservatism so long preach ed was really acting as a brake upon extraordinary purchasing. How much of this late quieting down was due to the unusual year-end seasonal dull- Subscription Rates Dally by carrier (6s per month. Dally by Mail $5.00 per year. Daily fcy Kail I1.S0 lit months. Dally by Mail S1.2S three months. Semi-Weekly 11.10 par year. Several hundred girls and boys have already taken ad vantage of this offer. Why not get your "Circus" now? ' IF CIRCUS IS TO BE SENT BY MAIL SEND 100 FOR P08TAGE, For Your Convenience Uee This Coupon. IMS Bast Oregenlaa Pub. Co. Gentlemen: Pleaee sesd mm "Unele BUTs" Circus and sesd the (Daily) or Semi-Weekly) East Oregonlan by (carrier) er (mall), for wklel find enclosed I ''"owing addresses. Bewd See paper tor months, ye. Name Town "" Street and No. My Name is My Address Is 5 2 5 2 z1 neas it would be hard to say. gomo of it, as, for instance, the quiet and easing in some cotton goods, was un doubtedy due to a 4-cenf break in raw cotton. Presidential Year. AH thia activity had occurred, too, despite the fact that it was a presi dential year, one also of disturbed foreign relations and a period of dis appointing crop outturn, which was made more manifest by large foreign buying of obtainable supplies, and ev. idences of speculation having taken advantage of national conditions to push prices of food to record heights. This latter resulted i a popular out burst against high living costs and the URual frenzied efforts of public men, legislators' and others to find evidence of monopolistic combinations affect ing prices of the "people's food." i Some FmaiM-ial Praturea Exports of merchandise totaled 45,- 1 460,000,000 in value, excelling those for the previous calendar year by 55 per cent, and those for the year 1914 by 157 per cent Imports aggregated (2.360,000.000, exceeding 1915 and 1914 by 32 per cent. Gold imports to taled (630.000.000, surpassing exports by (500.000,000. Our gross imports of gold during the war have aggre gated (1,100,000,000, and the net im ports (838.000.000, while our sales of merchandise for the like period were considerably over double our purchas es Hence the estimates that we bought back (2,000,000.000 of Amer'. can securities, and, in addition, be came creditors for an additional 12.- I 000.000,000 of foreign bonds or notes. As our export trade has grown since ' the war began, its character has grad ually changed, and the early large shipments of foodstuffs have become dwarfed, partly beciuse of crop short ages, by later enormous exports of manufactured good? not all of these. bv the way munitions though It must be said that our shipments to entente countries have far exceeded thne to the rest of the world. Our gains In trade with' the part of the world at peace have hardly expanded as much as might have been hoped though it is hard to see how our fac tory productions, strained as It was to the breaking point, could have bee;i further increased. Credits based en the new and vast supplies of securi ties and gold have expanded, and the country's banking position has be come one of unparalleled deposits an resources. Bank clearings for 191 testified to the enormous volume of the banking movement In a total of Jifin. 000.000 000, a sum never before equaled, and a gain of 40 per cent over the 1915 high record and of 69 per cent over 1914. If the normal ex cess of bank clearings at leading cit ies. 2 1-2 to 1, be regarded as a guide, the country's total banking business in 1916 was easily (650.000. 000 000. Slock speculation was more active than for a decade, total sales at the New York Bxchange aggegat ing 232,000.000 shaers, a gain of St per cent on 1915. fire times what It was in the "cose" year 1914. and on'y 18 per cent less than in the recoru high year 1906. Rond sales aggre gated (1,160.000.000. a total showing a gain of 23 per cent over lOlB, and second only to 1909, compared wl'h Your Bath Room Warm &n.1 Comfy With One of Our f? A trom $3.00 up Once used you wonder how you ever got along without it. Paic Power & Light Company PHONE 40 wh.ch year transactions fell off 12 per cent. Government bond sales, reflect ing large foreign flotation? wore eighteen times as active as in 1315. Money was easy until toward the close of the year and collections were good, with many old accounts liqui dated, especially in the south. Fail ures for the year, reflecting the final closing out of old, crippled concerns and of new ventures insufficiently provided with experience, capitAl or other requisites, were large in num ber, second only in fact to 1915, frcra which they decreased 12 per emir but the rarity of important fuspen sirns is shown in the volume of lia bilities being the smallest "lih one ex" ceptlon since 1909, 38 per cmt below 1915, and less than half those of 1D14. price Movements. As pointed out elsewhere, the crop outturn was not In keeping with th er developments, and to this cause as much as to active foreign demands were due the new and dizzy heights reached by many commodities includ ed in Bradstreefs Index Number, which latter rose steadily early in the year, faltered in the late spring an I summer, and then took a new flight to still higher ground as crop short ages became certainties, active indus try swelled pay rolls, and a snow storm of wage advances ia the latter months by a process of an endless chain character still further advanc ed all price quotations. This process resulting in a reduction of the dol lar's buying ability of 23 per cent a compared with the year's cpenlnfr. was ultimately responsible for a sort of popular revolt against high food) prices, petitions for embargoes aalnal fond shipments, and wtdesDread Mi- tional, state and municipal John Do hunts for the causes of advanclac prices. That some of the price ad vances were bred of speculation, mad possible by cheap and abundant mo ey. seems certain; that some wr what may be called psycholofffcal or auto-suggestive may be conceded, bu that short yields ana unexampled de mand were the main causes hardly r. quires prof. The fact that Brad streefs Index Number for the entir year 1916 was 20 Jer cent above 1913 33 per cent above 1914, 2 per cert above 1910 the last year" of food price revolts and meat boycotts and Just double that of the low water yea of 1896, is a visible staisical exampfl flcatlon of what have been called the "penalties of prosperity.' Mrs. jUysG Metis! PHYSICAL CULTURE AND ELOCUTION. Hotel Pendleton. 8 Vs- L Virginia Hardy, one of the most prominent of present day ingenues, who has been connected with a num ber of the most Important dramatic organizations of the country, will be seen as Barbara Worth in Mark Swan's dramatization of Harold Bell Wright's Western classic, "The Win ning of Barbara Worth,' which will be at the Oregon theater next Friday evening. There are other noted members of the dramatic world In cluded In this company. Aside from a powerful cast, L. c. Yeomans has given the play a beautiful scenic pro duction. It Is one of the distinctive dramatic successes of the past two seasons. -W'-T GREAT 1 JplSfife SERIALS II oa GROUP STORIES lb 3IN.1917E. i Stories apo Stories pteety of thm. Actio, $ a j a r d.iL.. I : ki U C, A8TCHW1, IU I tM99f UlJfleUWh) TljeYoutli's Companion will make 1917 a Great Story Year. Besides the Great Serials and 250 Short Stories, there are rare Special Pages for each one. Family Page, exceptional Editorial Page. Boys' Page, Girls' Page, Children's Page, Doctor's Comer, Current Events, Nature and Science, Travel, Information, etc. Everything from everywhere for every one in the family. THE TOOTH'S COHPAKION. StPuiSU I0ST0. BASS. CUT THIS OUT - and rrd it (or the name of C.'a paper) with (2.00 for Ttt Coawuuoa (or 1917. and we will tend you E"T5 rr All the remaining- hmnt of THE FREE THEN COMPANION fr TIIK nmPAMOM I1UMECAL- l:M)AK tor 117. The HflJ Two Wrktf Inon at THE CUMPAMO for 1U1 7. SUBSCRIPTIONS RECEIVED AT THIS OFFICE CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY 1XSVHANCE AND LAND IH'SIXKSS BEXTLEY A MONTGOMERY. REAL estate, fire. life and accident insur ance agents. 815 Main street. Fhone AICTIOXEKHS. COL. W. F. YPHNKA, AUCTION- eer. makes a spcialty of farmers stock and machinery sales. "The man that gets you the money." Leave orders at East Oregonlan office. S1XOND HAND DEALERS. V. STROBLE, DEALER IN NEW and second hand goods. Cash paid for all second-hand goods bought. Cheapest place In Tendleton to buy household goods. Come and get our prices, til B. Cort street Phone 17 1W. ARCHITECT, RAYMOND W. HATCH, ARCHl tect. Detain Building. Phone 718. Pendleton, Oregon. DOCTOns. DR. 5. A. ROE PRACTICB IJM lted to the eye. ear. nose and throit. Hours ( to it and I to I, and by ap pointment. Suite tl, Judd Bldg. ATTORNEYS. JOHN W. HUFF. ATTORNS Y-AT- Law. Room i, Americas Nation al Bank bslldin. ftALKT A RALEY. ATTORENYS AT law. Office in American National Bank Building. GEOBGS W. COCTTa ATTORN BY at law. Bstatos settled, wills. deeds, morticajre and eowtsnrts drawn. Collections made. Room 17, Schmidt block. FEE A FEE, ATTORBNTS AT LAW. Offiee In Deapam building. CARTER ft SMYTH B, ATTORNEYS at law. Offiee Is rear of American National Bank betiding. JAMES B. PERRY. ATTORKBW AT law. Offiee over Taylor Hardware cosipaay. PETERSON at BISHOP. ATTOR neys at law; reoms I aad i, Smith Crawford baUdlng. DOUOLA8 W. BAILEY. ATTORNEY at law. Will practice rn all state and federal court Rooms, 7, I anJ 8, Despaia beUdln. I FREDERICK STEIWER. ATTOIV- nev at law. Office in Smith-Craw ford building. & A. LOWELL, ATTORNEY AND counsellor at law. Office la D spaln building. FINERAL DIUFCTOHS. J. T. BROWN'S FURNITURE STORB Funeral director and licensed sra balmer. Most modern funeral par lor, morgue and funeral cara Calls responded to day or nlnht. Corner Main and Water streets. Telephone S. JOHN S. BAKER. FUNERAL Di rector and licensed emlielmer. Op peelte postofflce. Funsral pafloe. two funeral ears. Calls responded te day or night Phone 76. MONTAN A FA KM LAN D. NORTHERN PACIFIC RAIT WAT Lands In eastern Montana at tt.lt to 111 per acre. BuUaMe for farmtna or grasing. Easy tenna Tor Infos melius write or see W. E. UoH, Mile City, Monti If il 0