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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1917)
PACK SIX DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1917. EIGHT PAGES tatOKTMNOKM NKWMI'AriCE rHf and arml Weekly at Pea aJelnn. Oregon, by the I.MUONIAN PI HI.I.SHIXO CO. waf et th iwwtorflre at Pendletoa, mm (yu4 -laa mall natter. I IN OTHKR OITiKS rial Hmol Newa Stand. Portland. Kfa 'o, Port la ad, Oroa. N INI.B AT ixiu smurltj Rniintiw- 1 1 t. Bureau. 601 r'our- N. W. City Official Paper. County Official Paper. Member United Presa Aaeociatloa. AUIKSCRIPTION 1SATKS N AUVANCKI i mr, a. BiHll ..." 00 s . 13 . ..0 . T SO . 75 . l. . .5 U', eaa Aootl, kr aiaft.. t tare aaoatba. V mall i arivtta. ay nan rear. by carrier Has, at atonttt., ay carrier aaHy, aaiSBe aaoani". ay carrier Sbmtom. mmm attain, a, carrier... taiMI. ie rear, by anil . 1.60 :tv ate etonffca. br mall... ;r, tt moattia. ay mall.. . .M IUKE MF WOKTHY OF MY 11UKSDS "at as rny joy In life to find Jkt every turning of the road. Te strong arms of a brother kind. la bi Ip me onward with my J l;wd: Aaaa aiiire I hare no (told to Tj Awl love alone can make a.t trends, Hr ml" prayer is. ahile I live. xr.ake me worthy of my friends.' " INTOLERABLE HE worst foes of the suf VSjLL frare cause to be found are the women who re-j f"Slly "made spectacles of tSsonaelves by trying to picket fce White House , The worst foes in the world yf Uj cause of labor are fna iical L V. W. leaders who, be- of German money or for other reason, have at- Wniim,i taiaee Dm, TO 1jfnrptei here and there to yvmch a doctrine of anarchy sand destruction. . "With the country at war ftrvplr. are in no mood to listen "to SLrcb rot. They want loyalty -aind eotpatration and the aver Kge man is ready to render scfa service to his country. For the Blue-Jackets II 1 111 ' 3jvo He V. t-r.U ale 1 Hn This is true of labor as a class and it is true of capital. The country cannot stand for internal disturbances that threaten the efficiency of the nation " hile at war. Those who plan or preach to such ends give aid and comfort to the enemy and it is a precari ous thing to do in wartime. Take care that you make your position clear and remem ber the old adage about the company you keep. ADVICE FOR THE MEN R. ANNA HOWARD SHAW, chairman of the committee of women of the Council of National De fense, has returned to Wash ington after a busy week of speech making. She has been talking about the work of the committee of women and the plans which are being made at headquarters for-the coordina tion of the woman power. She spoke in Newark, 'N. J., to about 2000 members of various organizations, and in Delaware county before the annual coiv vention of the Suffrage Associ ation of New York. "The response everywhere was wonderfully enthusiastic and sincere," said Dr. Shaw. "I find that women are eager to work and most interested in finding out how best they can serve their country. There is a growing sentiment, however, against being scolded by every one in regard to saving. Wom en are much more economical than men. The soldiers have written back to us that they want tobacco. Well, I say let the men economize on tobacco I and give the boys in the trench; j es a smoke if it is going to make ithem happier or more comfort- 'able. If each man would put aside one cigar each day, the time smoking.' We'll eat Indian corn to give them' bread ; let the men also make a sacrifice. And the government would do well to look after the "machinery of transportation and the milling industry as well as the women in the kitchen. The women ""ill economize. They are eager to They want to do I everything in their power to 'help. They know, too, that barley is just as good in soup as it is in beer." REPRESENTATIVES OF HIGH CALLING 1 EPRESENTATIVES of the V newspapers of Oregon are in Pendleton at this time for the annual meeting of the State Editorial Association. It is an organization represen tative of most of the press of the state. This morning the visitors were extended a wel- ataT -r:JLm- i im.m mmmmmmmmmmmmim Our boys in the Nzvy enjoy their absvo. The Navy Department has put its ofiicial seal of endorsement on this fiumph in soft drinita. by allowing it to be sold and served on all naval vessels. A'jhore or afloat, you will find in Bevo a nair.tc-plca&in, r."rc-hing and nu t:itious beverage. just the thing io tak; along for sail cr cru:.? auto fip cr carr.p and for ',tt ic;-box zt horn:. the iil!-year-round soft drink in TVjttW. crT- and is bottled exclusively by ANHEUSER DVSCH ST LOUIS IJL VI viAUER & HOCH PORT'.AND. ORE. :ome to the city by the presi dent of the Commercial Club; a fitting program of entortain ment has been prepared for the guests. . There is propriety for this in the fact the newspapers of the state have on many occasions been friendly and helpful to Pendleton and to causes in which the city has been intei ested. They have a welcome coming from the city and they are truly welcome. It is the view of the East Oregonian that most people have a well justified confi dence in the fundamental mer- ts of the press. There is room for complaint at times, of course. 1 here are men in tne business who have neither the ability nor the integrity fo work of this character. But what profession or Jine of busi ness is free from such condi tions? Taken as a' whole the newspapermen of Oregon have faith in their profession, they are eager to serve their com munities and the country; they observe a higher standard of ethics than does the legal pro fession. Extremely few papers of recognized standing are open to bribery, be it direct or indirect. This is not because newspapermen are of better clay ttjan others, but because they find it good business. A newspaper s reputation is one of its chief assets and a paper without such proper repute is not good property. At this particular time the Ijiewspaper business faces par ticular obligations and respon sibilities. All that you know or anyone else knows about the war and its related subjects has been derived from the press. The appeals that have been made for preparedness. for cooperation, for liberty loan purchases and such causes as that of the Red Cross have been made through the press. For months every newspaper in the land has been literally flooded with propaganda, much of it being very worth while from a national stand point. It is to the credit of the press that most newspapers have striven loyally to meet their obligations to the nation in this hour of trial. To the newspapermen now ! assembled in Pendleton the East Oregonian extends greet ings and trusts that they will tind profit and enjoyment in their visit to the biggest town of its size in the world. 28 Years Ago Today (From the Daily East Oregonian, July 13. 1889.) " A carload of blind horses was ship ped by J. O. Young last evening for ue at elevators at Athena, Milton. Valley Orove, Waitsburg. Dayton and Pomeroy. - H. 1!. Hays han completed the grad ing of his lots on N'oh Hill and will commence the erection of a neat dwelling thereon In a few days. Orain north of Pendleton in some what shriveled but all thingn consid ered is very fair grain nevertheless. GAS MASK TO BE USED BY U. S. SOLDIERS .''-:;v;',ar ' Mum iiTTm r&ZT Vt laUaaaaaaaaaaaajaaaaajaajajaaaaawajasanaaM Itrpresentative llrintz of Cincinnati here shown wearing; a :u mask uch as has be n provided for A inert- ; , ' can soldiers in France. He one of . the two members of ronsfn'SH vhi tin vnltMd in the army. The mask was O. H. CHi-tor and X. Prk.'lty l.ft on uhIh.v'k train for nil excursion to BiitlKh Columbia, to be koiio aeveni! weeka. They will leave the rallronfl nt taml Point. Idaho, unci make the remainder of the trip overland. They will be followed ly Wirt Jllno Mon day uhoae law office will be ivrealdeo ! over during hia absence by T. u. j Haiiey, iro ner to John Hallev vn.o today from Washington-Ue university wmre ne Kraituated with honors. Master n.ihln Klotehor lUMlllttcd hlmaolf admirably In hla ballad horn solo at the benefit concert for the EliensburK sufforors last evening. REALTY TRANSFERS lMXl. Ksther SI. Cornell, et vir. to Karl I Carson, 1, lot IS, blk. H. Hemiis ton Orchards. James Wishart. et nx. to Earl I. Corson, $1. lot 14, block H, of Her ntiston Orchards. K. J. Kraehler, et ux, to M. Chrls tensen, J10. W. 1-u Nw. 1-4 HE. 1-4 Sec. 34. TwP, S North. ItnnKe 2S. DO YOU KNOW- That, if the'pen Is miRhtier than th sword. Uncle Sam would do well to conscript tho editors while he has them all together here? That the natatortum committee Is being panned roundly for not install ing a spring-board below the divimc pedestal as in. former years? That Col. Clark Wood, e pluribus unum of the Weston deader, rwd up city items for the Kast Oregonian renders some 25 years ago? Secretary of tho Interior Franklin K. Lane and Secretary of the Xavv Josephus DanielH are former newspa permen ? That one of the Institutions that has arisen in Pendleton since war was -declared Is the "In Pad club"? That th& best quotations obtain- able on bootlegger booze in the Pen dleton market is eipht dollars a quart without any quality guarantee? TWO MAIVKATKRS CAl'CiHT. Shark XetUd In Sound: Schools siren Going smith. NEW laON'DON, Conn, ly 12- Two man-eating sharks. nn eisrht feet in length and weighing 3 00 pounds, the other x feet long and weighing 200 pounds, were brought here this morning by the fishing smack Grace. The sharks were found in hlackfish nets, one mile and a half west of Fisher's Island, - in Long Island Sound. About two weeks ago a big shark was caught here similarly. One of the men on the smack atd that he had seen schools of sharks heading for the ocean and thought they were going south. l"ttrly C"setew Information. (From the Boston Transcript.) The eyes of a potato do not require glasses. A derrick in of no service In lift ing a. mortgage. The incandescent r not a good garden bulb for fall setting. Shooting stars do not require n constant supply of ammunition. We do not believe that a second hand tooth brush store would roaHy pay. Trousers may be prevented from bagging at the knees by not sitting down. We are told that centipedes do not hove to wipe their feet befor enter ing their homes. In eating a bowl of potip hIwiv'-. bo. gin at the top and eat downward. ne'er .the reverse. modeled after a fJerman mask picked up on the battlefield in France. Hut tn attacnea oag s an '"V provement. It in an air filter which wiJ pufify (hp jjr of nnlnUn KW so Wh-n it Is received into the mouth it will not poison the body. Start Now GO into this tir.e question thorough ly you can waste a lot of money if you don't make a careful analysis of the value you get the first price the cost per mile the non-skid qual ities the name back of the tire. ROOT GIVES $2,500 TO MOSCOW SOLDIERS Head of American Mission to Russia is Formally Thanked by Mayor of City. PKTUOORAD. July 12. Etihu Koot. head of the American Mission to Kuss'a. has given $-'500 to the soldiers of Moscow, He was form ally thanked for the gift by tho may or. Charles K. Crane and John It Molt of the mission attended the election held at Moscow at which Archbishop Tlkhon. formerly sta tioned in the United States, was nam ed Metropolitan or Moscow by popu lar vote. The Metropolitan former! was appointed by the emperor. The Congress of Workman's and Soldiers' delegates adopted a resolu tion today condemning a nti-Jewish ag'tation. in which it sees danger of a revolutionary movement. The res olution demands energetic opposition to all attempts at anti-Semitic agi tation, and suppression of a! propa ganda of the nature. The ltutskaka Wdomosty reports that the peasants of two cantons near Odessa, in view of their .inability to obtain clothing, have passed a reso lution to organize "processions ot naked men." mits nowx n.; and thkx MlniMNUia I Nearly BMiwn to Doalli and !nt to .Tall. K1NNBY. Minn.. July 11. Tearing down an American flai? nnd crushlnK It undnr hla heel almost coat Vlcto Salmi hi" life here today. MlHtakini; a gathering: of men for wympathfaerM Haluii tore the flag from it pole. The police ul tthbed their way into the center of the thronit and arrested .-'Jtinii. We was budly manhandled. Arraigned before Justice of the retire MrX'lairn. he was Riven 60 days in the workhouse. I'. H. A-Mltl'tAVCK SPXTION CI1T:i) Kutlrp 1rltind Stanford TIIvIhIoh Mrntionrd for Bravery. PARiS, July 11. The entire ambu lance section of the American field service sent to France by Inland Stanford University Inst February Is cited by Oen. ManKin today in orders to the division. The citation of the section is made for its havinff piven constantly since its arrival at the front an example of couraife and profound devotion, es peciully nt Verdun and at Moronvil llers. in pushing up to the battle lines under bombardment to carry away the wounded. I. V. W. H tor nnTultina. NORTH VAK.IM A. July 12. The Industrial Workers of the World hall hero which was closed last ntRht by 0EG..L IMN'T lII FTIIFrl WITH A XI; KKMOVR T1IKM WITH TIIK OTHIXK Pltr9-KIITHX. This prescription for the removal of freckles was written by a prominent physician and is usually so successful in removing frckles and Riving a clear, beautiful complexion that It la sold bv any druggist under guarantee to refund the money if it fails. Don't hide your freckles under n vWl; get itn ounce of othlne and re move them. Even the first few ap plications should show a wonderful Improvement, some of the lighter freckled vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othlne: it is this that is sold on the money-back guaran tee. ( E S Make Your Tire Equipment FISK The man who has made this analysis knows that Fisk Non-Skids are the greatest dollar-for-dollar value on the market. Buy NOW to know real tire satisfaction put a Fisk on your spare rim Renew old equipment with Fisk. Fisk Tires For Sale By All Dealers The Fisk Rubbe!? Company o N. Y. General Offices: Chicopee Falls, Mass. Fisk Branches in More Than 125 Cities Oregon troops who arrested leaders and members of the organization, to day was turned Into a recruiting of fice. Lieutenant O. A. Stevens. In charge of tho detachment stationed here, said today the cases of the men Nation Wide Te$t of Automnbile Efficiency Today It has been arranged that on July 13. In 200 points throuKhoiit the United States, people will have "a chance to observe how far Franklin cars will run on a sinKle gallon of gasoline Thfs simultaneous demon stration of national scope is beln put .on by Franklin dealers Just to show the extensive part being played by Frnklin cars in the national move ment toward thrift and efficiency, and to set a standard by which the ability of an automobile to conserve, can he judged. The great body of motorists is alive to the fact that there should be n reason why automobiles should not "do their bit" in conserving national resources, as well ns the men and women of America. As an economic factor in this country' life, the au tomobile holds a position comparable to the railroads; In fact, statistics show that automobiles carry more people than the railroads. It i only natural, then, that the striving for efficiency should extend to such an important cog In everyday life. With gasoline an all-Important war commodity, its conservation is one of the problems confronting gov ernment of ficia Is. It i generally acknowledged that to curtail auto mobile mileage In order to save gas oline, would work hardships on the business and social machinery of the nation. Therefore, the avenue left open Is more efficient use of the available supply. The came can be said of tires, while the elements of depreciation and upkeep also repre sent, in general, a waste that, if stop ped, would add greatly to national re sources. . In the opinion of J. W. Mcform mach. Franklin dealer here, it Is every automobile man's obligation to go on record ns to this thrift move ment, for only by such efforts can development be encouraged and the public served the best. "The automo bile business has been ' established for twenty-odd years." says Mr. Mc Cormmach, "but in all this time it would be hard to lay a hand on some universal standard of automobile ef ficiency. Yet gasoline economy is the one simple standard which tens the whole story. That Is why we , LiiiiMiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiftiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiieiitftitifiiiif riiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiMuiiniiiiiiiiMiiniiMiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiMiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' HOODIES, CHOP SUEY, CHIHA DISHES Kt . . . . - . GOEY'S lift 'Whin you pay more than Fislt prices you pay for something that Joes not exist" arrested would be taken before th United State court. Beware of the woman who doesn't like candy, flowers or babies. Are there any? are going to chow how far a Frank lin car can run on a single gallon of gasoline. Clasoline economy implies efficiency and thrift all along the line, for it not only measures fuel consumption but It shows to what degree the wear Htid tear of friction has been eliminated; also, whether a car is overweight, and consequent ly extravagant in tires and high in depreciation losa; in fact, gasoline economy is the gauge of the 'produc ing qualities' of design, muter hi I and conntruction." The demonstration to be made by Mr. McOormmach and approximately 200 other Franklin dealers, is not scheduled for a time when conditions are most favorable, but for a set day regardless of weather. The demon stration is not In the nature of a contest, as no priws or special hon ors are at stake. The whole purpose Is to show simply how the manner In which the Franklin car measures up to the present automobile require ments. The rules require the use of a sin gle certified gallon of commercial gasoline, carried In a separate tank connected directly to the carburetor, and that all cars In the teat be stock models, Keries 9 Franklin touring cars. The, courses cnl Ifor an oitl-and-back trip, so as to equalize any advantages from wind or grade. The strict conformance to the rules will be certified under oath by two offi cial observers, who will accompany the car for the entire distauce. With over 200 testa being performed in the same day. It is to be expected that average results will be obtained with respect to roads and weather. Franklyn dealers feel that in estab lishing some simple standard of effi ciency, like gasoline economy, the motor-car industry can he promoted In a large way. The tests are most practical, because the procedure i something which any motor car con follow In attaining a comparable re sult. The reputation for efficiency which the Franklin has held throughout the fifteen years of Its history, has been hacked up by many world's rec ords for gasoline mileage.- Adv. ACTUAL EXPERIENCE The theory of dentistry alone 5 Is worthlesa. tt is the actual experience from long years of practice, which counts. Lowest prices, highest grade of mate- S rial, skill andB service. Newton Painless Dentists j Corner Main and Webb Streets H Kit trance on Webb Sf. E I'll me II! Often FvcYiIng- s Wert AltaSt.. UpiUtr,, Phone 433