PAGE SIX DAILY EAST OREGONTAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. MONDAY, AUGUST 20. 1917. EIGHT PAGES AM IMDBPBMDBK NBW8PAPKB m Pall; and 8enl Weealj at Ptm- dleton, Ornc-oa. by the OBKUONIA.N I'LltLISHIXO CO. at the nostnfflra at Pendletoa. a aecoad ctasa mall matter. ON BALE IN OTHKR PIT1K8 Hotel Newa StanH. Portland. Mau Neva Co.. rortland. Oregon. OS FII.B AT flef Bnrftu. 909 Security Rntldlag. waaaiactna. i. c, Bureau, oui to tract. N. W City Official Paper County Official Paper. Member United Press Aaaociatlon. iCBSCRIFTION RATES 1 1N ADVANCE) aa rear, bv mall .1 no &alt. alx Doiilhs. bv mail - '. - aa!rr, tare.' u-.-mlis. !" mall ally, eae Month. bv mall let'.iy, ee y-'ar. by airier . all n-.onth. bv i-arrir Daily, taree months, by carrier MUr. aae moDtti. hv carrier Meatf-Weekly. one .rear, by inaM ). Weeklj. six months, by mall Aefal-Weakly, four oi.mtbB. by mall IXAtiS KRATERJiAIt Trie lilies of France have broken Her rosea are trampled and dead. -4 Her violets under the mosses Are drowne.1 in a river of red. Ht woods have been felled in the battles. -a Ht.r fields are all planted with eravea. - And a desert "f dark desolation Rxten.ls where the tricolor waves. Rut nver the "cean M Oiory Is spee linir tt Pave, and behold! Prom the oak o ifta flasrstaff new forests W.ll rprinir on th roots of the old. Front it. rUrii-es the red roses wi'l blossom. From its stars the while lilies will blow. FY. mi its blue of the resrions ce f lestial Violets w:ll fnll'.w the snow. Hail: to th,- laniiT fraternal Rtreamins- unfadinsly bricht. Splendor supreme of the morn - ins. fitar-spane ed sheen of the J , A night. Flyin? tmconnuered together. Colors eternally three. Blue, white and red of the tri - color. Hfc Red. while ani blue of the free. By Minna Irv nx in Leslie's. THE ROAD TO VICTORY OME people seem to think that unless the people keen in a constant state f hysteria over the war then !Tiie countrv is asleep, has no conception of what is before it !lnadino. and unloading of ort and is pi danger of disaster. jwi, he, -Navigation delays There is some justification )can undoubtedly be reduced. fr the view because there wasjIf jt does no more tb voyaee a time when people did not re- ; Kt ,eape witnesBes to the hope ..lize the magrati'de of the jobful pffort to t our river to t hand. Rut the government i work St p0st-Dis- realizes it ;ind in the main has taken steps accordingly. We j ' ... are doinj; big- thinfrs and pre- Jhe , tfat pffort for a Ger. paring to do much more As a j . d ear, e fe about oa.n we are not loafing on fat a9 Herr Zimmerman's the job, We are rolling up , , f an invasion of the he does not like at all and it is ine reason he strives so hard - v it.,1.1 i i.:- iwr a looinoiu ioomiij; tuwain ( peace. Among the essential things accomplished or in process of accomplishment may be in cluded the financial backing given the allies, the ship build ing program, the construction nf 22.000 aircraft, the raising of our first line army or 750. 00 men. the draft army sys tem, food control, new methods of fighting the submarines and "the use of our naval forces in unti-submarine work. WThile we are doing these things and arranging to do as much more a is necessary it is immaterial whether or not -jsch citizen beats his breast j Jind runs around in a '-ircle as i do the African natives when warfare is at hand. It is better to cut out the hysteria and circle running and get down to business. We cannot whip the kaiser with torn torn work. The spirit of the people is import ant but spirit alone will not win the war because all the na tions involved have plenty of spirit. The side with the men, the equipment, the organiza tion and the generalship is go- iii)T to win. God will fight as always on the side of the best and be.-t handled brigades. In that respect we have the supre macy now and this supremacy is going to become more and more marked. Therefore as time goes by we are going to overcome the foe and we are going to make the world safer than it has been for nations that place their faith in justice "nd democracy. Is the prospect pessimistic or is it one to cause good cheer? A TUG AND SIX BARGES TV 1 1. I J 1 5y with about 1000 tons of Til: 1 . ci ... t - 1 iimiius cum, leu oi. iuuisj so!,Iuly 30 and arrived in tow of a ; Sbji'ver tug at St. Paul Aug. 13. There they will be loaded with i!s i Minnesota iron ore to supply , JJlSt. Louis' blast furnaces. .V j Coal from Lake Erie ports to SOlii. c : i ivr: i"iar oujrriiui pui aim aUJII- nesota and Michigan iron ore from Lake Superior ports back to Lake Erie ports. . This is the formula which has built up the greatest iron industry centers in the country and made pos sible in the United States Steel Corporation the largest organi zation of industrial capital in the world. Coal up and iron ore down via the river route is near enough of this formula to make the voyage of the six barges a matter of very special local in terest. We may recall that South Chicago has successfully varied the original formula by starting coal from the lower end of Lake Michigan and (bringing ore back. ! One trip does not make a new trade route, any more than 0ne swallow makes a summer, :but we have reason for optim- ism about this puffing tug ana , its string of barges. No expert ;vho ever examined them has .failed to concede St. Louis' pre- 'eminent advantages as an iroc center. It is already a con sumer of basic iron in huge amounts 1000 tons a day or more, much of it brought by rail from Eastern points and pig iron at a lower cost of de livery could materially increase this consumption. Ore mined J at low cost, and near-by coal I assembled here by cheap water l transport would mean the re alization of many St. Louis dreams. The down voyage with the current, of cc-urse, will take less !time than the up voyage J against the current, but it looks j as if the round trip by river J; could not be made in very .imuch less than a month, whereas the round trip between Lake Erie and Lake Superior takes only about a week. But this first voyage will have many suggestions as to the value of the new route and as to ways of improving its ad vantages. Much can be done to cut the time. Machinery for the quick United States by Mexico. The I. W. V should not be 1 u i it is a trouble making affair and just now is specializing in try- SPARTANBURG CAMP S - - ' -nun- mwaflK! )l. ;I.iurtr offir at l'mp W.iilKWorth. Hpartanbur. South lliiii; ar- on th- hum ;iwiitinif Un- arrival of lh AMERICAN BATTLESHIP IN SMOKE SCREEN N vv -vlr R' J. vr, 5 vit 4;i; v., ,rf - m s ft - m JCfV1' , . I If; s. If t.r - v ':f "f jl. t.m,f 1 "- .. J The ships of the Atlantic which have lieen mobilized sin fleet. .......... l..., u, in nair nettun 10 ing to hamper war DreDara- tions. More seasonal weather is predicted; if the forecast comes true it will be hot but not sizzling. 9 28 Years Ago Today (From the Dally Kast Oresonian Aug. 20, 1SS9.I A cigar composed of raKs and fea thers but neatly put tonether was ?iven to a drunken fellow today for a practical joke. He afterwards turn ed the tables on the jokers by smoit- tn it in their presence. "uptain McClellan of Fort Vancou ver arrived in Pendleton on this mornings train from Walla Walla and left at once for the reservation. He comes to select a camping place for some 12 or 14 companies of t'nele Sam's bluecoats who will be Riven an outinR on the reserve for a little recre ation and camp drill. C. K. Wheeler, formerly of the firm of Tennery & Wheeler, the enterpris ing photographer, who was recently cleaned out by the fire in Pendleton, leaves on tomorrow's train for Ku e.tne where he will rcRide hereafter. The price of butter has advanccl a notch, fresh butter now selling at 60 cents per roll. As winter comes on apace the family man's face irrews lont'er and his pocket book Brows leaner. Summer complaint. Durins the hot weather of tho summer months some member of al most every family Is likely tn be trouhle l with an unnatural loosener of the bowels, and It 1 of rh- er.at est importance that this be treated promptly which can only be Ione when the medicine is kept at ha nl. MrH. V. K. Scott. ScottHbllle. N. Y states. "I fir.st used Chameriain'. Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy as mu-h as five venr a pro. At th'it time had a severe attack of summer complaint and was suffering intense pa in. one dose relieved me Other members of my family have since used it with like results." Adv I'ltF.NCH PRISONERS PIT ON FRONT MNF. 1VOKK PARIS. Auk. a. - The tterman have organized twenty nix hnttalions f Kreneh military prisoners for work in iliinKerous position on the front line, according to reyelations of H. Galli. a member of the eharnixr o" deputies. The government has form ally protested. Ralli deelare.l the Germans in vo latii.n of thf- rules of civilized warfare forced the French prisoner to do mi litary work under tile Runs of (he al lies, thus releasing lurif. numbrs of Herman soldiers for aetuul fihtinE?. It is asserted it had been proven thi condition existed. ALMOST READY FOR NEW YORK GUARDSMEN "ft'', , '" 7rf i s. r. HTt i i New York i iv the smoke screen, developed some months ami in Enltland. to hide irom submarines Thii photoerraph 0. A. C. EXPERT GIVES REPORT Oil DISEASE AFFLICTING HORSES B. V". iJimms. professor of vetri nary medicine at O. A. C. han made the following report on tnr study of the disease that has been causing many deaths nmon tmatil!u county horses : About July 1, the State Livestock -Sanitary Koar-i and the Agriculture College and Kxper ment Statiun be a study of the so-called walking disease in the vicinity of Pendleton. The symptoms which have been nutn.i agree so closely with those describ ed by some Carman investieators x occurring in lupine poisoning that it ; was thought advisable to study this ! plant very carefully Its distribution on the ranches wh'-re walking disease I has occurred was noted and one ani ma' was fed this plant. Ho far. the animal fed lupine has not shown any ! symptom? of poisoning. The plant was very well matured at the time , it was fed. however, and the animal would trtkp nnlv vr? ui-iutl ri minra I of it each day Attempts to transmit the disease by injecting blood from a sick animal into a sound one wer made but these were not followed bv any symptoms In the Injected animal. A great many ranchers believe tar weed is in some way connected with the disease. Some hay contain inn large amounts of tar weed has been shipped to the experiment station and this will be fed during the fall and winter. So far attempts nt dis covering the crowe nf the disease Kve not been successful. Symptoms would indicate, however, that the cause is In mo me way associated with a vege table poison of some type Symptoms have been studied and blood examinations have been made The blood findings are quite charac teristic and it is quite possible that an examination of the blood may en ;tblc one to diagnove the diseast be fore symptoms appear. If this va m ie ilnni', :t may he'p in cht'cking the trouble before it be'"mes K'l'eral on a ramrh. Autopsies have Iwen held on eight animals and material has been col lected for miscrscopic study. The au topsb-s presented the same pictures in a'l animals but it was not poss b'-? to come to a conclusion as to the cause of the trouble. At the present time, the only ad vice which can be given is to feet I clan hay as f:ir as is possible, to di nfeet thoroughly all barns and yards in which affected animals have been kept anil to u-e mutes rather tha n hors-s on farms where the trouble in prevab'Til The stufTy of this disense will be continued as far as available funds permit and ny further pro irresH wit1 be rMoorted as soon as thf work justifies it. t'1 "1 " T whirh if. sIhI.j t arrive in a use It.- TO HIDE FROM U-BOATS shows a bin ship of the fleet throw in out the soft smoke so a subma rine would find it imposaibe to lo- ' cate her. TRAINED EXTENSION MAN FOR O. A. C. DIRECTOR Orlo D. Center, Director at Ida ho University, Selected as ! Hetzel's Successor. 1VRVALUS, Ore., AUK. 20. The announcement of the appointment o! I Orlo D. Center, director of ITnlver sity extension. Idaho. Is made by President W. j. Kerr of the Oregon Agricultural College. Mr Center Is a trained extension director, and has also had extended experience as far mer and experiment man. "Here is a man." says President Ker. "who has taken up extension worlt in a most chaotic condition at Idaho and In three years trans formed it into a scientific, effective and successful extension systenl v heartily agree with President Itran mon of the Idaho institution, that he Is one of the very best extension di rectors of the 1'nited Slates. That is the kind of a man we were after w hen we went out to net a man to fill Prof. Hetzel's place. U A Clin ton, acting chief of the Slates ReU tion Service says that he is a worthy successor.' Mr. Center was born and reared on Illinois farm H went to schoo. :1n tn Illtlt' r,1d school houm' a mod em union high school and the state I'niversity of Illinois. He won a scholarship for the four years of un der graduate work and was manager of the experiment station farm In his Junior and senior years On gradua tion he was instructor In farm crops, and later, full professor. He won his '--Kree while carrying all thts work, which he resigned in 1911. to become superintendent of the Illinois Farmers Institute He resigned th's office the next year to k" to North Dakota ns district supervisor of th" Better Farming Association, and was 'ater county ai-enl of North Forks comity. He left this work to take up the work of director at Idaho which he leaves to accept the posi tion here. He is expected to arrive September first and at once enter upon hi du ties as director. IflKKIt FliAT QVICKS ASKS ALIMONY lli:v HKIt ltklO r STUI'S f 'H rr f ; i. A ug. 1 s. Mrs rh.ir! H. Acker, "Queen of f'oker Flats." whose income has ceafo-d since the dis charge of Sergeant Kdward Smal from the police force, following an eiLp(se of gambling arnom? wrtrnen, t A GRADUATE NURSE Why She Recommends Lydia E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound. Chicago, 111. "I was fn pivr health tor two years, caused by a displacement. ami u unrig six months of this time was under a joc tr's care without setting any help. I decided to try l.didK. I'inkham's V cRotable Com. pound and it mado me feci lii;p a new woman. I am en tirely relieved of the digplHremenl and D( ritKiic Dninn. and am now the mother of a beautiful healthy baby. I am a graduate nurse and will be glad to recommend Lydia E. Pinkham a Vegetable Compound to other women." Mrs. R. W. Smmn. G026 So. Park Avenue, Oiicago, III. There ure many women who suffer aa Mm. Sloan did and who are being benefited by this grmt mlicine every day. It ha.; helptfd thousatxis of women wno nave been troubled with displace ments, inflammation, ulceration, irreg ularities, periodic pains, backacne, that bearing down feeling, indigestion, and nervous prostration. , Ji T "'' sp.-eial advice writ I.ydia K. Pn khnn, t- du-inc Co, (confi. icntiul), l.yii:i, i.'js. 1 mi UllllllllllllinilllllllllllllMllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillt: 1 Just Received A Carload of Dodge Brothers Motor Cars Ready for Immediate Delivery Water and Johnson Streets. aillUUIIIIfttlflltlllftllllllUIUIlllltlllllllltltlllillltllHIIIlMlllllljllliiiiiiiiiiiHI day asked the arreat of her husband on a charge of non-support. j one wiu ne now nan no means 01 livelihood. During Smale's trial it was testified Mrs. Acker's rakeoff was as high us a night. QUALITY DENTISTRY Dr. F. L. DENTIST. Rooms 3 and 4. Belts Bldg. , Telephone 523. , FOR SALE in Riverside Me cre of Hie ht uardtMi Ihnd. All in alfalfa and gar den; 150 young and old chick ens; ftpbmdid five room house ; best of water; Rood barn, shed room and chicken houftea; everything in perfect order; like to S'dl at once an tha owner want to leave soon. Price, 1350000. Ten Acre In KlverHldc: splendid houee and barn; Rood water; about eiht acres In al falfa; balance orchard and ber ries; the beat of garden land : Ideal place for a KmaJI dairy or hog ranch. Price 18000, terms. Matlock-Laatz Investment Co. 8.19 Main Street. Phone 83. llllllllllllllllllllllllllllilHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlliMiiHIIIilllllHIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIM !!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIMltlllllllllllt 'III fr & if1 iliac Auto Co., Inc. I Phone 530 ARMAND'S The only NEW face powder in the past 50 year Oh yes. there are many, many kinds of powders on the market, but this one is absolutely different from any you havp ever had. The price is reasonable, too 50 cents KOEPPEN'S Hae It. Con Dung Low CHOP SUEY NOODLES -Chinet Stvla HOT TAHALES CHILLI CON GARNE SPANISH STTLS LUNCHES COFFEE arytblnf clean and up-to-data. FIRST fTUASS SBRVICB TEA Sc Package Under State Hotel Cor. Wabb and Cottonwood Pnona ;. Pendleton. On CLEAN MOUTH I Tllr"' thltiKK are n,'( omiiiry to s snj-tsi in life, f,,il, wat-r and air 5 Ml fcii'd. ull n-uter luitl part of 5 the iiir titcrH the lKly throuith E the mi. nth II.mm-,. the Import- E nnee of absolute eleanllnoss at all times. Come In imd huve all 5 those bad teeth tuken out with- out puln. Newton Painless Dentists 1 forner Mnln and Wobu mreeta r Kntr.in.-e nn Webb st. 5 Plume 12 OtM-n tvrah.i.. S HKI IKIl M stlrTRK I.KillT la UMiirrt by the ura of otn nf lhee hemltirul fixturep o" DUr They ive A light tha' lllUrniliMte the rimm erretl but that does not Ura or strain tho ee. They are not etnen ! ronalrLrlnd thlr Ttr l fldenry and esira tMaut Wh not at least n them'1 J. L. VAUGHAN