East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, September 07, 1917, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    EIGHT PAGES
PACE SIX
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON. FRIDAY, SEPTEMRER 7, 1917.
an iNii;i-i:Mn..vr mcwspai'KR
SHAKE WELL BEFORE
TAKING
akt nti:i
K.f.rl a I
Hrmon. aw
HERE-can be no gain
saying- the fact that
wealth, particularly
wealth coming from war
W49lintl.
ON SAI.M ... OTHKR C1TIBS
ImtmvIrI HnriH NfWN KtiUKl. Portland.
Ftawuta. Nw l'n., 1'nrtlniid. Oreffon.
OV Kir.H AT
Tikc ltnrtiau. ?nh S-nrlty Rulldtng.
Wanhlncttm. It. . Biirf.il 01 Fyur
nth Siiwl. N. W.
the Secretary of War, the high
watermark of casualties in the
French army was reached
early in the war at the battles
of Charleroi and the Marne.
The casualties in that period
were 5:41 per cent of the mo
bilized strengh, or 541 men in
every 10,000 with the colors.
Military experts in this coun-
y anil Semi Weekly at
in. oii-ymi. tv r h
MAN lTill.lSHIXi;
ii,. p.i..iTir t ivodioton. i proiits, should be taxed neavi
"'""""""' jy to meet the burdens of the
war. In fact the chief govern-
nved from this source and it,.:: , . , ,
is going to be so derived.
But it will not be wise for
people to rely, too much on the
fervid and frenzied oratorical
outbursts ot some or our sen a- these cauaea in everv 10.000 !!'"f Kussians 10 misunaersiana
r:.. tors and representatives. ,u:i:0j ofmi, ,o.-. i.hjs country and to underesti-
' - - . - . . IIIUllKlI ..LI I lilt III. VI I I.I 1 (IV I - . . ...
SI ltSi llllTlilS KATKS
. IN AI'V VNl'Ki
7ally. n. y-ar, hy mull
iHv. it munllw ov mull
iatly. Ihns ninHlhs liy mall
lllly, imf month. Uy mall
-ally, on yiir liy carrir
".ilr. kIk minilhs. Iiv carrier
tion and died of wounds have
never at any time in this war
exceeded 20 per cent of the to
tal casualties. This "gives a
figure of 108.2 fatalities from!
anxious to avoid another
change."
Apparently the interests
which the Zeitung represents
are not so convinced as the rest
of the country that the subma
rine is the sovereign panacea
for all the troubles of war.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The American copperheads
smd premature pacifists caus
ed the loss of Riga to the Russi
ans says Charles Edward Rus
sell of the late American com
mission to Russia : they cause
2-1 y. .in-.- Hi..... m.. .... ine nsi ana ine war revenue: s.i. ii i
ii.
tWll Wrrklr. ..
iml- tt m-k 1 1 . f.
i-arri
vi'Hr, tu
rnout h. hy mail
ir ni'. tit hs. hy mall
. mere are a numoer oi wouia- cav n men kiUed in action or
h 7r, be presidential candidates in .,ied of wounds for evprv 1000
1 !M U J K ...n.. -
r LmiiTZL". r.".o bill gives them a fine chance to i
,-,o shout from the house tops fori
: campaign purposes. Some of!
!these same men if the division I ERMANY'S recent concil
:were close and there was a lltl t;,,.
professed , Argentina in the subma- he wa' 5 Kod
WHY ARGENTINA WON
in the war.
Western Oregon has had a
touch of something they call
rain ; what can it be?
ili i)i:it !' iti:;i.MKNT
WHICH Wll.l, IMtKlMltK
t'A.Ur IXlt X. V. TKOll"S.
- rt-waa,
Jfjd'V. NJ ft
Troop D is
somewhere
luck to
on
the
; chance that their
i i .v i I'triiLiini in Liitr nuuiua- .
Mdeas might be written . into rine controversy doc8.t meanib0ya-
,the other side sf the question. I Pn-vthln else so much as that ! .That new sprinkler-sweeper
r.,- nfi .wia mc,t'the kaiser's government haswill be welcomed by our mer-
;4 k.. ' j. j0 : been compelled to listen to the ! chants.
.be judged by
! rather than by
their
their
words" jurmuring of Big Business at
j Where have thev stood and """ fl" T 7 -what
have they done in days ! nuer of the W eser Zeitung.
gone bv when they had a real "-
r.POTile nrl i "aung.
THK HAMMEll AXD THE
show their . independence
great wealth?
ELEVEN IN 1000
of
28 Years Ago Today
After complaining about the ' ,
ffi. f a -l-roni
money princes and their hire-
Waaaaaaiaaawiaaifi(fliattiiiat-iaaftW :4 j
The
the Dully K:st OreKonlun.
Sept. 7, 1998.)
bund - presented lust niKlit its
.Olr. CORHSWU5 VAMPjjJSBIT.
Colonel ('ornelius Vunderbllt, com
t under of the Twenty-Hecond. KnKl
neem, X. y. Nutionul f.uard. which
swoim.
T fields of Flanders, lift your
ape&rs
In glory of the Lord!
Fr these march snining down
the years.
The Hammer and the Sword!
F absorbing interest to rel
atives and
: 0
,the field is the question as to i selves like vultures and at
! what chance thev have for safe i tempt to swallow Germany's
friends
I'm. vvilonn " T1-1 "ThrnTT o u-irn full . 1 : . . . . ....... 1 . . . . ... I n . . . ...
lu' ' t ;i a a - !., --nr. ' w,,.rt nithnnh it n Kimeiit is to prepare rhf hiff camp
gi'iutru iciici? uiaLii auu i - "
.i:a 9 xv, 7n:f1in 1 orrtflf. music is btcome somewhat familiar.
r a . Tht lead
t von ine we will be
OI tiiai ine war was luc signal iui jtnat next priday
soldiers m camp or in)tre lankees to
ut SpHrtanburK, S. C, for the recep
tion of the Twenty-Hoventh IMviuion.
V S. A., otherwise the New York Na-
nai nf .vi pnn.iv - n i n rr w win ih t
Vinrl thTYi-' .. ...uu .ui.,.. .tional Guard. The Twenty-Beeond
When Harr lauphed at Affin
i court.
WTien Jeanne swept armed
through Maine.
These twain struck winffed.
swift md sure,
And now they strike again?
Where Crey bled, where Poi
tiers famed.
"Where heroes smote tho un,
Thtase twn smt eiiuer swift,
true aimed.
And n w they smite one!
Te
fields of Flinders, lift yotir
spears
In arlory of the t "M'
And shine ye br:eht throuirh
the hlindnt tears.
The Hammer an. I th" S-vordr
Karl Simonson
J. F. I.obinson has :i vtv mire h.ind
fi a res'.ilt of too f:iiiifli:ir ae i u:i I lit -inco
with poison ivy.
A license to wed wus issued ypter-
retum home. The chance is j share of trade with South Am- ;
Tormmaeh and they have- probub-
far better than is generally erica amounting to $337.000,-! iy b. f- n n-ade one :md h:ipu- hy this
supposed. jOOOayear." And it continues :: time.
The Committee on Public In-j "Future developments will
formation has obtained from j depend primarily on the length
official sources the most near-1 of the war. The longer Ger-K-
nr-!irntf fiiriirps nnssihle I mam- is cut off from the South
i. . r tl,-4.: A V. l,., Kxr:intionn have t oiiTlni ncerl for
. .. ... , i . the .fiH'.lidatimi nf the F'l-ndletiin Mtl -
in relation to casualties on tnejsne win una n to recover nerj,ss .,,, )1Tii,iins on the inn of
western front. These figures, share of trade. It is compara- j Main and Aita sti-r-.-ts.
taken when the casualties tivelv easv in the case of im-
were greatest in proportion to i-orts. but as to exports to I -Th nroa tn..-k i gMng t.. he
, , . , i ' c i v a i. i. v. plunked the entire distance diwn
mobilized ftrenerth and combin-South America it must be re- j XVpbh 8tr(t and the street leveled m
od with the highest proportion membered that the demand for correspond,
of deaths, shows losses due to finished products exists and
F.iiffineers entrained for Spartanburg
! immedlHtely following the big "send
! off" parade in New York. The pho
itoKraph was made as ('olonel Vander
j hilt sat In the raH way corieh thnt was
j to carrj' him south.
Michnel i sees the Teutons victori
ous. For a man of 60. Mike has r"
markable eesijjht. Wall Street
Journal.
2 MKX I1KM IX filltlS !FATII
deaths fro wounds and killed ,has not to be created; cnns
; action to b1 approximately auently. the longer the South
11 n ovon 1.000 of mobilized : Americans are compelled to
strnoth. 'take non-German, and especi-
Afcordin? to the figures ally American products, the
presented by the French Hiirh more accustomed thev will be
Commicpjonpr in his letter to come to them and the more
i:rn msiioi kf:vfiy in i
IM'tMK. Sept. 5 The body of
Archbishop Thoniiis F. Kennedy, rec
tor of the American college in Horn,
who died on August 2. has be n
buried in the tomb of the A merit-1 n
college in the American metery.
l'iOKhtu, ami TeaclitT AeiuMVi of
Iiird-r at VPWkJi, Ok.
KON'AYAWA. Ok.. Sept. 5 Ir A
H. Yaies. a physician of Konawa.
k.. and FrevI O'Neii. a school teach-
i er alsi) of this city, are held in th
county ja,!: at Wewoka on chnnreM of
F! i murder in Connection with the deaOi
j of I .vyear-oid Klxie Stone, a school
of teanher following an autopsy hel I
hist Sunday morning in the ceineterv
at Seminole, where the girls' bo !y
was buried. The accused men w 1'
be arraigne,! in just ire C'lirt at S:mi-nole.
Sec Mam(
The Right Medicine in Many Cases
Does Better than the Surgeon's
Knife. Tribute to Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound.
Doctor Said Operation or Death -Hut Medicine- Cured.
TVa Mi lii Iowa. "Mv husband savs I would
have been in my grave todiiy had it not been for
Lvdia E. IMnkhiun's Vcfft Uilile Coniixiuiul. I suf
fered from a serious female trouble unci the doctors
said I could not live one year without an operation.
My husband objected to the operation and had mo
t.rv l.vdin E. l'inkhani's Veeetulilc tVmUK)Und. I
soon commenced to get better mid am now well
and able to do my own housework. I can recom
mend I.ydia K. PinkhaniVi Vegetable Compound to
any woman at) a wonderful health restorer." Mrs.
I bLANCUB J JKKKIt8ON,703 UJOU St., VC& iMoUlCU, 10 W8.
Another Operation Avoided.
Richmond, Ind. "For two years I was so sick and weak from
female troubles that when going up stairs I had to go very slowly
with my hands on the steps, then sit down at the top to rest. The
doctor said he thought I should have an operation, and my friends
thought I would not live to move into our new house. My daughter
asked me to try lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound as she had
taken it with good results. I did so, my weakness disappeared, I
gained in strength, moved into our new home, do all kinds of garden
work, and rained hundreds of chickens and ducks. I cannot say
enough in praise of I.ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Mm.
M. O. Johnston, Route I, Box 1!K), Richmond, Ind.
Of course there are .many sertous cases that only a
surgical operation will relieve. We freely acknowledge
this, but the above letters, and many others like them,
amply prove that many operations are recommended when
medicine in many cases is all that is needed.
If you want special advice write to Lydia K. IMnkham Medi
cine Co. (confidential) I.ynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman and held in strict conndence.
niiiniiMiL'iiiuuiiiniin
O'Neill and Ml tut Stone taiiKht autopsy revealed that lh xirl w.ml I
schoof nt a Seminole county diut r et have become a mot her In four
school last winter. Accord ng to months. Yale ami O'Neill are mat -
County Attorney A !. Nichols, th; ricd anil have famil en.
i nnFY' KVYONG HONG LOW J
5 JVJW JL W 116 Weit Alt. S.. Upitairt. Phon. 433 S
5 r.
IP
Pin
' mm
WlilM
From the Forms f Umatilla County
to Yow Table
Thats the Short History of "Pemeco Meats"
When you buy the Pendleton Meat Go's. Meats, you do not buy meats where
the animals have been driven for miles or enclosed in cattle cars over a long stretch
of railroad. These are unnatural conditions, and are sure to detract from the
quality of the meat.
The Meat You Get From the Shops That Handle "Pemeco"
Brand was Reared and Fattened on the Farms of Umatilla County.
Just a few hours from the farm to your table. The shops that retail "Pemeco
Products" are among the best in eastern Oregon Cool, clean and sanitary. When
you order "Pemeco" meats from any of these shops you are assured of meats that
are wholesome, nutritious and possess flavor that savors of the grain fields and
sweet pastures.
Ihs Central Market
108 Eatt Aita Street
Ross E. Carney, Pres.
Telephone 455
J. H Loeding, Sec.-Treas.
Pendleton Cash Market
303 East Court Street Telephone 101
L. B. Ramsdell, Pres. H. P. Whitman. Mgr.
Harvey Mcpherson. V-Pres.. Mrs. Nellie Horton. S.-Treaa.
Hams, Bacon, Lard, Steaks, Chops. Cutlets, Sausage, Hamburger, Fish, Poultry, Etc.
0