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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1918)
DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1918, EIGHT PAGES S t i 5 I) iv-' a i ! t V Ill I llll f-5!"' AV TVTEPEVTEVT ICEWSPAPKR. fusUs rl)y mat Semi-Weekly a ndletoa. t.rs-on, by th 0AJ9T OHKUUMAN FUBL.lSHI.Na CO Katr4 at ta postofrtc at Pendle- Dally. Co. Oregon, aa second-clssa nail : Dally. n"ttw- Dally. 1 Daily. ralepboa ON BALK IN OTHER CITIES. ImperlalHotol Ktwi Htnd. Portland liownti News Co.. Portland, Oregon ON FILE AT Chicago Bureau. ses Security Build-in-. Washington. D. C, Bureau SOI Four tntnth Street. N. W. Dally, Dally. Daily, SUBSCRIPTION RATES (IN ADVANCE) one year, by mall aix month by mall tit re month fy mail on month by mall on year by carrier . aix month by carrier - S.SO 1.15 .80 T.E S.TS - 1.95 i Semi-Weekly (our mantha by mail -6 to the end that all ' Umatilla county soldiers may be reached with frequency. We should do this. It is only fair to our sol diers and it is good for the mor ale of the army to let the boys know the home folks are keenly interested in them and that we are all ready to back them'up to the limit. We must do our duty by the boys as they leave and after they leave. It is business in which all should cooperate. If lyou see something that seems iwrong, investigate ana neip by maZI u, make it right If all will do three month by carrier. Daily, on month, by carrier semi-weekiy. six month, by mu .T5 Ithia with intelligence and AMERICA. O beautiful for patriot dream That pees beyond tfie years Thine alabaster cities (learn 1'ndimmed by human tears! America! America! Cod shed his grace on the And crown thy good with ' brotherhood From aea to shining; sea! ' -Katharine Lee Bates. to those leaving for enlisted service. It would be appropri ate if some official recognition could be given every enlisted man on his departure and if he could be given some sensible souvenir of the town. Of even greater importance, however, is the matter of fol lowing up the men. after they have left us, be they volunteers or drafted men. We should not confine our efforts to a good sendoff. The boys feel fine as they leave. They need triotism the time will soon come when no wife or sweetheart will complain their loved ones have been neglected here or in the field. " THE BEST "INVESTMENT IN THE WORLD ROM whatever angle it may be considered, an in vestment by an Ameri can citizen in Liberty Bonds or War Savings Stamps is the best investment in the world. The money so invested goes to the srovernment, which loans little some of it to our allies: all of it encouragement then. It is when, is used in one way or another they are across the pond or to maintain, support, arm, LET US MEET THIS COM MON DUTY AND MEET , IT RIGHT HIS newspaper is in re- ceipt of a letter signed "SnMior'a wife" rnm. plaining that the men leaving de should be face hard work in some can tonment that they would like to hear from the old home folks. Lots of the men have no relatives here. They may have been newcomers and have few close friends or their friends may move away. These men should not be forgotten by Pendleton. They are giving us gallant service; they should have recognition in the form of letters nd post cards from Pen dleton and Umatilla county people. It matters not if the writers be personally acquaint ed with the boys or not. No sol- considered a I or tne national army camps are given more departing hon ors than' are the enlisted men. The letter is not published be cause the identity of the writer was not made known. The reason for the seeming equip, and maKe victorious our armies and our allies in Europe. Surely no American money could be put to a better pur pose. Here is an investment in the power and success of our country, an investment in the efficiency, strength, safety and success of our fighting men on sea and land. We do not know what com mercial and industrial conditi ons are to be when the war closes, but we do know that a Liberty Bond and other United States Government securities will be sound and secure. Every dollar loaned the Government by our people now is a dollar saved for the time when peace comes. With their savings in vested in these sound securi ties, the American people will v.o wt.ll nrenared to meet the . r . . . 1 1 i After cheering soldiers as stranger. In the lexicon of war there are but two kinds of peo ple, friends and foes. So every American soldier is your friend and is entitled to be so regarded. Trrhems that Deace will bring. favoritism referred to lies insistent systematic plan of -It is a species oi insurance the fact the draft men leave in ! keeping in touch with our sol- ithat day large bodies and their depar-jdiers is to have their addresses. permits of making a showing! East Oregonian such a list of .they leave for service don t ne- forthem. Whereas the enlist-addresses is now being pro-!giect writing ,io ed men leave one at a time or at vided. If friends and relatives sending words of cneerJ? best but a few men in a squad. 'of soldiers continue to send in lever they may go. xou wm oe ' Many enlist in Portland. Un-itheir nmes to Mr. Chessman as doing more good than you rc- der these circumstances it they have been doing since the alize. . . , . r v would be impracticable to hon-; request for names and ad- ' ' ' ... or the enlisted men in the same dresses was made the problem The Austnans are ; how tnui way the drafted men are hon-1 of maintaining a list will be enough about the ribs tnat ored, even though people might solved. ! has been hard for the H wish to show especial honor to With the names of the boys 'to follow them in their retreat. the men who enlist. available to all it will then be " " Bnori tn ... . . i - , i a A- Tito faator thpv are caiieu to wevertneiess mere snouia De possiDie to carry out, a yLc-i niinni of onnomn :Rprvir(. lug uciirv , some way of showing courtesy jmatic correspondence f Voltaire, KW-i. "Mamma, don't give me Castor. Oil" Such im familiar entreaty of cKilJKoocL All children hate castor oiL Grown people themselves won't take it. No child minds Stanolax it is tasteless, odorless, colorless. So it's not liVs medicine. Stanolax is not a cathartic, laden with habit-forminft drufcs. It does' not stixa- ulate the intestines to abnormal action. Stanolax is a lubricant. Ik softens the bowel content, and oils and soothes t the intestinal walls and makes elimi f nation easy. ' By this feende but certain method, all toxic poisons are carried away. Thus auto-intoxication is prevented. By the use of Stanolax one presents chronic Constipation, widi all iu resultant ills. TANG Stanolax represents the new-day way -as oppose! to harsh purjtives. The natural way as opposed to violent treatments. Drufc-'aden cathartics afford only tempo rary relief. Sta olix, taVen regularly, say a teaspoon at bed time, will keep the intcsr'r.al tract clean and ever ready to function properly. Your druggist has Stanolax. Buy one bottle. It will convince you thai old cathartics are needless. Standard Oil Company (Iadm) Qiiuo, u. s. A. ji(.w.a.MT.u, FOR corjsTipvr50M 5 JSIB aV 1 i - i T1 k. Here You Are For WHITE SHOES Ladies' White Kid Shoes, Goodyear welt soles, 8 inch tops $6.50 , Ladies' White Reignskin Lace Boots, Goodyear welt sole $4.93 Ladies' White Reignskin Button Boots, 8 inch tops, while they last. . . $2.45 The Hub , 32 Sample Stores. 745 Main St Buy Thrift Savings Stamps. For sale here. New Floors For Old No matter how ugly your old floors are, you can make them look fresh and attractive with owe Brothers VERNICOL Floor and Varnish Stain Vemicol does not show .heel marks, is easy to keep clean and withstands, rough every day wear. Easy to use and economical. Made in desir able finishes. L. J. McATEE The rractlcal Paint Man BIS Main St. T-l1tione 1S well equipped American sol-," diers mean a cold packed kaiser. There are good days for all men to feel like they were part of the fire department. The first drawn tomorrow will be the most fortunate. BAD BOYS." NEW NAME FOR YANKS 28 YEARS AGO the German soldiers are:l "bad boys" i A 5 (From the Daily East Oregonian Juno 26, 1890). X. W. Taylor and Miss Emma Fra xier were united In marriage by Jus tice Bishop at 9 o'clock last evening. Congratulations, which were pre maturely showered upon the couple upon their return from a recent visit to Walla Walla, are now in order. Pendleton fishermen have lied no often and terrifically of late that Pilot Rock anglers are becoming envious Will Stimson reports that he and A. S. Witten, during- a 25 mile excursion on foot on Birch and McKay creeks, cap tured a few trout If not several, the largest measuring three inches in length Who can beat It? William H. Daughtrey, foreman of Dixie ranch, is In the city. A lady who resides tiear Pendleton, in fill in e out a census blank, imt down her husband as a lunatic She told i general, lasting ana democratic peace, the census enumerator-that hi was at without forced annexations or j.unitive nresent navinz an election bet by push- Indemnities and with the right of all Ing a wheelbarrow 25 miles, and she j nationalities to didn't expect him home for .1 week. destiny WTTH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE. June 25. The American sc Idlers now are regarded by their German antagonists for whom cautioned to "look out," according loiS a vonne (German deserter who surren- ,5 dered In the American lines on th Marne last night. This willing prison- i er aaded that conditions In th German llnescnstantly were crowing- worse. He said many of his fellows also would desert. If they had the chance. There have been lively machine gun ar.d rifle fire actions and intermittent artillery fire In the northern section of the Fie 1 lea u wood, where the Ameri cans gradually are smoking out the remnants of the German machine gun nests- Otherwise, the Marne front has been quiet The twenty-eighth German division has been relieved by the 87th. The newcomers are said to be only a second-rate division,- where as the 2Sth was considered by the Germany as one of their best- Atk far lA fl S-w VERNICOL Q r color canf y Thomas Fit Geraly, Esq., is over from Port Townsend for the puropse of removing hlB family to that city. I i2: Socialists Are Out Against Indemnities 5 !r3 MILWAUKEE, Wis.. June S2- j Tho Bocialist party in Wisconsin i,t on j B record today an favoring "an early. K determine their own FRENCH ACE SOARING OVER GREAT LAKES MONTREAL June it. Lieuten ant Plachaire, the French "ace," who had been aspfHtina; in French patriotic work here, left in his airplane for Cleveland at 11:30 this morning- He Planned to follow Lakes Ontario and Krie and expected to make the trip In lens than four hours. This attitude was embodied In a plank of the party's state platform adopted in convention here yesterday Emil Seidel, former socialist may or of Milwaukee, was nomirnted for sovernor. Former Congressman Vic tor Tterger. recently a candidate for the senate on a "lOO per cent for peace" platform, was a moving siurit in the convention. fTHE UNIVERSAL CAR Keep your Ford running - smoothly and so get the most . possible value from it An idle Ford, is worse than waste. Let us look after your Ford. We have men who. know how to make re pairs; we use only the genu- uine Ford materials; we give the reasonable prices set by the Ford factory. Don't try to fix your car yourself nor trust it to inex perienced workmen, bring it here and be sure of satisf ac- ; tory work. Simpson Auto Co. Cor. Water and Johnson Eta. Pbooa 0fl Germany To Benefit By New Russia Pact LONDON, June 24. The bolshevlkl are about to conclude a commercial jpact with Germany which will subject i Russia to further exploitation, says a Moscow dispatch. The Bolshevlkl 'commerce commissioner declared the i i 1 1 -.1 .n ..1 tH. n AMERICANS FURTHER I foreign loan to meet Russia's debts to IMPUnVR POSITIfW4? Germany. The Interest will be paid In I materials. WASHINGTON, June 24. Pershing today reported that American troops northwest of Chateau Thiery Saturday Further improved their positions al though harrassed by enemy fire. He Maid the Americans repulsed a raid in VoSKes. EX-MAVOIt Of XOV YORK SOW MXVKSSKl L AVIATOR STANOLAX is for Sale in Pendleton by THE PENDLETON DRUG C031PANY AX- 0 .u-' '''ft fc -- at jJ TWO IICBBIES TOO MAXV. When First Returns Wife Klinns Hot" of 'Em. RAN FRANCISCO, June 24. A 'husband's return a la Enoch Arden, 'albeit with a different sort of out Jcome, has so upset the life of Mrs. l.nna H. Moore that whereas she found tshe had two husbands instead of the i more conventional one, she has decid led to get rid of both. I In 199 her first husband, Wiley A. 'Moore, disapeared and later she heard he had been killed. In 1914 she mar 'rled Langford L. Moore no relation 'to the first spouse and lived with !him until a few days ago, when Wiley idid a "come back." I The wife obtained an annulment 'from Langford and announced that 'she would bring divorce action against i Wiley. he declared she had no in tention of ever remarrying either. Minor Operations Net Prisoners for British LONDON. June 24 Halg today re ported successful minor operation In Flanders and other Brituh front points. "Many German were killed and prisoners taken south of Met- I eren, ' he said. tsrvtn frcm aubmnr'ne nttacks .n d-Tify.ic waters continue t. iMitilnbh. and firman, is not tryim; to rhow u "consideration"' either. After five months of stuiiy and practice,, former Mavor John Iurroy ; Mltchel of New York City, who was' defeated for re-election In Novem- ! her. has become an army avLitor who' can perform all the regular stunts in . the air. The progress he has made i at the field In southern California Is' said to be unusual- He Is anxious to . g9t to th w astern front. I CASCO-2V. Ci-VOE- AR.R.OW COLLARS GnpU. . do Doauf orf of the Belgian Army at .J CAPT, J. M. DE BEAUFORT of the Belgian" Artillery, Count of the Duchy of Luxemburg, is coming to Chautauqua with one of the most extra ordinary lectures of the week. He is the author of "Behind the German Veil" and will lecture on the same subject Capt. de Beaufort spent four months within the German lines, visited Kiel and Wilhelmshaven and interviewed von Hindenburg. Buy Your Season Tickets Now Capt de Beaufort's lecture is but one event of the big week. Every day will be filled with splen did lectures, wholesome entertainment and inspir ing music SEASON TICKET PRICES Adults' $2.50 Students' $1.50 Children's $1.00 (War Tax not included) PENDLETON CHAUTAUQUA June 28 to July 4, inc. 8 I ti