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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1918)
PACK TWO DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1918. WiMN!nnppH EIGHT PAGES "THEN " YOU ;. CAN XAI5K ; PESCE" 7! i.lllsUM A rr.n. i, "';Jff ' AN INDKPKNBENT naiiy and Bimi.wu .f renaieton. oea-n. hv th SIFT OIUtUGNlAJl CUULlSHINa CO lrt ritsreO 111 DOatofric at Pnnilla. U,H Oratfoa. a eecond-elaas nail tsrer. r(rphoiia ON BA1.B IN OTHKR CITIES. ;HirUIHotel New Bland. Portland 'IJJ'Wman Newl Co, Portland, Uru !jj ON FILE AT .!. lea iro Bureau, o BecurUr Bulld- .tfccf J :ffhlt,(, I, O.. Buroau (01 Tour )( h Rtrn, K. W. ' - NEWSPAPER. SUBSCRIPTION RATES (IN ADVANCE!) on y.st, br mail Dally, alx months br mail Dally, thre month a by mail Dally, id month by mall Daily, oua year- by carrier ' Dally, alz month by carrier-. M 1.6 1.5 T.BS .7 1.91 .(I P j r Dally, three nrnnthi br carrier, Dally, one month, by carrier Semi-Weekly, one year, by mall 1.6 Semi-Weekly, alx months, by mail .It Semi-Weekly tour montha br mall ,6 ' ir.V;v;'v 5s S - WHKX TI1K WKST wixn l.lOWS. -S '?' West Wind sings as It sweeps t 3 e S Where It plnys with the whlte-cauued foam: gut it will nut pause, for it bears .tnd the theme of the song Is 3 t,ld thelheuie of the sunt,' is- 2 T As of ' tnd a ft 51 5? 34iid the West Wind whispers. soft and lctw. old In the lullaby. father hears, as It stnrts to blow. 2 2 The sound of a baby's rrv. 'fiien-he sends a kiss to hjs little : child. Ana ine w est vi ina Dears It home; SpJFhile a doushboy down In the S front line trench S U Wings a prayer on the wind in 51 the gloam. SI JJi thee does, the West Wind S Iear a thought Ihist thou hear it over there. ffftl. mother heart, and babv dear. jjOn the soft, sweet twilight St air? .feid, -woman Cod save, dost Sj thou hear It, too? 2 For it B"oefl like a dart to thee; Slrirk! It blows on the patH of J the sunset warm. 2 r West bound on the eastern sea. jS r the West Wind Is the Home S 1 Bound Wind. ?je And tt blows with no vagrant chance; 'Tis the Wind of Love in the hand of Ood. And it blows from the fields Plj of Prance. From the Stars and Stripes. also, that scores of boys from this county have no relatives here and few close friends to write them. Don't let them go unremembered. The man who gets few letters will appreciate them more than does the man who gets many. Have you thoug-ht how it would be to go to France to fight and then never get one personal word of cheer from the county you came from? There are prob ably boys from this county of which this is literally true. In the past it has been" diffi cult for people to write to sol- . diers because of not having i their addresses. Realizing this j the East Oregonian months ago I started a move for the compil- i ing of these addresses. A card index of every soldier is being kept Dy Mr. Chessman, secre tary of the Patriotic Service League. He has their address es as far as those addresses are knowrr-. If you know of boys not yet listed or whose address es have been changed give hirnJ me correct aaaress. lie is al ways at the phone and the number is 123. It is up to you.. WHERE THE MONEY GOES WRITE TO THEM LL the people of Umatilla county will take pride in ,, the list of men now in the army and navy from this coun tyj.. We should do something wore than that. How do the boyfs know you appreciate the services they are rendering. They are not mind readers? ' Write to the soldiers. They all. say that letters from home are more enjoyed than any thing they get. Put yourself iri their place and you will un ROM the beginning of the war to June 30, 1918, the last day of the past fis cal year, contracts were placed by the Ordnance Department of the United States totaling $4,300,000,000. The estimate for the current year is over $7,000,000,000. The major items of last year were as fol lows : Artillery, $1,050,000,000; automatic rifles, $300,000,000 ; small arms, $100,000,000; ar-; tillery ammunition, $1,900, 000,000; small arms ammuniti on, $34U,uuu,uuu; sman arms ammunition (practice) $80, 000,000; stores and supplies (persinal,, horse, and organiza tion) $230,000,000; armored motorcars, $100,000,000,000; total $4,100,000,000. Some "other expenditures by the War Department were $375,000,000 for engineering operations, mostly in France; $37,000,000 for flo'ir, $145, 000,000 for sugar, $43,000,000 for bacon, $12,000,000 for beans, $9,000,000 for toma toes, $2,000,000 for rice, $47, 500,000 fOor rolling kitchens, I $127,000,000 for shoes, $565,- i la - srfi -v lwAv)IK i 1 1 li Tho Kind You Have Always Bought, aad which has been " . la usa iut over thirty years, has borne the signature ot , ;' ana has been mads under "bis per i w ,tvij iui tux cinct nuu $224,000 for blacksmith tools; $2,500,000 for shovels. The department has bought 266,000 wagons ' and carts, costing $37,000,000; and 410, 000 horses and mules, costing $99,000,000; food for them cosfc $62,000,000, and harness S5 AAA AAA 'I' I. . .. I -. . C 11 - fio-Hi-oo Thov .oom i o y,rc Knr i "ic itui:ians maue peace not so iarge when it is remem-' with the kaiser and have been bered that we have nearly 2, 000,000 men in France and al most as many in training here at home. All of this money and all the other money raised by the Liberty loans goes to make our Army, our Navy, and our peaple powerful'and vic torious in their war for free dom and right. "We've got the men, we've got the ships, and we've ' the money, too." on the West front do not firet "France -desires the honor of ex- along well together; when ' preKSlng ,"'r Kratitude to the hoiendid rogues fall out, etc.; etc They have secured a mental expert to examine the kine of Bulgaria. If the Germans hadrthe.1past done that with their kaiser years ap they would Jiot be so unhappy now. ' Davinsr inaemniries in monpv and in blood ever since. National guard divisions are said to have participated in the fighting to clear the St. Mihiel salient. They are evidently shock troops these days regard The war 'does not af ford jus tification, for raising the price of rooms on the visitors within our gates. The more bonds you buy the more money, you will have when the war is over. soldier of the entente whose efforts are about to ft-oe the population rroii, stflbjupiitlun to barbarism. We 'only seek peace so that future generations may be spared the abominations of Forward, then, to the lib eration of the people from th-; last fury of a foul force. Forward to vis tori, the whole of France, and all thlnkinK humanity are yith you fi.. sona supervision since Its infancy. 'C4iZ Allow no one to fieccivo you in this. All Counterfeits, limitations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with -and endanger the health ot Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. - What is CASTOR! A Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric. Drops and Soothing SyTupsr It is pleasant. It contains tciiaer Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic cubctancCt It ege is its guarantee, For mora than thirty ycerc it has bscn in constant Use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency,'. Viud Colic nud Diarrhoea; .'.Haying Fcvcrishnesn arising therefrom, and by regulating tho Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA (Bears the Signature of ALWAYS 3 IrUse 1w Oyer 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought .if . It is for the Red Cross this year. 28 YEARS AGO less of old time regular- army 1 ( Fr0m the Ka"t '"-mian, September I'endlL'ton a first cement prejudice against the national i - guaru. pavement IlKidH of thb The 166th Depot .brigade band is a good band and the 000,000 tor clothing; lor Plan-- music is all the better when it keta $147,000,000. comes from me nwho wear Some smaller expenditures were over $6,000,000 for axes; deirstand why. Remember this $1,635,000 for field stores ; $2, Uncle Sam's fighting clothes. ......... ..... The Germans and Austrian's liberty Hal JITNEY : BANC Starting at 8:00 o'clock Every night this week Sawyer's Big Orchestra OH YOU JAZZ Best floor in town with cooling' fans n-f- T)m CiFAruhnrfii 111 Ul rCIJ LI mm Lots olnnmn Giyuuuy wuibumo is ti:ug constructed al Savings Punk nuihllnf?. John II. licntly ihe hotel keeper of Walla Walla, la at pa old home in Missouri. Wallace AlKpaugh. Ior.dlotons chamiun fisherman, went out. near the agency ye.strrday and hr.tiKht hack hi UHiial hanketful of - trmit, none of which m t--a.su red less than six inches in length. All ftnal repiirta of homesteads, r'ri'--nutiinf( and timber cnltui-"? can ho made hefore J. H. fiean, I', tf commlspioner, Pendleton, t trefoil. An old wir cable has been cou-Vf-r ted .Into a hitching racli aion? Cottonwood Htreet. ! .if, - Hun Boots, Belgian Babest " A, jMuiiKtr.wMWiiwwp im. int. ii'iiiiw wimmtmmmmgM , 1., V -- - , - ....J- kt t ... , --(.- . . - ,l:TT-T'a-.: ... " lb- a Crushed and bleeding in the ruin of its homes, its hospitals, its schools and churches, Belgium has nevertheless been not. tha weakest of : the allied enemies of Berlin. - Its sufferings have united all humanity in its cry for redress, and its indomitabla spirit has roused the emulation of all its champions. . German "honor", lulled by its revelation tat it regarded "sacred treaty as a "scrap of paper", has been buried beneath tha bloodied ruins of a neutral nation's shrines. When the boots of the German superbeast welter in German blood behind the Rhine, the Kaiser's dupes mtay finally emerge from the self-hypnosis which made them think themselves "super men". ' Reflect the measure of your disavowal of the Hun's rape of civilization in your oversubscription to Ithe Fourth Liberty Loan. 3 FRENCH AIR EXPERT -ITO TEACH U. S. ' AVIATORS . Jit ! I. 11 'V 'ir .ft i.i AmiV, i i -I I For (Tapms in Hie Stomach. " If you have ever been doubled uu with cramps In your Rtnrnnch. you win be interested In the experience of Emories Henry. Oswpfo, X. Y who hu.vs: "About four years aso when Bufferlnir from cramp In my Btomncn and bowels, I used Chamberlains Colin and Dinrrhoea Ilemerly. It i by far the bet medicine of the kind I have ever used. Mr KMn ItocnmmciHls flinmbcr- la In's Unlmrnt. "I keep a bottle i4 Chamberlafn's f.lnimc-nt Jn thn. house at all times. and have used it for years. It will relieve rheumutlc r.zlr,z Quicker than anythlnff I ever used. I have, also rec ommended It to my neighbors and friends, who have used It successful, ly.' write Mrs. N. M. Klein, Chilli cotho. Mo. . Imllfrmtlon. "A few Weeks Ko F used a bottle of Chamberlains Tablets when I wa havlnic a bad spell of indigcstloff- These tablets strenKtheped my ntom-nr-h and toned up my system nener nlly. They are easy to take and most effectual writes Mrs. D. 8. Dart, Sknnm.tete. N. V. v jCspt. Jacques Boyrlven Is the expert aviator detailed by the French irovernment to assist the United States in perfecting it aviation students. Capt. Boyriveu baa charge of a squad of 24 at 'Idloeola. Ha has received every honor possible from the hands of the Prencb government. Including the Legion of Honor. DR. R. B. ROBBINS . ,i Dentistry Judtl Dflpr. Court and . Main Sts. All TJ'nl.Inu lluinanlty lUuks AHiCM- I'AUIH. Kept. m. I'rmnif.r Cle. menc-eau toltl the senate th? allies must keep on fighting until f; rruan understands there can be no compro mise tietween .crime and rlKht. UAI.R ROTirWElXi Kxoaaeuis and OptMaax Byes examined, Glasses ground to fit ' National Bank .laildJ ns. ' Axsartvaa I Scientifically ' Pmdletoa, --iliiiiiiiiiiiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllliiiiiiiiiin i Mr. Wheat Raiser! . horn ic enmo innif rniva inrvf.il in i ninif nnnur in a . jr CUUIItiy uuit tall nut ue ucau-u iut (Juuu uus itllU ; '- climate. ' I: 480 A. deed land, 400 A. in cultivation, 80 A. pas- ;- ture, fair buildings and plenty of good water on the place." $100.00 per acre for" plow land and $15.00 per I acre for pasture land. . Throw in lease on 900 A. ad- ;. joining, that rents for one-third. This- place lays eight miles from Lewiston, one mile from macadam road and one and fourth miles from warehouse. 350 ; A. summerfallow and 200 A. more to be plowed this ' fall. ' y cash, bal. terms. 'I' 640' A. 10 miles from town, all in cultivation, fine improvements on the place, abundance of good wa- ter. $75.00 per acre, 1-3 cash, bal. easy terms. This land lays in a district where they always have good crops. I . 640 A. three miles from town, 300 A. summerfal- low. Good barn, fair house. Water piped to build- ings. Price $35,000.00. $10,000.00 cash, bal. terms. ' 437 A. on Nez Perce Prairie, 330 A. in cultivation, bal. pasture. Fine improvements and abundance of water. This is an ideal gram and stock ranch. Price 5 $70.00 per acre, Yj cash, bal. easy terms. No better f : land out doors. g I 1 MONTANA LAND 2280 A. in Sheridan County, three miles from town. All in cultivation, fine improvements. Wheat made froifl 30 to 40 bu. this year. Price $-15.00 per f acre. 1-4 cash, bal. terms to suit. . 5 880 acres, 7 miles from Cascade, Mont. Good barn, fair house, water piped to buildings. 240 A. f in cultivation. 100 A- i" alfalfa. All can be cultivat- ed. Price $35.00 per acre, $10,000.00 cash, assume f $7000.00 mtg., bal. crop payment The owner's son f was called to war and the place must be sold. f Many other wheat and stock ranches for sale. I W. L. CARL, 400 Main SL, Lewiston, Idaho. 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