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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1919)
TV" PATTY EAST mgroUNrANnbEETON, DTIEGOW, MONDAY," APRIL' IT, lifltf. EIGHT PAGES time .-. Matinees at 2 P. JL Ntehts at 7-8.30 P. EastQreAoniri Adults 35c Kiddies 15c man- AM INDEPENDENT at. P W(l4 Dally an -ml.W.kt, Penslcsoa. Oreaon. by tli KAKT OREOOMAN TUDLISHINO CO. JQatered at tta postofflc at Penale- ; Dally, von. uraon. mm pcEwaMuui nu NEWSPAPER. SUBSCRIPTION RATES r (IN ADVANCE) Be rT. by Telephone Dally, els rooDtha by an all thr moataa by mall Daily, on moatk by mail Daily. n year by carrier Dally, six moatha by carrier - t-M - I ll .la - T. - ON )AI.B IN OTHER CITIES. ImpMialHMrl Nri Stand. PortJana IWa maa Newe Co, Portland. Orrcoa Daily, tkre moataa by carrier J.J5 CMb Bs't. ',rw"l,m0",h- "T rrW M lT Sena-Weekly, one year, by mall in ashinatoa, D. C Buraaa Ml Four-j8""!-Weekly, all moat ha. by mail .71 feebi li atreet. N. W. 'Semi-Weekly four meatha by mail JTST A JOB? i - Mm U Just Job that Is' your to :.L .. jiQid... A tak that offers Tan a much - fold. - . Jti-st jbo much work that is yours a greater goal In to do. WHb never view? - Wbat do sou e at your desk or loom Or the spot too Mil In life's l5T room? Or the spot ro .1: fHRDLt ft" Merely a nickering lamp that burns .With a sickly Kent as the mill a heel turns. ' And the sum old grind In the sam old ways. With all the tomorrows like yesterdays: v Is it last a Job, lust a task to , . do. So many pieces to build anew? Ro snanr flcnrea to add, and then Home tor a while and back again? Are you Just a clerk In a gaudy ' . shop. , "Pleased when a customer fails . to atop, , Finding no Joy In tha things yon g sell. Sullenly waiting the quitting bell? Are your thoughts confined to the narrow apace And the dreariness of your pres- ent place? . Geneva ma headquarters for the League of Nations instead of " i Brussels? i TM - ' me president is classed as having been chiefly influential in swinging; the conference to Geneva. He was supported by Oreat Britain, Italy and Japan w hile France with a number of lesser nations voted for Brus- sels. The president is quoted as having opposed the Belgian city because it' "incarnates the enmity between races." If that was President Wilson's chief reason for opposing Brus sels it was not sufficient. The enmity between German and Belgian arises over the kaiser's invasion in 1914 and the " subsequent brutal treatment . 01 me Belgian people, f rom the standpoint of Belgium that enmity is justified and a Germany that is not , ready to admit as much is not : in right condition to enter the League of Nations. Until Ger- T many is willing to frankly ad- I mit that her former policy was t wrong and that as a nation she intends to adopt a different policy for the future Germany should not be trusted. The Wilson purpose in urg- Stop the "Snuffles" If row waat to aaake your diilnassi babies easy aad comkxtable, girw Foley's Honey and Tar. It is just what they ought to hav for feveraa colds, cougna, "snuffles," and utis breathing. It stops croup, too. Foley's Honey and Tar tastes good aad the little ooea like St. It contains no morphine, chloroform or other drug that rou wouldn't like to (ire to young , children. Do not accept a substitute. Mis. a H. Garrett. ScaoalaeU. Va., writes: "My tdbr wat atrtcsaa wit a neaeomk aad eoM at a atoaut ole. 1 ere fciotta. ceafteea erase of roWr Heaer a Tar avr tkrea kan aad earetr 4.4 kl kiia. lis kaas'l bees eWa a day aiace." . SOI .11 KVEIIYWHERK THE SELECTION OF GENEVA ing the Geneva location is plain. He must be credited for a sincere desire to make the League of Nations a' success. He sees in the league plan great hope for humanity and apse HERE is room for asking he wishes to so arrange mat UL if President Wilson did ters that the central powers ' not act too broadly, did will eventually enter the not lean backward overmuch league. History may prove that in insisting on the selection of .he is right on this matter of Some m T7 1ST OASTIES The best corn flakes; you ever saw headquarters for the league but at present it is hard to coincide in his judgment. Belgium made a brave fight for civilization and is entitled to recognition. THERE -ARE COMPLICATIONS 0 EWS stories from differ ent parts of the country show that as a rule em ployers manifest a commend able sDirit in the matter of tak ing back men who entered the army or navy. Cases where service men have been "turned down cold" are sporadic. In some cases employers are tak ing their men back at higher wages than formerly paid on the ground that the men are now more experienced and therefore worth more. It is true, however,- that knotty problems sometimes arise in connection with re- storinir the soldier to civil life There are cases where married men or women with loved ones to support now hold positions formerly held by men who entered the service and who have no dependents. This complicates the duty of the man in charge of affairs! Cases are also known where return' ine soldiers ask that their old jobs be held open for them but do- not agree to accept tnem, being on the lookout for some' thin or better. Under such conditions it is not surprising that complica tions will occasionally arise. As David Harum said : there U as much human nature in some men as in others and sometimes more. , HE saddest Bight since little Eva's death consists in the grief of the Port land Oregonian over the dia bolical manner in which the Journal destroyed the up-state press by inducing the people to enact a law that abolishes a proceeding under which the Oregonian once made $50,000 in a single week or thereabouts. The problem of how to raise children seems to have been well mastered by many who have no little ones to care for; those who have children find the task complicated. ' There are many economists who believe we have entered upon a permanent high price level and if .they are correct in that theory those who delay building work expecting lower prices soon will be disappoint ed. It is going to be hard for cri tics to find much to complain about in the league covenant as it now stands. if If 3 Smashing Days Starting Wednesday MACK SENNETTS $500,000 COMEDY SUPREME MICKEY The Picture You'll Never Forget TO OCH PATRONS: , - , Mk-key" is beyond desrrliHlon. One simply MI ST wets it to aiiiirfclalf lis greatness. It is the uk-tnrc of a deiadt. We reject fully request that you attrnd the Malimt-s If w-IW llu-rt-by avoiding tlie evening crowds rr wherevor -Micfcr" has playttl, standing room has been the rule. (Signed) '. C. MATUK'K, Manager If ; V 11 COME AND LAUGH FOR AN HOUR AND A HALF nwffl. Thn, too, the beat regulated forest In. the world isn't steam heated, and my studio it. I can write as easK ly and comfortable when the blizzards are sweeping over Boston Common as uhen the spring hreeses whisper their tender message that Nature has resum ed a smilinK, joyous mood." XORTIUVEST T1EROR TO FT.Y AVITH HiYIXtt CTKCt'S TKOl PE SEATTLE, Wash.. April 14. Four times decorated by the French and for two years with a crack squadron of the Lafayette Kscadrlll, William Griffith Edwards. Jr., of Seattle, will be one of the members of Uncle Sam's great flying circus to visit Seattle April 23 Edwards was only 1 years, old when he enlisted in Spokane, In 191? as an aviation mechanic. He went across and was assigned to the 103rd Esca drille. He has been cited four times for bravery with his sxjuadron, ana wears the xourraeere. , meaning four decorations. You Can't Rub It Away; Rheumatism is in the Blood Liniments Will Never Cure. If you are afflicted with Rheuma tism, why waste time with liniments, lotions and other local applications that never did cure Rheumatism, and never will? Do not try to rub the pain away, for you will never succeed. Try the sensible plan of finding the cause of the pain, and go after that. Remove the cause, and there can be no pain. YU will never be rid of Rheums- tism until you cleanse yeur blood of the germs that cau3e the disease, & S. S. has never had an equal as a blood purifier and scores of sufferers say that it has cleanrej their fcbod of Rheumatism, and removed ail trace of the disease from their system. Get a bottle of S. S. S. at yocr drug store, and get on the right treatment to-day If you want fpc cial medical advice, you can obtain it free by addressing Medical Director 3 Swifr Laboratory, Atlanta. Ca. I lid Supremacy ) For Sale Used Cars AT BARGAIN PRICES 1917 Ford $150 down ; $35.00 per month 1916 Ford $150 Down $30.00 per Month Buick, 4 cy!.. 5 passenger $100 down, $30 month 1917 Paige $300 down, $45 month 1917 Oakland Six. $325 down, $40 month Come and look them over. Strongest used car Dept in Pendleton. - Miller and Bement C30 Cottonwood St Can be no more fully shown than' by the fact that the following cars sold in Pendleton come f equipped1 with WILLARD BATTERIES HERE THEY ARE: Oregon Theatre FRIDAY Apr. 18 KLAW 6 ERLANGEfc THE PLAY THAT PUTS JOY INTO Time to put the 1919 date on the Round-Up grand stand. - , f f in run- r .-..ii.-..MMnisJsssr- - j With Meat Prices 5 ' . a. t - 'd Tt. ia tiPPPRsnrv that vou have the best 01 cuts, so j ! that there will be no waste. Every ounce that cannot jj 5 h uspd is adding to the meat bill and making a St 5 f larger demand for the short supply of, cattle in this Sh'1 w. pountrv. Si f Help yourself to save and save for others by trad- 4 5 ing at the store where the meat is cut RIGHT, from Ji 3 the best of cattle, so there will be no waste. a 5' . . a AMUSEMENTS POIXVAXNA-" IV WAS WRITTEX A ROOF ST1DIO Pendleton Trading Co. "If It's On the Market We Have It" Mrs. Eleanor H- Porter wrote tha Pollyanna' Rlad books that have clr- culated by thou Bands all. over the world. It ts upon them that Catherine Chlsholm Cushing has based the opti mistic comedy "Pollyanna," coming to the Oreg-on Theatre on April 18. The tranquil philosophy and seren Itjr of spirit reflected In "Mrs. Porter's stories are the outcome nf her own manner of life She has lived a quiet and domestic existence In New England nee girlhood. One of her gifts was beautiful soprano voice and she sant; frequently 1n Boston concerts and church choirs. But public career was distasteful, and after an early marriage he settled down to the de velopment of her talents as a story teller. I The mental attitude Is affected byj one envlroment. Mrs. Porter loves; Ji the somuae or nature, out as ner nun-i aiiiij iirrreii nit? iinr-i cm a are in rii- : R bridge, m Boston suburb, she hit upon I the happy expedient of finding seclu-j m sion in a little rose emDowerea roor Stanley Steamer Chandler Chalmers Chevrolet Velie Nash Studebaker Lexington Franklin Dort ' Apperson Hupmobile Haynes Daniels Peerless Dodge Jordan Premier Stephens Reo Mitchell Packard I1 A--'.-?:- f ft Kw r ; ' 'l '.A -LIv INK rTHlfliRLO FAMOUS BOOK V." OF THE SAME NAME BV ELEANOR H.PORTER. Seats on Sale at Thompson's Drug Store Reserved Seats by Mail. PRICES 75c, $1.50, $2.00 m THERE'S A REASON We will be in our new location about May 15 n at corner of Court and Garden Sts. Electric Service Station Corner Main and Water Sts. Eats 1 A garden studio a top her residence. A books. 2 is there that she srrtite her 'pollyanna" , "i can concentrate mere." says Mrs. S Porter, and 1 feel as much cut off of the bis rlty, as if I had buried my 12 In th depths of a Mains wilder. HOGS WANTED Weighting Prime live fat hogs. 180-22olbs. $17.50 Prime live fat hogs 225-300 lbs. 1 16.50 Rough live fat hogs ; . . . . 16.00 Dressed Hogs Prime dressed fat hogs 135-170 lbs. , 22.50 Prime dressed fat hogs. .... .170-225 lbs. . 21.50 We will buy rough and heavy hogs but do not care for them dressed. Pendleton Meat Co. Phone 146 Oregon Theatre, Tuesday, April 15 8:30 P. M. Leopold Godowsky WORLD'S GREATEST PIANIST Assisted by Marguerite Hughes Violinist Brilliant Pupil of Leopold Auer. Prices $1.50, $1.00 and 50c. Reserved Seat Sale at Thompson's Drug Store. ; WrM ; '