r PAGE EIGHT DAILY EAST DREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, APRILlQ9iK TEN PAGES " I A Flavor for 111 every taste j T a. '"W SB 1 - is ii : I :" l 1 i COUNTRY NEARING TIMBER SHORTAGE : i . out by fir lftt fall, with but pasHlnjr notice. . 'Had the war. conift. fifteen yirs later, we would have been hard put j ui mi tM, in uan iitr iiimwr "Southern Pine manufacturer stute in uuik n iite original supplies, oi yellow pine in the smith will be ex t ha us ted ii ttm years and 3,000 lumber War Emergency Might :Not - it i. e.-tim..ted h..t Mr every forty HfiVfi BpPfl ATpt 1K ' MHlun feet hoard measure of inerclian- V T , , . ( tablo lumber seventy milium feet are Jliui l-icticr. I wasted in the field i.r at, the mill. 1 I "We have all- Been our newspapers (By I'litled l'rwa.) iumn In nrice. airnlnat the will, of the. . "AtniMiTiw, An'ii "a. wui'iiiiiR publixher. Ask the first newspaper. j the country of a coming timber ehort- man you meet about the com of white ; age ana the acme papr situation : paper and ha will tell you tho question j t eroivai b. itutsctaie, secretary, of the, is his nightly nightmare. Paper con J American Forestry Axaooiariuiu tida.v , servation should be taken up In the aave some startling facts a a to con-1 schools, as It has by thousands of busU ditinns confronting the fnlted States; noss concerns. The situation Is acute, following the war. Kidsdule. who has ' The American Forestry Assocla- Just returned from France, where the tlnh. through Its campaign of plant offer to aid In reforesting that country , ing memurlul trees, is educating the was accepted said: j American people to the values of for. "In no field did the hand of war;cstry. Dans are also going forward reach farther or do greater damage i f,,r tree planting on a wholesale scale, than in forestry. Pictures of the dc. so that our forests may 'he replenlsh vaatatiom in France are f.millar to allied before It Is too lute of us. A fight went tin In other tpiur- '-Just how acute the situation in may tors of the globe to satisfy the call ot i, KPVU m the warning Ty Col. Henry war that woa Jut as overwhelming as's. droves a vlce-preUlent of the that f the battle line The sound was ' American Forestry Association and the crashing to earth of timber trees: forester of the Vnltt'd'Ptatea. He puts and the whir of thesaw. jw this wav: ' . . m J i.-Trs; fl LL sealed air-tight : and impurity-prooL. la the wax wrapped. . safety packages. Be sure to get because it is supreme In ' quality. SB The Flavor Lasts "New KtiKland is no longer self sup porting in tin,ler resources. ' A timber area in Minnesota, eaual I't.rtxts Saved France. "The experience of the war called sham nttentinn to the condition of our that, of Massachusetts, was wiped remaining timber supplies. If the SALVATION ARMY OF INDIA GIVEN FULL CHARGE POOR RELIEF Con Dung Low Louies Place Fine home-made FISH NOODLES Chili Con Carne,, Span ish style. - Chop Suey, Chinese style. All kinds of Soup. Short Order Meals. Good Steaks. Lunches, Coffee, etc. China Tea for Sale UNDER STATE. HOTEL ' Cor. Webb and Cottonwood Sta. l'bone .7. Pendleton, Ore. -"lIlllllllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIII'i: I Whitman's I (CANDIES! Just received a large supply. i Tou can't buy better candies, ss! 5 better assortment, anywhere in ! the world than right here. ' 2 ' " H We have tried to carry this j H policy of selecting the beet S 5 through out our business. I H Coma In and Judge for your- ' self how well we have succeed- j ad. ' : I Taliman & Co. 1 Leading Druggists fdlllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIDIIe i w vj ' t"x. x . i emergency had come IS years from now we would have had every great cmbarrnasment In obtaining; oven the lumber needed for general construc tlcix, tixcept a a great sacrifice In time cost, and crowding of the railroads. The forea of France kept the Hun from, reachln Paris. Will our forests keep the scourge of. flood' and desert waste from overwhelming our. land? RETIRED-GENERAL FAMOUS. DIPLOMAT WHEAT PRICE MAY COST y. 8. NO! (3y United Press.) CAMP 11X, April J8. MftJnr Oen erul Hugh Scott, for yearn tti most plciuresgue fiHiire in the American Hnny, is again on th retired list, having turned over the destlniea f Camp Iix. to liriK- General Harry C. Hale, commander of the Twenty-sixth (Yankee) Division. . Oeneral Scott- ha been In command nt Ulx since Junuary 2. 1918. lieneral Hale has been with his command at Camp Devins since his return to this siiuntry. He was to have succeeded Oeneral Scott, April 19, when the lat ter received orders for his retirement from the war department but remain ed at; the Massachusetts camp in or der to parade with his division Boston. AlthoiiKh General Scott reached the nge limit and was officially retired j September VI, 197, he immediately re u.i-ued to duty at the request of; President AVilson. lrvious to thlsj he had been chief of the koiutuI Muff! and was inatrumental In planning tli selective service and army training system. I General Scott's career has been as varied as any of the present-or-last generation of the Americun army of ficers. He was born in Danville. Ky., In 1853. and entered West Point In 1872. belnnr commissioned as a second iloutonant In the 1. S. Cavalry tn 1876. He served through the Sioux expedition in the same year, the Xox Perce uprising- In 1877 and the Che yenne disturbances in 1K78. He commanded the Indian Cavalry the U. S. 7th troop, composed of Commanche, Apache and Kiowa In dians, until the unit was mustered out in 1892, after five years service. I-ater he was In charge of Geroulmo's band of Chlrlcahua Apaches. Gen. Scott was adjutant sen era 1 of Cuba from 1898 to 11)03, when he was transferred to Polo, P. I., command-, in the army post there. He was in strumental In abolishing- the slave trade tn the Zulu Archipelago. As a diplomatist in dealing with In dians, Mexicans and Phillipifio tribes men. Gen. Scott was In a class of his own. He settled peacefully the im pending conflict between U. S. and Mexico at Nogales in 191 & and per suaded Villa to restore property con- jfiscated from foreigners In Mexico. He I also, with the late Gtmernl Funston, participated in the El Pao Ponco 1 Conference, with Mexico In 1911. BARNES. DISCUSSES i MARKET CHANCES Market May Generally Be ' ' Above Price Set by Government. NEW YOHK. April 2. OMoars of the food, administration grain corpor. atlon announced last night their con. vlctlon, at, the close of three-day conference to determine policies for the, comliitf year, that the government price guarantee to wheat grower could be made effeotlvo without en. dangerlng the market or causing loss to the national treasury. Julius II. linrnos, president of 4he corporation and, federul wheat dlreo- tor. declared that crop Indications were that wheat would he traded In , 'on the government fair price basla It n ! will he poiwlple, ho adtlud, thuL the market uoneinliy nngnt ne anpve u fixed mice schedule In which event tho wheat dlrertor would not be an Influence In trading, as congresa ad opted no maximum Irndo policy. In case ft crop exceeding a demand reotilred government purchases and re.salcs in order to make good the dif ference between the markt price and tho farmers' guarantee. Mr. Harnes said the conference recognlwd the ne. j cessity of measures to Insure reflec tion of tho resale rate to consumers ! of bread. However, with the spring wheat 1 season two weeks late, indicating a I decreased acreage offsetting the fore, j cast record-breaking winter crop, the director nssorled, there was a lessen. ed chance that the country would I produce the "very largo exportable surplus of wheat popularly expected." When you see the caps and the little poke bonnets of Hi? Salvation Army in America or England you may not thkik of the world-wide influence of this organization. Gl;uee. iben, at this picture of Salvation Army workers in India', ill native attire, and know that in India, land of f:iNiin$ mid poverty, the army has been given the maniii'iite-nt of problems dealing with the poor. Do You Like the Fresh Kind? Tomatoes, Cucumbers, Green Onions, Radishes, Asparagus, Carrots, Cauliflower, Head Lettuce, Leaf Lettuce, Spinach, Beets and Strawberries. , They arrive fresh daily, and you may feel assured that by phoning 456 that your produce will be chosen the same as if you called in person to select it. "Buy a Victory Bond." Pendleton Trading Co. "If it's on the market, we have it." m BuylheRYePound Size and Save Money Iftucaiit buyBeller Coffee. EVERY CAN GUARANTEED Alio Packed in Said 14b. Cans THIS 1 I.YKIt MAY YKD UK FIUST TO t'HOhS Vf '' ii 1 1 u ss pi ' jv ' m GOODRICHrl I i'-4sysfJL.. KAY' COLUTHA Opera Star Wearing Bonnet Fashioned From President's Headpiece NEW YOltK, April 28. What to do with paftse razor blades, broken foun tain pen, heudlww collar buttons, stir-j Colllshaw, who lni won ff Killing vivmg watotcoats of clceaMed bihIr, service, has rod ft to Kngtend to bring misfit spectacle lenses and post-July hacjt a plune for a t trans-Atlantic cockktail shakers, nil these may rj fl.RHt. There Ik no no.su belns; mode answerless questions. Hut- f over his plans, but he may surprise Have you got an old silk hat? A ! the world by belnr tho first to fly ruffled old tile that no lonKer purrs across. and that needs a shave? Keep It, I Also If you have a wife, keep her. SOVII'TFS AMY IUCSTGX and if you haven't a wife, get married. I . Thon that ancient silk hat can hej nKKIJX. April 2l. Tlio Tfunjrttrlftn made to gurve asaln, not as the de-1 ovlH Kivrrnnwiib It In rcporunl in a mocratic $10 lid for which It was; virimw dlNpau-h, tt hsve iwked tlMS created, but as a chapeau, a vertitiale Paris chapeau for. your wife; net sav ing $4Q or 150, or whatever Mrs. You la in the habit of paying for an evening bonnet. Mme. Marguerite Xamara of the Chicago Opera, company has shown how to do it. Once an old silk hut of President Wilson's (he la the best dressed man at the peace conference, you kno got Into the hands of the Fled, Cros Then it fell Intothe cus tody of the opera star. She fixed It up a bit and now It l her most pro cUmn and most becoming hat. Kvery man can afford Jo wear silk hats now. In fact, he cannot afford not to if he has a wife. JlrlKOi ml ml on to grant on arnilstlco for ail the nlllcr. it 1 tfmulUinomui rnortd that ivm-iftn Mlnfctrr licla Run ntt4uipid to (tfNm mwtiaiions with Hiimanlan hMdqiirtcrK for an armlU-l- oiy-einr llw rt mauUn soUrt (rovoriimont. UK OMAN'S DON'T LIRR nRBTTLfCTIOXS VKItflAIIXRH. ApHI . (tiaflnff iirulcr rcv.riiiliiH linpowd on tlielr niovemcntit, tho firttt if tho (iff man iliklgntlon which nrrtvrd IVlday flint a formal protect with allied an- tltoriilct. Tho (.trmnni are permli ted t nwivA about only lit a ortlnn f tho Oiatcnn park ami In tholr ho. The Victoryt can M0i QwqL . 8 Victory Bonds ,Savf,yoiirCliilto's:; Lives! ' TfteNccd Is lend Comprehend! , Buy Victory Bonds to, Promote Peace! mtlTIAX ItlOIOVKS IlAltRllCnS (el tronn.lH I.ONJK.V, Alirilll 28. llrlUttll Is! - cnuluojly ri'movinK imimrt harrloi-K. 1 AVhpn a Rlrl makos nn nxsiKnmrnt or PartUftilarly on AniOTkmn, made WMKlsjher lnvr h(r sweetheart Is Immedlute- rrtaliilne: Mriy, lux-rwury irtiU'lliin i y niipoljited oh rpqlvar. for IlrlUvli. Indiuilry. ItcKinuld Kiillut. I (MntrflJir of Import t04trj(tloimj Why. Is It that a silent partner. has UMil, ttia I nitcu I'ros today, ........ so, ninch to,fay? Buy Goodrich Tires from, a Dealer SILVERTOWM mi va.7k Jr..-- , BETTER AND SOFTER LIGHT- la aasarad by tba m ot soma of tbasa baantlful flxturaa or aura. Tbay. slra. a llslit that Ulumlnataa tba room parfaeUy, but that does nt tlr or strain U ?. Thar ara. aot axaa mtrm aoBaMartnc taalr aztra af ridaaar and artra oaaaty. Way aot at laaat thssat ' J. 1 VAUGHAN V CHAMBERL TABLETS T'HIS is just-what you need, madam.,' Many M. women who were troubled, with indigestion, a sallow, muddy skin, indicating biliousness anJ habitual constipation, have been permanently cured by the use of Chamberlain's Tablets. Before using these tablets they felt miserable and despondent. Now, they are cheerful and happy and relish their meals. Try them. They only cost a quarter. Us. iry tnem. iney oniy cost a quaiid. n ; W." " '"" . v- -A ' Hi ii xg jf awa; " it , .' ' ' , 4 i Mi .1111 ll.l ! I.dUlo Itouh, hitting King of theiOn his si ache form just outside of .National League: baa done his 119 Hsikland City. Ind.. Rddle hardened training with a spade and plow. toe muscle of his powerful siuulnx wnna nis teammates, ine neas, arms by putting In his wheat and rounded Into condition at Wox. I corn crops. He hasn't touched a hatchlr. Texas, Kddie worked his bacoall r a bat but he Is as hard furm and watched for a letter or wlr;tui nails and declares he'll be ready from (Inrry Herrman with complete! tq Jump Into a game aa boon tui the surrender on the salary agument, ! Cincinnati club meets his demand. pRD TIRES I s LONG HllN f . . I in W