TEN PAGES .-I. VAGE FOUR DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1919, u .1 : ii- u J ' . J-J'"!'- j''-.-. .-J i r::.v l J.: : " BOOKSHELF IS PubtlxhM Dllr and Sml-Weeki; t i Pendleton. Urecoa, br the A8T OKEQONIAN PUDL1BHLNQ C&. Entered at toe poetofflce at Pendle ton, ' Orefon. aa aecond-claaa mall natter. ... 4 AS INDEPENDENT iNKWSPJLPXB. telephone ON SAl.K IN OTHKR CIT1KS. ImpeiielHotel Nrwi Stand, Portland Boermaa Nwa Co., Portland, Oregon UN r ll.K AT SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' ' V V ' (IN ADVA.NCB) Dally, on rear, by mall Daily, elx month by mail .: Dally, tbrea month by malt Daily, on month by mall . Dally, on year by carrier Dally, alz montb by carrier- i.eo 1.15 .SO T.t S.tJ lit ti Dally, three trtonttaa by carrier. Chinem uil (Wnrlt. n,,iid. DHr. on month, by carrier'-, r. . . I Semi-Weekly, one year, by mall. l.t waehlnrtoi, o. q. Bureau 101 Four- Serai-Weekly, six month, by mall .7t teentn Btrt. N. W. SemUW,kly four months by mall .69 4.. ' ii. ... IlKUXHAltDT -,: Stle willed that youth houll e'er Bbide. thoush year should come and go, She never drifted with the tide nor recognised Its flow; 7 Ph willed to live, and having ar willed, the race was well ' beftun, She paid no heed to those whose speed is spent at setting sun. Along life's course she met the , kind who held the ideas worn That year must crowd her to the rear but these she passed In scorn; She never yielded to the thought that time should make her old, So in her heart " there linfterej not the fear that others hold. good and the thought made our cause the stronger. Nor is an ideal lost because it may not be fully attainable. The peace treaty is not all that could be desired of course. Perfection tvas not to be expect ed. But if, as most people be lieve, it is a creat forward look- ing treaty, why not re.ioice that we have it instead of a Berlin made treatv that we wottlrl fhave gotten had it not been for the militant idealism of allied manhood and womanhood. many youth They Aiarvel much lands because seems to stay Within her eyes, her laugh, her tones, though she is old and frray; Kternal springtime lives in her because she loves the spring. And clinus to trnth which fos ters youth and every love t ly thing. Oh, cherish beauty everywhere! ; . Keep ever well in mind That you may be whate'er you choose, and sometime you shall find That years are merely phantoms that flit by on silent " wing. Xor touch the heart, as they de- part, of those who love ' the spring. By Grace E, Unll, in Oregon- !aru AN OPPORTUNITY HAT is the intrinsic value of a smile, of a rose in bloom, of a sorts' or of a spoken thought that carries in spiration? Such things cannot be measured by ordinary me thods but they are of wonderful value just trre same. The world would "be dead without them. During the chautauqua pro- igram now underway here there are many numbers worth while; Music may be heard that was not available to the masses of, people 20 years ago. There are speakers of world repute and many of them have mes sages of real worth. ' Rich or poor, be your educa tional status what it may, there is much for you at a chautau qua tent if you will but go after it and the good things of the world are for those who ; go after them. . OVERLOOKING THE SETTLERS , 7y:iE United States senate ljmade a, mistake in killing the bill " providing $50, 000,000 for further work on existing irrigation projects. In most cases the work contem plated was to make up for past mistakes - and ' shortcomings. There are other projects which, like, the Umatilla project, need recasting in order to attain the full-end desired. Movements for work of this sort are not speculative, they are construc tive in the fullest sense. The men to benefit chiefly are ac tual settlers confronted by an inadequate water supply. The appropriations are asked for on a reimbursable baste and might reasonably be granted, particularly so since the world's good supply is low and greater production is needed. THE SKY TRAVELLER ' 28 . YEARS AGO ( From the Daily' East July 8, 1891.) Oregonian Books by Chautauqua Speakers. TnrticJl Xtnv I1miU in lmiiuK Miss Tarbf?U Ima made a study of the various industries In different Marts of tU country that are trying out experiment h in shortening' hours, providing better t working condltiotiH. etc. She also touches on the activi ties of states' and municipalities in es. tabltehfng employment bureaus and In providing emergency work for th unemployed. I'arts of the book have been appearing in the American mag azine under the tUle "The golden rule in business.' Contents: Our new work shops; A fine place to work"; The (sospet of wifely: Health for ev eryman; Sober first; Good homes make good workman; A man's hour; A man's hire; Experiments in justice. Steadying the Job; The factory as a school; Our new industrial leader. " . Tnrbeli Business of boms: a woman. Miss Tnrbell says of the ideas ex pressed in this book that they are "the result of a long if somewhat de sultory, observation of the profession al, political and domestic activities of women in this country and in France. These observations have led to certain definite opinions as to thope phases i of the woman question most in need of emphas-is today." Tarboll Ways of -omcn. Miss Tarbell cites the 13th census to prove that Sfi.J per cent of girls of marriageable age do actually marry. She therefore argues that the educa tion of girls should he directed to wards those duties of the home that will for the majority be permanent. Other chapters discuss woman's pow- er to be of service through her ex perience in constantly meeting small emergencies, through her ability to talk cheerfully or n musingly when ne- , eessary, through her genuine interest ! in those things which mnke for cul-J lure, through her sympathy -with te intellectual and spiritual needs of young girl?. pent Private Peat. . Private Peat Is a Canadian soldier who experienced the whole gamut of war sensations from the thrill of en listment to the loss of. consciousness out there" when he lay In the open two nights and a day before the stretcher bearers found him His nar rative is full of the grimness and hu mor of life in the trenches and behind the lines. But most of all he shows the soldier's clear quality of courage to live because he must through an j inferno of destruction and death, or murder and horror. Romance Is part of the story. The last chapter is writ ten by the, girl herself a free lance of Fleet street whose advertisement concerning a lost cousin was the be ginning of a hospital acquaintance with the disabled private which ended in marriage after his return to Can ada for. discharge. Tnrbetl J Ate of Abraham IJncoln, 2 vol.. Andrew Tillard returned Tuesday to Heppner, accompained by Miss Alice Tillard. of this city. G. Mansei, and son, Albert with Ro bert starkweather and , Ed Hendryx left Tuesday for an outing at i Teel Springs. 11. J. Bean returned Tuesday from the Blue. mountain sawmill where his family is rusticating. Dr. W. C. LaDow has returned from his visit to Tacoma which he reports a trifle quiet at present. D. B. Watson who is sojourning with his family at Purdy Springs, is waging active war on the finny tribe. He has already salted down 25 gallons of trout and has sent to Pendleton for another 10 gr.ilon keg. At War With Huns For 45 Long Years "AVING seen Lieutenant Fetters fly away througn the air of a glorious sum mer morning-yvho could, fail to envy the roan,. such si ride? When it Ls fine to be' but, mov ing about on foot, horseback or by auto, how much greater must be the thrill tot ar fepin through the air at such a time? The world has some gfeat pport ahead of it for when the flying fever gets at its heighth it will be a whizzer. ry'. , IDEALISM PAYS - - 3N the course of a pessimis tic editorial regarding the treaty the Evening Tri bune says: ' - - . , ' "Idealism does not pay m a practical age. We are not hy ing in an epocft of. altruism. Awaken brother. The sur ost tViinc in the world is that M'p.ilism does Day in a practical L age. Germany did not know it tai. but knows it now. l ne unneu in states went to war for an ideal and our soldiers fought bouyedu up by the ideals f a republic (By United Preps.) BBRXB, July S. Any ar ' rangrements" the' German dele pates may make with the Allies at Versailles won't cut any ice with Liechtenstein. Liechten stein never .participated In the Paris conference, bo a..' state tit war still exists between her and Germany. Tet it Is hard, says the Resent Prirce Charles, for Lichtenstein i3 the foundation stone of the ijrand alliance against German'-, havinfr been' at war with her aggressive nei ghbors since 1SR1. '' The diplomatists at Paris com mitted the as'onifshing over sight forgetting the existence f the free and independent sta4-3 of Liechtenstein. Seeing tint Slam and the lledjaz wire In vited to participate in 'the peace negotiations. Liechtenstein Promptly demanded representa tion but? no notice was taken of the demand. Liechtenstein has an area of Br, square miles, and In 1912 had a- population of.10.71fi. It, Ires between "Switzerland and German-Austria, Trie state made war on Prussia In tho Schleswig-Holsteln squabble, but. Prussia arrogantly overlooked 'the tiny state's Interference and never troubled to conclude peace. Since" 1911 Austria Jias paid 4", 000 crowns a year for the pri vilege of running the state pos- telograph and telephone. service,- but otherwise the prin cipality was independent, under Its own royal family. Liechten stein has had no army since IKfi6 and no national debt, lint SCIENTISTS WANT BIG BERTHA GUN By HEXRY WOOD (United Press Ptaff Correspondent.) PARIS. (By Mail.) If French as tronomers and scientists can have their way, Germany's Biff Gertha pun that bombarded Paris from behind the Ger man lines will be used in conducting atmosphere experiments at altitudes never before reached. M. de 1 aBauem-Pluvinel, President of the Astronomical Society, is back of the movement to have Biff Bertha transformed from an instrument of war Into one of scientific progress. In fact M. dela Baume-Pluvinel asks that all of the heavy artillery takpn from the Germans be turned over to the astronomers for higher atmosphere investigations. He insists that they b given at least the Big Berthas. Up to the present time the precise constitution of the atmosphere at al titudes fifteen miles or such a matter is merely one of speculation. By shoot ing mechanically registering projest- ilie3 into these upper altitudes, M. de 1 Hi Baume-Pluvinel points out that the 'most accurate pnd valuable scientific information can be attained. The French astronomer has figured out that the Big Bortha gun, pointed vertically would send a projectile up to nearly 80, 000 yards in about 125 sec ons. We do not know what the status of the. atmosphere is at that altitude. We dG not know whether its weight still continues; we' do not know he ther terestrial attraction still exists there and hether as a -consequence the shell from the Big Bertha would fall back to earth'of whether is would start off on an aerial hunt for other plah etfs. In the latter event it might open up a means of communication with some of our neighboring planets,, French scientists have become so In terested In the possibilities of Big Ber tha as a means of ftcientific investiga tion that a large number of the details for its use have already been worked out. . that owes its origin to certain who's going to pay that 4?.oo . i .Hs.1 nd has Crown to' reat- crowns? And why shouldn't JV- , .Vi v,i,i ..4o Liechtenstein ne aiiowea ro sign TICKS uecause nao , fast to the cause 01 numan iree- peace with -Germany? FXTI'XT RATI PICA TIOY nrrrcfJY. July dnvrrnwmttt dom and the ppirit of democ- Illusions may not re proui- , .sbkh, at wnmcr oxpeot the able but ideals are, in peace tn-air to no ratified tni week, it i j ,.. There'are a million l.nrwd. The rrW i lwween tlw d'avs to Drove the point. It may irun .! also be shown .i"4- ' nltriiisni iri the ihun ever before nild the al- Is more nniiacmit and Is vorrj-lnar IlK" world, W)v-tl. Tlic IVankfort Ktrike itiiiitifn riiislie IieOPle and nations lose rmmmrat from a Mandimlnt of ii- nothinjr by it. 1 his nation d'd,', , Wrlke M WM tearea totlBt Hilt fiRht JUst for Knelt alone. rnijrf-lt Mainz and ICswnwUl also be Ve JougM for .civilization s u?u hp rik. 1 Umatilla Flour & Grain Co. : 1300 West Alta x Phone 351 and 1014 PRICE LIST All poi' lrtl Ihs. dclivrrcrt. riilckfwd (IHamoiulX ... 5.0A ScruKlirorul (Mil)') 1.7.1 Mllirpoil (while) a Kiick.. fl.75 Klumicd Inlll Rarler. . :t.2. lrjr nulled luirlpy .2S iri)iin JViili-y .., $3.25 Oats . , :i.25 'orn (whole oreracked). 91.50 Cow feed . .75 IIOK feed ()arle)', millfeed, eoeoanut nieal anil, mol- lassex) . ' $3.25 I'oiillry M'asli txk Pro-'. diieer. . v 9:t.7i a 100 Hi. Bailed lay J i,c lb. , All klmlH of I'oiilirr . rnles and 8tOfk toulex fir Kale at low et rlrt. l'nr Inrtir quaiitltle. no nlll make jotl peeliil jwlees. iti i miiiMMaiiaitiMMiiiiinnwamPMMMiiMnMaMai (H). , taaaaMaMMMMaMM . " '' '' f ' r i !.. ' ' .. . 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The nation is on an efficiency basis, a.nd both the individual and the motor car must either conform, or fall out of the picture. "Anti-Idling" laws apply to motor cars as well as to men. These are days when the car that can't earn its keep faces the possibility of being put under lock and key. None of us can be wasters and neither can our cars. ; '" '" ' ' - " '' ' ' ""' The Franklin . Car meets this condition with flat statements of just what it will do and just what it will cost to do it. 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