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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1919)
PAOE rotra BBtT KA8T OMCttOHIAW. PPtDIJtTOlt, OREGON FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 81, 1910. TWELVE PAGES 4.N INDEPENDENT NBW8PAFER. SUliSORIPTION RATE (IX ADVANVB) I .Iiiimi.iI Suirkn Taklnir bnhloa to place of nnuise mt its a crying hnmt. rhlouK'1 Xewa. ' Published Daily and Semi-Weekly, I'enninon, unnon, by the Entered at the po.toffic at Pandle- Dally, six month, by mail ton. Oregon, a .ccond-cla. mall r"y- U,rM month b mail... matter. Daily, one month by mail - Daily, one year by earn 15.(10 2. SO 1.J6 . .60 7. OXE SALE IN OTHER CITIES. Imperial Hotel Newi Stand. Portland ON Mi l. AT Chicago Bureau, !09 Security Build in Waahlnarton, D C, Bureau (01 Four teenth Street N W. t Daily, six months by carrier 3.. 5 i Daily, three montha by carrier 1.95 , Dally, one month, by carrier . Semi-Weekly, one year, by mall . 1.50 Semi-Weekly, aix montha, by mall .75 S in i-Weekly, four montha by mail .50 Telephone 1 Th,. rise In water rates hardly Inatl- fioa an Increaao In tho coat of milk. Hrooklyn Eagle. Then whining revolutionist, reem hlo tho blackberry that la red when It I. green. Tho Reds when blue are yellow. Detroit New. Smoking on the streets L now pro hibited In Phlhulelphat. Don't Ret exrited. The law. aa yet. nppllea only to mltors-. Nashville Tennesset fourth dimension. Ilia cure nre can tcrcd upon the oocttanut crop; nil clae la an htle dream to him. The Inhabi tant of Mars. If' aui'h there bo, live upon a world nati time cilder'otati ours, nnd therefore may be much far ther advanced in ctvUiflaftton than our the same feeilim .f pity that fa- took teh same feeling of pity that wo look down upon the Kayulniaux and llot tentota. Mars Is flti old world, long slin'e past It prime. This is known by the , rarity of It's atmosphere, and the scarcity or It s water supply, l.lfe If it exists M all Is maintained throiiKh the alteration of scientific appllancaa ! greater than any of w hich we know. A SOtTHKRN BIUSEUB. A little breeae blew from the south And touched my cheek today. A swift caress, as though some word 'twould bring; A sense of melancholy through the hours which seemed to stay, I.ikc a feather dropped from cir ling aerial wing. One of the strangest things in thia j world is ho-w often a girl can powder 1 her nose without getting chalk in her I lungs. Indianapolis News, EASES A COLD aboDt the stars A tender warmth has made a glow Within my heart; yet cheer Has chilled a little since that breeze went by; The call of long-hushed voices 1 have strangely seemed to hear. Though somehow I do not understand just why. Graco R Hall. "Pape's Cold Compound" then breaks up a cold in a few hours . . A VERY CLEAR CASE HOSE who claim President Wilson was to blame for de iL feat of the treaty do not mean what they say. President Wilson has worn himself out in an earnest effort in be half of the treaty. He was never over stubborn nor dictatorial. He consulted frankly with the senate and house committees on his first return from Paris and had the league covenant amended in order to comply with requests made by senate leaders at that time. Everything that the republicans led by Lodge asked for was secured by Wilson after he went back to the peace conference. The record shows this. During the time the -senate was haggling over the treaty the president often expressed the view there would be no ob jections to reservations that would help interpret the treaty and not destroy it. He would not stand for the Lodge resolu tions because they would nullify the treaty, not ratify it. The league of nations Lodge would have provided would have been useless to the world. The president was justified in holding out against such a farcical proceeding. After the Lodge resolutions had been voted down by the senate Wednesday and the Hitchcock resolution of unqualified ratification had been likewise rejected the administration leaders strove to bring about a compromise. But the majority senators voted down their motions, overruled Vice President Marshall three times and refused all efforts at a compromise. They insisted on Lodge's way or nothing. Thereby they forced the defeat of the treaty and they must take the responsibility therefor. ' Slurs (Continue-!). ! Considering the nrohabiliiv and the Mntprobability of lite on Mars, it may j be well to consider some of the dif i i- lenities contended with noon our own I world. Kelief comes instantly. A d If, for instance, there was some ; ever-v wo hour until three d i sort of natural barrier between the usually breaks up n aev a more favored portions, of the earth i ends all the gi lpi . and the polar region the land or the Tne very first dose opens your i I-.sir.iimaux and Laplanders and kin- i sed-up nostrils and the air pass. ig dred people and no one had ever seen i the head. Stops nose running, relieve them face to face or knew of their ex- the headache, dullness, feverishnes? istence. what then would we consider sneezing, soreness and stiffness, of the probability of life In that re- Pon't stay stuffed-np! Quit blow siun . xi wouia aoumtess gro wltnout j "K and snuffling: Clear your saying that life amid perpetual ice and snow would be impossible, and yet. the Ksquimau is not worried. He hibernates during the long; winter and spends his summer days In fishing and so long as the supply of whale blubber does not become exhausted, seems very well contented. So it is with the Hottentot living under the blazing sun in the jungles on the equator, he never worries about his income tax nor the problem of the ' con gested head! Nothing else in the world gives such prompt relief ns 'Tape's Cold Compound." which costs only a few cents at any drug store. It I acts without assistance, tastes nice, contains no quinine Insist upon Pape's! mm ONE DOSE lVE&BRIGH if TOP DYE pIS GUARANTEED TO DYE AND 1 1; ; U PRESERVE THE TOP U :: 1RAINPR00F AND SUNPROOF! t EASILY APPLIED i M I OUR GUARANTEE II :; BYOUB DEALER 13 INSTRUCTED TOl X PFfUND YOUR MONEY IF YOU 111 X ARE DISSATISFieO WITH RE3ULT3. I j.- IFOR sAi.r: hy H - W. I.. I MM1M. GARAOS I w. i. (i.u)W A n . H VM1.I.V CO. II . . V. A. HOAtil.AM I lSOlMt-l I' ti.lt.ii: I ,, if DEALER CANNOT SUPPLY WRITE 0IKCT II ' ' IgansBBBraRBBDaaEsaamasJ X T. P. W. PURE FOOD shop. $n In Our Model Sanitary Basement. (LKANLINESS ECONOMY SERVICE 3 Mam Line Phonos, All 15. All Other Departments Call 22 FOR YOUR SUNDAY DINNER Fancy White Cauliflower, each 50c Well Bleached Celery, bunch 15c Fresh Brussel Sprouts, pound 35c Large Solid Head Lettuce, each 15c and 20c Fresh Turnips and Carrots, bunch 5c Fancy Large Bell Peppers, pound 50c Fancy Smooth Sweet Potatoes, 3 pounds 25c Cannon Ball Cabbage, pound 5c, 50 pound lots or more pound '. 4c We pay the highest market Price for Ranch Eggs and Butter and will pay a premium for some nice fat Turkey Hens, dry picked. m'ndutonn (m.vrt.sT in i'MtTHtvi srtmr Unpeoples Wareh wjiimmaflmg w ie , I, .4VS It) Hwe fjg ous LADIES! SECRET TO DR. H. H. HATTERY Physician and Surgeon American National Flank Building Office phone 5?.1. Res. phone 1070 105, Phone NOTICE I have moved my office back to the American National Hank BliUdlng, suite DALE ROTHWELL OVtlnwOlal and Opricinn. Bring Back its Color and Lustre with Grandma's Sage Tea Resipe. THE WILDCAT FAD. K i & I R i aarnening your nair witn vvyetns Sage and Sulphur Compound, no one ic? Common garden sage brewed into a heavy tea, with sulphur and alcohol added, will turn aray. streaked and j faded hair beautifully dark and lux uriant Mixing the Sage Tea and Sul phur recipe at home though, Is troublesome. An easier -way to get the ready-to-use preparation improved by the addition of other Ingredients, a large bottle, at little cost, at drug stores, known as "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," thus avoiding a lot of muss. While gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful Clean-Up Sale Opening and Closing Schedule of the Highway Service Station OF becomes beautifully; dark, glossy, soft and luxuriant and you appear years younger. Eat less meat if you feel Back achy or have Bladder trouble. Meat forms uric acid which excites and overworks the kidneys in their efforts to filter it from the system. Regulat eaters of meat must flush the kidneys occasionally. Tou mu? relieve them like you relieve your j bowels; removing all the acids, waste j and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness j your stomach sours, tongue is coateu j and when the weather is bad you have f rheumatic twinges. The urine is i cloudy, full of gedlment; the channels often get irritated, obliging you to get up two or three time during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids ' and flush off the body's urinous waste j get about four ounces of Jad Raits j from any pharmacy; take a table spoonful in a glass of water before m hr.r. L-tr. ut Inr !J TatB rlflVa find vn r Kin- . - - . rm 1 C. t U.- r aa Yn tnim1 " ' .... and 51000 denominations. me only lauit w WT W Will then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to Senator McNary wanted the treaty ratified but he could i and toI b1a(ldpr irritation. Jad salts not stand the pressure and on the final test lined up with the h inexpensive, harmless and makes a , , , . j k it,. ..) delightful effervescent lithia-water Lodge forces. Senator Chamberlain stood fast by tne presi- drink wni(,n miI1ions of men and wo dent and for the neace treatv. Had the people of Oregon men take now and th. thus avoiding ....... 1J a !orlr.,,n 1i.lnnv nnA V.larlHfte tiworeS. shown the same relative independence that fenaieion am twO-J , ytars ago Oswald West would have been senator and his vote would have been for the treaty. GUSS OF SALTS IF HE savings division of the United States treasury depart II L ment is doing its best to keep the "wildcats" from get-: UP ir.r all rfco mvnov tn tlio r-nirnrrv hilt-, it. has A hard and can tell, because it does it so natural- . . , , .. . , . , Iy, so evenly. You just dampen a thankless job. Wildcat speculation is the great national pas-j sponse or goft brU3h with it and draw time now and nobody thanks the government for interfering i this through your hair, taking one . . i-j.ii i. i I small strand at a time; bv morning with the game. Everybody who has a little money to lose isjall Rraj. hairs have difJappeared. After losine it. All that thev get for it is the thrill of a great antici-' another application or two your hair pation and the thud of a great disillusionment. But disillusionment does not cure, If it did, there would be some hope. The wise wildcatters know that the victim has been stung is the easiest to sting again. He keps on "investing" so long as he has a dollar or a Liberty bond to lose. It is like playing the lottery, or the races, with this difference : In the lottery and races some win. "Promoters of phony enterprises and peddlers of worthless stocks seem to vie with each other in the preposterousness of their propositions, with the certainty that the one making the most unbelievable representations will be most believed," says the St. Louis Post Dispatch. There is no use of trying to propose anything so outlandish that "investors" will not fall for it. It can't be done. It has been tried. The story is that a newspaper in an Eastern city printed a satirical warning against unsafe speculation and in cluded a mock prospectus of "The Munchausen Philosopher's Stone and Gull Creek Oil Co.," with a capital stock of $4,000, 000,000 and a working: capital of $37, paying dividends semi daily except on Sundays. Something about that appealed to speculators. It may have been the $4,000,000,000 or the piety of the outfit implied in the candid announcement that no dividends would be paid on SiinriAvR. Anvwav. a lot of neople wanted to know where they could get some of the stock. The government is offering Thrift Stamps, Savings Stamps, "Babv Bonds" and new Treasury Savings Certificates in $100 1 LUMBER We have about ten thousand feet of off grade and damaged lumber that we want to clean up before inventory. The first come will be the first served. Oregon Lumber Yard 5 I 5 I! li 5 at Intersection of Court and Alta Sts. OPEN 7 A. M. CLOSE 6:30 P. M. Except Saturday nights and Holidays A full line of Oils, Greases and Accessories Repliblic Tires GAS 30c PER GALLON, STARTING NOV. 24. DANCE COLD SPRINGS DANCE HALL Saturday Night November 22nd FLETCHER'S BIG JAZZ ORCHESTRA LOTS OF PEP. GOOD EATS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii THE JOLLY INN Our motto is to please you. If we do tell your friends. If we don't tell us. Try the Jolly Inn's FAMOUS RAVIOLLIS AND HOT T A MALES THEY ARE GREAT We extend a specialy invitation to the farm ers and ranchers. Here you will find just the home cooking you have been looking for and amid pleasant surroundings. Basement Hotel St. George iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTi with them is that they are safe. They would sell better it there was a chance to lose something on them. KEEP LOOKING YOUNG Any increase in pay jfranted to the coal miners will be paid by the homeowners of the nation. This is a fundamental fact not to be overlooked and most people are not overlooking the Suet It's Easy-If You Know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets The president is trying hard to quiet unrest and reduce the living cost but it is a hard thing to do wihout cooperation from congress. A fine way to cripple Oregon would be to adopt the initia tive law provided for a four per cojpt interest rate. It would simply mean that the money would be loaned elsewhere in or der to obtain a higher rate. Cleaner streets would buildings nnd store fronts do much toward ' naleton, cleaner looking The secret of keeping young: is to feel young to do this you must watch your Uver and bowels there's no need of having a sallow complerion dark rings under your eyes pimples -a bilious look in your face dull eyes with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you ninety per cent of all sickness comes from inactive bowels and liver. Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician in Ohio, perfected a vegetable com pound mixed with olive oil to act on the Uver and bowels, which he gave to liis patients for years Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel, are gentle in their action vet always effective. They bring about that natural buoyancy which all .hould enjoy by toning up the Hver and rlrarirfe the svstem of impurities. ' Kd. :.:.'CiiveTableLarekriOwii vy Utat oiivc tutor. It iim avi WOMEN LIKE HMNES CARS BECAUSE THEY ARE EASY TO HANDLE. Umatilla Auto Co. 809 Garden Street Phone 417 We Are Busy But Not Too Busy to Take on More Work WE KNOW That when it comes to overhauling or tuning up your car we can deliver tho goods. WE KNOW That you will be thoroughly pleased with the performance of your car after it leaves our shop. WE KNOW That there are many cars here that arc being neglected that are wearing needlessly for want of being overhauled at the proper time. Don't wait too long. LET US DO IT NOW i Jewett & 8 Day Phone 486 54 Majn gt NlKhl phone 344-R I ! i EARLY TO BED EARLY TO RISE Will Get the Ducks IF YOU ARE WISE AND USE WESTERN SHELLS SOL BAUM Sporting Good Store Guns, Sweaters, Leather Vesta, at prices that are right Hotel Pendleton Bid. ! s I I 9&