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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1920)
PAGE FOTTC DAILY SA8T ORFOONTAN. FKNDLIYON, OREGON, TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1020. TWELVE PAGES AN ruhllntiffl Dully anfl Slml-Werfcly, i moil i .n (p.'Kon. by the ART olllMi .MAN ITHMSHINO CO. ICntrred at the poatnfrire at l'rndle tnn. Orrgon, u ereond-claaa mall Batter. IN BALE JN OTHER CITIK8. Imperial Hold Newe Stand. Portland ONR FILE AT Chicago Uurrau. 909 Security Bulld- Weehlnrton, r. c. Burraa (01 Four teenth Street. N. w. Mrmhrr -f Ikr a-ln-d I'rrx. The Aeafifiatr-d Pri M ia -xclu, Hv enlitl.-d l,, th u. for rpnhlit'atioii of alt now a dispatch,.' i-rrdited to it or wot othirwi.' credited In tall paprr ' and alao ih local news pukliahed lurr- 0 NDErKNDENT NKwSrAPER WHITMAN LABS VISITED BY PARTY FROM HERE GHT FOR PART IN MURDER suiiKeiurrioN rates (IN ADVANCE) Dally. D,ily. Daily. nii one year, by mall six months, by mail three moaths by mail.... one month by mall , one year by carrier n months by carrier three months by carrier one Mnth. bv carrier mi v cekty nM-Wcekly Dally Daily DaJbr. Dally ISM t.ja .- Ui . The rice that ' lita-h . ImMbI ajhlea ; bilton er.uvn to tn the ,...,. lyrics of ttitnva '. Vtktlrton ivxlaji- vtt i) bora iiaoe outt,' 1.95 one ear. by mail l.re six month., by mall .T5 sa a nti wtth :Ne avtrtv. f..-.tltv o i.T$ aoHooI. It made s much of a hit ini-1 kiy. four months, by mail .( rrl -! ii!. muvs irr. (By Prank L. Stanton.) I. Mr. Satan ourac ter my house. Kn any: "For goodness sake. Whar dat resolution What you 'lowed you swine ter make? II. Kn tell h'm plain an straight: De blizxjtrd hit tie sate. Kn blowed dat resolution Clean cross (lis here state" III. lcn Satan laugh, en tell me: "I b'leege ter fro niv way, Kf 1 don't atop lay ternutrrow, m see you jedgmint dav!" IV. "En I tell you, plain en straight. No blizzard at the gate Will freeze you up, en blow you Clean 'cross dis here state!" Copyrighted for the East Oregonian ruh. Co. Dr. Itrown. ).-s., If. S. ISxxle of th. sper.t stteral "ho. mental leettirea fvsr the N-nefU of t!w xisr.tors. The students from the loettl hiich school w --re .cvswp.initNl ly C. St. Cramer, science instructor. Much waul n in the way of ex periment and made the trip valuaMe from an educational sxan.ipoint. Sev eral more y.roup of students plau to make the trip soon Mr iYjmr es ImMs, to conduct a tour through the new- Ojlllna mill this week. While in Wa:ia Wall the boys of the party w orn entertained at the Beta frater- j nity house and the tsirls at Reynolds' hall. Father Vaughan. Who Says Women Undress for Dinner IWVI.Wll iVe . April IS O. F. t "lllaolkte I W ill'tvcd, ev-oonMct who i-es--ocd $'.ea la reWTjl monex fr lnr.vrwiattwn bp-atiwa to iho arrest of the mmevxrs e-f 4, N. Biirn-, uid t'flsv lMinricer of IVmlleion. is now- , wanted in (AMneMtn with the murder; o; R. O etl and nao' als, bra tried 1 f-Mr cvmplicti in the leortseso IVi inner cas. -tt, who was a sNv-ttle deputy shot .!T. was Vitle.1 during a hold up in Vr.le. IVsc-Htidn M one of the handits is said to tally exactly with thai of ' RlacW" ilHf odI. sSace. the tlareirt'ioni tavern owac, l'ortland ivltce detecUxwa are report ed to have gained lnfimatlvni to the effect that Willirotxl pUnmM the hold. l p and is aUeoed to have driven Ban nister. vgie and Smith to lha cst hank vt the WUIametta river that nighu John t!Xe" i;K S-MXXt After the murder, the ivrtland po- licw detetivea receivtM definite iafor .. mation that th men were in a housv ' a St. Johns by a mysterious "John J !oe" whom the olioo later ailmitted was "I'lacMe'' Wllllford, lex-convict at the tliuo of their trafto donlhs. and iillegexl stool-pfegeon. Williford Andy VaiiKhan, deputy sheriff at vi c.Mvctl $r,00l) In cttah under the name Seattle, is still in Portland iuvcail of John lHo when tho division of the gating tho Scott murder ca.e. Whoth '. .u,l mouoy 'wasi made. er or not a Charles Wllllford who MMMM t'ako Vp l'robo procured a marrlnx license at Vau lt was said yesterday at pollcftoouvor April 8 la the man now balng luMd.ui.'ii iii s (hat. the Shrlners ofsauHht. has not yet been determined I nrttand have luken up the Invosll-hy tho deputy shorlff und Portland tl.itlou of W llllford and that they will police dotoctlve. Insist that he be held it an accnm- . plnxs in tho murder of Messrs'. Perln- ana lllllgaaal if apiiiohendodk Both Women ore the real purchasing men murdered at 'la rriuont wereaRonta of tho I'llltoU l?tatc.s thoy buy prominent Masons and were in Port- sio per cent of tho commodities used In land lor a Shrine ceremonial session tho American home. Mllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'i 1 3 I X i a mm IlllllUiil. FOR Now Instead of Dressing Hy local a?mcations, aa thy cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh ta a local diaease. greatly inllu. enced bv ccnslituuoaal conditions. HALoJJ CATARRH MEDICINE will cure calarrl It Is taken Internally and acta througtc the Blood en the Mucous Surfaces of the Svsiem HALJVS CATARRH MKDKUNE is composed of some of the beat tonics known, combined with some of the beat blood Banners. The perfect combination of tn, ingredients In HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is what produces such won derful results in catarrhal conditlorfa. Druggists He. Testimonials free. F J. Chenav P-xvpa.. Toledo. O. BUT THEY BEAT THE ENEMY TO PARIS 3T IS easy enough to find fault with the cost plus system of building the army cantonments. But the question is would not regular contracting have cost more and in volved delays the country could not afford. Contractors were fearful because they did not know what materials would cost. They did not k now how they would fare as to labor or transpor tation. Forced to make definite bids they would have been obliged to play safe and the camps would perhaps have cost! more than they did. Necessarily there would have been delay; and as a minority congressman said yesterday, the Germans! would have beaten usjnto Paris. The house report on the cantonments is chiefly valuable in ; showing the length to which partisanship can go. Had the va- rious congressional probes been conducted by agents of the: kaiser the work could not have been more biased or unfair. There was real justification for George Creel's letter to Senator! omoot in which he said, "Ever since the armistice it has been your steadfast attempt t shame the American war record and besmirch every man con nected with that record. To date, these congressional investiga tions have cost $2,000,000. but failure to develop a single in stance of graft still forces your group to rely upon the activities of individual liars." At the same time congress is howling about war waste 100 ' Vl" j.-cuwcin ui me ioer nouse are preparing tor what is nothing more nor less than a pleasure jaunt to the orient on one of the government's finest transports. They talk against meddling in foreign affairs yet nearly one fourth the house is going to "meddle 'in the orient while domestic legislation of great im portance is being neglected at Washington. Here's Big Money A wonderful opportunity is offered to one man in this district to own and operate an exclusive busi ness showing tremendous profits with absolutely no competition, should clear $400.00 or more monthly. The goods talk when displayed. An absolute neces sity and in great demand. Investment of $300 in poods will start you. Investigate today. Manufac turers' representatives are here for the first time for a few days to establish their business here. Call Pendleton Hotel, Room 204 SALE 1-75 H. P. Holt Cater- 1 1 pillar, run less than two j I seasons, one Oregon Special Combine with engine. These will be I ! sold together or separa- 1 tely at a reasonable j price. Address C. F. I I Schoonmaker, P. O. Box 575, Pendleton, Ore., or I 5 Schoonmaker & Benner, La Crosse. Wn. iimiiiimiinHHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiT 1 That tho -".viinien of t-ri;iy "mulross fi.r dinner irmteatl 'if drossm?," is the way tho Hev. Jlernard Vmnrhan of London, widely known Jesuit faiher whose essays on morality and home I Itfe h.i-vo attracted world wide atten- dt-.srrilreH the 1930 fa-shion ten-1 envies. He condemns the modes as f ruining souls as well as bodies," and unhealthy, im modest and mjly." Have you seen Hans Collins' mill at nteht? rinp mass and twinkling llsht, COMPULSORY WORK IN SOVIET RUSSIA Take it from me, it is sure some sight. We aaed to think the City Hall And the Court Iiouso too, were -some ! for tall. But I'm here to aa', it'a irure some sight Old Hans" mill 'ivhiri iu lit at night. EARLY 11 A A I IT. vjJIjOBILIZATION of the workers of Russia for compulsory jjlpl labor goes on apace, if one may judge by the reported oi;cci.ii ui uu .troizKy, tne DoisneviK minister ot war, m Z n-, "L , U1 L""""ui Party nem in Moscow on , miiiiniii'iliii lll!lllllliim;Uimi March 11. Trotzky announced that the peasant population and , , x great masses of unskilled labor had to be mobilized and that ' Bu? yur Loal before g fi?1 ne,ces,sar- ? sret satisfactory results from 1 1 the new mine price and I Inem in tnt TYirm nf rmrl nituin Tlift e l .. l 1 av ... . . . f ' v .... 1 1 . i nc ai 1U Ul WUlftClS, OU11L Oil I B B the principle of compulsory labor, was proving no less produc-' raise in freight take ef- 1 ! live man me oia competitive system, according to Comrade irotzky. The general tenor of the speech, the correspondent asserts, "was in support of centralization of Dower in the hanrlt r,f a : strong government." Naturally. A government that mobilizes j I its man power and sends it to fight or to work at the sound of the bugle has nothing lackadaisical about it, remarks the Chi- I cago News. I The human ideal is liberty of action within the bounds of justice. But Trotzky, engaged in a systematic effort to rehabili- I tate Russian industry and rescue the people from want and mis-j ery. leaves ideals to those who choose to amuse themselves with 1 such thing. Calling armies to labor under militarv discipline is an efficiency system that human beings will not submiit to ex- S cept under the lash of necessity. Communism so interpreted 3 and exemplified is no world peril unless it should set out to con- quer with the sword after the manner of older forms of tyranny. Phone 5 feet. We have a complete stock of UTAH AND ROCK SPRINGS B. L. on hand. BURROUGHS Inc. There will be no guaranteed price on wheat but general conditions indicate a good price nevertheless so Eastern Oregon will not worry. City iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The Sonora revolt would afford Uncle Ban a good opportu nity to do some territory stealing if he wanted to indulge in that sort of work. Take note that the Round-Up dtes are September 23, 24 and 25th and make your plans accordingly. 9ft vfapq Ann lu I uiiiu nuu fc . r (Krom the Eaut Oragoniaji, April 13, 182.) ln Haffvn i imi-rovingr hU re- ideip Carl Mel.rha h ha returned from lunjc hinelni k rld on the iolumbia Mver rang-. Ha rounded up seventy hem! of hi rattle ul I'matilla and has SlttL MILLS CLOSE FOR LACK OF COAL t9f I'nited Treaa. ) rovuamrown, ., Apm u. Twenty thousand ateelworkera "Were thrown out of work here yeaterday due to the Inability of aeveral ateel milla brouarht them tr, ivndl-to. . ' 1 ' '"-" "I'erat.ona ror taca or 01. Several P-llt,.ni..n. n,nlmr,lal. I yartn,en atrike 1 Mill effective , a I iiiux t-me 11 l Ol rr-: 'tnc to rurtltind on April is and 19 te hwtr the fa-mous I. S. Marine Hand oi W .ijhinton which la viHitins the Cl'iic! . HOI M MMt I'ltOs) HOW WABHlfiOTOti, April IS. Hr a vote of 297 to 4 the Iioum toilav pit .-vmm 1 a rmoltitlon iuI11iik ujx.r; the ationi i:rnr r jI tu Mart ri and Jury 1m etiipttioua aud nwl auiu to rc 0ror laawea altefffd to have txen caOy- I b th' coat pluii Rxntrm of pii'i.i , Iffht la report ed to le completely paralyzed. If the strike continue, ateel rnUl of the whole V valley dlKrict will be lied up. f 5 Why Pay the Peddler or Canvasser Twice These Prices? JR. HISS STOCK TO MO 2". Ih. I'all OUM tJ.r.O IHO lb. Drum ;otg H.(H Here ia another point, Mr. Karrm-r, we want to empha Hize, that in: l)r. Heas Block Tonic ia highly concentrated, it foes farther as the small dose quantity proves. It puts your animals in a thriving; condition ready for Fpring; work. 5 2 & CoJ leading Drugglsta iti:niy.iiMM si Kini: IJy I'nited Preaa. ) UF..WKH. April 13. LamHaa a farewell note. Jeawe Povey, bridtrrtom of a week, killed himself by taking l,tiwn In a bal h',tH to4nv. Police OtASses oaotNO to f it your Eves 1 1 Sr S LHiPLK. AT 10 ON SHORT NOT ICE x.kimr r,r hi i.ride whom Povey. AMERICAN N ATI. BANK BtNUMMC, ie.:l.. r note, l..ir.-4 t' bU act. i I tfKDtt I ON , tlnmeU THE BANKERS HAVE AN AS SOCIATION to protect their interests. Membership is confined to banks that conform to legitimate banking practices. OTHER PROFESSIONS AND BUSINESSES HAVE SIMI lar associations with a high ethical standard. FROM THE ADVERTISER'S STANDPOINT, THE GREAT est and most useful co-operative organization is the Audit Bureau of Circulations, comprising advertisers, advertising agents and publishers. IT PROTECTS THE ADVERTISER AND HIS AGENT. They are enabled to know positively the facts regarding the circulation of the publications with which they place con tracts. IT PROTECTS THE PUBLISHER A G A I N S T UNFAIR competition, as the falsifier of circulation statements is barred absolutely from membership in the A. B. C. THE EXPERIENCED ADVERTISER, BEFORE PLACING a contract for space, asks to be shown the A. B. C. credentials of the publication. THE EAST OREGONIAN IS A MEMBER OF THE A. B. C. The Bureau's report on its circulation is available to all advertisers.