East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, January 24, 1921, DAILY EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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DAILY EAST ORE&ONIAU, PENDLETQ3T, OEEGON, MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 24, 1021.
TENlAGES
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Published rH? snd flcmt-TVccMy, at
J'ennlelnn, Oregon, bv the
HACT I1'JH.MAN ri'lil.KSHINl CO.
KnlTcil m tlio posted Ice at IVnille
ton, oti'nm, sa ti.'oint-i lass mail nut
ter, j
ON SAI.K IV OT11K.R CITIES
Imperial llut-I News Ktsnd, Portland,
ONE I'll.R AT
riilBO nureaii. f Security nandine-.
Washington. 11, ("., Hurrau 401 four
teen III 81 rft. N. W.
IHrnkrr f the Asawlstral Pre.
The Asstrciatcd I'resa la exlnaivelv
entitled to the use for republication or
all news dispatcher credited to It or
tint otherwise rrrriltcd in this paper
and alao the local news nublishcd here.
Ij1: ' Telephone
4
A
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NETVSl'APpn
SUKSCKirTIOX RATES
(IX ADVANCE)
one year, by mall
six montha, by mail
mree months by mall
one month by mail...
one Vi'nr hv earner
I'ntly, six montha by carrier
Dally, thrca montha bv carrier...
Daily, one month, by carrier
Semi-Weekly, one yea--, by mall.
Semi-Weekly, aix montha, by mall 1.00
ronu-n eeKiy, mre months by mail M
Tilt: MIOKI'KIUTY TKAIX
(By Frank U Stanton)
Where the. brtKht blcssinca dim down like the rain,
We're ringtMn' the New Year Prosperity Train! ' N
There never no sishin' we ain't lookln" back;
For the gleam o- the headlight shines far down the truck!
Ho! all you people from mountain and plain,
A trip on the New Tear ITosperity Train!
The shadowless sunshine still beckons lis on
From the depths a' the dark lu the blna." o- the dawn!
The fields shout for j.y and a melody swells
om the steeples that rock with the ring o-the bells!
Ho! all you people from hillside an' plain,
A trip on the New Tear Prosperity Train!
Copyrighted for the liast Oregonian Pub. Co.
''TV,
AKC.VDK SI X DAY AX IMONlAY
Moro than tho usual Interest' at
taches to too announcement tr the
forthcoming encasement of. James
Oliver Curwood's "Xotnads . of tho
North" at the Arcade Theatre bosln
nintr Sunday. All those who saw
"Hack to Hod's Country" and "The
River's Knd," masterpieces from the
worshop of this nuthiir. realize theyj
are Justified In expecting soniethinB I
extraordinary In the latest plcturlza
ibin of his brarui'o outdoors, Far
North fiction. This film la an Asso
ciated First National attraction and It
is said to be one of the very best fea
tures ever offered by this organiza
tion. The three high-lights in the
I reduction, according to advance In
formation, are: the remarkable per
formance ot animals Including many
wild ones in general and a pet bear
and dog In particular; a forest fire
which is accredited with setting a new
high mark in realism and thrills: and,
a romance of all-absorblnir qualities
lulto different than the ordinary run
of love affairs so universal in the mo
vies. The east which has beel selected
to play the various picturesque roles
in this Intense drama of the wildest ot
God's country includes such stars as
Hetty Blytle, Ion Chaney, I wls Stone,
Melbourne McDowell and Spottiswood
Ait ken.
There Was Nothing So Good
lor Congestion and Colds
as Mustard
' But the old-fashioned mustard
rl.ister buried end blistered while it
acted. Oct t ha relief and help that
mustard plasters cave, without h
plaster and without tiie blister.
Musterole does it. It is a dean,
white ointment, rnsde with oil of mus
tard. It is scientifically prepared, so
that it vor!.a wonders, and vet rbv.
uui muter ir.o tenaercst sljin.
Cently massa.-e Musterole in with tha
i.ngeiiips. ace now quicl.ly it brings ra
t t ?w 'PHy tiie Pa disappears.
Ue Mustorole for sore throat, bron
chitis, tonsilitia, croup, stiff neck,
tiithma, neurabjij, headache, conges
lion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbaRO,
pains and aches of the back or joints,
sprain sore muscles, bruises, chit
blains, frosted f xt, colds of the chest
(it often prevents pneumonia).
3oc ar.d 65c jars: hospital size S3.00
AI.TA Sl'XDAY AND MONDAY
been
power at
WHY NEGLECT SUCH AN OPPORTUNITY?
fr AKING note of the fact considerable interest ha
I awakened in the proposition of developing
Umatilla rapids on the Columbia the Oregon Journal in
it Sunday edition said :
"Pendleton and other Umatilla county communities are talk
ing: about harnessing Umatilla rapids in the Columbia river. The
result would be about 320,000 horse power in hydro-electric en
"W ?nd the irrigation of several hundred thousand acres of
Washington 's and Oregon's contiguous lands. By electrifica
tion the river mieht then be made in onomtn rraina a -Dn Qe
' , " - - v. kj wj n vii o
uIJJly current ior;inaustrial, domestic and agricultural uses.
. Yl'Vl in CAlmnniT n 1- i-'.l i 1 .
...i. aioajr ones iniisuiy awaiu proauciivity, wnen so
njany people eagerly hope for home making opportunities and
when so many peoples are hungry for the products of soil and
industry, every day that passes w ithout definite move to com
bine the reclamation, power and transportation features embod
ied in the large use of the Columbia is a day wasted."
VEt t?ese thins are frue there can be no denial. Vast bod
ies of land that may be wonderfully productive are going to
waste. That land should be reclaimed and added to the tax roll
of the state. That is one way to reduce taxation.
Our railroads complain of low dividends and seek increased
rates from the public so as to make a reasonable profit Yet these
roads consume valuable coal which they haul long distances
while the natural motive power of the northwest is going un
used. We would'like more industries in Eastern Oregon. We would
like to reduce fuel costs. It would be good business to safeguard
against the depletion of the oil supply and the increasing cost of
oil. It would be agreeable o heat homes by electricity and
cook with electricity. Such advantages are manifest.
Now the answer to each of these problems is largely bound
T j uues"n 01 cneap nydro-electric power. Through
abundant electric power sold on a low cost basis a vast acreage
may be irrigated by pumping water frpm the inexhaustible Co
lumbia; railroad costs may be reduced and freight rates in pro
portion, industries may be fostered and the cost of living re
duced. The possibilities of benefit from a real big electrical
project are so great as to stagger the imagination. It is a cer
tainty that the blessings would be more far reaching than can
be apprised at this time. These benefits' would reach all peo
ple in a very large section.
F ortunately, the opportunity to obtain this power is at hand
if we can but find the way to development. The Umatilla rap
ids power site is the third largest on the Columbia and in manv
respects is the most feasible project for early utilization. I I
will cost less than any of the other projects and arid land need
ing water lies close to the power site on both sides of the river.
There is basis for asking federal aid in order to reclaim this land
and for the further reason that power development would aid
navigation by eliminating two troublesome rapids on the upper
river.
It must be admitted the project is a big one and the cost
would be high. The preliminary survey estimated the cost of
developing 320,000 horse power at Umatilla rapids at $20,500,
000. There may be some who think the project so big that it is
not practical for present day discussion, but if you will note
vhat California, Idaho and Washington are doing you will think
differently. The state of Washington is vigorously agitating
the Columbia basin project which, it is said, will cost $300,000,
tOO and for which water ;vill be brought from as far away as
Idaho and Montana. Compared with the Columbia basin pro
ject the Umatilla rapids project seems like a very practical,
workaday scheme. Washington is taking the Columbia basin
project seriously and in some manner has secured $100,008 for
financing the move. They asked the president-elect to defer
naming a secretary of the interior until they could consult him
and he agreed to their request.
Can Oregon afford to sit by like a sluggard and let our sister
states obtain all the benefits of federal aid in development work
while we have projects which we regard as superior from a
standpoint of feasibility?
Ehhu Root is right about the disarmament subject and Sen
ator Borah is wrong. We want a let up on war preparations and
want it badly. But to be workable the disarmament plan must
le on a fair basis and apply to all nations, not merely to Eng
land. Japan and America. The logical thing now is to wait for
the Harding administration to take control and determine upon
its League of Nations attitude. There will be more confidence
in Harding leadership on this subject than in Borah leadership,
senator borah is too much of a demagogue to be trusted
The A nti Saloon league reports that the consumption of
whiskey m the United States dropped off some 84 million gal-
- -. lliai ) ca VL proniomon. ant nas the league
ruxen note of the amount of Canadian whiskey and moonshine
tiiat has bten upon the market?
............
.TJ?.1?0?! Eastern Oregon winter weather.
MAl lUCE TOl ltXFni
rEATUSE IS IHI.I.KD
f ,
One -of the blgsest screen produc
tions of the year will bo seen at the
Alta Theatre when Maurice Tourneur's
super special, "The Great Redeemer,'1
will be the feature of the bill for two
days, beginning Sunday. "The Great
Redeemer," it is announced, is a tre
mendous drama of absorbing human
Interest. According to the expecta
tions of its producers, it is destined to
be hailed as one of the really Impres
sive photodramas of the year.
Advance reports on "The Great Re
deemer" dwell with especial force upon
the unusual beauty of the production
from a pictorial standpoint, as well as
upon Its intensely dramatic theme ana
the tremendous moral message it car
ries to nil who view it.
Dan Malloy, as the story iroes, has
eluded a posse that pursues him after
he has held up a train, and takes
refuge in the home of a girl of the
mountains. The girl, startled by his
sudden and unannounced entrance
intiy her cabin, shoots, the bandiv,
wounding him slightly. Later, after
hearing his story and falling under the
spell of his dominating personality, she
begins to love him. "With Dan it has
lieen a case of love at first sight, and
he is soon contemplating the abandon
ment of his career as a bandit for a
fireside and respectability.
Temptation soon appears In the per
son of a former pal. who tips Dan off
to the fact that the limited can be held
up with ease if Dan will essay on
more fling at his old game. Dan suc
cumbs and attempts the hold-up, but
Is surrounded and captured after his
pal has died fighting the forces of the
law.
F
W ASHIXGTOX. Jan. !4. DeporU-
tlon of troublesome" aliens who are
in this country without passports Is
under consideration by the state de
partment It is learned.
Particular consideration is beins
given to the case of Hairy Boland.
secretary to Eamonn Do Valera. Ko
land entered this country without a
passport and recently made a sharp
advocating campaign against every
thing British in the United States. No.
action will be taken, however, until
a definite policy is worked out and
a definition of what is a troublesome
one is decided.
CORSICA NOW CLAIMS
COLUMBUS AS ITS SON
U. S. IS NO UTOPIA SAYS
GUESE NEVi
I-IBPON, Jan. 21. (A. P.) The
Portuguese newspapers have undertak
en a campaign to prevent continued
emigration of Portuguese citizens to
the United States and Brazil by point
ins out that more than 2,000,000
workers are idle and hundreds of
factories closed in the United States
and that the Portuguese are not wel-
oome in Brazil.
"Innumerable emigrants continue to
arrive in Lispon from all parts of the
country on their way to Brazil and
the I'nited States," says the Seculo.
"Jt is necepsary to stop this avalanche
and avoid this calamity, not only be
cause the hundreds that are leaving
this country are needed in the fields
and workshops but also because they
are going to suffer in a strange coun
try all manner of sorrow and mis
ery."
The same newspaper prints a letter
from a Portuguese workman in a New
Bedford. Mass., textile factory, who
sent a warning to his Tellow country
men not to go to that city. He said
that soon after he found employment
ho font for his wifo and children and
they told their farm in Portugal to
Piy for their transportation . aero ;s
the Atlantic. Then illness and the
closing of the factory reduced the
family to extreme misery and the
Portuguese now desires only to re
trrn to die In Portugal. He declares
that the Portuguese who remain In
fw Bedford, many are in abject
misery.
LONDON, Jan. 24. (I. P.) Not
tatisfied with Bonaparte, Corsica has
ontered the lists of claimants to trie
birthplace of Christopher Columbus.
C'alvi, in Corsica, claims that the dis
coverer completed his first successful
voyage in a house still standing in its
street
Italy, Spain, Portugal . and now
Fra.icc, via Corsica, claims Columbus
aa their own, -which moved a corres
pondent to remark that "although the
present generation will not see the
fifth centenary of the discovery of
America, it should be a splendid cele
bration, since so many European coun
tries now take a personal interest In
the discoverer." ,
Columbus himself Is said to have
stated that he was a Genoese, which,
however, adds point to Corsica's con
tention since the island at that time
l-elnnsred to Genoa.
if Ui
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Lessens Labor
Goes .Farther
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Guar-
20-MMTlAM
CHIPS
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iBliEllillEiis
'SUSIKESSI EAR :
Merchants count it nn invest
ment where returns are actual
and provable.
The expense of maintenance is
comparatively insignificant.
Tbm faMlln consumption liunuiualljr U
' Tb tin mllcac U uauaually bi$h
ELLIS-SCHILLER CO.
. '.' i Main and Water Sts. Miotic -Mi.
i. . ' - ' ' " , '
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CHICHESTER S PILtJ?
aJ. VJ?
' rrr4. A.kfocifi'if's.TEaa
I1AM-1P HUA0 PIU..ftll
Mcrskcowauaat.siftst.AlitYRetit.tt
Dr. Lynn K. Blakeslee
Chronic and Nervous IHseawa and
Diseases of Women. X-Itay Klectrlc
- Thorapcutiis.
Temple Bldg. ' Itoora 12
rhone 416 v
DR. C. II. DAY
riijslHnn ami Surneon
Ostniputh
Roomi 23 and 25 Hmlth-Crawforl .
Untitling.
Telephone' 7U Rea. 74J-H
ALTA
TODAY
CIllIJUMA 10t!
AIUXTS KM
MAUHICE
TOUENEURS
SCP.EE1M
MASTERPIECE of. the
REDEEMER
PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
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Quality PRINTING at Reasonable Prices
East Oregoman Printing Department.
UPPER SfLESIANS HOPE
FOR EARLY PLEBISCITE
HCTHKl'y. I'ppcr Silesia. Jan. 24.
(A. P.) German industrialists. Po
lish propHKnn-iisiK and men and wom
en who work In the mines of I'l-per
Hilem exprt-Ks hoe that the council
of nmlHUdofs i fix the earliest
potsihle date for the plebiscite which,
they tielieve, will be the fut Bieaji to.
ward et.'iblUzatlon of the unsettled
conditions terrorizing and paup.rizing
much of the population.
tici nuiiiK, viio aio coiuluctlns a
campaign to winr the region east of
the Oder to their aide, declare a fur
ther Postponement of the elections to
decide whether Poland or Germany
will control, will only add to the ex
citement and to the hatred' between
tne I'olea and the fjermans.
The Poles, apparently more confi
dent of victory, assert they have al
j ways mood for an early plebiscite.
Both sides say that the population is
e.pii.pe.l with arms and that the
fiKhtif can hardly be avoided.
; W. Korfanty, J'olish leader, whom
the Germans chsrKe with instigating
j the -organized terror'- last year, has
; declared Poland Is so confident of
: winning that lie has arranifed to aa
, mine comro! of every admlnistatlve
i t -t the moment the decision is an
P
astime
Children 5c Adults 2(k
SAJMUEL S. HUTCHINSON
f - Presents
The Great Drama of the West
"The Gamesters" -
With
Margarita Fisher
Rose of the "Gilded Hell Hole" "proves to be a
rose as beautiful and pure as the roses natured
in the sunlight of the open fields.
MORE THAN AN ORDINARY WESTERN.
COMEDY:
"MAIDS IN THE COUNTRY."
Today
ADULTS 33c
Lon Chaney, Lewis Stone, Betty JBly the and Big Cast
In.,: ' -:: '
jl. ar
: ARCADE
! CHILDREN 10c
i
J nil-
( nouueed,