Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1921)
4 i. About This Time o Year. fr .. . . ft J. JL 2 M 1 fl Tffl 1 i 11 AM JNDErtN'DEXT NEWSPAPER a. ""fun, op the KABT (IHWWSiAH I t HI.IHHINa CO. Wet.. t tha pom office t pendle wtiiun, aa (wund clam mail mat- tjr OS SAMS 1J OTICEU CITlEi tnpthl Hotel News ftand. Portland. ... . OH U-K AT C-hlfr Pureau, Security Tiulldiiir Wtnnttm, l. C, Ifureau 601 Four- leenth fHf-t, K. W. J"""1" AaHtral Prau. The Acaoplatrd ITpm in exclusively ntUied to the u for republication of all twi dirpitrnra credited to It or not whwwlM crnditr-d in thi paper i4 ia the local news published here- SUBSCRIPTION RATES (IN ADVANCE) one jwsr, by mail six mow he by mall ... three month by mail . one month oy mntl one year by carrier . Dailv, Hailv, Daily, Daily. Daily, Daily, Mix months by carrier . 8.76 Daily, three months by carrier. l.SIS Daily, one month, by carrier . ,s Semi-Weekly, on year hv mall . 1 no Semi-Weekly, six months by mail Semi-Weekly three month by mail .60 Telephone ..... , ' 4 HOPE ASn 11EAIIT FOtt Alii (By Frank I Stanton.) life' storms, uiv little warnli.g, the thunderbolts'U Call;' But somewhere In the dnrkns-, there's hope and heart lor all, Fur all the tturio.j- t.l.ies ' Tha brighter . will riM; We meet the dangem biavely, tl'trc's hope ond heart for all. Tha Iron chains of wriw niy hold our lives In thrall; . ? Bat tilcht will find the morrow: there's hope and heart for all. Somewhere the sweet birds sing. And winter dreams of Spring And brighter skies, and love-lit eyes, with hope and heart for all. Ce righted for iho East Oregon ittn Pub. Co, THE STORY OF A GIANT 1 . (By Wra. E. Barton.) : - , ONCE upon a lime there was a great big giant ; and if you do not believe it, I will tell you his name. It waa Antaeus. If you will say that name over two or three times you will find that it is not hard. i There was another giant, and his name was Hercules, "He was the strongest man who ever lived, unless it was Samson. Hercules carried a club bigger than the big stick of Teddy Roosevelt. i : Hercules challenged Antaeus to wrestle, and Antaeus ac cepted. Hercules was the stronger. But every time Antaeus touched the earth he felt a thrill of new strength. So finally Hercules lifted him from the earth, and held him up till he strangeled Antaeus to death. That was the worst kind of hold-up. ; This is a true story, and Antaeus is the man of today who lives indoors and keeps books or sells goods or has an office or teaches school or prepares sermons cr edits newspapers. And Hercules is this modern life of ours, this struggle and wrestle nd wrestlessness. He is choking the life out of us. Town life kills people : the third generation disapepars. That is the hold up and strangle-hold of modern life. But we Anatean folk, though we be not giants have this rem edy, which we have learned from Antaeus and from Adam ,that to touch the soil is to renew life. , The spring is near. Get out and make a garden. It may hot be much of a garden so far as vegetables are concerned, but it will do you a whole lot of good. f TIME FOR UNCLE TO SHOW HIS HAND " AafK. 7 . . e j WHAT WU JW,1 . i n lMfo.Tv A i m feu; . ivt 1 If ! xliA S : tern- ....... , m; I t I AUC.VDE SIXDAY AXO THE chief reason the peace treaty is criticised is because it imposes severe terms upon Germany. Alsace-Lorraine was restored to France and Germany has been ordered to reimburse France and Belgium for a considerable portion of the damage inflicted upon, their property. : One reason Germany objects to paying this indemnity is be cause they feel that the American election was a vindication of Germany's fight against the treaty. They have expected sup port from the new administration. The plea that it is impos sible for Germany to meet the indemnity is bosh. If Germany does not pay France and Belgium will have to bear the cost, whether willing or not If they cpuJd bear the burden then Germany can do so and should. . The reparations problem in a nutshell is whether the coun try that started the war and laid a great part of France in waste f hall pay for the damage wrought or will be allowed to escape while the victims foot the bill. The proper course for this country is to stand squarely with our allies on the subject of reparations. If it was worth while to. fight the war it is worth while to finish it and it will not be finished until the damages are settled. . With a man like Judge Hughes as secretary of state it should not take long for Uncle Sam to make his position clear. It is time to let Berlin know that our political campaign is over and that George Sylvester vierick is not running the govern ment. , v PROGRESS AND THE BATHTUB ' r RED KELLY, in The Nation's Business, says that whenever 1 a man starts to launch a new enterprise or sell a useful but hitherto unheard-of article, let him stop and tell what happened when bathtubs were first introduced. Within the memory of many people still living, the bathtub was lambasted as a menace to democratic simplicity and a danger to health. An ordinance was introduced in Philadelphia and almost passed to prohibit bathing between November and March. Boston made bathing unlawful except on medical advice. Vir ginia imposed a tax on bathtub owners of $3,0 a year. Yet everybody knows now that having a-bathtub in.the house is a first-rate idea. Bathing was probably even more needed then. But people resented bathtubs because they were new. Many new ideas are made commercially successful. The public re sents a novelty. The Oregon journal believes there is something fundament ally wrong with the Oregon system of regulating public utilities. That may be true, but no matter what sort of a system we may pet it will operate no better than the men who enforce it. The East Oregonian is of the opinion our trouble is not So much with our system as with the way it is handled by ourpublic service commission. A commission that would allow the telephone com pany to increase rates 20 per cent at a time when prices are falling shows a poor grasp of its duties. ", We have gotten the McKay storage project on the way and with a start once made its completion is assured; now let us show the world the necessity of developing power at Umatilla rapias. . , The new administration's first problem is a "foreign en langiemeni tver tosia mca ana ranama; mis country can keep out of such affairs just like a rock can swim. Whatever else you do this week you ought-a see the auto show 1 hursday, Friday and Saturday. Kutherine MacDonald, famed as the Must "Beautiful Woman iu America, supported ty a well known cast in cluding N'igel Ilarrie, Dorothy Cum tr.ings, r.tnest Joy, Margaret Campbell md William Clifford, is the star of the latest First National Attraction, which comes e the Arcade theatre for 2 days commencing Sunday entitled "The Notorious Miss Lisle." In this pro duction Miss MacDoiuiM is known by the title name, derived from the story by Mrs. Bailie Reynolds. Those who have reao the book will delight in watching- beautiful Katherine Mae- Donald realistically depict the romance of a girl who with a poignant past, marrtcT a man who knew nothinr of her notoriety. The subsequent devel opment of the plot moves with rapidity fom France, across the English Chan nel to "Blighty.1 Ur.Ger the skillful direction of Jaoirr Young, this human story is even more appealing on the screen than on he printed pages, from which it was picturized. MOXDATV ready a married woman and the wed ding is off. But out of the frying pan Into the fire of rueful trouble. The alleged "bridegroom" turns up and the pair are conducted to the bridal chamber by his mother. Here he orders Nancy to undress and get into bed. She is afraid to tell her family of her pre dicament and compiles. The "bride irroom' sits on the side of the bed and begins to disrobe. Now always her.e trlxre, someone has arrived on the scene and rescued the girl. But the niiht passes. The aotin? of Miss Tal nndee portraying the terrible mental tortur Nancy Flavell undergoes In this unique situation is declared to be u ncg uulled for Its sincerity. Another trying situation which Is handled with rare tact is when Nnc pleads with the hero to marry her and to make her his wife before the law as she Is supposed to be by all their friends. He demands a surety for her good behavior and she shows him n baby's shoe, promising him that moth eiihood will have a sobering Influence en her penchant fur flirting and fib "tig. For This Week, Get a trial order of the new Cookies, CHOCOLATE COATED PHETSELS. '.; Something new and very nice. "IE TABLE SUPPLY" , ... ,o ' f hon 137 and 183 739 Main Street .CHAS. D. DESPAIN & CHAS. W, GOODYEAR Proprietor U. S. INSPECTED MEATS ft CLINTON. British Columbia More than 100 claims have recently 'been staked In the Clinton and Lillooet dis trict alonsc the Caribou road' in the di rection of Scotty creek. A large body I of hermctlte ore carrying gold values has been- located about 15 miles from here. 1 . "The head should always be held tacred," said a magistrate hearing the case against a teacher who was ac cused of boxinsr a boy's ears. Begin Right Now to " Conquer Your Rheumatism (:-:-:x:KK-Hw:vW PASTIME SUNDAY AND MONDAY CABIN OP BANDIT I SKD , IX FILMING FHTOPLAY The cabin used by John Knox, no torious hermit and fugitive from jus tice, was used for the shack of the villain in the story 'Two Kinds of Love," which will be shown Sunday and Monday at the Pastime Theatre. Knox'p cabin, is near what la known as Fellows Camp in San Gabriel Can yo: in the Sierras. Heaves Eason- who directed "Two Kinds of Love" for Uni versal took his. company to the cabin and filmed many scenes ia the vicinity. Knox was shot and killed by a dep uty sheriff just a few weeks before the Gold and the Woman" company went to the cabin. Knox had four notches n his Winchester for whien he naa beer. Jailed in, the South. Many years age he broke Jail and fled to CaU- fornia. Then he himself was killed In a gun battle with a sheriffs posse and nis shack was found fitted for a siege. "Two Kinds of Love" was written y John Colton and Douglas Doty. Itcaveg Eason, takes the "heavy" role. In fact the whole Eason family ap war in the picture, -including Mrs, Eason add their talented son, Breezy," who is but 'four years old and recently was a feature In "Fink Tights" starring Gladys Walton. WOiJC JXHl BEAITY HOrSTON, March " (C. P.) Lfldit, would you be beautiful? ' Here's how, according to Dan O Leary, champion walker of the world, who's promoting walking . In South TrMW, x ; . , . .. . "I can make every woman beautl ful and it won t cost her a cent," said O'Leary. "It's simple, too. Just walk. A ten mile hike each day will bring up the standard of beauty a. hun died per cnt and that' goinj; some in those nay.' li'Leary. ut iO, can walk U'U miles Itl hours, ALTA Sl JiDAY AND MONDAY The Alta Theatre will have as itt feautre attraction Sunday and Mon c'av. ConStanee Talmadge in "Danger ous Business." adapted by John Kmer on and Anita Loos from Madelaine .Sharp- Buchanan's ctory "The Chess beard." It is directed by William Nrill. According to advance reports this drama is different than the usual run. It does not follow the conventional line of the persecuted heroine, the vil lain and the rescuing hero, rvancy Flavell, the madcap society irl who Is always falling in and out of' love is iouI to marry. one man when at the verf altar in order to escape a distaste ful marriage she declares she is FIT TO FIGH7 Life's greatest battles are between strength and weakness. Scott's Emulsion a high-powered Ionic- nutrient, nourishes and fortifies the whole body s ' 8 Sctt Bmn, BVomfiH, N. ALSO MAKERS OF 'HI IDE (TsbhU or Granules) If you are going to sgain rely upon the liniment bottle to try to rub your Rheumatism away, you will be doomed ag-ain to nothing but disappointment A disease that can cause so much pain and suffering is not on the surface of the skin, and cannot be rubbed away. Many forms of Rheumatism are caused by a tiny disease germ in the blood, and in such cases the only logical treatment is to search out. and remove these jjerma from the blood. For this purpose there is no more satisfactory remedy than S.S.S, the fine old blood remedy that has been in use for more than fifty years, and has given such general satisfaction for Rheumatism. Begin taking S.S.S. today, and if you will write a complete history of your case, our medical directot will give you expert advice, with out charge.' Address Chief MedicaT Director, 160 Swift Laboratory, At lanta, Ga. ' k - MAGNETOS GENERATORS ELECTRIC STARTERS Or any part of the electric system on your car overhauled and repaired. Satisfaction guar anteed. HARRY H. GRAHAM, Willard Service Station, Pendelton, Ore. Phone 684. LETS GO! PASTIME SUNDAY MONDAY Children, 5c ' Adults, Sflo DR. C. II. DAY Physician and Surgeon Osteopath Rooms 2S and 2a Smith-Crawford Building. Telephone 704 Res. 7-B Dr. Lynn K. Blakeslee . Chronic andj Nervous Diseases ana Diseases of Women. X-Ray Electric Therapeutics, Temple Bldg. , Room 1J Phone 41 Walla Walla Pendleton Auto Freight Service ROUND Tun's DAILY Leaves Pendleton 2 p. in. TPemlli-ton Plwm Sa-W. 1 Your eyes receive the best correction and : , attention when the . glasses are fitted - , here. ' . ' ' '. American Nat I liuuk Ilui'ding if- Si;!? -:i sj-'.BJ-ir.iir J Alta Today Children, 10c Adults, 35c 7 Constance Talmadge : '' in '. v-w "Dangerous B usiness PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE INTERNATIONAL NEWS Arcade , 1 1 Children, 10c ; f t Katherine Today Adults, 35c ,".. ; f -i h . ' MacDonald The American Beauty in Fir&t National '' Picture . The Notorious Miss Lisle The romancs of beautiful girl ho. fights the con demning but elusive shadow of suspicion and establishes her inocence in the face of a world that sternly scorns her. ROMANCE AFTER MARRIAGE Buster Keaton The Scarecrow Quality PRINTING at Reasonable Prices '": East Oregonian Printing Department . Til is is sa tbMtWaf pletnn of how mass's whin lie tsniled ap thrM umll It acmed u if tha uirl would ever so ttraifhtcned out. A story Uid in the foldon loot. hills el California aa-oc ai pta, andarataaoabia paopia hun. mrf ior happimaa a aa human drama lull of braathliM Bomanu ia which dear little toy and s tpotted pup play two BBfhtr nnportat pan. It tha kind of pictura that all the family . ahoald ac( ttcaui thaca'a ' aooiatnisg la la for varyos , ,? MOW, UAVlal 1 COMEDY . "f reh f roin the Country" B ig Dance TUESDAY March 8 AT UNION HALL ! j Music by t j; BILLY'S JAZZ HOUNDS The music with a kick. ' Tickets Union Dance , : : : $1.00 52 rous DAILY EAST C2EG0NIAJT, PENDLETON, OEEG0N, MONDAY EVENING, MAECH 7. 1021. TIN PAcrs