PAGE FOUlt DAILY EAST OHEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 25, 1021. ; j x$ lin;i'i:NiM;NT fQre&onlanl Jil!lli.hfi1 Unljy mil) Hemf-Weekly, lit P-Irtr ti-n, Ortiin, hv til EvflT OKKiHAIAN IM UI.ISHINi! CO. Knteroil t the- nt oiiln-jii ivn.lli -, ton, ori'fcon, second iIbts msil mat ter. ON SU.U IX OTIIKH CITIES lmneiliil Hotel Vi-wii Mnnd, 1'nrtland, l KII.K AT Chli-ki-n Rurenu, Him Sirvirity lUiiMinti. AVAil.tnKti.n. J, t'., -Hurrntt -501 Kuur (p tei-Mii Klri i l, K. v. Mrmker f llir AatMtclatrd lres. The A khi rtittiil Prions is inclusively entitled ti the urn lor repuhiiciuinn ! ell npwn dispatches crutt.M to it or not otherwise erertlti'd In this ptiper and also the local nr3 published h-re-In. NKJ'Al Kit sinsoKiPTUsi U-U'fs (IX ADVANCE) Daily, one year, hy mnll ..... Oml.v, six morths, hy mnil . ... lnil, three months hy tnHll lmty, niii' month by mail lsily, inn vnr hy carrier Daily, six ntoniha by carrier lily, thrir nionths'tiy currier Daily, on month, hi. carried Si'tni-Werkly. one ycir bv mail. .. 2 Si-mi-Weekly, n months by mail 1 S.mi-Wcel.ly three months by mail .. 1.! Tall, Fat .and Tiny;' . Telephono tlattpaMlKa I liU.L, PATS A CALL dropped' in with his ' Howdye-, Kill dropped In for ajittle call A , a' )tAn h brought in gladness foi ma on nave uif na"y a Kiss or iwn, An' he hugged the girls all 'round till they Had checks as pink as the buds of May; Then he wont to Mother an" shook her hand An' bowed to her with a sweep most grand, Asf'her far lit up with a merry smile As she joked with Bill for a little or us nil Old and young, when he passed the door, Seemed happier folks than they were before, An' there wasn't a care ive had known that day. Hut seemed to leave us ap" fade away. nil he suddenly said: "Oh me, oh my! It's ten o'clock, how time does fly!" while. He gallopod the youngster on his knee An' told him a tale of the rolling sen. Ho sprawled full length on the parlor floor An made its laugh till our sides were sore; Then the girls came in from the kitchen where ' They'd l-en doin' the dishes, an Bill . said; ''There. Now the work's all done, It is time for play, .. . Let us get to our'singing riRht away. Isn't so. much to a tale like this, I'nless you arc one who Is rich an' miss The friendliness an' the warmth an" all The joys of havin' folks como to call; Oh, we're richer than millionaires by Tar, . An' hapnlr, too, than the great men are, For with nil their promp an' their pride an' fuss, Bill passes 'em by to call on tis. (Copyripht, 1921, by Edgar A. Guest.) V ANDSTJLL' f $ 3&2iii. 5701bs' f a XT .S W ... 'V (I- V 1 1 W i ! ! t ?1 f j M i I W i 4 ! f: Is Your Business Stationery Distinctive? V ; . I n. . ' .' " 1 . - - . ' j . S 1 ? .' Sf f -t v 4 I'..'' -i v . , I '' l t 1 ;' .1 Ernest Tolhtno, 18. German boy, has brought his 570 pounds to America for exhibition in aide shows. . Ludwig Schulder is 7 feet 4 j ! tnchea, snd still growing. Miss Jennie Lindsay is only 3 feet t j inches, but she is 2 J years old. They're, to appear Id circuses, too. ; FESTIVAL OF NEW LIFE ; (By Dr. William E. Barton.) Nd iHAix, nowever sKepiicai or oDtuse, can wholly escape the spirit of Easter. He may hold his peace, but the very ' stones cry out- ifie cola, dead earth wakes to new life, tnd the spirit of the resurrection is in every blade of grass and every song of bird. ; , , , ' , Let us not trouble ourselves too carefully concerning the pre cise form of the wonder that occurred 1900 years ago. The question is not, Did Jesus rise? but. Is Jesus Living? Un that first Laster the world s hope rose from the dead The hopes of the disciples lay in a tomb, and a great stone was t tne door, tor 1900 years that stone has been removed, and an angel has been sitting upon it, proclaiming to men that the .Lord of life lives. ......... It is not simply the dogma of a sect; it is part and parcel of tne Dircnngnt 01 numanity tne f.ope that springs anew at Easter. Robert G. Ingersoll stood at his brother's grave, and asked the centuries' old question, "If a man die, shall he live again?" ; Ke had to answer, "Reason says, Perhaps; and Love whis pers, Yes. , ' i. Lt no man scolf at the faith of the great apostle of doubt for that answer. It is not so wonderful that life should exist after death as it is that we should believe that it exists. God might have a mil lion wondrous things in store for us which we could not possibly understand. We live in a world where death surrounds us on every side. How can we possibly think of life after death? The wonder is not that it should exist, but that we should believe that it exists. The fact is less wonderful than the faith. Yet there is hardly a tribe on earth so low in the social or spiritual rcale that it does not believe In life after death. " means an individual productivity of $400 a year. With 750,000 men turned from military idleness to productive labor, this should mean an additional national income of $300,000,000. Add this to the actual saving of military expenditure and we have much more than the lirst two annual instalments demand ed, and almost exactly the annual instalments of 8,000,000,000 marks stipulated for the years 1923 to 1925." ,e. If Germany can make this saving through compulsory dis armament, it is a mighty good. argument for disarmament and the allies sought to adopt voluntarily the thing they are enforc in? upon their late enemy. - ,.r ;, . - The tenor of the German replies on the indemnity question are far from satisfactory to those who feel Germany should pay for the damage wrought; the German purpose is to escape any just reparation payment and the bill collector may have to jse rather strenuous methods. .... FEAR OREGON WILL SUFFER THE Salem Capital Journal takes the view of Senator Eber hart of this joint district that the legislature of Oregon made a mistake in not passing the anti-Japanese bill at tie last session. I This vitriolic criticism of the senate recently appeared, as an editorial in the Salem paper: Thanks to the cowardice of the Oregon senate, Oregon is now threatened vlth a real Japanese invasion. California passed an anti-alien land law at the l;u general election. The Washington legislature has followed suit, and faps, barred from acquiring property In California and Washington are turn ing to Oregon. Senator McN'ary is probably to blame for leaving Oregon the open-door for alien Invasion. He wired the legislature the opinion that such action by Ore gon would gravely embarrass the national administration in its treaty making with J a paii. How could it? California, fooled lor 20 years by the national gov ernment, had already acted, and it was impossible for Oreaon to add further complications. T While Oregon was stiU dVbating the alien land law, Texas passed it. And Washington has now followed with a similar law. But the pleas of Lodge lot McNary and the commercialium of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, Ivhirh does not hesitate to sacrifice the future for present gain, prevailed. There is one way Hi which the anti-Jap bill can be put on the statutes and that is by Initiative at the next general election. The American Legion sponsored the bill In the legislature. Let the American Legion initiate the measure. It has all (he machinery for securing signatures. That la what the initiative was designed for 4o secure laws when the legislature failed to act. meanwhile we lose two years in order to "prevent embarrassment of the ad jaii"ratin." t The above language may be a trifle immoderate but with California, Washington and Texas in line on the subject it looks like our legislature overlooked something. - . i HOW GERMANY CAN PAY In a letter to the county court V. T. George, Kcho merchanVcallg attention to the need of guard rails und anger signs on the new highway between rendlcton and, Echo. ilr. George's letter is as follows: , ' ' County Judge, r Echo, March 23, 1921. Pendleton, Ore. My Dear Sir: Please pardon the liberty I assume in addressing you thus but I can't re sist asking if our County Court of the State Highway Commission is respon sible for the up-keep of the highway between Echo and Pendleton. The reason I ask is the many discussions which come to me from the various people who travel It and who express surprise that there are no guard rails or danger signs anywhere along the way and there must be at least twenty places between here and Pendleton that are exceedingly dangerous and there is apt to be, with the motoring season right on nana, a great many accidents if the proper precautions are not taken to avoid them.- It docs seeai to the writer that It's a matter of grave importance that should be taken care of at once, in order to avoid a heavy damage suit that some body may be liable for. With proper i guard rails and danger signals along the many dangerous curves and nar row places might have quite a ten dency to eliminate accidents and bring people to the full realisation of the situation and perhaps chock up some of the speed kings who are a regular menace to the common travel. 1 trust that' you will accept this in the spirit intended and not in any sense of criticism, but ! do think it's a mat ter for the proper authorities to give Immediate attention. Yours very sincerely. F. T. GKOIIGE. FIX STOMACH RIGHT UP I THERE seems to be a fcig difference of opinion as to whether or not Germany can pay the huge indemnity levied against ' her by the allies. . Without giving consideration to Germany's own plaints on the subject, some authorities contend that it will be impossible for the people of that nation to meet the demands of the victors trd that to require them to try to do so would be folly, y The New York Evening Post, however, is one that opposes this view and presents some very reasonable argument in de fense of the German ability to pay. This paper calls attention to "the enormous saving enforced upon Germany by the reduc tion of her army and the virtual disappearance of her navy." "In 1913 the German military and naval budget was almost exactly $500,000,000," it goes on to Kay. "The army then num bered 800,000 men. The naval strength was nearly 75,000 men.1 The army now numbers 100,000 men. In other words, on Jhe trinament budget alone Germany ought to save perhaps as much as f 400,000,000 a year, which is almost the annual instal ment for the first two years. But beyond that there is the im portant consideration that German disarmament means the re iue of 750,000 men from the barracks and war-fleet for pro ductive purposes. In 1913 Helfferich estimated the annual in come of the German people at $10,000,000,000. For a nation l? 25,000,000 workers, speaking in rough approximation this Tape's Diapepski'' at once ends Indigestion,- Gases, Sourness, Acidity, To-j don't want a slow remedy whnn your stomavh Is bad or. an uncertain one or a harmful one your stornaf-h Is too valuaMe, you musn't injure I: with drastic drugs. When yoor meals don't fit and you feel uncomfortable, when you belch gases, arids or raise sour, undigested food. When you feel lumps of indiges tion pain, heartburn or headache, from acidity. Just rat a lablot of Pape's Dla- pepstn and the stomach distress is gone. Millions of people know the manic of Pape's Dinpepsin as an antacid. They know that Indigestion 'and disordi-red stomal h are so. needless. Tho relief romes quiokly, no disappointment, and they cost so little too. Dr. Lynn K. Blakeslee Chronic and Nervous Diseases and Diseases of Women. X-Itay Electric Therapeutics. Tempts BMg. - Room 11 Phons 41 riwoc S10-W r, O. Box 331 EASIB mm TO YOU For that Sunday -dinner. Sinclair Hams Armour's Bacon Holly Hams Leg Lamb, pound . . . 25c Pork Roasts, pound . . . 22c Pot Roast, Pound .... . 13c .Veal Roast, 1 pound 18c, 25c Round Steak, pound . . . 2dc Sirloin Steak,, pound . . . 25c Porterhouse S 5 Steak, lb.. 25c rr, Links of Pork sage. Sau- Dill Pickles and Horse Radish. Phone 703 City: Meat Market 109 W.-Webb 1 DOES your business stationery say vto your ' customer, "I am substantial and reliable;" Jj -.'a or does it give him W negative,' false" iiii- . pressibn of you I Golden opixrtuhities to rein- . force prestige are often sacrificed for the saving of a feV pennies in printing. Probably nd money 'saving was 'effected. . 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