' ' I'AGE FOUR DAILY EAST OHECONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY EVENING, APRIL .4, 1921. TEN PAGES ax inokpundk-nt NEwsiurEn ruhllthcd Dally snd S.ml-We.)ily, at IVnolelon. lrrsin. hv the tCAUT HK( IONIAN' I'l W.ISHIXO CO. Knterefi nt the post oriiee nt Pendle ton, Oregon, as Bi'ii'KiJ cls mail uihI- UT. OV SAI.P. IN OTHER CITIKS Imperial Hotel News Stand, Portland. ox Kii.i-: vr Chicago Knrenu, '.'W liwnrliy PuiMing. Washington. D. "., Bureau idl Pom- l r Hi Nuc-t. X. v. Mrwhrr I I he ftnutclafed Press. The Associated Pres is exclusively emitted to the use for republication of all news dieoateiiea creoited to II or rnt other isc credited in this paper nd also the local news published lure-In. SI BSCKIPTION HATKS (IX ADVANCE) Daily, one year, by mall ....... luily, six niortlia. by mail Iia.lv, three n-onths hy mail...v lail, one nTWMh hy msil lily, one year hy carrier Daily, six month by carrier imii three months hy currier...,. Daily, one month, hy came Qiieer "Tub" of British Navy enii-Week ly. one yeir hy nuiil s.-inl-Wpc kly. six months hy mail Soml-Wee-Vly three months by mail Telephone .. j.oe I .. l.Mi .. ..''ill .. T.5H 3.75 .. l.a .. . . J OP 1.00 sY 1 ;itti; uuMK 4 '! - r, i f I V Octling Vmie Is best. I say! Though it's fun to so away. And there'll pleasure in a trip Overland or on a ship, ' ' Taking on to splendors new, Aftr all the journey' through, iMnkea no difference where you ronm, There's no thrill like getting home. Maybe with a thumping heart Tou look forward to the start. And you think you'll never get Quite enough of travel, yet' After you have journeyed far Where the nation's wonders are. Soon you'll find you hunger for All the folks nt home oiu t more. A'ou may laimh nnd sinct and shout As you wander, in and out, Moeilutf new friends everywhere, -See;s glories here and there. l;ut these joys at last will pall And you'll wish above it all Kor that happiest moment when You'll be starting home UKain. Trips are glorious things to take, J iui rneys everyone should make, There are ulaces good to be, Mtu-h the eye of man should see, Kut no matter where you go. This you'll surely come to know Host thing trains can do in when They get you back again. (Courtesy o. F.-ipuliir Science Monthly Tho "Tub" Is what I he Biitish jacktcs call Iter She's new "mother" for busy submarines. Carries tiie.r jupplles. The stranx bulges on her sides M protection axainst torpodons. as ehs's vor - (Oopyriplit, 1921, b y Edgar A, Guest.) HOW THE SALES TAX WOULD "RELIEVE" THE FARMER THE chief reason why a lot of people abhor the income and excess profits taxes that then have to pay them Not al ways can they pass these burdens on to the other fellow. The evidence in the divorce case of James S. Stillman, New York financier, shqws that last year Mr. Stillman paid a very high federal tax. It was in six figures. He had to pay that tax. There was no escape ; no passing the buck. Men like Mr Stillman dontlike that sort of a tax law. In their view the salea or turnover tax is much preferable. They say it is much simpler. It is. The sales tax is simplicity itself and is an admirable scheme from the standpoint of those who want to shift the burden all to the ultimate consumer. Under a sale stax law niost men in "big business" would pass the tax along to the next fellow. Big business would gain but the consumer would pay. The consumer would be the goat and the retailer is the man the goat would vent his wrath upon. Peo ple would think the retailer responsible for the increased prices his product at an actual loss. There would seemingly be .no es cape for him because he sells under conditions that do not per mit him to pass the burden along. The income tax has this vir tue from the farmer's standpoint no income, no tax. That vir tue would be missing from a sales stax law. Profits or no prof its thevfarmer would be taxed on what he sold and he would have to pay the accumulated sales tax on everything he bought. If the new administration wishes to "rescue agriculture" by substituting a sales tax for the income and excess profits tax it will indeed be some rescue, but the patient will need plenty of rus if he is to stand such an operation without howling. . NATURE'S PRRIEST rr HE man who dies leaving the world better or richer for his having been of it has not lived in .vain. John Burroughs belonged to that class and the world is poorer for his dying but much richer for his having lived.i j He was a high priest of Nature. He held communion with her visible forms and to him as to Bryant she'spoke "a various language." For his gayer hours she had "a voice of gladness and a smile and eloquence of beauty" and she glided "into his darker musings with mild and healing sympathy." The fields and the forest were, to him an open book from '.vhich he read with an understanding born of an innate love of the great outdoors. The birds and the bee3 and the shyest of animals were his friends and had no secrets from him. The trees and the flowers he loved. The "primrose by the river's brim" was more than a primrose to him. It was a thing of beau 1y with a soul, a purpose in God's great scheme, with a message imd a mystery all invisible to the unseeing eye. John Burroughs did more than enjoy the Nature he worship ped. He helped others to understand and to enjoy. He trans lated the language of the woodlands that others might know their secrets and share their inspiration. He was gifted with a simple, clear style of expression and the soui of a poet which inake his writings literature rather than prosaic essays or scien tific treatises. , There was a simplicity, a cleanliness and a sweetness about his character and his life that somehow seem to manifest that in living close to Nature he was living close to God. bucn men as John .Burroughs do not die. ihey live on ' The Opening Day .v. ; of our New Store was an immense success from a financial standpoint and very gratifying to the owners -inasmuch as we were showered with congratu lations on our new, quality merchandise and the low prices for which we were selling it. ' Several telegrams were received extending best wishes for the success of our new venture as well as those extended person ally. BETTER MERCHANDISE. AT LOWEST CASH PRICES. is what is going to make this store the busiest store in Tendlcton. We deliver due U the accumulated sales tax.charges, though in reality the j through the influence of their good works and become immortal retailer would not be to blame. Most products are turned over from five to 10 times while passing from the raw state to the re tailer m the form of manufactured goods, and most of the tax would have accumulated before reaching the retailer. Naturally It is said that 63 million pounds of wool has been imported into-this country during the last two months, the purchasers dt siring to get ahead of the expected tariff law. Looks like the the retailer would have to do some hard explaining for the final j voolgrower will actually be the victim of a policy he thought consumer having no one to pass the burden to would grow pee vish. However, the producer would be the man with the most genuine grievance, ihe wheatman, the workman or the cattle was for his benefit. Of the Pendleton boys, Sheldon Ulrich was one of the first to go and among the first to fight; it is fitting he wag the first of man would have to pay the tournover tax even though he sold - the overseas dead to be buried in his old home tiwn. parcels promptly. HYCKKST HK1.TS For the v ono-piece dress, Hprlnic jacket, sweater, coat or sepurate nkirt. those smart belttt are intended to contribute the finishing note. With their voku isll buckles, Hinull straps uiiil other touches of character, thev cotuilnly make a noticeable dif ference when slipped un ovor a pi, tin garment adding Just the 1 It of finish. in keeping with good taide. . , 25o to 51c' YOl'H SKl'AKATi: SKHIT IS . HKltl. And If you come right In, you will huve first choice of one "Just made for your type." Selecting a skirt is every bit as important as choosing a suit style .fabric, majleriul und col oring must all be cou-sidered with relation to your figure and' personality. Let us help you pick out the most becoming Better Merchandise at Lowest Prices " one. They wt new standards in vulue giving. ' ' t . tViNil Hciuo '' lUti, $ua to $;.05 . l'lnicb. All WikiI From $S.5 to v IS.4 I"i:kcaie am .!;ll AM APKOX i)Hi:ssi:s .' ' . Here are servU eublo ' house garments at price tliut will un able you to practice economy in ; tli purchase of uh extra sup-, ply for future needs. 'Many of them nre rlckrack trimmed. o matter what your unltvldiuU preference, you will have no dif, flculty In selecting her Jitot the . stylfc you want In the color com-; binations you dosiro. . . ' tu- tu 92.lt. ' Folly l"rhn Al'itMtK . BtH- to Hi' " - V ri,AIHMM'H KKI'HYft liliMAMS - Among the wonderful values orfcred this week In wash fuh rKis are the I'lalrloch Zephyr (llnghamii whlch Bio shown In a myriad ot new and pleasing de signs. At the new low prices which have been placed on theso flue quality ginghams, It be hooves the prudent women to make Immediate selections, i Ttw Yrnil 8c OIAKMIN; MI.K FIKH'liK, ATTUVJiYIXY 1'1UKI Just the kind of frocks you need for Hpilng and early Sum. mer are thine of taffeta and Canton cr'M'o whose service seems lu'ver ending, since they a i-o sultnUe for so many differ ent jttt-uMons. Their styles are the newesJhclr lilies charm lirk and . youthful, and nuallty of their material unusual. The 11'liv rtmiisally Jam, 1 n.iu fliM to 943.00. We Buy for Cash and Sell for Cash (From the Kast Oregonian, 1893.) . April ,4, barber J. S. Groff has opened a shop In tho Golden Utile hotel. Walter Welis' water well has been carried alvay by the Umatilla, which is raging. T. J. Tweedy states that sheepown ers in his locality along fllrch creek are having the best kind of luck in lambing. As yet the increase has been over 10U per cent.nm! there Is no proect lhat It will decrease. Hishop Wella says that the St. Paul's school nt Walla alia, will be re-established as soon as possible. Kor the Parish building fund, a sale held Saturday was very successful. The booths were In charge of the fol lowing young ladles: , 'Misses Grace Heale, Grace THlard Nancy Cameron. Myrtle- Smith, Delia l'crmore, Man nah Jiwitlner, Ida Thompson, IJzzle Starkweather, Kate Tlllard, Clem Wor cester, Lessle Moorhouse, Ivlsle Fot som. Hattla Thompson, Bessie 8vlt ler, Oiisslo Moorhouse ami-others. WON 8 IAY MM. HACK. PAKIS, April 4 (A. P.) Kgg and Seres won the six-day bicycle race. They covered S.7S.1 kilometers. 7S meters. Aerts. SpleJisons, finished sucoml and Dupuy and MUiuel third. Mrcuiitli comes from well digested, and thoroughly asslmulaled food. Hood's tsir.mparllla tones the dlgestiva organs, and thus builds np the strength. It you are getting "run rJown," begin taking Ifno at once. It gives nerve, mental and digestive, strength."" The Ancient and Beautiful City On the Danube a Com bination of Two Parts Buda j and Pest- Present Suffer- ingofPeopleBeyondBeiief j t-.f LILIAN 11 A Yl L.N 11 1 LSI O.N . ICTL'KESgUE, lovely Buda. upon its mure than Konian quota of hUU with Us ck-ar, delicious. mountain air. Its frowning fort ies, its magnificent piiaces, u he-parted by the silver ribbon of the rush ing Danube fioin its si&ter city, gor geous pet, v.pon its far-f xtend:iig plain, llctwtea the ts are many graceful bridges, unking them into one sunerb city, uneuuaiied in beauty Of lt. in rleanliness and almost bar-j il Kom great rampart asuint bane splendor. One might look far ! ' r.:in inlK cons'.antiy trying to llnd a place whose history has been1 pentinte into what is r.ow Europe, mote romantic, more thrilling, more' Tie Komans kept nvnjr pldk-r here fuil of tragedy and achievement. ! an, liie ei'l-ment n c.-'nii vtsi'cd 1'est, whose history goes back little i by the Loinan emperors, who greatly more than thouod year, is mod-: cnlard and beautified It. It was. ,tn in comparison to Buda, whee set-! very sirencly fort i lied and held until lenient antedates the b.rth of fhrUL I Koine hi r.-elf lost her pristine strength w.i. ... orwinaliv lounrl.d l,v a and be'-ame a prc-y to i's luxuriuo. -.,inn trihe. who. from the inaiiv hot and more primitive peoples. Kiulncs for whlcn me place is 4tmi'"i""' ea led It At ma. a name '" .. t till v , i.- f , -.. --Ji 1 , 1 i i ri tiii si . , . "1 u .A "I V . 4 1 .1 sl i m . l.Ur'- . j. ., .- f '' asssss 1 1 ssssssMBSHMMasssMsBsn - , . r-" -w r present time, and jtany corno to lake , of the first of tho-e 'kinTL Stephen I, the "cure". Ualie ihe Holy, the s'ate .was chrls- ' i.iiton,.l itian x.-i!. Another of these king! was This entire region has been a con stant batUcgrourid. l"ur many years The broke through ana tiln's brother built a palace for himself in" P.uda. The Lombards and S.avs followed and rwarda moved on- westward. The first Hungarians came In 4 undsr the leadership of Arp:id. and con- 1. h. modern CUT of Wudane't on imoro in i-ow-r ur .... both sadea of the river are magnince nt ; ded years. Their . i,... ! hAt sulnhur s'ld of Aro.ol. wr kn mlrerni w,. at mlHd st thi'ter on as kings. ":y rJ flilOOUi, chuliced by the ItomaA to Aquincuin. " a nm new rtlne4 by settlement close to Buda. There are. as always where Roman lived. rina:ni of vast baths and amphitheatres. liela JV. who ruied from 1235 to 1270, and re -tyred Huda aflcr tho dua.itcr of tli? T it i.ir Invasion, and was a mos! vrogr'.rt'Ae and enlihloncd ru?Vr. Thr-;'. cjm; a period of elected kirgv Thes in-.n i;:iyt:t or might not be Hunfirians. Ofsn a king of some ne'ghboriny country was u!d tobe the kins; of llungiay because of nis recognized ability. Among the best known of ihese w is Ludaig the Orea!, wh-js rule extended over ail the coun try froiii the Black Sea to the. Adriatic from ro:ith if Ihe Danube to DanHlj. Turks Overran fountr rurs, dependent wr knoA a dultes, snA r: K I -Later cjrtne a dreadful time when Ihe Turks poured over 111 counlry In ofrwhlmlng waves, catrying ail be fore them. Tliy wished to continue and rush In'o Europe, which was BtrneMnir in'o Uennlssanco and .y i.' . t i Iv' v l.-n ftv.ii.iotj jm ict.'i-i"d and deour.iaed iiut tlie Fliinsiarlans mode such desperate re sianre that It kept the Turks busy. At the same time the Auslrlans, sei Ing that it was a favorable oppprtunlty to realize a smouldering ambition to tain posses!o of Ilunar', and bas ing their claim upon a marriage be tween the reigning families, came with lavish offers of help. They did fight the Turks but the Hungarians found to their cost that the foes within were worse thin the foes without. Wcjary and discouraged by this double war fare the Hungarians were completely taken posse-ision of hy the triumphant AiifitrianM, who retained their, power over the country until the clone of our recent great war. There were one or two efforts made, as under the famous Korlith. lo regain their freedom but the inol achieved was that Hungary w is m-ognlK d a a separate state un- pendent republic. It was In 186" that t''ranz Joseph crowned king of Hun gary was forced to slgrt a paper grunt ing Hungary' Independent slatehood. In the latter part of the 18th century unde the able guidance and Inspira tion of Connt Etlenne gzechenyi, great progress was made, and Budapest be camf a vast and magnificent city. This was the time when she tried to throw off the Austrian yoke and would huve done so had not Russia' helped Austria tesubdue her. A Distracted Cmnilry . "' peace after the recent war has not brought calm to distracted Hungary. During th war, telng largely at farm ing country It suffered less than the other warring countries, but since tAe armistice she jtas suffered almost be yond belief. Maimed, desperate, starv ing, lorn by first one and then another inefficient and depraved government, ravaged by Bolshevik! and still more by the neighbor font by the Allies to drive the BolKhevlkl out, the very sheet stolen from under the slrk in her hospital wards, the glass out of the windows, her newly born wrapped in newspapers and dying for the want nf food and warmth; eighty thousnnd of her Intellectuals living In liroken down freight cars, crowded In like cat tle on their way to market, with no dee t-.i cifnirol of A'Mtria. Rum l sldol .itat ia in forclna Hungary to ' fuel, ho water or saBltary arrange- .: .-.j , tt a - ckfit she h .d i ni"0t.. dying off like file. In winter: ...v.Hslmed her.. If a free and i'i- 'her reformers nnd Idealists In nrl.ion: her criminals riding rough-shod over and rushed forward again. everyone, murder and suicide und rob bery rampatt everywhere. There are stll bravo hearts In Budapest, men and women who have not lost hope and who look forward to a brighter future. The Allies have tried their best to make a foe ot one who was their firm friend. Hungary hated Aus tria and Germs ny. Khe was forced Into the war decidedly against her will she longed to be friends wllh the Al lies nnd to help them. It is a ques tion whether the division of .Hungary has not been ft mistake. There have been many Alsace troubles begun which rosy sway the minds of men In generations yet unborn and lead the world again to war. Heckles Ami Disputing I speak of what I know. I have lived many months in Budapest and wholly with Hungarians. I have seen sights of woe and suffering of Injustice, oflvc. ,It Is sad now beyond all possl- ' oppression, of spartan courage, ofjblllly of your understanding. Chaos sublime charity, and I have seen fromArclgns here. We pray to be kept from J m.ii.i4u,. n .1 Ipnm 1 1 il rl a n na,lh Houses are entered and robbed at ill My shoe were burned through. and my coat also, even "where I stood far above but I never shall forget my Impres sions. I felt like that when I studied men and their thought- In Hungary".1 I went with lenders of various parties to secret political meetings, many of whose members were under the deal penally and I heard and saw thing that would a mane tho world. Let Sot tho world delude Itself wttU the Iden that Hungary Is subdued nnd bt(i. and at peace. The nation u reokles with despair. Honoring cu t to certain extent and llfjustto ean be borne to a certain point, beynnd th Is the danger zone. ' (linos A mid IH-auly ' Budapest la a beautiful city, en ot the most beautiful In -the world, one1 of the most enterprising and progress- the Inside and not asNa pas.iine, tourist sees, the soul of the people. In a great eruption of Vesuvius ence I flood wllh a poUce guard, when sll sight-sers were forbidden to go near the -crater, and looked down Into the ret)ilng miss of holling lava. The hours, the cafes and street are th scene of continual' deaths. There I ro fuel, scarcely any food. Chlldre sire 4ylng ot starvation oa all sides. scarlet fever, diphtheria and typhoid orest waves broke nnd ro.led hack I hare broken cut ll over th rtv. 1