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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 12, 1921)
DAILY EAST OK EG ONI AN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 12,1021. TEN PAGES Yields to Coaxing Goods of a V kiibwn AN JKlAl EXDI-.NT ruliliibe Daily and p.-ml -We.kly, t Rat iii.i.iiiisn ri ni.isnisa ro. , l;nt-n-l t U,e pvint offio at rrndle- eunsonii'TioM RATES UN ADVANCE) high ton, nr, tn t ti.nii cIum mull mat- Dally, niw j-mp. by mall tSOO l'tily, six lnorths, by muil J ft l.i:l. tlu'f-- irontlu by mail. ...... 1.S0 1 h 1 1 . one liinrith by ir.sil ... lity, .n y(r by earner , 7. So Dnily, aix n.oMh by carrli-p 3.75 l'n;i... llsr. month by carrier l.J.'i i'wily. otic i ,mlh. by c.irrivr A'.i lor, ON' SALE IN OTIIKU ClTir.3 Impel ml llut'-l Niws (Sum), Portland. UN' IUS AT ChiCfcB-o P-iirri.u. IV !t fceenrity Building. V kh.ImiiiiImh. l. i, Bureau tiOl tout teeMh Kll'rt. N. V. Vetulfrr f iht AanAcbiteil I'rra. The mi I'tHtftl 1'rrj-a in fX-lu.Mvely nlitl! to iiifruw for r nublu-auon if il ri'-wa rt'.pal. h- orv.l.led lo it or riot iithrte rrtHlitcd in 1 h f rpT nd alav tin locu.1 nta published here in. Standard of Quality Can be cohtinually-' sold with the perfect as surance of their creating lasting satisfaction. That is tha kind ve sell here and at lower s;;m-We.kly, one ye-ir by mail 8 11O Siiii-l,ty, ix months by mull l.flO i-tml-Weckly three nionirTs by mall .6(1 Telethons roi .-' , ' , i () - if iLMJm LIFE NEEDS rs AU There Is no Touch that we can do,, A kind word spoken here ami there Will ease another's weight of care; Ltfe needs us all. The splendid few Who rise t tanif, with nil Iheir skill Your post end mine can never fill. It we who have not wealth or fame. Should fail in all our little deeds. The world would sink beneath Us needs: . Cot by the greatness of a name. Nor by the splendor of sueces. Are heans restored lo happiness. The gifts which we have 'power to Five; We can be friendly while we liye And by some thoughtful, kimllv deed . Can help another on his way ' And that Is service, come what may. What thought we miss the heights of Skill, Th' splendor of the greater few. There is so much that we can do, There is a place w hich we can fill Always about us while we live. -Are those who need what we can Five. Almut u all arc those who neod tC 'pyrisht, 1521. by lvdsar A. Guest.) MR. liUGHES'S ARGUMENT FRANCIS Ot'IMET America's chances to cop the British amateur rolf championship are boomed since Francis Oulmet has joined the Yankee team. It took a lot of coaxing to get the crack amateur to enter. Oulmet does ' not think the British way of settling the championship on the 18 holo plan gives a golfer a fair shake. . The Invaders lv tor Eng land the first week of May. SECRETARY HUGHES' note to the British, French, Italian and Japanese povemmeuts in respect to American rights in German territory now governed unripr mandatps u in effect an unanswerable, argument in favor of the ratification of the Treaty of Versailles and the covenant of the League of Na tion ! All the difficulties with which "the secretary of tate is strug gling are due to the refusal cf the senate to ratify the peace treaty and make the United States a member of the League of Nations. None of these difficulties could have arisen if the Unit- i ea btat.es were a signatory of the Treaty of Versailles and were represented in the league. No mandate to JapanMn, respect to the island of Yap could have been granted by the council of the league without the consent of the United States, and the present controversy could not have arisen. Mr. Hughes in his nota asserts thst "the fact that the United States has not ratified the Treaty of Versailles cannot detract from the ryrhts which the United States had already acquired." But precisely what were those rights? Mr. Hughes does not de line them .and they are not easy to define. As a co-belligerent the United States unquestionably had highly important rights in the settlement, and those rights were set forth in the Treaty of Versailles, but the senate has rejected the Treaty of Versailles, and with it the senate has rejected everything except what can be clumsily salvaged from the wreck. Mr. Hughes knows, as a lawyer, that there is such a thing as permitting valid rights to lapse.. President Wilson, in spite of the senate, refused to waive any of the rights that the United States had acquired as a co-beliigerent, but how long can those rights be maintained if the United States is to hold itself aloof irora the settlement agreed upon by all the other belligerents and by all the forty-odd countries that are now members of the League of Nations? How can we expect to participate in all the advantages of the settlement while repudiating all the obliga tions of the settlement? We slam the door in our own face and then complain that we have been excluded from the room. : Nothing could better illustrate the follv of the Hprtfitp's jirtinn md the folly of the Harding administration's policy than Mr. Hughes' note. The United States has interests in respect to Yap uuv.il iduuui, ue jiKiiiiy aoanaonea ana wriir. i cnu 1 hnvp hppn adequately protected had the Treaty of Versailles been ratified. Instead of ratifying the treaty and asserting these riirhts the government is seeking to maintain them by a process which gives it no real standing in court and under which it must appeal solely ly to the good nature and generous impulses of the allied and as- sociaxea powers. ' The "involvement" which Mr. Hard! becomes in consequence a hopeless entanglement with all the issues of the peace conference, and the United States is awk wardly trying to settle from the outside questions that can be properly settled only from the inside. New York World. ( Why should not a police chief be chosen from outside the city if a satisfactory applicant from within the city does not ap pear? In choosing a school superintendent, a librarian nr person for any other position requiring technical fitness, no at tempt is made to confine a choice to local people. No private! concern needing new employes puts a ban on outside people. Why will not the same principle apply to the office of chief of police? .- , Some people think Lloyd George does not amount to so much but just the same he has pulled John Bull out of many tight holes and has weathered every storm he has thus far faced. j - With a fire department that can shoot a stream of water 100 feet above the Collins mills we should have a cut in insurance rates. Secretary Fall of the interior department was once a mining engineer; he should know the value of hydro electric power. ' ji - i v - . i - . 11 V ! i:: c prices man eisewnere pecause we sen mi- vae , 'jT 'P w only, eliminating all losses due to a credit busi- " wneo fnv wiiioli enmorme ivmct- nov The f'jttuTtsque tJJ thug tht histirit vfftehtTrai ttsr Rccstvtlt, 1 Arizn ! i t i ? I it. i. IOs.XX. v, . tit i I J dwellings of a ? a i .j- C4LONG the Apache 'Trail in Arizona the motorist can see the ' dwellings of a race now believed to be extinct. These cliff dwell ing3 are at least 400 years old and . if their walls could speak taey would tell a most dramatic story of romance ad conquest. Arizona has more than its share of interesting places to lure the motorist-There he will find many Indian reservations the homes of Apaches, Navajos, Hopis, Mo haves and other tribes. There, too, is the famous Roosevelt Dam and the incomparable Grand Can yon of the Colorado River. And cherever he goes the mo torist can be sure that his motor fuel will be right because Red Crown Gasoline is sold every where. Look for the Red Crown sign on service stations and garages. STANDARD OIL COMPANY PILOT ROCK CITIZENS SE 'WAY DOWN EAST' PILOT ROCK. April 12. Charles Wilson left last week wii his truck to orK on tne nignway near temo. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Connor moved their household goods to Hermtston last; week where they will make the;r home, Mr. Connor having accepted a position in the depot at that place. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Boylen were visitors in Pendleton Thursday. Amonfr the local people who saw "Way Down EaHf' In Pendleton last week were Mrs. C. A, Cooper, Miss IA1-1 lian Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Westgate, Miss Helen De Vaul, Miss Verona Fnllenweidcr, Mr. and Mrs. George Schlegle, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Cassidy, Dr. H. A. Schneider and C. W. Dejiew. W. A. .Gillman has returned home from Portland where he went to-attend a miners convention. , . Mrs. O. T. Carnes entertained Friday afternoon April S in honor of the sec ond birthday of her little daughter Geraldine. The little guests were serv ed with ice cream and cake during tho rfternoon. Many beautiful little gifts were received by the honor guest. Those present were Maurice, Burdctte and Warren Hyrd, Jean and June fatuD blefield, Ruth Lester, Madeline and fhirlcy Michael, Camile and Junior Stanley. Charles Schannep and Howard Done. The Children were accompan ied by their mothers. . Mr. and Mrs. Will Catlin were Pilot Rock visitors Sunday. - PICARDY VOILES re the finest Woven rubric of It kind known tit iiiaiitiiaofurvr. . It In rtatlly beautiful for blonwt-s droises niul rliildivii' Wou .. The irle lx-r jil. B8n, ORG A lfl.S that ar the Jalk of tlir town. 45 Im-lii's wide in all the bcAutiful miAI jtliado-, real. I.v wxiiuU'i-rul qualities that lime it xi-niaiiriit fin lsli. MMlt4 ut ilrrNM now on iliplay showliitf how to make up tlioso iiiitcrlnl., UiyanilicK. are the yunl . ...v,.,. . .. .. , ... . 91.10 I.lXGtRIi" I'll AttMi:-SI-. Wa vt-ry Mih Matni'tttt. IsIhiI nimi-rlml cloth Tor cinnisoli-i rnvWoinw nod gowns; 8A IiiHh-h widis fleh culr. Ik- mire to m it. The yanl , .V: ; WHITE PONGEE St'l'CtAI. Qt'AMTY IHMii'.i: nllHk in mi e. rimmI ftliii' at tin' jam " tia WHI'lt" Kt TIING fl'ON'.r.i:. ctrn lnavy welcht ni finish for klI1 ami Milts. Truly tin' best ului that we ever miw. Tlui hhikiv wild last year at SI.50. We are now ufrerliiK It at the aard . . ,., s v ,2UB ;l;ORGi:TTi: rltl l'l, a qunllty t lint in. r. ri'llent in all the uaiitiil.sliadin, Ihr )anl (I.I OU:iT: DM CHIMES 40 Inchi- wide, iilir of flesli, white, honey dew, tf the )niil... (1.40 The Crescent Sells Better Merchandise at Lowest Prices. 'It Pays lo Pay Cash at This Store. L 28YEARSAG0 Diplomat ..-v's V- ' . ' f M x ' J S..-V f ,;. The hih school baseball team went to Echo Friday to play the Echo high school team. They lost the game, the score being 12 to 13 in favor of Echo. The boys going from here were Peryl Smith, Lawrence Knox, Edward Kens, George Jordan, Ted Roy, Thurlo Smith, Tom Stanton, Paul Bracher, Victor Bracher. Albert Pallook, Homer Landers and Albert Kennlson, coach. Owen Carnes was aole to go on tho mail route Friday, his ffrsl trip since his accident at the warehouse fire. Mr. Carnes Is much Improved but Is still unable to 'Walk without his crutches. . . Albert Peterson of Ukiah spent a few days In Pilot Rock last week on business. . . u Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bracher were visitors to Pendleton Thursday. The Colored Tigers of Pendleton won the baseball game plnyed here Sunday the score being 14 to 20. . Little Miss Gretchen Schock spent the week end In Pilot Rock as the guest of Louise and Jack Miller. Air. and Mrs. Twig Winkle were din ner guests at the W. B. Hinkle home Sunday . Mrs. Gertrude Wilson returned home Sunday evening from a visit yrtth rel atives in Pasco. . Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Pcharpf and chil dren were here Sunday from Pendle ton. - . Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Schannep and son Charles returned home Wednesday from a visit with relatives In Portland. Mrs. Hanna, mother of Mrs. Schannep accompanied them home. Charles Bnsbee of Pendleton was here on business the last of the week. George Caldwell and Clyde Helmlck of L'klah were t-nnsactlng business In Pilot Rock Frldpy. Demitv Pheriff Lydny was here from Pendleton. Friday. Rob Boylen has accepted a position whh tho Sclby Repair and Machine Shop. ., ' Mr. and Mrs, P.ruce Brace left har urriav mornins for Pendleton. From there they will go to Enterprise to visit relatives. 1 The hlfch school play, "Ttnck to the Farm'' will be presented In the high rchooi auditorium Friday evening, April 13. Mrs. Walter Smith and daughter Dorothy spent the week end in Pendle ton. Tom P.urnetto of the Cunningham Sbeep and Land Co. has purchased a Ford roadster from the Pilot Rock Auto company.. iFrom the Dally East. . Oregonlan, , April 12, 1S.93.) ,. Several Pendleton citizens are In La Grande, proving up on their reserva tion claims. Among them are George A. Hartman, Frank Frazicr, J. C. Lea sure. C. O. French, J. W. Klmbell and C. F. Roosevelt. C. J. Matlock Is there clso to' prove up on land injlhe Butter Creek country. Lee Moorhouse is among the list of wounded,. while cutting open a can of corn recently, the Major sliced orf a piece of his finger. It is Quite painful. G. H. Shell is here from .Walla Walla. . W. H. Weston. , Fletcher is In tho city, from . ARE PLANNED IN DETAIL i - s r ' i i -i ! i I DI'BLIK,) April 12. (ChaS. MCann, U. P.5 Sfciff ' 'Correspondent. ) Wian an attack on police barracks or an umbush of police or soldiers is heard of the official report usually men tions a round number of 100 or 20S men engnged on the rebel side. It Is probable there never was an ambush with 60 or a harraiks attack with mora than 80 Or 90 men on the republican side. In cases where the report mentions that barracks attack ers withdrew after three-quarters of an hour of firing, it is probable the attackers" were the average assign ment of two bombers and three shot gun men hold off to "fake' 'an attack and cut telephone wfres In hope that tho besieged garrison would send ur rockets for hell) ami that the rescu ers would meet the real ambush en route. . Ambushes and attacks are planned In great detail. Usually tho brigade commander will plan them with his stnff. When there is an Important at tack on a big, strong barracks the per. mission of the general staff is sought; on any major operation. In fact when in the Case of a barracks eighty men may be used. If there are technical difficulties engineers or other experts nre sent from Dublin or elsewhere by 'plow In the morning. the general staff. Otherwise tho bri gade -commander or his subordinates will carry out the attacks themselves. ' A tecent ambush shows the usual number of men engaged. In this, the report to the general stuff gave tho composition of the attacking party as: nine riflemen, fifteen shotgun ners, six bombers, six engineers (to dog trench es and fell trees In roads to block ap proaching lorries) and sljcteen scouts from outposts. .. The scouts ami outposts are perhaps the most important siiiKla element of an ambush. , .They are placed nt stra tegic points. Their principal duty Is to slfiiul the approach of the enemy: perhaps from a-comnmndiiH; hill or on embankment i perhnps from a tree or telegraph pole. But In an attack they must use their own initiative. The ambushing parly may meet at a designated place, where the volunteers are instructed In their duties. They jake their places along the roadside, where they take advantage of natural cover behind hedges or in ditches, make simple earthworks, and await the arrival of lorries, perhaps eating a field ration of tinned beef during a wait of several hours, 1,'nder their, protection across the road at a des- j ignated point wliere a lorry will be stopped In the centre of the attacking force. The outposts and scouts take their posts and. give warning of the enemy. Sometimes the volunteers are suc cessful In an ambush, when after a half hour's f ring with mutual casual ties and probably mutual deaths, they will capture and dlsnrin the military or police patrol. Sometimes the volunteers retire nft- ter an attack in which they both in flict and suffer casualties. In this case the withdrawal is usually because of the approach of reinforcements. In several recent cases ambushing parties have been surprised by mili tary whom some citizens had warned of the ambush. Then there are al ways republican casualties; the toll of deaths was sixteen In a recent case. The volunteers often are roughly arm ed, and they are fighting well-armed men. Their big advantage Is that of surprise, but 'thls mny be discounted by tho fact that the ambushed party is expecting attack and Is prepared for It. The republican army's princi pal difficulty is In training men. They must drill secretly, and they are poor ly armed. Also they are youths. They have the danger and bono of the glory of war; caiure means probable hang ings and victory means a return to tho Ih Hungary service as a soldier at the front Is to receive recognition. Thn missing leg or empty sleeve will be a tax receipt, and bullet wounds will materially cot down 'tag assess. Inents under liew tax bills Introduced In the Hungarian Parliament by the minister of finance. sauty tenkntti Ct-vfH"! ti. IWJjiMt CI lis !"""'!" ftwr t'K-.n T I FbJ. t.ilrttlu Jin 1 i 1 1 : a fi I Tr f, wSy)r-e- HTH l,M-y PENMAfHS; 'UlE-'V Dr. Lynn K. Blakeslee Chronic and Nervous Diseases an Diseases of Women, X-ttay Electria , Therapeutics. Tsmple r.ldg. Room It 1 Phone 411 . , Phone SIO-1V P. O. Box S$l tactile Atcherecn cf Colombo. O , will be secretary to Myron T Berrlck, newly chosen ambassador to France. She ts the first woman to bold this diplomatle position, f he Is at present In Europe, con nected wltb Asa Morgan's. tllef yrgsnbatlon, , SOAP rrtKT.s AUK nlCDt OKT CHICAGO,. April 12. (U. V.). James S. Kirk and company have pm Into effect reductions In soap prices ranging from 7 to15 percent. Other soad manufacturers are expected trt follow suit. MOTHERS MEND For IxpecUntMotheri Csed By Trhee C:rewt:cnj j Sam aoow.IT oh aO(IQOD aaa mm Mat. ' f i It Saving Is Constructive For tlioso uhn fli d It hard : to save, we lmvo these Lllleiiy Bdl Homo llnnks where you run dclxwU inr small hnnso at any t'Jnio. . - Riving something out of what ' you earri means a stronger rofloiiitlon,. future coirifmt, permanent sat isfaction, happlnrwi for tho wife nnd children, prop er training mt education for ihe children, success for self, and Independence in old age all these are governed by the hHtolt of saving or of spending. A man's habits. In handling his Income affect his life and tho welfare of his family, both now and for the future; his children are served or compelled to suf fer because of these nitidis, Blart a constructive system- of . saving today one dollar Is all you newd. ' Inland Empire Bank Pendleton, Oregon IMIllMIlMIIi