Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1922)
.1 TWELVE PAGERS DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETOK, OREGON, FRIDAY EVENING. JANUARY C, 1022. toreAonign) THE OLD HOME TOWN By Stanley PACE FPUS II tbllahtd Dally and inl-Wkly. at j Pendleton. Oregon, by the I EAST OREGOXIAX Fl'B. TO. AJf INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SlBSCItirTlOX RATES IN ADVANCE) ! Entered at the post office at Pendle a, Oregon, a atcond elm mail mat r. ON SLE IX OTHER CITIES mperial Hotel Xewa Stand, Portland. ONE FILE AT hicaco bureau. HO Security BuildinK. Vaahn gton. . C Bureau 501 Kour , teenth Btret. New Vork. j Meaibt-r f ke Aetaed Prraa. I The Associated Pre ia exclusively milled to the use for republication of II newa dispatchea credited to it or ot otherwise credited In thia paper anl lao the local nea published herein. Daily, one year, by mail Daily, i months, by mail Daily, three months, by mail Daily, one month by mail Daily, one year by carrier Daily, aix month j by carrier Daily, three months by carrier... Dailv. one month, by carrier Semi-Weekly. 1 year by mall ! Kemi-Weekly, six months by mail 1.00 Semi-Weekly, three months by mail .JO S 00 . 3 00 . 1.5 . :.5o . l.S Teleakaae GREATER TH X VICTORY thought I'd done a dreadful thinir, Mv hoDe had fallen fluttering And I had failed where I had tried for conquest and its touch of pride, jl'd done my best and It had lost !And In despair I summed the cost. tut quickly I was reconciled. Bud and his mother blessed pa'r! Were proof against the KtlliKH of rare. They would not rhaiiKr or love me less I Hecause I faltered in siioeesH They did not, to lie proud of me. Always require a victory. And thouith di-xpuir hud left me Blum, TnTr i. iA -A'"?, OM THE WAY TO PAV HIS YEARS sueiCiPT'Ofi fou. the weekly cuarion "IKE HANDLES ON BOTH BASKETS C.AVF. WAV- YOU WILL WANT TO SEE THESE NEW ADVANCE STYLES IN Silk Frocks for Spring 1922 Just the prettiest ever, is wh.it you will say, and truth fully, too, for every or.e of them is a dainty creation of the manufacturers' art. Taffeta and Crepes in blacks, browns and navy blues, with blue the leading shade. Just ask to see this. Frock of blue taffeta made in the quaint and becoming; bouffant style with basque bodice trimmed with velvet rib bon and silver buckles, sleeves of the new styles in shorter lengths. Priced at 2..00 E'ue Taffeta Frock with Eton Jacket, rheves and skirt, trimmed with large lows of self material Jf32.5) 11 f ' r mm B w r c heard my smiled. story through, and They till would smile to see me come. rWhi j"We did not need the victory.' '.Then Bud camo bounding through the j door, iAnd helter-skelter on the floor 'I romped with him, forgetting there The hurt of failure and despair, 1A1 happy at the close of day 'As though success had come my way, Here is the cure for every aelie, The balm to comfort each mistake, So long as they who understand, Rejoice to take me by the hand And gladly welcome nie at night, I still can mauler every plight. Here is the greater victory, Always to have thciiii proud of me. I years. Gold worth $12,000,000,000 is still accessible there, en I gineers say. India is the greatest consumer of gold, according to Ham- moiidt It is used mostly for ornamental purposes. Pure gold ! is too soft for most uses in the arts. It is alloyed with copper and silver for making coins, plate, and jewelry. No other metal i is so malleable or so ductile. An ounce of gold can be drawn into a wire 50 miles long and beaten into a leaf 1-367,500 of an inch thick. JAPAN AND CHINA I'nnvrlirlit. 1922. by Edgar A. fluent j WE NEED EMPIRE BUILDING MORE iA' MAN does not have to be a jingo to find room for offense nt the Japanese attitude toward China as expressed at I IIIC alius luilici culc. tviij, lui inoLauLC, auuuni wuiui , (refuse to have the 21 demands Japan forced upon China under ; HE most sensible suggestion concerning the 1925 fair made duress during the war passed upon by the conference? Why in Portland yesterday was by Herbert Gordon. His view should the Japanese statesmen im 'st that the Shantung question j ij that Portland should finance the exposition but look to be discussed at Pekin and not at Washington? the state for a good appropriation for a state building. That j The obvious interpretation is that Japan prefers to deal i has always appealed to this newspaper as the logical course to , singly with China because China is helpless. It would look bet- j DUrSUe lhe State Can RllOra 10 piOViue lieuaauic vicisu" i icr wi uapau 11 m-i irirncninuvrii n wuiii mhiikiv itiy iu l1ll1'lr1ino nnd Oreiron exhibit at the exposition. Many would favor this plan who violently oppose the suggestion that the state as a whole go 50-50 with Portland in sharing administra tive expenses of the fair. The plan lor an equal division of ex pense between state and city is based on the theory the up-state regions would profit as much as the metropolis from holding of the fair. It is a false idea absolutely. The direct benefits would be almost entirely for Portland. Other towns would get some business from visitors nassine through but any such business ! would be offset by the draining of local money into Portland ! through the fact that almost every man, woman and child in the ; state would want to see the exposition. Millions of dollars ' would be taken from various parts ot Oregon to Portland in this I way and in many instances people would leave bills unpaid while they fared forth to see tne Dig snow, up-staie ousinessmen ami on the table and ask for a disinterested settlement. LIFE WORTH THE LIVING 'T!n' licst was to eradicate fear if' tn iisHiune it normal up pen ranee. Thai ! Is why n chiiuffeiir rtrl'es better In " ! inimeru" thornimhl'aie with a ciga rette hetween h's lips and why a youth' whistles while giiinj! past a cemetery at lilt;ht." Black Taffeta Frock, basque effect, rows of scalloped ruffles, edged with braid from the skirt, a very effective dress, for $29.50 A Truly Beautiful Brown Taffeta Dress is made with an overblouse effect skirt trimmed with loops of self-material and silver braid, finished at waist with cluster of silver grapes, priced $26.50 A Smart Dinner Frock is made of black taffeta with shirred basque, skirt trimmed with black Spanish lace flounce, belt of ribbon and steel beads. Priced at ..' $35.00 Another Very Pretty Dress is made of brown taffeta, with draped sleeves, skirt corded to stand out in bouffant style, trimmed with roses of self materia! and ribbon rtreamers. Priced at 75 A TREMENDOUS REDUCTION IS OFFERED ON THESE WOOL DRESSES sent us by our New York buyer: The very best qualities in navy, Poiret twill and -tricotines, made up in fashionable and becoming styles, with workmanship of the very best. Sizes from 1(5 to 44. These dresses formerly would have retailed at $35.00 to $50.00 Now cfered to ou at $22.50 to $;H.50 Attend the January Clearance! Sales Throughout the Store Attend the January Clearance Sales Throughout the Store LONDON. Jan. . U'. IM "Four makes life, worth living," S.i- U. Armstrong-Junes, a lending physician told an audience of donors in a lecture. "Wlthiuil it, life would be inspired. i "There are more than H elust-es m' I fear to clumsc from, Including fear nf , n i . 11..'. .. J lUuMnHA 41n. n - i- 4 Inn iMun flint 4 lini ' I the dark, heights, of open or closed t n f rvi n-wa iv n nm wniu li i i i mi hi hi h i iir v nw i t: itirn li ul nit. v A til 111 CI O I11U W41kJ W V Kiiva - a -v . 28 MS m TAKE "DiAPEPSIN' ML ( From be heavilv taxed for Portland's benefit Fair boosters place great stress on the settlement and devel opment they claim would accompany the holding of the fair. But they overestimate regarding that point. A state cannot be colonized by rush act tactics. It must be a gradual process. If we expect new people we must first get water lor the land, pre rure logged-off land for use, develop hydro electric power and Dlace agriculture on a profitable basis. There are great oppor tunities open to Oregon along this line. Rut these projects can-1 not be earned out by hip-hurrah methods in one single summer except in story books. If we want to sell Oregon we must first get our goods up out of the cellar and we must prepare to take care of our newcom ers so they will not go broke. The "bring 'urn in and pluck 'em quick" theory of colonization has been tried and found wanting. What Oregon needs more than it needs a world's fair is a program of empire building that is sound and workable. We have a glorious opportunity for such a program and we can pu it over if we go about it right. But we will get nowhere with such endeavors under the leadership of men who merely wish to take what cream they can get and never want to feed or milk the cow. THE MARVELOUS STORY OF GOLD . i spaces, or over-larne or over-sniaa .roiinin, of Mplilcrs, rats anil mire. Fears ai i often Inherited. j "There are several grades of fear iippreheus'on, anx'ety, tevri' or frlsht. I They may he shown hy f I in lit . pugnac ity or concealment, and can lie iiuln ml hv siitrsestloii or lm:ia''en. the Daily Kast (iretfiiMan, January li, ls:U.) .Vim. W. Tierce is III Walla Walla atlcii'liiiii her father I'eter Kuilio, wh has not recovered from his severe illness. .M iis Anna Marshall, who left last ' week, Is vIhUIiik for a few days in I l'oi'tland, 'whence she will so to Taeo- "Pape's Dlnpepsin" Is the nuickest, j surest relief lor indigestion, Oases, i Flatulence, Hearthurn, Sourness, Fer j mentation or S;oman ilstress caused I , j by acidity. A few millets give almost ; . ! immediate stomach relief and shortly the stomach is corrected so you can eat favorite foods without fear. Large ; case cost,s only few cents at drug store, . Millions helped annually. her sl'idies in Annie ti... r,ll,n'iitn.uu nf the Oirmans mn 10 lesnuie n'ply sua- v rmni seniinar. .M'i'ses .naanan ana Hess e Switzlc r stopped in Vancouver In th occupied an j on. was i to visit friends before returning to the Annie Wriwht st nointy in Tacoma. Milk Fed Hens PRIME STEER ROLLED BEEF VEAL, PORK, LAMB WE HANDLE NOTHING BUT STEER BEEF 1 Rivoii Ch lilt i it Ilk! Adults Ijogos 30c odayi L Downey MM Phone 600 815 Main THERE is $50,000,000 in gold in the sea for every inhabitant of the globe, says John Hays Hammond, the famous min ing engineer. But, unfortunately, no commercially suc cessful method of extracting it has been invented thus far. Wa ter dredged from the great depths of the Atlantic contains four grains of gold to the ton of water. An estimated total amount of gold in the oceans of the world thus runs into thousands of millions of tons. Hammond tells "The Story of Gold" in the January Mentor Magazine drawing upon his life experience for some of the most interesting bits of his article. He tells of meeting John Mar shall, the discoverer of gold in California. Marshall showed t In famous engineer the exact spot where he found the tiny nugget mat started tne uamornia gold rush in '4!. i Man's high regord for gold is due, Hammond believes, to a race memory of the time when it was the only metal known. Unlike other metals, which generally require smelting, gold is often found in a free state. One of the largest nuggets of this sort, the "Welcome Stranger," found at Dunolly, Victoria, in 1869, weighed 2,268 ounces. So gold may have been made into ornaments before the discovery of fire. The earliest recorded civilizations knew how to mine it. Gold was the chief medium of exchange in the ancient world. Kings apparently esteemed it more than their wealth in land. During the mediaeval times little gold was mined ; in the iifteenth century the world's total supply was valued at $225, 000,000 only. The story of gold in the United States began with the rush to California in 49. California still leads all other states in gold production. Nevada, Colorado, and South Dakota are close ri vals. The Klondike rush to northwestern Canada in 1897 was substantially a repetition of the California rush. But the Klon dike's gold production has steadily fallen off. while that of the neighboring territory of Alaska has increased until it is todav cne of the world's most important gold-producing districts. Australia experienced a gold rush shortly after California. Thirty years later, important fields were discovered in the vast, " arid interior. Engineers have worked marvels there, piping wa- B ter hundreds of miles to the miners. The richest gold-producing region is the Witwatersrand. or White Waters range, in the Transvaal, South Africa. The Rand. ! as it is commonly called, is a tract forty miles long. From this pmall area half the world's supply .of gold has come for many a ' NofhinlikPit has ever been seen on any Screen ! Ihe flist Ever Produced lhe eafesfi ' Vestern Character Ever Portrayed t1,-"tird.nd-OTie trcmeti tbr.lia in Suicr waters rroducetl bv Robert Thorn by Wtthout regard fur eiperiM til picture of a lifttuail IARCADE Today Children 5c Adults 25c BALLIN"7 HUGO fiftGAfl LOVF" NEWS WEEKLY BRAY COMICS from the rtory 'THE HONOURABLE GENTLEMAN" ACHMED ABDULLAH f t. fXUUUCCD BY HIKiO rAL-;i PRODUCTIONS' l lil ll Distributed by W.H0DKIS0N C0RP0M10N 5i7 Fiiihaue.NcfcrkCi7 COMEDY "JAZZ JANITOR"