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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1910)
PACK r"OX DALLY KAST OKECONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON, TlirilSDAY, Jl'LV 11, 1910. EIGHT PAGES. NEWSPAPER. h.tsnd Lat)T, Weekly and, Bcml-Waakly tt Pendleton. Oroitoa. tur t IS? OUKOUNIAN I'UHLlbHlNO CO. 81'ttKCBllTlON RATES. 'slij. uok. yar. bj mall saii. s'l minthn. by mall ihrw auwtbs. by mall.... 1 all j. oae month, by mall one year, by carrier ; nix month, by carrier Pally, three months, by carrier... i i j. one month, by oarrtor ciy. on year, by mall H erkiT. an moatha, by mall , Vwsit. four montbi. by mall $5.00 i.SO 1.23 50 7 .50 i;s 15 .66 1.50 .6 SO 1.50 .75 .50 aaii Weekly, one year, by mall.. isl neekiy, tlx mourns, by I ml Weraly. four montha. by mall. i St- lially East Orrgoalao la kept m aala 'be Oraton Neiri Co., 147 flth street, :t.nl. Orecoa. northwest News, Co, Portland, Oregon. Chicago Korean, C9 Security Building. v ashltyrtoo, D. C, Hnreaa, SOI Four iMntb street. N. W. Member United I Teas As oc tattoo. Entered at the post oi flee at Pendleton. ir(oa. as second class mall matter. tfeJepb.me Main 1 Official City and County Paper. . : 'lit'": TllE DAY OIF. Taking of a day off, where the hills climb to the blue And the river is a -say in': "Here's a fishin'-place fer you!" In the pleasant valley By the singin" stream. Where the cool winds rally A day -off, for a dream! Tallin' of a day off another world in view. Where the skies an.l wood lands are sayin" things to you. Happy hill or valley By a singin' stream. Where the cool winds rally A day off. for a dream! WILL IT COME ABOUT? Of much significance is the dis cussion now on in various sections of the country in reference to a new political alignment. The sentiment is crowing that the two present politi cal parties do r.u adequately repre sent modern political sentiment. Am ong conservatives it is urged that the conservative win g of the republican, and democratic parties unite for tile perpetuation of "standpatism," though of course that term is not used. Liberals on the other hand urge the union of the progressive elements of the principal parties. In the August number of the Crafts man, Gustav S:i. kley, the editor, says: 'The birth in the near future of a new political party, formed by the blending of the progressive elements that have attained such prominence lr both the old ones, is, now almost a certainty. The majoritv of the pen. t-le regard it as th nxt step in the reform movement, the old-time poli ticians, even while they affect to steer at it as impossible, are afraid of it, and sh w their fear by waver-" Ing uncertainly between the policy which yields sufficiently to public opinion to p i.-s hhh of the progres sive legislation th u i. most urgently demanded, an the other extreme of uncompromising hostility to every thing an.1 everybody that threatens the supremacy of the old order. '"In spite of the political clamor, there is no dodging the fact that the American people, irrespective of par ty affiliations, are even now arrayed In two great factions, one of which stands dog?td:y by the old-time poli tical methods and oreanizations. hop ing that the storm will blow over as other storms have done, while the other is battling for honest govern ment under Use direct control of the people, and for the conservation of those natural resources upon which the wealth uf th- Nation depends. ' "We are approaching an era when the Issues upon which a presidential campaign is base will be entirely different. In fart, we have no more iw-uep, save thai of honest govern ment upon a fair and sound business biisis a government representing the intTests of all the people and car ried on for the benefit of the whole. The demand for hls Is nation-wide, and it is the outgrowth of an awak ened moral sense as irresistible as that which swept away slavery and prevented the disruption of the Re public. "The minor questions that we have bten accustomed to consider political IsbUts are but details In this great movement, but until a change Is ef fected in our political methods both parties will still use them as catch words to delude the voter during the campaign, and will legislate or ob struct hglslation at their own pleas ure and for their own profit after election." The editor of the Craftsman pre dicts that Theodore Roosevelt will lead the new party. He would be a fitting leader because he is the man who put itfibreath of life Into the progressive movement throughout the country. Will he take up the task If the republican psrty does not act to AS 1NI)K1'ENDKNT suit his wishes anil the wishes of Ihe ihcr progressive leaders? Time must tell. KKiHTlNti Till: FLY. How to be rKI of the fly is a pro position that is of decided import ance nt this time of the year. A v ritor in the Technical World has the following suggestions: "Kill the first fly." Considering that one female fly can bring into 'oi'iu scvtrul millions oi the pest in one summer, it would seem a good job to kill that first one. If the first and its immediate fol 1 iwers are lot live and the house be comes overrun, there are several sug gestions for ridding the rooms of them. One course, taken from the si uth where mosquitoes are a public menace, is to burn phyethrum powder in a room. This benumbs the flies and they fall to the floor and can he swept out. The trouble with this if. the pvrethrum powder is not sold t mnnv drug stores in the north. From the American Civic associ ation at Washington comes this hint: Crop twenty drops of carbolic acid on a hot iron; the vapor kills the flies. Sticky fly paper has both good and bad qualities. It does trap some flies. But those that get their feet coated with the adhesive matter are likely to return to their filth heaps prepared to carry back to the house :..lded quantities of disease-bearing matter sticking to their feet. Fly traps do their part but Dr. C. St. C'air Drake of the Chicago health de partment says the insects are cau tious. "The flies soon learn to be wary of traps,'" Dr. Drake says. "Those that have had any experience with them cannot be caught, and shortly a tribe o; flies too shJWd to be trapped might be evolved. The insects also avoid the sticky fly paper after one experience. They are crafty little fellows anil the Instinct of life is as strong as in many superior beings." Various poisons are suggested, the In st of which, the doctor says, is for malin in water. Put a spoonful of the chemical into half a cup of wa ter and leave it exposed in the room a i.d the flies will do the rest. In passing it is worthy of note that this insect, with its love for odors that offend the nostrils of man, has a strong aversion for scents which the human likes. Tills has given a hint for still another prevention, of minor worth. Aromatic plants in rooms and at windows act as repul sives. Such plant3. then have a double value in sick rooms; they are pleasing to the sufferer and discour age the fly that, with evil purpose, looks through the open window. The greatest remedy for the fly though Is absolute cleanliness. Do away with dirt and filth and the fly problem will be easily solved. A "farmhand" union at Walla Wal la, did not last long. The members did not want to work and the farmers did not want tbat sort of men to work for them. So there was no is sue to keep the move alive. Although local politics Is quiet in Umatilla county -it appears that there will be sufficient candidates for all the offices. Then in case any of the offices should be left vacant of course the deputies could continue the work. Americans are wise. They are let ting the Germans and the French try f:ut those new airships and get killed. After sky traveling has been made sefe our people will Invest. Have the Russian bear and the Japanese bulldog gone Into partner ship? The German Emperor seems to have bi en misquoted. How like Roosevelt hr talks. Chop houses and meat markets should be especially vigorous In the anti-fly crusade. THE MARKETS OI" PARIS. Mrs. John Van Vorst. who has proven her ability to write entertain ingly on sociological subjects, rontrib ute a delightful paper on "The Mar kets of Paris" to the July TVppln cott's. The picturesque side of these famous hallos begins to show Itself about midnight, says Mrs. Van Vorst. "Am one drives homeward from the opera, up the Champs Elysets, one meets an intermittent procession of two wheeled carts drawn by strong, healthy horses walkin? t a slow pace and without direction, for the driver has fallen asleep on his high-piled load of vegetables sometimes a mass of snowy onions, sometimes a wall of orange carrots, sometimes n soft bank of green lettuce leaves. These wagons arrive toward two o'clock at the Hallos, where their contents are unloaded and sold off at auction to the market women. On the sidewalk from six until eight o'clock there Is a retail sale carried on of the 'green goods," which on the stroke of eight must all have vanished from sight." "The Paris Hallos, or Central Mar kets, cover a surface of fifty-nine thousand yards." a nundred million pounds of meat are sold there In a year, forty-four million pounds of chicken, and a number equally ap palling of bushels of potatoes and vegetables, of pounds of Ash and but ter, of dosens of eggs. Aside from the people who come to buy at the Halle Centrales, and the vast num ber of hotels and Institutions which provide themselves with food at this source, there are twenty-nine smaller markets held in the different quar ters of Talis every day. which have no other supply than the H.illes. The reason for serving themselves thus throuch an intermediary instead of ..pplvin,; directly to the suburban Hucksters and the coastwise fisher men is that thereby are avoided the complication involved by the laws of hygiene, which are very strict in r;i Every laMie'.e of foo.I ad mitted to the counters of the Dames lbs Hallos must first have been in spected and judged fit for the hu man palate, by a commission who hold their seances between midnight and three in the morning, perform ing test experiments upon hungry guinea-pigs! The effects no doubt prove fatal rather often upon these poor "tasters." for there are four hundred and forty thousand pounds of meat seized every year and de stroyed with quick-lime, while an equal amount of sea fish is cast to destruction. together with fifteen thousand pounds of fresh water fish, thousands of lobsters and. last as al ways in the procession, one hundred and ninety thousand snails! "The men who accomplish the dif ficult task of unloading the wagons of food as they arrive from the rail road are appointed to their positions by the Prefet do Police. He makes no further tax upon them morally and physically than that they shall be honest, and able to carry from one end to the other of the market a loa,d weighing two hundred and forty pounds! For this formidably hard "job" the remuneration Is never less than six hundred dollars, and attains to as much as a thousand dollars vear." AX AITO I II XT, I sat in my auto one day in the shade. To rest for a while. When a sweet rustic maid In a pretty red bonnet Came walking my way, With a smile in her eyes Like the sunshine in May. "Ah. Little lied Ridinn-liood. Greeting!" quoth I A very bold knight To a maiden so shy. "Beg pardon. I'm not." She shook her smal head; "I'm little rod walking-hood. Sir." she said. W. J. LAMPT'.X. two wnoxes. "Well, two wrong; don't make right, do they?" "That depends. Sometimes they do." "What?" "Yes. Suppose that without any provocation you knoelc my hat off. That would be wrong, wouldn't it?" "Certainly." . "Then suppose you pull my nose. That would be wrong, too would it not?" " "Well, what of it?" "Well those two wrongs would make It right for me to knock you down. "Y-yes. 'Again. but- Suppose you fan. y that somebody has wronged you. and you find that you're wronir. Then you have !m:'.g!!H'il a v.ron where no wrong existed. That is to say. you have taken offense at the wrong wrong. Isn't that right? Don't you see now that these two wrongs " "f wt.-h you'd quit. You're making me dizzy!" Chicago Tribune ITALIANS lUtlNfi PFI.LAt.KA. Pellaitra carried by an insect! It is one of the most important of recent scientific discoveries that is announced by Dr. L. W. Sambon. lec turer at the London School of Trop ical Diseases, and member of the "field committee" which is now en gaged in making a stud nf pellazra in Italy. Dr. Sanbon, it will be remembered. H the man who helped so importantly to prove the ease against the malaria mosquito by his classical experiments in the Roman Cnmpagna, where he, with one companion, spent several weeks in a screened hut on the marsh- ' os. merely taking the precaution not to go out at night. Inasmuch as the malaria-carrying mosquitoes fly only at night, they suffered not at all. though dwelling in one of the worst known breeding places of the abomin able Insects. Accordingly authorities of the highest kind attaches to Dr. Sambon's announcement that pellagra in Italy owes its distribution to a midge, or black fly, nearly related to our own "buffalo gnat." Just as malaria could not exist without' the Anopheles mo squito, so likewise does pellagra a much more terrible disease, resemb ling leprosy depend upon this black fly for ! transmission and dissemi nation among mankind. Such being the case, t will be ask cil. how does it happen that this dread ful malady, unknown until recently In the I'nited states, has suddenly brok en out In many parts of our country, spreading with alarming rapidity, and threatening to become a plague? The reason why It Is suppose, is that the Italians, who have been swarming Into this country In such multitudes within the last ten years, have brought the disease with them Keeping VeCI is an easy task with the aid of Hos teller's Stomach Hitters, because It is compounded from Ingredient best known for making and preserving health. If sickly, rundown or over worked get a bottle of HOSTETTFR'S STOMACH BITTERS today and see for yourself what a wonderful medicine It Is In cases of Poor Appetite, Gas on Ktoniaeli, Headache, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Cos tlvencftfl, Cramps, Diarrhoea, Malaria, I'ever and Apiie. Its results are certain. Silence! The instinct o inoUesty n.iruri! to ovjry wonm is ollen a Jreat hindrance to I lie errs of woivanly i!i -.cases. Women Shrink Irom the persoua' questions ii ihe loc.:! j-liysi .un which seem indelicate. The thoci ht of rr.i:.ima;'o- i:. cS borrent to them, tmd so ('v.y cuoure i: vlv.i.e a cond-tion of disease whi.'h i .: Isoi:! it has free- T; - , ; ,.; , ;t Nif man -...:. : : .' ;..vs .' for mutK. .. :-. . ; .- y, tlon by Icitur. y.ii . o .. as sacr?r'!y oo.';. Ti . '. .",.' Dr. Pierce's Favorite Tros.-r; n re;nrc: un j recite (he womanly funitioiir., ahuli hrs pain and builds up and puts the finishing touch ol h.-ultii ua every weak woman who jives it a fair trial. v It Makes Weak Women Strong. ' Sick Women Well. You can't afTor.l to accept a ttcret nostrum as a substitute for tins non-u!coluiiiu medicine op lnown composition. from Italy, where it has long been rife. They have infected our buffalo gnats, w hich thereupon biting heal - my persons, nave communicated the malady to them, it Is just like the case of the mosquito, which, having sucked the blood of a malaria suf ferer, attacks somebody else and in troduces the malaria germ Into the latter's blood. From "Pellagra Caus ed by Gnat." in August Technical World Magazine. '11 lore A iv Ollicrs. A big hearted Irish politician in a western city had just left a theater one night when he was approached by a beggar who said: i "Heaven bless your bright, benevo lent face! A little charity, sir. for a poor cripple.'" The politician gave the man some coins, saying: "And how are you crippled, old man?" "Financially, sir." answered the beggar as he made off. b A Little Hero. He rides most daringly to hounds Upon the rocking chair, i r calls the cat a tiger fierce. And stalks her to her lair. Tiif rug becomes a battlefield Where spears and banners toss. The hall a river wide anil deep. That he must swim across. Behind each curtain-fold he sees An Indian chieftain grim. And bandits throng the kitchen stairs And seek to capture him. And when the stars begin to shine In night's eternal arc, He toddles up to bed alone. Quite fearless of the dark. Minna Irving In Leslie's. KAISF.lt AM) liROTIIFR FI SS OVFR 7.FPPFLIX Berlin. A serious difference of op inion has arisen between the Kaiser and bis brother. Prince Henry, in re gard to the Zeppelin airship expe dition to the North Pole. Count Zep pelin has interested the Kaiser in the project, and now that an American has reat lied the pole by the ordinary route the Kaiser would like to see Germany Never come back when cleaned by the B Eli LIN DYE HOUSE Dry, wet, chemical and steam cleaners. We call for and deliver any where. Phone Main 4B. JACK WEBSTER, Mgr. S02 K- "rt s' wvvw-jti-s jsKxioa' 60mjirrvs t'"ti- it n-iTirri-i r The First National Bank PEKOLETON. OREGON': Report of the Condition, June 30, 1910 to the Comptroller of the Currency Condensed Resources Loans and .Discounts Overdrafts . . U. S. Bonds (at par) Other Bonds and Warrants Banking Building Cash aiftl Exchange . , Total Liabilities 1 Capital Stock . . Surplus and Undivided Profit Circulation Due to Banks . Deposits . Total I, G. MyRice Cashiei of solemnly swear that the I to the best of my knowledge and belief. Subscribed and swern July, 1910. C. K. SEAL i-1 J o ,lf. ' f ::?: 2 ; achieve a marvelous feat by air j The Kaiser has ordered Prince 1 Henry, as an officer of the German navy, to accompany Count Zeppelin to Spitzburgen and though the Deutsch land smash has occurred, the North German Lloyd steamship Main has Uft Kiel with Prince Henry and Count Zeppelin and a corps of scientists aboard. It now appears that Prince Henry favored abandoning the trip. He ar gued that public confidence has been shattered in the Zeppelin system and ho would be exposing himself to ridi cule if the airship failed. But William was firni and finally told Henry to obey orders. So Henry has gone to Spitsbergen under protest. He has foretold disaster and thinks the en terprise will end in a burst of merri ment from the civilized world, unless It ends tragically. Advices from Norwegian ports state that the eminent members of the ex pedition have been made to feel ex tremely uncomfortable owing to Prince Henry's dislike to the scheme, which lie does not conceal, and which has cast a gloom over the whole party. Even the irrepressible Count Zeppe lin is depressed. Lnh for Wife Heater. Everett. Wash., July 14. At the summer meeting of the Washington State Sheriffs' association, opening hero today, several new laws will probably be recommended as desir able in increasing the efficiency of sheriffs In dealing with criminals. A resolution favoring the estab-!.-hinont of whipping posts for wife beaters and assailants of women pass ed upon favorably at the last session, will likely aeain meet the approval of til,, sheriff. The sheriffs also favor tin; rigid enforcement of a state cur few law- Read the "Want" ads today? OPEX FOR THE SEASON JULY 1st. THE HARVEST HOME Mrs. Jos. McKenn, Prop. $1.30 per Day, $9 per Week.. Ileda 5(e and 75c. Meals 50c. Children under 10 years half rate. LOXG BEACH, WASn. S P itnjSKtvmussM'tM rrr n " i i n n in iwiaiisii aaaai $1,655,082.16 48,149.54 . 250,000.00 11,875.25 10,000.00 311,014.13 $2,286,121.08 $250,000.00 201,174.21 240,000.00 186,824.74 1,408.122,13 $2,286,121.08 the above named bank do above statement is true . G. M. RICE, Cashier to before me, this 1st day of CRANSTON, J Notary Public for Oregon OLD LINT7 LIVE STOCK IN 8 PRANCE. Indiana & Ohio Live Stock insur ance Company Of CrawfonlsTille, Indian. Has now entered Oregon. Policies now good In every state In the Union. Organ ted over 26 years ago. Paid up Capital 1200,000.00. As sets over $450,000.00. KE.MK.MnEU, this Is JTOT a Mutual Live Stock Insur ance company. Mark fiborhouse Company Agent, Pendleton, Or. Ill Kant Court St. Phone Mala M. Headquarters For Toilet Goods We are Sole Manufacturers and Distributors of the Celebrated F4S TOILET CREAM COLD CREAM TOOTH POWDER and MT. HOOD CREAM Tallmon & C o. Leading Druggists of Eastern Oregon. 5i COLESWORTHY'S International Stock Food s i the old reliable The best for your stock i Try it COLESWORTHY 127-129 E. Alta T QUELLE Cus La Fontaine, Prop. Best 25c Meals in North west First-class cooks and service Shell fish in season La Fontaine Blk., Main St. Toil make a bud mistake when yoa put off buying your coal until taa Fall purchase It NOW und secura the bent Rock Sprinp coal the mines produce at prices considerably lowar than those prevailing In Fall sail Winter. By stocking up now you avoid ALL danger of being unable to secure It when cold weather arrives. HENR.Y KOP1TTKE Phone Main 178. vV.'rU,, co v cans' ' Vl Ml M (.'3 d nr 24. ,' 'A AnTonft"fnrllii(; n r-l-otrh rn1 rii iion n nj O'li'Ulf iinrinin our ornih-H fiji v ! i :t r t r ui t;itfnii-n Is prrhnhly iwtiMitnH.i. fYii.tminlf ii-Mi 1tricti7r.11n1.jrnti.il. jinr;i!ijj!0K n ,iruu JO. t tne. OMfMl imenry for : . n ihk nut Mil. I'.ifi'iita tiikn tiinmiih ,Mii: t o. tucc Serial notice, with.mt i hr--,.. tnt'i? Sciettfific American, t nnnrtfjomrly tDii-trntmi wpriri. f muvnt dilitftori of unr fu'lrrtuin J intmil. Titiiis $,-) ; four montha, L tfolJ by ll tiewiuo&tor IvlUNN fS Co,3818"- New Yort tifmncto oiUca. eiM P gt. W antiunion, u. ii FOLEYSIIGNOTTAR stops the C3 u tail Ueals tanas