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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1910)
DAILY KAST ORfcUOMAN, PENDLETON. OHEUON, m:im:shy, jclv 20, mo. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. raklliud lml.7. Weekly and 6ml-W.lj at rD-Jleton. Orecoo, by the S? CKEtfOSIA.N lTBLlHBlXa CO. KUHSCIilPTlON KATES. ally, oo. yer, by mall 15 00 Clly, til month, by mall . , 2M rally. three months, by mall 1.25 Dally, oae mouth, by mall .50 tally. one year, by carrier T.50 (ally, atx monib. by carrier.. 1.75 Dally, tbree montbs. by carrier l.WS Dally, one moutb, by carrier... 85 Ktrkly, oat year, by mall I SO Weekly, an montlie, by mall 75 WeekiT. four moutlii. by mall 50 ml Weekly, ooe year, by mall.... 1.50 Stool Weekiy, tlx moDUia, by mall... .75 ml Weekly, four montba, by mall.. .50 Tbe Dally Eaat Oregoolan la kept tale t tb Oresoo Neva Co., 14T 6tb tract, artiand. Oregoa. ortbweat Neva. Co., Portland. Oresoo. I'bUao ltureaa. j9 Security Building. WnbtUK'ton. U. C, Bureau, 601. Four (ntb street, N. W. Member United Preaa Asoclatlon. Entered at the poetoiflce at Pendleton, Drecoa, aa aecond olaaa mall matter. telephone Main 1 Official City and County raper. "r REALISM. The man who sees things as instead of military conscription, a conscription of the whole youthful population to form for a certain number of years a part of the army' enlisted against nature, the Injustice would tend to be evened out, and numerous other benefits to the com monwealth would follow. The mill-1 tnry Ideals of hardihood and discipline would be wrought into the growing fibre of the people; no one would re main blind, as the luxurious classes now are blinded, to men's real rela tions to the globe he lives on, and to the permanently solid and hard foun dations of his higher life. To coal and iron mines, to freight trains, to f. shins; fleets in December, to dishwashing-, clothes-washing, and window washing, to road-building and tunnel making, to foundries and stoke-holes, find t' the frames of skyscrapers, would our gilded youths be drafted off, according to their choice, to get the childishness knocked out of them, and to come back into society with healthier sympathies and soberer ideas. They would have paid their biood-tax, done their part In the Im memorial human warfare against na ture; they would tread the earth more ptoudly; the women would value jtl'.em more highly; they would be bet ter fathers and teachers of the fol lowing generation." My little grandson, having eaten, some peaches, asked me a couple of days later: "Grandma, when are you going-to give me some more apples with hair on?'' A small boy was playing with a kitten. In the play the cat scratched him and he said to his mother: "Mamma, the pussie has a Din- eushion on his feet and it's full of pins. they are Not as they ought to be, Whose vision is not tangled up, Whose mind from myths is free, When starting on some special task Before he has commenced He very clearly understands What he is up against. It Is not fair and fairy dreams That make the world go round. The master builders are the men Whose feet are on the ground. I The two fundamental duties of a man are to work and to fight; to jefirn a living for himself and to defend his home and country. This is trua wherever men are found. It matters not whether a man be born with a golden spoon in his rfouth or he be of the poorest parentage. It Is the same TIIK LAST CAMPFI15K. His tribe swept up across the drift of "years, Won fame and honor for a little space, Then vanished utterly. And now, in place Of them that strewed the land "in blood and tears, Leaving their brethren heritage of tears Wild things who gazed stern prog ress in the face And withered at her glory he re veres Another creed, and treads a path his race Knew not. Here, tn the wide, free land his sires Loved well, where Mohawk ruled and lived supreme, Master of wooded depth and silver stream, His last poor son rekindles wasted I fires With twigs that, wind-swept from some ancient tree. The white man throws him. of his clemency. H. Bedford Jones. $ K ' fsk C& Lr.hi ko SfJ? DRIVES OUT BLOOD HUM0PS Though splendid castles in the air Our idle qfforts crown, Tou cannot move the family In And calmly settle down. e e?? p a' j in the centers of civilization as in the . jungle. It would be well, as Mr. James ' suggests, could young men be traln- j ed with this idea In view. At this i time our schools nav too much at tention to "culture" and too little at tention to more essential things. AX OPEX RACE. The man who sees things as they are May have beneath his hat Less roey prospects, but he knows Exactly where he's at. He passes all illusions up Without regrets or sighs, Nor does he stop to take a shot At folly as it flies. Selected. REDEEM THE STATE. During the past few years every state institution of higher learning lr. Oregon has been forced to stand with its back to the wall and to vir tually fisht for existence. The state university, the Oregon Agricultural college and the three normal schools have brer, attacked successively. The ! The local political pot is beginning i to simmer to a slight extent and from indications there will be plenty of candidate for the various eountv j and district offices. The more the j merrier. With plenty of people in the running the voters will have an op portunity to select good men. One of the benefits of the direct primary system is that it provides an "open track." All may enter and run who so desire. There Is no"fixing" and the race is to the bejt man. So come on Mr: Officeseeker and get in the game. It is a "free for all." RLOCK THE SCHEME. On the official ballot the "Orchard" county bill will be number 332 yes and 333 No. It is not too early now to I be gin tf lling your friends throughout university won out after a fight, but the state to ynte ..Vo thu by a narrow margin. O. A. C. was sure. It ls a measure that able, through hard work on the part t-nreatens to inorease taxation in this It alumni and friends, to prevent its runtv am3 in the ew county Jast appropriation from being held j it be carrie(, n ,s a measure that up under the referendum. The nor-' benefu no one ?aye a few a, mal schools have been closed for a Milton wh have gelf,sh lntPrests year and are now forced to ask for,;lione at stake. On the other hand maintenance under the initiative. division would work injustice and in This Is a situation that ixflects dis- h,rv unnn thotisnn,1s of non: win SOME AXCIEXT BRIDGES. When ve see persons with soft, smooth skins we know at once that their blood ls pure and hoalthy, that the cuticle, ls being sumciontly and properly nourished by the civa'.lnt'on. But wheu tho blood becomes infected wilh any unhealthy humor tno cTcct is shown by eruptions, boils, pimplos, or some wore definitely marked sMu disease such as Eczema, Acne, Totter, e':c. Humors get into the Weed v.sualiv, became of a sluggish condition of thore members wlioso duty it is to cai'.sct "itud carry off tho waste aud refuse roattsr of tho syslom. This unhealthy matte-, left in the nvs'eni, emirs ar.d f i' ,:.-n''3 and ls soon ab sorbed iiro tlia circulation, Piling the blood with an irritating Junior. Remove theso humor:; ar.d the t&in disease can not exist, because i s vs-y cause is, then destroyed. S S. S. c'.'rea all hmnors of the blood becnusa it is the p-eatest of all blood "purif.e: :. It chw.'.srs the blood of every particlo 0f vulical'.liy matter, enriclie3 tho urculaticn r.nd causes it to supply healthful notir'shmejit to all skin tissues. Tlicu the s'rin becomes soft aud clear. Local apgilcrri::: can not euro, they can caly gjotL-o to tcrinovarUy reducing the in araaiaMoti, oat, the cause ren!a!!3 '' f'rr-.'?': ''.e cruyition will be no nearer well when the ex ternal trfPtP'ea' is lett otf. The humors must be rc:ovd atv' m'ri:ig ofjit.iU S. S. S fr tM vv":c?"'. b1?oJ. ir.i'""! bn"1"--? 'w-q -i ' f. nialccs pure blood. Eock en kin P'srasfs free to all who v.-riio rii- tvvrst it. t:th svitt specific co atiaxt.. gv fopo wove known, and tho smaller thi-v were the giontir their value The rose has enjoyed peculiar fa vor as a sacred flower. The Moham medans sprinkle the walls of their mosques with rosewater as a purifier. Something of the sanctity of the rose in the Moslem mind may. of course be traced to the tradition that the rose springs from the blood of the Proph et. In the east it is believed that the burning Uuah. in which the Angel of the Lord appeared to Moses was a rose-tree. In no other part of the world has the cultivation of roses been brought sn nearly to perfection as In China. The ros,. gardens of the emperor are gorgeous, and the revenue obtained yearly from the manufacture of oil of roses and rosewater is enormous, only members of the royal family and the nobility, high military officials, mandarins, etc. are allowed to have attar of roses In their dwellings and very severe punishment Is meted out to ordimiry citizens in whose posses sion even a drop of the precious essinse is found. Headquarters For Toilet Goods We are Sole Manufacturers and Distributors of the Celebrated F 4 S TOILET CREAM COLD CREAM TOOTH POWDER and MT. HOOD CREAM Tallman & C o. Leading Druggists of Eaattr Oregon. Suspension bridges which were built in the time of the Han dynasty (202 B. C. to 220 A. D.) are still standing, striking examples of ori ental engineering skill. According to historical and geographical writers of China, it was Shang Lieng, Kaen Tsu's chief of command, who under took to construct the first public roads in the Flowery empire. At that time it was almost impos sible for the province of Shense to comunieate with the capital. Lleng took an army of 10.000 workmen and cut grea gorges through the moun tains, filling up the canyons and val leys with the debris from his excava- ! tion9. At places where deep gorges were traversed by large and rapidly flowing streams he actually carried out his plan of throwing suspension bridges, stretching fr-'m one slope to the other. These crossings, appropriately styl ed "flying bridges" by early Chinese writer, are high and dangerous look ing in' the extreme. At the present day a bridge may still be seen In tho Shense which is 4"0 reet long and is stretched over a chasm more than K'O feet deep. How those early engi neers erected such a structure with the tools and appliances at their com mand is a mystery which will probably never be explained. fflGHM lire jtM fie wrtft important autmobik imttttt have been won tn Mubeltn Ttru. Whyl In Stock by Pendleton Auto Go. Johnson St., Near Court Pendleton OLD LIX'l LIVE STOCK IN. 8URAXCE. Indiana & Ohio Live Stock Insur ance Company Of CrawfordsTtlle, Iadlana. Has now entered Oregon. Policies now good in every state In the Union. Organ ted over 25 years ago. Paid up Capital 1200.000.00. As sets over 1460,000.00. REMEMBER, this la NOT a Mutual Live Stock Insur ance company, Mark Moorhouso Company Agent, Pendleton, Or. IIS East Court BL Phone Mala si. I COLESWORTHY'S ; International Stock Food : the old reliable The best for your stock Try it VAMPIRE REVAMPED. credit upon the state. It ls a situ ation that makes progressive and pa triotic people blush with shame for Oregon. The state Is. not poor. Why should it not support its institutions of learning as do other states of the west? In the election this fall Oregon will have an opportunity to redeem Itself. If tfce people understand the situ ation they will do so. They will vote to upholl the three normal schools. Thr?e normals are needed in Oregon because the state Is so divided geo graphically that we have three dis tinct sections, the Willamette valley, eastern Oregon and southern Oregon. Then it is hMd by educators that several small normal schools are preferable to a singie normal. Al most every state in the union has more than one school. Pennsylvania has 13. Contrary to statements made by the normal school detractors they have never bpen expensive. The Ore gon normals have had but one fifth the money Washington has given her three normal schools. Should the bill for the Eastern Oregon norma! be 8dopt1 a man who pays taxes upon 11000 will be required to pay the enormous sum of five cents to the E. O. P. N. S earh year. In return he will have the satisfaction of know ing that eastern Oregon Is educating her o-.vn teachers. They will not have to go over Into Washington to secure norm.il training and to teach for three years following graduation from a Washington normal. Lot ti bak the Eastern Oregon normil and also the schools at Mon mouth and Ashland. A WHOLESOME Rt'OGESTIOX. There is much merit In a sugges tion made by William James, a writ er In the August ifffiure's. In an article headed "The Moral Equiva lent of War," Mr. James gives his Ideas of a system that would strength en the moral and physical fibre of young men. "If now," he declares, "there were, in seeing that the scheme does not carry. "Uncle Joe" Cannon does not seem to know that every dog has his day and that his day is over. It will be a hard matter for J. J. f'orbett or anyone else to arouse much enthusiasm over another fight. Pendleton is as pleasant as summer resort today. any Many feel called but few will chosen. Tn the winter it is floods and in the ::nTHr time tbe forest fires rage. SAIE TO VOTE "XO." (Madras Pioneer.) When the voters of Oregon come to east their votes on the Sth of No vember, they will be required to vote "Yes" or "No" on the division of Crook county for the creation of Des chutes county, naming Redmond as the eounty seat. The majority of the people of Crook county and of the territory embraced in the proposed new county Itself are opposed to this bill, which will ap pear on the ballot as an initiative measure. a Now. if th..- voter wants to give his neighbor in , some other part of the state a "square deal" all the time, he should at least take the- care to In form himself on these county division schemes or else do what is usually the square dear vote, "No." It is safe tj assume that all these new county ideas blossom out before there is any actual need or real de mand for a new county. It is always the ambition of Born? little town to clothe itself with the dignity of a county teat that first brings these pro posals before public notice, and to leave conditions as they are, is a safe and sensible way to vote on every one of these new county division questions. (Or, Kippered Kipling.) Some fools there were, and they play ed their stack (Even as you and I), On a large white man to defeat a black (We called him the man with the deadly whack!) But the fools now know- he could never come back (Even as you and I). Oh, the time we spent and the thoughts we lent And the weight of the gold we lack Belongs to the Jeffries who did not know (And now we know that he never could know) He never could come back. Some fools there were, and their goods they spent (Even as you and I), Reno and keno the pace they went (And it wasn't the least what they thought It meant); But a fool must follow his naturil bent (Even as you and I). Oh, the sleep we lost an l the dough it cost And the excellent things we planned Belong to the Jeff who never could come back (And now- we know he could never come back); Yes. now we understand. Anil it isn't the shame and It Isn't the blame That stings like a red hot tack; It's coming to know he never knew why (See'ng at lost, he cnub.l never know why) The deuce he-couldn't come back. N. P. Babcock. BiBsafciiWi iin nfr.VTsmffsT BUY DIRECT AND SA VE MOSEY Carloads of perfect bull ling mat ,-i i ll. cut to a hair, to lit like the paper on the w.i.l. sUitri-l daily our 5-cross panel il.."et I-,. or is t i i . - Ik st v.ilue I - v.- price, ar.l it Is only a s:unplo of !!; i:i i::y good tilings nod price-savers contained In nr eat llouue. We own ami operate our own mill in .Seattle and SAVE YOU MIDDLEMEN'S PROFITS Builders Need S This dialog Send In n list of what you need and l"t us show you in ATl'AL KK.1 1'KK.S wht.t we save you. We sell everebo.le nml s!:iji atp. where. Save middlemen's profits "FUR TlliO (II I I.I KKN'." send lor Catalogue. One price to everybody PACTS AIIOIT ROSES. June is 'he American month roses. In southern France the rose month U May; ! E-rypi It is March; in South Africa it is January. The favorite flower of the late Kine Edward was the white rose, and that U undoubtedly why It is the fashion- ! able flower in Paris this season. Originally only two kinds of roses the red moss-rose and the white "Well, Willie, I hear you have a new baby at yur house." .. "What ls it; a little. ister or broth er?" "I dunno. AH I heard was pa kick In' about it's beln' an ultimate consumer." Men's oxfords cheap at A. Eklund's. You can eliminate all if Vi !1 n rtio r 9 r CTOMArU IV 1 c k spell i i aT a i t t" r p r m " 0 m c Ol I I I- IT stomach, ver or bowel dis order by talc Inf the lilt. in '-K- 1 ;. i y V lors lumpily sZxri- It Is for '-irtfc.Vf Poor Appetite fr -'flm Indigestion. ' lra m ni n ., .1 - ," v. Diarrhoea. 1 tU ls!Lm? isfllfftri COLESWORTHY 127-129 E. Alta 1 I 4 i " s wtiii turn w -mfatit .7MuawwiaMMn saasnjsmumnmr:;ui's The First National Bank PENDLETON. OREGON Report of the Condition, June 30, 1 9 1 0 to the Comptroller of the Currency Condensed Resources Loans and Discounts Overdrafts U. S. Bo"ds (at par) Other Bonds and Warrants Banking Building Cash and Exchange Total Liabilities Capital Stock Surplus and Undivided Profits Circulation '. Due to Banks . . Deposits . . Total $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 I, G. M. Rice Cashiei of the above named bank do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. G. M. RICE, Cashier' Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 1st day of C. K. CRANSTON, SEAL ' Notary Public for Oregon TT. QUELLE Cus La Fontaine, Prop Best 25c Meals in Northwest First-class cooks and service Shell fish in season Ld Fontaine BIk., Main St. V-VtJL mLV.! Ifou make a ba 1 mlotuke uhn vn,. put off buying your coal until tha Fall purchase t NOW and seeurs the best Iiork f!prinK C(,al the mlnM produce at prices considerably lowsr than those prevailing- In Fall and Winter. By stocking up now you avoid ALL dunger of being unable to secure it when cold weather arrives. HENRY KOPITTKE Phone Main 178. vVfcM44, 60 YEARS' -r EXPERIENCE 'rMM' Copyrights Ac. Anrniip refilling n (.ketch mid ilo,rii.ll..n nint atiloklr Miennlii nir opinion fron li..fh..r u Inronllon pr..1im.lr imlpnliihln. CmnmtiKvi. urnt trra. ( iMoat buimii-t f,,r f.i-i in lint puli-nm. I Mciiia i Ukon flir.nitii i,. x t u. rcU Scientific flim'scan A htirtiom(ir lllntrtM wnoliir. I . en mlatimi of uny i-lnilllKf l..iirnl. Tortm II MUNN & Co.3ro.tw., fjew y0 J Bnmcb OBIcti. BtrBU WuhtiiiilTia; J. 0 ste fpo e r ; - i n Ioals lung