Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1910)
V- PAGE IX) in DAILY EAST OHEGOXIAX. PENDLETON, OREGON, SATTRDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1910. EIGHT PAGES P AN INDEPENDENT NEWSP. PER. normal school appropriation two years agro was partly due to the work or Dr. Cole, one of the senators from this county. This year the republi can county central committee, or at hast Its chairman, passed out cards calling for the defeat of the normal Pally, one year, by mall 5.0t ! n8ht 1,8 hote county. It may al- ?hhLbrhln''.rr: remarked that this county fail'. Published Illy. Weekly and Semi-Weekly at IVndieton, Orevron. by the CA8T OKKWOMAN l'l HLlSUlNtf hl'llSCltU'TION KATES. CO. Pally, one month, by mail 50 Dally, one year, by currier 7. Bo Dally, all aiumna. by carrier S.73 Dally, three months, by carrier l.l3 Dally, one month. ! carrier 6," Weekly, one year, by mail I..10 Weekly, aix m.mths. by mail 75 Weekly, four months, by mall fc etnl-Weekly, one year, by mall 1.30 eml Weekly, six months, "by mall 73 Semi-Weekly, (our mouths, by mall... .30 Tbe Dally East Oregonlan la kept on sale at the Oregon News Co., 3J'. Morrison street. Tort land. Oregon. Northwest News l'o.. Portland, Oregon. Chk-atro Hureau, 9oU Security Uulldins. Waahlncton. D. C, Bureau. 3ol Four teenth street. N. W. Member Vnited Tress Association. o.l to reelect Senator Smith who had fvucht ably and consistently for the normal. What can a county expect that turns down its best friends and nur tures a political machine that thinks nore of petty political revenge than it does of the educational interests of this county? EXONERATES THE CAT. Entered at the postofflce at Pendleton, Oregon, as second class mail matter. elephone Main 1 Official OltT and Crnintr Paper. A KIT OF EXPERIENCE. I have met with a good many people In jogging o'er life's varied way. I've encountered the clever, the simple, The crabbed, the grave and the gray. I have traveled with beauty, with virtue. I have been with the ugly, the bad. I have laushed with the ones who were merry And wept with the ones who were sad. One thing I have learned in my Journey Ne'er to judge one by what he appears. The eyes that seem sparkling with laughter Oft battle to keep back the tears, And long, sanctimonious faces Hide often the souls that are vile. While the heart which is merry and cheerful Is often the freest from guile. And I've learned not to look for perfection In one of our frail human kind. In hearts the most gentle and loving Some blemish or fault we can find. But yet I have ne'er found the creature So low, so depraved or so mean, But had some good impulse, some virtue, That 'mong his bad traits might be seen. Selected. Woods Hutchinson, well known r.icdical writer and formerly a resi dent of Oregon, smashes the old tra dition that cats sometimes suck the br.ath of infants. In a recent issue "C Success magazine he says: "The sole basis for this belief ap pears to be a few scattered Instances j of children having been found dead ( in bed with a cat In the room. Inas irvuch as there" are several rare con Tjditior.s which may produce sudden 4 'death in young children, without pre- vious warning, notably swelling of the v : thymus gland, and a cat is as much a . 1 part of the ordinary furniture of most 4 'houses as a chair, the relation be- tween the death of a child and the , presence of a cat is obviously no ! more than could be accounted for as ja coincidence. CatsT like "Mister ICasey," are "epicures in schlapln' " jnrjd very fond of soft, warm beds, and j this may lead them to curl up in a 4 baby's crib. If the baby happens to t 1 De very young or weak, or tne cat unusually heavy, and it should curl up on the baby's chest, the child's respiration might be seriously inter fered with. But unless the cat lay I right over its mouth and the baby ! v as so feeble, or so swathed or bound I down that it could neither cry out nor get its arms loose, it is almost that any serious, let Absolutely Pure Tho only baking powder made from Royal Crapo Cream of Tartar Ho Alum, lis Lias Phosphate WOODROW WILSON. w ..inconceivable aione, iatai, sunocauon couia occur. Dr. Hutchinson exonerates the cat I from a long standing charge. Yet the exoneration is not complete after all. CILNGING. WHERE GOOD JIEN FAIL. Good men go wrong in politics by paying no attention to who gets con trol of their party machinery and too little attention to nominations. Of ten he wakes up to find that his par ty has been mismanaged. ' This is es pecially true in the populous centers like New York. In its Progress of the World de partment the American Review of Reviews discusses this proposition and In doing so says: To the state and local bosses of the republican party, It has been very much more Important to keep In con trol of the machinery of the party than to see that a high-class succes sor to Governor Hughes should be nominated and elected. Yet the great body of republican voters in the state of New York is composed of honest men, and the kind of administration given to the state by Governor Hughes Is a thing that hundreds of thousands of republicans believe in and desire. These honest and well meaning republicans are In a large majority and ought to be able to have Influence, and at Important moments they ought to control the action of their party. But, unfortunately, they are busy men who have not found It easy to make themselves felt as against the professional politicians wko ran the caucuses and conven tions and who handle the money that is contributed from improper sourc es for selfish reasons. This Is why Governor Hughes made his insistent demand for direct primaries, and for a method in general of enabling the rank and file of a party to have due influence In the party's organization and in its selection of candidates." The criticism was Intended solely for a state that has not yet obtained the direct primary system. As a matter of fact It applies also, though with much less force, to a state that has a direct primary law. In the olden days the solid south stood against the protective tariff system and the democratic party up held states rights in preference to fed eral control. It has already come to pass that the south has Joined in the clamor for protection for south ern Industries. Those who run the iron and cotton mills of the south want to increase their dividends by keeping out foreign competition. The pineapple growers of Florida are In the same situation. Now we have the republicans of the west, or many of them at least, clamoring for state conservation in preference to federal control. They want state control of the forest res erves and state control of streams. On the other hand some very con spicuous democratic leaders are for the Roosevelt-Plnchot style of conser. vatlon. They say the only effective conservation Is federal conservation. These changing sentiments are fea tures of the gradual political realign ment that is underway. Returns show that had the good people of the east end only known it they could have saved themselves much trouble and expense. Also they could have spared Pendleton more or less anxiety. Pendleton was promised a new theatre if the cTty went wet Now let us have it. Assuredly the city is wet and besides we need a new playhouse. WHAT CAN YOU EXPECT? The Weston normal school voted down by the people of the state. So eastern Oregon will have no normal and the young people of this section who wish to teach will have to continue going to Ellensburg, Cheney and Lewlaton for instruction. However Umatilla county cannot well complain of the action taken by the rest f the state. The defeat of the The most important question confronting Pendleton Is "Can stand prosperity? now we The state that does not have a democratic governor next year will be out of date. New Jersey is the scene this fall, of a political campaign in which every citizen of the state is keenly interest ed, but not Jerseymen alone; the whole country has fixed its gaze on New Jersey as never before. The newspapers, not only of New York and Philadelphia, but throughout the union, are probably giving more space to New Jersey affairs at the present moment than in any previous cam paign of that state within the mem ory of living men. From the limbo of parochial politics New Jersey has sud denly emerged; for the first time In many years her concerns have a place in the nation's thought. This is be cause the state's most eminent citi zen has accepted the nomination of the minority party for the governor ship and is actively seeking election to that high office. From the mo ment when President Woodrow Wil son, of Princeton university, was nominated by the democratic state convention at Trenton to succeed the republican Governor Fort it was ev erywhere foreseen that the state cam paign of 1910 would mark an epoch in New Jersey's political history. This was notably an instance of the office seeking the man and very distinctly an instance of success In the search; for Dr. Wilson's equipment is excep tional, his fitness for the governnr ship is unquestioned. The fact that a man of such engag ing qualities as a leader willingly re sins from the presidency of Prince ton to challenge the supremacy of one of the most strongly intrenched par ty organizations In the country does not fall to impress itself on the Am erican imagination. It Is this that makes the New Jersey canvass Inter esting not the money that Is being spent by the "ins" or the "outs," not the well-worn campaign shibboleths of either party, not the charge of ex travagance In state administration; for all those things are taken for granted. The one thing that is new is a personality, and upon that per sonality is focused just now the at tention of the whole country. From "Woodrow Wilson and the New Jer sev Governorship " in the American Review of Reviews for November. FROM THE FARM. When the world wants good cows, horses, sheep, hens and hogs it sends out to the farms and gets them. When it wants good things to eat It writes a letter to the farmers and is never disappointed in getting just what it orders. When it want3 the choicest fruit our farms have it. If fruit is not plentiful in the East, there Is the great West to draw from. When it is looking for homes for the thousands in other lands who never knew what home really is. It sends to this great country of ours. When the world feels the need of men to do great things, it reaches out its hand to the farm, and says: "You have Just the ones we want. Send them to us! It Is a time of sore stress; do not fall us!" And from the farms a steady stream of men goes to answer the call You find them in the offices, in the factories. In the stores of the great cities. They are doing much of the world's work today, and they will al ways be doing it; for the farm grows just that kind of men. The world gets its best from the farm; and there is a-plenty left, Let's be thankful for that! From November Farm Journal. WOMAN'S INFLUENCE. For Business Use 1 -jw mm 1 w There are a great many places and occasions when the possibility of get tine extra heat immediately effects an economy by decreasing the discomfort of the worker. In the ofTice, In the early morning or late at night, before or after the steamheat is on, it is of Importance to have extra heat. In the builder's outside office, in the shipping room, in the checker's shack, on exposed lofts, in railroad stations, in studios, the ESS EKFECTI Smokeless mum Absolutely smokeless and odorless Is often necessity. It Is safe, smokeless and odorless. Apply a match, aad h gives heat quickly. With four quarts of oil it burns nine hours. Has aato-matlc-locklng flame spreader, which prevents the wick from being turned nigh enough to sdioke, and is easy to remove and crop dsci so tost me wick can be cleaned In an Instant. It has a cool handle and a damper top. An Indicator always shows the mount of oil in the font. The filler-cap it is put In like a cork In a bottle, and Is attached to the font by a chain. Tbe burner body or gallery cannot become wedged, because of a new de vice in construction, and consequently, it can always be easily unscrewed in an Instant for rewicking. Tbe Perfection Oil Heater is finished in japan or nickel. It Is strong, durable, well made, built for service, yet light and ornamental. Dtaltri Bvtryuktrt. If not at yaws, writ! far dtscriptivt circular to ikt Martst agrncy of iKt Standard Oil Company ) (Incorporated) If the women of Oregon want to vote they should let the men know about it Most people meant that this county should be wet but not too wet. CONSERVATION' OP THE CLAM. The succulent American clam is growing scarce; everybody eats him; nobody conserves him at all, says a writer In Success Magazine. State and national governments guard the fish from extinction; the lobster In dustry Is protected as if It were a ten der, helpless steel trust; the oyster is personally conducted through a peril ous infancy, but there la nothing to stand between the clam and the ulti mate consumer. From Maine to Car olina comes the sad news that the noble race of clams Is facing; extinc tion. Constant attendance at shore dinners has brought their downfall. Something will have to be done In a national, constructive, statesmanlike way If we would save our grandchil dren from clamneesness. Unless we Institute a closed season and prohibit free clamming, another generation will not know the delights of the lit tle neck In the half shell, the chow der, the baked, fried and steamed clam. The fact that women are in a period of transition, that they are Just break ing loose from the enslavement with in the four walls of the home, ex plains the many discomforts and hardships which they are forced to endure. Transition necessarily means pain and sorrow. But now that women have started on this Journey of tran sition there is no turning back. Some who object to women In men's colleges would shut the door to them, others point to the suffering they endure in the Industrial world and advocate shutting them out of in dustry also, but this cannot be done. The only thing to do is to throw open the doors the wider and let them en ter In. In Prance and Germany the many departments of Industry which are carried on by women, and which make such a large part of the life of wo men drudgery Is due to the militar ism of the countries. If women knew what militarism had done for them there would be less admiration for brass buttons and shoulder straps. The period of transition from the old Idea of woman's position to the modern one has been marked with suffering. With the Italian awaken ing, the beginning- of the Renaissance came the Idea that marriage Is aoma- thlng more than a physical and bio logical union. The Ids came that marriage means the union of two lives in all that concerns the human spirit. Is it any wonder that acute suffer ing falls on the woman as she enters new fields while still possessed of irstincts of self-abnegation, the spir it of obedience to a superior will, which she had always had? . Her strongest opponent to making a bril liant carper for herself Is the old biological idea that she should stay In her home. Take the educational world. The first step in women's education was the "finishing" school, where she was prepared properly to decorate a drawing room. For 25 years higher education has been the vogue until men are now protesting against the influx of women Into the colleges. You will find the vocational cours es crowded with men, and the cours es which deal with the cultivation of life crowded with women. Men are ashamed to come into the latter. It is the old sex spirit cropping out. In the religious world it is the same. Preachers are complaining that the churches are filled with wo men. The men are absorbed with business, which now has the same rtlative importance that militarism formerly had, and are indifferent to the church. In the industrial world which has been thrown open to women we find that women have gone into nursing, medicine, fine arts, all of which deal with the person. They are most suc cessful in things that bring Immedi ate personal approval. They are least In the activities that take Initiative and involve a long period of waiting before there Is personal recognition of achievement. Whatever makes for the equality of man and woman makes for progress. Moral equality does not mean iden tity. The greatest argument for giv ing equal political rights to both sex es is that It would help to place the relationship of men and women on an equality. Goethe said "the eter nal woman leads us ever upward and on." The eternal woman leads us upward and on, and she can take comfort in the belief that pain Is a sign of life and that life Is infinitely worth while. E. H. Griggs. DEEMED IT A TONGUE. "Tho self-made man Is splendid," said Andrew Carnegie at a dinner In Washington, "it he makes himself a mental and spiritual no less than a financial success. Too many self made men neglect the intellectual sMe, This sometimes at com mencements, for example puts them at a disadvantage. "I know of a self-made man who said at a commencement to his neph ew: "Well, Tommy, my son, what do they teach you here?" "'Liitln and Greek.' the boy re plied, 'and German and algebra.' " 'Dear me!' cried the self-made man. 'And what's the algebra for turnip?" m-J- m... ...uiii; Headquarters For Toilets Goods We are Sole Manufacturers aad Distributor of tbe Celebrated F4S TOILET CREAM COLD CREAM TOOTH POWDER ' and MX. HOOD CREAM Tallman & Co. Leadiug Druggists of Baatera Oreaoa. Blood Humors Commonly cause pimples, bolls, hives, fcwma or salt rheum, or some other form of eruption; but sometimes they exist In the syrtem. Indicated by feel ings (if weakness, languor, loss of ap petite, or yeneral deMlity, without censing any bnwklng out. T,i(.y are expelled and the whole sys tem is renovated, strengthened aad t-;red by Heed's Garsaparilla Get It today In usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. VTSsiiMiHiwTn!i? ' Pi I KntWM For Its Strength The First National Bank PUULETOX, REB0N OLD LIS ! LIVE STOCK EN grRANCK. Indiana & Ohio Live Stock Insur ance Company Of CrawfordsTtlle, larttana, Has now entered Orogon. Policies now gooi In every state In the Union. Organ sed over 16 years ago. Paid up Capital 1100,000.90. As sets over $460,000.00. REMEMBER, this Is NOT a Mutual Live kaocfc Iasur tnce company. Mark Moorhouse Company Agent, I'Ciidletoa, Or. 113 East Court aU. Ptooae Mala SI. Milne Transfer Phone Main 5 CCA Lid PROMPTLY ANS WERED FOR ALL BAGGAGE TRANSFERRING. PIANO AND FURNITURE MOVING AND HBAVT TRUCK INQ A 8PBCIALTT. CAPITAL, SURPLUS aa4 UfOIVCCD PROFITS . RESOURCES OVER . SECURITY 5450 000 000 0 .10 Orpheum Theatre J. P. MEDERNACH, Proprietor HIGH-CLASS; -UP-TO-DATE MOTION PICTURES For Men, Women and Children SEE PROGRAM IN TODAY '8 PAPER. Program Changes on Sunday's, Tuesday's and Friday's. Byers Best Floor Is made from the choioeet w treat that grows. Good bread ia asrarad when BYERS' BEST FLOUR ia used. Bra, Shorts, StMtn Rolled Barley alwaya e hand. Pendleton Roller Mills V Pendleton, Oiwgoa. . ITB QUELLE Gus La Fontaine, Prop. Beat 25c Meals in North west First-class cooks and service Shell fish in season Ld Fontaine Blk., Main St. THE PENDLETON DRUG Cft. WE DEAL H DRUBS MOT PROMISES You Make a Bad Mistake When yon pat off baring your GodJ until Fall purchase It NOW nd secure the bent Rok Springs coal the mines produce at prices conniderably lower thaa thane prevailing In Pall and Winter. By stocking ap now rov avoid ALL danger of being aa nle to soeare It when maid weather arrives. Henry Kopittke Phone Mala ITS. 60 YEARS EXPERIENCE G mm TITS on" inD Mai . Dcaieais CopvmcifTc &c Sdtwific JiBtrican. T mattraiM Hllf, IirrM ou - ir lMlia, loaraiL Ttl U tesssmw