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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1910)
PX.E FttCR DAILY EAST OREGON' I A V, PENDLtrTO.Y. OKEGOX, 1 rKsllAV. XOVCMbtlU 15. 1910. motet PAGtea S I.MJEl'KNLiEST NKWSPal'CR. Pvkllalied lal!y. Weekly and 8ml Weakly at 1 D.l.Hon, Urrguo, by ta eUST OKL.JoNIA.V l l HUSH l.j CO. Ult.lUlT10. RlTLh. one year, by mall $5.00, l'allv. three mtmh. h mail -". uiooiua. oj man z.ti I -any. one montb. by mail 'ally, one year, by carrier ally, all niontu. Uf tarrler Ially, three luonthn. by carrier ially. one month. Iiy carrier Wek!y, one rear Ey mail elly, mi motittM. by ball WaeaW. fur munitit. by mall ml Weekly, one tear, by mall eml Weekly, mi niontha. br mall.... fcemMVet-My. four m.otha. by mall... .So , T M : 3 75 1 Wo 1 5' 1.5o t. .50 ; Tb lull? Kat Orot.nlan la kept on sale at the r-t:.n N'e to., 22V Mjrrtaon arret. Portland. Oregon. Nortbwwt -eara u . I'ortlanit Oregon. nl. air., I'.ureau. Security flail i'uit Waablnrt.n. I. , Kun-ao. .VU Four- "entii street, X. W. Member I'nltey lria Aseuclatlno Entered at the p.t.ifflre at !'nii!eton. ! nreon. aa aerond class mall matter. telephone M,in t Ofnrlal Pity and Conntr Taper CUNION LABEL WOMEN OF THE EAST. a Veiled women of the East, what thoughts arise Behind the guarded splendor of your eyes? Does that great racial Impulse to be free Surge In upon you like a storm at sea? Or has tradition gained com- plete control Of yearning heart and outward reaching soul; And given the tragic dullness of content, To check your spirit In Its up- ward bent? Veiled women of the East, your veils were wrought By Centuries of misdirected thought; But now the old world Hghts Itself; and all The binding fetters and the veils shall fall; The slave must rise, and claim the queen's estate Man's mental comrade and his equal mate. Not till all women find this sec- ond birth. Can God be wholly glad made the earth. Ella Wheeler Wilcox. OX PROBATION. According to a news story In one Cf the Portland papers the saloon men of that city are planning for an open town. They appear to think ; pleasant notoriety every time they that they, the liquor men, won a vic-.iveet for the annual struggle? If so tory In the recent election and that j tuen it will not be long until the they should be allowed to say how , --port must be abandoned, the saloon business shall be conduct- j Following the big V. of O.-O. A. C. d in this state. jsame Saturday riotous scenes occured This Is a splendid way for saloon j in the quiet little city of Corvallis. One men to bring about the repeal of the t university man was knocked uncons home rule amendment, if Indeed thaticious while another was given somo Amendment Is not already worthless j tonsorlal work gratis. University because of its ambiguouB wording. 1 1 .en say that the agricultural college It would be the rankest sort of folly j students were bad while the O. A. C. for Portland, Pendleton or any wet j ir. n retaliate by saying that the other town to permit anything like a wide ' fellows were as blamable as they, open saloon system. To take su..h al man who should probably be . course would be to abuse the home ;f ' risureJ more than anyone else is the rale privilege and would be a forcible ' argument for the repeal of that am endment two years hence. In the late election the home rule amendment did not have a heavy majority even though this was a "wet year." There are reasons for believing that should an effort be made at the next election to repeal the home rule amendment and re turn to county option it would be suc cessful. This in spite of the fact that the principle of home rule is sound. The danger for home rule lies in .. fact thi in Oreeon the country vrte holds the balance of power. This , . , year many country people voted with , the anti-prohibitionists in favor of allowing cities and towns to govern themselves with reference to the li quor traffic. They did this relying upon the assurance of the home rule association that the saloons would be r.gldly regulated. During the corn Ins; two years the home rule policy will be on trial. Should it fall to work satisfactorily It i almost cer tain that the amendment will be re pealed. That the amendment would have "rougher sledding" should It he put to a vote again may also be seen from an analysis of the vote in Umatilla county. The official count shows that In this county exactly BOO peo ple who voted upon the governorship did not vote upon the home rule amendment. A total of 4364 votes were cast upon the governorship while only 3854 voted upon the home rule amendment. In this county only 3870 voted upon the subject of pro hibition. For the most part the people who failed to vote are country people of dry tendencies who refrained from taJda any positive stand this year. Few voters In the towns and cities re fused to pass upon the liquor ques tion because an effort was made to ret the wet vote out If Umatilla county may be taken as m standard then over ten per cent of the people of the state refused to hibition this year. Those people may Induced to vote two year hence. ow they will vote will depend large ly upon the ort of saloon regulation have !n the Interim. If thf-re waa ever a time when the liquor business In Oregon should be eonflnej to decent and legitimate . i .iiii. i It la now. INFANTILE PARALYSIS. I Infantile paralysis has been a source i of much terror to the motherhood of ur.try during the past few 'rths. The rt-fore those who fear tl-is disrate will rejoice to know that :he pijmlc always subsidt-s with the ?;rst sharp frost. That this strange and baffling dis- ifoe of childhood U not a modern all i rm-nt Ind is not confined to this coun- ,ry is shown by facts presented by I Pr. J. B. Huber In the November Re view of Reviews, Before 1907 epidemics of infantile : . raiysis were rare In this country'. Thi-re was one In New Orleans In 1M1: and again, about thirty years at' ', the disease was pronounced, but was otherwise not especially noted until the beginning of the present century. There was a marked epl- : rale in Sweden in 1903; two In Aus. tr. lia in 1903 and 1908; and an ex- t r.sive epidemic in Prussia In 1909. is not likely that other European 'ccuntrles have wholly escaped. The - disease has for several years past bfen prevalent In Scandinavia. During the past four years infan- tile paralysis has prevailed through lout our country and probably but .'fi-.v states have been altogether ex- 'empt; Cuba has also been visited. In ja single epidemic which visited New jTork City in 1907 2,500 cases were j reported. The southern Hudson re- g!n, with the surrounding lowland I sections, suffered also. There were In (t":at year, moreover, cases In 138 of the 35 cities and towns of Massa chusetts, the Infection having been relatively much more prevalent In small towns than in the cities and rTge towns. The disease In Its epi demic form Is emphatically one of hot weather, prevailing most In July ' August, September arid October. Cas He es have been noted to develop after W :i hot Arv "Knell " Vevertheless It ' ' I seems warm countries do not suffer -as much as those more northerly. TOO MICH NOTORIETY. Has football In Oregon come to such a stage that the two big colleges of the state must be subjected to un- lellow wno wen' and tola- iJotn institutions have gotten some un favorable advertising from this affair and many people will misunderstand the thing. Those who oppose foot fall will now find especial pleasure in pointing out the degenerating ef fects of that sturdy college sport. The Portland Oregonlan Is still harping about plurality nominations under the direct primary law. The Oregonlan would like to return to the convention system and have nomlna- tlon8 made a bU" 8maUer number, on man or a ,Utle rouo who meet in me i&w onice oi some puouc service corporation. Joe Cannon has been roasted to a frazzle and has been taken out of the box, to use some baseball lingo. We will now see what sort of a twlrler la Champ Clark of Missouri. Here's hoping that new theatre and those other skyscrapers do not prove mere illusions of the day after. Pendleton is the winter resort of eastern Oregon. Mixed but Logical. One day a farmer drove Into town with a load of produce and spent the rest of the day and part of the night with convlval companions. On his way home he fell asleep, and his wa gon came In contact with a tree by the roadside, startling the horses In to a burst of speed. They broke away and went blattering down the road. The farmer slept on. He was thus found next morning at daylight by a stranger on horseback. "Hello!" called out the horseman. "Who are you and what are you do ing hereT The farmer peered up and down the road in a dazed way. "Well," he said, "my name Is Rogers and I've lost a blamed fine span of horses." Then he got down from his seat and Inspecting the vehicle. "And If I ain't Rogers," he added, "I've found a blamed fine wagon." Everybody's Maiaxlne. "Why do you Invariably take taxlcab when you're drinking?" Tli 111 atwava mhn ma Inatant. Pillil Absolutely Pure Tits only baking powder tnada from Royal Crape Cream of Tarter Ha&Iuai.MoLirns Phosphate THE WEST IX ART. (Pittsburg Gazette-Times.) Despite the pretensions of the Eaat. It seems that love of art has its true home in the West. There is an ar ticle In the current Century which Is profoundly significant, after John W. Alexander's recent praise of Pitts burg as an art center. The author of that article was told recently that nine-tenths of the Americans studying art In Paris came from west of the Mississippi. No fewer than 1500 pupils were enrolled at the Chicago Art Institute last term, and the total attendance was 2637. The Pennsyl vania Academy for Fine Arts held an exhibit recently, and over 30 per cent of the artists represented came from the West or the South. In Chicago a society has been organ ized called the Friends of American Art, the 142 members of which have each pledged contributions of $250 a year for five years to buy American painting for the Chicago Art Insti tute's collection. Facts like these show that this Western love of art is no dilettante pretense, but rests upon solid appre ciation and enthusiasm. On the show. ing of the article It permeates all classes from the newsboy to the fi nancial magnate. A lad of 9 years having won a prize, was given his choice of a picture or cash. He chose the picture. "I can sometime earn $10," he said, "but I never could have got that beautiful picture." A worthy counterpart of this boy Is found in that Chicago Maecenas who died not long ago and left $1,000,000 in trust, the interest to be used In purchasing works of sculpture to adorn the city. The oldpr communities of the East may have become blase, or have lost their sense of Jieauty In a sordid com mercialism. The West comes to the worship of beauty with all the enthu siasm and virility of buyant youth. "There Is today In the West," says the writer, "a hunger for art In Its vary ing forms of expression that the East has never experienced." And it might be added that this Is one of the most hopeful and gratifying signs of these materialistic times. Christian SoUllces. Helen Philbrook Patten of Pitts burg said at a recent dinner, apropos of a grafting politician. "What an excuse he offered! It was so ingenious, so unsatisfactory an excuse, it made me think of a little Xliddletown boy. "One Sunday morning, on my re turn from church, I saw this little boy playing with tin soldiers on the sidewalk. " 'Tommy,' I said, 'don't you know It's wicked to play with soldiers on the Sabbath?' ' " 'But, you see, ma'am,' Tommy ex plained, 'these soldiers is the Salva tion Army.' " Madness comes with a better nader- atar of the transient aatnre of the physical ilia which vanish be reswr e forts gentle .forts t efforts rightly directed 1st, it by the pleasant laxative rem wtr Srraff ef Figs and Elixir of Seaaa. bs beneficial elects are due te the t It is the eae remedy which inters si eUaallneea without feMlbatfug the organs oa wbloh ft To get its beneleial efaots at bur the genuine sasasfsatssrsd by fee CsMfonua rig Syrup Cm. For Rent Store Room now occupied by Eikrs Uusic llouso 813 Mi St. Tour Little ones m i ght need your, MOWEY rnSOME PUT IT IN If you vftre to die today woulJ you leave lehinl helpless little fhiltlron '. The ONE way to keep them from need is to SAVE l'AKT of the money you make. Plant it in our bank; it will prow. We will pay you 4 per cent interest on the money you put in our bajik and compound the interest every six months. THE American National Bank Pendleton. Oregon UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY "Make Way for Lllxrty." A fond mamma had found occas ion during the morning to reprimand her small daughter with more than usual severity. In the afternoon the little girl sat on the sofa staring va cantly out of the window, apparently wrapped In meditation. The mother relented and, coming over to the side Mother's remain a l-rcp-i-cs -tiry cor. Eivctl nv.: vriih no j Friend Is U3cd before the coming of bz'ny, and the healthy woman can healthy mother. It is the only remedy that perfectly- and thoroughly the S75tora for hca!ifc7 n:(rcrhocd, a;:d brings about a- natural and r.vijr-.'icn of tho term. Wcmen who ulo IIotLer's friend are always rh i: Tjri'i'i vfcen tl-.a little om arrive.;, r.nd recover more quickly, and il cC. c. J, cr circuio trou'olca. Every expectant Mother should safeguard her tcr-l'h Try v.:'.ri I'c'I-''b Triend, tiuz yr-:r".r;7 !:tr rhyvlcal condition for tho hiur of Motherhood. This ncdiclno is for snlo at drug stores. Write for free bock for expectant mothers. BEADFEELD EEOrlTOrt CO., Atlanta, Ga. Raincoats, Overcoats, Leather Coats, Sheep Lined Coats in fact every kind of coat such as you need right now or are apt to need during the winter. Size 34 to 50 $ 1 .50 and Up UORKKJGMEN'S CLOTHING GO. Less Expense Makes Our Prices Lower Orpheum Theatre J. P. brXDsHlXACH. rroprletor HIGH-CLASSi UP-TO-DATE MOTION . PICTURES For Men, Women and Children SEE PROGRAM IX TODAY 'S PAPEIt. Program Change, oa Sunday's, Tuesday's Mad Friday a Byers Best Flonr DAY THE BANK of the little girl, ; i : c J her hand on tho child's shoulder and asked: "What are you thinking about, dear?" "I "uz Jus' flnkln.' " said the little girl, " if I want six or eight brides maids " Everybody's magaaine. "She has a model husband. "What? 1910 or 1911." The bearing of clldrcn Is frequently followed, by poor health for the mother. This supreme crisis of life tndizg her physical system unpre pared for the demands of nature, leaves her with weakened resistive powers and soxothr.es chronic ail ments. This can Vo avoided If Is made front the ctoiceot Trbeat that grows. Good bread is Msnrad wtasa DYERS' BEST FLOUR mi umL Bra, Shorn, Sfcrn Rolled Bariey always hand, Peadleton Roller Hills Headquarters Fqr Toilet Goods We are Bole Manafactnren and Distributors of the CMrbrattd F & TOILET CREAM COLD CREAM TOOTH POWDKTf and MT. HOOD CKKA M Tallman & Co. Leadluc Druggists .of Esstora Urns ob. , OLD IJ.V '. LITE 8TOCK IN SURANCE. Indiana & Ohio Live Stock Insur ance Company Of CrswfordiTlllo, Has mom entered Oregon. Policies bow gooj In every stat in the Union. Organ ted over 16 years age. Paid up Capital 1200.000.09. As sets over 40,000.00. REMX34UER, this la NOT a Mutual Live-stock Iasur knee company. Mark Moorhouse Company A grill, PiMitlltnoa. Or. 119 Ka Coaft at. Pboa Mala M. Milne Transfer Phone Main S CALLS PROMPTLY ANS WERED FOR ALL j BAOOAOE TRANdriRRINQ. I PIANO AND FURN1TURK MOVINO AND HSAVT TRUCK 1 I.NO A SHCIALTT. 1 vi aninj 1 The QUELLEl I Cus La FortLaine. Prrtn. W . -. -i-- w I best ZJc Meals in North - wesi I First-class cooks and service Shell fish in season I Li Fontaine BIk., Main St. THE PENDLETON DRUG CO. WE DEAL II DRUGS I0T PROMISES You Make a Bad Mistake Whi yon put off buying your Coal. until Fall purahaaa It NOW and secure the best Rook Springs coal the mines prodaoe at pilars considerably lower tltaa those prevailing la Fall am4 Winter. . By stocking ap aaw yoa avoid ALL danger of being Baa able to eeaure It wbea aoid weather arrive. Henry Kopittke Pfaoae Mala ITS. aV40. 60 YEARS' tV EXPERIENCE ..a aaiNa rrr?vv- CoV(C.VT8 &S. At al.iaatf Start. m aHr, UaaaMa 1 J MLOTTO aaraata aaaaia a ikatah aa Mr4M.a at Eair armrtaia air ..in., tio iimw u ! atak.klf aMBkl. C'.aiaani.a aaaa.anaiiiwasaaaWaj. WtVIIIK aa ratai.ta MM fraa. t4mt a.r l.r ( MIMH. a i7io4 mmm ailfia, wli.nt . m a-a a aa aar .M..at. 1..4. s "V. It? BlUafawMaaar 'H 9 Pit a.ia . H.x V. race poa either home rule or pro ly ..