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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1911)
PAGE FOUR. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1U. EIGHT PAGES. AN I X 1 1 K r F..N PENT NEWSrAl'EU. Pub l.h.ii t unj SitjI Wwklj it 1'en oi 'l"r.. orti'U. l)j the ' CAST OIUa.oMAN I'l'liLISUIXU CO. SVr.SCKllTlOX KATES. lmilT, one war, by mall l::V, t. nit:tt.. ! ma 1 1 u.rw mouths, by mail n( m-s:U. by mail uar. ly iarr.cr ilv'iiri.s. by tatrior t..r-e ai.'tius. by carrier ... ,u by earlier evfci. yciir. ly mall.... t-? i leiii . s-.x ni. iiibs. by mail .. (ua uiouibs. by mall. li,y la..; i:.y i ..; l'.. . a.oo i.y.- ..mi ly when they use It In person would make a mockery of the thing. It would be giving them ft present with full know ledge it coull not be util ized, nights given the Indians on st:eH a basis would pl.ie them in the same plight ns old Kl'ig Mlda who perished surrounded by gold he could not eat. If government officio's try to stop with merely proving t!-e Indians are entitled to water when it is used In pi rson they will show plainly tliey 750 lare not trying to do their duty but to ?7.-Lvol,l their dutv. It wMl show that tjtt!iile thev are sworn to s-rve the wel 1 f)0 l f.:re of the Indians they In reality .50 ili-CiNrr tailed l'resa Association. I serve those having interests that eon fliet with the rights of Mie Indians. Tte iaiiy East Orejuclan ts kept en sale! It will be an net of gnss Injustice committed because those 'niposed up on are ignorant, ilumti and helpless. Is John McCourt that sort of a man? Is the United States government that sort of a government? We shall see. t e iirv.-oti News 1.0., J-U Murrisoo s:ret. 1'i.riiand. urepn. N -r:Lrfl Nens to . Portland, Oregon. t'lir;o l.urrau, ii'U Seiiinty Pull'ltDi:. Wsihintton. l C, I'.ureau, oOl Keur teectii i-'.rect. N. W. EntfreJ at the postofru- at I'eadleton, Oregon, at wcouJclass mall matter. Teicpboue Main 1 Official City and County Paper. WHY UK SMILES. him in the Men hurrv past street And yield him no regard at all; Where those whose rr'de is great compete He has a place obscure and small; He humbly serves as best he in ay Where giants battle for suc cess. But at the end of every day He hurries home to happi ness. Where traffic roars and walls are high He earns the pittance he re ceives. And few men would be glad dened by The little triumphs he ach ieves. Denied the talents of the great. He hurries home when night arrives. To be a blissful potentate Among the ones for whom he strives. T1IKY MAY SKI: THUOKiK IT. The Portland Oregonian tries to show that the East Oregonian and other Independent papers of the state have declared against organizations for presidential candidates because they have criticised the manner in which the Taft committee was organ- ! Ized in this state. The Oregonian is a quibbler and is alraid of the truth. Xc newspaper objects or hai objected to the de lation of a Taft committee Objection J was raised because that committee ;wss brought forth by tho republican j state organization headed by Ralph There is good ground for the objec tion. The state organizat'on and Mr. Williams are supposed to represent the entire party, not any special can didate. Mr. Williams should have kept his hands off the presidential race for the present and atlowed the republican voters of the tate to ex piess their choice as called for by is IT REMAINS TO BE SKEX. Our presidential preference primary Men wonder why his look glad, Since he is poor and under paid; Obscure, hard-pressed and cheaply clad. He goes to duty, undis mayed; The glories of supreme suc cess. For when the day's work Is done He hurries home to happiness. S. E. Kiser. law. If friends of President Taft wish to Times ne the troubles from which so ..many women suffer can be relieved quickly in a perfectly safe and natural way. ine Headaches and backaches, the lassitude, the extreme nervousness and worry, the sense of misery women have, at times, show the need for proper help. But at such times Womai Only Meeds the same sort of help so many thousands of other women have needed help they have found in . Beecham's Pills. The human body is a wonderful piece of machinery all its organs sympathize with one another; if one is wrong, others will be wrong also. On the other hand, if your digestive organs are right, your liver and bowels active, all the rest of the system will work properly and all functions be performed naturally. It's no trouble to find out the good for you in the harmless, effective remedy At all druggists, 10c, 25c Direction of tpecial value to women come with every box. fiat Cuba must be evacuated by Jan-jfiom the flames of the traditional ' sented to the country a plain state ,J ,. , riaues. nient unfolding the meaning and pur- 1U0 Limed S-tates cruiser Yosem- The Bertillion system and the pt.se of that plan, In terms intelligible in- mnuu ui nuam oy lypnoon. rigues ganery ana tne police blotter to the ordinarv neonle Kiep in careiui seclusion tne records i!ii)4 Russian scouting attacks in dicate Kuropatkin is. Peeking weak sp-its in lines of Japanese in order t' organize In his behalf there can be 1 em er a "pvy blow; news from Port- ni.1 njri.uuii. .ui t-iiii u'lyuiie oujec. i long ! Arthur 1, m oK o.ti ...lul if the friends of La Follette organize to promote his candidacy. It is but a sensible thing for presidential can didates to have organizations. But the republican state organiza tion has no business to mix In the af fair as it did. It Is supposed to be impartial. When Mr. Williams named the Taft committee and committed the republican organization of the slate to the Taft candidacy he did a highhanded and Improper thing. It was a revival of assembly methods and deserves a swift rebuke. The Portland Oegonian's replies to the criticisms made by this paper are weak and insincere. They are made on the assumption that most of the voters are asses and wont be able to see the difference between a Taft It it proves true that the ruling of the supreme court in the Montana case applies to the Umatilla reser vation, then the government will have an opportunity to do something really worth while by iu local wards. With water available for the In- i .... . . . j twMiiumee luimeri as it snoukl Have dian lands it should be possible ,je(.n formed and the committee through use of the flood waters to ir-jb.ought into existence by Ralph Wil- iiKtfie a large portion of the reser- Hams, vation. This would make it possible jut i'r an muian to make a livlihood ofr f.,,, Ms allotment. It would mean th I salvation of the redmen. the voters mav not be such as the Oregonian thinks. They saw through the assembly scheme anil they soaked it swift antf hard. They But no suc h results can come about I may do the same with Mr. William's unless the government goes clear I Personally conducted assembly, through with the performance of its j . duty. It will not do at all to stoo. a-! WHAT WILT. THEY MO? John McCourt seemingly wants to ttop, with merely showing that the Indians are entitled to water for their land when they farm their land in person. That would make a farce of the thing. Few of the present Indians are farmers. They are but a few years removed from savagery. They know but little about agriculture. They know still less ibout engineering. They have neither the skill nor the money to build "torage reservoirs, construct irrigation systems and get their land to producing as it may be rcade to produce. Many of the tribesmen on the local reservation are old and feeble. Some tiay those now young and strong will be old and feeble. The old cannot work. Neither can the squaws and the ehiidren. They must rent or sell their land if they aro to get anything tut of it. jo rr,,g about tho results that The personalities involved in the rr.ayorality race are not of as much importance as some other consider ations. What will the mayor, who ever it may be, do after he has been elected? What, for instance, will he do about the price of gas? Will he strive to secure for Pendleton the same rate that prevails in Walla Walla and which should rightfully prevail here? With winter now up- n us this is a timely question. Where do you stand, gentlemen? An attempt made to assissi- i:ate Francis J. Heiiey, the prosecutor of the San Francisco grafters, w.is made in the court room in that city. 1909 More than 300 iives lost by f-n explosion in the St. Paul mine at CV.erry, 111. A sensational trial for murder of Mme. Sr-inheil in Pari:,, ei.ded in her acquittal. PIHUCITY. There are many people who will wonder if It would not be better for India if King George would devote that $25, 000.000 to feeding the na tives during times of famine. The snow has been recalled. XOVKMIJKIt 13 IX HISTORY. 1804 Three hundred slaves were should .,. v . . . , cu it me nujjyarus at Ant- rr.OUia if- brought flhrmt nr.f.r, V,a!.. . I - . . ...... j i. r i j, . t IIUJII. U12 Napoleon, on his retreat from Moscow, quitted Smalesnk for ii'ifrw.iiun u,f. gove-nment should act for the Indians and reclaim their lands or else jt shoulj permit the In d'ans to rent or sell their lands to white men the water rights going v-ith the land. For the government to rule that the Indians are entitled to water on- SURE! You can keep the stomach sweet, the appetite good, the bowels regular By the Use of HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS Krasnoy, his army now reduced to 43,000. IS 17 Willam Wirt, of Virginia, became attorney-general of the Unit ed States. 1833 Remarkable meteoric phe nomena, which extended over a large portion of North Americk. 1839 Town of Kelat. In Beloochls lan, taken by the British army. 1854 Great tempest raged over the Black Sea, which continued several days. 1870 Prussians occupy Dole. 1884 A treaty of commerce be tween the United States and the Spanish West Indies concluded with Spain. 18 87 London's "Bloody Sunday." 1889 Opening of Catholic Univer sity of America, at Washington, D.J C, 1890 United States cruiser Yosem Ite wrecked at Guam by typhoon. 1890 Duke of Manchester on1 Mips Helen Zimmerman of Cincinnati, Ohio, married in Indon 1898 United State notlffc-d Spain (Atlanta Constitution.) , Governor Woodrow Wilson, of New Jersey, recently told a large audience at the University of Wisconsin that the most effective remedy for evil po litics is publicity, and that the school house is the basis of all modern po litical reform. In the two issues to which he ad dressed his theme, Governor Wilson was unquestionably correct. It is only within the last decade and a half that we have fully appreciated the power or the fearless and Independent newspaper as a cleansing agent in po litics, though its work is not yet lull!' done. His other contention, tha touching the school room as the bst (inter from which to radiate upright political influences, is also sound. Reiteration and exposure today makes harder the labor of the demagogue and the agitator. Hut if such fillis ter forces are to be permanently driv en from public affairs, and the citi zens made to realize that his civic vigilance must never flag, it is In the impressionable minds of the younger generation that the seed must be sown. , Governor Wilson might have gone a step farther, and given publicity cred it for being the greatest moral anti septic of our day. In crime, In com merce, in civic uplift, in social cor ruption the spotlight of the newspa per is the one strongest factor for the purging of wrong and error, and the substitution of right and a correct perspective. Burns sang, "The fear o' hell's the hangman's whip to keep the wretch in order," but the fear of newspaper exposure is probably a more potent deterrent upon the large and small evildoer than even the shrinking of great and little criminals. But the newspaper throws buck the cur tain so that all the world may see whether the o.fender is a crooked P litician, u murderer, a bigamist, a torger or a bank robber. Reporters and editors, being human, fall oc casionally into error. But no sum mary of the effect and influence of their craft would be impleto if it dhl not take Into consideration the force of the newspaper us a moral and social propy lactic. WHAT IS IT? (San Francisco Examiner.) The National Monetary Commission . nearing the end of its four years of existence. It has done some ex cellent work in the way of investi gations In Europe and Americu, and has published a library of informa tion on the theory and practice of fi nance and banking. But it has not yet made clear to the country Just what it is driving at. Ex-Senator Aldrich, the chairman of th's commission has made a great many speeches before association of bankers, but he has never taken the puVIc fully into his confidence. The commission is now traveling about the country, offering freely to all comers a chance to pass criticism on the "Aldrich plan" but it has never pre- For more than two years of the life of the commission Mr. Aldrich spoke or its projects only In ways of general exhortation; and up to a year ago he said that he and his commission had not arrived at any particular solution of the problem In hand. iast t etiruary the scheme for a 'Reserve Association" was made pub lic. The public was told that it was merely u "tentative" proposal. Mr. Aldrich prosecuted his banking stu dies In Europe last summer and it was afterward given out that the "lie serve Association" plan had under gone "modifications." The nature an 1 extent of these "modif Icatlons'' are not matter of general public know ledge. "The Examiner- respectfully reom mends to the commission that It should not only brink Its proposals down to date, but should also explain and ex pound thenw In non-technical langu age, suitable to the understanding of average men. ISIS 7C," I J ' 'nriilf f n II 1 1 K, 3 J 1.1 I ri ; Hotel St. George GEORGE MAUVKAU, Proprietor. European plan. Everything first- class. All modern conveniences. Hot water heated throughout. Rooms-en suite with bath. Large, new sample rooms. The 'Hotol St. George Is pro nounced ono of the most up-to-date hotels of the Northwest. Telephone and fire alarm connections to office, and hot and cold water running In all rooms. ROOMS $1.00 and $1.50 Block and a half from depot. See the big cloctrlc sign. First-class Grill and Cafe In connec tion A La Carte. ' When you wani Tins :AUTO CAB: PHONE MAIN 408. The OREGON MOTOR CO. : 315 E. COURT ST. A Young Grafter. Stranger Hoy, will you direct me to the nearest bank? Street Gamin I will for a shilling. Stranger A shilling: In't that too much? Street Gamin Bank directors al ways get big pay, mister. Til-Hits. Price Comparison Alwiivs makes friends, for tlio (JoMen Ttnle store. Just a few items to set you thinking: Corduroy Pants, oilier stores cliarjrp $3.00, our prkv $1.08 Heavy IJililied Wool Underwear, rarinetit 9S Heavy Weijrlit, TJililied Fleece Lined Underwear, garment 40 Heavy Wool Shirts, the warm kind . 98 Heavy Kihhod Wool Sweater Coats onlv 9S Golden fiule Slore WE LEAD OTHERS FOLLOW The Pendleton Drug Co. It In business for "Your Good Health" REMEMBER, THIS WHEN YOU HAVE PRESCRIPTIONS, OR WANT PURE MEDICINES HEADQUARTERS FOR Toilet Goods We are Sole Manufacturer and Distributors of th Oelebraied, F TOILET CREAM COLD CREAM TOOTH POWDER and MT. nOOD CREAM. Tallman & Co. Leading Druggists 0f East ern Oregon. . Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard J. A. BORIE LUMBER CO., Props. JUST RECEIVED Carload of Cedar Posts and two carloads of Cement. All orders promptly filled. Phone Main 7 Large and Complete Line of Lumber Carried. ST. PAUL'S SCHOOL I Opens Sept. 14$ Boarding and Day School for Girls. Primary, Intermediate, Ac- ? aderaio Special and Post- I Graduate Courses. Depart- X menta of Music, Expression Z and Art PERSONAL ATTENTION REFINING INFLUENCES THOROUGH WORK t Nettie M. Galbraith t 4. ri uiuutti L WALLA WALLA, WASH. Z MMIIIIIIIIIMtllW DR. GRAY THE PAINLESS DENTIST. NOW AT THE BOWMAN HOTEL $ WILL REMAIN ANOTHER WEEK. The Dr. has already operated SB upon numbers of Pendleton's citizens, all of whom will tell you that he does exactly as he a claims - i