Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 27, 1900)
they measure and compare their elders. Hear a group of young'girls, whose fresh youth one would think ought in the matter of their most tender ami sacred affections to be as free from sordid instinct as from the taint of a gndlels cynicism, ami yon will find that they have their price, ami an not, to be had without It any more than a Circassian slave in the market of HftVf yon a relative or friend in the Iinni t L . i "J wnnm ... id sniiti b jrui) . ,l ..A GREAT SALE.. ii Silverware, Carvers and Chafing Dishes. Christmas Present Bagdad. "Go where von may, talk wltl whom vou will with leleravnien esti mating the promise of a field for Of ribbon remnants at The MaRnot Cash Storo. Now is the time to buy your ribbons for X mas anil Th; Magnet is the place. Somr marvelous bargains there, Ribbons of all shades, lengths and widths for little money. Come early and get your choice. spiritual iah.ii. with women rating the claims of other women upon their social recognition, with the heads of great unlversitie parnlyred with fright leat the indiscretions of some plain spoken professor who tells his age tin truth in an hour when if sorely needs to hear it shall cut down the revenues Nothing would pkn.Ro them more than a PRICES ARE LOW. QUALITY HIGH Cull in and oxmninc my stock tonne buying holiday prt'Bonts PENDLETON BLANKET OK AN INDIAN ROBE THE MAGNET CASH STORE Clements &. Wilson. Court and Cottonwood THURSDAY, DECEMBER 27, WOO. pass on. Touches of ita nrci' wn in the most iinexjiwt"' places. It Wlltailltlll Ittilf a thousantl times, in tht' MUBtlMI shapes and iittitwles it assumes. Kverv person, nlaee, happeniiiK or DAILY. WEEKLY AND SKM-WUUtLTIfthtBOt has its poetical side. The suhjei-t matter for it exists, evsrywhere BY TNI Haet oreironlati Publiahtnir Compinj PI-NDL1IT0N, ORLviON. daily si'fcwmmoN b.tv One topv P1" " ' . I v id Ail Om cc,v zir. Month. Ir mail r nti, tv i atnf i rinttoB 1 a I . V J ; i inffU lunhi iMBlh t WOtm BIPTIon KAl I) . (me copy on vfai (mt copr at monta. TiUI aula. npitMi Single mnbcri WIIKLY St'MCaiPTION RATI) i DM t opy M yetr 0 tovr auAnoniht Tnal I'ltmnPtlun fcaflecopy ADViHTItlMi. a A TBS : I On. inch, n ltt. In S.rot-We.klr p.. month , U.. iitch. o, I.... In rlailf Lr reionth 1 wo nxHi. ne Im.. in li.u r an 1 tkeekl, pi tnotitli . O.er tl.rM In, hc, 1mit.. Week ly. p., larh per moiitti . I tj (Her three l.r.e. ll.il v. per in. n per innnlh . .... a el tivn ihr.irM.h..tn li.ilT.ni1 Weakly, per Inch per month , -a On. tr.cn. r leal, til W eekle per tai'iith . aa l.er thrrettacliM. tit W..kiT. per lih per month . ...ITS O.ef thr. inch... in 1 ue. . I v niur c I Semi vke.kky , pet in It p.f tuonlK I Daily, twit I ton . pa . Lax. I ootket, t.n I aileeeliMin.nl. In Semi-Weeku wkly .ti.fi . e.cli inle.iii I Inw. it. -er ilea, each inertioti. WHY IS CHURCH-UOINC. ON THK WANK' Tho miniitcr of Cleveland, Ohio, KrowinK alarmed at the diminished attendance at church, have resolve I lo bold a week of secret prayer ami ex hortation meeting behind closed doori, ac a last effort to revive interest in church services. Cleveland in a plendid city of 400,000 inhabitants. It is a business city. siierh resi dence city, a city of schools, colleges, churches, com mere ia I institutions and moral atmosphere second to MM m the United States. Its population may be said to be typical of American cities of like characteristics. Its likes and dislikes may Is- logically taken as fair types of the likes ami dislikes of ot.'.er communities, of similar sur roundings. It is a representative city, clean, business-like, progressive, intellectual, full of Uie active ii f the American. Its educational facilities are unrivalled. Its .-pulpits are oc cupied by some of the brainiest men among the American clergy. Its popu lation is up to the average of all cities of its proportions, in mental ami moral tone. Its record of crime is not discouraging. Its social air compares favorably with that of other tirst-rate American cities. This alarm expressed i y thu clergy of Cleveland should in- considered by every thinking man in Christendom. It should cause deep and earnest in .juiry in every Cbristian community in the land. The conditions in Cleve land are not abnormal. They probably represent conditions everywhere in civilised society, where a like national faith prevails. To dis cover why church attendance should be on the waue should be made the mission of everv communicant. The vast religious army in the United Htates comprises 1.10,000 active ministers of the gospel of Christ. It has 10,000 church buildings, Hcattered to everv hamlet in the nation, ami ita membership includes iS.OUl 000 soldiers of all denominations. It ia the most gigantic organisation on earth, devoted to human salvation and the rercun of the tvayward. For 1U00 years Christianity liar been beat' ing through thr wildernesses ol the world, carrying its niettsage ol light ami love tn every race. The greatest minds in the worltl are allied to ita cause. The foremost men of all ages have advocated its U-uete, and the kings, princes and rulers of earth have nforced its laws with enthusiasm ami eal. Its spread over the world lias leeii the wonder of the Christian era. Its civllisiug influences are found be neath anil arouud every achieves. m of note in human history, since ita advent. At the close of this eventful century, in the light of the spleudid triumph of man, why should there be one civilised community alarmed at the waning seal of its adherents. Ameri can society is susceptible of every good influence, it responds to every worthy cry. It yields to every elevating agency. The wortiiy of every cause are crowned with its Jove and its laurels. The churches of Cleveland must turn their eyes inward the churches of the world must do likewise. Selfishness and greed are the armed Uruaaaiers of this age. Mankiml must he aware of them. The church has conquered, and will do so again. If we can hut turn upon it the lens of the poetic understanding it will hlopsom in glory Before us lies a little volume of verse, "The Path of (told," bv Mrs. Carrie make Morgan, born of the genius and art of the West. Its touch is tpyical of the 'West. Its under cur rent flows through every Western life anil it is Western thought, Western legend and Western beauty given true utterance and interpictation. "I'osst'.Mng little inaketh no man poor; III. poverty U In .tealrlnn mor " The Kast has furnished most of the American poetic product ; its people, places, tragedies, events and environs have Iteen sung the worltl over. But the rising star of Western enlighten ment i throwing shafts across the con tinent; in the inspiring themes of Western settlement, heroism, legend and romance is found a vastness of poetic sentiment, unrivalled in empire Mildtag. Its day is dawning; the tluih of promise gilds its skies. Around a Western altar will gather year by year, the multiplying votaries of Western literature. New Kng land lyrics will be rivalled in sweet ness and worth by songs- of the sunset shore. The school of Kastern songsters will be matched hjf a rising Lost from the West. NOTE AND COHHIHT. The l'.nalish in Alrica ilon l seem to know enough to "get awity from Da wet. The football bovs can isjint with pride to their scars. They will have these evidences, at least, of having uttended school, once. So I'addy Hyan is dead, too. Well, pugilism is one ol our ilisappearing CnaraaMriSIlCS, ami so we will semi our veterans on to the next frontier, where thev mav "shine" a little while. It a- I iotas I hv the American peo ple that they would get a canal of their own through Nicaragua in the near future, hut from Pauncefote'a recent doctoring ol the subject, it looks list- thev m hi Id have to swallow a little more Hay. 1 iii-graiiln-r- -I ri ki-n ili have a teudeuiv to promote science. The rai roads will adopt wireless telegraphy as a means of sell-ueleuse. A little boy looked clown a f ua (Tht- luirrtl was empty, Ulls); The) neighbor saw an angel form HurtiiTnc (illroy'i kits! Paris fs short in her exposition ac count. Paris is at fuull for this her self. There were enough American dudes there, readv to have their I pulled, to have covered all deficits rant couM have reachcil them, to sav nothing of hei 71 ' Tin- i it cut and it is not in the United Htates which has not regis tered a kick about its census returns, ia New Jerusalem. But perhaps it is out of Merriam's jurisdiction Aside from her smallpox, Japanese labor ami decaying sugar beet pulp Oregon is soon to no aftlictutl with a series of senatorial pains and a county seat sore, The weather in Washington city is usually too suggestive about this time of the year, to allow of much senti ment in favoi of the lobbying brewers' association. They might present their case with success about August 1, when tin- legislative thirst is 110 in the shade. of the college it is no miittei ; Un commercial question is at the bottom of it, and decider- usually all the others. "We read the other day of n woman at the horse show whose attire was a dress made of the skins of unlrnrn lambs. What do vou think of such a thing? Is not tin- a relic of barbarism? "The situation, grave anil threaten ing as it is to all tnat is best in a nation's life, is the result of causes that are not far to seek. They are' to be found in the spirit of the ago, in the condition- of our national life anil in tho standard of our personal values. "If material wealth be the end of being, if accumulation he theworthie-t aim of human ambition, if the palaces or the buying of legislatures tie the final and highest distinction possible to modern manhood, then we must needs look them in the face. "In the country in which you and I live what we call civilisation has un dergone what is nothing less than a giganitc revolution. The huge uggrega tions of capital, which have practical ly taken from the hand- of the individual the independent disposition of his labor and have introduced into his ex istence paralysing uncertainty as to Iwth his comforts and his future, ami the gradual widening of the breaches that separate classes from class.-, and the competitions that, while they cheapen the necessaries of life, in crease the elements of perplexity ami uncertainty as to ln.n great multitudes may obtain them. all these are features of our modern situation full of danger. "l-or one. I have M hope that any mechanism of legislation, any system of socialism, any scheme of agrarian distribution or taxation will in the remotest degree remove them. The church ol iod must go up, must stay up, in-. n a much higher plailn than that." THK P0KT1CAL MOk. The world is full of poetry. De spite ita cold commercialism, thu Muau till liv.- jie i reigns. Wo don't read it always, uur understand it always, after we read it. but every day we come in oontaot with it. Its little volcanic uamea Hash up into our eyes, and we are daisied for a utuiuent, aud It would be useless to banish Aguinaldo to an ocean inland. His life has beeu devoted to dodging from I.. island tit another, with the greatest possible rapidity The only way to confine him would be to place hiai in the center of a body of land so large that he couldn't see the ohore on nvery hand. Put him down in Kan sas, for instance. There some of her lakes might deceive him into building a boat. BKKT HUKKMAN. BISHOP eoriKH on aaKD. Bishop Potter in an address before the Church Club of New Haven, Conn., spoke at length on "Wealth and Commonwealth." "I choose this subject because of its paramount importance," he said. ."Divorce, crime and corruption in all our cities have one root, the lust of money. The one eager, dominant hunger which salutes uh from one end to another of our uroad laud is the ion, the hunger, the greed.of gain 'Challenge what method i mmf Mr ul at Um rwtt at tha run caaialac talllag Ir. llsvaUy Said- A HdlthT bJr. "A" aurtu axtar aal lajrar af asaaVar alt Shaath. O " naariu lha Intartar atrsailly. n mark, tha Inlsraa! later .. C" mark. Ua rost at tha hair. NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE Oestroyft those oaraaltlc gcrmr. and It U tha only Wr preparation mat does. , "utatroy im cm you remove the effect. " FOR SALE IY NOtilSTl - Like Chrlatmaa Snow In the color of the -Inn collars anil cuffr- that an done up at the Ivuniestic Laundry. Santa Claus knows a good thing when he see- it, and the fault- leas beauty of the linen laundered here will excite tils admiration, as well aa the man who loves u. dress well and have his linen perfect in color ami finish. THE DOMESTIC LAUNDRY J. F. Robinson, Prop. telephone 60 Nasal CATARRH In all Its stagaa Ultra atiuulcl bu cwauUuaas. Ely Cream Bain r Joaurnra,aii(illaaail.l In ila tot Skaaai.it nit-mlieinc 1 1 curaa catarrh an cl tiri t at away a Oultl in lit titacl tiuickly. ( rratut Halm la jilat t-l Into tb noatiila, tiraa.!a oaar Ilia luaiubrtnti auct ia altaorbatL Ualiafla itu AuuUialu and a curs follow.. It 1 not drying tlot-a eeoaurotluuiaiiaawlUL;. Lara Utaa, 60 oanla at Uu sat or by wall ; 'Trial Hue, lu cents by mall. aXV alWeMiHW, o Wartati tUat, Kaw York. iii tin complicated web trial, uoluical or social life aud you will of OUT Union you will and the ojtiustion of gain behind it. Listen to tsUat acandalyou may in tint haunts o iioiltaCiauji in thu camp of soldiers, In tlss .itll.i ol lathiou, the filial standard of the wluH busi ness may be expreaaed by dollar mark. s I .mien to the talk of children aa Hold by JOHN rJCIIMUU The Louvre Saloon FKNULKTUN OUKUON. Farmers Custom Mill Prwd W alters, Proprietor. tlsaaolty, U0 barraia a day. wjbjsjT asrktiigtl lot wheat. Um. fcVdl fvd, cnoptad feed, sic., always Taylor, the Hardware Man. e null is now running an extra fine Rradr- for in Th us trade and merchants will Hhortly have a fi (rom winch to make selections ne Christ- assortmem GOLDEN RULE HOTEL NEW LUMBER YARD. C.F.KOHLER, Prop turopcai ind Amfrican Plan. Tit Only First CIlM and Complata Mote In trMCIty. aMMavaMBBaMawaMaw lwrk?'awflrT ABaDpfllLakHj IH T. . .JsJswannaaraT Nawly Ramodalttl and RenoTitnl. Starn Heitad, Bui Maati All Traini. Fraa Sampla Roomi, Elsclrlc Llf Ml. f ir. Proof Biiildlnr Cor. Court and Johnson Streets. PENDLETOM. OREGON Byers' Best Flour... To make good bread use Byers' Besi Flour it took fust premium at the Chicago World's Pair, ovei all competi tion, and gives excellent satisfaction wherever used. Hverv sack Is guaranteed. We have the best Bteam Rolled Barley, Beed Rye and Beardless Harley. Pendleton Roller Mills W. S. -'YERS. Prop. r St or We are now ready for liuninenM near WasliiiiRttin A OolUBlbla Rival fndght doMl with a Senerul assortmont of lumber reel from our own naw mill, and ran furnish Hnythinir promptly. (Jountry onlnrs in ear loads shipped direct from our mill in enrload lots at eorreot. prices, (live Hi ii Sail, A, C, Shaw & Co. W. J. SEWELL, Mgr. Equal to any in the world. Etc.' $3J AMERICAN PLAN. er Day and Upwards Hnest Motel treat Hra: wa -., PILSNER BOTTLED BEER. UKEWF.RYH OWN BOTTLING. Highly ret'oinineuiietl to fiuuily trade r.very Mltle fully inuiv.intei il. THE PORTLAND PORTLAND, OHBQQN, .Special Kates to Bastern Oiearon neoDla vlaltlna- Pne-ti.mi " - lor tourist. and commercial traveler. M. C. HOWUkS Manar Schultz Brewing Co. I CE New Year's Presents Here, is thu opportunity of a life time to buv your (rin ie a New Year.h present and buy it . lit-an. I havn an elegant line of unredeemed pledger! eonsjstiuu Ol ladles' an. I L.(.nts' watclien, linjer ringo, eiirrinan. iind other jewelry which liolliluy traile I am ottering very cheap for the Joe Basler. " ... .- - Also Wholesale A(ent for SCHLITZ MILWAUKEE BEEK In bottles, barrels, or cases. Call up I C Telephone I Ml. O H. KOPITTKE. Hotel Pendleton i. Strictly Kirst Clas lixwjllant Cuisine. Brery Modern Conyeflltncv Under New nanagement. t 4 ) Giro Us a Trial. I Rites $2.00 a day 1 Special Bates by Week or nionth Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard Can sell cheaper than any firm in the county because they buy in large quantities. If you need lumber or any kind or mill work call and get their prices. R. FORSTER, - Proprietor. IF YOU WANT Bar and Hllliard Rooms. rleadauartera tn, i,c.n- aa. - - ..c.inu men the Heat Hotel In eastern Oregon. Know. We'll be there. Van Dran Bros.. Props. Successors to J. E. Manr, 1 in char, i rroprleior. A good livery rig call on us. If you want a cab night or day let us Depot Stable. ATTORNEYS. 0ABTJU ,t- KAI.KV i.nw ion. OM0N A T r . v ..IT ' Utv. Uot.ni II a.... . '. "NY saaaai. " laea 1 '-".llfloii or,.w. THOH. iw. otilcc In Aaaoclatlon Block. IN. HKKKKl.KY. ATTOIlNKViTt A Offlro III Aiawlatt,,,, Hlo'l ' AT UWJ 01cc In Aaaorlstlon HIVk NlY A' KirriB,!Y,,-ATToRNl JAMKH A WV.V I iii'.ii. ..." -- - . ..i tri r- lit, i tr ,n nil 1 lit I II v -""OIJU PHYSICIANS. 1 1 V I . I 'i ' L man. mill.llutr OSIn.. v...' ,"..V " " JCDD , nSr.L m vo u a. ,i . ,.. oa, w. i I- ." .- -.-it i , .11. ii, uFFirmara.. .-... i, . I.J. BM 'TH. OKKICK OVKRm Uleton Havli... Hauk T.iPhn. ! "V ii. H. ( A i. . i u n u...... rrr DH. D.J. If'FATJI,, utioM i- ASKorir I I II III-. I I'll Mil, ,11, 'I' lllirillr. i hi u in .rnir.t.rAinn rmKiriANK, im ton eflL?e r"- "m'1'' onu blotk ' . I-;. I'KKltY PHYSICIAN AKD srK. Ki-oii, I'klali. iiri-Kon K- HlrAKKULKK, CHKUNIC lili.l iK.rtoiiv.il,,. um ili.,.,., ,,,! W01; Oiii. Hotel. Mr, Water ami Main ku Crnii,; UKNT1STS. h. A. VAUUHAN, DKNTIDT. InJudd Bulltlluf. omm A. I,. 1IKATIK, 1). I). 6. OKKICK 0VM oTiiisa nana, taras a.l uilulllcrad. K. A. MANN, HKNT1HT. IN AUriOt'lA u. in Block, over Y. B. (aoptou'aolltcf. AHC11ITBCTS AND BUILDIIS. T. K. HOWAUll, AB0HIT1I0T AN 1 1 81 I" nilli-ll.li-iil innkue touiplcl. an i reliaU ulana lor biiiliilusa In the ell; oi touoiii .VI loom 17, Jiiittl biiirilius. " A. MAI ION TKAtTOl'. ANt liiillili-r (ialliuatva luriiiiluil uu ail tiii.ltci aaSjOnty, t-invni walks, atouc wall, etr. Ot .lorn can In lull at tin' haal iirufunlau oDcy BANKS AND B R U K K H S . KIKHT NATIONAL HANK OK PKNDLa ion Capital, iv.i.tai.. Trauaacu a Ki.-ueral ttauklus bualueaa Kiraaaii aim tt'iesraiinir iraniit-rii ...... i un i iiii-asci.i Kraut-lauo. Ntiw York auct pnudpal imiou tht.- Norlliweat llralta Drawn on inua, Japaa an. I huropv. Nakti. txjllecllou. ou raaaoaalni Uirma. 1 -vt Aukt-ny. urcalileut; M Sank Tlit-prttalilaut ; C. B. VVadv, caihlt-r H. C (lueruac-T, aaalalant uaabisr. Illl. I'KN DLKTON bAVlNOH HANk Heuillaton.drefou Orsaniitril Starch MM. I'aplUl, lai'.UUti. lni.Tt.il allowad on tlraaae imalu. Kxcliauiti twiisbl ami aoM on ail pna .Tittl p.tuu. HiK'Clal alltintlou firau UtasSM n.. i" W. J, Knriilali. preal.laut, J. t. Tel, vnx.-prtaldeul; T. J. Horrli, caablar. Kl KB T NATIONAL HAN K OK ATMItSA, Oragou. C'aplul, HU.WW; aurplui, ! turoaton lloio dupoaita. Doala lu lorelfn aaJ UoLiaatlf ott-iiaiisi' I'olloctloua prompUT M Ailauia, prt-ticic-Di. nui. wuclti.l to Mi .-Arthur, vlct- uroaidsal Mt 1 W. Baruett, aaslauui caahlitr llenrv I Ailauia, ur h l naru.it Hull , cau THK KAItMKU'H HANK OK WMTWI, Wealoii, tirc'Kou. -Doaa a gaot-ral hanliai bualueaa. Kxchause bousht au.t aold Ul-I.-, n. hi. prouiully allauilnl m ASait. lu utcui 'loelieot couillllon. aad ao reported urjuu b invaatigalioiit'ouimlttauul reaiainilblerliiMii tittlic-r. K. Jauieaou, pre.idenl; lieu I'roebalol. vice preaideiit ; C M Plercr. m' J. K. Ktllcore, aa.iauni caahlet; clliccwn O. A. Hartmau. M M Johua, T. J. Knee, u. I I raw. J. It. Klllfore, Boberl Jaiutaos, 0. W I'mobaWl. A. II. BTKPHENH A CO. IX) 8AW1N-; iiu.l ...iiiratiUUK ol all kiu.l. , WoatA sawa on abort aotli-e Leave onlem with A. U. aaiti. k t o. or with Van Orwlall d. I Oregon Lumber W ....Sl.l.I.... Lumber, Lath, Shioaleti, Building Paper, Tar Paper. Mouldiugb. Pickets. Lime aud Cement. Brick and Sand. Sash and l""- . Screen Dotirst- Wiudows, Terra Cotta Pipe. Borie & Light, Prop s Alta St , opp- Court iHuae Tha Raat Orsaonian is '1a gen's rreaanutiv. paper. JIMP , by ha peopla appreciate it dvtt. their liboral pstioMK isins- mavrliitro o eclion GREAT CARPET SALE 1. .... I . A 1 sea JM- To make root) All i for now stork I will anil m 7 -wa i'WUVn ... at.amaataK.at A aft I- . .... I " and wall nuner for aaaL Vltl'V lllteil' wholerialf HA till IIM1N HI. tl.lf n I I ItlL. ............ -. errt ... . ' ---j in name proportion Fine Hue dZ"JZuZ 'aV;russo18 ,,a,P"ts 60c' YT8 Qm, Leather Couch" an H,ko M Z TT f li,!tureB' Fine ictiiee oe.el 1... " " W",IS' V.UBU "bllluUl, th FaillOUB (JvOO hill I I lt:ll I' i 1 1 L' CftlUtit ' 'TfVl.iM.lin tUW L If llllt'Ml and Near Main St. Bridge. a. . r - ..... .ii . 'vi.ii ileal 1 1 1 1 1 I I I'liuuuu , 1 1 1 I , .' ' r ' i ,. .. . "vo"UDi HUUIaf U1U1 till low li::u -.1 ........... 1 a.a. tall (Ion t toriret the Kuni.iin. H..ll.l;..;.... i ...I .T.V. V."" "V""ni eouon nevei w rJfira. 6 a y ffmi" ttewiuK Machine. Take no other- wn JESSt rAiww