Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 3, 1902)
i in li 1 1 i j1"01 I minti nmlnntinA no n ci rVi nl n i ntirl till It VQ&Sv I QOVSXOf ! Heist and statesman, that his-name Is '''J 1 W I I I 111 1 1 I i I II I V j I THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1902. ,.foo . 2M . 15 w . 05 DAILY, WEEKLY SEMI-WEEKLY Eut Oregonlan Publishing Company AT PKNDLETOK, OHKdO.V. tiiTT.Y urMmiPTinv t.AT.?. One copy per year, by mail. One copy six months, by mall One copy per wt-elc, bycarrlf r Trial subscription.. fclngle numbers HEMI.WSEKt-Y HI'MmllTlnS" I.1TFJ! One copy one year f2 CO Dnpmntfilrmniilli . IV) Trial subscription M Mnzle numbers 0 trattr-T RI'IMI?H!ITIOV rates: One copy one year 150 Onn miir mnntlm . - 7i Trial subscription..... ... 50 tingle copy , 05 AIVKRTI1N0 HATES: Display Advertisements.) One Incb. or lest. In Henil-Wreklv. nvr month. MOO One Inch, or less, in daily, per month -0Q Two Inch t, orle.s,ln lal(y and Wn-kly,pr month 5 00 Over three Inches, Semi-Weekly, ier Inch per month ..." 100 Orer three Indies, Dally. per Inch per month.. 200 Over three Inches, In Dally and Weekly, per inch per tuoMjh 100 Onelnch.orless.ln Weekly per month 17S Over three Inches, in Weekly, per Inch per month 7 ver three Inches, In Tuesday's Issue of Semi Weekly, per Inch per month a Bolld nonpareil advertisements In Semi-Weekly, weakly or Dally, first Insertion, per Inch, IL; BCh subsequent I nsert Ion, 0c local notices, tea csnts per Hub. each Insertion. A r-ENDLt IONIAN HONORED. the synonym for excellence of thought and expression. He has lived a life of such virtue that he Is above re proach. He has braved the world In the advocacy of his views, and has ex" hibited courage suoh as never shows in the breast of one who possesses ele ments of treachery. He represents Massachusetts in the upper legislative house, and, after his position had been fullr known there and elsewhere, he was returned to the senate without one voice raised to protest, his fellow citizens being unanimous in voting for his re-election. If Georee F. Hoar bo a traitor, then is Massachusetts one nest of traitors, and the grand old Bay State, home of the Pilgrims and nursing place of rev olutionary heroes, contains naught but Benedict Arnolds. Of course, no rational person really holds George F. Hoar to be a traitor, notwithstanding many are indulging in such remarks nowadays, and to read them is to throw down the pub lication wherein they are contained, with the passing thought why do not men exhibit candor and sincerity in I J talking politics? cnmnlinflp enmpwhprp IK (thlrklnlT These old stories of crime and wrong are coming tnici; ana rast. tsomeming mnnr lip rlnno in nffsph these social failures. Some of our social customs are at fault. We are weak, some where. And we must find out just where. One of the fruitful sources of social demoralization is the youthful mar riage. The marriage which precedes reason. The marriage which pre cedes maturity. The marriage wnicn precedes thought. The marriage which precedes deliberation. Stop It. Rf?hi tinnn It nnr Evprv ntrpnnv for good, and righteousness, fight for it. I The republican state convention! tins honored a Pendleton citizen by selecting him as the standard bear er of that party during the cam paign of 1002, by nominating Wil liam J. Furnish for governor. The nomination was won after what was perhaps the hardest fight ever con ducted within that party for guber natorial honors in the state of Ore gon. ment in Pendleton, and. by dint of in cessant work and skillful manage ment, the strength of his candidacy extended to the limits of the state, and became powerful enough to com pel the attention of the disposing el ements in Portland and elsewhere. It is a victory that will be regarded ns brilliant by most people, in view of the intensity of the struggle, and the potent forces that were met and overcome. COMMENT OF THE DAY. A boom is an evil, taken in anv view. In the first place, facts are ex aggerated to create a boom. True conditions are overdrawn to induce) rnnltal nn TTniliin methods arp nseil to tenmt the unsettled or the unemployed class to try one more journey. Men leave po sitions which are yielding them bread and butter, to follow the wild stam pede; they sell out at a sacrifice to , , iii get a lew uonars together, in me It was begun by a local move- effort t0 anlags a ?ortune qllickly. The result is that suffering follows. The community is burdened with an additional weight of famlshers whose substance has vanished. The labor market Is glutted. Men who bought tickets to the West are counting ties toward the East. Small homes which supported a well contented family were hurriedly forsaken. Women and children were bundled up in a week's time and set down homeless The colony of Latter Day Saints, or Mormons, nf Grnnrl Tlnnfip vnllpv have erected a neat and commodious 1 . .... T i nouse oi worsnip in me city oi L.a Grande. Regular religious services are held here each Sunday. The Mormon minister is especially ac tive. The Sunday school classes are large. The choir is led by a profes sional musician and the young peo ple's meetings are well attended. In addition to these good features the Mormon contrreiration has IntrniliipeH a new phase of entertainment in their church. Each Fridav evenine durintr the winter months, at least, dancing nar-i ties have been held in the church. ' Old and young attend these narties I ana tane part tn them. The best of music is furnished and strict order is maintained. The entertainment is I opened with prayer and closed with a benediction. No boistrous language Is allowed. Every attemnt at "rnwilv- ism," if such should occur, is quickly Pendleto Pianino and... lamp Mamies Guaranteed for 45 Days Peerless Flexo Mantles i just out Lumber -nuaa lots ami .1 them to sell at a Vfr! NEW THING BEST IN THE WORLD These mantles are new productions and give 90 an respectively ior wic smic u nd e ;:,.i,. 100 canuic juwci "f- 1 - . -j . 1 . , A nr Trim nC firm weaves. 1 hey are maae in two kiuw. o 40 cents each. The John Barrett Co. Jg&, or. margin ver,, BYERS' BEST FLOUR To make good bread use Byera' Bst Flour. It took first premium at the Ohicago World's Fair overall competi tion, aud gives excollent satisfaction wherever need. Rolled Bailey, Seed Rye and Beardleae Barley. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S. BiJiKS, .proprietor. IF YOU NEED T Lime, Cement, 11 Terra Co3 or anything in J gt out prices. 1 Pendleton Planing m Lnraber yard, RASTER, Propria Gasoline Engine for Sale IU V-1 I UJKJ -illll, I ' j 1 are overdrawn to induce "nPped in the bud " and more gen- a five horse power gasoline engine with pipes and fittings, oil tanks d labor to create a rush, feel, jovial respectable gatherings . t jf evervthinc necessarv to set ud and oneratp Fntrine thods are used to tempt the wave never been seen in any commun- i an , . er tanKS', f ver u"nB necessary to set up ana operar... engine ity. auu iniiiib are an new, ucui u ubc uuiy a icw weeKS. of dancine: in a t2.o including fittings. Address East Oregonian, Pendleton, Oregon, The first installment of the com- 7 a. - IUU gCL to the propriety of dancing in a house of worship, this answpr mm given: "Young peojile are going to enjoy tnemselves some where, if not in the right place and in the right manner, then in the wrong place and L m,anner- AYe courage iete printed city charter was deliver n!n,. n,,r vn . amusem,ent ed to the secretary of the charter among our young people. It makes I commission of Portland, them genteel, intelligent men and wo-1 mnn. Sn in nrilor Hio. r..n t ' ' . v. . ,.mii. nc UltX) 111 L I the needs of our folks in a rational , manner, we say that we will go with I them, encourage them in their efforts, i instruct them where they tend to go wiong and in doing this are worship ing boil, in our humble wav. The. A GREAT SURPRISE I., . 1 1 n u iiuuicicM, in atruuge laiui, ai-i " ui uuiiiuit; way. l ne ready overcrowded with poor people, cnurcn being our only meting place all because of a one-fourth rate excur- j at present, we allow them to spend It is a recognition of eastern Ore-!80" "cket and a iorid circular full . ven ng each .week in social en i . . u,., of lodak views. The innocent must i Wment there. It is not sacrilege to gon b a party that has hitherto re-bear the ,)rnnt or the ,JOom The , be gentlemen and ladies at a quiet fused to give this part of the state mining and real estate agents and j dance in our meting house. We see anything but lesser offices, that has I transportation companies reap a I to 11 strictly that the aim of our meet asked much from the cniinti unsr nf transient harvest. A dozen men are inS is not perverted. We think it a th n..H .,.. 1,0. , I benefited while a thousand suffer. The "' to our children to furnish the Cascades but has given little A struggle will now commence, in which, in all probability, George Chamberlain of Portland will be the nominee of the democrats for the governorship. Mr. Chamberlain is a strong man politically. That the campaign will be necessarily an ex citing one is conceded by all observ ers who know the situation in Ore gon. Tiie Portland Evening Tele gram said, Jn Its Issue o Wednesday, editorially, that the fight between Furnish and Chamberlain will bo a battle in which the chances will not all be on one side. This reflects the views of the politicians in the metro polis who are closo to the sources of power, and is not idle, talk for cam paign effect. However, it will be a campaign into which there need enter none of the disgusting features that are not un common to politics. It will he a bat tle between two men of high charac ter, men who hold the respect of their fellows. Men of prominence throughout the state. Men who are thoroughly qualified to discharge the duties of the governorship ln n man nor to conserve the Interests of the people of the commonwealth. The victory won by the Pendleton man calls for such courteous statement to a fellow townsman as that here giv en. It would be graceless, indeed, to indulge in expressions anent the re publican candidate permeated with a spirit of uncomplimentary comment The East Oregonian, from the stand point of a Pendleton newspaper, will not go to the length of partisan ve nom of saying any such things. country at large is worse off. Those nure amusement at home for thorn of the excursionists who get back to j for in doing this wetake away the dis' the ' East, after numerous hardships, Position to seek it elsewhere" and re scatter bad impressions of the West. move many evil temptations from uney came expecting to find condi- ulKlr pain. Good Beer.. When you drink PILSNER BEER. Guaranteed not to cause headache or dizziness.... pair and paint an old burgyor tSI k lnd It is as trood as a now one, $1 Our prices are tnm a vc money to our Bhnn. work II rat clasa. tlons somewhat near the stories thev read of the West. A sad and expen sive disappointment was the price of their experience. Jlen will rush to Thunder Mountain as they did to Cripple Creek, to Daw son, Nome. Buffalo Humn and other cold .excitements. Thev will en with. out money, food or blankets, expecting to una jons at tabulous wages, await ing them. Hut they will be deceived. They will find three feet of snow lv- ing everywhere. A horde of idle men will greet them and sickness and pri vation will pay them for their folly. A boom is a curse to jnen and coun tries. In the first place, a falsehood, an untrue statement of facts, is the mother of the boom. If a country is good, capital will find it, without the agency of the boom. If the country is not good, it requires the boom to call attention to it. Workingmen, poor folks and laborers hold vour Jobs and stay at home BERT HUFFMAN. Prominent railroad men sav that 1902 will be the greatest year ever known for railroad improvements in the United States. Orders already re' ceived by shipping companies, and bids sent out by officials, indicate that not les sthan $200,000,000 will be expended for extensions anil ininrovflmnntR TwninA i n railroads of thp onnmrv .m I fully $150,000,000. Ask for it. JUST Twiwu ne it Three-fourths of the people in Umatlll comity ,r u " enuiuei ana me . .i, Ui "ns fQmmencea to use them All tOiS COCA to 4hntt t fiflf nnrm nA ..11 r-f CLASS and PRICES RIGHT We T carry a corn Cl I J. r . Brewing (La JOSEPH ELL. Leading Harness and Saddlery. KEEP YOUR The German emperor's American built yacht Meteor III has sailed for Southampton. THE BALANCE OF HEALTH The press dispatches teem with ac counts Of suicides, desertions Anil ilos- oiateu homes. Every class ln socie ty furnishes its quota of unfortunatps. No section of the country escapes Its sensation. It has become so common to read of these unfortunates that we pay little heed to them. It is said that familiarity with evil breeds contemnt UI It. There must be a cause for the in- Not on Pasco, BUT ON BYERS' GROVE ADDITION TO PENDLETON. I still have Farms for Sale pass a pleasant even ing playing Pool or Billiards at GoIdcnRdc Pool and Biifcatd WILLIAMS&WlLLIAMS.Prop r3i3 Court Street. NEAGLE BROTHERS i Watfcr St, near Main, pa "I would as soon think oil bURlnpflfl wltlintif Ma.!.. -u advertising." John Wanimiul iiuuuier statement Is: "M paper advertising g the mtj Bumui compared to prlct t any other advertising hi world." Space In the East Oresodtii buiu ui tow raiee. SEE FOR YOURSE Four Inch Ad in the My last oregonian, One Wat 6 Times . Ui FoarJuchAdintkWafyl East Oretronhn.OneWui.1 1 Time, and Semi-Waty 1 1 lime Or a Four Inch Ad in 1 Daily and Weekly ani l oemi-weekly, 6 limes in Daily, 1 Time in WceUr ana j iimeiniiemi-weei-! WHO CAN GIVE1 A LOWER PRK FOR AD VER' GEORGE F. HOAR TRAITOR. Some very foolish and disgusting wings are said by politicians and writers in discussing men and issues connected with the Philippnes ques ton. Among these foolish and disgust ing things Is the statement that Geo. F. Hoar, the venerable senator a traitor to the United States, because he opposes the program that has been followed by his, party In relation to the islands. George P. Hoar has served In the United States senate for almost an ordinary lifetime. He has attained Is often very much against the wife. Her strength is un dermined, she loses flt. 1 creasing ratio of broken family altars. courage slowly leak away from her. ess, xarc aenS SF? duty of the moral agencies in society we"akn bourns daily ,B hef 1 mt,U,P I!10 ?a"Sea. and brid,e Nyn,en find their health failine. .1 a u,u uuiy 01 every thlnK- a"u won,uiy atlmenU fastenine on them ing man and woman to lesson th ahould promptly begin the use of Dr evils around them. Sllenoo hro -.c Pierce's Favorite Prwrimi t ' elsewhere, gives consent. Tn nnn,i recta irreculantv. dries tti ilninc ..:u still and allow young men and young w1eake" women, heals inflammation and artner cures lemale weakness. It N. Berkeley lf YWantto THE REAL ESTATR maw TV M I Bavlngs Bank Building, Pendleton. Ul ""l For a longer time or tor i space me rates are id uk 1 jiroportion. A .In ...... . . m . af AAA 1. . . 1. .. I .VaIm At tlnn In .in r. n ... I K nli.n na Ml without extra charge, as oftal once a weeic. Doing business without W tlslng la like winking at P rrlfi In tf-fin i1a1' Vtti mtV Q what you are doing, but no i eise aoes. The East Oregonian's Tel Is mam ) JR WRITE TO TBI - EAST OREGOI Pendleton, Oregon women to go wrong, Is to be a p in their wrong doing. The country Is 3i e; won,en st"?. sck women full f -.1. i ..t, . . J . Well, b Ck women ari. imntl i . i. ..... w. uuuii.-iit.-ii, iuii oi secret socle- rr d;, i i . w lunsuu ties pledged to uplift mankind and SST'hfc J5 J& f0" support the weak. Are these great tcmR&JV11 bodies of soc al cnrails nnP,in p;-rJ ,V Aauress Dr. R. V. . , , , " " w f? I ViWi iJUUUIU. i, Y. ineir wnoie duty? Aro thosu a8eAt8,?f riV"? 0,1,1 ,,r,vat0 moral"y sVwtefSS!effi WQtCIini Of tilGir trust? la aft 1UUH wnauienng the agencies wV,.rVM.e?fXi?'11.- ,J haw a, r abroad for mirlfv o.i i n o .V.crce-,..Co,n Medical Ditcomv for , . . v' wiuauuiieab.' Are "? ne throat with eood retulti inAhlti we taxing our strength to the utmost? SivS tt when3"" Have we rolnvo.l r...- , , .1 scarcely swallr." """" the holpless fall? , 7l-e PeoPle's Common Sense Medical These are vital questions that t?m!!rV1008 Pges' S, on receipt of qtrllrn i ... mm I SlaniDS for lll.iiliinr ... c i .. who have he hlgl esuX? Tmen Cent statnPs p.cov d bk at heartf-ffrS ZJ5g&. feSSTtl Laurels I.W.HARPER KENTUCKY WHISKEY OoU medal mm wamtd at A A A A A A A A house lot farm horse cow Piano dog wagon OR ANYTHING ELSE Hold by JOHN 8UHM1DT The Louvre Salonn rSNDLBTOK ORXQO Put an add In tfce classified columns oi the East Ore0onln, s there Is 0 othec means of securlno . preat an audience to ,uur needs a throuoh the coIum COMTIMDUV.. IPlfAa...!.- ...WANTRn Energetic people to sell our up.to date pub catinnc ., up 10 shin f:..;:r v c.dc town C I II I II II able agents nn a Write for . E"eF- circulars. ""u u"cr,Pt reli- ive BUY YOUR - f j LUMBE AT THE - (Oregon Lumber Alta St., opp. Court H PRICES AS LOW A3 THE I For All Klads of BuMH Including Doors Window Screen V and WJfl BuildW Lime ' Cent aoodh fiS - TH&a hereabouts ',v,crvou4t' Won't you? And Dae't Forget Out ul41 Far HifRI anw m1 j