MONDAY, APRIL 7, 1902. DAILY, WEEKLY" SEMI-WEEKLY BY THE v? OKgonLan Publuhing Company AT PEKDIiETOX, OHKUON. daily scwcBirnos IUTS: Ouecoprper j ear. by mall i One copy six month, by mail.... -f' Onecopyper week, by carrli r , Trial sutMorlpllu jr.' Blngle numbers SEMMVHEKI.Y BCBaCKlrTlOS I.ATES ! One copy one year ':w One copy six months Trial subscription JT! Elncle numbers . w whklt si B.-cmrrioN baths: One copy one year ' ?. One copy six montlis IX TrbU subscription jj( eitigle copy AIIVKRTWNO ILlTr-S! (Display Advertisements.) Onelncb.arless.lii Heml-Wreltly.P-r month.i00 tine Inch, orles. In dally, per ""'"..: "1 -w Two Incite!, orlc.ln lally and W eekl) , per month . . J 'Ai Over three Indies. Hnil-Veenly, per I neb per Ore? three'lnciieil baiiyVper I nrh pr mntn. . -00 Over three Indies, in Daily an.l Weekly, per luch per month 'Ti nelnch, orless, In W'e-kly per month.. ...... 171 ever three Indies, in Weekly, per Inch per month 78 ever three Inches, In Tuesday's Issue of Semi- W'eekly.perlncfa rr month... ......... ...." Solid nonpareil advertLsements In Beml- eefcly, fftUy or Dally, first Insertion, per Inch, tLW; ach sabsenuent Insertion, fioc. local notices, tea oeuU per Una. each Insertion. "CALL" SCRIPT PROMPTLY. Within the past few days Treasur er Yates has called $25,000 of county -warrants outstanding and drawing interest, and he tells the East Ore onian that he has fully $20,000 more at the present time applicable to the redemption of script, and that he will make a call within the next ten days of this amount. In other words, Mr. Yates has $20,- empty and with plenty of Beats for any one who may desire to ride in it. It has a lonesome appearance. Vot ers and politicians look at it with al most pitying expressions of counten ance. No one applies for room there in. The driver, mayhap, by dint of management and skill, secures the right of way, and It becomes the or der of the day that this particulai band wagon may compel others to move to one side, and permit it to go whither its driver wills. How soon does commence the scrambel for seats! How excited the rush to get into It! Men erstwhile lukewarm towards the driver of that hand wagon suddenly develop an enthus iasm that is in marked contrast with the cold demeanor previously mani fested. Soon the steeds groan with the too heavy load they are expected to draw And the band-wagon, but shor;'. before empty and lonesome for the driver, has in it a howling mob that cannot give vent to their exuberance of feeling. Those who are near by may secure the best seats, and, sad to relate, other who kept too far away in the times when that baud-wa.Kon was not in such great demand as a method of political conveyance, fail to enter the covet ed limits of the vehicle. And that is tii-1 way oi I'd't'i-S. Is not yet clear. The argument made by him would not, however, Justify a policy of inaction toward trusts. ; His own little condensation of Unit ed States history shows that previous aggregations of wealth have been restrained from excesses only by thej most strenuous and sometimes io lent action. If the reference to the landed proprietors, banks, slavehold ers and railroads teach anything It is thnt organized wealth needs regula tion. Of course, regulation does not mean repression, but It does mean oversight and watchfulness. Chi cago Tribune. MODERN COLLEGE GIRLS. ni oi First Street The John Bairett Company y portland. ore. MAIN I fii-ai prove any ..... -Lr.iu onph ns will objects of utility iud beauty in house. Catalogue of Mantels Free Electric fixtures, lamps, shades chnmleliers, globf s, etc. VERY LOW PRICES .. i i. niitio1 ripnlcrnfl Wi 1 luniisu win,.."- - o .u nr mnntlwi free. lntr. woou wf"1 " " , Zl designs for fitting up saloons, tiniates furnished free. for til- Spe- WEALTH IN FIVE PHASES. A few days ago Mr. Stuyvesant Fish, president of the Illinois Central, made a speech at a banquet given at the Union club of Philadelphia in celebration of the seventieth anniver sary' of the founding of the Baldwin locomotive works. The occasion was O00 at least of county money idle that, R containel, amoug other thlngs should be put Into mterest-ueanng a sketch. sllEht. but snlrited. of the script, at once, without the loss of I succession of contests in the United J one day, let alone ten. The inter est on each $1000 of county money licld idle amounts to $5 per month, and quite a saving can be effected by prompt calls of outstanding script. Mr. Yates has done as well, and even better, than some of his prede cessors, in calling Bcrlpt, but there is still room for improvement. A sood deal of time is lost in applying llm rnimtv'a mnnnv In tho nnvmpnt T1"-'n Came tllO attack Upon banks. lL . , . . , . , , . . . . The banks were not assailed as octo- oi lne county HCOl, anu it is to ue nop pU8e ,)Ut ag vamires. Tney were said to be sucking the life blood of the people. Andrew Jackson did bat- States "between those who had not and those who had what was in their day the largest visible share of the wealth of the country." There was in the first place the fight against the landed proprietors, who had put into the "state constitu tions certain property qualifica tions which kept the suffrage In its own hands. The result of this fight was manhood suffrage. ed that Mr. Yates' successor will do better than even Mr. Yates has done, for the county should not be compel led to contribute to the prosperity of interest eaters any more than is pos slble. The custodiau of public funds of all men should remember that a public office is a public trust. KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK. With fine enthusiasm and an evi dent intention to co-operate with the officers, the Pendleton people have begun to clean away the debris that has accumulated during the past months, and, if the present work con tinue, It will be tho boast soon that this Is the cleanest town In the northwest. This certainly pleases everyone who has civic pride. It will pay for all the effort that will be )iit forth. Prompt compliance with such orders is to be expected from a people who have won the reputa tion oi "uelnp the most enterprising of any in the country. It is the due of the officials that their movement for a cleaner Per.dlelon receive support from all who live here. Suppose each person residing in Pendleton determine to lend a hand in this ex cellent work. Suppose that old and young, property owners and others, all without exception, decide to do some small thing toward the desired end. It would result In making this the most attractive town in tho north coast states, and it would not be far In the distance when tho town would bo like any of its citizens in its con stant demand that everything that defaces or mars the appearance must bo removed. Let the people cultivate the samo thought toward the town that is entertained by each well-bred man toward his own yard and lawn. This Js tho spirit that will compol such improvements in methods here that will earn for Pendleton the de served name of being the cleanest and tidiest city on tho Pacific slope. Clean up the town. And lot the good -work now begun continued. SEATS IN THE BAND-WAGON. Tho political band wagon has laws peculiar to itself. It makes all the difference In the world who holds the relus and drives tho steeds that draw It. The political band wagon at times moves along the public highways One type of "new" womanhood was o..i..v.,.io.i tn a oovprn toKt on Sunday night, and, In the complimentary j sense of a phrase they may be in-j cllned to resent, its representatives ( "miirtpH thimselvfis like men." When Denbigh Hall, one of the donninories , rf Ritk Moir orillppp took fire the I young women who lived In the build ing exhibited neither the hysterical weaknes sthat was once thought the characteristic of their sex in such contingencies nor the lack of prac tical sense which is sometimes thought to distinguish the studnn Instead of screaming and falt.ting, they promptly took their tilacss in thp firp hrlnnilp. Which is (II1C OI Int. regular organizations of the college, and proceded to fight the flames with such cuolnos? and courage that the file was extinguished with no loss of life and no excessive damage all things toudidered to propo.'.y. It is a noteworthy fact, also, that while many of the students lost their ward robes, 15 candidates for the degree of Ph. D. succeeded in saving their thpses. This story, of feminine intrepidity la in no way'imj s nn.' by the fact that the boys of Haverford college aided In putting out the fire. Though the modern girl is self-reliant, there are times when a man may be useful, and Haverford gallantry' does not dim Bryn Mawr bravery. The damage to the college building is covered by in surance, but it is feared that the fire may make it more difficult to raise the $147,000, which is needed to make available Mr. Rockefeller's offer of $250,000. There should be no such difficulty; a college that rears young women of such pluck deserves well of the philanthropists. New York Tribune. WHAT'S IN POLITICS? tie with the largest of them and broke down its power. The bankers were succeeded by the slave holders as the object of popu lar, indignation. The analogy here seems somewhat strained, but has its excuse. The emancipation procla mation and the overthrow of the con federacy put an end to this phase of our history. It did not, however, accomplish economic equality. The railroads soon seemed to be acquiring a power that was dangerous to the country. Legislatures, therefore, as well as courts and commissions, set out to shear the locks of the new Sampson. Politics played in this case the role of Delilla. The railroads took to politics and they lost a large part of their franchises. Says Mr. Fish: "None will today advocate the wis dom of a railroad corporation meddl ing with politics." Now It Is trusts, for the common people, who are always able to lead the etymologist and the rhetori cian by tho nose, have decided to give this name to the vast combina tions of capital which are threaten ing to dominate tho industrial world. In some ways, thinks .Mr. Fish, the trusts are unfortunate. They have often been over capitalized; their plans, have been carried out with great suddenness, and have seemed to tho public like so many hideous apparitions and they have been con structed on a vast scale. These disadvantages, however, are balanced by certain other considera tions. For Instance, they do not rep resent anything like so large a share of the wealth o fthe country as did in their day olther one nf tho fnnr other aggregations of capital," that have been mentioned. And besides,' their "securities are at the outset, chiefly hold by thousands of our own people In comparatively small lots, instead of being held, as railroad se curities originally were, in largo lots i and to a great extent by foreigners." 1 In this respect Mr. Fish seems to bo-.1 Ilevo that the trusts resemble the Il linois Central, which, when Mr. Fish entered Its service, Iiml stockholders In Anierlcn with less than one-sevonth of the total capital, hut which now has 5.1S0 American) stockholders with nearly three-fifths of the total capital, while at the same ! time the average holdlmr is nnu- sm.i 385 and there are at home and abroad 3.084 proprietors who own less than $10,000 apiece. a "Obviously," says Mr. Fish, "our country Is not controlled by aliens and plutocrats." .i.Firth,B rea80n Mr- Fl8h believes that the trusts will weather their storms and reach their final haven though just whore that haven will be Co. E. Hofer, editor of the Salem. Oregon, Journal, always a philoso pher, has turned his attention to poli tics with a view or discovering all there Is worth knowing of the sub ject. And the following summary ot his conclusions is really interesting and worth lingering over: "The question may come up in the mind of man or woman or any two legged political being, what is there in politics anyway? "According to a Portland author ity, with a good many people, who are innocent or any other source of en lightenment, it may be explained In this way: " 'And now,' says the Salem Jour nal, 'The Oregonian is explaining the difference between tho two fnprinnsi at Portland.' Mistake. The OreKon- ian is not trying to explain. It is not necessary to explain. Everybody knows what the difference is. Each faction wants to ride the party horse, and the one that has been riding hitherto, time out of mind, does not want to give the other a turn.' "'The one that has been riding does not want give the other one a turn.' That is all there is to politics. "That is all the whole state is torn up over, holding corrupting primar ies, log-rolling assemblages of trick ery, called conventions, and an ex pensive election campaign for four months. "The follow in the saddle does not want to let the fellows who want to ride the beast of burden, called the taxpayer to have their turn. "That's all thero is to politics," Boise Capital News. BYERS' BEST FLOUR Rolied Bailey, Seed Bye and Beardless Barley. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S. BYERS, Proprietor. Gasoline Engine for Sale A five horse power gasoline engine with pipes and fittings, oil tanks and water tanks, everything necessary to set up and operate. Engine and fittings are all new, being in use only a few weeks. Engine is very economical and guaranteed to be satisfactory, fnce I IT a.! h rr rocc East Oregonian, Pendleton, Oregon JUST THINK OF IT Three-fourths ot the people in Umatlll county re using our fcarnea and saddle aid the oeher fourth has iust commenced to uae them. All this goes to snow that ours are all FIRST CLASS and PRICES MQHT. We carry a com plete stock of Collars, Spurs, Brushes, Whips, Sweat-pads, Pack Baddies, Bags, String leather, Tents, Wagon covers, Canvas, all kinds. JOSEPH ELL, Leading Harness and Saddlery. You get What you buy Tom us. Bid Stock of WOOD, COAL, 1 SAND & BRICK. We do... Trucking & Transferring. Laaiz Bros. You get Good Beer.. When you drink PILSNER BEER. Guaranteed not to cause headache or dizziness Ask for it. Schultz Brewing Co BUY YOUR LUMBER AT THE All Ladies liko glossy haii I Such as New- BBO'S IIERPI- cide produces, realize that it in creases thiir who wish to kIvo NCWIiRll'S llpnvr. Pine ft trial will cMn , ..... MJ this act, because, by ilejtmyinp the dead lY irerm nt icnrt- nn. nn fhn hnl. w. ! makes rinnrlmfl fnitin hair and thin, brittle hair luipusaiuutucs. Gmntltitntn find it equally as valuable, for ''workslike a charm, oveu up on bald heads. ' ! for Sale at all Drst-CUsa Drug 3, mi StoreaAfkl I.1 HARPER KENTUCKY WHISKEY for Gentlemen who cherish Quality. Bold hy JOHN 80UMIDT The Louvre Saloon ENDLETON OltEQOfl transfer, st:oragTe 3& CROWNER BROS TKLKPHONK MAIN 4. 8mok. Pride of Umatilla cigars. Lfi b lr, Oregon Lumber Yard Alta St., opp. Court House. PRICES AS LOW AS THE LOWEST For All Kinds of Building MatetUtl. Including Doors Windows Screen Doors and Window Building Pkper Lime Cement Brick . . and Sand Dr?n Forget 0ur Wood (Hitter P01" Barns and Dwellings Not on Pasco, BUT ON BYERS' GROVE ADDITION TO PENDLETON. I still have Farms for Sale N.Berkeley THE REAL ESTATP m Planing; Lumber 3,k SS.'i 4 Buy their stock K.S '"is and d rynt- ihi. 1. - i riisrniintc- . 1 wnirh acii ar s . it you NEED Lumber,' ime. Ce or anything far $t our cried. rendition naniflr InmW Vnd. ft. FORSTER, friar, THE MINUTEST i- ... v. . . ... .. i. - . . ... .LI. 11... TIM put In flrat-class otder and nidi new bring it to N EAGLE BROTHIM Water St, near Main, i wuuiu as nuuu laiai DUBinesa wunoui cieru u advertising." John Wanuuk Anotner statement u: paper advertising If the 1 sultful compared to one any other advertUlni h world." Space In the Eait Orajaki sold at low ratea. SKK Kf IK YC1 C T f. 1 J if.. TUt. East Oregonian, Ok Wet 6 Tunes . . . 4 a m ,4t i four incb Ad in UK Wflm East Oregonian,0neW& 1 Time and Sani-WS 4 T Or a Four Inch Ad in W Daily and Weekly Semi-Weekly, 6 Times uaiiv. i iTfne in n tH 1 im in Vrnll.wm' ly, Only . . . . WHO CAN GIVE1 FOR ADVER1 For a longer time or f pace the rates are In tne rates, but having choice of without extra charge, m wm uuiv a- tt ce. . Doing business wltnoBt tlalnn la' lllro ivlnklne 8t 1 . .1. j i. vn mat what you are doing, but M else does. Tin Vtf Muimntgn s 1 is Main OR WRITE TO TB " Pendleton. Orcpo IMBj .... fM ar "i ran i uray s naruui - sucassoRS io - A. C. SHAW I . ... n nnnri in-- . Auxiuwt 1 . ..nil :inds of boxes, '" i oo. Peach, w Plumb ano.r preparcu .v 7 in 8018" ' else. every all kii Appl ana and prices . i n h & h . mmm m m m a BavlngaBankBuUdUig.Peao,.