East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, April 18, 1902, Image 4

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    FRIDAY, APRIL 18. 1502.
TIMELY ANNIVERSARIES.
April IS.
M-George Lord Jef
freys, notorious cruel
Judge, lord chancellor
at England, died In
the Tower of London;
born IMS.
SB-William "Williams,
signer" for Connecti
cut, soldier, etc.. born
In Lebanon. Conn.;
HA llnn 1911
XTE Paul Revere" s fa-ROTCOC Conkllng,
wintin rlfTA nut nf Ttofl.
ton to arouse the militia of Massachu
setts.
Hn Battle of Cerro Gordo; General Wln-
SeiU' acott ueieaieu uenerai jvniuuiu
Lopez dc Santa Anna.
a-Hon. William K. King, vice presi
dent. dltd at his plantation near Cn-
VbwIiii Ain hnm ITXC-
B-Rascoe Conkllng died in New Tork
from the effects or tne great jjnrca
Ulzzard; born Dr. Cornelius It.
Agnew died in New Tork; born ls3
S R. C "Wicklltfe. ex-governor of Lou
isiana, died. Granville Perkins, the
artist, died; bom 1SC0.
B Lieutenant General Carrea, Spanish
minister of war in 1S&3, died at Mad
rid. Fight at Samoa between Ameri
cans and English and the Mataafans.
i
the market in their own I such as to cause distrust and the peo
ple are aiscouragea in m uu
ever getting an economical manage
ment or the state affairs at the hands
of the republicans.
THE CECIL RHODES' IDEA.
put them on
garb. If there is a genuine demand
for oleomargarine on Its merits, the
tax may not have any great effect in
lessening its sale, as It would taste
quite as well, presumably under any
other color.
If the trade In these substitutes,
however, has been built up on the de
ceptions practiced in the coloring,
the purchasers supposing they were
buying the genuine article, the law
will no doubt operate to cut down the
business, as one of the main props
that supported the delusion will have
been removed. At any rate the bill
will eliminate the Imagination as a
factor in the butter trade. The sen
ate made such changes in the measure
as it came from the house that fur
ther consideration of it by the latter
body will have to be made before it
becomes a lew, though there is lit
tle doubt that these changes will be
acquiesced in.
If the house fails to pass it as
amended the masses of the people
will care little, while certain special
interests will care a great deal.
Dairymen will find the protection .af
forded by the bill will help them a
very little, if any.
Cecil Rhodes wrote the key to his
Idea was the foundation of a society,
composed of rich men who should
leave their money in trust of a so
ciety Instead of the undeserving re
latives, the money to be used in con
trolling the world. He declares the
nations, the United States leading,
were combined to boycott the manu
facturers of England ;that the British
government was blind to the fact
it was losing its power; and that the
British should at once declare com
mercial war on America and boycott
American goods until that country
should "come to its senses."
Khodes declared a combine be
tween the United States and England
would preserve the peace of the
world for all eternity, and he sug
gested a federal parliament to meet
fire years In Washington and five
years in London. Rhodes saw clear
ly the coming expansion of America.
He declared President Harrison saw
dimly the inevitable overflow of the
United States fnto oth'er lands, and
he rather Impatiently criticized him
for not grasping the idea more broad
ly. He scored the British leaders
bitterly for failure to realize that
commercial leadership, was slipping
away fro .11 them.
Rhodes vision went into the fu
ture as far as human eye ever reach
ed, hut he never became a "big man"
until he was dead at 47 years.
Rhodes was not an appreciated nor
understood man while he breathed.
Death broke the shell around him and
alas, he proved the big soul he was!
THE DEMOCRATIC CAUSE.
SENATORIAL DELUSION.
The railroads and the steamship
lines, aided by those who profit from
a trade in cottton with China, brought
about the defeat of the Mitchell-Kahn
Chinese exclusion bill and gave to
the country in its stead legislation
extending the present laws, with a
few unimportant amendments.
The East Oregonian has printed in
Its news columns the Piatt substitute
measure as it passed the senate, so
all may have the opportunity of
reading and reflecting upon the meas
ure complete. It is quite evident
that even Senator Mitchell did not
except the radical legislation that he
fathered. In short, the senator, as
well as many others in the senate
who supported it, were "playing to
the galleries" in order that the labor
vote might not be driven away from
the republican party.
It would appear that the senate is
seldom serious in exacting legisla
tion favorable to the interests of the
under crust of society, but avoid its
wrath by delusion an- pretense, and
so successfully at times that they
have the admiration of most of those
they delude.
It has been ever so, the knave
makes capital out of the fool.
The Dalles Times-Mountaineer
makes the following editorial com
ment regarding the democratic poli
tical cause in Oregon:
Here are two extracts from the
platforms adopted by the state con
ventions recently held in Portland:
Republican "And we further reco
mmend the election of United States
senator by popular vote."
Democratic "We are in favor of
1 the election of senator by direct vote
of the people."
Thosp txca dpplarntlnne hnvp thp
I same purport, and from reading them
one would be led to believe that both
parties were heartily in favor of the
people having a direct voice in the
selection of their representatives in
the upper house of congress. But the
action of one of the conventions lends
distrust to this declaration.
i A statute was nnsspd at thp last
legislature Intended to give the peo
ple an opportunity to express their
choice for United States senator. It
provides thai any state convention
may make a nomination for this of
fice and that such nominee shall be
entitled to be placed on the official
ballot.
The republican state convention,
although it "recommended the elec
tion of United States senators by
popular vote," did not make a nomin
ation and allow the people an oppor
tunity to express their choice. So
far as any action of the convention
is concerned the people have no inti
mation whatever whom a republican:
legislature will choose lor this office !
whether there will be an election at
all, or whether there will be a hold
up. On the other hand the democrat
ic convention after declaring for
direct vote for United States senator,
made a nomination. By this action
the people are informed that if the
democrats gam control of the lecisla
ture, a United States senator will be
elected in the person of Col. C. E. S.
Wood, one of the ablest men in the
state. This convention sought to
deal honestly and openly with the
people, to allow them to express a
choice for senator, and to give them
assurance that there will be no traf
fic or trade over the senatorial elec
tion. This cannot be said of the re
publican convention. The voter sup
porting a nominee of that party for
the legislature has no assurance who
such legislator will support for Unit
ed States senator, or that he will
support anybody. Let the voters re
flect upon these comparisons.
From every part of the state comes
encouraging reports. Delegates wno
assembled in Portland last week
brought word from the sections they
represented that democracy was on
the ascendency, that the party of the
people was gaining ground.
Salem Journal: The democratic
state convention did its duty honest
lv and deserves commendation for
nominating a candidate for the senate
to go before the people, as the law of
this state provides shall be done.
When it is considered that the same
faction that passed the law was In
control of the republican state con
vention, it was a cowardly evasion
not to nominate a candidate.
The truth is, there are four or five
of that faction expecting to be made
senator by the next legislature, and
some of them would hardly dare to
submit themselves to a popular vote.
The people have clearly noticed
that the scenes of the last legislature
are not to be repeated, when both
factions bought votes with appro
priations, and another senatorship is
to be bought with public money.
C. E. S. Wood, the democratic nom
inee, is an able man. but so radical a
freetrader and anti-imperialist that
he does not even stand on the very
reasonable democratic platform.
It may suit the purposes of the
anti-Simon faction, or even of Mr. Si
mon, to have no candidate for United
States senator nominated in the re
publican state convention, but it
would have suited the people of Ore
gon to have had that question decid
ed by themselves, and taken out of
the legislature entirely
MUST ELECT A DEMOCRAT.
THE OLEO BILL.
The senate has passed the oleo bill
xrhlch in brief provides that the taxi
of ten cents per pound shall be placed
on all butter substitutes when color
ed in imitation of butter and one
fourth of a cent on the uncolored ar
ticle. The effect of this measure will
be to make manufacturers of the var
ious substitutes stop coloring them in
imitation of the dairy product and
Ex-Secretary of State Kincaid in
his paper, the Journal, says:
"The difference between the two
democrats that are candidates on the
so-called republican and so-called
democrat ticket neither of which
names cover enough of the principles
claimed and advocated by them re
spectively a few years ago to be re
cognized by the ghosts of Buchanan
and Lincoln, or Tilden and Grant
is that Furnish, who was a Cleveland
democrat, bolted the nomination of
Bryan and voted for McKinley. While
Chamberlain voted for Bryan, the Ab
raham Lincoln of the present day,
who is a far better representative of
the principles on which Lincoln and
Grant were elected than Cleveland,
under whom Furnish held office and
for whose principles he bolted Bryan,
or McKinley, for whom he voted.
So the only choice the people of Ore
gon now have since the republicans
have gone over to the Cleveland de
mocracy body and breeches, on the
money question, on the tariff and are
the tools of the monopolies that Bry
an fought, and have nominated a
Cleveland democrat for governor to
show their loyalty to "the party"
the Cleveland party" that in four
years emptied the treasury of the
United States and brought the people
to starvation and the government to
the verge of bankruptcy and ruin, is
to elect a Cleveland democrat, who is
called republican, for "office and re
venue only," or a real modern demo
crat, who represents the principles
on which the republican party was
founded and on which it administer
ed the government until 189G, far bet
ter than McKinley or Cleveland whose
follower Furnish is. It is bound to be
a democrat now. People who are
governed entirely by political and fi
nancial pirates will vote for the name
"republican," headed by a Cleveland
seeker after spoils and office. Peo
ple who think more of principles and
facts than of empty names and the
roar of lying demagogues, will not
care by what name a candidate is
called if he represents the principles
and policies they believe to be the
best for the country. If principles
and consistency are to control in the
coming election Chamberlain will be
May yean, have elapsed since the elect,e(L, " the people continue to be
outlook for democratic success In deceived and sed Dr loud-lmouthed
Oregon was as bright as It is this ""-""b"b"VB "c uucatu
VPflr. Thft nnrt la nnoa mnrn ttntt-
-. 2' " -J J uuwu uiui o ...... .
ed. A state convention has been held
that was harmonious, and a platform!
has been adopted to which no demo
crat can obpect. Best of all, however, .
a ticket has been nominated the per
sonnel of which Is a guarantee that
if the men thereon are elected the j
state will have clean, honest, econo
mical administration. With George'
E. Chamberlain at its head for gover
nor, and from there on down, compos-,
ed of men well known throughout the '
state for their capability, honesty and j
Integrity, a full democratic vote will
certainly be brought out on election '
day, and besides a large number of
independent voters who have become
tired of legislative hold-ups, extrava
gant appropriations and corrupt ad
attracted to the state ticket noml
attracted to th estate ticket nomi
nated In Portland last week.
I
bers and crumpickers, an u
from Maine to Manila, thej
elect a Cleveland democrat and . once.
Sore feel that they
hairbreadth escape from the dangers
of Bryanism.
THE SCIENCE OF TEACHING.
of the
A glance at we d!fferent
tpachers institutes .
counties during the spring months
is reassurring to all lovers of educa-
tion. ...
..1.4n.tc dlfiCUSS-
The wide scope i '""J1"" r,ni
ed at these meetings, the technical
details of the profession whict . are
are seeking
prove tnat aur -
. .... ot in thpir art.
the mgnesi euucuw ,
Teaching like every other science
is progressive, it s cuufc'"b
the advancing civilization of this age
of miracles.
a
The teacher, next to the parent.
... .. lflnonrA In S0C1-
wields tue greuiesi lu..v--w- -
etv. He or she leaves an Indelible
imprint upon the lives of the young.
How many ot us iruce u" -.
!.,. vioT-QPtorifttins to tne
most jimiuiucui v.u.... ------ --
training of an old teacher? How much
of our lives is fashioned after them?
v fnnturoc nf nppuliar
mode and manner mirrored in our
wavs of thinking and reasoning.
Their foundations, like those of the
home, are built for life. They are
the weavers of the world, who stand
at the bucv loom of human life and
action to place the mis-shapen colors
angnt. iue uum. "c , : .,:
or distorted, according to their skin
and earnestness. xaeq nuumau.
State Republican
Ticket
Governor.
W. J. FURNISH, of Umatilla,
Supreme Judge. '
R. S. BEAN, of Lane County.
Secretary of State.
F. L DUNBAR, of Clatsop County.
State Treasurer.
C. S. MOORE, of Klamath County.
Superintendent of Public Instruction.
J. H. ACKERMAN, of Multnomah..
Attorney General.
A. M. CRAWFORD, of Douglas.
State Printer.
J. R. WHITNEY, of Linn County. (
SECOND CONGRESSIONAL DIS
TRICT. For Congressman.
J. N. WILLIAMSON, of Crook County
It Pays to Trade at the Peoples 2 Wart,!
Parasols! Parasols!
We have just received a
larBe shipment of Paraso s
both for Ladies and Chil
dren, prices ranging from
J 9c to $9.00
Boys' School Hi
3 pairs lor 5
juu usually p
t-f 9 nair tnr rA . .
-o x "SiQereti
good value at that, now 3
3 for 50c
Woodmen L-Rllini I
in PmUetow, Or., I
April 21-22.
Tailor Made Suits
Our stock is now complete
and we are able to suit the
most particular lady in town.
Alterations made free of
charge, right in the store.
Any one buying a suit this
week will get a
Discount of JO per ct.
Sammer Corsets
That popular corset that tht
..w mi sum
mer wear has arrived and the
prices are such that will ea.
able everyone to get a net
corset. Prices
49c, 69c, $t to $2.95
: P
L.. ThnnnnnlnrtlMnrnhniinn ssl
n a .mHH m m m m m m m m m hb
m uuu uu 11 uiuuuuvu
ICK " - - I Send
LEGISLATIVE DISTRICT TICKET.
For Joint Senator.
J. W. SCRIBNER, of Union County.
For Joint Representative.
G W. PHELPS, of Morrow County.
JUST THINK OF IT
Tbree-fourths of the people in Cmatill com y
are using our harness and saddle and the
oeher fourth has Just commenced to use them.
All this goes to snow that our are all FIRST
CLASS and PRICES BIGHT. We carry a com
plete stock of Collars, Bpurs, Brushes, Whips,
Sweat pads.Pack Riddles, Bags, Strloc leather,
Tents, Wagon covers, Canvas, a'l kind',
JOSEPH ELL,
: Leading Harness and Saddlery.
LMBE
Gray's Harbor Com. D,
SUCCESSORS TO -
n - . L .1 1 .
.Deing one ui iue imlui mai-
ufactunng plants on Puga
sound are able to sell yn
lumber cheaper than anyone
t T 1 1
else. jew mmoer comine
every daj lney also mas
all kinds of boxes, including
A 1 T- T1 1- I " 1
Appie, .rear, ireacn, vuenj,
and are prepared to makeyos
nrirpc Munnr in sum 1 1 kii ia
dv tuc riD in
UMATILt-A COUNTY REPUBLICAN
TICKET.
State Senator.
F. W. VINCENT, of Pendleton.
Representatives.
HENRY ADAMS, of Weston.
C. E. MACOMBER, of Pendleton.
Sheriff
M. J. CARNEY, of Pendleton.
Clerk.
F. O. ROGERS, of Athena,
Recorder.
W. H. FOLSOM, of Pilot Rock. . .
Treasurer.
E. J. SOMMERVILLE, of Pendleton.
Assessor.
GEORGE BUZAN, of Pendleton.
Commissioner.
T. P. GILLILAND, of Ukiah.
Surveyor.
J. W. KIMBRELL, of Pendleton.
Coroner.
WT. G. COLE, of Pendleton.
Justice of the Peace Pendleton
District.
THOMAS FlTiiuERALD, of Pendle
ton. Constable.
A. J. GIBSON, of Pendleton.
A Challenge to the World
YVe take great satisfaction In placing our
selves in competition with the world so lar as
It concerns our line-agricultural implements.
The various makes we handle cannot be ex
celled (we doubt If they can be approached) in
excellence, durability and price. Their tame
Is world wide, and their prices will be lound ex
tremely low; for the quality; alao for gasoline
engines and for buggies.
NEAGLE BROTHERS
Water St, near Malm Pendleton, Or
The outlook Is that the democracv '
of Oregon has nn exceptionally good '
opportunity to win at the polls next !
June. The current that Is flowing its .
way promises to he irresistible. The
tide has certainly turned against the!
republican party. People have be-,
become disheartened at broken pledg-i
es of economy. The state adminis
tration the past eight years has been
your Hair
worth Omm Dollar?
If so, bur a bottle of Kewbro's Uerpi
clde and stop that dandruff Uiat U
slowly but surely rendering you bold.
tfEWaftO'S HERHCIDE
Is the only preparation on the market
that really will stop it, for it is the
only one that kills themlcrobeatwork
on the hair root, thus destroying the
canm and consequently -removing the
effect.
One trial will convince you. the same
as it has this "doubting Thomas":
Wliea 1 twaebt that UnUeo'f lUrpieUea
tttvparaUoos. I U)onlil it would pnne a
i&kt.but I am haprr to slate that It dot aU.
and even iwre. than you rialra for it. ilr
Lair UKrowlnr rapidly. Rrtpnctfnllr.
AiT.li. kEU.T,it6 DerUaderoSt.
For Salt at ell Firrf-CUn Drugstore.,,
Pendleton
Planing Mill
and...
Lumber Yad...
Buy their stock by the several
carload lots and, therefore,
get the benefit of the cash
discounts, which enables
them to sell at a very narrow
margin.
IF YOU NEED . . .
1
Lumber, Building Paper f
Lime, Cement. Brick i
Sand, Terra Cotta Pipe
or anything in this line
get our prices.
WOOD! COAL!
WOOD! COAL!
WOOD! COAL!
W. C. MINNIS
SELLS BOTH.
Kemerer Coal. First Class Wood
Orders Promptly Filled
Telephone, Red 401, or call on
W. C. MINNIS,
S f rh BtKet0"t opposite Han
ford & Thompson's hardware Btore.
Pendleton Planing Mill
Lumber Yard,
and
R. r (MISTER, Proprietor
The Eaet Cregonlan It Eaatern Ore
go.V- representative paper. It leadt,
and the people appreciate It and ahow
it by their liberal patronage. It it the
advertising medium of this section.
TRUCKING,
STORAGE
CR0WNER BROS.
TELEPHONE If AIN 4.
You get
Good Beer..
When you drink
riLanc
BEER.
Guaranteed not to
cause headache or
dizziness
Ask for it.
Schultz Brewing
Birt h, JOHN BOHJtUTX
The Louvre Saloon
PJCKDLETON
R. P. RECK
PLUMBER
and TINNER
Sheet Iron and CoPg
to Job Work.... k
and Guttenng...A .
o 5 '
Shop: Cottonwood StreeUJ-
at. JO)B aioici