St ft MONDAY, APRIL. 28, 1902. TIMELY ANNIVERSARIES. April ST. 1739 Mary WolUtonecraft born; died 1791. XD1 S a m u e 1 Flnlejr Breese Morse, of elec trical telegraph lima, born In Charlestown, Mass.; died ISTt. 3KB Lajos fLouls) Kosh uth, Hungarian pa trlot. born In Monok; died In Italy March 20. ISM. 3813 Genera Zebulon Montgomery Pike killed by explosion of magaalne at the battle of York. Canada; born 1T7J. Revolution successful In Venezuela, and General Guzman Blanco made pro visional president. -13 Ralph Waldo Emerson, trnnacenden tallst. died In Concord, Mass.; born 1S& 3S3J General John Murray Corse, hero of Allatoona. died; born 1S35. 3(57 The Grant mausoleum on Riverside drive, New York, dedicated and form ally turned over to the city of New York. General Pfks. from the publication, that it Is willing to share the field -with anybody 'who wants to cultivate It. And the East Oregonian will make even a better proposition: it offers itself for sale to anybody who wants to establish a daily paper In Pendle ton, at a less price than a dally paper can be established against it. Now, another word, so that no one may be led astray in a matter of this kind: The East Oreconian has had rivals, daily papers that were pub lished in opposition to it In spite of He thinks that businesses manag ed by corporations are apt to dimin ish In value news quite interesting to holders of Steel Trust stock. Ho thintc thnt "toiir mir un changeable gold has ever been, and CA TA RRH . f Patnn-h with antiseptic and uituuujcui lor uie uruitrcuuu ui mc -, - . , . i.?i;cr n hre on top oi masses of the peopled Mr. Carnegie just as senseless as would kling Jt evidently does not mean that pure! the pot to make it boil. True, gold -s better for the masses of the! rclieTbut the cavities and passages o the head and tnc , . j.- . t.:-t ...w.. fill nn np-atn With mnctlS. people man eaucauon, since ne itbuca , oroncniai iuua v.. .... r -o - ,-.i, (nr i his pure gold so freely for libraries. Taking cold is the first step towards Catarrh lor it It is therefore not necessary to take checks perspiration, and the poisonous acias aim ... . .. i , t , u r v,rri thf skin, are iiTAraiiv nic nnnrwtnrinn nr rnid i n-inf h cnniiin i i.l uu uiiuui." ' - , ..v -,' . ...... v. " i . . He thinks that a college education' thrown back upon the mucous membrane or mnu ijR usually hurts a young business man. ; producinr inflammation and . i'u5?fl. " , milnHrm It the East Oregonian pursued thJ12?l of which is ridnevs and oUie . , . ., , , c ouvii uuu (iiatuuiii.' reaches everv part oi inesvsi.au, iuui"i, -" . ' ... , even tenor of its way and so did its achieve their success before the col- "fir t C1 bodv When the disease assumes the dry form, the breath rivals. In 1891-2. when the dailyEast lege man begins working, i Cs exceeding foul, blinding headaches are frequent, the eyes red, Oregonian had only about one-half Thlr book of almost four hundred . flffected and' a constant ringing in the ears. No remedy that does th oir.i.tion i w Oo s I Pases records throughout the thoughts . - i,,, hwi ran cure Catarrh. S. fa. i. expeis irom me , v uu .nd lnpress, of practical man uuc y - -----. d h rich, pure was nothing like so good a newspaper, dealing practically with present con- i s Ti SJaVnl, , !r through the body the mucous membranes become Iieaitny ana me sun a ? 1 1 -1. o H r r rrrann rn?tifnl sniritoms aisat- f active, an uiMi,m." , i - - . y pear, and a permanent, thorough cure is effected. S S S. being a strictlr vegetable blood punner aoes noi ucnuigc uic Siomach and digestion, but the appetite and general health rapi improve ffte Write us about vour case and get the best medical advice free. Book on blood and skin diseases sent on application. THE SWIIT SPECIFIC CO.. aiubw, wm Its advertising rates, with a rival in the field, were higher by twenty per cent than at present, with no rival. Ticket W. J. SECOND dealing practically with present con- i aiuons. i The most valuable thing about the book is its common sense. ! The most interesting think about . April 2S. Betterton, famous actor. . ... , t xne most interesting tnmK aoou: And strange as this may seem its sub- ' it !s ,ts absolute absence of specula senpuon rates are lower at tne pres-; tlve thought. est time than they were then. i if It has ever occurred to Mr. Car- Of- course, its volume of business is ! negle that da-v wiU come when . ... . . success and monev will not lx svnnnv. larger out its rates tor an inch of space und a single subscription are less. Jn other words, the East Ore gonian has never "hogged the pot" or 3710 Thomas 17SS James Monroe, fifth president, born In Westmoreland county. Va.; died lfc-tl I .--H .... -Cn ... L.I. nf 1 SI Hloul V. ; ..1 n J ! 1. ff T" . . I tlnents must thenceforth not be con- , . . , the 50011 valuable. It will make th( -i .. ..v-i-.. . , w. son. if no other, its character is cood Iwl. tn.nnnni i-. .i ..- mwcu ouijnu tut I.1J1UULUIUUU V) i I imcuoci.1 luiciuuilg L u ptjr- ana its Dusiness on a nar with its char-' iectei numan hemes who mav rpnri it I ion uiuuwaD years irom now as we success and money will not be synony mous, he conceals the fact. It is his belief, apparently, that as the world is organized today, so It is destined to go on forever. This simple line of thought makes the book valuable. It will make the acter, The East r i ; i , . , . . , n the rude drawings of the cave lots of them, good ones, and it may dwellers. European powers and that European Interference with governments In America which declared their Inde pendence of European control would be regarded as unfriendly to the TJnlt- C. ThU I. .1.- : i , r .w i c euemiea, uui 11 nas so tew oi me- it win De observed with intense in- UlCup f'romTuropeln er that It really does not feel they i terejt long years from now that the if ther do, the greatest ,i ..lib tift iiuuj iuujrui i.u t tr- nles. wen to be Innlui11 in fhp nnl1(-- t avlct cnH ITS Great fire at Oshkosh. "Wis.: a square i ,, . ... , . mile burned ovr: loss, cooo.ooo. punishment this paper wishes them Is 3SH The famous old St. Charles hotel ! that thev mav eo into a nnnnnroil burned In New Orleans 3n James Douglas lie Id, a pioneer In eutabllshing the American electric tel egraph system, died In New York city. THE CAMPAIGN OPENS. town and run a pica newspaper. They will then discover how good a news paper the East Oregonian Is for a town of 5500 people or less. ANDREW CARNEGIE'S BOOK. niinu wnicn accumulated mnnv ns easy as the perfected mind will accu mulate knowledge was blessed with a dim ray of imagination which caused it to transform the gold into knowl edge, inti libraries of good books and give them awav to nthors I Ten thousand years from now the ! face which you see in this page will I be thrown upon large canvases and studied eagerly by human beings with n . v. ono.enuuy aeveioped heads. It will The speech of George E. Chamber Iain, democratic candidate for gover uui. ul ctthcr iiy. oueus ui cam- i i paign and sets the political ball roll-lit "The Emnlre of Busings" U ' mas.tdon Preserved In the ice of the Arnnn qrtnA ing in all parts of the state. The con- published by Doubleday, Page & Co.! t . , .es, o w eUo. aar . how )S5J State Democratic Ticket Governor. r.pnnr.p K CHAMBERLAIN, of Multnomah, County. Secretary of State. D. W. SEARS, of Polk. State Treasurer. HENRY BLACKMAN. of Morrow. ATTORNEY GENERAL. J. H. RALEV. of Umatilla. State Printer. J. P. OODFREY. of Marion. Superintendent of Public Instruction N. a. wann, oi une. Supreme Judge. R P. BORHA1I. of .Marlon. Member of Congress 2nd District. uJC ouruegie. lamer oi imra-: shown . children's W- F- BUTCHER, of Baker, ries. has just added one to the num- meni. aD Jctnres ot Senatorial District Morrow, Umatilla ber of books in the world. H calls LL,,?1?"8 ot. the ad iinin r.n.,ti It is to be hoped that it will be car Tied on with fair play to both sides and that the fittest and best men will be elected to office. The voters will decide the question, but in deciding i there is a responsibility on their shoulders which should not be carried $250,000,000. But it is an It is the face of one whose ambition V i. VJ t tit LdlljCU j " lAJ - juai 133UCU. OUl 1 1 lb II UL lightly. The fact of the matter seems I tiie WORDS of Mr. Carnegie. It is to be that the privilege of suffrage' loId in nortrait whch fills the are too little prized by those who pos-j potstory of success! -sess them, particularly by those who is told; In that face the men of ten I stand in most need of them and whose thousand years from now will study I rights are involved in the proper ex-! with lntense scientific Interest a great erclse of them I phase of human Industrial develop-, ( ment. The democratic candidate's speech j The face is like a steel bullet In ' at Baker City is a plain, frank, force-1 it are written all the qualities that ful declaration. It is like the man who ! arneg'e bo earnestly recommends made it It will gain force as it Is re-1 t0T:V0UnE men. and many others, peated throughout the campaign. It " Z TZ'l intensely interesting human docu- hstodesel tite Mr. Carnegie has tried to account 'motevwlillVylV' for his own success and to tell young centuries after his men how to succeed as he has done. 1 u' . The secret of Mr. Carnegie's sue-' litfran,0 cess is well told in th handsome vn . ""rthe injunction to give what ume just issued. But it is not told in best-New TorkJou!,5 diDg th wfurno rt r. - ? r. utbu iorh. Journal. and Union Counties. Senator. W. M. PIERCE, of Umatilla. Representative, Morrow and Umatilla Counties W. P. U.TLOCK. of Umatilla. .lUSTTHINK OP IT Three-fourths of the people in Urns. till county IWUSI IUU1IU .11. w CMl. M UK U1CW 111 thU vriM tn.hAB-tKitnnN o r. oil rrDQT. CLABaand PRICES RIGHT. We carry a com- pieie ihu oi vousrs, spurs, urasnea, n nipt, sirct-&ds.Prk Baddies. Ban. H trior leathsr. Teatt, Wscon corert, Canras, all Unit. JOSEPH ELL. Leading Harness ami Saddlery. iHii gives the people to understand that if he is elected governor he will ac complish something: that he will bend his efforts toward moreeconomi cal government, which is needed and -which the people will be quick to ap preciated. Mr. Chamberlain turns the light on the taxeaters at Salem, shows where a large amount of the taxpayers' money goes without result to the people; shows where "snans" exist and how and by whom they were created. Like an honest individual should, le comes forward with a pledge, clear and direct as words can make it. which binds him to a correction nf tell him first of all to studv for an hour the picture of the man who wrote the book and made the millions. ( In that picture you will find con- centration, self-control, hard work so-' briety, determlnatloln, absolute and ' eternal TENACITY. . Davenport's cartoon shows Carne-' gle passing unharmed through -the ! chilled steel armor- of competition. n 1 Mr. Carnegie can teach nobodv how 1 to fight and win the battles in which ! he has been victorious. But he has' good advice to give and he gives It' Against inree things he warns young men especially. First and foremost comes drink. "You are more lik-plv tn fan in your career from armiirinf the of drinking than from any or all the! thai burrows op the scalp, making dandruff urf, earning the hair to WL and finally BALDNESS. You will have NO MORE DAN. DRUTf. FALLING HAIR, BALDNESS B you mt NEWBRO'S HERRIOIDE The aly hair Preparation on this tokittiy new scientific principle. - """""ib H uuiu any or ail ine these evils if he is elected. The work other temptations likely to assail you. supporting Mr. Chamberlain, as'10" ma Jeaa to almost any other the head of the democratic ticket, is I cmptatJo? and reform. But from the vut. iui uyuor encape is ai- c vr. COUNTY. State Senator. C. J. SMITH. Representative. "VVM. BLAKLEY. Representative. EDWIN A. RESER. Sheriff. T. D. TAYLOR. Clerk. D. CHAMBERLAIN. Recorder. C. H. MARSH. Treasurer. W. D. HANSFORD. Commissioner. JAMES NELSON. Assessor. CHAS. P. STRAIN. Surveyor. JAMES A. HOWARD. Coroner. T. M. HENDERSON. BEAUTIFUL Are the exclusive new pat terns In wall paper we are show ing. Praise is heard from all who select their paper from us and allow us to do their work. Our workmen do your work right. If you have painting you want done entrust your job to us and you will be satisfied. JUSTICES A RCUD DISTRICTS. ARTISTIC DECORATOR now up to the voters. If they desire a man In the office who will work to abate the abuses of official life they Tfrill vote the democratic ticket and they will elect it If they wish no abatement of the state government burden upon them, they will not vote for the democrats or they will stav at home, and allow the same old .politl- most impossible." The next danger is speculation. "Gamesters die poor, and there is certainly not an instance of a specula tor who has lived a life creditable to himself or advantageous to the com munlty." The third great danger to the voung business man is the "'peril of indors ingall the more dangerous. Inas much as it assails one generally In ..ADJUSTABLE.. Window Screens 40 and 50c cal machine to do business name old stand for four years more.,' SIr. Carnegie says to the young As the matter is to be decided by man who wats to succeed, don't the people, we should be satisfied wit" dri.nk' . don,t gamble, don't indorse tb .ve, a Jt l IS. Eft ,onna w or aga.rst us The East Oregonian far us regards drinking and gambl- in me aemocracy the voice s- W. J. CLARKE & COM'Y oi tne people believes in making that voice as free and clear as it Is possible to make it. WANTED: A DAILY PAPER. It is frequently remarked that there should be another dally paper In Pen dleton. If there should be one,- why Is not one established? The field Is open and Barkis is willing. The East Oregonian has been pub Jished as a daily for fifteen years; and it has gathered so much wealth It is true that men whn nrr drift- ganioie or indorsed a note can be mrea in considerable numbers for $5 or $C a week, and even for less when they are past middle age. It is also true that many million aires in the Umited States do drink and gamble and occasionally indorse notes. That is another and a long story. Mr. Carneeio'R nrU-io i - 0 ..i.v jo gWU ior everr voune- mnn .r.i rElih,!aci;umu,atJo of money oi success will learn much from tke book. Mr. Carnegie says that he does not "despair of the republic," EI Principe Degales Henry The Fourth La Flor Stanford Sanches & Haya El Telegrapho La Mia Charles The Great 2 for 25 cents Maloy. T. C. REID. Justice of the F. W W-ILKS. Constable. C C. DARR. Rnart ?nm.rrltn. Alba. J. W. GALLOWAY, Road Supervisor. uistnct pilot Rock, Gilllland, Willow Springs Precincts. E. C. BEITLE, Justice of the Peace jutus WILSON. Constable. HENRY SMITH, Road Supervisor. mena worth and South Athena ana oingnam Springs Precincts. ORANGE CHAM3 ERLAIN, Justice. 01 tne Peace. J. S. SNriTW W. H. BOOHEE. Road Supervisor. j CLARK", WALTERS. Road Supervisor icuu n Ainono 1 Encampment Encampment and Rud. dock Precincts. D' of the Peace. ?Atvc-. Constable. G. D. HIT.YAT?n r j D n.r " r' ,luau supervisor. 1 c:;: rr;ena.'eton' n North, and ' p Ulton' Uni0. McKay, Ho and Pmcn n 1 " I - - -r - - riccincis. A--t NTE. Justice of the Peace J. M. BENT LEY. nn..,.H.Ce Echo-Echo, Yoakum and Umitllla r-recincts. JOHN DORN. Justice of the Peace u .'. McCLELLAN. Constable ' -nenx, juniper, Vansycle o. CASEY. Road winton-North and South Milton Va. ley and Coftj Val fNnr,h Mil 7 r-'w,lour. w..- ,..'r"" -""ion.; m;..-."', ast. wton and t t T .V;u,,n recinct W S prS?01? Cotable. S. PRICE, Road Supervisor, W'es r ton. ' KC5 oad Supervisor, JOSH CLARk- T . .. 03 Preclnet8. amikzo DOWS. R0ad SuenZr COURT STREET FTTRVtott . R. S. BEAN P. L DUNBAR. t c. s. moorr rr. SUDerintnrlont'r , rue . ACKER.MAN. 0f , A. M. CRAUTnir1 - wiku, or J. R. WHITNEY, of Lfc, CONGRESs.0 oi urool LEGICUhTIVE D I Strip lji uninr c&-a J. W. SCRD3NER, 0f UaS, For Joint Reotvu. 4a " or MorroT UMaTII I a fi-vi 1 1,,. , , nt TICKET. State Senator. F. W. VTNnF.vr neDrescntafiu HENRY ADAPTS .-. . ... n Sheriff J. CARNEY, of Clerk. . U. KOGERS. oTJ Record lr ' ' - vuquju, 01 XfUM 1 reaftttM E. J. fiOMMBRimixi'j, Assessor. GEORGE BUZAN. of Commlssionr surveyor. TTT mrmnn J. w. rvi m ntvELUU, of Coroner. TTT n rtrT t. . . Dlitrlrt ton. Constable. Pendleton Planing Buy their stock carload lots and, discounts, which e them to sell at a t margin. IF YOU NEED ... Lumber, Bull Lime, Cemen Sand. Terra or anything in get otr prices. Pendleton Planing Lumber Yard. R. fORSTER, I Dallv Eaat Oreaonlan I only 15 cnta waek. It Pays to Trade at the Peoples Warehouse $15.00 ere ..Mens Suits,, Good Style . Good Make Good Fitters Come in anrl tm r.n r ,1 coo what yv.uu luuKers tnev are. Vnn are UDQW f obligation to buy just because, you look, ya I Agents for I ! Butter- ' tck 1 Patterns! 11 V mm t f ..itH 1.. i.Aiisini ran aanniAflA iiiMvnnfiiiiiii ) in 1 11 11 1111111 r mmm mum iiiiiiiiru I I If" mwrl II IIM III Ml II III 11 I I III. I I. IIIIII 1 III l.llllllll y' llllll llllllllia! II II II II in 7 -v a WVMIVV II 1 CLOTHIERS