& 4& IS E HI r w ! " "w 1 8 THAT Mil 'V AtwoocFs Cascata Compound U the -Jtirest and ?ifet meriieine for resciiluting thu acMnn of ths Hvir, khlnpy, stomach ami bowels. A never failing remedy for constipation, liilion nesa, heada--he and all rlsens caused by a torpid liver or irn-.iiular action ot the bowels. It i- very use ful to relieve colds and fevers and to purity the blood. .nt,r!nrnil Rlll'npn bV WV.1t good Kteak or juicy chop. The wife seems to have agreed with the bus ! fnr shn is reported to have told the court that all went well uu til it became impossible for thorn to have meat on the table regularly, and imii hnnnmn vozetnrlans. ic didn't suit her husband, firmed that he began i '. ther things around hn had not before and that Anally, last week, lie bcut her. She was so injured that she had to tube to bar oeti For Sale Wholesale and Retail by Brock & KcComas Company DRU GISTS - PENDLETON of 8 a lYli 1IO LT 1 i nmir and sher.r- , loo sometimes Irom very tnimnj uuB, - JYUttWua east, to complain celop somen , blister wart, tumor, mole, or the simp est li ml! h I,.,.-., of, them. A boil, oi aess , . frfcrhtfiil looking Cancerd fi louna iH'rv. thev How many other domestic troubles - intc- line linfln rnused by the unaccustomed eating of vege- thlllk your ' Amirentlv there is no difference between a Cancerous and Common rfJJ . flio r nnnearauce, auuiui mia j "- '"""ci novim,- less it may seem, ana an siow subpicioa at . . J-r .... r nnwdnri; ovnr had Cancer, or von Imvo .i ikrm mrticu arly ir any ui .yuui , . - "-gwar aiarm, yani j fi, Cr,rf nftpr all. is onlv the outornu-Mi u i .nrA ie ninin i r- . lui laiv- ."- v imp ii x t 1.1, Ann nliol' ifc nrncrrAcc until tables it would be impossible to say ' :dence 0f polluted blOOd, auu iiuu iiuS J"", , IT 1 1 v r aUCer . . . t ! 1UC1KL r . , ' All affnrt-c hfnl trip lllppr hv mpnnc nf .Wrl hns heeu nunneu. j "o W1 ailtves harmless t may seem, ana an & -aoa alarm, particularh; 1 think your blood is mMpiiop nf nollllted 1" r , , .rj ah (Hnri-c: tn heal rne uicer dv mpnn! nf i... Wrt IOC tlPPTl 1 U1111CU. - - .J " 3UlVP5nr. . 1 . tn.t.tilpm UIUITIIIi IL111LV.U . . 1 J j . . t . ... - V nn.rnin Timr vtirt.iii liiiiiaui swv.m" ... ... t- T'nnnsrh Is Known, however, to maise " - . fiMornn nifiiiii 1 1 tin uwww r-' -viu i . mi ..... u ;i-o fnr ciiHi treatment can nave tin nncc;u . kind of Polee disturb- external remedies uin . .r -lij j T,.. r.nni.rnto n k nil nt fo ee uisiuru- pvtpnia reiucuics . . i,-, , - . - .. " i- n. rt.. tl, Ic nn tel- , . 1 11 - -mnrhlfl matter WW 1U1111 lli -Jav, uiuuu auu die tamea hm'. ance iu i tile Qeaul JJUI 1110 auu ua-'. uuugj L-cur unless relief be promptly found. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 11, 1902. islands is necessary to carry out the plans of the Almighty. A few years ago the "advance agent of prosper ity" was announced and now the re publican party has secured the ser vices of the advance agent of the Al mighty in the person of the good Bishop Thoburn. , With confidence PINGREE TO JOHNSON. Men who have the least charity for others need the most for them selves and they are the first to cry i ln 0rsoiVes and a little nerve we can easily imagine ourselves interpreters of the Divine will. This was done successfully ccrituries ago, but no one contemplated that the industry was to be resurrected in this en lightened day and age. out at the lack of it in others when they are in a position to feel the need of it. The trusts are all at work and Mark Hauna is talked of for presi dent, while the Ohio republicans, in state convention, put a strong anti trust plank in tne.r platform, model ed after Hanna's dea of reforming the trusts. The world do move! Han na is a man Tvhoni the people can trust! General Leonard Wood pulled the flag down in Cuba, but when the same thing is proposed to be done in the Philippines there are a lot of people who rise up in apparent if not assumed indignation and wrath. There are those who will persist in making a mountain out of a mole hill and vice versa. George F. Ho'ar, republican United States senator, in a speech in the sen ate on May 22, invited the Ameri can people to gaze upon these two pictures: No. 1, "In Xuba you have got the enternal gratitude of a free people." No. 2, "In the Philippines you have got the hatred and sullen submission of a subjugated people." Senator Hoar is not a bad artist when it comes to word painting. President Itoosevelt's memorial speech appears to ha-e contained a "crown of thorns" to some people. It did contain some things that would have been better if left unsaid. Pres ident Roosevelt's strenuousness is not as popular ln office as it was out of office. He is just a little too positive to be always right, and just a little too partisan to be president of the whole people. President Roosevelt will have to take a reef in Lis enthus iasm as well as his strenuousness if he wishes to be renominated and suc ceed himself. Ex-President Grover Cleveland has accepted an invitation to speak at the opening of the new Tilden Club on June 19th. There will be 1500 invited guests, among them David B. Hill, William J. Bryan and Richard Olney. This will be Mr. Cle" eland's first po litical speech since his retirement from the presidential office. This Is to be a notable gathering of demo crats ot all shades of political belief and is taken as an effort to harmonize tLo various discordant elements of the party ln order to properly pre pare for the battle of 1904. One of tho curious freaks of the In tense heat that swept down upon Martinique is stated In the report of one who visited one of the ruined buildings In which were found a num ber of glasses that had been fused, twisted and flattened, but tho wooden ahelf on which they rested was not charred. In another place there wore found a doll and a small table set of metal plates; the metal was fused, but tho body of the doll was not burn ed. Just how such things occurred is one of the problems that science will have to work at for a long time be fore it flndB the solution. This unhappy close of the Boer struggle recalls the fact that the late Gov. Pingree, of Michigan, that great democratic-republican, who died about a year ago, made a pilgrimage to South Africa. He died while on his road home. It is not so well known that he completed a book on his experience and observations in which be protested against the British war of conquest. The man uscript of this book was delivered last month, so says the Cleveland Plain Dealer, to Tom L. Johnson. Gov. Pingree's intimate friend. It was sent, continues the Plain Dealer by Mrs. Pingree in accordance with the wish of her dead husband. The country are 'tribute of Mr. Pingree s esteem was received just a year anu u uuj people seem to think is proposed b th(j Atlantic. It had beeu Gov. Piu. the Fowler bill before congress. The gr8e-s intention personally to deliv bankers of Missouri and Kansas areer the manuscript to his friend on the first on record to denounce by res-1 his return to America, uut ne was olution the branch bank feature of the I ?fLn, '"1 fXj'0 bill, declaring It to be unpatriotic ' deei,ly affected when he received the "un-American, unbusinesslike and as , manuscript. It avas almost a voice tending to establish a monopoly of ; from the dead. Gov. Pingree and Mr. the great and honored business 0f, " " " 7,7; The bankers of the not in favor of a bank trust, as some circulation to the sore, MOTHER, TWO AUNTS, AND ONLY SISTEfl DIED OF CANCER OF THE BREAST. I had a Cancer on my left breast, which caused me great pain for three or four pains were deep and shooting. The ulcer discharged yellow nud rather offeustve mat ter. I had given up nil hope, as the doctors v gave me no relief. My mouier, iu Quints and an only sis- SPK7"T' ter died of Cancer of '7 ' '"''' Vi the breast, and I am f ' I (Mil i satislied tnat i, too, , ,. -x wol,jd kave been gone but for S. S. S. I feltsome betterat'ter the n: -t bottle, and after using only seven bot .les. was cured. This was several years l;o but have seen no signs of the Cancer -luce. I would urge all who are suffering :rom the disease to give S. S. S. a trial. Iklton, Mo. Mks. James Cassem.. M 5 A SMALL SORE CAME ON THE INSIDE OF HIS LIP. t About the first of February, 1899, I noticed a small lump on the inside of my lower lip. It annoyed me considerably; the doctor cauterized it ancl in a few days it dropped off, but shortly after another came and broke into an open sore, and in spite of the large number of remedies I tried, it would not heal. I then went to another, and he gave me something to put on the sore, saying if it did not cure he would cut the sore out. I used his medicine, but received 110 benefit. I de cided a blood purifier was what I needed, and began to take S. S. S. The ulcer was growing rapidly, with some pain and a crawling, creeping feeling. At first S. S. S. seemed to make the sore worse, but this soon changed, and after I had taken seven bottles the place healed entirely ; my general health" improved and I am as well now as ever and no signs of the dis ease have been seen since. Hollands, S. C. - W. P. BROWN. WOULf) SP.AR num - u"-n, BU HEAL. Mr. Tno. Massic. OwensW. t-. adoui uiree vears apo n m;,. tne right side of my nose. Itgrewsteadi ly in spiteof nil efforts to heal it up ; the pain was not very severe at first, but increased when the sore began to inflame nud dis charge matter. At f : 4.i 1 u .'if scab over and appear to be getting well, but the scab would drop off, leaving a red, angry looking ulcer. I had almost destsblj curing the Cancer when ar i was called to S. R S .mil t..j few bottles the Cancer besrantor Urow smaller, the discharge sta 1 was reneveu 01 uie xemr-dsat' C banking ln the hands of a few mil lionaires to the exclusion of the men of the west, old and young, who have labored so faithfully and well to make our banking system what it b5 today the best in the world." Just so, a monopoly of banking would be a bad thing for the many bankers but a good thing for the tew bank ers. If monopoly and privilege are to continue in other lines of industry nnd enterprise why not In banking too? To preserve "equal rights" ui banking and deny it in other lines would be trouble for nothing. The fact of the matter is, the bankens and crew to be sincere friends ing the mayor's stay in Detroit. The dedication of the book, however, was a surprise to Mr. Johnson. 1 -t 11 3 i-t,,.. ..nn .1 i.i p Cancerous Ulcers can De reacnea oniy uy a. lcmcuy max oa-lo auu iwtwi UlUUU 9BW.i", cwju. - j A rli-ivM nut the frerni nroducme doisoiis wliicli cause tne uicer, ana purines anam -- i ... -, . ,1 111 ATM - it 1... fKZ2S .rfBSCaLHtfc. .... J y 3 1o-inn1 rrpntmeiir fnr sores of this character. nrl U 9 K K ,v43 w - r ry. r r ,1 . . .1 r. l fc hi m k . iv tne use or o. o. o. liic uitci is suumiai k. fe ?i sn. 0 and iorces out all tne irritating poisons, ana ; lit E trsf H .. i . i 11.. J ,.,f1,. C CQ. As reproduced in the Plain Dealer - tecS Ssh8 nirft otf nnA -,,-Tiere trie pnnstitution has : the dedication is as follows: " " To mv friend. Tom L. Johnson AKtcvA onrl irenl-erierl. it restores vitalitv and streuirthens the nenrous system, am . .... UltlkUk.U V. 11 - 7 I'll tnat unuenaing ioe oi lnenuaiuv, tuut ..i i- k- c c t: nnfnic Amnrv nrnn nr nrner rumerab. champion of honest government, of , tne appetite aim uigwaiuu. w.. . v. j, leges to none, I dedicate as a token, " TWe Ivivnicr n rhronie ulcer or sore of anv kind 'that IS slow 111 healing. of sincere esteem this story of an op-, . , , 11 ;ii '. ,0I,i or1,-,V or1 cuoli Qnrinl info; n n lc-f ntrilPn 11TK171 1 If. Ill)LiV Ui 1L1LC1 llcill . Wi.lL lUUt 1 UV.U 1 v. CL L u.J.J-- " r- - i,cu',lt: "fa"'"?1- .r". - -- --' - . , t Cj.i..tji"j as thev desire tree ot cost. 5ook; on dancer ana Winer diseases or tne mnun aciumt. THE SWIFT SPEGIFSG GQPJIP&NY. ATLnNia. ft nressed and outraged terrific odds for freedom and civic unity. H. S. Pingree, On board the Melbourne, Message- ries Maratime Service. Mas' 22, 1901. The admirers of both of these men had better join their fellows and a', j as wen as an sympathizers w un me tack the citadel of privilege along i all lines, with a view of guarante.-' ing to all men, regardless of race ir previous condition, equal rights, bu:, ! doubtless, the bankers will turn, from this proposition with wry faces However, a thing that Is not worn' doing well Is not worth doing at a.!, not but be interested in this impres sive testimony to the common as pirations for human liberty of two such distinguished characters, who, though of opposite parties in politics, were bound together in the same fun damental political faith. , SEE OUR RON BEDS THE VEGETARIAN EAST. Bishop Thoburn recently gave tes timony before the Philippine commis sion of tho senate, and in tho course of bis remarks declared that God was responsible for tho aquisltlon of the Philippines by tho United States, and that our continued occupancy of the Our eastern friends have not yet become absolute vegetarians, but it looks as if they wore being driven in that direction by forces sufficient-, ly powerful to land them before long. ' These forces are various and not all of them are operating in the same lo cality, but they mutually strengthen' one another and make a mighty tur-i moll for meat eaters. In the first place there Is the beef, trust, whose operations have disturb ed a good many people. Next Is the rise In the price of beef, which whether caused by the trust or not has forced a considerable number of people to prefer to dine without eat-, ing flesh. Then in Chicago there Is the strike among the teamsters who have been doing the hauling for the stockyards and packers, and there is danger that no meat will be hauled ' for the hungry oven If they have the price and are willing to pay it . . I It Is In the tenament districts of' tho larger cities on the Atlantic sea board that the trouble Is most per plexing. A powerful element of the tenement population has declared war against tho "meat trust," as it is called, and has undertaken to sup press the sale of fresh meats by the butchers. Eastorn papers are full of accounts of riots long the whole lino from Massachusetts to Now Jersey. Re cently In the Williamsburg district of New York 800 men and women marched through the streets for tho purpose of attacking tho Bhops of butchers who refused to stop selling meat. Similar riots have occurred in Boston, Brooklyn and Newark The leaders of tho riots are Hebrews but men and womon of other racep join them when tho rioting gots llvo ly. Some of the effects of the lack of meat are surprising. A prlsonor bo foro a Newark police court on a charge of beating his wife sought to Justify tho offense by Baying he TO YOUNGLADIES. ; From tho Treasurer of the Young People's Clu-istiau Teni- j pcrance Association, Elizabeth Caiue, Fond du luc, lVis. "Dear Mns. Fimoiam: I want to tell you and all the young ladies of tho 1 country, how grateful I am to you for all the benefits I have received from using Xiydiu E. Pinklmm's Ycgc- ; table Compound. I snUered for Largest stock and great est varietj ever shown in Pendleton. Iron beds are the neatest, most comfortable, most attract ive and easiest to keep clean of any articles of furniture ever put in bedrooms. MSS ELIZABETH. CAINE. eight months from suppressed men struation, and it effected my entire svstem until I became weak and debil itated, nnd at times felt that I had a hundred aches in as many places. I only used tho Compound for a few weeks, but it wrought a change in me which I felt from the very beginuing. I have been very regular.since, have no pains, and find that my entire body is as if it was renewed. I gladly recom mend Lydiu E. Pinkbain's Vege table Compound to everybody." Miss Elizaiictu (Lune, 09 W. Division St., Fond du Lac, Wis. $5000 forfilt 1 abovt testimonial Is net gtnuln. At such a time the greatest aid to nature is Uydia E. Pinkbain's Vegetable Compound. It prepares the young system for the coming change, and is the surest reliance for woman's ills of every nature. Mrs Pinkham invites all young women who a?e ill to write her for free Advice Ad" dress Iiyiw Maw. Campers' Outfits Camp Stools, Camp stoves, folding chairs, folding cots, teuts, wagon covers or anything else the camper may need. Joseph Easier Complete House Furnisher Summer School for Boys Bummer Season of HILL MILITARY ACADEMY PORTLAND, OREGON Open from July 1 to August 31 . For day and bounllng itudent. School teealon only iu forenoon; recreation all tho afternoon. For particulars apply or write to DR. J. W. IIILL Hill Military Academy i',lnclPal Mar-hall and'Jtth St., Portland, Oregon. STANDARD BLUE FLAME WICKLESS OIL AND GASOLINE STOVES W. J. CLARK & CO. Court Street tvt k A TV T CM? LT JL J - -A- T T 1 T If " X I iv ciTOR AG1 V t Jk- - -- rnrnvN PR n T nun Telephone Main it r'avs to lrade at tne r-eopies. vrw- Shirt Waists AND The Pioneers of the Parrffr. A Btrictly Up to Date Inroranw Organization. ABordi Absolute Protection and Payi liiaimi rromptiy. hud omcx: g PENDLETON - OREdON j li Well Established r ln Beren Btatea. S SOLICITORS WANTED. vx,.v-V-muL ggpgppppooq oojootj BELTS If you'll come to us you'll acknowledge that there BUT ONE assortment of these summer oesu Pendleton. Whatever is correct and new yuu and the PRICES are beyond the shad.wotau than the same coods can be bought for elsewhere. cum watpho en. nCr. 98c afl BELTS, 25c, 35c, 50c, 75c and $ And all the time our JUNE SELLING goes on at prices like this : Bcotcli lawns, per yard 3c Good calico, I per gj'.y'to' Spool cotton, 2 for 5c Wome7 L.!oSoD Jjonaaaie MUfllln 7c equm " Itl n 1. iifntiAiinnii Agents Butter Patterns PENDLETON, OREGON