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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1902)
mum. Iu Alabama the common drunk ard gets six months at hard labor. In ' A STRONG, VIGOROUS Musical Instruments "Violins, Gcltars, Banjos, Mandolins, Accor dlans, Concertinas, Zithers, and Aotoharps We handle none but the best makes, and our prices are the lowest . . . . Brock & McComas Company DRUGGISTS t i 1 1, -r ha' SATl'RD VY NOVEMBER 1. 1902 the lead In furnishing Oregon teachers. "While our pedagogues ma? have come trom the "bleeding" state. the hoosier state and the state of outlaws, yet there is not one among ,., . them that does not understand his The Halloween fiend who placed r,, , ... , . ,, , . J ' profession. The states that win names the sign "Men's resort where the . K,, , ... . . . , ... , . . ; abroad usually have strenuous cltl- men never think of going, ought to be . ..., .u j .v. 1 " whatever they do they do jitusrvuim tut iitii. wtfh Minnesota there are progressive pen a ties for otTenses after the first- Sev. eral states exact bonds for future so briety. It Is a fact proved by' drink statis tics ihat America is becoming more temperate, but the best authorities do not attribute the Improvement to the effects of legal penalties. Hard drink ers are no longer countenanced by de sirable society. This is one reforma tory force, and a stronger one yet is the Increasing demand in many lines of busiuess for men w.ho are always sober and reliable. Most railroad cor porations, for Instance, Insist on tem perance in their employees. As they have work for more than a million men. they exert a tremendous Influ ence for abstlneuce. ... , Austria's new law will swell heri records of offenses. It will not change : men's tastes and desires. The best , reformatory statutes are those fram ed by social and business self-inter-! est. New York World. Is Liable to Break Down Pe-ru-na Sure to Restore. Marconi is st.U branching out. He Is now going to have people talking across the ocean just as If It werr over the back yard fence. a vengeance. Halloween night has passed and no one was killed. There were a number of "killing" jokes perpetrated through out the country, however, and "quite a few" in Pendleton. The statement that all people like to be humbugged should be more con fined. The most ignorant nowadays stand In the front row when a street iakir is plying his trade. The fairs and carnivals have been : uniformly successful throughout the ( state this year. They have demon strated the fact that Oregon has good things to exhibit and Is capable or producing just ns fine things in most I all lines as any country under the ! sun. The boomer that said you might build an unsurpassable wall arouna the state and she would still thrive upon her own resources, did not talk so wildly after all. So a millionaire has bee-n convicted in the courts. Young Vanderbllt was too swift with Jiis automobile. A millionaire looking through Iron bars for two days will be an anomaly. The architects and builders and contractors are all busy In Pendleton. More building is going on at present and more buildings are In prospect than ever before at this time of the year. It was not republicanism that set tled the strike trouble. It was the American people. They rose up as one. irrespective of politics, and the -president caught the cue and carried out their decree. Golf and bird-shooting are racing for supremacy in the way of sport in Pendleton. It is well to be able to handle the sphere, but the man who can always the mark. Is often useful in times of war. Solid institutions do not worry over the success of others. They like to see s-ieeeS'j all alorr; the line. But the weak-kneed, "one-gallus" gang are Jealous of success. It Is a strang- r to them and they do not like to see rihers enjoy it. The strike trouble is not so thor oughly settled yet In the minds of the operators. They still refuse to take back union, leaders, but they will tinally see the point and be good. The leople have decreed, through the president the rights of the miners and the operators must come to terms. Pendleton citizens have not often been charged with all being cowards, but still there are those who doubt less think so. The people are not only generally successful, but have usually held their own in moat all kinds of encounters, business and otherwise, when It came to the pinch. "The Webfoot country is not in it with Eastern Oregon." said a Web foot teacher yesterday. "We have good times down there and there Is prosperity generally, but there are dollars here where there are nlckles there. It requires a visit to this sec tion to realize the fact that the gTeat Inland Empire is destined to rule this state both financially and politically. Umatilla makes a good showing in the line of school teachers. As a re markable coincidence 38 of her teach ers are native Oregonlans. The fact that so many have lived here all of their livee does not only enable them to Inspire their pupIU with true Ore gon paUrlotlam. but It speaks well iot Oregon that so many of her sons and daughters have turned their attention to education. Kansas, Indiana, and Missouri are Many people not Informed, think there is no game or fish in Eastern Oregon. They have formed the idea that it Is a barren desert waste, out side of the towns where trees have been planted and water has been put into use through artificial means. This is .a grave mistake. There Is game galour throughout this country, and there are trout In the streams that would set the dullest fisherman wild with enthusiasm. While the price of wheat is rising and times are generally so prosper ous the people of Umatilla county should not forget the irrigation ques tion. He who waits is likely to get left, while the man of action is sue. ceeding. Umatilla county may not need anything just at this time, but, she may need it in the future. It is well to prepare for the rainy day. Laying the plans for irrigation by as sisting the government in the work is just like laying up for a rainy day. WHAT TO SAY. When you see a man in woe. Walk right up and say. "Huliot" Say "Hullo!" and "How d'ye do? How's the word a-usln you?" Slap the fellow on the back; Bring your hand down with a whack. Walk right up and don't be slow; Grin and shake, and say, "Hullo!" Is he clothed in rags? Oh, sho; Walk right up and say, "Hullo!" Rags is but a cotton roll. Jest for wrappin" up a soul; An' a soul is worth a true. Hale and hearty "How d'ye do?" Don't wait for the crowd to go. Walk right up and say, "Hullo!" When big vessels meet, they say They saloot an' sail away: Jest the same are you and me. Lonesome ships upon a sea. Each one sailin' bis own log For a port behind a fog. Let youv speakin, trumpet blow. Lift your horn and cry, "Hullo!" Say "Hullo!" and "How d'ye do?" Other folks are good as you. When you leave your house of clay, Wanderin' In the far away; When you travel through the strange Country t'other side the range. Then the souls you've cheered will Who you be. and say "Hullo!" S. W. FOSS. DRUNKENNESS AND THE LAW. The Austrian government is pre paring to combat drunkenness by law. A bill is being drawn inflicting severe penalties upon dipsomaniacs. In this country about 30 states have general laws dealing with drunkards. The others leave to local ordinance makers the business of disposing of the victims of too much drink. As penalties for intoxication there are i porvided One aranglng from SO cents, (the minimum in some states, to $100, the maximum in others. Imprison Iment Is an alternative punishment In .most states, but la the only one in Maine and New Hampshire. The I term, of the convicted range In -various commonwealths from a two day's minimum nn in tL fivA Vftartt' mYl DEMOCRATIC LABOR PLANKS This must be a government by law. and not according to the will of' officials. We therefore demand thr enactment of laws, both state and tederal. prohibiting the Issuance ori injunctions In labor disputes, Infring ing upon the rights of frees peech, free assemblage, full freedom to or ganize and to quit work, and trial by jury, to the end that such rights may be maintained in complete integrity. We unqualifiedly favor the complete t exclusion of all American territory of all Chinese, of either whole or raised blood, according to the terms of the bill presented to congress by the American Federation of Labor and the California commission, and we denounce the republican majority ( in congress for its treason to the working people and the Pacific Coast Ir. rejecting this bill and passing the present weak and inadequate law. We favor the eight-hour day for public work, whether done directly or by contract. We favor the construction of gov ernment vessels In the government s navy yards and we pledge our candi dates for congress to use every effo-t to secure the immediate construction of such a vessel at the Mare Island I navy yard. We favor the eatabllshmeLt of s state free labor bureau in connection with the state labor bureau of sta- , Jt. tlstics. to the end that the laborer ' "OB. Frank Dana, Alderman TwCBty-Fourth District, writes seeking employment may be furnish-1 fron 232 East Fifty-Eighth Street, New York City: ed with reliable Information ot n ..... -i,- n . sources of employment without cost , e Pcruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: We are opposed to the present prar-; Gentlemen: "There is no remedy for a broken-down system tlce of purchasing state supplies part- ibst j know ot whicb wiU so effectually restore health as Pcruna. ly or In whole manufactured in sta'e . , V prisons, reformatories or asylums, anu j "Whenever I am overworked or suffer from the consequences of to prevent this practice we demand g cold a few doses p Pvruna builds me up again more quickly than untonTat. mult sarUr tiet aU ! ever tried, I find it especially valuable for catarrh goods purchased by the state. Three bottles cured me three years ago of catarrh of the stomach and. I hm-e never had the least symptoms ot it since.' Vciy truly, FRANK DUNN, Alderman 24th Dist., N. Y. City. iiu wwa99 i imes he qualifies the stntrment, and )jAAiVSVN'SKSAAVS' m y avs: ""Impossible without an opera- 1 C d I ft 1 I C ion." Yetboth these "impoesibles" I VUJLLAC- XV JS the happtnes3 of motherhood," savs the doctor some times savs tion." Yet both these "impossibles have been made possibles by the use ot Dr. tierce s i-avonie ire- scnption. Manv times the hindrances to mother hood are to be found in womanly diseases or weaknesses, wtnett are perfectly and permanently curea dv "i-a vorite Pre scription." ThU t BBl BJar cine for nTOOissa are different kjJ . waasi.. tonlo thstopcrsUsoniS brines. Pemnsls " owe avT n 111 a stHutea the dellcau v LkxiM u a specific fa . KUtw 1 JOfl nerre nores. CtUrrh i ttuon renni i .... j t, . " - x-eruna geexs ont r.i.i. t ucu pmu oi tie body. T.nl T!l ... i sya: "In Janusry Uit I W i 1 1 . nn i.j wrmea orcuuc heart tu. or btifilnMiA wtfhswi i . . -vkyq on arrival fnlt fvmi..i Perun I becan to tanm reel that Iuai Round c leeling.'1 Paul Landna. , , .wrWj R eat Uniliirta no relief, risilly on U i tor me, uitt I htaetaead and there wss no cor. Ti wiwoui gre muerj, 123 1 grew worse. nnnv 1 cot ana or ns dre&drui cusease. itooizn 1 . 1. YnMn. ..Jit irrltn at ones to In. rlmfi m uwwvw v rtce gratis. w AQureas vi. atnajn, 1 Tl.o TTurtman SUUtinS. Ohio. meal- mmmWmmkkmammW mriar mm xummr m 2 r 1 cures xr- rrsrnlaritr and drtei debilitatitiE drains. It heals inflammation and ulceration, and cures female weak ness, it makes -weak women strong and sick women welL wiih to add my testimony indrvdi of otberm a to the nloe of Dr. PierceU medicine." writo Mra. Ida M. be Ford, ofLatooa. Huboanl Co.. Minn. " 111 re doctored with a great many fbyucUn aome apcctaliits; hare twice been a a hospital for treatment. My caae baa been regarded as a hopeieM one, and they knew not what the trouble was. Beart wa bad stomach all n of order, tired oat , terete pains in aU paru of the body ; sinking spells, and oearrr e-rery ailment a woman coo Id bare I took many a bottle of 'patent medicine without effect. I began takins; Dr. Pieree'a Pararue r teriptioa, and ten month afierward I rre birth to a ten-pound boy. AU iinmjw Asd siaUd at a act that I ntvr toutd itar a ckad. Both the baby and myself were strong, and I got alone splendidly thanks to your medicine' The Common Sense Medical Adviser, lOoS large pages, in paper covers, is sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Adores Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. 17 or POULTRY and STOCK SUPPLIES CALL ON- Colesworthy AT Till- CHOP MILL 127 and 129 Etu-t Alta Street 1 For your lumber and buildine material of all descriptions and )uu win save money ana get fiist-class stock. We can sup ply you with , Doors, Windo.ws, Screen doors and windows. , building paper, lime,- cement, , brick and sand. ' We make a specialty of wood gutters lor bams and dwellings. Oregon Lumber yard. AJta 8t., opp. Court House. Nasal CATARRH In J its sUges tUre thooM be ckaoliceai. Ely's Cream Sain eJeaBMe,9O0tlKi andbrus I he dueoMd wemanse I I care catarrh and dr ea away a cod is tLe u.d quickly. Cream Balm U pUeed into !he cortrUi, f?read4 orer the paeaibtaae and i aoiotbed. Belief Is Un mediste and a cure foUowa. It U cot drying doy Dot produce rateiinf. LareBii,MaetiuatIrcg gliUorbynaUi Trial Slse, 10 ceaU by mail. LT BBOTBBS. M Wuta But, linr Tork. I Joseph Ell, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL IN THE LIGHT oi our experience In carriage and business wagon selling, we do not Imitate to lay that w bare fairly well teamed the needs ot our erutomers-present and proiwetiTa. Tv .. 1 l0rn,f IU ,"Ie ,'t M '""S "Ton please, 1 TODll find oar onlnRt in k. .11 . be next day, every day. Oor Winona hacks are Inst the thin,. .t, made, good looking, easy to ride In and strong. We hare top. for all kinds of bnggieaand cash. Ions and daihu tor hacks. Gel onr price on wagon, boggles, backs carts, gasoline en glnea, plow and taw Dill. NEAQLe BROTHERS Wat" Bt- ' MJ. Paafll.tott. 0. Lumber, T All kmds for ail rap UUn..rt nt all nPCCTI. X lAUlUg " " 1 to older a . t wmsT JJOQI piacc rsunaing maieiw , consulted us. Pendleton Rail Lanibef U R0MBT f0SI mllll Til I K kn I ii nu 111 U ill ill " " IS HARNESS-SADDLER! . 1 F0 8AfB AT TUE ORBOONIAN office, Urge bundle; of newspapers, eoa- Uined for S6 cent a band!. 1 nr """tHSne in firsts .1. n US. men uuiut j Our prices w - out low. you. U. 8 700 T0.t