Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1902)
$ Ladies Pocket Books & Ladies Pocket Books , Ladies Pocket Books Ladles Pockot P ooks g50 emitts mi ttlh OeDEfflr Latilos Pockot Books Ladies Pocket Books Ladies Pocket Books S; Ladies Pocket Books Brock Sl ffBcComas.Gompaiiy i-ec Window Display MONDAY. DKCEXIIlKIl 1. U02. tliusiiistlc. the mast thoroughly Ore goiilnii or any that has graced tin1 business liihtory of thin state. Every i citizen Is a member of the Irrigation army. Every foot of arid land is a rnmnum foe that must be vanquished Labor with what zeal we will, Something yet remains undone; Something uncompleted still, Walts the rising sun. Longfellow. JUST AMONG OURSELVES. I This morning the city of Pendleton l put on her metropolitan clothes. The ' most beneficial addition that has been 1 added, at one stroke, to the home and ! business circles of this city, is the inauguintlon of free mail deliver)-. i From the plane ct an every day town. ! she rises to the queenly dignity of a Pendleton's hands are lull of goodjeIt'. wi" "e CW strlle- In Keeping things Just now. The business, so- wl tllls Progressive spirit of the cial. charitable and educational cir- 'la.V- '' ,llst ,nke t,le ,3fmeB of cles are alive with activity. No time importance now before her. She ior Idleness Plenty for all to do foi4,n,lst meet ""fUnchingly the plans and months to come, lluslness pressing j '"islncss proposition- that press for furiously upon every citizen. Public 80'ltlon. THE WORST TRUST OF ALL. and private Interests that must be in telligently met. Plans for future achievement that must be enlarged To me government ownership upon and consummated. Improve- -' worst "trust" f a11- a,ul I , , , believe, attracted by rich spoils, a ments that call for action. Questions frl.homnR fow woulll coutrol lat so. of importance that cannot be postpon- cinllstlc government in their own In ert all bearing upon the shoulders of terests. just as they control this one the community. whenever It becomes worth their while to do so. For example, the The plans for the new club house 8' oat prize in every country is man's , , ... ... .. ,. inheritance the earth: and I'll ven- have been accepted hy the Conimei- . ,,.,,,.,.., ., ... n. cial Association and the young men's ,,lo wm,(li,e bettor off today if con club. The proposition of disposing gress had never had any control over of the $2tt.00U worth of stock is now the public domain. before the city. Every point in the' , ... ,ni ,, ,, ! Tlie laud bounties, railroad grants, ,,.... . i.u ,....u,...u.. .., ... . wam) an(1 aptsji ,mve a re3ult0(, in satistactoruy mot. it nas ueen tieau the v.j),lauie bulk of the public do- with as a purely business transaction, main going Into the hands of schem and is now on n most rigid business ing rings which stood back of each of wi ti... flnnriui,oa n,i i,ioHv iln I 'lese ostensibly public and general not enter into the strong and practi- rmlv n nenannt child, nnd the barbar- i i,t..fl.nr, bol'q ''tin mnttnr 1 for love, marry a princess. mu, peasant girl shook the Russian throne. Nicholas married a princess and so 1 far as life's .highest accomplishments I are concerned, he had ns well not 5 married at all. His i.ie nnd her life j ' are records of mutual bitterness. She ;!was a princess, it Is true, but. Ah, ii that lingering, clinging, tender thread, l I . . 41... ........ 1 nnlnitfl vv tnat reacnea irom iuc iuj"' (,.... &3 back through the story of boyhood to the peasant cot! It bound him as vv ! with bonds of steel. He is only human. M 1 ... , . I ....,.,, 1- Sn Ilia tils neiiri is L-uiuuiuii life is empty. His soul hovers over that old resplendent dream. Now that he Is borne down with care, burdened j with the weight of government, soured with the details of an unhappy life and driven to desperation with, the thought that his children are all girls, he Is said to be Insane and on the point of abdication. Ah, to be a( peasant, only a peasant! Hut why should not three laughing girls make any rather proud? Why should they he a cloud upon the royal brow? By the same Inhuman barbar ism that bars a prince from wedding! a peasant, women are exciuueu uum the Russian throne. Think of it. 'Don't love, only marry a princess. Don't let a noble woman wear a crown. Give It to some reprobate, who can dim its radiance with a life of debauchery! If your mind can imagine tlio great space that lies between the glor ious life of Victoria nnd the groveling baseness of old Leopold, you can un derstand this Salic law. What Is the Salic law? In the 5th century, the Franks, a nation of barbarians, roaming in the woods of mediaeval Germany and France, decreed that no woman should Inherit the lauds of her father. In the 5th century, when the warriors drank blood from a cup made of the human skull; when ferocity was val or; when butchery was glory; when civilization was not even a iwet's distant dream. This was the age that brought forth the Salic law. Modern nations have applied it to the succes sion of the crown, as the ancients did to lauds. It Is a relic of fifteen hundred years old let Russia clings to it. No wonder Nicholas is unhap py- Rubber Goods i Mirkintoshes "O per cent discount on all grades i c Mickininl to per cent discount on all grades fiSe. watrlS raglnn e'oat. fall longth, $7 5- now 6.56 OVERSHOES and RUBBERS n.:i,u Q.nrm rubbers 2Sc; Misses storm rubbers 35Q; Ladies xnm rubZZSy. U Ladies light weight, best made 48c; 0 s st o n Shbers 40: Youths storm rubbers 48 s; Mens heavy rubbers fioc: Mens Uailey patent rubbers 65c; Misses arches toe and 50c; Ladies arctics 85c: Boys arct.es, sizes 3to 5. 95Cj Mens arctic; Si: Mens overshoes for felt boots $2 $1.65 and $ 35 All the above goods are new stock, and guaranteed LADIES JACKETS and LONG COATS Special reduction nf 10 per cent on all Misses coats and Ladies jackets. Special reduction ot 20 per cent on all Ladies long coats THE FAIR The Place to Save Money Lumber, Ltimbet, r LUn All IcinrU u. ... Saskf Doors Planine of ail a... to older. UC5nfc! Don't nl Building Material Cn consulted us. mil Pendleton Plank Umber Yard. RODERT rORSTH, r iM"H"M"H' l"M H l -H4-4-H--M4-tt-H--H--i-4-4W't''H-j- m m s. m m 1 -m r jr .-v w. ft HOLIDAY UUUUS cal features of the concern. They can be added after the money Is rats ed. It Is now In the plainest and most practical business parli. It remains for Pendleton to meet It. as she has met. successfully, every other consid eration that entered into her futur welfare. She can add this club build Ing to her worthy institutions without an extra effort. She can raise this $20,0rt0 worth of stfck and lay tho foundation for the building inside ot two week's. The present quarters of the Commercial Club aro inadequate to the growing demand for room. TIip nped for suitable recreation and en tertainment for the young people grows more apparent day by day. It Is a plain, broad, business deal. It will redound to the credit and profit of the city. It will be an everlasting monument to the enterprise and pub lie spirit of the community and the work of building it should bo entered Into with zeal and wisdom. The new Academy building Is near ly completed. Its addition to Pendle ton's high position as an educational center, demands an increased scope of opportunity for the social and bus iness inclinations ot the young peo ple. The high school journal that Is to be Issued by the niombers ot that in stitution, is an undertaking hy the young people of this city and deserves the support of everyone. As an ad junct to the high school, its mission Is especially worthy of encourage ment and aid It Is to be n home product. Thought and word and sen timent of your sons and daughters; fruit of their yearning for a higher plane and broader view of life; aro you in favor of such? Then make It a success that tho young and the old, the city nnd the county will he proud of. Acting upon tho suggestion of Judge Hartman. this, city nnd county should organize at once, for the pros ecution of the campaign or Irrigation. There must be organized effort, sys tematic work nnd thorough under standing of the plans to be put forth by TJmatllla county for government aid. Thoso In charge of our proposi tions should be In eammunlcntlon now with tho government engineers nnd the secretary of the state asso ciation, looking to an Investigation nnd acceptance. This Irrigation cru sade did not end with the convention. Its climax Is yet to como. In the full fruition of the land wo love. Its meaning will bo empty If we dovnot act In concert with the spirit that rnnds 'that: convention tho most eu- acts. Tho stone and timber act gives every citizen 160 acres of land valua ble only, for stone or timber. What does a citizen want with an 1 Isolated lfio acre tract of such land? Obviously not to use It himself, hut In practically every instance lie se cures it only to sell It at once to tho timber speculators, who thus have gathered at nominal prices about all the timber land not In general grants (often calling perjury and fraud to their aid. and taking up the land by their own employes). President Cleveland, to preserve river sources, set aside certain moun tain areas as timber reserves n worthy act; but the grafters, by their willing friends in congress passed an act permitting any person having land in a forest reserve to exchange slow- cAnrri i HEALING Slow healing sores are unsightly, pain, fill ami daugeroui. They are a comtant care and source oi anxiety and worry. Chronic, slow healing sorea are fre- 3ueutly the after effects of some long ebilitating lickneis that leaves the con stitution weakened aud the blood in a polluted, run down condition, when a scratch, cut, simple boil or bruise, be comes a fearful looking ulcer that grows aud spreads, eating; deeper and deeper into the flesh in spite of everything that cau be don to check its progress. Old people whose blood is below the standard and the circulation sluggish, are often tormented with face sores, and indolent. sickly looking ulcers upon the limbs that give them hardly a moment's rest from 1 pain and worry. ' Ordinary sores Purify the BlOOfJ I are liable to be. I come chronic Heal the Sore. I when the blood 1 is too weak to throw off the germs and poisons, and no amount of external treat-' ineut will heal them, but they continue 10 grow worse anu worse, anu many times terminate in that most horrible oi all human maladies. Cancer. S. S. S. cures slow healing sores by purifying; and invigorating the germ laden, vitiated blood and purging the system of all corrupt matter, thus strik in? at the real cause and reitinvhi evrv it for an equal quantity (not value) ( hindrance to a rapid cure, aud this is the out of the leserve. This exchange be- only possible way to reach these deeulv ...1. H.. I ,1 I .J J - imk iiuiij upiiuuiii, luiiiuuiiK 1 aim 1 ruuieu, uuugerous places. a. o. S. others) have kept all their good tlm-1 strengthens and tones up the circulation, I her land inside the reserve, but have and supplies rich, exchanged all their stony or burnt ov,g nutritious blood for otherwise worthless sections Inside the rebuilding of the the reserve for choice timbered lnndUfc 1 E, . fe constitution and outside the reserve, till now theie Is. 5te bos' h?allsr the sore, but little good timber left In the pub-1 , when you get rid of lie domain the old plague spot for all time. ' " " . 1 If you have o slow healing, stubborn . ., , , ' sore, write us about it, and our Physiciaui What the babies to bo born oO years , win ,,ivi,. vou :,' i, ' hence will say to this question of Tu e.if o i- n. ' We have a fine line of Rogers' "1847'' Silver Knives, Forks and Spoons in plain and shell patterns. Also Chafing Dishes, Carvers and many other nice things that are suitable for holiday gifts Watch for display in south window. T. C. TAYLOR THE HARDWARE MAN t f IntiitiitnfuTi Ailisfi Jnfisfcifcifi Jnf -- " 'I' I " T I I V 1 I l I I I Jill I TTTT r PIANOS FOR CHRISTMAS Nothing can be more appropriate or add more to the pleas ures of life in the home than a high grade piano. There is no reason why a piano should not In in every home. Our easy payment plan makes it possible. Drop in and learn of it. $ S. L. WAKEFIELD & CO. X Wareroom on Court Street private ownership of all the timber, we cannot tell. It is a favorite axiom of the modern feudal baron that everyone has an equal opportunity. Obviously, the babies to bo born 50 years hence will not believe this as to timber, coal, Iron, water power nnd other natural foundation stones of wealth. C. E. S. Wood, in Louis Post's Public. The Swift Speclfio Co-, Atlanta, Ga. RUSSIA'S TOTTERING THRONE. Unhappy Nicholas, Czar of all the iiusslas. f 10111 Vladivostocl; to crush d deflnut Poland: ruler of an empire : .'it leaencs half way around the world: nil that wealth, gold, crown, kingdom and life could select or de sire lying within his fingers' reach! ?t. Petersburg, Moscow their spires, luxuries, palaces their elegant tern- ilos or wealth; their rlcn apartments, silken and embroidered tin "!' Couches for the royal head. ili-rdo;vn for the royal fffit! Nop- tha. wine, rich and dainty dishes served in nil tho unique and won- Irous styles, by cooks from every known clime, for '.he royal appetite. A treasury of gold, the key nt his disposal. Tho greatest army on earth at his command. The Russian Em pire for a playground; yet Nicholas Is unhappy. Why? When he was a boy ho loved a peasant girl. Some winsome lass, whose father had bent his back be neath Hussion tyranny, took the son of tho old czar into her heart and he was changed for life. She laid a blight upon the Russian throne not wantonly, for she was Innocent as on angel. But It was she who was the author of Nicholas' unhapplness. She crippled his nature so It has been im perfect since that day. She roturned his love, but they could not marry. IIo was the son of an emperor and she, the happy, guileless thing, was Blight's Disease and Diabetes Positively Curable, They are curing Drlght's Disease and Diabetes In California. The per centage of efficiency (recoveries) In these hitherto incurable diseases averages as high as 87 per cent. The details ot the investigation and dem onstration of the now compounds arc so conclusive that we at once sent for a bundle of the reports and for the new treatment for urgent cases In this city. Call or send for one of tho reports. F. W. SCHMIDT & CO.. I'endleton PERFECTION IN FLOUR Is reached in DYERS' BEST- Better (lour cannot be made. Hie cream of the wheat crop enters in Byers' Best Flour, which is right for bread and Fane Baking. I LIMBER Gray's Harbor Com. Co. Opp. V: & C. R. Depot When getting figures from others on that lumber bill of yours, don't forget to come and see us. We carry a large stock of all kinds of Building Material including shingles, door, win dows, moulding, screen doors and windows in fact, every thing that is found in a first class lumber yard. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S. Byers, Proprietor. WINTER COMFORT Well cooked meals and a warm house go a good ways in making a cold dreary winter comfortable and bright Our coh e t S dinBw.g00d ralS,and,l,r heaters wiU make th comest DiulUing warm and comfortable. The Thompson Hardware Co. Hungup those picture and have them framed at Christmas is Not Far Away 0uu;mSiitoh::t worrk and newef st"e ' jou win come to us. Largest stock to select from once I C. C. SHARP SHARP New Ideas. Opera House Block. Foi POULTRj and STOCK SUPPLIES CALL OX Coleswoii -AT THl- CHOP MILL 127 aud 129EastAIUStiBt itWWVkVWWV Let Us Do Your Hauling We do trucking and 1 of all description at 1 able prices. Your horses willbedl3 for if taken to the Old Henry Feed Yard, West Alta and Lilliths Hay, grain and all M feed bought and sow. Horses for saleatallt WILLIAM COSNERUT, Successtor to Hays 4 Cos 1 U4l happen to uyop 0L$& arlvem on the 101J. m4 tnkoyour Injured wJ,,,ia where It win M7"i,SiiHI Wagou, cart. l"Slh(l,B!J h maaterliandat o' "Pf'.'d illfl bugglea and naci; awl'S; JM ortwo'hore. Syraoiw' plowa 13. It you want haclc, iair mm. the big one N EAGLE BROTH ' j irt" J geuti for them. . Laatz Bros fOR- Wood, Coal and Material Delivered Pro' We are in the ire I trucking business ; pared to move ligW Parmers CUstOffll ft UI - - I nwaBftet' I Fred Walter. j Flour exchange? dFe JTIoUfi Mill rY always on uu"