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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1903)
creased cost of administration will amount to a saving of a million nnd a quarter dollars a year. THURSDAY, MAHCH 2G, 1903. A snored burden Is this llfo yo bear. Look on It, lift It, hear It sol emnly. Stand up and walk beneath It steadfastly. Knt not for sorrow, falter not for sin. But onward, upward till the goal ye win. Kemble. WHERE SKILL AND COUNTS. INDUSTRY We are In receipt of numerous let ters from persons In the East who enquire as to the chances of success In Oregon. To the man who Is sober, industrious, and Intelligent Oregon presents an excellent fluid. There nre some men who command success wherever their lot Is cast; men who can turn defeat Into victory. Others there are who wander from stato to state over In search of n place where they can "make a stake," always trusting that their luck will change. Such men nre of no benefit to the state. j Oregon has more varied resources than any state In the Union. There Is a vast amount of raw material pro duced here, which could be turned In to the tinlshed article within the bor- iiers 01 our state. We have the raw material and the wntei- power, and there Is no reason that we should not have the manufactories here. Our wool and hides, lumber, llax, livestock, minerals ami other natural resources will give profitable employ ment to thousands of workmen. For the man without special skill or training, but who possesses cour nge and the determination to succeed the opportunities for success are good. Livestock nnd ngrlculture are two employments where industry and CONSOLIDATION. The preliminary step toward the consolidation of all tho beof-pnckliiK Intorcsts of the country was taken yesterday In the Incorporation of tho National racking Company. Seven companies located In Chicago and Omaha, lose their Identity In the for niatlon of the new corporation. One of tho famous "Big Four" is ullmlnnt ed. Hammond having sold his Inter est to tho new company, of which Ar- mour, Swift nnd Morris are tho prln rlpal stockholders. The capitalization is the third Inrgost among the packing compn tiles. The Swift company has $25,' 000, the Armour company $20,000,000, and tho Nntlonal Is next with $15,000 000. horse sense will enable a man to Bristol Hay. Alaska, whore 22 sal mon canneries have been In opera1 tlou, was visited by a destructive storm nnd tidal wave. Five of the 22 canneries were destroyed and eight badly damaged. This will greatly re- duce the snimou pack, Alaska Is n land of stern realities. Nature does not veil her grip of steol beneath the velvet glove as In the temperate or tropic zones. It Is a land of wonder ful riches, hut the exploitation of most of her resources require considerable capital. "Wonderland," lor 1903, Issued by the Northern Pacific railway, is on our desk. It Is beautifully printed and profusely Illustrated. It de scribes and Illustrates the "Great River of the West," tho Columbia. also ellowstane Park, Irrigation In the West, the Mnndan Indians and other topics of Interest to the West. Why 5yrup .of Fugs th best family laxative V It is pure. It is gentle. It is pleasant. It is efficacious. It is not expensive. It is good for children. It is excellent for ladies. It is convenient for business men. It is perfectly safe under all circumstances. It is used by millions of families the world over. It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians. If you use it you have the best laxative the world produces. Its component parts are all wholesome. It acts gently without unpleasant after-effects. It is wholly free from objectionable substances. It contains the laxative principles of plants. It contains the carminative principles of plants. It contains wholesome aromatic liquids which are agreeable and refreshing to the taste. All are pure. All are delicately blended. All are skillfully and scientifically compounded. Its value is due to our method of manufacture and to the originality and simplicity of the combination. To get its beneficial effects-buy the genuine. Manufactured by (aL'fornia Efa 6yrvp(?J San Francisco Louisville, Ky. FOR SALE 11 i' ALL LKAD1XO IHtVOaiSTS. CM. New York, N. Y. rle Nation Is the mast Intemperate woman In the United Stutes. THE VALUE OF DISCIPLINE. Schley, than whom few naval he roes aie more popular with the Amer ican people, will pay Portland a visit within a lew days. WORSE THAN VOTE SELLERS. muKe a goou living anil accumulate a competence. I.an'd, especially in East ern Oregon, Is cheap and good. To one who gets a quarter section now the Increase In tho value of his land during the next decade will amount to as much or more than tho sum saved by most clerks drawing a good salary during the same time. Heretofore the tendency hns been to neglect occupations such as dalrv lng, fruit raising and other occupa tions requiring manual labor. As resident of one of our eastern conn- lies sain, "We don't take to those kind of jobs. We don't do any kind of work we can't do on horseback, We don't have to." There is room and need for special ized industries. We should be and could be exporting Instead of import lng our produce. We are using car loads of butter and eggs from Iowa and other eastern states which could be profitably produced here. We need men with money, and brains to put In packing houses and manufacturing establishments. We need more men of thrift and Industry to produce the pork, and beef and mutton for the packing houses nnd to produce the raw material io he manufactured here. No where will skill or Industry meet a better re ward than right here In Oregon. CASTRO WITHDRAWS TION. RESIGNA- Castro has withdrawn his resigna tion. In his message he says; "When I abdicated It was not from any small-minded nor Interested cal culation, still less was It tho result of any sorry or ridiculous farce which has no place In a heart warmed by the heat of great Ideals. "With my separation today," he said, "nobody would lose and all would gain, since this would imply that my efforts and my sacrifices were always and under all circumstances, at the service of the republic at Its first call." The Venezuelan trouble has led to several rather important results. It has discouraged the shotgun policy of collecting national debts, and It has strengthened the Monroo doctrine. From a financial standpoint Kngland and Germany have come out second, best as the South American republics will be averse to resume trade rela tions with them. Their trade will come largely to the United States. IRISH TO BE THEIR OWN LAND LORDS. The long-standing Irish question Is to be settled at last. Tho govern ment proposes to loan tho Irish ten ants money at 3'j per cent, with which to purchase tholr holdings. The collection of tho rents of the non-resident landowner has been for generations a fruitful cause of troublo and In tho maintenance of order, and In the triala and convictions of offend ers It has been a heavy hurdou upon Kngland. Tho recent plun contem plates the loan of $60,000,000. Leav lug asldo nil but financial considera tions, it is u wlso move as tho de- "That man Is not the most corrunt who sells his vote for a dollar bill or n job In the street cleaning depart ment. It Is tho man who swears off his taxes; it is the man who seizes great public franchises. Greed Is worst In the most respectnblo citi zens. It is sin, black,-damnable sin In any man, whatever his rank, what ever his wealth," who counts public interest something out of which he may draw personal emolument with out giving fair return." Dr. Lyman Abbott on "'wiiuicipal Reform." before the League for Po litical Educiitlon, laid stress on tho Individual responsibility, holding ench man to bo a trustee for his city. New York," he said. "Is perhaps tho worst governed city In the United States. I say 'perhaps.' For In my mind, republican Philadelphia Is a little worse. Municipal reform Is no political question. It cannot be set tled by an election or settled In a year. It will not lie achieved by get ting the democratic rascals out and letting the republican rascals in. It Is the battle of the ages between good and evil. It will not end until the curtain goes down. "The three great enemies to reform are Ignorance, indifference nnd greed. For ignorance the remedy is educa tion. The chief reason of our bad city government Is the Indifference of what we call the bettor class. This dates from very early dayh" ami the doctor read from the Illhle the story of the trees who wanted a king, and how each In turn, from some person al consideration, refused till they came to tho bramble. In Illustrating the battle between good and evil, tho doctor cited the history of our country. He contended that whllo the same forces are nt work all over the country, they cen ter here In tho big city, where "they kneel, side by side In the same church." Ho gavo a graphic picture of the different elements. In sum ming up tho civilizing influences among the great commercial enter prises, tho doctor admitted that in vestment in a railroad would be bet ter than Investment in some colleges. He pnld u passing comiillment to the newspapers, "with ull their faults," when he said that we might get on for a year without congress, but that he was sure we could not got on for a year without the newspapers. ah virtue,- ne went on, "grows out of the struggle in life. Virtue Is not Innocence. It is victory. Temper ance Is not merely abstinence from wine, beer and cigars. Among other things. It Is control of the tongue. I am inclined to think that Mrs. Car- Hoynnd doubt each of the 75 Unit ed Stntes marines who behaved so splendidly on the steamer Plymouth nfter the collision with the City or Taunton was n man personally brave. Hut It Is not an exhibition of the cour age of Individuals that the perform ance of the soldiers nppenls to the re flecting mind. The men under com mand responded not to any dining Impulse of tho occasion, but to the promptings of what lias become a con stant, overy-moment factor In tlrelr lives the habit of discipline. Tne Plymouth Incident, then, so far .as the marines are concerned, becomes one of many illustrations of the uni versal value of that habit. Courage Is a quality that makes- c men ready to do and dare. DtBcitiliuo' . -jc i ... . . i . . . . i , i ... .i . to the doing and daring. In such nil f I emergency ns that on tho Plymouth not the least of the strength lies In j the example of coolness and precision , set uy tne disciplined. The lire-drill In our public schools gives to the children the same per sistent sense of the right thing to do In an emergency as that which made those marines tho helpful horofs of n post-mldnlght alarm. The World. WISDOM FROM IDAHO. Over In Oregon the people do not understand (he plans upon which the geuloglcnl survey works In making Its examinations with respect to projects for establishing Irrigation works un der the natloii.il law. The survey in vestigates every possible site for it. then, and not until then, will any I lduho this Is thoroughly unilm-i one lie Justified In taking up lands but some people In Oregon appeil tinner tne proposed woriis. i nuvu uuiiiuu mai, necause a i I Is being made at one place or at The making of a preliminary sur- , works are going to be Imilt.-fJ vey Indicates nothing more than that i statesman. the site Is being Investigated with the view of determining its practicability, nnd the people who should take up works. When It finds one that is land on the strength of such work available it recommends It for adop-, would have thrown away their time tlou. if the department shall adopt i If the site should not bo selected. In At North Yaklnm, Jirs. Jo JimgJ nee iMiss Himn iicnnctt, his just I granted n divorce. She alleecs husband tried to make her eat AM ruts nnd other Chinese delicacies I kkkkkkAkkki k A A A k A A A k h A k A A A A A A h A k A A k k A A A A A A A A A A A A A AA A AA A A A k k A k A A A A k Akhkkkk MllB o LIGHT AND DARK, Day and night, sunshine and shadow j are not more different from each other I than a healthful from a sickly woman. The healthful woman carries light and T tuusimie wiin uer wuerever sue goes. I He woman who suffers from Ill-health casts a shadow on her own hap piness and the happiness of others. She cannot help it. Those who suf fer cannot smile and slut'. Ill -health in woman is generally trace able to disease of the delicate womanly organism. Many women have been re stored to happiness by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It estab lishes regularity, dries weakening drains,, heals iuOaiiimatiou and ulceration audi cures female weakness. It makes weak: women strong, sick women well. I fetl it my duty to Inform you that I had I bii a suflercr for many years from nervous, ness with all Its symptom and comptlcatiou,' writes Mrs.O. N. Kl.lier. of 1861 i rilnom.. a New York. N. Y. "I wa4 confttjntH. r.timw tt, sec a physician or purchasiug medicine for thU- ur mat cuuuiaini as my iroumes became ud. bearable. In the iprlug of 1&97 my liuibatid! induced me to try Ur. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription. After taking oue bottle and follow ing your ajlvice I was so encouraged that I tout uvc more ooines 01 - ratorue frescnptlonf andi then I did not take any more for several weeks. u j rcu so ruuen ueuer. DUl sun 1 was not com fttttlrtuttd. I commenced taking It again aud felt that I was improving faster than at first. I am not now cross and irritaole. and I have a good color in uy face ; have also gained about ten pounds In weight and out thousand of com fort, for X am a new woman once more The dealer who offers a substitute for " Favorite Prescription" does sotogaiu the little more profit paid on the sale of less meritorious medicines. His profit is your loss, therefore accept no substitute. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 31 one-cent stamps for the paper-covered book, or 31 stamps for the cloth bound. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Boys Week at The Fair Our Spring Clothing and 15oys Furnishings have, arrived and we have decided to make a Big Special Opening Sale for .boys, -i ins sale will hegin :::::: .5: Monday, March 23 and continue until Saturday, March 28 during which time the special prices quoted below will hold good. Our Syndicate tuiyer in New York lias made some very large purchases and se- L r- cureu lor uie i' utv stores connected wmi our asu uuyers union some ot . 1. .. l 1 :.. !...! . l... , l : .. . L. .. I ... M.... l. r 1 a 4 values in Boys Clothmc and lutrnishings been offered to Pendleton buyers. tf Uverything from the highest priced suit of clothes down to the smallest article used by votir bov has been marked down to the lowest price possible C 'or this BIG SALE J Many articles are priced Below Actual Cost. This is the week to outfit your boys. You can save from 20 per cent to 50 percent here on everything listed below. Note the SPECIAL PRICES. The BUCKEYE Folding Vapor Bath Cabinet. THE ONLY PERFECT CABINET MADE Fortbe Scientific Application of Heat and Steam In Curing and Preventing Disease. : : : : : Endorsed by 3o,ooo PHYSICIANS nnd OVER 600,000 Happy User. PRICE, $5.00 BROCK & McCOMAS CO. j DRUGGISTS COTHING IJoj-h' ilnrk S-pleco vexteu suits, mailt' of k1 twilled Hultlns. well niuilo, In the lales-t i'lvlch, sizes fiom 4 to 11) years, well worth Sl.liu, Special Sale Price $1.15 Hoys' two-piece suits, doulile-lireasted coats, same goods ns above, sizes S to 1-1 years. Special Sale Price Ji.in lloyo' dark striped S-pleee suits, bIzcs -I to 10 years, well made, a handsome suit and very durable, worth much more than we ask fru it. Solo Price $l.ri0 Hoys' dark striped 2-iiece suit, same us above, sizes 8 to 14 years $1,50 Hoys' light srey wool, 2-piece vestee suits, slzee 1 to S years, latest style, Speclul for this Hlg Sale $2.00 Hoys' y-plece wool suits, green mixed color with pin stripe, now and neat pattern, sizes to ii years, only $2.75 Hoys' It-piece vestee suits, sizes 4 to 8 .vi.iirs, line new goods, dark with lino white specks, n beautiful Biilt at $3.00 Hoys' 2-pleee, all wool, blue herge, heavy weight sizes 5 to 10 years ,a great biirgain at ,.$:t,00 Hoys' 3-pIeee suits, blue serge, same as above, 9 to 14 years $4.00 Hoys' It-piece, all wool coronation cloth suits, beautiful mixed color with small speck or dot tfffect. sizes 8 to 13 years, regular price- $5.50, Special for this Salo $4.75 Hoys' brown, all wool worsted dress sailor suits, beautifully trimmed, sizes 4 to 7, regu lar $5.00. Special Salo Price .'.$4.50 Hoys' long pants, 3-plece suits, black und white mixed color, newest style cloth, fine value nt . $4.00 Hoys long pants, 3-pIeco suits, Bl.es 12 to 20 years, dark color with small stripe, a very dressy suit $5.50 Hoys long pants, 3-pleeo suits, grey mixed lu ui is to i years, a good serviceable suit .$5.50 Hoys ,long pants. 3-ploce suits ,flne mixed color black and white, up-to-dute dress suit $8.50 Hoys' dark mixed color, 3-pIecu long pants suits, 14 to 20 years, strong and durable, yet hussy 77c Hoys' nil wool black clay worsted suits, long pnntB. sizes 14 to 20 years, heavy weight $8.75 Hoys' durk fancy worsted suits, 3-piece long j.utiio, 1,1-uuiiiiii iiuiiurus, latest stylo dress suits .$9.76 BOYS FURNISHINGS Hoys' suck's, grey mixed, good, serviceable ar tide 4c pr. Hoys' skin gloves, nil sizes ISc pr. Hoys' suspenders, all grades from 25c down to 10c pr. Hoys' bow ties 15c, 13c, 10c and 5c each. Hoys' scarf ties, regular 25c value, Special 5c each. Hoys long hose, all grades, "Topsy" brand, 23c, 17c, 15c, 13e and 10c pr. Hoys' Spring nnd Summer weight underwear, all sizes, 25c each. Boys' knee pants, all sizes, $1.00, 75c (i.'.c, 50c 40c, 25c und 15c pr. Hoys' waists with belt.35c; without belt, 25c. Boys' ruffled Bailor walBts, good quality, only 35c. SHOES Boys' heavy shoes, strong and durnuls, all sizes from 10 to 2, Special for this Sale 80c Hoys' shoes, sizes from 13 to 5, heavy soles, $1.20. Boys' shoes, sizes 13 tn 2. seamless, made 01 the best of cnlf skin, n shoe to give good service, $1.00. Boys' shoes, same as last mentioned, sUes 3 to CV6, $1.85. Boys' heavy shoes, oak-tanned leather In up pers and soles, made for hard service, cut ( uest stioe, sizes 12 to 2, $1.80. , Boys' heavy shoes same as last mentioned, sizes 3 to 5V, $2.00, Boys' fine dress shoes, Dongnla or calf swi shes 12 to 2, $1.80. . Boys' lino dress Bhoos, Dongoln or calf SK"1' R1-.PR 3 tn r,u. to on Small hoys' shoes from G to 8, soft calf skin of Dongola, $1.20, . Hoys' shoes, Bame ns last named, sizes 11. $1.35. FREE FOR BOYS With every suit costing $4.00 or lesf small boys a silk Wlndwr necktie, worth i z With every suit costing more than $4 w. nice silk tie, and tie pin. .ir With eVftl-u n.-llr nf hnun' shoes. nC P' of "Topsy" hose. SATrronAv sppriALS Calico, 10 yards to one person ;.j Outing llannol, all 7c. patterns .. ""Iil. Aj House lining, any quantity ... Heavy 8-oz, duck, 28 Inches wide for . etc . "r 'i Ktrlnixl Ulili-Hn.r ..nn.l V.i.nllrv nnlV , ". ' - Sun bonnets, ludies' size, 19c; M8e'Jcb. nets , n. ' LrUvJT I Ull i JLUI MMMmi MMMMMMUmf MMMWM W W WMUuu iii ftttffsff 4HR f 'fffTTTr