DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. OREGON. FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1 Published trtry atlernnon (except Sunday) at rendition, urrgon. djt tne EAST OREGONIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY. fhone. Main 11. SUIISCKIITION KATES. Dalljr. one jear bj mall $5.00 uaiiv, six monius ujr man -.au Dallr. three months br mall ........ 1.25 Daily, one month br mall 50 Dally. wr month bj carrier OS Weekly, one year by mall 1.50 Semi-Weekly, one year br mall .... 2.00 The Gut Dregonlan Is on sale at B. It. Alch'a News stands at Hotel I'ortland and Qotel Perkins, Portland. Oregon. Member Scrlpps-McRae News Associa tion. Ran Francisco Ilurean. 40S Fourth St. Chicago llureau, 000 Security Building. Washington. D. C. Bureau, 501 14th St., K. W. Entered at Pendleton postotflce as seccond class matter. "Wherever there Is, In any country, uncultivated lands and unemployed poor. It Is clear that the laws of property have been so far extended as to vio late natural righL The earth Is given as a common stock for man to labor and live on. If for the encouragement of in dustry we allow It to be appro priated, we must take care that other employment be provided to those excluded from the ap propriation. If we do not, the fundamental right to labor on the earth returns to the unem ployed. Thomas Jefferson. IT RAINED DOLLARS. It literally rained dollars in Uma tilla county and Eastern Oregon yes terday afternoon. In two hours probably one million bushels of wheat were saved to this county alone. The reports from every point In the county are now favora ble. "While some few localities had considerable acreage that was past redemption, the general rain of last evening t has assured a fair crop. The farmers are in the best of spirits, business men rejoice at the bright prospects and a ijeneral revi val of depressed hopes is felt in the cordial atmosphere that surrounds everj- branch of business since th soaking shower came. Ilanges were suffering greatly by the continued dry weather. Gardens and orchards were endangered in many places and the roads were an kle deep with dust. "While tho local money market was not affected to any appreciable de gree by the prospect, it was evident to all that it soon would be, if some assurance of crops did not put in an appearance. The old proverbial "ten-year panic limit" is bore. Those who yet re member and bear the scars of 1893-4 were moving restlessly in the seats. "While many farmers of the county are in debt, the general financial condition is good. The last year wheat crop brought good prices. "Wool and livestock have also brought exceptionally good returns, and the value of real estate has advanced in proportion. Evary man who was financially scorched in the past hard times and low prices has been engaged in for tifying himself since that time. Con tinued good crops and good prices have placed the county on good financial footing and while many were on the anxious seat before 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon, the old legend still bangs over the gateway to the Inland Empire: "A failure Is unknown." Reports now in Indicate that the rain was general throughout Eastern Oregon. 'the nntlonnl constitution and declar ed himself dictator. He bad dozens of precedents in his insane course. He was following the pathway of that ultra-despotic prin ciple which rules the Russian peo ple. He misjudged the spirit of his people, was led Into madness by an ambitious woman, and has paid for his folly with bis life. He is the last of his dynasty. He was murdered on the 35th anniver sary of the murder of Jllchael, the founder of his family. "Whatever It was, or whatever it meant to Europe, the house of the Obrenovltches diS' appears with him. The great rival faction In Servian politics, the house of Georgovitch, whatever It means, comes into power. The Balkan states are the toys of Russia, Austria and Turkey. The ren egade royalty of all these powers has flocked Into the courts of this little group of seething, semi-barbaric gov ernments. The people are mostly mountain eers and lead half civilized lives the tools of scheming leaders and the playthings of the powers. The safe ty of the thrones in the Balkans lies with the personal following of the rulers and not in any constitutional guarantees. Dynasties come and go just as the rival factions gain and lose power. Historically, the nigged district has been a plague to Europe. Its bandits, brigands, assassins, scandals, mad ness and unspeakable brutalities are known and deplored In all Christen dom. Since the days of the Scythians and the barbaric tribes that swept down out of the dark northern fastnesses upon the unprotected frontiers of Rome, that territory has been a hot bed of anarchy nnd revolution. And it will remain such until the civilizing influence of democratic government succeeds the tottering despotism that surrounds it. The American can console himself with the fact that the Atlantic ocean and the Mediterranean sea lie be tween him and that European plague spot The "Weston Normal closed anoth er successful school year this week and logins the campaign for next year, with renewed hope. The man agement will make a personal can vass among the people of Eastern Oregon during the vacation months, and should be rewarded with, the largest attendance ever recorded In an Eastern Oregon Institution. This school has been established for the benefit of this portion of the state, and the opportunity should not be overlooked. I nfflro has n Innr- wnltlnir list, and the number of applicants grows with each college and university commence ment Turning from the professions, we find that the callings resemble their names in the calls tbey are making upon the educated ranks for trained young men and women. Three presi dents of great universities have with in the past half-year complained that the Inroads of the industries upon their ranks of students and instruct ors had become serious and that they could not furnish one-half as many desirable workers as were needed in the applied arts alone. Four of the scientific schools say that this year's graduates will step at once into lu crative employment, and more could do so if they were at hand. In the tremendous developments of the past decade nothing has been more Big-, nificant than the general competition for educated workmen. This wonder ful country has outgrown the mere scramble for quantity and is now rac inir for aunllty. and in that contest science and skill ana originality are of the utmost value. One nanny result of the new condi tions is the re-alignment of the social order. The professional men no long er monopolize the Inner circles of cul ture and aristocracy. The man wno does things has taken a place higher than the man who simply belongs to a profession. Neither law nor theol ogy nor medicine carries a patent rle'lit to a finer nobility than any other department of education, effort or In vestigation. A big lot of nonsense has been knocked out of society and the fipid of endeavor has been widened nnd made more at tractive to all the earnest workers of the world. We have all been preaching the In herent and essential nobility of work ever since printing became common. but it has remained for the truly golden age to break down the old barriers and to make opportunity free and the reward honest and right. It is folly, of course, to think that the big places In any of the professions are all filled and that greater prizes are not to be won, but the Important fact is that the professions do not enjoy their old monopolies, that there are other desirable proficiencies, compensations and victories, and that the credits are of more equal merit in the eyes and appreciations of the times. And in this new order the engineer who plans and buiTds a fine work is a bit more consequential in the pub lic esteem than the eloquent speaker who delivers the dedicator" nddress. Saturday Evening Post. $50.00 Given Away To the first one handing us the nearest correct solution of the two following rebuses, we will give $25.00 worth of furniture or other goods oi vour choice from our Immense 'stock; $15.00 worth to the second, and $10.00 "worth to the third. The question is, how many different ways can the word "Furniture," and how many the word "Rader" be spelled in the following squares by spelling to the right, or down ward, or any combination of down and right, or right and down, but always using con tiguous letters but no two times, using exactly the same numerical letters, yet all spell the words "Rader" and "Furniture" correctly. For illustration, the word "Rader" may be spelled by nslm- lotters numbered 1. 2. 11, 12, 21, or 13 1 I 2 I 3 4 6 G 7 8 9 R A P E R A D E B 10 I H 13 JS 14 lb lb M " A DERA1DERA "IS j 21) 21 22 23 24 25 2S 27 D ; E R A D E R A D "28 , 2 , 3D , 31 32 33 34 35 3C E RAQERADE "3J j 3! 3 40 41 42 43 44 45 R,ADERADER "4b 47 to 4J 50 61 62 63 54 A PERAPERA 65 , 56 67 68 6 B0 CI 62 63 D E RA D E R A D 14 , 65 , 66 j 67 68 U! 70 71 72 E RAQEjRADE 73 , 74 , 76 76 77 78 7 80 81 RADERADER 2. 23. 24, 33 etc. The solution iu ira handed in sealed, giving only the number of combinations that can be made of each word, with no name attached, in order that the commiuets awarding the prizes will not A Canton (Mo.) mfll will furnish free trips to the "World's Fair for three ladies. A ticket is placed on each sack of flour and the three la dies collecting the largest number of tickets will be the recipient of free tickets to St. Louis and the exposition. The new county road' has been sur veyed from Sumpter tar tTper Burnt river, and will be built tais spring and summer. WANTED ANOTHER KING. Servia has paid another Install ment on the penalty of despotism. She has contributed another mite to the bloody history of kingcraft. She has met the inevitable fate of the one-man government and touched shoulders with the anarchy that stands in the shadow of every throne. King Alexander, who was murder ed by his enraged subjects yester day, was half Idiot and half tyrant He was placed on the Servian throne against the choice of his people. He did not respect the rights of the Ser vians nor the decrees of the legis lative body, but in open defiance of the people, consummated a morgan atic marriage with a beautiful widow, Draga Slacbln, whom his suojects call a "public wench," and after his marriage, at her command, set aside Under the provisions of the 3tax well national Irrigation law, over $15,000,000 will have accumulated from the sale of arid land for the Irrigation fund of the Western staR-s. by July 1. 1903. And yet there arei thobe who say that interest In. the subject of irrigation has died out in Oregon. This $15,000,000 is a gift to the arid states and territories of the "West. Will you prepare to re ceive it or will you remain idle and see It distributed elsewhere? The Kansas City Times says the wealthiest citizens of Kansas City, the great corporations and. capital ists, are contributing least to the flood sufferers, and adds that th greatest help is being given by ths generous, loyal, open-handtrd middle class of people who are neither rich nor poor. Government engineers are now at The Dalles looking over the line of the ship canal. Estimates now made indicate that this canal will be com pleted in 10 years. The people of Eastern Oregon have hope "to burn" and will watch the progress of the work with much interest. THE PROFESSIONS AND CALLINGS. THE At the recent national convention of the American Medical Association at New Orleans, Doctor Billings, the president, said: "This country needs about 2500 medical students annually, and the medical schools are turning out between 10.000 and 12,000." "We are told by distinguished judges and leading members of the bar that the supply of lawyers Is fully twice the demand, with a gentle hint that a famine of legal graduates for a few years would not be a disastrous hard ship. In the ministry the returns are conflicting. Some of the denomina tions report an abundance, but many others have empty pulpits, the small salaries being cited as a cause. There Is some question as to whether or not journalism is a profession Dr. St. Clair McKelway, an eloquent authori ty, In a speech the other day, "hoped" it soon would be; but there is no doubt at all that every publication Health and Disease as Bntstnbd in the Scalp. Flj. I shows a section ol m kutthy hair -p&thei. Fi j. 2 shows the deadly cOttt ol the DANDKUFF GERMS that art dtitroylnj the hair root Destroy the cams you remove tat effect No Dandruff, no falling Hair, no laldncu. if you kill jtte germ with NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE. For Sale by aB DrugjUU. Price $1.00. Going to Improve Repair your homes or places t , .. . oi uusiness oy naving tnem paint cd or papered. Come to OS Large and nicely selected stock of wall paper and paints. E. J. Murphy, HI Court Street. Ageacy for the Sherwin-Wil- liUBB Fftilt. I 2 ( 3 4 5 ! C 7 S 9 10 F , U Rj N, I jT UR E F II ! 12 13 14 15 ; lli 17 J 1 1 j 20 URNljTjUjREFU 21 22 23 j 24 25 26 27 28 29 3U R N I T U R E F U R 31 32 33 34 35 j 30 37 38 39 40 Nj I Tj UHEFU H W 41 , 42 , 43 44 , 45 j 46 47 48 49 50 jTUREFURNl 51 , 52 . 53 i 54 55 j 60 57 68 59 CO Tju'R'EFURNlT lil t2 , 63 ! 04 65 68 07 , 68 , 69 70 U R E F U R N I j T U "Tl 72 , 73 , 74 j 75 , 76 j 77 7S j 79 80 RE)FURNllTUjR Tl 82 , S3 , 84 j 85 86 I 87 j 8S j 89 90 EFURNjl!TU!RE yi 92 93 94 ; 95 9(3 97 98 W, F ujRiNjlTURE know who is In the contest IBut if requested, each winner (must be able to write, numer ically, each of the various ways the number of times they claim. In order to iden tify all solutions we simply number each -envelope con staining an answer and keep memorandum of eacn. is a bne will be allowed more than one answer. Prizes lawarded July 25, 1903. There s no sure thing that the urst solutions will be correct. So if you decide you want to change your solution alter banding It In you can do so ly placing your second in the numerical order we receive lie latter. No one connected vlth the establishment will e allowed to contest M. A. RADER Main and Webb Streets FOR SA WehavetheBeJjj in xeal Estate. some nice homes tb be sold. Choice Bn Lots. Alfalfa Land fro,, acre to 160. Wheat la tracts from 160 ,0J 12,000. Rihorn & Swam TAKlf YOUR CHOK One or ths Pendleton li r0om all Bl nrovements! nrtt . 6,500. 2,500 down, baling Auuuirr rcHiopnr 7 Ma.. bath. Bewerace. eletru iawn, snaae trees, within tiavi ui main street, iS00. Other houses nnd Im, f-, i $2,500. Nice residence lots 1150 Vl 4i I The Grand Trunk Gold Mine Sumpter, Oregon, Gold Mining District. Is located upon the GREAT MOTHER LODE system of veins and has for neigh bors on that vein such well known mines as the NORTH POLE valued at $10,000,000. The COLUMBIA valued at $5,000,000. GOLCONDA valued at $3, 000,000. THE MONMOTH G. M. CO'S BELLE BAKER mine valued at $5 00, 000. THE BALD MOUNTAIN valued at S5oo,ooo. THE IBEX valued at $400, 000, and many others. The Grand Trunk Gold Mining and Milling Go. Owns Its Property Consisting of 160 Acres cf RIchQold Bearlar Veins It has no indebtedness of any character. It has a conservative mining and business management. It is offering 50,000 shares of stock at 15c per share. It will become a dividend payer in a short time. It will pay you to write us for full particulars and to make careful investigation of its merits. It has the indorsement of mining men, business men and bankers of Eastern Oregon. Write us today and let us post you. H. S. McCalltim & Company, Miners, Brokersand Finanolal Agents, BAKER CITY, OREGON. Or R. S. BRYS0N, Local Agent, Pendleton, Oregon. Our Weekly Mining Letters on Sumpter, Oregon, Gold Mining District Free on Application. rTTTl THE R AC YCLE The genuine, the bicycle which is the undisputed leader, is handled in Pen dleton only by us. Come in and see the Racycle. Withee, LST A Cool Place Is Robi8on's Amaiemeit Par lors, under the W. & 0. Depot. Just the place to while away leisure time. . First class bowling alley; splen did pool and billard ta bles; up to date shooting gallery. Temperence re freshments and cigars. Pre Musical EitertaiMiest very JEveslig Much Other Town Property Ranches. Easy Terms, Where Deilrei 0. D. BOYD. Ill Court! Water i am! We make a Specialty of Builizr I or square WATER II We make them right nii always give satisfaction- work is never slighted or c Pendleton Planing I and Lumber Yaril ROKKKT F0K5Tn,P UNDER NEW MANAGB THE OLD DUTCH HEM FEED HI Cor W. Alta and LillM L. Neff, formerly of Alta, lias cnaige ui "---, t 1 'rA and 1TCS neury rccu , pleased to care for jonrj v.. , i-ra corn fienty 01 sia, &- loose horses aud cattle. OT . . 1 -l.n mill grain lor saie. nection. s OUND 1, mvi received place your order with Fir. Tamarack ..Pine.. VVhy.bnypoorcoal can get. tne price? Laatz gen's PnV?r' and ths f? 1 It by trtsir "BV" 'Trf