DAILY EA8T OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1904. PAGE FOUR. SALE OF BABY GO-CARTS, 10 STYLES $3.35 to $8.(15, material the best, styles the latest,, prices the lowest j CO. f FREDERICK NOLF ' r AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. Published every afternoon (cxrcpt Sunday) at l'endleton, Oregon, by the EAST OREGONIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY. Telephone, .Main 11. HUDSCItllTlOX HATES. Dally, one year by mall 13.00 Dally, she months by mall -.00 Dally, three months by mall 1.23 Dally, one month by mall 00 Dally, per month by carrlar C3 Weekly, one year by mall 1.30 Weekly, six months by mall "' Weekly, four months by mall 50 Semi-Weekly, one year by wall .... -.00 Semi-Weekly, six months by mall . . 1.00 Semi-Weekly, three months by null . .30 The Hast Orejronlan Is on sale at It. II. Itlch's News Stands, at Hotel Portland, and Hotel Perkins, Portland. Oregon. Is tin' preservation of the forests. except just what Is absolutely neces sary for the settlement of tho coun try The mountain streams must he protected or Irrigation will fall, and selling the timber by hid, without limit, will bo Just as bad for the country as selling the land to dum mies, who transfer It to the same corporations in the end. It Is not a repeal nor a revision looking to an improvement. It Is simply another way of turning over the forests to the syndicate. Member -tlon. Scrlpps-Mcltap News Assocla- Snn Francisco lhire.ni, -40S Fourth St. Chlcaxo llureau. 000 Security IlulldlnB. Washington, I) C, llureau, 301 14th fit. N. W. Entered at Pendleton poitoClce as second class matter. The glory of our life below Comes not from what we do, or what we know. Hut dwells forevermore In what we are. There Is an architecture grander far Than all the fortresses of war, .More inextinguishably bright Than learning's lonely towers of light. Framing its walls of faith and hope and love In deathless souls of men, It lifts above The frailty of our earthly home An everlasting dome. The sanctuary of the human host, , The living temple of tho Holy Ohost. Henry Van Dyke. Prollt" Dowlo says the "powers of Hull" were united against him in Australia when the people slopped - one of his idiotic tirades. Ho will -find these same powers united ugalnst fraud and blasphemy in nvery civilized community. Congress has appropriated $200, 000,000 for tho Panama canal, $100, 000,000 for new warships, $2,7!0,000 for the war department, $150,000,000 for pensions, besides millions more, unltemlzed, for postal expenditures ship subsidies and public buildings, in the already well-supplied large cities hut not one cent for the Co lumbia! ., Oregon will whoop It for her fighting factions this year, while .the people remain in the same thrall dom that has bound them since the rocks In the Columbia first barred their products tram the markets of tho coast. Millions of the people's money lavishly spent on war, pen iJous, battleships and high salaried lOQicials, but not one cent for the re' lief of the Inland Empire, which has . been before every session of con gress for tho past quarter of n een tury. It seems that the people have had enough of these honayed prom lses. Do they still wish to be bound and gagged? . "The amended bill offered by tho senate public land committee yester day, to supersede tho timber and stono act in tho Western slates, is Just another way of giving tho Urn her to tho corporations. Instead of causing them to pay fraudulent sot tiers for laud entered under tho present act, It proposes to sell the timber direct to the corporations by bids, tho government reserving tho denuded lands, and the corporations. thus escaping taxes by not becoming tho ownor of tho land. The sumo re sult will be obtained in tho out) that Is, corporations will uecuro tho cream of tho timber, tho mountains will bo stripped of their forests, and tho peoplo will bo loft without tim ber supply In the future. It Is not n change In policy, It Is simply n change In tho means, suggested and fathered by tho lumbering Interests In congress. What the peoplo want In no branch of employment In Oregou has there been such an Im provement In the past 10 years, as n tho railroad service. Ten years ago, the man wno could drink tne most whisky, gamble his check away the quickest, and swear In public the loudest, was the real, Ideal rail road man. No matter for wooden legs, glass eyes, mashed hands or weak heads, the rules were all car ried under tho hat, and if a man wor ried along, without meeting some other train on the main line, or blocking traffic, he was considered a good man, and the more roads he had worked on, and tho more migra tory he proved to be, the greater his popularity. Today, the drinker, the gambler, the "boomer," who will not work steadily, and the blustering. uncivil man is banished from the service. Gentility, ability, sobriety, trustworthiness, steadiness and knowledge of his business are the marked characteristics today. The railroad man must be sound In mind and body, ns the public Is in his keeping. He trust have a thorough knovledge rf his business, for his work causes him to think quickly and light, at times when other lives depend upon him. He Is a home builder today. The longer he works in oue place the greater the credit, and the more readily he propares himself for promotion, tho surer be 's of his position. Baker City Is moderately well sup plied with school houses, but Pen dleton must take one more step to catch up with Haker and several stops, In order to overtake Boise, In this respect. The Salem Journal, in speaking of the tendency of corporations, to push their attorneys forward, as repre sentatives of the people In public of fice, says: "There is a disposition to push corporation attorneys In all parts of the stato for legislative po sitions. This Is a mistake from the standpoint of the corporations, and puts the party that engages In It on tho defensive. The people should In conventions generally sit down on such aspirations, whether they eman ate from the ambition of the Individ ual or tho policy of the corporations. , The corjMiratlons have been treated ' fairly and liberally in Oregon, audi there Is no occasion to send their di rect representatives to maite laws for the people. The Journal has al- J Ways contended that a salaried offi cial or attorney of a corporation had I no right to ask to represent the peo-j plo at the same time. If ho is an honest man be cannot serve two masters, and his heart is apt to be where most of his treasure comes from. Lot the people beware; and not place too many of these gentle men who represent the "mergers" In positions of trust. I A SONG OF DIPLOMATS. Sing a song of diplomats. Pockets full of gunsl Four and twenty . fountain pons, Letters by tier tons. Chips on efery shoulder, loo, Vile dey vatch der scrap, Hooting for der Roosians nnd Plugging for der Jap! Valting for a goot excoos For to get a vex Sing a song of diplomats. Sing n song of rubbernecks! George V Hobart in San Francisco Examiner. Commercial travelers who visit all the towns In the Inland Empire, say that Ilolso Is the most progressive city In this entire mountain district, as shown by Its miles of modem street paving and Its splendid school buildings. Its business activity Is not so great as that of Pendleton or Haker City, but Its paved streets give It a metropolitan air that no amount -of activity would glvo It. Dolse City claims but 12,000 people, which probably means 0,000, and yet it equals Spokane, Portland or Seat tie In Its progress, while Pendleton and Haker City, both having more rich territory tributary and both of which probably do more business In dollars and cents ovory year, are lagging behind in the class of fnm tier villages In the matter of streets, Drink DESCENT REAM It Is Fine IN 1 AND 2 LB. SCALED TINS ONLY CANTY'S PARLORS OF AMUSEMENT Open day and night. Billiards, Pool, Shooting Gallery, Bowl Ing Alleys, Throwing Racks. Good music every evening. BASEMENT, CORNER MAIN AND WEBB STREETS. Under W. & C. R. Depot WOOD FOR SALE In carload lots. Green cut black pine. Dry four-foot wood at $4.60 per cord on siding at Pendleton. Address S. G. BRYSON No. 1700 W. Railroad St. What Shall We Have for Dessert? This question arises in the family every day. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell arm Br? S3 a delicious and healthful dessert. Pre pared in two minutes. No boiling! n baking I add boiling water and set ti eooL Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Rasp berry and Strawberry. Get a packaj; t your grocers to-dav. 10 cts. MALARIA Germ Infected Air. Malaria is not confined exclusively to the swamps and marshy regions of the country, hut wherever there is bad air this insidious foe to health is found. Poisonous vapors nnd gases from sewers, nnd the musty air of damp cellars are laden with the germs of this miserable disease, which are breathed into the lungs and taken up by the Wood nnd transmitted to every part of the body. T.ien you begin to feel out of sorts without ever suspecting the cause. No energy or appetite, dull headaches, sleepy nnd tired and completely fagged out from the slightest exer tion, are some of the deplorable effects of this enfeebling ..,!.,,!,. a c tlm ,1ip.ise nrnirressesand the blood becomes more deeplv poisoned, boils and nbscesses nnd dark or tgjjr; yellow spots appear upon the skin. When the poison is loft- to formpnt nnd the microbes and germs to multiply in -. the blood, Liver nnd Kidney troubles and other serious complications often arise. As Malaria begins and develops in the.blood, the treatment to be eliecttve must uegm men: iou. o. o. o. uesiroys the germs and poisons nnd purifies the polluted blood, nnd under its tonic effect the debilitated constitution rapidly recuperates and the system is soon clear of all signs of this depressing disease. S. S. S. is a guaranteed purely vegetable remedy, mild, pleasant and harmless. Write us if you want medical advice or any .special informa tion about your case. This will cost you nothing. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GAm FRAZER THEATRE -WZSXv One Night Only, TUESDAY, MARCH 22 ; A Sensational Trlumphl A Mammoth Attraction! THE MIGHTIEST OF THE MIGHTY! I RICHARD & PRINGLE'S Famous Georgia Minstrels Monumental as a Monument! Pleasurable Surprise of Prime Gigantic as a Glantl Magnitude! Colossal as a Colossus! Cannon. Shots From the Minstrel Kings! J A PRINCELY EFFORT BY THE REIGNING MONARCHS OF J MINSTREL CATERERS TO HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS, "THE I PUBLIC." J A Superlatively Great and Incomparably Big Minstrel Festival. J A COMPANY WITHOUT AN EQUAL, IN THE WORLD OP MINS- ! TRELSY. FREE STREET PARADE DAILY. J Seats on Sale Monday, 10 a. m. Prices 25c, 50c, 75c and $1.00. I IAYLIC I IIZZY A Rnliian n 1U ail beauty, nnd then man's handiwork. is found along the DENVER fit? A WTT r tt latter at the wnr ti Tts I. o it- v.. Liin most nr it tlnn nnrl 1iinatu. ture write W. r.. M'RRinr r. Dnp4t-in,J M. wi tmnui u Mncsano UiI.j Manicuring. Roomi nv,p M.ip1m' orders at Brock & drun store. Th n. lors are In charge of ureyer, a graduate Shaw's parlors, of Idaho. Egg Baths, Fomentation Bath, Plain Shampoo. Rhamnnn ...lU p.. ment, Ing, and gentlemen, nair Dressing, Manicuring, Facial Massage. Peace Provokers and Profanity Preventers often Ho in the bosom of a shirt, tho curl of a collar. Hence, logically our laundry promotes morality, in that Its output causes no complaint, but soothes the troubled spirits of men accustomed to frayed edges :.nd crumpled bosoms. Why don't you try this laundry for awhile and "be good?" THE DOMESTIC STEAM LAUNDRY YOU woo DRY and FINE, tilt will find with !t xtr kit An w ivir m l i i niH Lunaui tu . ST. JOE STOR CASH TALKS prices are self-evident. We propose to lead and not to follow. Our house is the place to find the latest as well the best qualities in merchandise. Our eastern connections give us advantages over all competition. We do not propose to mark goods at fabulous prices and then claim to offer them to the trade at from 33?, to SO per cent discount on actual cash values. Below we offer special values that are worthy of attention 3-THREE BIG SPECIALS- For Saturday, Monday and Tuesday Dry Goods Department LADIES' TAILORED 8UIT8 In one of those pretty new tailor made Eton suits of ours, YOU'D LOOK SWELL. They are char acterized by their up-to-dateness In trimming, color and materials, There's nothing olso quite so stylish or good ns those wo can show you. TRY ONE ON; it's our pleasurp to show them. See that pretty new broadcloth suit In blue, brown nnd black. SPEC IAL PRICE, $18.00. LADIES' SHIRT WAISTS Tb'at entirely new line an Interest Ing exhibit sale of 1904 modols. A salo and display the equal of which has never been shown In Pendleton Retailing. As a note worthy opening special, wo offer them In prices UPWARD FROM 85c. LADIES' WALKING SKI RTS Remarkable offerings in tho se lections for this sale. Tho materials aro fancy mixtures In Cash meres and tweeds, also groy, blue, brown and black cheviots. Some aro trimmed with buttons, some with strapping over tho hips, and others with box plaited effects, Thoy are good ones, values up to JG.75. FOR THIS SALE, $2.98. t .inrninir arm nno i lorkArrrneuu orcvini. m n,c,n o out I a 91K.au Will uuy " tin-to-date suit, made In tho lnteat stv e. Tailored anu u. - tor dress and service. This special line consists oi mixtures, chovlots, Clay worsteds and cashmeres. . mi.,.. t . , 1 ADA, IP" W, V, ...... 1UI GINUIUI,!., DIJ IL'fl llltti VI i ... . . . " last season, nnd are worthy of your attention. SHIRT 8PECIAL FOR $1.25 At this price we have eff lliln.. In th a Mr, fnmllv (Vint In l Darulna as well AS " est fabrics and best made garments, no not fall lo see lino before making your spring purchase. REMEMBER ubL-u iu ciubt. in mun s nnu women s ai vac; m m - J Whittinghill Mercantile Co. Successor to Lyons Mercantile Co. 126-130 COURT STRE