Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 15, 1904)
PAGE FOUR. DAILY EAST OR EGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1904. EIGHT PAGES- ill Children's flj A 1 ? Children's Garden Sets 2S. 45 and T'i jer set. Ladies' Floral Sets II pieces iVtc. Frederick Nolf & Co. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. The simple reason Is here They have no millionaire lobbyists in the halls of congress, buying and bull dosing from the national legislature these priceless concessions, which men of moderate circumstance's are denied. It Is the rankest brand of I"BWUh1 aftr-mxin icpt Sunday i t Pendleton. Oreson. bv the EAST OREGONIAN PUBLIbMINU j 1K,ternaism. COMPANY. . Busldlf belng unfalr 10 the taxpay- will hold 'Catrrrd at Telephone, Main 11. ; er. this pernicious policy .m ..,,!. . back trade conditions there. X eUUICiUU iwtiui , claw matte- unomw'LBEtr Our present national policy disregards the great underly ing fact that our institutions and our government must be upheld if at all. upon the shoulders of our citixens. Whether we will be weak or strong as a nation whether our government will be weak or strong as a govern ment whether our free insti tutions will .ve or die de ponds upon whether we con tinue to produce a strong and stalwart race of people root ed to the mhi conservative because intelligent and' inde pendent. Our present nation al poliT contemplates lit tle more than the accumula tion of wealth, as a nation, we must turn our attention to building men and building homes, as well as to building fortunes. I believe in a spade and an acre of pood ground. Whoso cuts a straight path to his own living by the help of God. in the sun and rain and sprouting grain, seems to roe a universal work ing man. He solves the proo lem of life, not for one. but for all men of sound body. Emerson. This guaranteed income will encourage the syndicates to nulld and maintain ! their properties in the most crude ! and cheap manner possible. Good .'service will count for nothing. Good , management will be a secondary ' consideration, because the govern , most guarantees an income, no mat , ' ter how slight an effort the roads make to meet public demands. RANK PATERNALISM. The house of representatives yes . Thinking taxpayers of Umatilla county will read with great delight . and admiration the spirited cam- paign editorial in the Tribune this morning, in which it rolls up Its sleeves for a genuine mud slinging onslaught. While the Tribune was slurring T. D. Taylor ana Judge Hartman. two of the most popular officials in the couniy. irrespective 'of politics, it forgets to say anything ; In commendation of the present county commissioners who entered i into a job with the Tribune, in spite . of Judge Hartman's opposition, to . i hand over $700 of the people's money to that paper, for county printing !that could have been done for less , than $2u0. No matter what the pol . j Itics of the voter, he will wonder ; whit public interest the Tribune could have in recommending any- i body for election after having ex- ' posed to public view its reau.ness J and determination to levy tribute on the taxpayers through partisans it has boosted for office. It has been but three months since the Tribune permitted itself to be used as a tool to fabricate an Interview with Char ley Cunningham, in an effort to send ges. The O. R. & N. has openea the door, the cities or Oregon must now push the chair forward and in vite the tourists in. Here's a hint. The Push Club of Coos county has been presented with $1,000 by the county court for the purpose of doing the greatest possi ble Rood for the county If the Pen dleton Commercial Association should be struck with such a sur prise as this. Umatilla county mlcht have a more appropriate exhibit at the Oregon bureau of Information at the Lewis and Clark fair. SUNSET DREAMS. The moth and beetle wing nbout The garden ways of other days. Above the hills, a fiery shout Of gold, the day dies slowly out. Like some wild blast n huntsman blows. And o'er the hills my fancy goes. Following the sunset's golden call. Unto a vine-hung garden wall. Where she awaits me In (he gloom Between the lily and the rose. With arms and Hps of arm per fume The dream of love my fancy knows BABY'S VOICE Is the jov of the household, for without it no happiness can be complete. How twect the picture of mother nnd babe, angels smile at and commend the L..rrV,tc nnA xenirations of the mother bending over the cradle. The ordeal through which the expectant mother must pass, how ever, is so full of danger and suffering that the hour when 6he snnll kUC JITUaVO . . i i l 1. 1 A-.nA nnn feel the exquisite thrill of motherhood vnm inoescr.uau, -- ---fear. Every woman should know that the danger, pain and horror . . . . . . - 1 - .1 r ,1 1 ,mh 1 1 1 JI1ULIIVI - - , tens and renders pliable all the parts, and assists nature in its sublime work. By its aid thousands of women have passed this preat crisis in perfect safety and without pain. Sold at Jt.oo per bottle by druggists. Our book of priceless ralue to all women sent free. Address SSAOrtELD REGULATOR DO Mlmnta. On. of child-birth can be entirely avoided by the use of Til a scientir"- l'r.trr.ent fir external use ot.Iy, vr..ch toub.: THER'S END PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING We do only good work J at right prices. 1 Our facilities are unactHj We are experienced in tht lucss, auu mi won; recehBi our personal attention. Neatness and promptnea. r.o matter wnat you In painting or papering.. I !j we'll do the highest grade oil JworK. maoor and painting. outdo I H-l Hlllll h i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 iw 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1- The gloworm and the firefly glow Among the ways of - bygone days. A golden shaft shot from a bow Of silver, star and moon swing low Above the hills where twilight lies: And o'er the hills my longing flies. Following the star's far. arrowed gold. Unto a gate, where, as of old, She waits amid the rose and rue. With star-bright hair and night-dark j is $ t t t t i t The dream to whom my heart true. My dream of love that never dies. In the April Reader Magazine. Robert B Roosevelt, uncle of the president, is an ardent and active democrat. At the Jefferson's birth day banquet in New iork City, he was the principal speaker, and de clared himself to the effect tnat "The days of Jeffersonlan simplicity are forever gone, in America " ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::r::;rriiJ!""i"Sj !j terday passed one of the greatest , t,im to the penitentiary This is the grafting- bills Imposed upon the peo-jkind of salve it has been spreading le for many a day. when it voted to over the ranks in this county American capital a five gsaxantee American capital a per cenr income on investments in nflroads in the Philippines. The bill was passed on a strict jarty me of 139 republicans for It to 123 democrats against It. . When the house voted to" permit this graft upon the people. It placed a premium on subsidies. It opens the door to every form of commer cial parasite known to the world, to lobby for guaranteed earnings in ..e islands, where the concessions are already so great that they amount la subsidies. The Philippines are not nw ter ritory from the trade standjoint. nor trom the standpoint of settlement. There is every facility there to build railroads almost as cheaply as here. The spirit and intellectuality of the Russian people may be estimat ed by their religious beliefs. The press dispatches from St. Peters burg say that the Russian populace Is In mourning since the loss of the warship in the harbor of Port Ar thur. Wednesday, believing devoutly Jthat that accident is a certain sign of God's displeasure at Russia's po sition in this war. To the thinking. God-fearing American, this groveling nuperstition Is a dangerous and dis gusting thine Would It not be bet ter for civilization if Japan, with her wooden gods, impassive and ir responsive to the human drama, to win the contest in the East, than for j the groveling Russian, with his beastly ideals and his barbaric no- vim I. ii tc r, ! i n r I f 1 1 1 IftVtnr la fhpnn a , u Kcino c tK t ons of a God. to Implant such relig- and the business is waiting the ... , .. .. ,,. .,, ous belief In new territory? The roads. They will pay a profit from i ... ... . , Uai-ineses wooden god is yielding to . " " . ,;';": civilization. The Russian's bigotry capuai ifc interning in iuurio. .,., .,.,, , ,, rann idled witn me uviug iruiu. agricultural enterprises, very rar "rom all reports from the Islands. As a striking evidence of the gen tie country is not a difficult one in ; ,.ra) sentiment in favor of purer so- whicb to construct roads. The co8ticia surroundings and for the re of roadbed would be much lighter than in this country and this pap cocking bill, guaranteeing the mer ciless corporations a five per cent income, moans that all the boodlers in congress and the government are ot in the postal department. Enterprising capitalists should be glaif of the chance to Invest there with trade concessions already grant ed In favor of ine islands. The eople's money should not be dis tributed to syndicates which eel their chief activity from congres sional favoritism. If the railroads anst be guaranteed a fixed income. mhy not guarantee the American larmcr. the American laborer, the American manufacturer, now look ins toward the Philippines? Way should not American miners, finking life in the frozen fastnesses f Alaska, be guaranteed J2d ir day lur thulr work? They are civilizing new American territory Why should out the mining companies and mer chants now bringing order out of cfasos In the wildernesses of the Tkon, be guaranteed fixed Incomes? Titer are tiie plonecrB of trade there strictlon of vice. It may be Inter rsting to mention an Incident Dr W. G. Cole, on March 2C, gave the East Oregonian an Interview on the future policy of the office of coroner in giving to the public all the details of future suicides and murders such as have occurred in this county with in the past year. This Interview has been republished In 27 of the lead ing papers of Oregon, and many of the best papers In Idaho and Wash lngton. So strong was the popular sentiment expressed In the interview that one Salem paper has published It the second time. Since the O. II. & N. has granted the stopover privileges on tickets to the Lewis and Clark fair. It now be comes the duty of Oregon towns to make their existence known In the East, so intending tourists will know where to stop, to Bee the country r,,ot nilvnntneeouiily. People will not stop over unless there is some thing interesting to see and learn and they will not know where to stop uuless enterprising cities invite visitors by advertising the auvama .f t t t t t t t What Shall We Have for Dessert? i This quest.on arises in the family very day. Let us answer it to-day. Try j Jeii-O 't 4. Pre HOLT BROS. Side Hill Combined Harvester The latest .Improved two-wheel, slde-hlll combined harvester has rroven a boon to wheat raisers. It is he most successful, most economical and easiest machine to operate ever built. These harvesters haie been given abundant trials right here at home and all users are highly pleased. None have been dissatisfied and all are high in their praise. The Holt side-hill harvester on a side hill is able to stick to the side of the hill, while the header will slip down the bill. The main wheels are vertical, which braces the machine to the side hills. It works equally adapted to level land. The Holt harvesters are sold exclusively In this section by E. L. SMITH i 2J8 Court Street, Pendleton, Oregon All extras for Holt machines on hand. I Wilson & Carnine $ Shop on Cottonwood street.! near Neagle Bros. 'Phone,! X Blaci; 1043. rtWmU'HH 111111 ffJ The Arlingto J. L, SHARON, Proprietor, The Arlington Is a night rooming house, equipped witk i trie lights, free baths and all ern conveniences, it is cenir located, being on Main street, tiJ doors north of Hotel St. over the Delta candy store. by the day, week or month. 50c to $1 a day CIS Main Phone Red 1091. GOOD DRY WOOD All Kinds I have good sound wood which is delivered ai reasonable prices For Cash. rinlJeimi; nnd healthful dessTt. pared in two minutes. No boiling 1 ' . .. , , , , ,, iA.i. i i j j h ,,h 1 I i I 1 1 I 1 1 I I I 1 I 1 H tool. Flavors: Lemon, Orange, Rasp- ! oerry and Strawberry. Get a package j For sale at the East Oregonian of fice Large bundles ot i.ewspapers ; your grocers l o-uay. ;ocis. containing ovr 100 ble papers, can De nao ior ac a duuu.c. vy. C. MINNIS Leave orders at NeuBi-tj Cigar Store. I MERRILL TYPEWRITER i-JJ Sptkane. Cn.gt.DEHSDBt nri I SuDDiiei Heniing uwi w THE Mammoth Shoe Sale LASTS JUST ONE MORE D Y. TOMORROW (SATURDAY) WE WILL GIVE EVEN GREATER VALUES THAN AT THE BEGINNING OF THE SALE. HAVING SOLD SO MANY THE PAST WEcK HAS LEFT MANY LINES BROKEN IN SIZES. THESE WILL BE SOLD AT JUST ONE HALF PRICE. WE HAVE STILL IN STOCK MANY STYLES IN OXFORDS AND DAINTY SUMMER SLIPPERS THAT WILL GO TOMORROW AT FROM 20 TO 50 PER CENT LESS THAN REGULAR PRICES. BUY YOUR SUMMER FOOTWEAR NOW Ladies' Oxfords and Slippers J3.50 Patent Kid or Kid French heel Slippers or Oxfords $2.40 J3.00 Patent or Kid Slippers or Oxfords, many styles J2.00 J2.50 Oxfords and slippers 1,65 J2.00 Oxfords and Slippers 1-25 Men's Shoes A. E. Nettleton J6 and 7 Shoes. Patent or Kid Blucher and Bal, now 4,35 Lewis A. Crossett 15 Shoes 3.45 M. A. Packard $5 Shoes 3.60 Ladies' Shoes J5.00 Patent or Kid Lace Shoes, French or low beeis 4.00 Hand turn, fine Kid Shoes, now J30 Hand turn or welt so $3.00 Hand turn or welt Misses' and Children's Shoes 12.00 and 2.25 Shoes In many Ktyles ' ' ' $1J5 $1.75 Misses' Shoes, 11 to 2 J1.50 Misses' Shoes, 11 to 2 ' JZ.UO unua s bnoes, ovs iu n ! jijj J1.7B Child's Shoes. 8 to 11 ' jt.tt jl ti r.fi rhlWl's Klines. &V, to 11 " ! i $1.25 Child's Shoes, 8 to 11 70c Ijj $1.00 Child's Shoes, 8 to 11 jjj We sew all rips iree. m 1 I Lee Teutsch's Department Store jj CORNER MAIN AND ALTA STREETS