East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, June 17, 1904, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    PAne. i .
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DAILY EAST OREQONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 10O4.
LIGHT
PAGES.
PAGE SIX.
LYDIA E.PINKHAMS
VEtTABLF
if2
2 A
Has Cured More Women Than
Any Other Medicine in the World.
Its annual sales are greater than those of any other medicine exclusively for women.
It holds the record for the greatest number of actual cures of woman's ills. This fact is attested
by hundreds of thousands of letters from grateful women which are on file in the Pinkham labo-
. ... .,it 1 i . i i i
ratory, and which are constantly oemg puDiisnea.
Merit alone can produce such results. Good advertising serves to call attention for a time, but
merit alone can stand the test of time.
The ablest specialists now agree that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the most universally
successful remedy for woman's ills known to medicine.
All sick women should note these facts, and placing all possible prejudices aside, should realize the
truthfulness of these statements, and that a cure for their troubles actually exists.
Wise is the woman who has faith in Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, for health and happiness
is sure to follow its use.
YOU CAN GET HELPFUL ADVfCE FREE
If there is anything about your illness you do not understand, Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., will be glad to receive a letter
from you telling her all the details. She will send you promptly a reply which may save you years of suffering and pain. She
has helped thousands of women. For all this she will not charge ycu a cent ; besides, she will keep your letter strictly confi
dential. Write her to-day ; don't wait.
How to
Judge Beer
The only beer
bottled exclusively
- i. rc . "
Parity, Flavor, Solid, Creamy Foam, Clean Taste and
Brilliancy, the points of excellence contained in A. B. C BEER,
mark it as the one perfect beer brewed.
The American Brewing Co., St. Louis, U. S. A.
CEO. DARVEAU, Wholesale Dealer.
Its Rich an5 Delicious
Our cold storage meats nro always right; always tendor, always
Juicy.
Try our mild cured Hams. They are ireo from that strong taste.
The Schwarz & Greulich Heat Co.
607 MAIN STREET.
BECK, THE PLUMBER
Let him do the work and you will be satisfied. His work Is always
first-class in every particular.
Always let us figure with you on plumbing.
BECK, the Reliable Plumfce
Court Street, opposlto Hotel Dickers.
PABST
Milwaukee Beer
ON DRAUGHT AT
THE STATE SALOON
tell Co.. Props.
CHOICE IS HEARST
HAS A HEAVY MAJORITY
ILLINOIS DEMOCRATS.
Convention Sits Down Upon His
Campaign Managers Platform
Calls Attention to Republican Du
plicity on the Trust Question Del
egates Instructed to Vote as a
Unit Platform Indorses Woman
Spffrage.
indefinitely to levy exactions on the
people
"Wc Hubmlt that tlio republican
party itself controlled by the trusts,
cannot safely be rolled on to curb
tin trusts and we demand that the
M- voinment be taken out of the hands
of the friends of monopoly and re
h.oreil to the uutrnmmeled ropresen
tntivep of the country."
The delegates to tho national con
vention are instructed to vote as n
unit.
BAPTIST MISSION WORKERS.
The Illinois democratic state con
vention, after nominating a full ticket
instructed for Hearst for president.
Delegates at large to the St. Louis
convention: John P. Hopkins. A. M.
Lawrence, Ben T. Cable, Samuel Al
Bchuier, Instructed for Hearst.
The convention instructed the del
egates to the national convention to
vote for William II. Hearst at St.
Louis as long as his name remains
before the convention,
Hearst's campaign managers, who
attempted to ride into power by the
aid of his name, received absolutely
no consideration from tho convention.
The Harrison party, which came sole
ly from Chicago, and was pledged to
tho support of Congressman James It.
Williams, was completely routed.
The resolutions offered for tho In
dorsement of Mr. Hearst were not a
j part of the committee's report.
Tho original resolution provided
jiracucauy mai me Illinois delegation
should vote for Hearst until it was
convenient to vote for somebody else.
A substitute offered by Clarenco S.
Darrow, pledging the delegates to
vote for Hearst as long as his name
Is before the convention, was then
adopted by a vote of 93U to 1595.
The Platform.
Tho platform "points to the recent
rovelations of corruption in the post
ofilce department at Washington.
"To a depleted treasury, shown by
the last treasury statement at Wash
ington. "To tho failure of the attorney gen
eral to prosecute illegal trusts and
combinations and the promoters
thereof by criminal acilnn
"To the refusal of congress to re
duce the tariff tax on those articles
which enable the illegal trust and
combination to plunder the people,
and to tho fact that the attorney
general loft It to private i-iMzens f t
large expense to uncover the coal
trust, as proving tho truth of tho
abovo charge against the republican
party."
Woman suffrage is approved.
Growth of Trusts.
"Wo point to tho growth of trusts
and mononolleH nn nm nf the. ,.n
suits of tho ascendancy of the ropub-
iieuu puny ui wasninglon,
"By tho present tariff law and In
numerouit wnva lh tAnr iHtci. i.n.n
all been strengthened and now trusts,
too numerous to mention, havo been
created since the government passed
Into tho hands of Him rnmlltltonn
party In 189C.
"ir tho people do not speedily reg
ulate and control these trusts the
trUStS Will nermanoiltlv rlnmlnnln nn.l
control the government and continue
Western Conference United Society
at Winona Lake.
Winona Lak3, Ind.. June 17. The
first western conference of tho young
people's missionary movement of the
United Society of Free Baptist
Young People opened here today and
will continue for one week. The
movement was organized nt a confer
ence nf leaders In missionary worlc in
Sunday schools and young peoples'
societies hold at Silver Bay. on Lake
George, in 1902.
The purpose of the conference is
to afford a practical training school
for missionary workers in Sunday
schools mul young peoples' societies
and to combine with such training the
facilities for rest and recreation that
most Christian workers are obliged to
seek in connection with their brief
Bummer vacations.
MAY
BISHOP SCOTT ACADEMY
MEETING WITH HARD LUCK
Its Affairs in Very Unsatisfactory
Condition and Subject of Great So
licitude to the Church and the Con
vention No Statement of the In
stitution's Indebtedness Is Yet
Made Public School Has Been
Running Behind.
Drink
RESCENT
REAM
II Is Fine
After lining in existence 34 years.
Bishop Scott Academy, operated by
I the Oregon Diocese of the Episcopal
! church, stands in danger of being
. permanently closed, says the Port
land Tulegram. When the conven
tion of tho diocese meets at the
Academy, tho proposition of running
i the academy another year, or of clos
. Ing It indefinitely will be brought up,
I probably by Bishop B. Wlstar Morris
himself. For a number of years tho
school lias not been making expenses
(and this Is tho reason for the propos
: ed movement to closo it.
j When asked what would probably
bo done in the convention, Bishop
' Morris this morning refused to dls
icusb It beyond saying that tho mat
jter would be brought up In due time,
j When asked further if the manago
'ment of Arthur C. Nowlll, who has
I been principal for tho past three
years, was responsible for tho pro-
posed action, tho bishop declined to
state, saying that he was blamed by
' a few and uphold by others.
The bishop admitted that the
I school had been running behind, but
stated that ho did not want to seo
It closed If there was any possible
.way of overcoming that contingency.
Although ho did not directly say so,
Bishop Morris implied that tho ques
tion of closing tho school was one
which was bolng earnestly dobated
among tho mombers of the convention
and that was hard to toll just what
tho convention would do.
Principal Nowlll declined to discuss
tho situation at all, except to say that
the length of time in which to de
termine whether a school of tho class
of Bishop Scott Academy Is success
ful is live years. Ho took chargo throe
years ago. According to Principal
Newlll's figures at leaat 60 "board-
basis where it will at least pay ex
penses Bishop Scott Academy has
not had SO boarders at one time for
a considerable porlod. Tho total reg
istration at commencement was 84,
boarders and day pupils. Of these
not more than 4u were boarders. Tho
tuition of the day pupils is so small
that it is not figured In when tho
expenses of the school are added up,
although of courso it is a part of !Si
running fund of the school ui i
used as such.
L'Etolle, the last French paper a
tiic 1b. minis of Panama, was lssw
for tho last time June 12. it wutif
direct representative of lie oH
French canal company and IB ti I
dlate successor.
S 0L
The disease which lias brought more suffering, degra
dation and disgrace upon the human race is the same
to-dav that it was centuries ago. It is called Contagious
Wood Poison, "The Bad Disease," and is given other
names, but among all nations is regarded as the bla.kcst
and vilest of all human diseases. It goes from bad to
worse ; the little sores that first hppear arc soon follovcd
,i i n I was afflicted Trlth blood plon.?iC
groins swell and niflanie, a doctors did mo no trood 'houshltoolttWtw
1 . i . - j i 1 . T nan marl tft fflUW
rWlCrupUOllUreaUSOUlOnille menwaitniuur. m i-jk 't"'.j farltiffli
body, the mouth and throat gftt i" $&-iSr&ffiffl
become ulcerated, the hairntid friend I then toon o. a, ., ana wivryi
t ... ..,i ,.i I continued tho nediolne. snd it curat wj
u.v,,, uui, uuu uip. piotoly. uuildlnjr upuvn8iuinKim..jj1
vciiuiv mull-lien iiuikc men iiihio. r,""., "to from. I
is not checked nt tins stage, . .
every bone, muscle, tissue and nerve in the uouy 1,ecomes,,u' ,r" -d
jioison, and from the roots of the hair to the soles cl the feet ""a
sound spot any wnerc. io cmc : i ";r."gM
i, i,iil nin. first 1m- nitrified, and notto?
i.: , ,..,:t.i n,l ,ir,.W n; R. S.S.. whiclW
known for years as an antidote for tfit P?
ash may check it for n time, but it comes back in ar-tiii '"rjfop
ionn. t. t. a. is gttaratueeu purely vegciamc. .-.iiu Il-.-at W
that it contains a mineral itisrredient. AVritc for our uoe-r
and learn all about Contagious Blood Poison and howtot rea"t w,
for medical advice. TfE SWSrT SPECIFIC CO., AW'
! The Pantheon Theatre
Webb St. cor. Cottonwood Open Every Everotf
CHANGE OF PROGRAM EVERY MONDAY.
Tho Pantheon is a strictly high-class? moral T4UlJe'
tor, catering to ladles, childron and gentlemen, w
the Orpheum circuit. Performance will consist ui "
J 30 to -10 minutes by tho great comedian,
JOHN P. BRACE
A roar from start to finish.
MANN AND FRANK
in tho funniest of all farces.
CAD FRANK
In her laughable act. A great bit.
Moving pictures by Edison Vltiscopo. Poo"
o'clock.
open
kh? fcr
'tare
HAMMOCKS
Time
to s(
ties'
'L.
The season for hammocks Is sere, i " - w t e
find h nlnrn In Ffit thn best at th iOWCflt P
Wo have spread ourselves in securing lb t ee
.... f.,orfl. JUBt '
patterns turned out by we nmmui'""'"-
Goodman-Thompson
643 MAIN STREET
Hardware
n
"hens!
Fifing
v,
lA"0 OP,
"ay
ptlte w
Hi. ..
'toslbV
for
icoi
'or i
v.
tier
-"1 Wt
lis from out of tho city, aro