av- DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1904. PAOE THREE. Lcpettta. low ol strength. constipation, tfreneral debility, sour rb l0, .1 .1,. Kiomach are ' Mloverv repre- P0, ' . ...i-.. i dlrestlon LCffifee not only cure in lr. ..... ,tih!s famous Kshirouolesby Kt1 . .t.n n and L puritywg. 5w b Cinj the mucous membranes (toa!aen. odol ;STS WHAT YOU EAT ,.HUh the s,ck "n Btfenjth to the Weak. Idf. 51.00 She holdlnt 2K tlmaa jjtjE. C. DeWitt & Co., CUeaxo. by Tallman & Co. tSTlPATION t . . I I lunerea wun curouic cod- I (Mariaf thli tlm 1 had to take in Emu action on my bowela. Happily 1 , fcmu. and today I am well man. Emamharr with Internal pllea. Thank j Best For The Bowels CANDY CATHARTIC I Ll,PtJUbl.Potnl.TiteOrod.Tor.ood, I tin, weien or unpe. iuc sac. vc. hatoi iX. iB (iDHIDv IBUIBI 1UCU l rf I . to ear. or roar money back. ki&l Remedy Co., Chlcieo or N.Y 603 L SALE, TEH MILLION 10XES Summer Drinks jcl, refreshing and lnvigorat- Our drinks go right to the fl Call for Soda Pop, Sarsa- m, iron Brew. Dr. Pepper s tosphates. Mineral "Water, t Beer, Ginger Ale and fa, and all kinds ot Eoft fcks. Our drinks are Dure. Id only distilled water, made 1 condensed Bte m, is used mfactured by I. MARIN flnrr .,nrini Ct r!-v-. tj i 1 ..hmw Ui. ()C J.4ULd LET US FILL YOUR BIN WITH fcccoi cost Ire d OAL 1 . 'gnizod as the best and :(&t economical fuel. We r Prepared to contract with 'w tor your winter's supply. ffe deliver coal or wood to 'f part of the city. J aT II I n I 1 1. 1W M aaaw- STREET. NEAR DEPOT. THP RCCT v pi j sr . this In Inrl wrViAn van jv"' ua siock supplies for thn IntArnntlnnal -1 auu shock Food. Dae Kur tor your cow trou- ? Colesworthy ,127.190 p.. 4 a,. A. 'or Leo's Lice Killer. f . a- kl '""lUjlullttUUll W A hill Ukaa,AB( VU tlffl . ful you through In It u4 wim more comfort Uilw "X. S "no. Leaving El- amves, ana Joseph at K-sn . IM . """7 DVUUICB ill Wk. (KM a v WiUoWT you mke a trip through 1b. "oyon, try the Tender- MEETS TOMORROW USHERS IN A WEEK OF GREAT EXCITEMENT. Battle of Conflicting Interests and Policies In the National Democratic Convention Complete Uncertainty Attends the Outcome Both In Rela tlon to Platform and Candidates Will Probably Be the Most Dramat ic Political Episode In History of the Party. St. Louis, July 5. An even thous and delegates will assemble in the Coliseum tomorrow to name a candidate to. run as the democratic party's choice for president of the United Stntes. These delegates rep resent 53 political divisions 45 states, four territories, Alaska, Porto Hico, Hnwaii and the Philippine Islands. The number of delegates exclusive ot the territories and Insular possessions is twice the number of United States senators and members of the house of representatives. There is no doubt ihat the national committee will de cide that the six delegates from Porto Rico are, entitled to seats In the convention. Each delegate to the national con vention represents a section of the country peopled approximately by 80,000 people, ot" whom at least lfi.000 arc male adults of the voting age. So the whole convention represents the democratic party of approximately 1G.000.000 voters, or SO.000,000 peo ple. The delegates will assemble In the Coliseum at noon on Wednesday. They wll be called to order by ex Senator James K. Jones, of Arkan sas, chairman of the national com mittee. Secretary C. A. Walsh will then read the official call for the con vention. Senator Jones will make a brief address, presenting to the con vention John Sharp Williams, of Mis sissippi, who will be introduced as temporary chairman. The -choice of Representative Wil liams for temporary chairman is made at the suggestion of prominent democrats of all factions. Though he comes to the convention as an in structed Parker delegate, ,the Bryan and Hearst element offered no objec tion to his selection." Mr. Williams' chief duty as temporary chairman will be to deliver a speech which will voice the general party policies, and will be what Is popularly termed a "key-note" speech. William J. Bryan, who is here as a member of the Nebraska delegation, is understood to desire the chairman ship of the resolutions, or platform committee. His selection wil natur ally be combated vigorously by the "conservatives," who are mostly sup porters of Judge Parker. The plat form committee will have a difficult task on its hands to satisfy the oppos ing elements and draw up resolutions that will be acceptable to a majority of the delegates. The platform will discuss trusts, labor, immigration, statehood and other subjects. There are numerous contests to en gage the attention of the credentials committee, among the most important being the cases from Illinois and the District of Columbia. The recom mendations of the national commit tee, which has been considering the contests for several days, will govern in most of these cases brought before the credentials committee. The com mittee on order of business prescribes the rules and order of business which will govern the convention and names the permanent officers who will have charge of the convention's delibera tions. Senator Bailey of Texas, Thomas Barkworth of Michigan, Patrick A. Collins of Boston, and James Hamil ton Lewis of Washington,, are among those mentioned for permament chairmen. John W. Martin will be sergeant-at-arms, and C. J. Gavin, of New Mexico, will be reading clerk. Thursday the convention will be called to order by the temporary chairman, who will receive the re ports from the committee on creden tials., and permanent organization, and order of business, and these re- Often The Kidneys Are Weakened by Over-Work. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. It used to be considered tliat only urinary and bladder troubles were to be but now modern science proves that nearly all disea&os have their beginning in the disorder of these int important orgins. The kidneys filter and purify the blood T wiuv .... ---- - . .1.Utii.vsnrp wejllc There ore. wnenju.. jiow every organ duty- , , . . IukIIv." becln Jffite kidney "remedy, Dr. as your kidneys are well they wiU lieip all the other organs to healtli. A inai wlUconvincewyouc. UkeTOKyourl. The mild ana ine Dr Kilmer's Swamp-Kooi, me K"J r i 1. ... rtifcirebauiK " Ul UH- V'7V on its merits oy druggists in irnjwi rA i nne-dollar sue bottles. , r-rt SSSffi tp SwKoot miM D,K been a1Pted, a com ..! .u 1,1 be MmcA t0 PSwt to the chair the permanent chairman. The alter will then deliver a speech sim. ilar in character to that of the torn porary chairman, dealing wi.h the is- t.nSi.f ,h.e can,naisn- This speech will later form an important part of 11 ft. Y""'"'sn I'lcraiuro and be pub- ' lished in the .official partj publication known as the "campaign text-book " i Following the address of the perma nent chairman will come the report ot the committee that has framed the. Platform. At this stage of the pro cedlngs the convention . 'il i:,. and many interesting speeches ' and ' ucumes may do looked for Friday will be the big day of the convention, the day to which all ot the previous sessions and proceedings are but an introduction. It will be the day on which candidates for pres. ldent and vice-president will be named. The candidates will be plac ed in nomination, but few believe that the convention will be able to make a selection before Saturday and probably later. This Is the part of the game when heated debates and fiery oratory are In order. The roll of states will be called alphabetically and each state will be asked if It has a chsdldate to pre sent. Arizona or California might present the name of Hearst, but it Is probable that no response will be made until Delaware is reached, when the leader of the delegation from that state will present the name of Judge George Gray for the presidential nom ination. It Is probable that Illinois, with Its 54 delegates, will be selected to present the name of Hearst. Mas sachusetts will present the name of Richard Olney. When New York is reached the name of Parker will bo formally presented to the convention. The speech nominating Judge Parker will be made by Martin W. Littleton, president of the borough of Brooklyn. Missouri will cast the candidacy of her favorite son, Cockrell. upon the turbulent wHters and Wisconsin will place In nomination Wall of Milwau kee, whose can.-.-iacy succeeded In preventing the Badger State from fallng Into the hands of the Hearst column. The Gorman candidacy will be presented by West Virginia, which is the onlv state instructed for tho Maryland senator, though this fnct. not by any means indicative of his real strength in the race. With the selection of the ticket the national convention will adjourn. The national committee, however, will remain in the city to choose a chairman, who will be the manager of tho campaign, a vice-chairman, and a secretary, who will be his assistant, and an executive committee, who will act with him In an advisory capacity. The selection of a chairman will de pend upon which wing of the party gains control of the convention. The chairman will noturally be one who Is personally acceptable to the presiden tial nominee. In any event, it is stated definitely that ex-Senator Jones the Incumbent, will retire and a new man chosen for the place. Should Parker be nominated it Is rumored that Thomas Taggart, the present na tional committeeman from Indiana, and a practical politician of recogniz ed ability, will be selected to head the committee. After the new committee Is mado up the chairman and his assistants will proceed to open headquarters for the campaign. Headquarters will he maintained in New York, and the Western end of the campaign will probably be directed from Chicago as In former years, ABOUT THE TEA YOU DRINK. How to Judge Beer PURITY lajer'e to fW It In most bottled beers, because their preservation it gained through chemical adulteration. Bottled been, as well ns food products, arc ottcn itdul tcrntcd with chemical picservatives, etc., which tor awhile keep them from routing, but ore injittioui to the stomach. A. B. C BEER is Rimrantcctl to be ebsolutely pure ami free ftom any niiultcrnnt vhntevcr. It i never exposed to the air (which is germ-laden) but is br.wed, fermented and aged for eight months in air-tight compattmcnls, then piped In tin-lined pipes direct to the air-tight bottling machines, where It is bottled, scaled, pnstcurized and packed tor shipment. A. B. C. The only beer bottled exclusively at tho Brewery, therefore the only Iwttlcd beer that can be absolutely guaranteed. The American Brewing Co., St. Louis, U. S. A. GEO. DARVEAU, WtlOLKSALU DLALCtt. boasting of these 12,000,000 pounds of f Mt'i'il wil, mill il iiii-imn mi duiitiu wo protested. Since Japan Is fighting the battle of civilization, mid moro particularly the battles thnt will restore England's prestige and influence in the Hast, it Is hardly fair for England's people to steal Japan's markets while the la. iniuliTrt me busy baltiing. . Wo besought that planter to turn trom the evil way of robbing an ally, I and assured hlin that tho swlftne.su with which Secretary Gage put a , countervailing duty on Russia's Ik)uh- ty-fed beet sngnr might bo equaled by Secretary Shaw's mailed fist fall ing hard on this ti-cent bounty-fed green ten of Ceylon. With an abundant supply of cheap labor, this beauslful clluiato and ( beautiful scenery, few insect pests, and a steady market, one would think the ten plnnters In Ceylon much en vied mortals. They have pretty bungalow homes In the midst of their estates and tho country llfo of England is kept up ns nearly as tho climate permits. Ev eryone rides and drives, plnys cricket and tennis and there is an Immensu lot of visiting back and forth and up and down the Island, Everyone knows everyone elso on the estates, and each winter there Is an influx of visitors from England who bring tho world's news and last notions to these pleasure loving, strenuous young planters. But while they grumble In Ceylon and pine for home, .their visits to thnt delectable place always end before the time set and they come back to the sunshine and the exquisite tea fields, to the easy outdoor life of the unending spring, and to tho gentle black folk In their brilliant and pic turesque dress with a thankfulness beyond expression. SOCIALIST "VAGARIES." The culture of tea is Ceylon's one great Industry and a visit to the fields, crowded with native pickers, with their queer wicker .baskets. Is well worth the tourist's while. When the baskets are filled or the field is picked clean of young leaves the tea pickers turn In their crop to be weigh ed and credited to them, and by a good day's work these women make as much as 8 and 10 cents a day, says Eliza It. Scldmore, in Chicago Gro cers' Criterion. Besides money wages these coolies are provided with quarters, rations of rice, medical attendance, and care In sickness. There Is a constant coming over of Tamil coolies from India to earn these big wages and a going home of the provident oneB who bav accumulated enough to return and take up Independent agriculture In India, to become landed proprietors In their old homes. The tea leaves are carried to the factory, a two-story building with a tall stovepipe and many windows. Any large leaf or twig is sorted out, the leaves are spread on tiers of shelves or trays on the upper floor and left to wilt over night. Twelve or 18 hours are required to wilt the leaf until it can be put In the roller, that the cells of the leaves may be broken, the tannic Juices freed, ready to be eliminated by the next process of fermenting. Tho moist, withered leave, which have been roiled and crushed Into no semblance of a green leaf, are spread again on trays and covered In the higher tem perature until by fermentation they have turned to a bright reddish cop per color . . For many years the Ceylon planters have been anxious to make green tea and capture the Canadian and Amer ican markets, since they cannot con vert those people Into black tea drink ers, but their efforts were not sue ..i Tha fevlnn ereen tea did not look like either tho Chinese or the Japanese green teas, ana me tea nerve wreckers would havo none of It; but by diligence the tea makers learned to make the big long Assam or hybrid leaf look like the needle like Japanese leaves when cured, and a moderate success has been at tained, i. ,.!, u.na offered and last year 12,000,000 pounds of Ceylon green tea earned the oouniy o each pound before It reached a mar ket. One tea planter, who had been re joicing over Japan's naval successes and the "biding" she is giving Rus eia, as all the British elegantly term the afflictions of tho hear, took to Professor Richard T. Ely figured out some years ago that the Missis sippi valley alone is capauie oi Blip porting a population of 600,000,000 and that all the necessaries and luxuries of American life at Its very best could he produced on a labor bnsls of four hours a day. . Of course it was set down ns a 1 "pipe dream" by those whose nar-1 cotic Is n thousand times worse than 1 hnshheesh ; hut now comes Professor I llerlzka. the famous Austrian slntls-1 ticltin. who has been looking Into the same problem. Head his figures: ; "1 have calculated how much labor tiud time are necessary v the aid ' of the present mechanical .i. pllances ' fn nrmliirii wlint Ih remilreil til Hlllinort I In enso and comfort tho 2t'.,00O,O00 luhnbltniits of Austria vU: food, clothing and shelter, consisting of n live-room house to a family, and In cluding fuel, medicine, furniture and utensils. "I llnd it would require 20.,00O,O0O acres of arable land nnd about 8,000. ooo acres of pasture, or about one and one-half acres per capita, nnd 015,000 workmen, working 11 hours per day 300 days In th year. "These 0.15,000 are hut 12.3 per cent of thn jiopulutlon able to work excluding the women, children below U years of nge, nnd men nbove 50 yenrs of age. If Instead of these C.16, 000 men t lie whole 5,000,000 men nhln to work were engaged, they would need to work but 37 days in tho year, or If they were to work 300 days In the year they would need to work only one hour ami 22 minutes per day. "Again, If till the luxuries of lire wore included It would require 5,000, 000 workmen, or 20 per cent or the population able to work, two hours and 11 minutes per day 300 days In the yenr. With this working power 20.000,000 Austrlans would bo sup plied with all their hearts could pos- Biuiy ueniri. "But if, again, the whole 5,000,000 men were employed three hours and 12 minutes per day they would need to work two months or the yenr only. Behold whnt time could bo spared for study and plea mires, while the cares of life, in so far as wealth Is con cerned, would be obliterated altogether." THE GALL Published Every Day cl the Year, LEADS In those essential elements of enter prise and progress which go to make up GREAT NEWSPAPER row THE,,, Designed Especially HOME IT PRINTS ALL THE NEWS. Is Ably and Carefully Edited. if lit cotumni in replete with brljht, iplcy (Olllp ol Cctlt tear. I indcOlei It Woiksfor the Welfare of the Stale. THE WEEKLY GALL, A Blitatn ro ri)r. ConUlnlrf ftf Of I ot tre nk I kiJInj nti ttitjrei rd miry ipecill luturei lor the titirtr ird Hock riliir MEND 1-OR BAafriiEB. Subscription Pile (Always In Ad- 7a.se), Including- Poat xlthltl tli L'nlla.1 Hiatal, 1,'anaiU or Mail, u Dally, On,- yrar (Imlu.lln Sun day Call). m.imi Dall), li muntl.a nn. tu.llriaC Sun day fall) . Dally, tin month ilncluJInit Sun day i-iilll T5 SomlAy rail, on yar 5l.riO Wrraly Call, nn yrar I.OO) rnralim fl'0y. ,M.N( I'ar yr utra. i!fiVl-l Sunday. -I. in Pr ar " j"oia vrkly. l.oo r,r yr atr Traction of yr lu proportion. Get a "top coat." Tho Boston. HE TOLD HIM. aa..,7 I'luuin . N3WEP. ME ONCER! rS, . pJlrAtAWHM V-Tr ' , Mou in Your. One. Two. INSURANCE. Fire, Life and Accident JOE ELL Room 8, Over Taylor's Hard ware 8tor. i a ....... ....... . . ...--.- The Columbia Lodging House Well ventilated, neat and com- gi fortablo looms, Kood beds. Bar In connection, where beat goods are served. Main street, center of block, between AJta and Webb streets. F. X. SCHEMPP Proprietor Walters' Flouring Mills Capacity, ISO barrels a day. ' Flour exchanged for wheat. Flour, Mill Feed, Chopped FeM. etc., always on hand, REPORT OP THE CONDITION OF THE PENDLETON SAVINGS BANK At th Clot of Business, June 30, HHM RESOURCES. Loans and discounts f 822JJ Warrants , 8,59 Bank building and furni ture 30.O09J&W Other real estate t,15.4 Due from banks 112,761.10 Cash In bank 04,452-W 11,077,142-71 LIABILITIES, Capital 100,00.M Surplus 75,000-W Undivided profits ., 10.399JC Duo to banks 2,740.30 Deposits ,,. 83,002.7 ll,077,M