DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON,, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, PAGE FOUR. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. Published every afternoon (except Sunday) nt l'endleton, Orci?on, by the EAST OREGONIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY. sunscitirriox katks. Dally, one year oy man $3.00 Dally, lx mouths by mall --GO IMIIv. threo mouths by mall 1 Dally, one month by mall 00 Dally, per month by carrier .t Weekly, ono year by mall l.fjo Weekly, six months! by mall Weeklv. four months by mall 00 Semi-Weekly, ono year by mall .. . 2.00 Semi-Weekly, six mouths by mall . . 1.00 Seml-Wcekly, three months by mall . . .SO Member Scrlpps Mcltae News Associa tion. The llast Orcgonlan U on sale nt H. It. Itlch's Nous Htuuds at Hotel I'ortlaud and Hotel l'et kins. Portland, Oregou. Sau I'ranclaco Itureau. 408 Fourth St. Chicago Ilurenii. 000 Security llulldlnK. Washington, D. C. llurcau, ."01 llth St., N. W. Telephone, Main 11. Knterel at Pendleton postoftlce as second- class matter. UNION(felLAHEC RESULTS FROM IRRIGATION. Horo Is a brief description of tho benefits of Irrigation In Montana. It was furnished to tho ufllcials In Wash- woro nulto unused to such altitudes, and also a Inrso amount of Indigestion i duo to undercooked food. At olovutlons of 15,000 feot water Imlla ni nlmiit 1SI1 decrees Fahrenheit. Ington hy a citizen of ho state, and j n,,, consequently, tho ordinary i the scene of the operations Is near amount of cooltlng Is quite inndo-j .Missoula. I uoato. At such a holght It Is almost , l...nntl.tn ... 1...II ln,. itrniinplt wlllln In 1900 a tract of land containing tho .ov oral kimuTof dal, or ordl" Sisr, acres was purchased, upon which lmry re(( ent, of Imln tiiero Is only nt that tlmo four families wero rcstd- ono vnrloty that can ho coolted tit lug and having a hard struggle to heights over 10,000 feot. For such el- make a living. An Irrigation system ovations in "" "'"..'..V,, ',, costing about $5000 was constructed. tho laterals covering nbout 480 acres, RISING Did you over think of tho fact thnt, on all sides, we are constantly touching our fellow- beings? For good or for ovll, others are continually effect- ed by what we do, say, think, feel and nre. If we place a bouquet of flowers on a tablo in a room, tho fragrance soon fills the whole atmosphere. An odor, whether good or bad, Is at once detected If we ap- proach tho substance from which It emanates. In like manner we are each of us j silently saturating the ntmos- phero about us with the subtle aroma of our character. In o the family circle, besides and beyond all teaching, the dally life of each member mysterl- ously modifies the life of every person In the household. The same process, but on a wider scale, goes on throughout tho community. No man llveth to himself, no man dleth to him- self. Others are built up and strengthened by our uncon- scions actions or thoughts, while still others may be wrenched out of shape and thrown prostrate because of some malign, though uncon- scions influence thrown out from ourselves. Will M. Mau- pin, in the Commoner. As soon as tho water was turned In the ditch tills land was put on the market at 200 per acre, on five years' time, tho purchaser paying 10 per cent of the purchase price down, and the balance in CO equal monthly pay ments. There was no difficulty In ills posing of the land at this price. Some of tho owners of live-acre tracts are now getting as much as 11500 each y.ear from the sale of tho products of their forms, ljist year 10 acres of tills land sold for $:1I100, the same tract having boon sold for $2000 in 1901. The success of the first ditch was so pronounced that another and larg or Irrigation system costing $19,000, was constructed to reclaim tho bal ance of the tract. It has practically all been sold at from $150 to $200 per acre since the ditch was finished. As an illustration of what water will do on .Montana laud, tills is probably ns good an example as can be furnished. In 1900 there were but four farms of 21S5 acres, Today there nr.e 400 families living In prosperity and con tent and deriving n comfortable liv ing from tho cultivation of tracts which in other sections of the country would not be considered ns fair-sized gardens. With the republicans of Washing ton spilt over tho railroad question, and those of Idaho split over the Mor mon issue, it looks like democratic victories in both of Oregon's near -neighbors. The Oregon women's suffragists are beginning slowly to prepare for an other trial of equal suffrage. Their persistence, like that of the prohibi tionists, will finally result In triumph, It Is thought by observant politicians. Three yenrs ago, the idea of Oregon carrying for a strictly prohibition measure, would have been hooted to the echo.. Times change, thought changes, public sentiment changes, and no man can judge the future by the past, or even by Its nearer neigh bor, the present. Umatilla county will be represented by at least 30 delegates nt the mass meeting to be held in Portland on August 2 and 3 for tno purpose of or ganizing the Oregon Development League. The city council will tonight appoint 10 delegates from tho city of Pendleton. The Commercial Associ ation and the county nre already rep resented by 10 each. As the rail roads have made a ono faro rate for that occasion, It Is hoped that every man appointed will nttend. It will show tlie proper friendly feeling to ward Portland, which will result in more determined effort on tho part of that city, to help Eastern Oregon, when occasion arises. It Is not an Idle mission. It means something that will bear fruition, perhaps not tomorrow, nor this year, hut which will grow Into a ripened friendship, n commercial and industrial union, as the years unfold the resources of this great state. vldod cooking vessels with air-tight lids provided with safety valves, which would blow off at a pressure of 1C pounds to tho square Inch, or approximately that of the atmosphere at sea level. Another effect of the altitude anil tomnornturo was the difficulty In tho operation of the magazines of tho ri fles and mechanism of the Maxim guns on account of tho congealing of tho oil, which lost Its lubrlcnting properties. This could have be remedied by supplying glycerine f lubricating purposes. Harper's Week ly. THE SOUL'S HOUR. All day I have tolled at the busy mill Where souls are ground and money Is made; All day, till my temples throb and thrill With the whirring wheels of trade. All day I have gripped tho trenchant steel, And grappled with columns black mid grim, Till tonight I am faint mid my sonso3 reel, And tho glory of God seems faint and dim. And so I have come to this quiet room To sit In the darkness and touch the keys To waken the ghost and tho lost per fume Of tho soul's dead flowers with my harmonics. And many other painful and serious ailments from which most mothers suffer, can be avoided by the use of ! "MOIHtrs hfieno. This great remedy is a God-send to women, carrying uiem tnrouga meir most critical ordeal with safety and no onin. No woman who uses "Mother's Friend" need fear the suffering and danger incident to birth; for it robs the ordeal of its horror and insures safety to life of mother and child, and leaves her in a condition more favorable to speedy recovery. The child ia also healthy, strong and good natured. Our book Motherhood," is worth its weight in cold to every woman, and will be sent free in plain envelope by addressing application to Brad field Regulator Co. Atlanta, Go. MOTHER'S FRIEND Its Rich and Delicious Our cold storage meats are alwayB right; always tender, always Juicy. t Try our. mild cured Hams. They arc free from that Btrong taste. The Schwarz & Greulich Meat Co. 607 MAIN STREET. WHO IS YOUR BOSS? Perhaps no other city In the North we3t Is so nearly deserted by bus! ness men, families, employes and all classes of people during the hot weather as Pendleton. Half of tho offices aro working "short handed tho business houses have doubled up tho duties to permit the employes to go to tho coast, one at a time, and everybody makes excuses for being so busy because of absence of help, that life is made strenuous for a couple of months, while the sea shore and the mountains arc beckoning. This wholesalo pleasure seeking wholesale vacation, Is ono of tho surest indications of prosperity among all classes. In towns of less business activity, less push, less life and virile commercial spirit, this practice does not prevail to such an extent. So far as is known now, J. A Borle, president of tho Commercial Association of this city, is tho only man In Eastern 'Oregon, In a position 61 this kind, -who Is taking. an active part In collecting .exhibits to advertise the .resources of the state. Sir. Borle, In (the capacity of president of the Commercial association, has" been working quietly, through friends In different portions of Umatilla county to collect a modest agricultural .ex hibit of our resources for tho Ore gon Information Bureau, in Portland. Whllo ho lias tho moral support of ovorybody he has been pursuing tho work alono, and deserves tho grati tude and prnlso of tho county for his public-spirited effort. The farmers of Umatilla county nro Invited to co operate with Mr. Borle In collecting a few choice specimens of grains, fruits, grass.es, and nil other products that would advertise the state. There Is a call, every day, for something that, will enltghten tho stranger on tho resources of this county, which has a world wide reputation. That Pendleton Is one of the best horse markets In tho Northwest, Is proved by the number of sales made In this city during tho past month. As near as can bo learned, 115 head of heavy work horses have been sold here since June 10, the prices ranging from $C5 to $125, according to the size of tho horse. Some of this stock has been driven overland from Wal lowa county, a distance of 145 miles, some from (Srant county, some from Union and a largo number from Southern Umatilla. The farming communities tributary to Pendleton, use good horses and will buy no other kind and thoso contemplating a sale of horses here must bear this in mind. Not only does tho farming In terests demand good horses, but a largo number of tho best teams to bo found in any city In Oregon are used dally on Pendleton's streets In handl ing tho Immense traffic of tho city. NINE MILLION NEGROES. The Now Age, a Portland paper ed ited by a negro, has tho following to say of the negro population of the United States: "Recent figures from tho census bureau show that there are now more than 9,000,000 peoplo of the colored race in tho United States. Think of that; tho colored peoplo of this coun try number 9,000,000, mora or less free people, as compared with about 4,000,000 blacks when Lincoln fre,ed tho slaves 41 years ago. "Five hundred and eighty-four years ago tho first black slaves were landed at Jamestown, Va.; they and all tholr descendants were slaves for over 300 years, with no chance of education or enlightenment or progress; under over 250 years of slavery thoy multi plied to 4,000,000; In 40 years of free tlom, under very embarrassing condi tions, and. avays more or less handi capped by a ''lot of maneuvering, un conscionable politicians, who never cared a plcaynno of a tinker's dam for tho whole negro raco, but only for their votes, th.oy have grown to ovor 9,000,000; and whllo many of them aro In comparative mental and moral Ig noranco yot why not? thoy aro slowly and surely working tholr way onward and upward," ODD EFFECT8 OF ALTITUDE. Tho British TIbot expedition, which has required tho existonce of troops nt altitudes of from 10,000 to 15,700 feot above sea .lovel, has furnished a numbor of Instances of the effect of a high elevation on llfo and habits. Thorp has boen considerable moun tain sickness among tno men, who Anil hero, alono, for a slnglo hour, I can dream and Idle and drift away; I can touch the ghost of a passion flower I can catch the gleam of a vanished day. I can gather tho lilies of long ago, That bloomed by a path which n baby trod, And love's first roses, 'as white as snow, That are blossoming now at tho feot of Ood. O. stainless lilies, and roses white, O, passion-flower, with your petals red! You are mine once more for an hour, tonight, Though tho heart be 'dumb and the years be dead. O, scented summer of long ago! . O, vanished day, with your gleam of gold! O, blood-red Hps and neck of snow! You nre mine once more, ns in days of old. Just for tonight. For nt early dawn I am back to the grovel of greedy lust Where tho wheels of truffle go whir ring on, And souls are ground Into golden dust. Albert Hlgelow Paine. Two hundred peoplo witnessed a ball gamo at Brighton Park, a suburb of Cleveland, and wero hurled to tho ground by th.o collapse of tho grand stand, Monday, and 29 legs and arms wero broken. Among old-fashioned cattle men in Virginia tho goat Is hold to bo a pre ventive of disease and a clearer away of noxious herbs, Who Is your boss? Does ho go on two legs Or Is he tho demon who lurks In tho dregs Of a roisterer's glass? Does ho bide from you fur Or rise In the smoke of a fragrant cigar? Who Is your boss? In your desk does he lurk To drive you all day? Is It Worry or Work? Don't cavil, you rascal; you worship some Josh. lie It man, thing, or habit. Como, who Is your boss? Who is your boss? Come, bo honest; don't hedge. Decs it bear n stumped englu and wear a milled edge? Wliohn tog ar,o you wearing? Whose song do you sing? For whom do you dance when they pull on tho string? WIcfo brand nro you bcaring7 What cult hnve you bagged? By whom or by what has your collar boen tagged? You may bo the boss of some ono that I slug. But this Is tho question: Who's pull ing your string? My boss? Ah, I'll tell you; A slip of a girl Who fottors my heart with the gyvo of a curl Straying down on hor brow like a thief gone amiss On his way to her red lips to steal him a kiss. She scolds mo and holds me and molds me at will, Nor over my fluttering heart will bo still When sho brushes my cheek with tho wisp of her curl, But who'd not be bossed by a slip of a girl? J. W. Foley In Denver Post. Special For prices, quality and quan tity, our "Medicated Sanitary Silk" toilet papor cannot bo boat. Per roll, 10c; 3 rollB, 25c; dozen rolls, 95u; case lots of 100 rolls, $C90. Phono ned 1191. Frederick Nolf & Co. GOOD DRY WOOD All Kinds nauiYi ... 011 mW6 i 71 ?mZ ai and e unnt or Un, i cuiinn w I Brock&McCo Company DRUGGY Cor. Maln-anj e, rcnaeton w m I vie Hill Mi'lWn,,,, j i it. A priTjte nnrl A.. . . Ud) ir ai Inlaw ltsftlr.1l.. paratlon. & "Be admits time, witi Septemkt i CUT THIS 0LT In A ...I r, .." j, viuaiiu. . I hnva i -i ........ iu a luuuury SCHOOL ... U . . ft me prices and terms; i! descrlllllvo rnlfitAm, (Name ... (Address) ,, Oregon GIRLS SCHOOL OFT r.ai uijia corns or hip f if in hllltftlnrr tin n trim on t Send for catalogue. Dnnna nf ptyi)ioi IS 10,1 i nave good sound wood which is delivered at reasonable prices For Cash. W. C. MINNIS : Leave orders at Neuman's Cigar Store. Tho London Uuicut declares Unit, except Tibetans and Lapps, tho Eng lish working classes aro the dirtiest people in the world. Walters' Flouring Mills Capacity, 150 barrols a day. Flour exchanged for wheat Flour, Mill Feed, Chopped Feed. j etc.. always on band. The famous Black Bull tavern In London u Dickens landmark Is to be torn down to make room for tho 'jjjcd Xq ueUoBjo 1b3 MQ extension of u business block, j only 15 cents .a week. HARVESTERS' HEADQUARTERS OUR STOCK OF SUPPLIES FOB THIS HARVEST SEASON 18 NOW COMPLETE IN EVERY RE8PECT. IF IN NEED OF ANY OF THE FOLLOWING ITEMS, VIZ.: - mix FORKS, HOEDOWN8, RAKE8, 8CYTHE8, . I 8NATH8, ', ; WATER DAGS, . ' WATER KEGS, f.'i CURRY COMBB, " BRUSHES, . , MACHINE OIL8, AXLE GREASE COMPOUND, LACE LEATHER, CAP 8CREW8, SET 8CREW8, SMITHING COAL, BAR, BAND AND SHEET IRON BABBIT, ROPE, WHIP8, OIL CUP8, VALVES, PIPE, 8TOVE8, RANQE8, WOOl QRANITE AND TINWARE, ETC. ... - .'PHONE MAIN 211, OR CALL ON ?&tA W. J. CLARKE & CQa not 211 COURT STREET S2.250 will buy one of tit Sower, bain, etc.: Km kn wtt n Info nm&T 1 ft .tin. numll QIDn IflaPr !U 2 lots; eastern exposure; eastern oxposure. der cultivation; eiiensi" nionts, plenty of water. i. ....,.. r. lima iobs si ket value. MICfi Rill Successor to E. D. Insurance, Real Estate, 111 Court 8treet V 'NOW SUMMER I BUN'S v" milt eterr nbaotona to Duc--"to - . .n,lo rlM IB '"i guaranteed to gWe -and most durability . Wo have tae "'"-j wagons backs and this climate. W u, Wo set your o the W'ih'eV. iner ,or uurm-b -- -.d , ot wheels, m aw k an m ar -fiflO to ..n nl flT UI1 . ..atn iv" i flt I Have years, I need P"' Ity of my tf m alnck of BBoea damaged by ,nmnany told J . -ffl wbat I couia 6. f rur ii"t Cm"1