PAGE FOUR. DAILY EAST OREQONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUOU8T 26, 1904. AN INDEPENDENT. NEWSPAPER. rubllslicit every afternoon (except Sunday) at l'cnilleton, Oregon, by the EAST OREGONIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY. KUilSCItllTION KAT12S. Dally, ono year, by mall $3.00 Dally, six months, by mall... U.iSO Dally, three months, by mall l.'j:! Dally, on month, by mall..... 00 Dally, per month, by carrier . Weekly, one year, by mall l.fil) Weekly, lx months, by mall i!i Weekly, four mouths, by mall BO Kemi-Weekly, one year, by mall 2.00 Senil-Weekly, six months, by mall... 1.00 Semi-Weekly, three months, by mall.. .50 Member Scrlpps-Mcltae News Association. The Hast Oregonlan Is on sale at 11. II. Illch's News Stands at Hotel I'ortlanil anil Hotel l'erklm, I'ortlanil. Oregon. San Pranclsco llureaii. 40S Fourth St. Chicago llurcau, (100 Security llulliling. Washington, D. C, llurcau, 001 11th St., .V. W. Telephone Main 11. Entered at l'enilleton postottlec as second class matter. Out of the mountain tlioy'ro pouring, With tho smell of the smoko on their clothes; With camp boxes empty anil yawning, And a flaming red spot on each nose. The campers are bacl; from vn- cation, The sportive aru back from tho beach, The perilous feats tlloy have witnessed i Are almost loo gory for speech! The shots they have mado in tho mountains. i The rescues they mado on i tho shore Will live as the proudest of i records For ehi.-.-on to con o'er and o'er. Thoy are weary and tired and careworn, From climbing o'er mountain and hill From hating tho fogs of tho seashore From shaking with old ocean's chill. Thoy are back from tho sum mer vacation. From shore and from high mountain crest. You can count them stretched out in the hammocks Enjoying a long-needed rest. Uert Huffman. divorce record of Umatilla county for tho past throo months" ennnot bo sur passed. Tho pigeon-holes at tho clerk's offlco nro bristling with legal literature thnt would harrow up tho blood of nny lawyer on earth oxcopt Peter West; oauso n Hluobcnrd's hair to stand on end and drlvo a Lucretla Borgia Into hysterics. Young and old, simple and wise, experienced and Inexperienced, docllo nnd obstroper ous, the hugglc-niugglo nnd marble hearted all kinds havo poured their connubial sowngo at the feet of ,1ml go Kills within tho past throo months, and ho has lived through tho stench of It nil, although at times ho has held his legal nose, as somo of tho vials ot domestic depravity woro poured out In his court. And yet tho ingredients for future divorce stink pots, arc being compounded dally, in hasty, ill-timed, mismatched, unfit, unnatural marriages thnt are "sol emnlzod." -Several small papers In Eastern Oregon aro pronarlng to uso what thoy call tho Associated Press dis patches, furnished free by tho repub lican campaign committees during the presidential campaign. It Is no part of the regular Associated Press service which Is closely reserved for the big dallies In tho pool, but this "pony" service will be mostly editor ial opinion under dnto lines, and in the guise of nows. Tho big dallies are careful that no part of tho nows monopoly Is allowed to go to small papers that might grow up to bo a possible opponent of them in nny field. In nearly every lintanco this press service will be discontinued after election, as it Is ono of tho cam paign methods of tho party. It is fur nished free to papers who will run It for tho campaign committee, but it is so bitterly partisan that but few pa pers accept oven the free service. Miles of free editoiial is sent out by tho same commtite, but this also smacks of machine-made stuff, and A HOSPITAL TOWN. United Slates Consul Guonthor, of Frankfort, writes that wh.cn tho now hospital In Vienna Is romploted It will form n town of Itself. Tho total area covered Is 2,400,000 square foot, nnd (hero will bo 40 s.op' nrato buildings, of which .12 will bo clinics or hospitals and tho remaining eight will bo dovoted to offices nnd residences for tho stuff. All tho clinics will hnvo flat roofs with Bur dens, so that patients, particularly consumptives, can bo in tho open air as much as possible. Each patient will havo 1030 square feet of space, tho largest proportion of space allot ted to a patient in any hospital in the world. A correspondent of tho Frankfurter Zeltung says that tho ultimata cost will be from $7,000,000 to 8,000,000. Tho hospltnl will bo on tho "pavil ion" or "cottage" plan. Each pavilion, with its sick wards, operating nnd lecture rooms, will form n hospital by Itself, and of thoso thero will bo 18. Tho hospital will havo 2300 beds. Tho magnificent operating rooms will bo of a now typo. In tho clinics for In fectious diseases tho patient will bo separated from tho professor nnd tho students by n glass partition. A number of medical students will live In the hospital for tho purpose of close study nnd observation. Tho latest technical achievements will bo utilized throughout the institution. THE WORLD'S OLDEST CITIES. Udnunkl, tho undent Adab, porhaps tho oldest city in tho world, hns been discovered by tho University of Chi cago's excnvatlng expedition In Hnby Ionia. This city has for many years boon tlio.object of search by Oriental ists. It Is mentioned In tho code of Hammurabi, an early king ot Rnby- Ionia, which document was translated I recently by Prof. Robert F. Harper, director of tho .expedition. He has just received nows In n ca blegram from Porf. E. J. Ranks, field director of tho expedition, who since leaving this country last winter for Hismnya, in Babylonia, has announced many Important discoveries. Tho uncovering of ancient Adah Is ono' of tho most important archaeolog ical achievements In recent years. Dr. Banks informed Professor Harper IMPURE AIR ?,lnlnri1 iS ,I0.t c0,1""ed exclusively to the swamps llfll Uilt. mil and marshy reirious of the cnmttrv i,f . v7. ns is bad air this insidious foe to health is found. Poisonous vapors nnd i I from sewers, and the musty nir of damp cellars nre laden with the rrerms of this miserable disease, w itch nre breathed into the lungs and taken up bv Amory, mu,, January 28,1900 Durintf lOOOIwasrunnlmta farm the blood nnd transmitted to every part of the body, Then you uecm 10 leei our. oi sons masippi juvor and booamnnn im. without ever Suspecting- the M'n'nthut for a your aftorwards I Was anlivnl. rsc-, cn,rB,y or ?ppe: -w!!7Sh-,s& titc, dull headaches, sleepy rB orndloatom, but nothing did mo any .rood un nnd tired nud completely tilIbe(rautouoS.8.S.,whlohIdlduboutavoar t , ii. -,F-i.A.fc ntrn. TtinrAflllUwnKtlinf nlYnv fnl.lnr.,1 . . lugircii-oui iroiu uic siifrnic&k , ; r . .K lur"Dot. ,.,...., f i..i. tlo.of tho largo lzo I wn?B woll and stromas I i ii i evor waa ana iiavo novor nau a ohlll Blnce. I ox- iHuiiiuit: cjiecis oi mis cniccu- poos io mue , a. a. ovary your as a proventive , . 1 . I , . ...) .,! rl nilwl.a AWk.-l,,,lr nl an n 1 1 ' ling m.iiauy. js uie uiscasc ox nroirrrssM n,1 tho l,lnn.l he- mle- OOWLEV. comes more deeply poisoned, boils and abscesses and dnrk or yellow spots appear upon the skin. When the poison is left to ferment and the microbes and germs to multiply in the blood, I.iver nnd Kidney troubles ntid other se- and develops in the blood, the treatment to be effect ive must begin there loo. t. b. b. destroys the germs ntid noisons and purifies the polluted blood. S. S. S. is a truaranteed purely vegetable remedy. Write us if vou want medical advice or nny special information. This will cost you nothing. THE SWIFT StPEGIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. that he had found bricks bearing tho has no local coloring nor bearing, nnd i syllabic Ud-nun-kl at tho lowest lovel - . . . ..f .1... ,1.. 1. ....-Int.. !.( tt. ...... rnn in i etpfti'il li- nnv nlisnrvnnt "' " "" iiu raimu uwi ure ! .,.. , identify tho city ns Adah, reauei. ttn.i. ..t ion .. i.., llll it 1,1 ImII 1I1C11 ItU .UAltlttll ELECTION FORECASTS. For a fair and impartial survey ot the political situation It is always necessary to go to the independent journals of the country. Perhaps no other publication In tho United States presents as compre hensive reviews of ail great questions as the Outlook. Its editor has a grasp of great issues enjoyed by hut few writers and being independent, his views havo a significance that cannot bo questioned. In a survey of the situation in Its Issue ot August 20, tho Outlook says: Tho plan of tho republicans Is to hold everything that thoy carried under McKlnloy in 1900, and to add practically all tho Rocky Mountain states to this list. The .effort ot tho democrats is to carry, in tho Kast, Now York, Now Jersey, Connecticut, Maryland, Dela ware and Wost Virginia, and to add to those states Indiana and Wiscon sin. But, like skillful campaigners, the democrats ar.o apparently neglect ing no opportunity. Thoy havo per fected fusion with tho populists in Kansas and Nebraska, although this arrangement has been repudiated by Thomas K. Watson, the populist can didate for president. They havo put their best foot for ward In West Virginia by settling all party disputes. In Indiana they havo nominated for governor their strong est man, John W. Kern, Thuy aro also making a desperate effort to re duce tho usual majority which the party In power has been able to roll up In Maluo at tho atato election, which Is held early In September. Tho democrats are also to make an appeal to tho business community, on tbo ground that tho country needs a more "conservative" administration, nnd that tho election of Judge Parker cannot p jsal'oly do them harm. Tho republicans, 011 tho other hand, aro Invading many congressional dls tilcts In the South. Tho progross of labor troubles la being watched with the closest attention by both parties. Thoy recall that in 1892 tho tide to ward Cleveland was greatly acceler ated by tho Homestead strike. I The Baker City Herald says the I law against gambling lu Oregon was passed as a club to be held over tho gamblers' heads whenever thoy be came too rude and brazen. Did any one over hear such balderdash from a seemingly sane newspaper? What about the law against murder? Is It only to bo executed when a murderer kills more than his allowance? Does that law against stealing horses mean that stealing is respectable within certain limits? Tho same logic ap plies to all these laws. Such rot as that preached by tho Herald breeds a disregard for all law. It makes an archists. Bad laws should bo enforc ed until they aro repealed. It Is a travesty on government and a stigma on legislatures to say that laws were not Intended to bo enforced. Where will you draw such a lino? How many times can you violate a law before It comes Into execution! This is a per ilous teaching for young men to hear. "llcago.may hold the usual record fMd flro' divorce granting, but 't present tho samo propor- !'?stic infelicity, to her Umatilla county furn atlou of Judge 131 ,nd freakish dl firing complaints, jf conjugal disaster ed tho ruins of Risninyn, and found the remains of four temples, built one above tho other, which ho named ac cording to the kings who built them. The dates became earlier, until finally the bricks identifying Udnlukl were- found. Among other articles which Dr. Banks found aro marble statues, onyx nnd sandstone lamps and many bronze nKjects. A HARBOR PANORAMA. In tho editorial on tho portage road published yesterday, It should havo read that tho freight on a combined harvester from Pendleton to Jloro, Instead of from Portland to Mpro, Is $130. Thero aro mora farmers now In Umatilla county than ever before who do not havo to sell their wheat, until thuy get ready. ST. LOUIS' ACHIEVEMENT. A city, llko un Individual, never knows what It can do until it grapples with a good, strong test, It is now a demonstrated fact that St. Louis can entertain tho biggest WdHd'a fair tho earth will over see, with a lot of na tional and International conventions thrown in, and not bo overstrained In entertaining and transporting tho mil lions. All this, too, without extortion, except in tho matter of house rents and possibly somo temporary and im ported frauds and fakirs. Word and Works. In Collier's Weekly for August 20, ISO I, John -Mitchell, the president or thy United Mine Workers of America, says: "My experience has been that tho commission of crime on the part of strikers or their friends reduces tho chances of success. A strlk.o of nny considerable magnitude can not well succeed unless it have tho sympathy and support of tho general public, and when a strike resolv.es itself Into an armed conflict tho public vory prop erly withdraws Its sympathy- That employers of labor understand full well tho Injury to strikers which fol lows violence Is shown by tho fact that not Infrequently during labor dis putes thugs aro employed to provoko strikers Into the commission ot somo unlawful act." A SUGGESTION. From morn ,to night, from dark to dawn, The booming cannons roar, Where sitting In their bomb-proof huts, Tho Russians yell for more. Down at tho yards tho union men Aro laughing In their sleeves, While- packers grind their teeth In rage, As scabs cut up their beeves. Now, why not havo a two-ring show, A trouble- octopus, To settle everything at onco, And centralize tho fuss? Chicago American. CEIEBRATLD Sitters V the Hitters be jy fore meals mid v villi1 II nnlov them. U re Stores ,thuupp' :tlte ntid glws power to prop erly digest tho tood. Then It ii1m cures Silk Headache, torpid liter, ludiyrlllon, ConMipmlon, Up-pld, Insomnia nnd Mularla. mr a uoutt ' Those on the water front at an early hour this morning say that tho various vessels in the harbor maneuv ering around and gutting ready to go out on their respective runs mado a picture of surpassing beauty and ono thnt Is not ordinarily seen, oven on tho Wlllametto river. Thero were seven vessels in a grpup Just below tho Morrison street bridge. Thoy wero tho Spencer nnd tho Dalles City preparing to leave for The Dalles, while alongside of them stood tho El more waiting for tho passago to get clear for her to go out on her run to points up tho Willamette. Tho steam ship Crusader had Just got through tho draw ot tho bridge and tho tug boat Ocklahama was following elose at her heels. Tho Undine was circ ling her .way around tho aggregation and tho Nellie was steaming by nt tho samo time. Oregon Dally Journal. I The Hotel Cruise First-class In overy particular. Modern In all appointments. Splendidly furnished throughout. Service the vory best. Tho Hotel Crulso Is located at tho corner of Webb and Cot tonwood streots In a now building built especially for hotol pur poses. Each room Is largo and comfortable, bolns woll lighted and well ventilated. In -furnishing this hotel, tho best of every thing was purchased, and attention has been given to the artis tic effect aj well as comfort. Tho Hotol Cruise Is a model placo for lodgers, traveling men and cltlzons who seek a first-class placo whero rates aro not high. Cafo In connection. Short orders served at all times, MOVING Wo aro moving our stock Into our now room, whore wo will bo In better position to display our spl.cndid lino of now goods. Our rule has always been to sell lower than competitors, and wo will continue tho policy. In moving wo find wo havo somo odds and ends of various different liu.es which wo will sell at cost and below In order to clean up our stock. In our now store will bo found a largo, bright, fresh assort ment of furniture, mattress.es, springs, couches and rockers, chairs, etc. WE WANT "YOUR STOVE TRADE, and enn furnish you with a better and more satisfactory heating or cook stovo tfran any store In Pendleton. Como in and bo tho Judgo. A carload ot now goods Just In. V. STROBLE 2J0 Court Street One Hundred Dollars Reward. CRIME BY STRIKERS. Theodoro R. Tlmoioy, 83 years old and living In Brooklyn, claims to havo Invented tho revolving turret, first seen on the llttlo Monitor. Drink OtESCENT REAM 1 It Is Fine IN 1 and 2 LB. SEALED TINS ONLY The 'Leading Of the city, 8IEDERT & 8chultz, have removed to 222 Court street, opposite ho Hotel Dickers. When you want a well made suit at reasonable prices, call on them. Ono hundred dollars Is a protty good roward for Ave minutes work, yet that Is what J. E Strodo, of Waltsburg, Wash., got from tho East Oregonlan In our last subscription contest. Ho recolv.ed with tho compli ments of tho East Oregonlan, without a cent of expense to himself, a $100 rubber-tired buggy. We proposo to conduct another subscription contest on the following basis: From now until November 4th wo will take now subscriptions sent In by our subscribers and to tho ono who guesses nearest to tho voto received by the winning presidential candidate In this state, we will give one-half of all tho monoy received from this contest. For oxamplo, If you mink President Roosovolt will r.ecolvo tho major ity of votes In tho coming election, All out tho coupon, "Roosevelt's total voto in Oregon will be ( ),"and put In your estimate. If our subscribers co-opernte with us as thoy have In provlous contests and as wo oxpect thoy will In this, wo will take In sovernl hundred dollars and possibly much more, one-half of which will go to tho person who guesses nearest to tho vot.o In Oregon for tho winning presidential condl date. Thero Is only ono requirement and this Is Important. ALL NAME8 SENT IN MUST BE THOSE OF NfcW SUBSCRIBERS. Ronowals ot sub scription will not bo counted In this contest. Subscribers con participate In this way: Got somo neighbor to tako tho Wookly East Oregonlan for four months for 60 cents. Send In a monoy ordor for tho 50 cents; or In lc and 2c stamps or sliver, accompanied by your guoss on the presidential vote. If you do not want to ask somo neighbor to subscribe, send in 50 cents and tho name of somo friend In tho East who Is interested In the western country. Lot him read tho Wookly East Oregonlan and It will give him moro nows about the resources of tho Inland Empire than you could if you wroto him a 50-pago lottor a week. For every CO cents you will be entitled to ono guess. If you get four ot your frlonds to take It four months each, you will bo entitled to four guess.es, or If you get one new subscription for a year for tho Wookly for ?1.50 ou nro entltlod to thrco guossod. Some ono ot our subscribers will got ono half ot all money taken In on this contest. It may bo only $60, or It may bo several hundred dollars, but whatever tho sura tho ono who guesses nearest to the presidential voto In Oregon for tho winning candidate, will setono-half of tho monoy. Remember the guess is on tho vote cast In Oregon for the successful presidential candidate. Only now subscriptions count. A subscription for 60 cents gives you ono guess. You can send In as many subscribers as you wish and for each 50 conts you get ono gu.ss. ' ' This contest closes November fourth, so bo sure to send In your guess before that time. Tho total voto In June, 1904, was.92,C08; for republican candidate for supromo Judgo, 52,946; for democratic, 28,729; socialist, 6419, and prohi bition, 5514. EIGHT LET Us SUPPLY Yoj Dimension lumbM aenpuons. Bash iw u.uluSl uuiidi,, Paper. 5 BRINQ YOUR EM. l 0UR F(QJ 'ays Had Commeicial Opposite W. & A Positively the best t mado. Any quantity you sire. Delivered to jl home. Always call for J pla. A. NOLI Phone Main ml WATI TANK! We make a Specialty oil Round or Sqdi'iI WATER Ti Also Header Beds all kinds. We make them rijlt always give satisfaction. Is nevor slighted orooMl Pendleton Planing and Lumber Yaij ROBERT FORSTER, I Corner Webb and My estimate on vote In Oregon for President l. '. r ..Name. .. Poatofflce address Fill In tho first blank Bpaco tho name of tho candidate you think will win, Fill In tho second blank spaco with your estimate ot'tthe number of votes he will got in Oregon. Encloso with 50 conts nd mall to the East Oregonlan Publishing Co,, Pendleton, Orogon, 8end paper to Address C0A LET US FILL YOU BIN WITH Rock Spring Recognized as the H rnnat economlCli fue'' are prepared to coatradj you for your wiaie" 1 Wo ilollver coai or any part of tho city. Laatz Bn MAIN STREET. The Fren I Restaura Best 25 Cent Ml j" Private Dining Eleoant Ffrnl.h.d R Connetii'" GUS LaFONTAINE. Pj 633 Main Stroeu rUC RPST IS THE CHEAPJ Bear this to need poultry 'dn8ffil ,8nd osk v' 'Q k Food.1 Poultry and Stqcy Row Kure "c'f. CofSSSI 12M29 E A " J AU-t for C wedded hades, tho