if . 43 iAir,Y east ouncoMAX, rr.Mn.RroN, oitnoox, wi:i.vi:siav, .sion'i:Mi: i t. I prevent the passing of largo Chinese 1 Interests to Hint country, It Is safo ' anf Htnt .T,tt,.i M'lll 1a 1t'nl,llltt.fl 1 (rum holding ltusslnn territory or I taking her Just commercial rights In rubllsho.1 every afternoon (crcent Sunday) , Kore- " 18 uMsheiirtenlng to think nt i'cmllcton, Oregon, by the I that nil this eurnnge must bo nbso- EAST OltKOONIAN PUIUASHINC. , T,. ... ,,.. so , Jealous of each other's nilvunces In the Orient, that Japan will certainly J N I ONjiK) L A BE t no item in ri'siruuu nun iiuiuiuku nne "TEi2l'" drives Kussla from JIanchurlu and I Korea, and takes every Uusslan AN INDBPENDENT NEWSPAPEtt. COMPANY. AXOTIIint SOCIAIi MISSIOXAItV. The college woman has been ac cused of neglecting her duty to the race, of developing her brain at the expense of her primary physical Junctions, of fomlulxliig American education and of dlsturhliiK the In tellectual balance of the sexes. A new Indictment has mw h -en f.Mliitt) against her. Elizabeth Hanks, writing In thu North Ameri can Itevlew, complains bitterly that the educated American woman makes herself a household drudge. This poor misguided creature, It appears. KUREDWHENOTHERSrAILER 10.115 Wimieniae Avenue, Hill Military v. stronghold In the East, In the final keeps her home In order, does her Sly neighbor hath a little field. Small store of wine Its presses yield. And truly but u slender hoard Its harvest brings for barn or board. Yet, though a hundred fields are mine, Fertile with olive, corn and vine: Though autumn piles my gur- ners high, Still for that little field 1 sigh. For, ah, methlnks no other- where Is any field so good and fair. Small though It be. tls better far Than all my fruitful vineyards are. Amid whose plenty sad I pine "Ah. would that little field wore mine!" Large knowledge void of peace and rest, And wealth with pining care posseat These by my fertile lands are meant. That little field Is called Con- tent. Hobertson Trowbridge In Scrlbner's. I settlement, the neutral nations will unite to deny Japan her rightful re- ward for fear she becomes too powor- i in. The I.ewlston Tribune sarcastically refers to President ltoosevelt's letter I of acceptance and his past perform- j ances, as follows; Considering the rather primitive form of argument adopted by the president In his letter of acceptance, his plea is skillful. , specious and strong. The Pharisees of old were accustomed to the Inter rogative line of defense, such as "Do 1 not pay tithes'?" "Are not my prayers in the synagogue long and loud?" "Have I beaten my wife?" Vet while no transgression of the letter was proven, the affirmative ser vice was not such as the spirit of the law demanded. Take, for example, the trust question. The president treats the subject as one wholly dis posed of by his administration and points to his performances, not to his promises or to any future line of con duct, as evidence of the efficiency of his works. On the other hand, the " democratic party Is viciously assailed - by the republican press for alleged The gain of 35 per cent In the friendship for the trusts and for re- democrutlc vote of Maine, against a celvlnif trust funds for use In the republican gain of but 15 per cent, campaign. Hut If President lioose- slnce ISS!. shows that the balance Is velt has done his duty, as he says he tipping the democratic direction. In has, there are no trusts left at Maine as well as In Arkansas. This leant, there are no bad ones. own housework when It Is necessary, takes care of her children, mends their clothes, scrubs their little faces, gets her husband's dinner, rends her I Horace al the original and defies emancipation. ! It Is a nul ense but we fear there Is mi l.elp for It. One of the curious nolle ns acquired by the educated , Amercnn woman Is that she knows! her own business and Is not In need o.' grnultious advice as to how she I shall order her life. As long ns she persists in being n stiff-necked and haughty generation, the efforts ot woll-niounltig missionaries to save her from herself are worse than wasted. New York World. Sixteen natives of New Guinea were executed .Monday for the murdei of six Catholic priests and five sisters engaged in missionary work In New Guinea. l, , i .-r ..i. r.- !.... .,f p.i-.Imi imii nlw.n- "c renin upon to cure when ev.'rWiin.ir cl-c f- ' V. .r It is a certain cure for female chne m tiei worst forms. 1 suffered for -Mrs ' 1 atum. Inteiue pains in tlieuomhmido m llnl lieuilai'liiM uiilill' O mi' inr uij work- 1'inalh I grew so ill that I lnul to Keep to invlieil. Tiir pnnii were so inieii-riit times iw totalise spnuimind a disagwiil.liMlischiiree .i. i 'i.f.. -.,..J i im oMriMiuty after nil illillliru ill mi' ium , I....I r.. .1.1" t i I ll'... ..f I ' rill l After I Willi.' It nan mum, I mra im- . .. ., , , f i. two weeks I bo,M.i to improv, ; njH ' ' relief was .nine ami how ... and I-'''"' 'f iw health was reUore.l. Unl thn who Imve P"' 'iF-1 '"n " .ft I have will tun I'mttltld how mucll 1 MUIII! I"'- i" It is indeed - lick women. xreretary. NurtU Clileago I'miien Vi'reln. Kvery weak woman iic-l- Wini' of Canlui. Wine of Carilui cures . onlernl ami painful im-iHirnation. perioilical hei.ilaches. falliiiR of the womb ami leiicnrrli.ea. V "ires extreme cine of these trouble. It strengthens pirls approa. ami: womanhood", helps briiiR children to l.arren homes. nuikef prennancj ami mldhirth easier, prevents miscurriajiei ami is the biMt nieilicnie ever mini.' i"r n-i' uiiriii' the chiinyo of life S hy permit the pioil women in your home to sillier another ilay? JAery drugB'st has 41 00 bottles of Wmi' ot .mini. a. it i ii i -'uiir. Ren UT Tins 7 11 And mall to Dr tnry Acndemv r, ' " h I have Un"Hl "v-,,v U III me prices and term.'": N Uescrlptlve cata .S (Name) (Address) ,, I Oregon St. Helen's j A OIULS SCHOOL tlon. building. e,ulPffleiJg Send for catalogue. Orimtu Qr.iAK.L ),,.. a ,, ,JJ i connencates for the slaughter in Vermont. democratic thi:i:i: piivk.s i. vu:v. The brnen Inhumanity of the Port- At a lwlnt on the O. It. & N rail- land automobllist is drivinjr the in- , "r mile post la, four miles tropolls to the extreme a rigid ordinance, regulating the of passlnif I rosier, me imcK p.i.veil over a runt kiiuwii oy raiiroan men as the summit of Maxwell bin. conduct and speejl of the machines f,. about a quarter of a mile, on Visitors to Portland are Impressed , the tip top of tills ridge, three moun wlth th recklesines ot the chaffeurs i Peaks In the distant Cascades can running at a high rate of speed fron,,1t',,e . Mt Ho""- ., " , 1 Sit. Adam nihl Jit. St. Helens, through busy streets, the defiant . btest of their horn causing people1 u ivtllllreg but feu mlllueH t(, to take to shelter ns If nothing but i puss over the ridge and the da must th automobile had a right to use the j he bright and clear to give u vi.-n of Streets. Before the city fills up with ,he wh,,e PH1. 1"0 miles away thousands of visitors next season, j b T6 'J????'1' "," -fn from the train Jit. Hood. Portland should regulate the auto. Hood appearing on the south and Jit. The record of accidents caused by ' Adams mid St. Helens on the north reckless driving Is no Inviting adver- , s,,,e tlsement. I tall road englnors who might be reckless to half such an l , The ''f ' V'W 'm ,,e oIjlai,,yi1 fru' , , , , , , , , . the euglnn on the train, the three extent would be roasted to a finish .,.,,, enkH IIwarlnK ln rallk by the press of Portland. straight ahead of the engine. It Is one of the most beautiful and refresh calling lug vlewx seen along the entire line voting Eastern Oregon and every u. u. & a. engineer on the mountain division looks for a glimpse of these land marks In passing over the narrow The empty nonweri.-e of "peace congresses," while awuy the substance of the people for increased war preparations, disgust the thinking taxpayers, who reully love peace and despise war. What ridge of Jlnxwell hill. 1 0 really conscientious ruler, having the ' killings, a diamond lottery highest interest of his people at heart ' ilf'1, lnls ,"Bn, ar,rs''l 'n Boston. ; His operations Included signing con could respect a call for a peace con- tracts for the purchase of valuable rerence, coming from u country , diamonds on the Installment whoee leading ambition is to keep alive the war spirit by spending nail -Hon in -hum battles and useless u.u -ships? The fare of Th- H.isu should not be repeated again. Th right hand of the car wrote a call for that international talkfe.-i :iin. Ills left hand was sharpening a Ui.if for rapine and conquest. The de -u should not be tolerated further ! 'honest and quit this lnternation.il lv -Illg. Nobody believes the peno- talk Plan. , Ip tbe past six months he has written ovt Jl.nu.ii oogus outruns and has di.iut tl, fim- p.,- merit iMiigiui: f-on i, " .i o: itivic t i ; J t e acumen us this campaign of V-0PPC4UP' m' "reath had a sickening and I 2 2 . . disgusting odor, anil I coughed incessanth He stHj-ut-home vote In .re. i hear(i"of your S, S. S. and wrotTvou ' Who remumburx a presidential cumpHlgii within six weeks of the eleotlon that Is as barren of enthusi asm and 130t? The gon will perhaps be greater than ever. No keen Issuo spur the voter to notion. Crops are good, times are prosperous, and the tendency to lie back in the harness and drift listless ly Is seen everywhere. Wheat prices can get a crowd on a street corner, but politics, never, this fall. Is It a fact that the people are actually los ing Interest in the national contests : Is the fire of the Blalno. Cleveland I suffered for a long time with a bac cae of Catarrh, and took a great deal ol medicine without any benefit. I had a continual headache, mv chmL- had grown purple, my nose was alvrayi i kuiiiuicuccn 10 use u, ana alter taking several bottles I was cured and hav never since had the slightest symptom ol the disease. JIiss Marv L. Storm. or. 7Ui &. Felix Sts., St. Joseph, Mo. Wheeling, W. Va., May 29, 1003. I had Nasal Catarrh for years for which 1 used S. S. S. with very gratifying results. I tried local applications for some time, and getting no permanent relief Icametc the conclusion that the seat of the trouble was in the blood. Knowing S. S. S. to be a good blood medicine I began its use, 5 2 campaign totally extinguished. In dhl ay enti&y oS those memorable campaigns of 20 cus in the nostrils, and I did not have tc tiawk and spit, especially in the morning, to dislodge the catarrhal matter. 1627 South St. I-'rkd H. Prkssy. years ugo, every farmor was an ora tor and the voter who had not made a campaign speech from the goods box rostrum in the street, was the exception. The filthy secretions and foul mucus that re continually dropping back into the throat, find their way into the stomach ind are absorbed into the blood. Catarrh then becomes con stitutional, and the only way togetrid of it ia through the blood. Write us il you have Catarrh, and our physici ans will advise you without charge. The moat disheartening featuie of the Ilusso-Jitpanese war, nslde from Its terrible loss of llfo, Is the fact that tho European powers will inter fare about tho time Japan wins, and prevent her from taking the Just trophies of tho contest. The powers watoh the carnage during Its pro- gress; they assume a listless neutral- T"e Swift Speclfio Company, Atlanta, Ga. Ity while the battle Is raging, but after the millions have been squand- PIONEER BOTTLING ered and hundreds of thousands of WORKS lives sacrificed, they will 'then deny All water used is sterellzed and is the winner the privilege of taking over alls0'utQly n"re. his winnings. For fear of Japan be- poemake''0'"'0'1 dr'nk8 " '8 coming a master in the east, and to Telephone Main 3G1. 1 The Clothing a Man or Boy for Fall and N lniun l n- nun in nil , rleluie . ileum'-- mill Mimi'tiic We claim the ill-llnctloii of being 1 1 1 1 ".smart" ( lotliiei's or I ji-tei'ii Oregon, noil ne niv entitled to the reing 11I1I1111 liccan-i' hi' eurr i;clnlel.v in I'i'uilleiiiu. uch Hue- or Suits. Tup ("lmt., jinii qtemmts as .Slein-lllocli A- Co., liiihu Itnis., W. S. Peek V Co.. iicoguli'il the oiuiilr. ni the iiiauiirartiirlug tailors uhit set the pniv lor other, m follow. coititiirr. ui:Aov-roit-si:i:ici: cinthes i,,r .. ouths ami hoys. We make 11 seolall.v of fitting men and hojs from heiul to loot. For the Head HATS AM) CAPS Wo huo the Kuo. Duiilnp mid .I11I111 Stetson and other lilgli-grudc lints. For the Body r.VDintWIUlt lortj line- or niens mil anil 11 Inter nil ilenioar, ranging In prio rioni aOe to S7..H1 per garment. ct. ton. lisle, ,fc, linen. uimiI. Ml enluis and to fit nil forms. Shirts The .Monarch, Cluett null i:. A W., ami Wll-on Itros. stlrr iMisoiiis, cuffs nttacli-d nuil iletncluil. Prkv, run .si. 1111 to s:s..-o. New from For the Neck E, A W Arrow Itrnml. (oiiiiiiit mI,wI ii..ii.,.. 1 largest coIlecUon of neckties In Pendleton. Nothing can epial our slum lug. For the Hands DentV gloea and other ell Unoiui brands of kid ghnes, l'riccs range from SI. 00 10 8S.5i, A lurgo lino of Scotch golf glo;. For the Feet Hosiery -lust received 1111 extra largo shipment of plain ami fnncy hoso in cotton, lisle mid ensimore. Wo handle tho Slmuknlt liosiery. Tho iinnie giiuiiiuteos the quality. Shoes and Boots Tho fnr-faniwl Hunan nuil Honglas nro our leaders In men's shoe. Tor b,s, the I toil School House, and for ladles tho Pliisreo. To ho satisfied nil ju , s , cllU ,, M0 0 goods nt the prices. fWVVjQrAi 9 asm f s Roosevelt's Boston Store Clothiers, Hatters and Feet, Fitters