llf page four. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER, Published erery ntternoon (except Sunday', at l'cnilleton, Oregon, by the EAST OKEGONIAK PUlHilSIIING COMPANY. sunscniiTioN iiatks. ua y, oue year, by mall $5.00 Dally, three months, by mnll 1 23 Dally, one month, by mall..,.. GO Dally per month, by carrier 03 VVeek y, one year, by mall l.ao Weekly, six months, by mall 7B Weekly four months, by mall 00 Bcnil-Weekly, ono year, by mall 2.00 nemi'tteeuy, six months, by mall... 1.00 Beml-Wcekly, threo months, by mall.. .50 Uember Scrlppa-Mcltae News Association. The Kast Oresonlan is on sale at 11. B, Rich's News Stands at Hotel Portland ami lortiand, Oregon. Hotel 1'erklns, San Francisco Uurcau, 408 Fourth St. Chicago Uureau. DOfl Spcnrltr liniMini. Washington, D. C, Ilureau, 501 HtU St., Telephone Alain 11. Entered at Pendleton postofflce as second class matter. e "What Is the real good?" I asked In musing mood. Order, said the law court; Knowledge, said the school; Truth, said the wise man"; Pleasure, said the fool; Love, said the maiden; Beauty, said. the page; Freedom, said the dreamer; Home, said the sage; Fame, said the soldier; Equity, the seer. Spake my heart full sadly "The answer Is not here," Then within my bosom, Softly this I heard Each heart holds the secret Kindness is the word." John. Boyle O'ltellly. PAHjY EAST ORE OONrAKT- PENDUEri'oy, OltEQON, WEDNESDAY, SHITKMHEH 21. could got It for the asking, but It pre it.- uie service now being used. The Baker City Herald uses the afternoon Asosclated Press service and that pa per's telegraphic service averages about 10 Items per day, or a little bet ter than the morning service used by the Baker City Democrnt and the Pendleton Tribune. The afternoon service gets the day's news while It Is fresh, and places It In the homes of readers In the evening, when every class of people has the most time and Inclination to read. The resolutions speeches, parades, picnics and other features of the On tario Irrigation meeting are Insignifi cant compared to the splendid ex hibit of Irrigated products seen there. These are the realities of Irrigation, the speeches are but the theoretical habllaments of the subject. It was fitting that the convention should be held In the midst of the prolific pro ducts of the art of Irrigation. It is imposlble that u delegate to that con-,- ventlon could go away from the meet-' lng without an Increased ardor for and a higher understanding of the subject. Lying In the heart of the sagebrush desert, the little Irrigated settlement of Northern Malheur coun ty Is a veritable garden spot-, the dreary wastes reaching up to the very Borders of the orchards and alfalfa fields. Happy families are now llv lng contented, useful lives on the once arid desert. A useless waste has been converted Into a productive settle ment, producing taxes for the support of the state and inviting the Idle from me cmes to the broader sphere of usefulness In the pleasant life of the farm. "LAYING UIMtnEAttUUE." William Welghtman recently died In Philadelphia, leaving an enormous fortune, made mostly out of quinine. Ho was called the richest Pennsyl vnulati. He was one of those men who rec ognize opportunity. He realized as early as 1862 that the Clvlt war, with Its fever-Infested camps, would make quinine a valuable commodity. Ho secured a practical monopoly of the chlncolna bark supply, until then al most worthless, and from It extracted iiuuieiine quantities of the medicine so Indispensable from that time to this. Ho never lost his control of the quinine market as long as he lived. And he left fifty millions. William Welghtman was a typical. representative of the eminently sue cessful American "captain of Indus try." Millions of men are earnestly striving to meet tho same kind of success. THE GUAM) CANYOX. The editor of the morning paper does not believe in mediums nor clarlvoyants. The seven free "read ings" he has taken have Just been taken for amusement. When told of a wedding ceremony to occur In Pen dleton next May, at his first free seance with a medium, the editor of the morning paper decided to try six more seances, evidently thinking If one "conflab" with the spirits result ed o happily, seven communications would increase the Joyful anticipa tions seven-fold. Keep cool. Be culm. Nothing is going to happen. One of the most pathetic sides of the Lewis and Clark expedition 1h the .fact that although the explorers car ried an unlimited letter of credit from President Jefferson, pledging the United States government to pay any amount contracted by the exploring purty for necessaries or equipment, yet the party was forced to eat their horses, Indian dogs and wolves and at Astoria the rawhide thnngs of their leggings were boiled Into soup. Out of such supreme privation has sprung the Infinite plenty of the Oregon country of 1904. Could there be a more sacred cause for commemora tion than that of the expedition ot these heroes who are now on the tongues of the American people? As more Oregon history Is read by the people, the more thrilling becomes the rescue of this Northwest territory from the dominion of Great Britain. The general passenger agents of the transcontinental lines that run Into Portland, who have made It their bus iness to study public feeling through cut the country regarding our Lewis and Clark fair, say that the travel to this city from all points of America gives promise of being surprisingly heavy next summer, says the Lewis and Clark Journal, of Portland. "Ex position specials" have been already arranged for by all these roads, and these sumptuously equipped trains, put on as extras, will make record breaking time. The distance between Chicago and Portland will bo made In two and a half days, instead of three days as heretofore, and only two stops west of Omaha will be made by these flyers, as It Is maintained that there will be weight enough to the traffic to fill tho trains east of Oma ha. According to these passenger men the travel will be heavier than the general public dreams of. Headers of the Dally East Oro gonlan remember tho Associated Press nows service used by this paper several years ago. It was so Incom plete, unsatisfactory and clumsy that It was discarded and the present Scrlpps-McRae afternoon news serv lco adopted. The Associated Press morning service sold to country pa pers consists of from eight to twelve long nows Items each day, usually a clumsy rehash of the news of the pre vious! day, while tho afternoon servlco of the Scrtpps-Mcltae Association con sists of from 25 to 40 live, snappy, concise Items covering tho nows field of tho entire world, up to the hour of going to press. The afternoon Asso ciated Press franchise for Pendleton Is now open and tho East Oregonian I am going to paint a picture with a pencil of my own: I shall have no hand to help me, I shall paint it all alonu: Oft I fancy it before me and my hopeful heart grows faint. .s I contemplate the grnndiiur of the picture I would paint. hen I rhyme about the river, tho laughing limpid stream, Whose ripples seem to shiver as they glide and glow and gleam, Of the waves that beat the boulders that are strewn upon the strand. You will recognize the river In the Canyon of the Grand. When I write about the mountains with their heads so high and hoar. Of the cliffs and craggy canyons where the waters rush and roar. When I speak about the walls that rise so high on either hand, You will recognize this rockwork In the Canyon of the Grand. God was good to make the mountains, the valleys and the hills, Put the rose upon the cactus, the ripple on the rills; But If I had all the word of all the worlds at my command, I couldn't paint a picture or the Canyon of the Grand. CY. WAUMA.V. It Is said that Japan would be wil ling to entertain a peace proposal after she captures Mukden and Sak halin, on this basis: That an inter national syndicate take over the Man churian railroad and operate It as p. purely commercial enterprise; that Russia pay Japan 100,000,000 pouudn sterling Indemnity; Japan to hold all the Russian vessels now In Chinese waters, and maintain a commercial suzerainty over Koreu. An American company has offered to lease Sakha lin from Japan at J26.000.000 for a long term of years. At Worcester, Mass., another old man Is ending another kind of suc cessful career. George Friable Hoar is dying poor. "All the Income-producing proper ty 1 have In the world, or over had," says Senator Hoar, ''yields a little 'a muii iauu u year, uigui Hun dred dollars of that Is from a life es tate, and the other $1000 comes from stock In a corporation which has paid uiviueuus oniy ror the last two or three years, and which ' I am very much afraid will pay no dividends or much smaller ones nfter two or three years to come. With that exception the house where I live, With Its con tents and with about four acres of land constitutes my whole worldly possessions, except two or three va cant lots, which would bring .but very few dollars." ' ' Compared with Welghtman's fifty millions, this seems poverty. It seems little less than pathetic that a man of Senator Hoar's tire-eminent abilities should never have accumu lated more than a few ncres of land a little house and a few shares of stock that n financier would turn up his nose at. Welghtman might have been deem ed his own life a monumental fail ure had he been able to leave no more property than does Senator Hoar. Senator Hoar's failure to get riches has not been due to extravagant liv ing. He recently said: "I have one extravagance. 'I have been in my day a most enthusiastic collector of books. There, 1 grunt you, I have spent money, but not nearly ns much money ns I could get back for the books If 1 were to sell them now." Senator Hoar leaves little? Nay, Indeed, he leaves a legacy rich beyond that of fabled princes. He .has given to the nation and 'to mankind the strength of a splendid mind, a strong body and an exalted spirit. To his own family he leaves an liquored. nnme and a noble example the rich est Inheritance in the world. , Like a great tree that requires lit tle ground for its own rootage, but stands as a far-seeing landmark, .for wayfarers and sheds grateful spade for the weary, the life of this great man. who has only a little home for himself, has been projected Into the lives of the entire people of this land. A Welghtman, with his mind cen tered on quinine, might despise Hoar's estate, but what must such a man as Hoar, viewing life from his lofty height, think of a life devoted merely to the accumulation of money? Women's Headaches 642 1-2 CoiigrM Street. 1'OltTl.ANM), iM AtNKi Oct. 17, 1902. I eonidcr Wino of Cardui superior to anydoc tar's mcihcino I over used and 1 know whereof I speak. I suffered for nine months with suppressed menstruation which completely prostra ed me. Pain would shoot through my back and wiles and 1 would have blinding licaouehes. My limbs would .. ..if t.l ... nmi.L I ....nil! tint. swell up ami 1 wouiu vi su ..... stand up. 1 naturally felt discouraged for 1 seemed beyond tho help of physicians, but W me of Cardui camo as a Uod-send to me. 1 felt 11 chance for the better within .1 week. Aflcr nine teen days treatment I menstruated without suf fering agonies I usually did und soon became regular ami wiinuui U.11U. ,,,,. Wino o Cardui is simply wonderful and 1 wish that all suffer ing women knew of its good qualities. Treasurer, Portland E.onomlc League. women and is the unerring sign of irregular menstruation and bearing down pains. Completely prostrated by nmo monthi of suppressed menses, blinded by headaches and racked with pain, Mrs. Snow was made a strong and healthy woman again. Hcmember with Wme of Cardui no caso 18 hopelesi because this great remedy cures icrmanenlly nineteen out of every twenty cases and never falls to benefit a caso of irregular menses, bearing down pains or any female weakness. If you arc discouraged and doctors have failed, try Wino of Cardui, and try it now. Remember that headaches mean female weakness. Secure a bottle of ylno of Cardui today. All druggists sell $1.00 bottles of Wine of Cardui. WINB'CARDUI WOMAN'S BEST FRIEND. Women sutler all about us with headache, backache, loss of energy and spirits, Nervous Dyspepsia and many other ailments which make life almost unbearable. Every woman can be im mediately relieved of this suffering if upon the first sign of derangement she wpuld take a dose of BEECHAM'S PILLS By following the instructions with each box of pills thousands of women all over the world havo saved their lives. BEECHAM'S PILLS purify the blood, give strength and vigor to the digestive organs, give vim and tone to the nerves and put the whole body in a healthy condition. A box of BEECHAM'S PILLS should always bo kept in the house ns, like a "stitch in time," they will invariably have tho most beneficial effect and save much future worry and anxiety. Sold Everywhere In Doxob, IOc. and 2Go. Gus Swanson Is building an Inde pendent packing house In Tacoma. MAu jijILN in THE Hollv Snrines. Miss.. March 24. 1003. While building railroads in Tennesjet some twelve years ago a number of lundi contracted fever and various forma of blood and akin diseases. I carried S. S. S. in my commissary and gave it to my handi with most gratifyingresults. I can recom mend S. S. S. as tbe finest preparation for Malaria, chills and fever, as well as all blood and akin diseases. W.I.McGowan. I suffered greatly from Bolls, which would break out on different parts of my body. I saw S. S. S. advertised and after using about three bottles I was cured, and for the last three years have had no trouble whatever. A. W. Zkbr. 217 Read St, Evansville, Ind. I began using your S. S. S. probably ten years ago for, Malaria and blood troubles, and it proved so good that I have con tinued ever since using it as a family remedy. It is a pleasure for me to recom mend S. S. S. for the benefit of others who are needing afirstrate blood purifier, tonic and cure for Malaria. Arkansas City, Ark. C. C. HUMINOWAY. Boils, abscesses, sores, dark or yellow iplotches and debility are some pf the lymptoms of this miserable disease. S.S. S. counteracts and removes from the uioou an impuri ties and poisons and builds up the entire system. It is guaranteed a pure ly vegetable reme dy. Write for med ical advice or any special informa tfon about case. The Swift Speolfto Company, Atlanta, Q. As a health Vand monthly V regulator, the imters win te found unequal ed. That'Bwhy so many wo men use it to the exclusion of all other remedl.es. Tt never fails in cases of Sick Headache, Cramps, Bloating, fe. STOMACH M. Cramps Ul 1 I b H! oacucMMd I 1 Indices lloeslien. fry a Botlet INSURANCE. Fire, Life and Accident. JOE ELL Itoom 8, Over Taylor's Hard ware Store CRUSHED FRUITS A fine line just received to be serv ed with lco cream at our fountain. We have Peach Marine, that refresh ing drink. ( THE CABINET Candles, Soda, Ice ream, Cigars and Fruit In season. 200 Court St., U. J. Wilkinson, Prop. Expert Collectors We havo located a branch office In' Pendletpn, and will make collecting defunct bills a specialty. No ac count too old for us to handle. Our plan Is: "No collections, no charges, Suits Instituted, Judgments advertised. Tho Van AIstlno-Gonlon & Co., Mer cuntllo Agency, II. V. Idpo & Co., Mgrs. 110 E. Court St. Tclcphono Main 311. r MERRILL TYPEWRITER CO.. So. 7 Pait SL. Splian,OeaAgl.DENSUURETYPEWHITER ISuppll Hinung ... tlWI mpiiring I Now Is the time to order your suits. Just step In and examine our line Of fall and winter goods; they're beauts. Each garment made by our tailor Is fine. Ilemember our cutter Is an artist at his biz. (larments we clean, repair nnd press. Everything finished by us good as now 'tis. Jtemember, 12S; Court Street, Is the address. N. JOERGER, The Tailor BYERS' BEST FLOUR Is made from the choicest wheut that grows. Good bread Is assured hIicii Ilycrs' Ilest Flour Is used., linin, shorts, steam rolled barley always on hand. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS V. S. UVEItS, Proprietor. ElOirj, Statio n siynsi, ueliaret " you nnt "vo It; infact MOST COMPLnrr STOCK mid the FINEST ASSORTMENT f ever slum,, ln Brock & McCo Company! IiHTUSSCPPIA-youJ Dimension lumber ot 1 scrlptlons. SaBh, Doon . Moulding, Building am) 5 per. llltING YOUR I AND GET oua nc Grays Haifc Commercial I Opposite W. & C. IU RAINING Jnion made, HAND MADE.7 CLEAR HAVANA. A STANDARD FOR QUALITY. CLEANLINESS AND WORKMANSHIP. When you call: ror a TRIUMPH.) CI YNN &C0, GmT.DoritacttptasubsMtte.il i m.m c.fflHH. . MAKERS. The Hotel Cruise Flrst-clasa In ovory particular. Modern ln all appointments. Splendidly furnished throughout. Sorvlco th.o very host. Tho Hotel Crulso la located at tho cornor of Webb nnd Cot tonwood atreota In a now building built especially for hotol pur posea. Each room la largo nnd comfortable, bolns woll lighted and well .ventilated. In furnishing this hotol, tho best of every thing wao purchased, nnd attention has been given to tho artis tic effect aj w.cll as comfort. Tho Hotol Crulso la a , model placo for lodgers, traveling men nnd cltlzons who seolc a flrat-clasa placo wh.ero rates aro not high. Cafo In connection. Short orders served at all times. TEETI Per set, $5.00; pU 1 $1.00; sliver rilling tructlng, ROc. Ve nro thoroughly eql with all modern method! appliances, ami piarantJ work to be of the highest! ard, and our prices the consistent with flrst-ckuJ White Br Dentists. Association DIocL Telephone Slain 161)1 Oregon St. Helen's A GIULS SCHOOL OF TH EST CLASS corps ot tea! tlon, building, equlpment-ti Send for catalogue. Opens September 1C, WATEI TANKS We make a specialty ot round or square WATER Tj Also header twd. al1 kinds. We make them rllM llof.nllfin. 0 uiwuyzs bivb t-s.n.. Is. never slighted or botchei Pendleton Planing I and Lumber Yar IIODEKT EOHSTKIl, Corner Webb and The Frei Restaur -.rol In tfc Private Dining rJ Elecant Furnish1 Connection- 033 Bfaln SWfc .!