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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1904)
i ' 1 , : " PAGtt PAGE FOUR. DAILY EAST OREGONIAX, PENDLETON, OREGON WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1. tM AW INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. Paaltshro' every afternooD (except Sunday) t .Pendleton. Oregon, by the EAST OliEGOXIAX PUBLISHING COMPANY. 8UBSCKIPTION BATES. Halle, one year, by mall as no X.au ally, alz month, by mall wiiy. inree nioutua. Dy mall Ially.one montb. by mall Weekly, one year, by mall Weekly, six Btontba, by mall Weekly, four months, by mall east Weekly, on year, by mall fcnl Weekly, six months, by mall., rail Weekly, throe month, by mall. PROSPEROUS PENDLETON. The following well deserved trlb- oau make the most and the beat of himself until he la absolutely honest with his own soul, and unfalteringly ute tDj the enterprise of Pendleton's true to his highest Ideals. ousmess men appears In the Tele gram: It is not unfair 10 any other munic ipality to say mat i'endleton is more thnrouchly representative of progress now evident in the famous Inland Empire than any other city In It Is hardly to be classed I SO ! with the lame cities of the state, but "THERE AIXT NO SANTA CLAUS. 1": 0regon. !io " hat It lacks In numbers It more than ' makes up In the character of its pop- .50 I ulatlon. Its location la In the latest Member Bcrlppa klcKaa Kews Association, developing section of the rommon- I wealth, except In the conduct of ex ! tensive agricultural Industries, such The East Oregon laa Is on sale at B. R. surn's News Stands at Hotel Portland and acel Perkins, Portland, Oregoa. fan Francisco Bureau, 408 Fourth St Chicago Bursaa. vo9 Security Building, asblngton, D. C, Bureau. 501 14th St., Telephone Mais 11. tared at Pendleton Poatefflc as second- class matter. Uiliot.,aVt:lLBEL as wheat and cattle raising; but of re cent years there has come to the front every evidence of an approaching epoch where the small farmer and the varied Industries outside of agri culture will enrich the people who make that section of the country their home. A girl of eight and a boy of four, Playing down on the nursery floor. the upu "ening. without a pause. v-ii me cuuiing or a ear old sania Claus! The girl of-eight was wondrous wise. And. gravely rolling her knowing eyes. She laughed to scorn her brother of four. who believed all the Santa Claus tales of yore. "It's all a great big story." she said. To make little children go early to bed; Old Santa Claus never comes at night. To fill your stockings so full and tight No reindeer skips o'er the roofs of snow. Prancing and dancing and eager to go! Ifs all a story; they can't fool me. For I'm no ionger a baby, you see!" Man la his own star; and the soul that can Render an honest and a perfect a man, Commands all light, all Influ- ence. all fate; Nothing to him falls too early or too late. 'n the production of those things that Our acta our angels are, or good j contribute to the comfort of men, as . r,'"v j ... . can found in all the West The Our fatal shadows that pursue i ,, . lne us stliL """en' 'act with regard to Pendleton's Beaumont and Fletcher. j advance of the recent past Is the energy and public spirit of her cltl- sens. The men who are conducting Portland. Oregon, will lead the ' her C,Vic aI,d bui,,e" are fully world In her production of timber. It ""ve to tne opportunities 'hat lie at Is said. The output of the Portland .' her door' Wlthln the P"" year no Pendleton Is showing the effects of this dawning era for Eastern Oregon and Washington In a manner that conveys to one some Idea of the ma terial destiny of a region, much of which was at one time considered little better than desert In this city there Is the manifest expression of activities that will at one time make The girl of eight and the boy of four the Inland Empire rich as a territory, I Huhg their stockings beside the duor; The boy had listened with deep sur prise Flashing up In his earnest eyes. He looked aghast at the cruel creed. Of the eight-year-old, of the skeptic's breed; Her startling words had struck him dumb- He could only stammer; "I know he'll come." J Vf U , ; - IKSMSMSs iB. r. ... I V y TV. t.A.T.t ffinir that vouT dinner liiDIC ll 1 - t I I it Dcrfecilv correct in ib apiointment5 csn be 1 Un(ler ' I I I K,.J A m, k. service of 1835 R. . . . , . . II J Wa!W Silver Plate. V Mrs. Rorei't illusfratcd book, "How to Set the TaolkA I full of timely hints. You mav have a copy if you call I a" H. L. HASBROUCK, Jeweler J The boy. because he believed the tale, And knew the good saint would never fall . The girl, with a toss of her curly head. "Because the baby hung his." she suld. The boy's were filled to the very brim Santa Claus surely had come to him But the girl of eight, who had grown so wise. Looked on her pair with tearful eyes! ms during the. past year. In lumber, 1 "ultab,e "" "ee neglected j re is 438,600,000 feet Minneapolis is a ' to br,nB lhese "PPortuniUes to the j good second with her output and Ta- n of the ou,8'le wor'd. These coma third. men have hen progressive In every I SeriR nf the n-n-A lH..tl i , - t. u, u, 111,11.1111; iiiveaii wus no Santa I Claus In her heart, that morning she wish ed there was! BERT HUFFMAN. Pendleton, Oregon. Luther E urban k, the "Plant VTlz- . ""n of the advantages of their sec- ! ard," who by hia marvelous feats ' ,,nr Hn1 Providing for the welfare of A remarkable high-speed teleirraph In hybridization, has accomplished so i the Investigator In such manner as ! instrument hus been inventel hv Fall Suits and Overcoats Place your order with us and you will be satisfied In every par ticular. Our suits and overcoats please the most fastidious. We guar antee perfect fits, best wearing Qualities and best workmanship. Oar goods always have that neat, tidy, well-dressed appearance. Price no higher than lower grade goods sold by others. N. J0ERGER 126 WEST COURT STREET, CORNER GARDEN. Sister, of St Fram-u. -V Uelphl Resident Plls. Special itention music and elocution. S!? ? prepared for teacher,. 3 aUons for county .t tlflcatec -a. r SISTER SUPEnjnit xcuch tor the fruit proven, has en j to produce the most satisfactory re- prmnted an endowment by the Car negie Institute to enable him to con tinue his experiments. suits. 0t out your thread and needles. We will soon have to sew two more stars to Olo Glory. Oklahoma and In dian territory will be consolidated and admitted to the Union under the name f Oklahoma; and Arizona and New Mexico will be consolidated and ad mitted under the title of Arizona. Mr. Donald Murray. vh claims It is us great an advance upon the ' Morse Instrument as the Morje wus ! i Novel and most excellent work has j ul'" "s predecessor, the sinule been done by the Pendleton Commer- I neei,v- For 12 months the postoffice J clal Club, not slon i ,h ., I " had tne rument working for,. STATE M)VrmNORs67o inl, Governor Grant. Vermont' tJ thy has been tn.n v... l and women of thu state. ni tlfy to Its merits. We Wl !S chance." Gov. Briggs, North n.v... .J ODathv hni hdn,l . me ana dm, j In my family, and in th, Z$ comnetent ... .M w, win nun no one. T wtn Got. Plngree. Michi,. thv i. . , cuuiiea to all mi and confidence as a distinct Hni "'ence or mediant' Gov. Shaw, Iowa, (ecreUrt m treasury): "I am fullv eoi,.L, Oatopathy la a rational ana mJ system of healing." 1 Gov. Altgeld. Illinois: -CmJ ,.a - v. . .u rescue ot myself ui and did that which other to talled to do. Honor to those to honor Is due." uov. Mcminan, Tennessie- ol opathy It one of the greatni iiij eries of modern times." Gov. Turner, Illinois: "Then J aouot tnat unteopathy will teut j cure many chronic trouble! tint J iclne will have little effect oooi"! nnniiar expression come from a hat '. t a aaaa I rnr, 8teven" 01 Mlssourt. Lee Lon- ui.om.ng municipal improvements, j don and Edinburgh, apparently with! but in its common sense methods of ' promising results, for It has now ; looking after the comfort and wel- 1 1"'en Iet'ided to test further a perfect-'! fare of neonle who h,i w i.,.. ea ll,,lnlme tn"t has been devised pallty. but it is a youngster of lusty growth and great promise. With the i ! hi- At. 1 ii ...-. , . .1 i j 1 1 e to make new location In that region. ! tn. Murray transmitter ever become, j t Pendleton as yet is an Infant munici- ! universally adopted. It will mean that ; telegraph clerks will never have to ' put pen or pencil to a telegram, be- . . ' J""u pernaps marking upon It the In Russia the -students and police ,. " i-"aie irrigation ( Ume of handing In. . i,.u , u.versiry me agrl-, The system is In some respects Bim cultural products of the surrounding j "ar to the Wheatstone. It uses a pa country; the further settlement of per tape' wn,ch. Instead of being hand lands already arable, and the creation ! unone' ' Perforated by an lustru- , j c ia iv ui liic u Liter ena oi BYERS' BEST FLOUR Is made from the choicest wheat that grows. Good bread la assured when Byers' Best Flour Is used. . Bran, shorts, steam rolled barley always on band. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. S. BYERS, Proprietor. Dakota; Dillingham, Vermont: Til n i trniiessee; cecKiiam, Kentucky, Smith, Vermont. Only a sound, scientific and cf plete system can elicit each eipl sion irom such men. Yon, who knowledge and regard Orteopethjl -ruoDing" and a "fad," are due to evstigate. Call on Doetori Bold ton, Despaln Block, tor Inforaatf OLD NEWSI'AHERB TO PPT Vftf carpets, on abelTea, wills et la ri ping purposes. Old newepapenj a i hnndlea of 100 earb at is earn t tea at the EAST OUBUONlAN cake, hJ tna. fiearno. nuke Sergius, the governor of Mos cow, has had a falling out with the xar. The official censor has warned I " - J he editors not to discuss the doines I manuf";""-'ns interests, which area wire is similarly perforated. Instead f the xemstvos or town councils un-!"1""8 l f0ll0W Pendleton h I- j f being marked by dots and dashes er penalty of the law. The Imperial i" " l contribury territory and i Thl" n be placed upon another lhtlth .r if11UCkriitIR. Vr' nifh innt'Arta fh v. M n family is divided. The czar and facilities for rail transportation that ' n",chl"e. whic converts the perfora the czarina are in favor of granting reforms auked for, while his advisors bitterly oppose any concession to the ' pei-j.le for fear it prove an opening' e.ge for a constitution. must eventually make her one of the ureal cities of the Pacific Northwest. i The meeting held at the Mar qnam Orand. at Portland. Sunday af lernoon. to endorse Sheriff Word and sMinest municipal government, was a stormy one. An attempt to tack an amendment to the motion endorsing i cult to understand. The experimental In his estimated needs of the state institutions for the coming two yearn. Secretary of State F. I. Dunbar, al lows the state experimental farm at Union, the sum of 120.000. and the Weston Normul school but 1 16.000. By what rule of logic the secretary can arrive at this conclusion is dlffi- wiora was tne cause of the uproar. The amendment included the endors ing of District Attorney Manning. After the tumult had subsided the meeting did not know whether they sued passed the original motion, or tbe motion as amended, or failed to pass It. or what they had done. It was finally decided that Word had been endorsed and Manning had failed to receive an endorsement. , Pleased are they, aaya the Denver Post, who buy Christmas gifts with taste, rather than with lavish ezpen ellture. The soul of Christmas la tboughtfulneas and remembrance, rather than display of reckless gen eaerity. An 1 n ex pensive gift of rare good taste showing that the Clver took pains Is far more agree able than a mere lump of cost that, perhaps, is of no use to the one re ceiving It, causing more regret over the waste of money than pleasure. That point is the secret of happy Christmas giving. How much better to be able to send a pretty thing to all on your list than to blow yourself for some of them and abandon the then. The artistic little gift is the aahratlon of the hard up who would otherwise Indulge in tbe folly of go ing on short rations through January and February to make a Christmas splnrge. Christmas Is pre-eminently the children's time and the old' peo ple's time. Parents who double-cross their children by waiting until Christmas to boy them what they tnnst have, anyhow, commit a pecul iar cruelty. And the sons and daugh ter who forget their old parents are ewea more cruel, for while the disap pointment of children passes away, the aged have nothing sweeter than being remembered and nothing aud aer than being forgotten. farm Is a body of the richest land In Oregon, comprising 4fl acres, capable of yielding a net profit to the state, in addition to the expenses of running the farm, of at least $10 per acre per year. The buildings are well equipped, a new 17000 barn hus just been completed, and aside from new fencing, the farm I In excellent con dition. Why should the state contrib ute 120,000 to this farm, which should be self-supporting, and Indeed, profit yielding, and then hold back the Wes ton normal, which la now crowded to the limit of Its accommodations, and which must have a dormitory, before It can continue to Invite attendance? The Weston normal needs help this session, because of the growing de mands In Eastern Oregon for higher education. All the educational insti tutions of the state are centered In the western part, and this proposed parsimony on 'the part of state iffi clals will continue to deny Eastern Oregon her just and legitimate rhaie of educational funds. Let the state farm yield a profit for two er three years, and apply that to the Improve ment of Its fences and buildings. Give the Weston normal what the board uf regents asks for 121,000 and place it on a solid footing before tbe world, as Eastern Oregon's only educational institution, maintained by the grrat state of Oregon. There is no more demoralizing in fluence in modern life than the un natural straining to seem other than we are, says the Rural Spirit Noth ing else so quickly lowers self-respect, takes the fine edge off honor and blunts conscience as the sense of be jng a aham, a gilded fraud, or an un reality. It cheapens standards, lowers Ideals, saps ambition, and takes the spring and joy out of living. No man , - - . LIIC nci luia - tlons Into printed words on telegraph ! torms at tne rate of about 120 to 15M words a minute. The system ia four or five times as fast as the Morse, and consists of three stuges: 1. The telegram is copied on a ma chine resembling a typewriter. Pa per tape runs through this and is per forated as each letter Is struck. 2. The message, as It appears on the tape, is run at a very rapid rate through a transmitter, and an exuet facsimile of the tape Is produced at the otner end of the wire. 3. The tape is put through a type writer with automatic mechanism, driveu by a small electric motor, and the message reappears neatly printed, lined and spaced. This last stage may be described as being similar in effect to the placing of paper rolls of music In an auto matic piano. Whereas in that case the perforations are the cause ot tbe notes being struck and the music be ing produced, so in this instrument the perforated paper Is the cause of the typewriter keys going down and the hammers containing the letters striking the telegraph form and pro ducing letters and words. One of the effects of tbe use of this Instrument, provided It be found ul timately to come up to expectations, would be a great saving of time, a a wire would be capable of carrying four or five times as many words as at present, and fewer persons would consequently be required to perform the work. Any person able to oper ate a typewriter can transmit sages by tbe Murray system. Holiday.... Copper to the value of $21,000. all stolen, has been found cached in a New York basement, stored to await a good chance to put It on the market. Manicuring The finishing touch to the toilet A necessity to good dressers. A competent mankort, direct from San Francisco, may be found at Krs. Campbell's millinery parlors, 107 Court Street, To introduce the work, very low prices will be asked: Ladies 25 cents. Gentlemen 35 cents. Appointments made in advance. Ladies hair dressing in latest modes, 25c Work done at customer's home, doc- bk price. FURMBTORE IXG YoV THE m ?, 1 It WI l SKFt,L NEW IUEAS rOK XMXS. AND WE ARE CIT- n ior mm YmSNU lolrl,E KVEK HAD- the way of FiRNircRE AXDN .'fS? ,TH?,T 'UX MOST ACCEPTABLE GIFTS FOB ME, POR YOU TTOJOMF AVn T4kp w -ti VOUO SUGGESTIONS AND WE ARE ANXJ0CS YOU w:.5.JT? 8AVE VOC WORRY, AND WE CAN 8UPHJ WHEN AND WHERE YOU DEsTrE WAT YOCK "a" AD DKUVEB " e MENTION HERE A Nl -IIBER OF SUGGESTIONS FOR HofidayOfts,. 00 WRITING DESKS DESK CHAIRS WRITING TABLES BOOK CA6E8 BOOK RACKS MAGAZINE RACKS LIBRARY TABLES CARD TABLES SEWING TABLES PARLOR TABLES TABOURETS INDIA STOOLS FOOT STOOLS JARDIMER STANDS MUSIC CABINETS PARLOR CABINETS CURIO CABINETS CHINA CABINETS CHAFDfG DISH CABINETS C'KLI.ARETTES SMOKING TABLES SMOKING STANDS UgiEUR STANDS JEWEL CABINETS ILT CABINETS OIJ FURNITURE STATU ART MORRIS CHAIRS MORRIS ROCKERS MISSION ARM CHAIRS MISSION ARM ROCKERS MISSION TABLES MISSION DESKS MISSION SETTEES MISSION BOOKCASES ROCKERS ARM CHAIRS LOUNGES DIVANS DAVENPORTS PARLOR CHAIRS. PARLOR ROCKERS PARLOR SETS DRESSERS CHIFFONIERES TOILET TABLES DRESSING CASES AUTO VALETS CHEVAL GLASSES HALL MIRROHS PARLOR MIRRORS SHAVING MIRRORS SHAVING CABINETS REED CHAIRS REED ROCKERS ' AND F UOUDAY FlE "AS BEEN RECEIVED AND ALL THE OK AND NEWEST DESIGNS IN OUR LINE ARE READY FOR YOUR rNSPECTION. FURNITURE, CARPETS, RUGS. MAIN STREET, NEAR POSTOFFICE. a -. . ..... 1 . .j MMMMt.ttsgt??M as... ttSS! ' nai ravryaw. t mi