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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1905)
page p.irn DAILY EAST cr.SGOMAX, PENDLETON, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1905. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. FobllnhM EAST every Friday at rendleton, OreiroD. bf the OREGON 1 AX PUBLISULXG COMPANY. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dally, one year, by mail $5.00 Dally, six months, by mall . J. 60 Dally, three months, by mall 1.26 Dally, one month, by mall 60 Weekly, one year. hy mall 1.60 Weekly, six months, by mall 78 Weekly, four months, by mall.. .60 9eml-Veekly, one year, by mall. 1.60 Semi-Weekly, six months, by mail .75 Semi-Weekly, four months, mall. .50 Member Srrlpps-McBae elation. News Asso- The East Oreftonlan Is on sale at B. B. Rich's News Stands at Hotel Portland and Hotel Perkins. Port land. Oregon. San Francisco Bureau. 408 Fourth street. Chicago Bureau. 909 Security Bldg. Washington. D. C. Bureau, 601 14th St., N. W. and smoke, was It any wonder that the old father rejoiced? Wouldn't you? "Joint" smashing under such provo cation Is not such a disgraceful thing after all. tiik Chinese peril. Telephone Main 11. Entered at Pendleton Postofflce as second-class matter. NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS. Copy for advertising matter to appear In the East Oregonlan must be In by 4 :45 p. m. of the preceding day : copy for Monday's paper must be In by 4 :4S p. m. tbe preced ing Saturday. It was only a simple ballad, Sung to a careless throng; There were none who knew the singer, And few cared for the song. Yet the voice was sweet and ten- der As the call of a woodland bird: Strange, that It woke no echo In the hearts of those that heard. But when the song was ended, And hushed the last sweet tone, The listener rose in silence And went her way alone. Once more to her life of labor She passed; but her heart was strong. As she prayed, "God bless the singer," And she thanked God for the song. Selected. Tf. under the pressure or an alleged boycott of American goods In China, the president Is brought to advocate a modification of the Chinese exclu sion act. he will make the greatest mistake of his administration and will Inflict a blight upon the country which it will be almost Impossible to again remove. The trusts and big manufacturers of the east are urging the modifica tion of the exclusion act, on the grounds that it is an unjust raw and Is detrimental to American interests. The president Is inclined to listen to their pleading and It Is possioie that the limit of the net will bo ex tended to admit certain alleged "bet ter" classes Into this country. The Pacific coast knows by actual touch with the Chinese, his utter un fitness for citizenship in this country. The protest against the extension of the exclusion act should be so strong and emphatic that there would be no misunderstanding of Its meaning. The boycott will amount to nothing. China will be forced to buy Amcrlcnn goods. She can get the same supplies nowhere else. It Is a bluff, but will he exnanded into a grave danger by the Chinese sympathizers. But not as dangerous to the United States as the extension of the exclusion act would be. also, to harbor strange notions nbout moral as well as statute law. Just now they are seeking to have the courts prevent the Republic and Standard OH companies from doing business in their state. Every people under stress of indig nation is liable to give way to blind prejudice. The people of Missouri need to be reasoned with. S. T. C Podd should be dispatched west at once to explain to them that Standard oil is Incapable of violating laws be-j cause it hires the highest priced legal i advisers. Dr. Rolutt Stuart MacAr- thur should Immediately assure them that Mr. Itoekefelle! s most condemn ed transactions "are in accordance with the highest standards ,f inni mercial morality." WILLIAM Till: IIF.STI.KSS. If vou are itfttintllv not as strong as vour more fortunate 'l yf sisters, anil for tl.is reason c-.tn-ricnce tlrc.nl rather than joy at the prospect of beromim; a mother, take courage and assurance from this fact: Moihcr'.s Knead is meant for you, and by its use vou may pass ihrouirh that glorious m.irtvrdom which is yours by divine riht with no more (lisroml'oi t thnn that experienced by those who by nature are possibly more adapted for the role of motherhood. MOTHER'S FfijmD is a liniment of proven merit, and its ereat worth can be no t?,. belter attested to than by the rmm sinm and healthy rhiiuren who through its kimllv o.';i. -. have enlind this world tinham'.icappea hv anv dciona;tv or vveal;ne.-s. It is a liniment which by external application acts upon the ilnlitaiin d muscles and permits of a painless pat tui ition. rriAariELD regulator co AritesTA. pa. REVOKE THE LICENSES. Warm WeaLher Items There Is a way by which the city council can make the saloon business in Pendleton respectable, and there Is only one way. That Is by revoking the licenses of places where drunken men are robbed of their money after being made drunk by boosters for these dives. This kind of an eample Is needed to make the dives know their places. The council and the city marshal have sufficient evidence that certain dives are making a practice of robbing drunken men. The facts are repeated ly brought to the attention of the marshal and upon his recommenda tion, two or three dives should be put out of business for good. Their own ers should not be allowed to go Into business In the city again, for they are unfit for a civilized community. The council will ' be backed up in this action by every legitimate and or derly saloon in the city and by every business man who Is responsible, In a measure, for the moral standards of the city. Will the council have the courage to do it? Does that body dare to show Its Iron hand In the management of the dive? TO VIOLATE PRIMARY LAW. It Is rather surprising that Senator Fulton, the only member of the Ore gon delegation In congress who Is not under Indictment for law violation, should counsel his party to ignore the direct primary nominating law, in the selection of a candidate for the United States senate. It Is to be expected that the high of ficials of the state and nation will set an example of law observance, for the encouragement and guidance of the masses. Absolute disregard for the mandate of the law from one in Sen ator Fulton's place, is startling when considered In the light of Its n.oral effect upon the state. The nominating law says that -he voters of any party must select HI candidates, but Fulton advises a se lect convention In advance of the pri mary vote, to select a candidate for the senate. Will the voters stand by decrees of this "seieei nr- For Indoor comfort and satisfying sinner meals, we offer you Irp ffpam PrPAior l,mt freeM! t,,e m8t cream u,d IIC VI Call! II CtCI require the least I and labor, and the safe kind, that cooks the food and not the cook. Gasoline Stoves Hammocks For outdoor good times, our broad and strong, will double your sinner 's enjoyment. Goodman-Thompson Co. HARDWARE PLCMIiING the tion? Will the masses of the peo ple of Oregon give sanction to the po litical machine in the face of a law disarming the machine? Hardly. At least the people expected a dif ferent standard from their only re maining representative in congress. TEACHERS' SALARIES GROW. A FATHER'S JUSTIFICATION. Ex-Congressman E. H. Funston, and father of Gen. Frederick Funston was fined at Iola, Kan., yesterday for expressing sympathy with the dyna miting of the Iola "Joints." Funston is a highly respectable man of conservative opinions and excellent tandlne in his state, but his father's instinct got the better of his Judg ment In this case and he is brought to the bar and fined on a level with any other disorderly person. Looking behind the surface facts in this case, however, It is not difficult to find his Justification, and the Judge in sentencing him to pay a fine, said in a few words, a whole volume oi truth. The Judge knew his provoca tion and said that In view of the cir cumstances it was the most disagree able duty of his life to fine the aged father in face of the facts. Here is the story: Funston has a son younger than the general, who was a bright, forceful young man, but who has been ruined by the "Joints" against the old man's constant plead ings and protest The "Joints" follow no a victim with more dogged fiend- ishness than an open saloon and it Is more difficult to guard against their enticements, because they are hidden away from the public and are not easy of access. The father has felt that his family waa disgraced. He has seen his son, whose promise was so bright pulled down and down until he Is a common ot and when the time came that the Joints, which were the cause of the boy's ruination, went up !n dynamite Perhaps the most pleasing feature of the annual report of Superintend ent Frank K. Welles, Is the Increase shown in the average salaries paid to teachers. The East Oregonlan believes that the efficiency of the public schools mlmarllv depends upon the pay .t.ink , fonrher receives. If the teacher Is underpaid and the profes slon drags along at the rear of other professions In the matter of Income, the best people will be driven out of It and the public schools will suffer. The Increase In the salaries of teachers Is from 54.15 for male teachers paid last year, to $57.77 paid this year; for female teachers the In crease is from J42.88 paid last year, to 43.30 paid this year. True, the advance Is small, but It Is an advance and that Is something. It should be forced steadily upward until the teacher receives as much In proportion to work as any other of the professions. The work of the teacher is not transient. It is for all time and should be equal to Its Importance In society. We Are Headquarters In addition to showing Ills constant ! interest in music, art, yachting, the- ology. theaters, military tactics and i the government of Germany the kai ser can cia.m tne c.isnnc.ion oi "ems i ! the busiest world politician, says the I I V- V.iilr tt'nrt.l ! His unexpected visit to King Oscar of Sweden is only another evidence of his irrepressible activity. The kaiser shows himself sympathetic, appoints King Oscar a grand admiral In the German navy and plans a series of Imposing naval demonstrations in Swedish norts. A formal German- Swedish alliance has been hinted nt. Then Norway's vacant throne is to be filled, and the Hohenzollerns have n weakness for these royal plums. Last week he won the first game with France In the tournament of di plomacy in Morocco. The Rtakes seem small, but the kaiser Is deter mined to keep In practice. William's activities in world politics have been ceaseless. It was he who Inspired Russia to snatch Port Arthur and Southern Manchuria from Japan after Its victory over China. Klao ehau gave him a foothold In the Far East and a voice In Asiatic politics. The little matter of his warships in Manila bay is best forgotten. By pur ohnoini? the Carolines after the war with Spain he secured a new base for his Pacific fleet. At the time of the Boxer troubles he made Germany as sume a more aggressive and vindictive attitude than any other power. His telegram to Kruger was plain indiscretion In a ruler having posses sions In Africa bordering British ter ritory. African colonies have cost the kaiser dear In men and money, but his policy Is always against being a "little German." Rightly or wrongly, ho has made for himself the reputation of being the one Christian upholder In Europe of "the unspeakable Turk." His tri umphal pilgrimage to Jerusalem was a fine spectacle for Near Eastern eyes. In promoting his Bagdad rail way he has crossed England and in the German contracts to furnish arms to the Turkish army upset French cai nutations. The Venezuelan adventure at nrsi was regarded as a test of the Monroe doctrine. Recent corresponnence puu llshed by the stnte department points to the kaiser's having prompted tne United States to urge the "administra tive entity" of China during the pres ent war. P"lve vears ago the kaiser deciarea In a speech at Wilhelmshaven: "I do not consider that the German nation fought and bled and conquered au ne-n In order to anow imi i ka tvsmat nalde In the settlement i o-ron miestfons of foreign nations. Were that to take place It would be ho ond nnee and for all of the posi tlon of the German nation as a world power. I do not mean to let things come to that pass." He has more than made good Ms words. He has made the little questions of foreign politics great questions by his personal Insist ence upon them. FOR KODAKS AND CAMERAS, DRY PLATES, FILMS. PHOTOGRAPHIC PAPER AND CHEMICALS. Brock & McComas Company DRUGGISTS 'Phone Main 20. El ECTR.IC I IP w Ixst 6 1-2 Cents on the Pound. John Anacava, of Jordnn Valley, brought in the last of his father's wool yesterday. Sam Anacava. his father's wool crop this year, amounted to 6S sacks or 22.000 pounds, which he sold last spring for 16 1-2 cents. Wool low is 23 cents. Caldwell News. Korea now demands representation on the peace commission and has ap pointed two young men. American ed ucated, as commissioners. The gen eral belief Is that they will not be rec ognized, even In an advisory capacity. A VICTIM OF PREJUDICE. It must be a sad shock to the sense innocence of Standard Oil mag n.ip. tn be caught at the game of ruining business rivals In Missouri by means of the rebate system, says me jew York World. Their confidence In their own virtue ha. heen so Implicit, so unquestioned n..,.,.ii mieht accuse them of a v. . i ' . r, n ' o being unscrupulous, but deep down in their own hearts they knew their own righteousness. There is nothing new or mysterious about their methods In Missouri. The manager and agents of the Republic company were instructed to unaer mln the National company's trade To get the National's customers they Dald them half a cent a gallon rebate In cash. For outward advertising pur- fh Republic figured as an "in- rienendent" concern like the National It worked with and through the Standard Oil. Witnesses testify that at timet the "independent" Republic used tne Standard Oil's horses, wagons and tanks. The people of Missouri are a sens! tlve folk. They sometimes lose their temper. They have laws which tney are erratic enough to think should be enforced, and officials so perverse as to try to enforce them. They seem, RHEUMATISM COMMON IN SUMMER The time to eet rid of Rheumatism is in Summer while the blood is endeavor inir to puree itself of all poisons and im purities, and the skin is active, with all the pores and glands open ami able, in ims way, to assist in uic cmziioaiiuu. Columbus, O., 135ft Mt. Vernon, Ave. Six veara m I had a severe attack of mnammatory Mneumausm. ana ineaou torsl bad did me no good. They changed mAriinina avnrv WAfik and nothinB they freacribed Beamed to help me. finally left off their medicine and began the uaeofS.8. 8. M y knee and elbow Joints were a wollon terribly, and at one time my handa were ao swollen and painful that I oould not close them when opened. 1 was getting discouraged, you may be sure, whan I Penan a. . o., one as i saw it wai hnlninir ma I continued it. and to day I am a Bound, well man and have never naa a return ox ma oiaeaan. it. it. c;ha ixiAn The inactivity of the Liver, Kidneys and Bowels causes the refuse matter to remain in the system, which, coming in contact with the different acius oi tne txxiy, forma uric acid to be absorbed by the blood and distributed to the different taints and muscles, producing the pains inflammation and other distressing symp toms of Rheumatism. The wandering pains of the disease remind the sufferer that the poison is still in tne Diooa ana he should lose no time ineettine it out. 8. S. S. neutralizes tli8 acid and makes the blood rich and pure. It tones up every organ and cures tne disease perma nently. S. S. S. contains no harmful miner als to disagree ably affect the .system, but PURELY VEGETABLE, whilecuringthe disease builds up every part of the body by its fine tonic effect Book on Rheumatism and any medical advice desired without charge. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, 6a. 4 CAREFUL SERVICE Is characteristic of our ex aminations. Our tests are un erring and your Eyes are al wuys safe In our care. LET I S SHOW VOU HOW WE CAN' MAKE VOU LOOK. We can relieve that squint, take away those frowns, and In many cases overcome headaches and relieve much nerve strain, which If left uncorrected will cause Irreparable barm. From the wee child to the gray haired sire we offer thl careful service. We can't af ford to make mistakes and Each Puir I'lttitl Sells Others. Wmslow Bros. ! JEWELEKS-OPTICIANS. 817 Main Street. Xcnr Postofflce . IS THE CHEAPEST, MOST CONVENIENT, MOST SATISFAC TORY POWER KNOWN FOR ALL PURPOSES. IT IS READY FOR TO START THE WHEELS ROLLING AS SOON AS YOU THROW THE SWITCH, AND CAN BE SHUT OFF IN A MO MENTS NOTICE. NO FIRES TO BUILD, NO WATER TO CONSUME, NO ASHES TO EMPTY OUT WE DO ALL THA TFOR YOU, AND SAVE YOU MONEY BESIDES. Prepare for Hot Weather FAN MOTORS WILL BE RUN AT THE FOLLOWING FLAT RATE. 12-INCH FANS 1 SO PER MONTH IB-INCH FANS $3.00 PER MONTH SEE US ABOUT RATES FOR POWER. Northwestern Gas f& Electric Company F. W. VINCENT, MANAGER. BYERS' BEST ELOIR Is made from the choicest wheat that (rows. Good bread Is assured when Byers' Best Flour Is used.. Bran, aborts, steam rolled barley always on hand. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. 8. BYERS, Proprietor. t B-. V MK-r- .' v j m- iv, ,:!; St. Anthony's Hospital Private rooms, elegantly fur nished. Finely equipn d operat ing room. Also Maternity De partment. Every convenience necessary for the care of the sick. Telephone Main IU1. PEXDLFTOX. OIEGON. Weber Has Them Racine Buggies and Hacks. and there are none better or more serviceable. Bain and Cooper Wagons built for this climate. Hodge and Keystone Harvesting Machinery. (Not made by the trust) All kinds of extras. Belting, oil, axle grease and lace leather. Harvesting supplies of all kinds. Fred Weber 329-333 Court St., Corner Tliomps..-' TEETH EXTRACTED BY THE MOD ERN METHOD, Ma We are thoroughly equipped with all modern met' ods and appliances, and guarantee our work to be of the highest stand ard, and our prices the lowest consistent with flrst-claa work. T. H. White DENTIST ASSOCIATION BLOCK Telephone Main 161. CHICKENS NEED SHELL BONE GRIT AND MANY OTHER THINGS WHICH C.F. Coles worthy CAN SUPPLY YOU WITH. 127-120 EAST ALTA STREET. W. T. PARKER Dealer In Dry Goods, Groceries and Notions Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes and Farm Produce. I have JUBt purchased the D. B. Richardson store at Helix, Oregon, and I am going to thoroughly remodel it and greatly Increase the stock. I solicit your patronage, and it good goods and fair treatment can hold your trade, then I know you will trade with me. Bring in your farm p re duce. Highest market price paid. HELIX OREGON LAND SCRIP FOR SALE. ' Unrestricted forest reserve scrip tor sale at lowest market prices. My scrip secures title to tlm' ered, farm ing, graslng or desert land, In any quantity, without residence or im provement Address H. M. Hamilton, The Portland, Portland, Oregon,