II PAGE POCK. EIGHT PAGES. DAILY EAST ORECOMASr, PEJfDLRTuJf. OnECoHf, Tl'ESD.lY. MARCH lS, Itfotf. AN lMHU'KNDKST NEWSPAPER. t'ubllaliod ever? afternoon (except Sunday) t Pendleton. Oreon. by (he EAST UltKliOMA.V I'CllLlSUtNG CO HI'HSCRirTlOS RATES. lial'y. one year, by man Dally, alx monttia, by mall tally, thro? months, by mall Dally, one month, by mail Weekly, one year, by mall Wefkly, Kit tuomha, by mall Weekly. f.'Ur mouths, by maH 8ml Wtvkly, one year, by mall flenil eekly, six montha oy mull.... Semi-Weekly, four moutha. oy mall.. 1 otl I.MI i 1.601 ."5 ,:o 1..VI .75 .50 Member Si-rlppa Mdlae News Asaoclatlon. The F.ant 'ireconlan la on sale at B. 11. Rlrh's Newa Mamta. at Hotel Portland and Hotel Peiklua, Portland. Oregon. Ban Pranrlaro Hnreau. 4s Fourth atreet t'hlraito llureaii, 9"tt Security building. Washington. I '., Kureau, Sol Kour teenth atreet. N. W. falepboD Mala 1. Entered at Pendleton P-tofflre aa aecond class matter. XOTIfK TO ADVERTISERS. Copy fv advertising matter to appear In tbe Kaat Oregonian must be In by 4 :4."i p. ID of the preceding day : copy for Monday's paper mint be lu by 4 :4S p. m. the preced ing Saturday. When everything goes crooked, And seemg Inclined to rile, Don't kick nor fuss nor fidget; Just you smile! " It's hard to learn the lesson, But learn it if you'd win; When people tease and pester, Just you grin! When some one tries to "do" you By taking more than half, Be patient, firm and pleasant; Just you laugh! But if you find you're stuffy e (Sometimes, of course, you will!) And cannot smile nor grin nor laugh, Just keep still ! Arthur Chamberlain. VOTE BY PItECIXCTS. Several local option elections will be held In Umatilla county this year. The local option law will be kept constantly In use in Oregon. The law Is good and should remain In force, but friends of the law must not abuse It nor run it to extremes in their zeal. It was Intended to be strictly a pre cinct law and with this understanding secured an enormous vote. If this aim Is subverted, and the law is used to coerce unwilling and unprepared settlements, public sentiment will re volt at It and repeal of the law will result. Prohibition Is a progressive science and must be learned by degrees, gmall towns and county precincts which desire prohibition under the local option law should vote prohibi tion for themselves and enjoy it. but they should not attempt coercion In other precincts not wholly prepared and educated up to the prohibition Idea. In the precincts where the senti ment Is strong for prohibition the law can be enforced and will be suc cessful while it would not be a suc cess where it Is forced upon a town or settlement not fully understanding or desiring prohibition. The East Oregonian hopes the local option vote will be confined to pre cincts and not extended to Include Umatilla county. Precincts In Uma tilla county are ready to accept pro hibition under a local option law, but Umatilla county as a whole is not ready fur It and it would be disas trous to the prohibition cause to force It by a bare majority upon the coun ty. Let the precinct have it and let the education and the preparation slowly spread. Local option successfully en forced In one small precinct will multiply the local option sentiment In adjoining precincts, and thus grad ually the vital essence of prohibition will creep from precinct to precinct ere the enemy Is aware and a healthy and Intelligent sentiment will prepare the people to receive It In toto, within an Incredibly short time. A county vote will wreck the cause and force the repeal of the law. SEATTLE IN THE PROCESSION'. Seattle has Joined the ranks of pro gressive cities that are committed to the municipal ownership of public utilities, and, as is natural, under the leadership of a democrat, says the San Francisco Star. Last Tuesday Judge W. H. Moore was elected, after an exciting campaign, mayor of the Puget Sound metropolis. In other elections the clly has gone republican from 3000 to 4000, but on the Issue of public ownership the nor mal majority of that party was en tirely lost. The democratic newspa per worked for the candidate of its party, but frankly avowed Its enmity for the principle of municipal man agement of water and lighting plants. The people took the matter in their own hands, however, and the mere politicians found themselves helpless before the solid ranks opposing them. Thus from the Atlantic to the Pa cific the movement wins its way. and one city after another begins the trial of practlcul advantages. To doubt that the' trial will be perma nently successful is to doubt the in tegrity and ability of Americans put In places of honor and trust by their fellow citizens. It is a charge on the redoubts of special privilege and graft that must result in regaining the works for the use of all the people. GOOD WOltlv IX)K ORKGOX. The people of Willamette valley who are receiving direct benefits from the agitation of the Oregon De velopment league' for reduced rail road fares, extension of railroad lines and better traffic arrangements, have cause to be grateful to Judge Stephen A. Lowell of this city. who. as a member of the transportation com mittee of the Oregon Development league wrote most of the report of that committee demanded the re forms which the railroads have promised to speedily grant, and which have been effected in part, in western Oregon, already. In writing this remarkable report which recommended revolutionary principles In railroad activity, in com parison to the old policy of Oregon roads. Judge Lowell and his associates had but the best Interest of Oregon at heart, regardless of the power of the corporations, regardless of moneyed influences in state politics, regard less of aught but the welfare of the whole people. The report of that committee started the wheels rolling In Oregon Industrial circles. Following closely upon Its- publication the Harriman people announced the appropriation of over J4.000.0ftu for extensions and improvements in Oregon; new traffic arrangements went Into immediate effect in western Oregon; surveys of new lines were accelerated and a new spirit of activity thrilled through the entire state. It is self-sacrificing and fearless work of this character which uplifts and develops states. Oregon was ripe for that committee's report. For a quarter of a century railroad develop ment had been at a standstill. A great state was panting for progress. In terior valleys and settlements had prayed in vain for relief. The report of that committee was the first prom ise that had ever reached them. Oregon owes much to Judge Lowell who wrote that report in part, and who launched at Eugene last fall the slogan which Is still resounding in the state: "OREGONIANS FOR ORE GON; NOT OREGON FOR ORE GONIANS." Such a man will be a power for good In the United States senate from Oregon. While the letter recently received by President Perry Gould of the Umatilla County Woolgrowers' asso ciation, may have been a "Joke," yet It Is not considered as such by sheep men. The East Oregonian would call attention to the fact that Oregon sheepmen have raised a fund of sev eral thousand dollars for the purpose of apprehending such men as wrote the threatening lctte.'. Two such fellows have been convicted and are now In the penitentiary meditating upon sheep killing and range dis turbances. The fund will be Increas ed as necessity demands. There are actual opportunities for homeseekers in the Irrigated districts of Umatilla county and to those dls trlcts, homeseekers should be especial ly directed. In the west end of the county and also In the Milton, Free water and Hudson Bay districts, there are rich opportunities for men with small means to secure good homes in excellent surroundings and at rea- IT'S RIGHT HERE that the superiority of our blank books, stationery and office essentials makes Itself manifest, as they will to every practical bookkeeper. The quality of our goods Is of the highest, and as they cost no more than in ferior kinds, you certainly can see why It will pay you to patronize us. Frazier's Book Store sonable prices. , The East Oregonian calls attention of strangers and home seekers to the districts mentioned. Ditches are being extended and new land Is being brought under irriga tion every month in the year. It re quires but a few acres to support a family and splendid settlements are forming in those districts. MOI Y TUUU-: IS PASSING. The great Sioux tribe, the most pulr-snnt of the American aborlglnies. Is withering to extinction with tuber culosis at the agencies along the Mis souri. There are about 25,000 of these pepole making fair progress in civlll zatloV; living In hois; wearing citi zen's clothing: the children being ed ucated; the families generally pro fessing Christianity; the able-bodied engaged In some form of mnnual la bor, by which they earn the means of subsistence. The alarming extent of this dread Infection prevailing among them can not be overstated. Hardly a home where it has not found victims, and hardly a home where It does not still exist In some form. The disease is usually quick in Its deadly mission. A man, apparently healthful, leaves his work and goes to his trader and or ders a suit of grave clothes. "I have the sickness," he says. He is meas ured for the suit, and by the time It Is finished the buyer is often ready to wear It through the long sleep. The mother and the grown-up son or daughter are likely to share a similar fate. Under such conditions, and In such environment. It will readily be understood that an atmosphere of gloom and depression abounds, paral yzing to ambition and to further ad vancement. D. W. Robinson In Re view of Reviews. KEEPERS OF THE GATE. Where free and strong the whole day long The shouting seas swing in. With friendly roar to storm the shore That flings them back their din; There headlands bold a bay Infold, Where calm and silent wait The guns that drowse, till war shall rouse The Keepers of the Gate. Through portals wide the ebbing tide steals out to open sea. Past sleeping hills where stirs and thrills A wind-song wild and free. From far and near the trade-ships steer. Wide-winged with precious freight. To gain the land where sent'nel stand The guns that keep the gate. When summer sun his day's work done. Has sought his glowing bed; When watch-lamps stand by sea and land And swing in skies o'erhead: Midst night's soft gleam the great guns dream, On guard o'er sleeping state. Dream lasting peace, when need shall cease To keep the nation's gate. K. L. S. in Overland Monthly. WHAT HI KUAN K TEACHES. The greatest teacher of childhood should be nature. Send the child out to get acquainted with her. Let it make playmates of the sun and the wind and the flowers. Let It drink in the purity of the out-of-doors, the natural foe of all that is cramping and degrading and that tends to lower the standard of manhood. The child may nof learn as much about the structure of the plant, but he will know the plant when he sees It. and love It. His knowledge of the anatomy of a grasshopper may be somewhat more limited, but the creatures of the field and the wood will be his friends. In short, give the child more of nature and less of arti ficiality, and the result will be for the betterment of the human race. Such In brief, is what Luther Bur bank would teach. UMATILLA. A PASSWORD. Umatilla, Oregon, In the days of the stage-coach, a prosperous and populous town on the banks of the Columbia, where supplies for the great inland empire were transferred from the steamer to freight wagons and pack teams, has awakened from sleep, brushed the sands of the desert from her eyes and arisen to the dig nity of being more than a dot on the map, says the Pacific Echo of the Women of Woodcraft. A move is on foot to Incorporate the town. Old members of the Women of Woodcraft, whose memories run back to 1897, will remember the name as the first password of the new order, and what a time they had twisting their tongues around it. A tribe) of Indians and a river share the name with the town. THE LARGEST CORN FIELD. The largest field of corn In the United States, If not In the world has Just been harvested on the Adams farm In Sac county, near Odebolt. One hundred horses and 37 corn cut ters have shucked corn to the esti mated amount of 300,000 bushels. Mr. Adams, the owner of the farm, spends the most of his time In Chi cago, where he resides with his fam ily, operating his large farm by ex pert foremen. Iowa correspondence In St. Paul paper. A Compnrlin In Space, A European astronomer has re cently made some remarkable calcu lations. He figures that if all the living representatives of the human race were strung out In space and Sep. arated from each other by Intervals of a mile, the line would only reach one. third of the distance to the planet Neptune. If separated by distances as great as that between London and Constantinople, the line would only reach half way to the nearest star. Exchange. Fifty Yesss& 0V" L M L e V V nrmre Jo)AP mm Wviffi A Groom of Tartar Powder Made From Grapes No Alum New Easter Neckwear Rushing Collars, Stocks and Turnovers. Assortments most com plete with all new Easter styles. Early selections urged! Prices here from J5C to $2.50. New Art Materials Stamped and open work Linen pieces In Lunch and Tray Cloths. Scarfs. Doylies, etc. New Pillow Tops and Cords. Stamped Eylet work Corset Sovers. Chinese and' Waist Patterns, Collar. Cuff, Belt and Hats putter, complete range of styles and prices. Fancy Sash Ribbons For Easter's wear. You'll want these sure. Widths frojn 5 to 9 Inches wide.JJ. to Jj)l,Q.) yard. French Embroidered Rib bons, also Brocaded White Ribbons, here In the various widths and priced at (JC t0 85C yarJ' White Goods For Confirmation New French Linens at 5()c.. Jfo and $1.00 New French Organdies, 68 Inches w'e-,)()(, 7C antl $1.(M) Persian Lawns, 32 inches wide I2.)C, "l,1 50c Silk Coussellnes at, per yard .)()c 32-lnch Poplins at, per yard 35t' and 30c 40 Inch Albatross at, per yard.. .... . ,")()( 27-inch India Silk, 65c quality, at, per yard ,"OC New White Veilings ;J5C ,").. ruid 8.C Baby Irish Lace, In band trimmings, with allover lace to match. Oriental GalloonB in lace and Allovers. Ready-to-wear White Dresses For the Easter occasion now here. Our Children's Department is complete. Nowhere can you find such as. ortment of new. partly made garments. Peoples Warehouse WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE. SAVE YOUR COUPONS. 4 $iw Standard I if i iv rv. A tut 7 SAVE YOUR COUPONS. A Complete Stock Our facilities for supplying you with bull ;ing materiel Is unsurr..ssed any where. Our modern plant Is equipped to turn out sosl-, doors, flooring, cell ing and anything for house building. We carry the lumber or all pur poses. No ordor too large or small for us to f.ll. Plaster, cement, lime and sand al ways on hand. Mine, Sand, Cement, Laths, Shin gles, liluo Rapplds Plater and Dipped Shingles. ROBERT FORSTER, Proprietor. mm St, Anthony's Hospital t r8.J t a essi Era tsS!r1 till Private rooms, eiegniuij' ZTZ furnished Finely equip- ped op rnting room. Also ww a . it .. nUtintiTifnt A ytTT Ji a i e r i 9 Every convenience necessary for the care of the sick. Telepho Main 1651. 1 aXPLETOJ". OREGON. New Industry We manufacture fancy party gowns. kimonas, sill', fancy and medium un derwear, house gowns and ladles' light underwear and gentlemen's dress and) negligee shirts to ord r. Importers f silk. Prices reasonable. Give us a call. Low Sam 209 Court street. Next to Clarke's Hardware Store. UNRESTRAINED PLEASURE. can be enjoyed when driving in on of Neagle's new style fancy traps, spider phaetons, runabout wagons. surreys, buckboards or pony carts for children's use. They have all the leading handsome designs for city or country use at moderate prices. We are proud of their elegant stock this season and arc pleased to show them to you. We are headquarters for the Wi nona Wagons, that have Iron-clad hubs. No checking or breaking loose of boxes. Our stock of Hacks and Wagons Is the largest In eastern' Ore gon. We sell Fulrhanks-Morse Gaso line Engines and Pumps, and Irrigat ing Plants. All goods warranted. 8e Neagle Bros. the ll'acksinlllis Get Prices Before lluylng. Give ear unto wise counsel. Coal that la onn-thlnt rilM mia a ereat deal mote to the scuttle and lasta much shorter time thaa the good. clean Coal w sell. If you want the best, oar Coal to the kind for yon. Henry Kopittke DUTCH HENRY. Office, Pendleton Ice ft Cold Storage uuiiHuiy. mone t-oin 178. THE POPULAR PLACF TO EAT IS THE The French Restaurant Everything served first-claaa. Beet recnlar meals In Pendle ton for 15 eenta. SHORT ORDERS A SPECIALTY. Polydore Moens, Prop. Walters' Flouring Mills Capacity, ISO barrels a day. Flour exchanged for wheat. Flour, Mill Feed, Chopped Feed, to., always on hand. Dally Kaat Oregonian by carrier, only If cents a week. TV-- (?n