PAGE FOUR. DAILY EAST OftEGONI IX, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, iliori. EIGHT PAGES. as IM)K1'KM::-.'T Nuasi'.vrKU. Pobllibed .r afternwn letrept Sunday) at Pendleton, otmou. by tbe EAST OUROONIAN I'LT.LISlll.NU CO. 8UllSOl!imu. HATK8. Pally, on ymr. by mall $.100 llly, tlx months, by mall it. 50 ltitr. three months, bv mail 1.K5 I'fcily. on. month, by mall 50; Weekly, one year, by mail 1 AO; AVwkly, six months, by mall 75 Weekly, four months, by mail BO j Semi Weekly, one year, by mall 1 JO Seuil-Weekly, six months by mall 75! 8iui-Yeckiy, tour months, by mall... .30! Uembr Sorlpps Mcllse News Association. The Kast Oreeonlan Is on sale at H H.I Rich's News Stands, at Hotel 1'ortland and llotel Perkins, l'ortlaud, on-c. u. fsn Francisco Ilnreau. 408 Fourth srr,st Chicago Itureau, aut) Security bulldl . Washington. IV C, Bureau, iol l-.nir-teenth street, X. W. fslerboaa sfsls t. Entered at Pendleton l'Mofflc. us second class matter. NOTICE TC ADVKUTISKKS. Co;y for advertising matter to appear In the Kast Oreconlan must I In by 4 :4.1 p. m. of the preceding day; cpr for Mondays paper must be in by 4 :4S p. m. the preced ing .Ssturdsy. .union ,A.TCaT; I saw the mount; i-is stand Silent, wonderful and grand. Looking out across the land When the golden light was fall ing On distant dome and fpire, And I heard a low voice calling, "Come up higher, come up higher. From the. lowland and the mire. From the mist of earth desire. From the vain pursuit of pelf, From the att'tude of self, Come up higher, come up higher ,. Think not that we are cold. Though eternal snows have crowned us; Underneath our breasts of snow Silver fountains sing and flow And ' restore the hungry lands." -Barnes G. Clark In the Arena. s,kii f j or of i LAW ENFORCEMENT. Politicians said that Harvey K. Brown, reform candidate for gover nor could not carry a single precinct for law enforcement In his noma county. He carried the entire county against the strongest" candidate for governor whom eastern Oregon republicans could name. And In the state, where politicians said ne would be the laughing stock, he polled 5000 voles, a record tfiat seems phenomenal. The law enforcement sentiment Is no Joke. "Til" Taylor can s.veept Umatilla county on a law enforcement plat -irm. The people want him for sher iff another term. His qualifications; are so high, his success with the of fice has been so pronounced that he is the logical man for the p'.ace and his determination an'l promise to en force the laws in addition to his per sonal qualifications will give him enormous strength. And there Is nothing revolutionary about law enforcement. It will not disorganize society. The laws are on the books. They are there to be obeyed. Nothing new is demanded. If the laws are not good get them out of the code. Legislatures made up of citizens of Oregon have passed those laws. Tho.-e same cltlzetm live among I us today. They were plain, blunt, sensible men. Their sentiments are the common sentiment of humanity. They were elected by their neighbors ! " and reflected their neighbors' thought and spirit when they wrote the laws that are now on the books. THE ONLY AllGUMEXT. I Forged applications covering hun When a republican editor exhausts j (jre,s of thousands of acres of school his little stock of logical argument lands have been brought to light, the and is run. Into a corner, he always Partle convicted and the cer- , . , . tlflcates cancelled, shakes the "bloody shirt as his last Forged certificates and other docu resource. ments covering thousands of acres of That Is his one clinching argument j state lands were discovered In time to for hi, candidate or against the op-1 prevent complications which would I have arisen had deeds been Issued to posing candidate. the hoMeTg In this enlightened and virile age other Oregon governor has when e.uh man stands upon his own looked after the school fund as close indlvldualltv. when oroure s is blind-' ly Governor Chamberlain. Port- , ,W ,.f tho rmrtman type, it is distrusting to hear war is sues used as an arsument in present day political campaigns. It is a pitiable mental state which can find no other, no more live logic to u e In present day contests. Few vote are held or won by such argu ments and It betrays a woeful lack of modern spirit to hear them mingled In the modern chorus. When there Is nth!n3 else to say. the moss-back can always resurrect the past to do duty for him , In the present. It In no argument against the efficiency or capability of Gover nor Chnmberlnln te , ay that he was born In Mississippi. A, least he Is American burn. OKK.OOX I.KAl:. As In other industrial lines, Oregon leads the northwest In tne average weight of fleeces. The good breed. oi necp , which :.;tve been introduced into Oregon, and the excellent care taken of Oregon sheep have borne fruits. The live stock census Just taken for the past year shows that Oregon Is the peer of all the livestock states In the produc tion of wool. She owns but 2.000,000 head of sheep, but she shears one pound per head more than Idaho and Wyoming, and three-quarters of a pound more than Montana. She shears 2 H pounds per head more than New Mexico, 1 pounds more than Utah and Colorado, and 1 pounds more than California, This is an evidence not only of the adaptability of Oregon to the sheep Industry, but also of the skill with which the Industry Is conducted by Oregon sheepmen. It pays to study an Industry, even though It may be the prosaic Industry of livestock grow'ng. It pays to excel in any line and .this advertisement which Oregon enjoys from the heavy weight of her fleeces has reached to the fartherest corner me worm wnere pneep are grown where husbandry Is one of the arts mankind. The average weight of the fleece , i... in uie uurinwm amies as given uy the recent census is as follows: Ore gon, 8 pounds: Montana, 7.5: Wyom ing. 7; Idaho, 7; Utah, 6.5 Colorado, .E; California. 6.25; New Mexico. 5.5. HOUSE VALUES IXCHEASIXG. The horse Is always noout to be, but never is, put out of business. On the appearance of every new agency of transportation the announcement is solemnly made that the horse, after passing through an era of decreasing prices, will cease. It was so when railroads began to gain headway, when bicycles . came Into use, when the electric cars com menced to buzz along the highways, when the auto developed into some thing more than a curiosity, but yet here the horse Is still with us, and more valuable than ever. Statistics submitted to the house of representatives. In connection with the agricultural appropriation bill, show that there has been a notable Increase both In the number and value of horses In the United States In the last nine years. The aggregate of horses January 1, 1906, stood at 18,718,578, against 14, 367,667 at the corresponding date of 1897. Their total value increased from 1452.649,396 in 1897 to $1,510, 889,906. This startling rate of Increuse in value Is no more marked than that of mules, according to the same govern- ment authorities. There were 2.216, 654 mules In 1897 and 3,194,061 in 1906, and the values were, respective ly, S32.302.090 and 1334,680,520. COMMENDS CHAMBERLAIN. The work of Governor Chamber lain through the state land office has eenJe? creditable and speaks well .. 1,1., Km, nnni nannrt tv XT nm than 33.000 acres of vacant government lund have been selected to satisfy losses In school sections, which were due the state. All of this has been sold netting the school fund about 190.000. "inl dispatch. The first chamber of the Swedish parliament has rejected the govern ment's electoral reform by a vote of 126 to 18 and adopted by a vote of 118 to 26 a scheme of universal suf frage with proportional representa tion In both chambers and reducing the electoral period of the first cham ber from nine to six years. THE MODERN ISAAC WALTON who Is mastering "Ye Gentle Art," knows that his skill avalleth no., without his tackle Is of the right kind; that Is why self-respecting fishermen go to Krazler'g for what they need in rod, lines, hooks, flys and other ea sentiala. Our stock comprises all that Is up-to-date. All that Is of standard merit, and this Is no fish story e'ther. Frazier'sBook Store Aerograms Penetrate the - Human Body f t You are full of aerograms, says the Colorado Springs Telegraph. Thousands of them shoot through your body every day. ' The largest office buildings and solid blocks of houses fall , to Im pede the progress of the wireless mes:iage. . ( Perhaps the assertion has an omin ous and alartlint; sound, but It Is lis true ns It Is startling. Whether you are eating, sleeping or walking about, whether you are at church, at the theater or on the street wherever you are in Colorado Springs to-lay. you are constantly crossing the routes of thousands of aerograms and being penetrated by them. Put, If It will aid your peace of mind, the statement may be made that no one aerogram lingers long enough, to allow others to collect In your body and form a blockade of messages, In fact, the ones that strike Colo rado Springs people pass through them at the rate of about 1S6.000 miles a second the same swiftness with which light travels. An aerogram If you are not frtmtl lar with the term is nothing more or less than a wireless telegram. They are sent every day from the American DeForcst Wireless telegraph tower locuted on the campus at Colorado college, to the DeForest stations at Pueblo, Denver, Boulder, Cripple creek and Cheyenne. Wyo. And not only do these aerograms pass through the people of Colorado Springs, but through buildings or any other ob struction that covers the earth's sur face. . Brick, iron, steel, wood no matter what the structure does not stop the course of the wireless mes sage. When an aerogram leaves the wire less pole In Colorado Springs, im pelled by 25.000 volts of electricity, the message takes a course fo,- the tower "in tune" with It In Denver. It does not rise in the air and soar above buildings, forests and moun tains. It sticks close to the earth's surface, climbing hills and mountains or de scending into valleys and pHins. but nothing interferes with its progress or turns it aside. When the giant sparker, brought Into action by the operator at the key In the Colorado Springs station, rips off the dots and dashes of the Morse alphabet with a noise that is almost deafening to myone close to It, and a force that is deadly If you oorr.-j In contact with It, those dots and dashes form words, the words sentences, the sentences messages aerograms In the same manner as the ordinary wire-telegraph, there Is no wire to convey the message to Its destination. Instead, the powerful eloctrie&l ap paratus at the wireless dispatching station drives the dots and dashes up the 200-foot mast over the stetlon, from where they follow th' '''cntan nae" wires to their ends nnd are hurled off Into space. Instnntly they are picked up by the stations throughout Colorado, the re ceiving station being "tuned" to ex actly the same degree of sensitiveness as the sending apparatus In Colorado Springs. The American DeForest WlrelesB tel egraph station at Colorado college Is of especial Interest because It shows a wireless telegraph system In prac tical operation close at hand. The messages received at the downtown office. 116 East Pike's Peak avenue, are repeated by telephone to the wire less station. Here they are copied and turned over to the telegrapher who transmits them to their destina tion through the ether. COMING EVENTS. . ! May 16-19 "Made In Oregon" con vention, Portand. ' May 22-24 Quarterly conference M. E. church for The Dalles district, Pendleton. May 22-24 Umatilla Baptist assc ciatlon, Athena. May 25-2G Caledonian picnic at Athena. May 24-27 The Dalles and Colum bia river Epworth League conven tion, Walla Walla. May 31, June 2 Umatilla Pioneers' reunion, Weston. June 14 Oregon Pioneer Associa tion meeting, Portland. June 20-24 Northwest Sportsmen's tournament. Walla Walla. July 17-19 Elks' grand lodge, Den ver. September 3-8 National Irrigation congress, Boise City, September 18 Northwest Laundry, men's association, Pendleton. Dates of Wool Sales. The following wool sale dates for Oregon have been fixed by the Oregon Woolgrowers' association: Pendleton May 22, 23, 29 and 30. Heppncr May 24, 25; June 7, 8, 21 and 22. Condon May 31 and June 1, 27 and 28. 1 Shaniko June 5, 6, 19 and 20, and July 10 and 11. Baker City June 15, 26; July 12 and 18. Elgin July 1. Drugirlxt l ined 25. J. I, Tucker, the proprietor of a drug store at Toppenlsh, was tried yesterday afternoon In Justice of the Peace Taggard's court on a charge of selling whiskey without a certlfl cate from a reputable physician stat ing that the whiskey was for medic nal or scientific purpose and furthf thnt defendant had not a proper license for the dispensing of liquors. Ho was fined 825 and costs. The Tucker case Is one which has grown out of the complaints against the drug dealers of Toppenlsh. Some of the citizens of that place have re peatedly complained to the authori ties that life nnd property were un safe In their town because of the "blind tiger" traffic In whiskey and alcohol which was carried on. Indl ans have been able to get liquor In as large quantities and ns often as thoy choose. Yakima Republic, Tte Royal Baking Powder is equally valu able for the preparation of the finest, most delicate cookery and for substantial, everyday food. Royal Baking Powder has been used by three generations and is employed in baking by tbe best families everywhere. ROWC SWKINO POWDER CO., NEW YORK. THE ANGELrS HMU). When traveling In the forests of Gulnna and Paraguay, It is not un common to meet with a bird whose music greatly resembles that of an Angelus bell when heard from a dis tance. The Spaniards call this singu lar bird a bell-ringer, though ft 'may be still more appropriately designated as the Angelus bird, for, like the An gelus bell, it Is heard three times a day, morning, noon and night. Its song, which defies all descrip tion, consists of sounds like the strokes of a bell, succeeding one an other every two or three minutes;, so clearly and In such a resonant man ner, that the listener, If a stranger, itnugines himself to be near a chapel or convent. But it turns out that the forest Is the chapel, and tie bell a bird. The beauty of the Angelus bird is equal to his talent; he Is as large as a Jay, and as whtte as snow-,, besides I All ot tins can be avoided.' however, by the-use -of Mother'. Friend before baby comes, es this great lin!r. always prepares- the body for the strain upon it, and preserve, t.ie ymmciry of i;ur form. Mother's Friend overcomes all the danger ,f c!iiul-birth, anil uarrie the expectant mother safely through this crilic&l p?rixl without ptiin. It is woman's greatest blessing. Thousam.., i;:riL-fully tuili of the buuelit and rciicf derived front tile use ot th.Y iiutiuaul: remedy. drujfir'te lit botik. bcok. ; 1 :: this In-.-.. i. T8 t"' i i. oil r 'Ti f. 7i . a . will be sent free. ..... r, f fSj. ' $ i Byers Best Flour Is madt from th choicMt wheat that grews. Good bread Is as sured when 3TER8' BEST FLOUR Is used. Bran, Shorts. Btwam Rolled Barley always- on. hand. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS 4, W. ft. flYKKS. !W1 l4ir. HAIR DRESSING Miss C. Hudson, formerly with Dr. C. F. McLane of San Francisco Has opened parlors In the Hotel Bowman, whero she will: be pleased to havo all ladles xlslt her for HAIU DRESSING, SHAMPOOINO, SCALP TREATMENT, MAN'I CUniNQ OR FACIAL. MASSAGK. CHIROPOPT A SPECIALTY. Outside Calls Promptly Attended tow Rooms 33-34 Bowman Hotel. Phone Main 62 All Kinds of Lumber for all kinds of purposes, are not found In every yard. Whatever your wants may be In Lumber and Building Mathrials come here and let us give you an es timate. We. can save you money, quality considered. Oregon Lumber Yard XKAR COUNT HOUSE, 'phono Main 8. Pendleton, Oregon. Money to Loan on Monthly Installments Long Time Loans Real Estate In Any Part of the City for Sale Frank B. Clopton & Co. 112 East Court Street - t y , (E(Dl jm being graceful In formi and swift In motion. But the most, carious orna ment of the Angelus bird Is the tuft of black, arched feathers on Its beau tiful head; It Is of conical shape and about four Inches In length. Guar dian Angel. nw Not Hurt In Tammany. "Crops are not burning up. In the Tammany country," sold It A. Can ter, who Is from that section today. "The country needs rain, but the re port that serious damage has been done In Tammany Is not well found ed. The grain Is looking well, and with a good ruin will mnke an abun dant crop. There Is no cause for the alarming reports that have been cir culated In regard to the drouth fa the country." I-ewlston Teller. Isaac W. Anderson and other capi talists have Incorporated a gas com pany at Lewlston, Idaho, with a capi tal of (200,000. Every woman corot9 a chapcly, pretty figure, and many of them deplore tbe loss of their girlish forms after marriage. The bearing of children is often destructive to the mother's shapeliness. r ss me f DONALDSONS , BEST ICE CREAM , SODA ON EARTH We linve secured the services of Mr. Woolley, of Chicago, dls penrr of nil kinds of fancy ilrinka. We clnlni we can now produce the best drinks that can be mnde. Making all our flarors from the fruit Juice manipulated by no e.xiM-rt in this line, we can guar antee satisfaction. F. J. Donaldson Red Cross Pharmacy St Anthony's Hospital Private rooms, elegantly furnished Finely equip- ped operating room. Also Maternity Department. Every convenience necessary for the care of the sick. Telephone Main 1831. PENDLETON, OHKGON. DON'T LOOK A GIFT HOPSE IX TIIF. V.OCTII. We don't pretend to ,lvo uway ua.' elegant stock of p-to-date vehicles. Kut we do say that we will sell you the most stylish and well-made trap, buggy, runabout, phaeton, surrey or buckboard at lower prices, qua1 considered, than you can buy ot any place In Pendleton. We sell Winona Wagons, Hacks and Buggies. Easy running and made from bone-dry material. Guaran teed to give sotlsfact'.in In this cli mate. See us abo t Oasollne Engtnos. W are agents for the Fairbanks-Morse Gasoline Engines for Irrigating and mining, machinery. Estimates given on irrigating plants. Call and g our prices. Neagle Bros. the ii neksmlths Chicken Feed Horse Food Kow Kure and Sich C F COLESWORTHY 127 and 139 East Alta. Wood and Coal to Burn and that will burn; try a phone order and be con vinced that I handle the good kind only. Dutch Henry Office, Pendleton lee & Cokl Storage Company. 'Phone :.ala ITS. Also at Henneman's cigar stoi-j, op posite Great Eastern store. 'Phon main 4. i