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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1906)
a... . u., L.m miMMii-r - -nr '" -..mik.iiiimiiniiiiiMiMiiii,.nyiiiiiiu . . . . . E1G11T PAGES. DAILY EAST OHEOOMAS. PENDLETCN, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1006. PAGE THREE. BABY S VOICE I the joy of the household, for without it no happiness can be complete. How sweet the picture of mother and bubo ! Angels smile at and commend the thoughts and aspirations of the mother bending over the cradle. The ordeal through which the expectant mother must pass, how ever, is so full of danger and Buffering that she looks forward to the hour when she shall feel the exquisite thrill of motherhood with indescribable dread and fear. Every woman should know that the danger, pain and horror of child birth can be entirely avoided by the use of Mother's Friend, a scientific liniment for external use only, which toughens and renders pliable all the parts, and assists nature in its sublime work. By its aid thousands of women have passed this great crisis in per fect safety and without pain. Sold at Jl.oo per bottle by druggists. Our book I priceless value to all women sent free. Address BHAOriCLD KEBULATOH OO., Atlmmtm, Bm OTH F i E IT S SENATOR CLARK OF 1 ROBINSON CRUSOE OF THE SENATE ( ItOSSF.I) WITIIOI T A I.IC'KNSK. Water Wheel a Grout Niiccpmh. We lenrn from a reliable Source that the water wheel that has been under construction for Home time on the Hnake river near Olds ferry, to Irrigate the Portor ranch of 6(10 acre, Ih now in running order und a complete huccchh. Thin wheel Ih now operating a pump that In delivering S00 Inches of water to a height of 4 0 feet and covers every font of the 600 acreH. This land before water was put on It was prurlleally worthless, and today It Is worth In the neighbor hood of 1 1 00 ,an uere. Hiyitlnglon Herald. Read the East Oregonlnn. John D. CrlmmlnH, contractor and realty owner of New Jersey, la the wealthiest Catholic In the United States, his property being estimated at $30,000,000. He was formerly park commissioner In New York. He In herited part of his wealth from his father, who wan so poor on landing here, that efforts were made to de port him to Ireland on his arrival in New York. The county court of Wallowa has authorized a county high school, which will be located at Enterprise, that town offering the best Induce ments: 1500 cash, and three acres of land. Catspaw Customers. fENNEMS FK-iimllt of Bos The story of the monkey who used the cat's paw to pull the chestnuts out of the fire, finds new illustrations daily. When a dealer sells a customer a sustitute for MliNNEN'S BO RATED TALCUM, he docs so because the substitute pays , hira a bigger profit He makes the i customer his catspaw to rake in a few extra dollars. It is not pleasant to be made a catspaw, especially when you pay for the oppor tunity of being injured. Is it not foolish to 6ay for the opportunity to use injuri ous imitations of MEN N EN'S BOR ATED TALCUM, the standard powder of the world? Think it over. Have you tried MENNEN'S VIOLET HCIB ATRn TAI.CUMTOILET POW DER ? Ladies partial to violet perfume will find Men nen's Violet Powder fragrant with the odor of fresh plucked Parma violets. For sale everywhere for 25 cents, or mailed postpaid on receipt of price, by GERHARD MENNEN CO.. Newark. N. J. Fac4lmilc of Box New Through Service ! Over the Northern Pacific-Burlington Railways, East To Omaha. Kansas City, St. Louis, St. Joseph and Lincoln. In addition to the present through Northern Paclflc-Burllngton transcontinental passenger servl.e. a second train has been audr.:, thus providing two daily train between Oregon, Washington and Idaho and the Missouri river cities and St. Louis. All trains carry through rullmnn MaMard nnd I ..... -f -I. . i car". cl.Ur care and dining cars. For full Information en 1 1 iir WALTER ADAMS Agent W. A C. n. fly. Pendleton Owami. S. B. CALDERHEAD W. & C. R. Rv. alia "Valla, Wn. A. D. CHARLTON A. O. P. A., N. P. Ry.' Tortland, Oregon. I'' iTL Mini Tr4 Y::y 1 4 LINES Traversing n States and Territories The Richest Under the Sun 1 Rock Island - Frisco Lines completely gridiron the great Middle West and Southwest- From the Rocky Mountains and the Rio Grande to the Great Lakes and the Mississippi Valley From Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico. If you are going: anywhere in this great land of activity, let me tell you about our service to it, and through it to the East. General Agent, Rock Islind-Pri.co Line, 140 Third St., PORTLAND. ORE. The following entertaining sketch of Senator W. A. Clark of Montana, Is from the last number of the Satur day Evening Post, and will be read with Interest by those who know something of this Robinson Crusoe of the United States senate. The Post says: William Andrews Clark, senator from Montana, has an Income of $36, 000 a day. That In a mere bagatelle of 13 millions a year, and then some. And he has less fun than any man on earth. Clark Is the richest man In the sen ate. Indeed, he is one of the richest men In the world. It is quite likely that he has more ready money than John D. Rockefeller cash on hand although he Is not so rich as Rocke feller by a great many millions. He built a railroad recently from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles and he paid for It In cash, mile by mile. Nobody else In this country or any other ever did a thing like that. He has announced that ho will not be a candidate for the senate. That 1b not surprising. With all his money he is a zero In the senate. He is out of place. Everybody looks on him as a man who came to Uic senate he- cause he Is rich which is more or less true; and he is given grinding Il lustrations of the fact, known to all those who know the senate, that the dollar gets nowhere In the upper house of congress unless It Is coupled with some legislative ability. There are rich men In the senate, plenty of them; but those senators who are senators because they are rich, and fur no other reason, are pathetic fig ures In the greatest deliberative body In the world. Notwithstanding the various gentlemen who are decrying the senate, there never was and never will be a success there not backed with brains. Ih a Good BusliieKS Man. Nor must it be thought that Clark has no brains. Far from It. He has as fine a commercial mind as ever discovered how to make two . di.zen dollars grow where one grew before. Still, the commercial mind and the legislative or legal mind have different convolutions and get at things in different ways. Clark knows all about how to develop a coppe mine. but . when It comes to a bit of constructive statesmanship a dozen men in the senate who are worrying along on their VjS.15 a week make him look like an abandoned claim. Clark Has lVv Friends. U would seem that a man who If worth a few hundred millions might ' afford a few friends. Clark, appar- j ently, hns none. He Irs as solitary as rmes 1'enK. Me is as lonesome a Rnblnson Cronoe. To be sure, he i surrounded by a lot of secretaries. i but they are secretaries und get no ! further. Beyond that, there Is noth I lng. Everybody Bays "Howdy-do?' i to Mm, but nobody says. "Clnrk. ol 2 I man, I'm glad to Fee you." I He tries to be congenial at that. T Occasionally he gives a dinner and In i vires as many as will come. They go and look him over and eat his food and drink his wine and come away. Nwbn-ly ptivs ihc slightest attention t him In the senate. He works bard too, intending committee meetings and keeping "up with his correspond I Mice. Once 'in a session he makes xpee. h, usually on some mining Vina tuple. "He reads from mannscrlpi ith snipzlng crescendo and dlmtnu mdo effei'a-., and his own papers in Putt-", and Salt Ijike tell of the gre;i r 'rr:v.io e'll'.trt uf the dltinculshe' . Kiatesnini.. and not another paper I " .Ude, wide world cavr'cf a !Mi mr it. , Tilt- lo lie a titMKl ScTiivwir. '"lark wanted t,t be n gv-.rt l-enato ' I1-' h-ii unihitl'Hi'. to serve bis cou:l ! i-n-: he tried falthf'illy. H . ivn .;n ,i. in the tirst pMre he wu flit eut f'" en:itrla rii'Or! , t'r nn, place lie c:iriv- In with ! Cie iiiiHcnp "f mere money. 'I'll senate has respect for money too miH'h. some people say but it iiulres the riKlit kind of a man to be j hitched t,i tlie muney. Clnrk Is iiroa in his way, nut lie Is not a senator, and he kimwt it now. He has fi.nr dissipations: ills wills 1 ! rs, his house In New York, his pic lures, unit wora. '1 wo or these are the direct outcome of bis money. H means of the third lie got the money, und he could have the whiskers If h didn't have a cent. Such is the prod Inglity of nature. He runs to hair, for that on hi; hi'iul is as bushy as that on bis chl and as exquisitely tended, lie Is 6 years old, but, so far as hah- an whiskers go, he looks like the grad uate In osteopathy Just out of school and figuring on a place to settle flown, He buys pictures because he has money. He buys good pictures be cause he can afford them. They are a fad with tiim. Ho talks about art as If he Invented perspective. He I wont to mourn because art Is bein commercialized, but when there Is anything choice to bo had, he prompt ly commercializes art to Buch an en tent that nobetfy else can get within hailing distance of what he wants. He will have a great collection of old an present-day masters when he gets his art gallery finished, and he will hve a lovely time looking at them all by himself. Fluent Home ill America. His house In New York Is his pas slon. He started out to have the fin est residence on the continent. He hns been building It for years and will be years more at It. The outside of It is covered with bronze Jlmcracks and with statues of various kinds, and on one corner there Is a tower that looks like a church steeple that has run against the demoralizing Influ oners of the world, the flesh and the dovll. Clark works all tho time. Night after night ho goes into the telegrni offices in Washington and writes mes sages for an hour at a time, sitting there, often, ns late as midnight. When he Is at his desk he Is laboring Incessantly over papers. A man came across on a private car from Butte with him once. Clark was working over papers. "Mr. Clark," said this man, "why do you work so hard? Why don't you have some fun?" "I can't let go," sighed Clark. "If I stopped now they would say I had broken down. I must keep on." He la close with his money. He Is never seen with anybody. He drives his employes to their utmost. Nerv ous,, wiry, he seems to be as active and Vigorous now as he was 20 years ago. Clark tries to be a good fellow. When he has a dinner party he sings to his guests. He has a shrill tenor voice that has been cultivated, and a stock of opera gestures. He gets up on a cnair ana sings -nome, weei Home." There Is to be said of him: he is a producer. He bought in and develop ed mines; he built railroads; he opened country. What he has he took out of the ground. That Is more than most men who have approxi mately as much money as he can say. And, with his Industry and his appli cation and his faculty for making money, he would have been rich even f he had not gone Into mining. i Only 82 Years Old. I am only 82 years old and don't expect even when I get to be real om to feel that way as long as I can get Electric Bitters." says Mrs. E. H. Branson, of Dublin, Ga. Surely there's nothing else keeps the old. as. young and makes tne wean as strong as this grand tonic medicine. Dyspep sia, torpid liver, Inflamed kidneys or chronic constipation are unknown af ter taking Electric Bitters a reasona ble time. Guaranteed by Tallman & Co., clr'Jggitts. Price 50c. Several Baker County Sheepmen fu ller Arrest. The Baker City Herald gives the following account of an attempt to enforce the law requiring of sheep men a license before they may legally remove sheep from one county to another: "I'm guilty." That was the plea of Miles Lee this morning before Justice Currey when the shf ep king was arraigned before the Judge on a charge of moving his sheep from Baker Into Union county without first securing the necessary license. Dave Lee pleaded not guilty and the Jacksf.p Brothers who were also ar rested upon the charge were unwil ling to admit It. Mile Lee, however, threw himself upon the mercy of the court. It was a formality he. had overlooked, and he pleaded that his intentions were good. He was not trying to deliberately break the Oregon laws regarding sheep. The fact is that Mr. Lee wants them enforced, according to the story the Parkers tell. According to Carl Par ked, It was the prominent rancher who urged him, when he took office, to go after the law-breakers and pun ish them one and all, because the Iawg enforced helped the sheepmen. Lee was the first man arrested after In spector Parker took charge here. Intention- Were lllght. The trials of Dave Lee and the Jaeksons came up this afternoon. The former claimed as defense that the sheep In question were owned not by him but by his brother Miles Lee. and the Jacobsons showed permits Issued by the authorities of the county Into which the sheep were moved, to in dicate their nuthorlty. The permits In question were Issued upon the theory that the Inspectors had Jurisdiction for 20 miles on either side of the line, according lo the statements made by Inspector Parker this morning, and Parker declares that this right, for merly theirs, was repealed In a later revision of the statutes. ARE tOV TAXING CHANCES with your life by rl." ng In a rickety carriage? Life la too sweet to risk losing It when for a reasonable sum you can have your carriage repaired at Neagle Bros'. Use the Wln-na Buggy and the WINONA only. It la so well bu' t that It's safer to ride than walk. See us about Gasoline Engines. We sell Winona Wagons, Hacks and Buggies. Easy running and made from bone-dry material. Guaran teed to give satisfaction In this cli mate. See us abo t Gasoline Engines. W ' are agents for the Fairbanks-Morse Gasoline Engines for Irrigating and mliing machinery. Estimates given on Irrigating plants. Call and get our prices. Neagle Bros. ' LACTfMI . ST.VI 'I KS roil STATE CAPITOL. Movement to Adorn State House With Historic Statuary. The Salem Journal says of a pro posed movement for beautifying the state capitol grounds: The political gosslpers who must have 8oiwfclng to talk about during the healed term. In the absence of vi tal political events, have stirred up a story that pressure will be brought to bear o-n nhe next legislature to have an appropriation made in the Interest of hith art. Te particular form this high art will take is to beautify the state house grwunds with some high class statuary of the men who did so much to make Oregon great In pioneer days. It Is argued that Orefon owes It to posterity to have In the public grounds statues of such men as Gen. Joe Lane, Senator Nesmith, Colonel E. D. Baker, Dr. McLoughlln, and oth ers. Almost every other state In the union has the grounds of Its capitol adorned with the statues of Its great men, and the friends of the movement say that this Is an auspicious time, as the people of the state were never more prosperous and free from debt. In times of profound peace states usually turn to arts, sciences and civic adornment. It Is argsed that the state could not spend a moderately large amount of money to better advan tage than in having some such statu ary made for the capitol grounds. The state of Otegnn has spent little or nothing for the X'frpet nation of its t-eat men on canvas, or In marble or bronze. The daubs, alleged to be oil paintings of governors, tbat line the walls of the senate chamber and hall of representatives, to the contrary notwithstanding. Friends of the movement express the hope that In the event the next legislature decides to do this. It will not attempt to pay political debts hv iv. aiding the contracts to "artists" who have rendered theiT party signal iervlee as ward heelers. Stimulation Without Irritation. That Is the watchword. That Is what Orlno Laxative Fruit Syrup does. Cleans and stimulates the bowels without Irritation In any form. During the summer kidney Irregu larities are often caused by excessive drinking or being overheated. At tend to the kidneys at once by using Foley's Kidney Cure. Koeppen Drug Store. Notice to Contractors. Sealed bids are Invited by the coun ty court of Umatilla county, Oregon, to be filed with the County Clerk of said county, on or before the 16th day of July, 1908, at 10 o'clock a. m for one hrldge to be constructed across the Umatilla river, one mile east of Pendleton, Oregon; said bridge to be constructed either of wood or steel, as the court may elect, and according to plans and specifications furnlslied bv the Ccunty Clerk upon application. The county court also Invite plans, specifications and bids, for a combina tion of wood and steel bridge. A cer tified check must accompany each bid for 5 per cent of bid, to be forfeited in case the successful bidder falls to enter Into bond within five days after having been awarded the contract. The county court reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Dated this 3d day of July. 1906. FRANK SALING. County Clnrk. 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 Ice A Cold Storage Company. "Phone l-ulu 178. Also at Henneman's cigar stoi .. op posite Great Eastern store. 'Phon-J main 4. The coal strike In the Dubois re gion. Pa., bas been settled, and in. 000 men went to work July 10. Horn'thlcf an Oregon Cotrvlct. William Thnmas, alies Thomas Young, an escaped convict from the Oregon penitentiary, and one of th? most desperite crooks In the north west, was sentenced by Judge Lynn at Vancouver yesterday, to serve a sentence of I t years in the Walla Walla penitentiary for the theft of a horse and buggy three weeks ago. Thomas entered a rlea of guilty to horsestaling, hoping to get a lighter sentence. THEY NEVER FAIL. That la What They Say About Them In Pendleton, and It Is, Therefore, Reliable. Another proof, more evidence, Pen dleton testimony to swell the long list of local people who Indorse the old Quaker remedy, Doan's Kidney Pills. Read this convincing Indorsement of that remarkable preparation: Mrs. N. Swaggart, of 819 Garden street, Pendleton, Ore., says: "Both my husband and myself have used Doan's Kidney Pills with most gratify ng results. Mr. Swaggart was troubl ed quite severely with his back and kidneys for a long time, and nothing ever helped him as Doan's Kidney Pills have. I have known of the healing and curative power of this remedy for some time, and found that a few doseB would quickly remove any lameness or pain In the back caused by kidney derangement. I am glad to help make Doan's Kidney Pills bet ter known to all afflicted with back ache or kidney trouble." For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Donn's and take no, other. All the news all the time in the East Orcgenlan. "IT SAVED MY LIFE" PRAISE FOR A FAMOUS MEDICINE Mrs, wniadsea Tells How She Tried Lytiia E. Plnkhan's Vegetable Compoind Just la Time. Mrs. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning1, Iowa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: Dear Mrs. Pinkham : " I can truly say that you have saved mr life, and I cannot express my gratitude to you in words. Pretty Paper PoorJy Hung You are particular about hav ing nli e wall . aper. But are you particular about it being well hung? The best wall paper. If poor ly put on the wall, wl'l never satisfy you. Come here and select a pat ter., and let us hang It fo you you will then km w you hare th best results obtainable. Pendleton Paint Store Ed. Murph" Prop. 121 Court f "Before I wrote to you, telling you how I felt. I had doctored for over two years steady and spent lot of money on medicines beside, but it all failed to help me. My monthly pe riods bad ceased and I suffered much pain. wild i&inung speiis, neaoacne, oacKacne and bearing-down pains, and I was so weak I could hardly keep around. Ai a last resort I decided to write you and try Lvdia E Pink- ham's Vegetable Coinnound. and I am aa thankful that I did, for after following your instructions, which you sent me free of all charge, I became regular and In perfect health. Had It not been for you I would be In my grave to-day. " I sincerely trust that this letter may lead every suffering woman in the country to write you for help as I did." When women are troubled with Ir regular or painful periods, weakness, displacementorulcerationof an organ, that bearing-down feeling, inflamma tion, backache, flatulence, general de bility, indigestion or nervous prostra tion, they should remember there is one trictl and true' remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. No other female medicine in the world has received such widespread and un qualified endorsement. Refuse all sub stitutes. For 25 years Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law of Lydia K. Pinkham. has under her diTeotion, and since her decease, been advising sick women free of charge. AddreesLynn, Mass, ALTA HOUSE The Working Man and Farmers Hotel Dining room and Free ' Employment bureau in connection $1.00 PER DAY Cor. Alta and Mill Sts. DR. GRAY'S English Kidney Tabules A Guaranteed Cure. For all diseases arising from dls r ders of KIDNEYS AND BLADDER. ,'eak or lame back, backache, '.aiding, scanty and highly colored urine, congestion of the kidneys, In flammation of the bladder and all troubles of the urinary system, "ft Seller Gray, London, E. C. The Pendleton Drug Co. Agent BOo per bDX. A Positive CURE EWs Cream Balm ;ATARRH i 1i quickly absorbed Oivei Reliei at Once 1 1 cleanses, soothes, heals and protects the dis eased membrane. It cures Catar.! and drives away a Cold In the head qulckU. Re stores the senses of taste and smell. Full size, SOc, at drugglBts or by mall. Trial stae 10c by mail. Ely Brothers. It Warren treet, New York. HAY FEVER