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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1906)
rc,K porn. DAILY EAST OREC.OMAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATlllDAY, SElTEMBFIt 22. 1906. TEN PAGES. '".IStJHKNtKS'l XKWSI'AI'EIU .i ,hed tvrr afternoon (except Sod- Iti. at IVnrlletno, Orvifon, bj tta EAST uliKliOMAN I'l'BLISUt.SU CO. SI'IIM'KIITION KATES. Pall. on. year, bj mall full, all months, by mall l-alljr. ttare moniha. by mall rai:r. one roontli. by mall Weekly, one year, by mall Weekly. all mou. ... by mall Yeek!v. four roonilia. by mall Serol Vveeklr. one year, by mall Semi Weekly, all montha by mall.... eml Weekly, four mooitaa. by mall.. braver. blMing his mud hut, with al) the wide world filled with superb lm- agos niiilinsc about him, Inviting him to j change, to progress out of his mud hut Ftaee. The only test of manhood Is In the mental and spiritual activities of the ...n.. 1 a ohttta li I a i,l r Iha ,5.00 " " '"" " , 2 so I light of progress, darkens his life with ', 50' slothful Inactivity, ho Is only part of 1 Sjji a man. The best civil and military . SO warriors of the world have been those 1 Ml w;io tool clear. ,v mil ueifii mieui- 71 .50 Member 8crlpi McRae Xewa Aiaoclatloq Chicago l'.urean. foi Security building. Wnnhinfrtou. ! C. Uureau. 501 tour teentb sireeu S. v.. rieptoe "''a 1. Entered at Pendleton Prstofflc as second elasa iratier. .UNION fcTLABf-L wrought More things are prayer Than this world dreams of. Wherefore let thy voice Rise like a fountain for me night and day. For what are men better than sheep or goats. That nourish a blind life within the grain. If, knowing God. they lift not hands of prayer. Both for themselves and those who call them friend? For so the whole round earth Is every way Bound by gold chains about the feet of God. Tennyson. gently In lesponse to the thot. Virile activity, brain work, mind expansion spiritual growth, ability to see am hear the new things In the world all these make up the true benefactor of the race! The croaker sitting Btill !n the rut never lifted a stone from the pathway of mankind nor tore down a barrier for the angels of civilization to pass! ACTING AS EX ECITIONEU. PROGRESS AND CROAKERS. The Highest Voice In the World Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney and Bladder Trouble. int .New ioik tuiuiay v,orm gives tr-.A..... tmuhle iireva i.mn the mind. the following account of the woman discoura'gesuiidlossensatnbition; beauty, vigor and checrtul- whose volt'e reaches the highest pitch known to have been reached by nny person In toe world. The name of the young woman In Nina David and the World says of her: What are the utmost possibilities of the human voi scale? Is there any limit to them? That is u question which doctors of mu.ic asked each other 30 years ago when Pattl sang for them. It has never yet been fully answered. Today when progress hi voice culture has kept pace with all other achievements In art and science, there Is only due woman In the country Indeed In the world credited with the ability to sing th.u gorgeous G In nit., which Is ness soon lisuptir ' when the kidneys are out of order or dis eased. Kidney trouble lias become "so prevalent that it is not uncom mon for a child to lie boru afflicted with weak kidnevs. If the child urinates toooften, if the urine scalds the flesh, or if, when the child reaches an aire when it should be able to control the " ; 1 i.-.l . passage, u is yci aimuicu wmi ucu-wcl-ting, depend upon it, thecause of the diffi culty is kidnev trouble, and the first step should lie towards the treatment of these important orga ns. This u npleasant The croaker has been the millstone about the neck rt Progress from time Immemorial. If the patient jade Progrers, ever made a forward step or looked for n instant beyond its r.. the croaker was there with whining complaints and fait finding seeking to prevent any advance or change. The upward -nd forward progress of the world has been made In oppozi tion to the calloused and hardshellcd conservatives who have fought every Innovation. The conservative has al wavs be?n wiilin? to remain in the rut. He has evfr pleaded to be let alon that he m'ight sit still In slothfulness, The radical man has urged th world upward In spite of this dead load. He has suggested changes and with lightning like rapidity has ex ecuted them. In literature. In Inven tion, In development of new empires In the Improvement of social condi tions, the radical man. the man who Is hooted nt as a visionary, on experl- merter, has achieved the world's only genuine su-rcessec. M-m were endowed with minds in order that they might think. Change is the rc-zuit cf thot. Progress comes from brain activity. The radical man has uzed his mind. He has conceived bett?rments and Improvements, and as God Intended, he has adopted them has pushed the race forward, has lift ed up social conditions, given wings to Invention, made education easy and has hrot to the world Its most splendid development. And he has done all this in the face of the most stubborn and unthinking resistance from the man who Is satis fied with his condition. He has not only exerted his energy In devizing new and better systems of Industry, advanced systems of thot and expres sion, but he has had to fight against the oppozition of the blockader, the do-nothing conservative. The badger has burrowed In the ground since the dawn of creation. He is satisfied with his condition. The beaver his bllt houses of mud and twigs from time immemorial. Th!i Is good enuf for him. He has nol made a forward move since he was set upon the bank of the primeval river. The conservative who fights against all forms of progress would blld huts of mud forever, becauze his forefath ers learned that mode of architecture He says that Is good enuf. Ht re fuses to advance. He Is In a ruf His mind would soar, but his non-progressive nature binds It dow While all about him spread the spl-ndld vistas of the world, wide epen, Inviting, beckoning him to grow, pleading with him to expand, urging him to develop his powers, occupy his mind and Increase his usefulness! JJut he Is a blind badger still bur rowing in the earth becauze his fore fathers burrowed. He Is a flat-headed Tne East Oregcnlan. In assuming the role of executioner of the English language In Pendleton, Is reminded of an old Chinese custom In regard to the method of Inflicting the death penalty upon criminals. In olden times In China. It is said that each executioner had a large box In which were kept about 20 sharp knives, on the handle of each being written the name of a member of the human body. On one handle for In stance, would be written the word "ear," on another, "right thumb." on another "left foot," and on another "upper Hp." and so on until all the members of the body were enumer ated. Tbe executioner would reach Into the box blindfolded, and select a knife at a time. If he selected the knife bearing the word "ear." off came Mr. Chinaman's ear. If he drew the "foo'." or "hand" knife, or the "head" knife, he uzed I, upon that member and so on down the exquisite syster of torture until the victim died, eith from loss of N.iul or the shock. The Kast Oregon'an is not going to reach Into the box blindfolded to se lect a series of knives for the English alfahet. P'lt it has carefully selected knives which will deal the death stroke to the "ph's" which mar the English language. Hereafter it will spell tele frne. telegraf, emfatic, alfabet, sulfur fonografy, fonoi;raf. fonetlcs, fotog rafy, tyfoon, fvsician, fyslcs, emfasize' chirografy, filoofy and all other words having that senseless combina tion, "ph" In them. In u sensible man ner, with a letter "f" as they sound. This will be the chief point of as sault, hut uther letters will be attackt on the skirmish lines, also. recognized hs being so far above the trouble is due to a diseased condition of capacity of the ordinary prima donna the kidnevs and bladder ami not to a that Is Is never found In a mo, lorn habit as most txjouie suppose, score. Women as well as men are mane miser The name of this gifted young wo- able with kidney and bladder trouble, ,, i vi., n..i.i ami liotli need tne same creai remeuy. The mild ana the liiimetiiaie eneci oi S wamo-Root is soon realized. It is sold a Uv ,1rnmists. in fiftv. fT'KT smaw nssemoiage oi muzicians mat a cent oml one-dollar it-iiiiu.uc ..urn., iiiuviui r u iuii susuuii- s,7e bottles. You may ed note two tones higher than had iiave a sample bottle been reached by any singer In the hv mail free, also a Horn of Swamp-RoM. history of muzlc, the savants compos- pamphlet telling all about Swamp-Root, ing her audience could hardly believe including many of the thousands of testi- their ears. They made her sing the monial letters received trom Batterers When Adel'na Pattl first showed ROAST FOR AMERICANS. William T. Stead, the great English Journalist says that the average Amer. lean newspapers are becoming mora and more sordid, more and more the tools and slaves of private Interests and less and less expressive of the great throbbing principles of Amerl can'sm. He says most of them dare not open their editorial mouths on subjects of common Interest and decency forj fear of being struck In the bizness pocket by some Injured interest or element. Most of the editorials, he says, are written In the blzness office. Most of the editorial sentiment reflects the cowardice of the modern blzness meth od which compromizes with vice, truckles to money and makes the cash account the god of the whiffe concern. He says the majority of the seem ingly lespectable papers are things without mind, conscience or back bone. It Is time American editors realized this tendency. It is time that money and blzness were made to keep their place and time to Inject some Inde pendent, fearless thinking Into edi torial expressions. great note again and again, while thev listened with critical senses that wore certainly Incredulous, If not cyn ical. Y's. there It was G In alt. Even Pattl could not reach that note now and hold It In Its purity. He. tween the time when Pnttl's voice be gan to fall and now, there has never been a woman who could sing that high t. ' ov. by nil accounts, we have such a ringer. That Mine. Nina David, who has been hailed by the whole muzlcal world as a ohenumenon. actually sings and sustains that magnificent note there seems to be no question. It is authenticated by a number of eminent mu-.icia'is, vho fouid hardly place themsplves on rerord unless they were sure of tluir position. It is true that the possession of one tivnioi-dously hifjh note does' not guarf.nt ' a great voice throughout. As to Xina David, it is declared that her tonos throughout the whole scale, from O below the staff to the C, on the tourth leirer line above, are rich, full, vo'vetv and irresistibly sympa thetic. If she Is all that is claimed for her In cities where she has been heard, she is liulublta-liy a wonder. Ker portrait shows that she has- been b!esed with more than the ordi nary share of personal attractiveness. She has a blight. Intelligent face with irtistio intelligence shining from her large, luminous eyes. Personally she Is a very charming young woman, cultured and modest. Until Robert (irau. the Impresario, prevailed on her to make a tour throughout the I'nlted States, she had never ung In public, except for a short ime In Europe In grand opera. and o:i the conceit platform. Her great part in opera hns always been Astnfinmente, In Mozart's "II Flauto Magico." When Mme. David sings at Carne gie hall she will have the assistance of Damrosch's New York Symphony orchestra and several soloists, ns fol lows: Antoinette Ravelll. contralto; Georee W. Ji-nklns, tenor; Anton Heg.ier, cellist, and Maurice Kaut- mann, vlolinlft. cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Ilinghamton, N. Y., be sure and mention this paper. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer s bwamp-Koot, and the ad dress, lhiighainton, N. Y ., ou every bottle. The First National Bank Pendleton, Oregon. Report of the Condition, September 4th. 1906. to tho Comptroller of the Currency. CONDENSED : RESOURCES Loans and Discounts - $1, Overdrafts - - - -U. S. Bonds (lace) Premium on U. S. Bonds -Other Bonds and Warrants Bank Building -CASH Cash on Hind 101.102.79 Due from Banks 37.S46.40 Redemption Fund .1.500.00 2J7.212.H.1 24.258.04 170,000 00 4.46H.75 1.1,959.84 10.000 00 142.149.19 TOTAL $ 1,592.048.65 LIABILITIES Capital Slock - - - $ 70.000.08 Surplus and Undivided Profits 2l5.207.85 Circulation - - - i - 70.000.00 Due Banks 5.556.54 U. S. Deposits loo.ooo.oo Indlv'di Dep ts 1.1.11.284 26 1,2.16,S40.R0 TOTAL $t.592.04fl.65 G. 1, G. M. Rice, Cashier of .the aboVe named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement .is true to the best oi my knowledge and Deiier. (Signed) Subscribed and sworn to before me this 6th day of September, 1906. (Signed) C. K. CRANSTON, Notary Public tor Oregon SEAL M. RICE, Cashier. A p!ltivc CATARRH i 1 We have in stock a large amount of S3 Rock Spring Coal ready for Prompt Delivery .1: ,..,. , 1 ih.-i.i. W.. uri s 1 ::;rr'i ;.i:'l drivi-P a Co! 1 in 1 Kfi.l qui.'!;! Tel (!i3 s cr I'V rar.il : MvHrothi':-,.-, V If you are wise you will get your winter supply now, while it is to be had later on you won't be able to get coal. OREGON LUMBER YARD 512 ALTA ST. PHONE, MAIN 8 1:v;HAY FEVER It !.. . r, ,t r, . Tri.il Siz ) 10 ct. bv rnniL 1 Sin-ot, Ktw Yorlfr i The Sunrise Store t JAr.WF.SE CfHIDS uamhoo rruxiTrnK. CHINA WARE AXD I'OTTKRV OltlKXTAIi WORKS OF ART . Harry Hiraiwa, Prop. ! 305 E. COURT ST. t HORSES Vy&FlTED Mr. m. Mcdonald Iiuvc r fur tlit- 1'. S. irnvorniiictit, will lie in l'l inllcbm Friday, September 28 TO SFCri!K 50 Head of Cavalry Horses While in ilu' citv .Mr. Mi-DimuM will do nil huvini; nt tho OREGON FEED YARD. A MU.K WITH ME. Some of the nonsensical form of spelling In ue In the United States to day will be so completely forgotten within a few years that the very let ters of which they are made up will be left out of typewriter keyboards. At Goodland. Kan., Backstop Mes sltt. of the Pueblo baseball team, ran after a foul ball off the bat He grabbed at the ball In the grass and was stung by a rattlesnake. Meraltt knew so little about rattlesnnkes that he flnlhat the game without paying attention to the sting. As a rezult the will lose his arm and possibly his life. ."-vr?! FALL WEDDING STATIONERY. of the very latest styles and correct form Is our specialty. The finest style of engraved marriage announce ment, wedding Invitations, cnurcn cards, at home and calling cards, dln ner and reception notices. Our faclll ties are of the very best, and opr Judg ment and taste In designing pronounc ed especially good. We also carry a full line of correct social correspon dence. FRAZ1ER Book and Stationery Co. Oh, who will walk a mile with me, Along life's merry way? A comrade blithe and full of glee. Who dareB to laugh out loud and free, And let hln frolic fancy play. Like a hnpvy child, through the flowers gay That fill the field and fringe the wny, Where he walks a mile with me. And who will walk a mile with me. Along life's we.ary way? A friend whose heart has eyes to see The stars shine out o'er the darkening lea, And the quiet rest at the end of the day A friend who knows and dares to say The brave sweet words that cheer the way Where he walks with me. With such a comrade, such a friend, I fain would walk till Journey's end. Through summer sunshine, winter rain, And then? Farewell, we shall meet again! Henry Van Dyke. IMMIGRANTS. Each ship doth bring them; see where lost they stand In huddled groups,, and stare from side to side. Upon the curious crowds whose looks deride Their peasant faces, garments strange that brand Them aliens; In their far-off native land Each had his place, though humble here the tide Sweeps h'm along, an animal dull eyed, Patient, submissive. What mysterl ous hand Has thus uprooted from their ancient place These myriad exiles, cast them on our shore, And what the purpose? Shall our country be The crucible of nations whence a race Shall Issue In dim ages to restore God's Image to mankind, and make men free? ' William Apenwall Bradley In The American Magazine for October, The r-opulatlon of the United States Is estimated to be 85.0f0,00!, and only 29.000.000 are connected with any I church Catholic or Protestant. ' ' in mm- Heaters STOVES Ranges The cold weather is coming and NOW is the time to prepare for it. Our stock of lending stoves is complete, large and well assorted and we can suit you in both quality and price. Coal Stoves : $4.00, 5.00, 10.00, 12.00, 14.00, 15.00 and up. Air Tight Wood Stoves : $5.50, 5.75, 6.00, 6.25, 6.50, 7.00 and up. We are Sole Agents for Acorn Stoves. Jlljj.,wP !'l Do not fail to see the Howard Heater for both Wood and Cool 211 Court s, W. J. Clarke Co. Pendleton Oregon