East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, September 21, 1907, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR.
I l.LX EAST OKEUONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1B0T.
FOURTEEN PAGES.
County Official Paper.
AN IXPEPKNimNT NEWSPAPER. .
ISibllslied lially. Weekly and Semi Weekl.
I IVndleloD. oivgou. 6y th
EAST UMKUONUN I'LHUSHINO CO.
SL'IlPCnirTION RATES.
rxllT. one year, by mail 5.00
Datlly. ill months, by mall 2. VI
fcallr. three montlis. by mail 1-20
Dally, one month, by mall 10
-iy. one year, by mall 1.00
weec.lv. all montha. by mall 75
Vcekfv. four mouths, by mnll SO
Heaal-eWlv. one year, by mall 1.50
eaol-Weekly, all months, by Wll.... .75
Bral-Weekly, four months, by mall... .50
Chicago nurean, 909 Security building.
Washlncun. D. C, Bureau, 601 Four
teenth street. X. W.
Member Scrlppa New Association.
Telephone Mala 1.
Catered at Pendleton Postofflc as second
class matter.
A crv of Comrades, scattered
and afar:
Ba constellated, star by circl-
lng star;
Give to all mortals Justice, and
forgive;
License must die that Liberty
may live:
Let Love shine through the fa-
brie of .the State
Love deathless. . Love whose
other name Is Fate.
Fear not; we shall not fall;
The Vision will prevail!
Truth is the oath of God and
sure and fast,
Through Death and Hell holds
onward to the last!
Edward Markham.
and In attending a state fair in west
ern Oregon, all unite in forming a
sclld and substantial basis for an
eastern Oregon state fair, near the
center of eastern Oregon activities,
situated at a place easily accessible
to all of eastern Oregon, and conven
ient for visitors and exhibitors.
Pendleton offers Just such a loca
tion. It is the hub of the great
wheel of eastern Oregon. Its railroad
facilities reach out in every direction.
It is the trading center and lnAustrlal
and commercial center of this vast
district and Is the logical place for
what is certain to come some day
The Eastern Oregon State Fair.
The foundation for such a fair has
been laid, deep and strong. In the un
qualified success of the Umatilla
Morrow county district fair.
THE WAV TO SHADOWTOWN.
ANOTHER TAX DODGER.
Because the Pacific States Tele
phone & Telegraph company would
escape payment of taxes, it seeks the
overthrow of the Initiative and refer'
endum amendment to the state con
stltutlon. If the company's contention
is upheld, both the direct primary law
and the local option law will be up
set, while nearly every public service
corporation In the state would escape
paying tithes.
a. ...... . .. .i ,. i. .. ....i.! v.. ..
. a..u ,., .... v,..K..l ...... r. V t. T-
This Is the ferry for Shadowtown. "un r.. w-r
It sails away at the end of the day Z"0 1 m
Just as the darkness closes round. yTg SAPPING 1YIY LIFE.
Rest, little hand, on my shoulder
so;
A sleeping kiss W the only fare.
Drifting away from the world we
go
Baby at, J I in the rocking chair.
Set' where the firelogs glow and
spark,
Glitter the lights of Shadowland.
The raining drops on the window
hard,
Are tipples lapping upon Its strand.
There where a mirror is glancing
dim,
A lake lies shimmering, cool and
still;
Blossoms are wavering o'er Its
brim
Those over there on the window
sill.
Rock slow, more Blow, In the dusky
light.
Silently lower the anchor down.
Dear little passenger say "Good
night."
We've reached the harbor of Sha
dowtown.
Eugene Field.
A PELVIC DISEASE WALLA VALLA'S 5th
Annual Fair
Hotel St. George
GEORGE DARVEAU, Proprietor.
'v i
MH8.OPHICL0WEUrt- 7, 'V
AND
Race
$40.
Meet
sxos
lit.
IN PURSES AND PREMIUMS.
One Wot'k of Solid Racing. Racing
program Includes two harness events
and six running races dally. Walla
Walla is assured the finest aggrega
tion of race horses In the west for this
year's fair and race meet.
Horse and Stock Show. Thousands of
dollars in premium offered for prize
winning horses and cattle this year.
Big livestock exhibit digger and bet
ter than ever.
1V-. Ilnn-l-i In ArtmlflllfV.-MllRlri for
the big fair this year will be furnished
!by the famous 14th Cavalry Band and
. the Walla Walla Band. Concerts ev
ery afternoon and evenlngln the ex
hibition pavilion.
Relay Knee. $1000 purse for the win
ner o fthe relay race. Entries for the
MRS. SOPHIA CALDWELL, 1121 b)(? re,ay rnce are commg ln fast and
MoGavock 8t.( Nashville, Tenn., over a doien rtders will contest for the
writes :
"After doctoring for a year and find-
THE TRYST.
I In 7 no relief from leucorrhea resulting event.
duu H uruugin ujr mo Life has been sweet togetner, nere, from prolapsus uteri, and whicn was
tlOOO prize. Two miles dally during
the fair. Don't miss this exciting
CNITY OF RELIGIOUS FAITH.
Xn Portland are more than a dozen
Immense church edifices, valued at
perhaps 1, 000,00.. These buildings
have been erected and the churches
rganized at great cost of money,
strength and energy. They stand as
monuments to the tireless labors of
denominational sentiment. They are
landmarks signifying the dividing
lines mining through the religious
faith of the world.
Think what splendid results might
have been achieved, had all this divid
ed, energy been employed ln building
D, in unity of faith, one great relig
ious organization; one great church
r the living God!
Here is what the book of books Bays
et the unity of religious faith: '
"I, therefore, a prisoner of the Lord,
beseech ye that ye walk worthy of
tbe vocation wherewith ye are called.
With all lowliness and meekness,
with long suffering, forbearing one
with another ln love.
Endeavoring to keep the unity of
the spirit in the bond of peace.
THERE IS ONE BODT, AND ONE
SPIRIT; even as ye are called ln one
hope of your calling!
ONE LORD, ONE FAITH, ONE
BAPTISM.
ONE GOD WHO IS FATHER OF
XLL, WHO IS ABOVE ALL, AND
THROUGH TOU ALL, AND IN YOU
time ago against the telephone com'
pany to enforce the payment of the 2
per cent tax. The amount sued for la
$9500.
The Initiative and referendum, and
all laws Initiated under It are allege
ed by the telephone company to be
unconstitutional, violating the federal
constitution.
This is the same corporation whose
vice president and general manager,
Louis Glass, has recently been con
victed of bribery in San Francisco ln
an attempt to shut out a rival
Whenever the taxation of a big cor
poratlon Is at stake, the latter has no
scruple about buying legislatures, but
when It Is up to the people, as In Ore
gon, and they can't be bought, the
courts are uniformly resorted to to
overthrow laws forcing the corpora
tion to pay the state tolls as the
small taxpayer Is compelled to.
dear heart .
SIX DAYS
'Twere
sarjDinn mv life forces away. I finally
i sad If we should Journey on, I iei Peruna, and when I found that It Qcm A 15, 16, 17 18s 19
apart! was helping: me every day. It seemed . . .
So, If I go and leave you. I will wait, ,imo,t too good to bo true. Walla Walla County Fair As n
A loneiy spirit, jusi ouisiue me uate; "But, it not only helped me, II cured
Aye, whatso-er the outer darkness be me and In a very thort time. I A. C. VAN DE WATER, gec'y,
I'll stay through Its appalling gloom "I am now enjoying the bestof heaitn. ' Reduced rates on all railroads..
for thee! "I am strong and free from pain, ana
And If you go fi-om Earth, O promise, I certainly feel that all praise and honor M(4,4(A.A,ttA,A,A,A,A,At
aear, are aue w r.ru,- -
That Just beyond the portal you'll be I Thousands of women will read the
near, testimonial of Mrs." Caldwoll as above
Patient and beautiful as In the olden given. I
days I Thousands of them will be Induced to
You stood beside me through, the I trT the remedy that saved her. 1
Blame or praise i Thousands of them will have the
Waiting to clasp my hand and Jo'ir- I Bame experience she had. ,
ney on Peruna is the remedy such women
need. Pernna comes like a boon to suf-
fering womankind. I
Mrs. John Hopp, Webster Ave., Glen-, ;
dale, L. I., N. has also been relieved .
- - -.. h Puritn 1 .
PROMPT SERVICE
QUICK DELIVERY
Choice Fresh Meats, Lard, Sausages
and Smoked Meats everyday at the
REACHING TOWARD PENDLETON
In the face of this substantial creed
ml unity, think of the millions spent
sn divided energy, in pulling asunder,
ti building up rival enterprises. If all
the labors of all the denominations
were directed along one purely Chris
ttan line of activity and all the super
flous capital and energy were used In
nitlng Instead of estranging the hu
nan family, what a more magnificent
world It would be!
There Is but one Road, one Gate
way, one Goal.
The people of Grant county and
the Interior' of Oregon are reaching
toward this city, trying to complete
a telephone line from Dale to Uklah,
order to be in direct communica
tion with Pendleton.
An agent of the people of that sec
tion Is now in Pendleton making an
effort to raise funds; by public sub
scription, for the completion of the
line and Pendleton should see that he
does not go home to his people,
empty-handed.
Those people have been isolated in
the far Interior for years. They have
developed a rich section of the state
ln the face of untold obstacles and
lack of ordinary conveniences and
they deserve help in their present ef
forts.
Especially Is Pendleton Interested in
completing this telephone line, since
these people are reaching toward this tracted attentlon of th presldent
city. To Place rencieion in uire.i oI the United States. A federal in
communlcation with that country vestigatlon was ordered and the re-
means much for the city and It means suit was a great change In methods In
mr,r er thn nennle in their isolat- the Packing houses, a thorough clean-
. Th r.r,mnitlnn of a ln UP and a betterment of the llv,
CU otvwtii"..i-. r I ln. anrl wnrlrlntT nnnHitlnna In lt
telephone line 10 mis city win packng.hUse district. Another re-
WOMEN WILL TRY AGAIN.
With a tireless and calm patience
which should win the most obdurate
oter, the women of Oregon are going
to try once more to secure the pass
age of the equal suffrage amendment
tc the constitution through the refer
ndum next year.
Last year the amendment was lost
by a vote of less than 7000, with ex
traordlnarlly heavy opposition direct
ed fiercely at It, from the liquor In
teresta. The liquor Interests have had
their wings clipped and their claws
trimmed since last year and there Is
little fear of them ever again exerciS'
leg any considerable power ln Ore'
(on.
If they continue to make an open
fight on the equal suffrage amend
ment, friends of the amendment will
imply vote prohibition on the state
in retaliation. That win be the out
come. Then Oregon will have equal
suffrage ami 'prohibition, and the re
formers will have triumphed beyond
their fondest hopes.
EASTERN OREGON STATE FAIR.
Would it be sacrilegious to suggest
that somr -lay, perhaps not far off,
there sh n-M be an Eastern Oregon
State Fall, '. I I ln permanent build
bigs, upon ground owned by the state,
at Pendleton?
The great section east of the Cas
cades la entitled to such. Its vast
diversity of products, Its isolation from
the Mute capital, the great distances
to be traversed ln taking premiums
We two. Into the Mystery, from Dawn
to dawn!
So; when we part we'll meet beyond
the Gate)
This be our tryst, dear heart: "I'll
. wait." "I'll wait."
Bert Huffman, In Woman's Tri
bune.
r; pelvic catarrh by Peruna.
Central Meat Co.
Carney, Ramsdell fie Co.
Telephone Main 33
SKETCH OF UPTON SINCLAIR.
Upton Sinclair, author of "The
Jungle" and other books, was born
in Baltimore, September 20, 1878.
He studied at the college of the city
of New York and Columbia Univer
sity, paying his way through college
by writing Jokes and stories. He
wrole a book of 80,000 words when
he was 17. In 1900 he gave up col
lege and went to Canada to write
"King Midas," his first successful
book. For four years he lived ln
shanties and tents, often subsisting
on fish and game. During the next
summer he wrote "Prince Hagen."
The publishers rejected It and during
that time he nearly starved ln New
York. Mr. Sinclair then became a
socialist and wrote "Mannassas," the
first of a civil war trlology, ln a
shanty that he built near Princeton.
N. J. His most striking work, "The
Jungle," was written in 1905 and de
scribed conditions of a horrible na
ture alleged to exist ln the great
packing houses of Chicago. The
charges which the author made
against the so-called beef trust at-
ALK with the thousands
who wear them and you
will quickly realize the
worth of
IfBITH'S
A.ONQUEROR
SHOESJotMEN
$350 $Z00 $502
BOND BROTHERS
SCHMIDT BLOCK
H& f.
v m 1
it
European plan. Everything first-
class. All modern conveniences. Steam
heat throughout Rooms an suite with
bath. Large, new sample room. Th
Hotel St George Ji pronounced on
of th moat up-to-date hotels of th
northwest Telephone and fir alarm
connections to office, and hot and
cold running water In al 1 rooms.
ROOMS: $1.00 end $1.5 0
Block and a Half From Depot
See th big electric sign.
The Hotel
Pendleton
W. A. BROWN, Proprietor.
, The Hotel Pendleton has been re
fitted and refurqlshed throughout
Telephone and fir alarm connec
tions with all roomj.
Headquarters for Traveling Men.
Commodious Sample Rooms.
Free 'Bus .
Special rates by the week or month.
Excellent Cuisine.
Prompt dining room service.
Bar and Billiard Room In Connection.
Only Three Blocks from Depets.
Pendleton the certain headquarters of
that section and Pendleton must help.
suit was the enactment by congress of
a rigid meat inspection law.
"PENDLETON DAY."
Monday will be "Pendleton day" at
the district fair.
This day, while It Is the opening
day, and many features of the fair
LACK OF BEER CAUSES STRIKE.
The five stove foundries ln Evans-
I vllle, Ind., are dealing with a strike
whose cause Is out of the orldlnary.
It has been the custom ln these foun
dries for the men to lay off 15jnln-
will necessarily be Incomplete, should utes In the morning and tho same
K-. event Pendleton can length of time In the afternoon to
v. ,. V... th record. arlnK eer-
mane iv ........ Tne owners , th0 f,ve foun(JrleJ
Let us wake It the banner day of have be;n glow t0 re3ognize that this
the fair. Let us fill the pavilion with was an unbusinesslike and costly pro-
DeoDle from the opening to the clos- ceedlng. At times the rudders have
lng of the gates. Let us make a rec
ord attendance on "Pendleton day.
There will be room for everybody
and everybody will be needed.
For a portion of the day, anyway,
let every home and every business be
closed and let us go to the fair. Let
the turnstiles at the entrance to the
pavilion tell a story on "Pendleton
day," which will always be a matter
of pride to Pendleton.
The fair Is held but once each year,
and surely It can claim undivided at
tention from this city while It is ln
progress. Enthusiasm Is contagious.
If Pendleton gets It, good and strong,
It will spread.
The fair pavilion will be ready to
night, and the exhibits are now pour
ing in from all sources. Within an
incredibly short time the repairs and
Improvements have been made and
the booths arranged. The workmen
and the fair commission have made
a new record ln this excellent pro
gress. The work Is stimulated by the
keen hope that at some future time,
a permanent, spacious and attractive
fair pavilion may be erected here for
the people of eastern Oregon, In
every hammer stroke of today we are
laying deep foundations for that fu
ture success.
taken too much beer, with the result
that casts have been spoiled, and
again the stopping has made an In
convenient Interruption of the work.
Notice that the beer drinking re
cesses were to be abolished sent 260
men out on a strike. The owners
have resolved to hold their cwn, and
the men have agreed to stand out
against this new ruin, so that a long
vacation Is likely. Of course the
strikers are bound to lo.e In an Issue
that ought to have been made long
ago.
RICHES ALL IN CITIES.
England prides herself on being
the wealthiest and most prosperous
country in the world, but her wealth
and prosperity belong to- the commer
cial classes and are very unevenly dis
tributed among the masses of her
ptople as may bo seen from the rap
Idly rising tide of socialism ln tbj
great centers of population, and the
constant demand for land reform
throughout the agricultural districts.
It is said that nearly every week ln
England there Is a book published
telling how to get the English peo
ple back to the land. Catholic
Sentinel.
The returns for tho first four
months of 1907 show a total Immi
gration Into Canada from all sources
of a little over 80,000, compared
with 66,369 for the first four months
of 1906.
I Known For Its Strength
The
First National
Bank
Pendleton, Oregon
Designated United States Depository;
Established 1882
Has operated under the National Bank
Act for more than a quarter of a century,
making five statements of condition each
year, besides undergoing semi-annual
examinations by Federal examiners. To
day its business is larger than ever in
its history. , .
It invites new business on the basis of
its strength and security. 'Courteous
treatment, progressive methods and a
careful consideration of. your require
ments are assured.
SECURITY
HOTEL PORTLAND
OF
PORTLAND, OREGON.
Amei.can plan, (3 per day and up
wards, .leadquarters for tourists and
commercial travelers. Special rates
made tn families and single gentle
men. The management will be pleas
ed, at all times to show rooms and
give .prices. A modern Turkish bath
establishment ln the hotel.
H. C. BOWERS. Manager.
, Get the Best ;
Good
Dry Wood
and the
v BEST KIND OF COAL.
PROMPT DELIVERY.
W. C. MINNIS
Leave orders at
HENNING'S CIGAR STORE
Opposite Peoples Warehoose
'PHONE MAIN
4)
FRESH
; Meat. - Fish - Sausages
; Lard t
; Delivered promptly each day, J
Empire Ileal Co.
Phone Main 18 $
) e
Stambery &
Milne Transfer
Co.
ALL KINDS OF HEAVY
DRAYINQ PROMPTLY DONE.
FURNITURE AND PIANO
MOVING A SPECIALTY.
HOTEL T1AGGAGE SPEED
ILY AND CAREFULLY HAN
DLED. PHONE MAIN 5.
RES. RED 273
OFFICE NEAR DEPOT.