PAGE FOCB. DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1908. RIGHT PAGES. .felted OOCXTY OFFICIAL PAPER. AN IXnKI'ENnKVP NBW8PAP8R. Pebilekd lxilly, Weekly and Hem Weekly, at lYnniptnn, Oregon, or In EAST ORKUOXIAN' l'UIiLlSHINO CO. RrnsmirTidk rates : Pellr. oee year, by Oaitl 1500 Daily, all months, by mall 2.S0 Dally, three month, by mall.. 1.29 Pally, one month, by mall SO PaHy, one year, by carrier T.BO iany. nix months, by carrier 3.7B Pally, three months, by carrier IPS Pally, oae month, by carrier 05 wialv. rae year, by mall t M Weekly, six months, by mall........ ,T Weekly, four months, by mall BO Bml Weetly, one year, by mall 150 Semi-Weekly, six months, by mail... .75 Bexat Weekly four month, by mall.. .60 The Dally East Oreironlan Is kept on sale at the oreeoo News Co., 147 6th street, Portia. Oregon. CoJrao llurean, 1)03 Security building. Wasklaffton, O. C, Bureau, 601 Four teenth street. N. W. Meater United frees Association. TetapMae Main 1 Btarcd at the postofflcc at Pendleton, Ontm. aa second clans mall matter. As one -ho when a new-found landscape flings It's wealth of promise open to the eyes, Pauses with one glad Impulse of surprise, And listens to the song of Joy that rings Through all the country, while In his own. heart bings gladness with it then 'neath stranger skies " Fares onward where the untried future Ilea. Careless of what the long, long Journey brings: So I with you beside mo stretch my arms In dauntless courage toward the life to be. Gqne are the Idle fears! the vague alarms That marked the path behind me; in your hand I place my own and open eyed and free. I Journey with you toward the promised land. Mary Page Greenleaf. in Sunset. THE FTRE DRILL. Every public school in the country should practice regularly the fire drill. While it is too late to get Beared after a horror comes, a;;J may seem fickle to take up a serious mat ter of this kind simply because an ac cldent has happened, yet the Cleve land horror In which 175 school child ren were burned to death, should stimulate every school district in the country to take precaution. It requires but a few moments, to practice the fire drill and It should te done daily. The state should en force the rule rigidly for while educat ing children the state Is under obliga tion to give them .adequate protec tion. Not a week should pass in the pub lic schools without a fire drill. The teachers and children should be thor oughly familiar with it and superin tendents and boards should see that this Is not overlooked. The life of one little scholar is worth ten thousand times more than all the time that may be thus consumed in a century. IT'S TIME TO FIGHT ANARCHY. The two recent anarchistic outrages, the murder of the Denver priest and the attempt on the life of Chicago's clef of police, and the recurrence of bomb explosions In eastern cltiej, have finally roused the people of this country to the extreme danger and menace that the spread of anarchy has brought, says the Spokane Chron icle. All have heard of anarchy, and rea lized that anarchists are "undesirable citizens," but nearly all have been Indifferent, not realizing that their laws, lives and Institutions are already seriously menaced. Now, however, the people are be ing awakened, and efficient action ehould follow. The police, the cnun try over, will now war on alJ anar chists. Added to that the Catholic church will exert Its tremendous in fluence against the spread of the doc trine of anarchy. The danger in which religion stands was exemplified by the Denver murder, and the un reasoning hate of anarchists for the officers of the law was clearly shown Monday In Chicago. Sneaking murderers who wprk In the d nk. who hoot, kill and wreck without warning, without even the excuse of personal enmity for their victims, have no place in thjs coun try, or anywhere In the world. the 600,000,000 cells In your brain Or are most of them plugged up with stupid laziness r Each one of these cells represents a unit of work. Just as each cell In the hjney-comb means a certain amount of labor for the bee The bee-hive cells are filled with honey and the cells of your brain are filled with protoplasm. This protoplasm may be dead, use less stuff, or It may be the active, wide-awake kind. Is the protoplasm In your brain dead or atlve? If most of It Is dead, then wake It up. Stlmu late It with some good old Jfashloned hard-headed thinking. Don't be afraid to think hard. If you are not required to think constantly In your present position, get a Job where you will have to use all your brains. The average weight for the human brain Is S00 grams. The monkey's brain weighs 150 grams. If you are using only half your brains, then you are no better off than the monkey, and who wants to be a monkey? When you accept a position with a concern you are selling your brains all of them. Be fatr In the matter. Be fair with your employer and be fair with yourself. Give him all you have. Let the convolutions In your grav matter grow deeper. Get the benefit of every one of the 600,000,000 Don't be a monkey, but use all your brains. ARE YOV I SING YOUR DRAIN? Herbert J. Hapgood In a serins of short sermons for busy people, makes use of some convincing facts and clinches some points with fine mental skill. One of his sermons Is as fol lows: Are you making use of every one of A SCHOOL BLUNDER. The Oregonlan of March 4 In dis cussing" the relative merits and de merits of the University of Oregon and the Oregon 'Agricultural college, brings out some pertinent facts which are worthy of consideration and thought While there cannot be too much education nor too many good educa tlonal Institutions, yet the questions suggested by the Oregonian are time ly and highly essential to a thorough understanding of Oregon's higher ed ucational standards. The editorial Is as follows: It cannot be denied that C. S. Hu ll of1 Newberg, lays his finger 'on a real weakness in our educational sys tem when he speaks of the duplica tion of courses at Eugene and Cor vallls. It is, beyond all question, an educa tional calamity that the university and the agricultural college are not united In one Institution Instead of being established in different cities and existing more or less In the capac ity of rivals both covering to a cer tain extent the same ground. It is also regrettable that this weakness -Is beyond remedy. The problem of uniting the two Institutions Is now hopelessly insoluble, and the some can be said of the duplication of courses. Eugene ougnc not to orop the technical and general scientific courses, for without them her literary work would become sterile. We live in a scientific age and the college which fails to teach the sciences dooms Itself to intellectual impotence. On the other hand. Corvall'is must continue to offer instruction In tne more essential literary branches, dince It would be wrong to deprive the stu dents of a well-rounded education. They wish to pursue technical courses, but they do not wish to become nar row In mind and spirit. The fact Is that the colleges at Eugene and Cor- vallia are compelled by the very n.ture of a college to duplicate each other's work. This is one of the penalties which the people of Oregon must pay for permitting their educational Inter ests to be managed b politicians in the past instead of by experts who had the general welfare at heart; and it would be a sorry remedy for the nconvenience to blight the future of the university by cutting off Its resour ces. While we nave a university us support it with becoming liberality. If we desire to Join the group of semi-barbarous states which do not maintain universities, that Is another matter. The genuine remedy for the dupli cation of courses at Eugene and Cor vallis Is, of course, to repair the orig inal blunder which separated the ln-( fctitutlons. This looks harsh and radi cal, but In the long run It would save expense to the state while It would enable the people to concentrate their support upon one strong and progres sive college Instead of two struggling ones mutually Jealous of each other's prosperity. We do not believe the farmers as' a class will vote against the appropriation for the State Uni versity. They will sustain the, Insti tution, though with a, pretty general feeling that something Is wrong with the system that compels them to pay taxes for two collpgs where one would do better work. ber, II vessels, with half a dozen others fully due. The January fleet carried Oregon staples of a value of approximately $3,000,000. The value of the February cargoes was about $2,400,000, and March figures will be about the same as those for February. Exclusive of the coastwise business, Portland exporters have cleared an average of $100,000 worth of the three staples mentioned, every business day since November 1. These figures ac count in no small degree for the elim ination of the financial stringency, so far as Portland and Oregon are con cerned. After Bishop Paddock comes to Pendleton and looks over this rich and prosperous district, views the promise of this country, recognizes the accessibility of Pendleton from all parts of his Immense .diocese, and meets the splendid citizenship of this city and county, there will be no doubt about the location of his home. This city Is the geographical center of his diocese. It Is most accessible from all parts of eastern Oregon, has unequalled train and mall service and the eastern Oregon diocese is di rectly tributary to this city. Portland dispatched 22 cargoes of wheat, flour and lumber to China, Ja pan, Europe, Australia and South America during the short month of February, says the Oregonlan. There are now In port under charter to load outward with wheat, flour and lum- ABRAIIAM LINCOLN. The colof of the ground was In him the red earth. rhe tang and odor of the primal things The rectitude and patience of the rocks; . The gladness of the wind that shakes the corn; The Justice of the rain that loves all leaves; The pity of the snow that hides all scars; The loving kindness of the wayside well; The tolerance and equity of light That gives as freely to the shrinking weed As to the great oak. flaring- to the wind To the grove's low hill as to the mat terhorn That shoulders out the sky. And so he came From prairie cabin up to Capital, One fair ideal led our chieftain on. For evermore he burned to do his deed With the fine stroke and gesture of a king. He built TTe rail pile as he built the state. Pouring his splendid strength through every blow, The conscience of him testing every stroke. To make his deed the measure of a man. So came the captain with the mighty heart; And when the step of earthquake shook the house, Wrenching the rafters from their an cient hold. He held the ridge pole up and spiked again The rafters of the home. He held his place Held the long, purpose like a growing tree Held on through blame and faltered not at praise. And when he fell in whirlwind, he went down As when a kingly cedar, green with boughs. Gos down with a great shout upon the hills. Edwin Markham. WASHINGTON'S PISCOVERY. "There Is a great temptation, when a man get on bis feet to speak to a crowd, to state a thing a little strong er than it is," said Booker T. Wash ington recently. "It seems to me It's harder to tell the truth to a number of people than to one man." Mr. Washington Is right when one has a large and attentively sympathet ic audience, he Is liable to stretch the truth Just'a little for the effect of feeling that he Is able to sway peo ple. Maybe that is the reason that so many of the promises heard Just be fore election are often unkept. Spo kane Chronicle. ROVER'S SONG. I shall leave them all behind me, all the tinsel and the glare. And the songs that lured and led me to the paths J dreamed so fair: I shall bid goodby to pathways that were tempting to my feet, And give welcome to the meadows and the clover blossoms sweet. I shall hear the woodthrush calling, and at morn the Joyful note Of the lark shall drink for mirth that comes from every feathered throat. I shall go the road I wandered when I dreamed In twilight gloam, And I wonder If they'll know me when they see me coming home? I am going, staff and bundle, to the winding, backward track I shall wend again the road beyond the town that leads me back To the fields of blossomed sweetness where the flags of purple hue, And the willows, graceful, bending, in the quiet bayou grew. There shall be no songs to call me, songs that once were lilting sweet, When I -saw my last goodby and homeward turn my weary feet. No sea, no sky shall lure me, there shall be no thirst to roam And I wonder If they'll know me when they see me coming home? Will F. Griffin. TO GROW SPINELESS CACTUS. Every farmer In the arid districts of southern Idaho will watch with much Interest the experiment shortly to be made by Dr. C. A. Hoover, su- Absolutely From GPi. jffl the most healthful ffl of fruits pomes the ysy VXf The only baking powder & ' Y'fSssssssg? made from Royal J& j$m of Tartar "j X hIx G)tiannJeiiKirelKndbjoraIum ' fil lYlr rVflV v p'm"p'uU P00. tl 1 1 tHkUil HtVTjf Royal jrou are tureoF pure, healthful food. perlntendent in charge of the state asylum for the Insane, who has pur chased enough cuttings of the much- advertised spineless cactus to plant 10 acres of sand hills on the asylum farm. If this wonderful plant, which has been given to the world by Wizard Burbank, does half It Is claimed to do It will solve suddenly the problem of dry land farming. There are hun dreds of thousands of acres of arid land In Idaho so located as to be im possible of Irrigation. This land Is largely used now as a range. If it can be converted into fields of the Burbank cactus It will be able to support a hundred times more sheep and cattle than It does now. There fore, the experiment to be. made by Dr. Hoover at the asylum .farm will be of utmost Interest to the state. Pocatello Tribune. THE II ALL OF FAME. Representative Kahn, of California, Bartholdt, of Missouri, and Kuster- mann, of Wisconsin, were born In Germany. John S. Mosgy, the famous Confed erate guerrilla captain, Ig in the cm- ploy of the department of Justice In Washington. Benjamin Ide Wheeler, president of the University of California, Is one of President Roosevelt's close friends and advisers. Senator William Alden Smith, of Michigan, owns a newspaper In-Grand Rapids. It Is the same on he sold on the streets when he was a boy. William T. Vernon, register of the treasury, whose name appears on all United States paper money. Is a negro, and so were his predecessors for many years. Judge Richard A. Balllnger, of Se attle, who resigned rf commissioner of the general land office at Wash ington, after a year of hard work, was hailed as a recruit to the Tennis Cabinet, but he never qualified. He couldn't learn the game. Saturday Evening Post. "PANTS" AND "TROUSERS." Everybody talks well when he talks In the way he likes, the way he can't help .the way he never thinks of; the rest Is effort and pretense. The man who says "trousers" because ho likes to say It and the man who says "pants" because he likes to say it are both good fellows with whom a frank soul could fraternize, but the man who says "trousers" when he wants to say "pants" is a craven and a truckler, equally hateful to honest cul ture and wholesome Ignorance. At lantlo Monthly. Rexall Cold Breaker and GrippevCure Do it in fourhourt Guaranteed by The Pendleton Drug Co. REXALL STORE "J7, :;""' ' " -. lT' ' " ' "" -mi'' ,ti"m2W' Andrew Carnegie has sent a gift of gratitude to Mrs. Henry Sanger Snow, whose husband deserted her, taking her fortune. Her father as sisted Carnegie many years ago. The gift was a check for $26,009. No matter how honest and careful your grocer may be, he cannot guarantee the quality of his Coffee; the manufacturer must do that. AJ0LGERi3 mm Folger's Golden Gate is of uniform strength and quality always satisfactory. Aroma-tigh tins-Never in bulk. Grind it at home Not.too fine. J. A. Folrfr (IX Co., Saiaa Francisco ST. JOSEPH'S ACADEMY PENDLETON, OREGON Under the direction of the sister of Bt Francis, of Philadelphia. Resident and day poplls. Special attention given to music and elocution. Stu dents prepared for teachers' exami nations for county and state certifi cates. Tor particulars address SISTER SUPERIOR. Dr.. LOTS 'te'- Are Your Valuable Papers Secure? If not their Loss may Prove very, Embarrassing Sometime. The Pendleton Savings Bank Offers absolute Protection in its Safe Deposit VaultS Reinforced Concrete Walls, Steel Lined. Triple Time Locks. Boxes for Rent at a Nominal Cost. Accessible During Business Hours. You Can't Afford to be without one. Capital and Surplus $250,000.00 - Four per cent interest on Savings Accounts. Montie B. Gwinn E. L. Smith Directors: W. J. Furnish J. W. Maleney R. Alexander T, S. Morris R. T. Cox INSURANCE Livermore & Bickers Room 12, Judd BIdg. Pendleton Oregon Large Qpantity of the Famous- Rock Spring Now on Hand The coal that produces heat and not dirt. Also fine lot of good dry wood. Dutch Henry Offlrp. Poiiillfloii Ice t'(,hl Blornr CnniHiii.v. 'Phone Mnin UK. Byers' Best Flour la mads from the choicest wheat that trows. Oood bread Is assur ed when BYER8 BEST FLOUR Is used. Bran, Shorts, Steam Railed Barley alwajre on sand. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS W. 8. BTER8, Proprietor, Columbia Bar and Rooming House F. X. Schempp Estate Fine Wines, Liquors, and Cigars. Newly furnished and up-to-date. Rooming House in Connection. 826 MAIN STREET. ss.sssss.s Our Specialty is the Family Trade We are fully prepared to fur nish you the best of lard, sau sages and fresh, smoked or cured meats and fish each day. I Central Meat Market t Carney Tweedy. Telephone Main 33. All the newt all the time In ths East Oregonlan.