East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, May 22, 1908, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR.
DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1908.
EIGHT PACES.
COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER.
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER.
Pebllshed Dally. Weekly and Baml-Weakly,
at Pendleton. Oregon, by th
AST OREGOXIAN PUBLI8HINO CO.
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fart land. Oregon.
Cblrairo Bureau, 900 Security building.
Washington,, D. C, Bureau, SOI Four-
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Member United Press Association.
eiephoos tfala 1
Entered at the postofflcs at Pendleton,
Oregon, ss second-clsas mall matter.
I know a path that leads away
Far from the busy haunts of
men,
Where little children came to
play
And frolic In the shady glen.
Ah! long ago I sung with them
The songs thelr children sing
today.'
I know a brook that leaps along
The meadow and the pasture
land; In days ago Us merry song
Made music; and again I
stand
And listen to the meadow brook
Make music and my heart
grows strong.
I roam a vagrom as before
Beyond the valleys and the
hills;
While with the wanderers of
yore
My heart renews the golden
thrills;
I frolic in the shady glen
And am a boy with boys once
more.
Horace Seymour Keller.
of the state, but there has always been
a heavy stay-at-home vote hereto
fore. '
This year there should be no stay-at-home
vote. Vital issues are at
stake. Congressmen and a United
States senator are to be elected and
these officials are to take part in
making the national policies of the
government.
The republicans of Oregon can keep
the state In the republican rank by
getting out and casting their ballots.
They are In the majority and can send
a republican senator and congressmen
to Washington to work with the ma
jority for the benefit of the state.
They have a clean, honest, aggres
sive and fearless candidate for the
L'nlted States senate and also for con
gresa and can sound the republican
battle cry for the nation on the first
day of July by going to the polls and
voting their ticket.
Be a citizen. Don's stay at home.
exercise your rights. Keep alive your
prerogative. Make the vote In Uma
tilla county heavier than the registration.
SPOKANE VIEW OF SALOONS.
WHEN TO ENJOY.
A prosperous wheatgrower of the
county made the remark on the street
of Pendleton yesterday that if the
price of wheat went up a half cent
today he would go to Seattle to see
the Atlantic fleet. Otherwise he
could not afford it.
ThJs brings to mind the question of
enjoyment and pleasure and life and
labor and human destiny.
The time to enjoy life Is now. You
are going to live In Umatilla county
and on the earth but once, and a very
short time at that. And you will per
haps never see a better country, no
matter what your Intentions.
so tne time to enjoy lire Is now
while you are in an appreciative mood
and have the time, means and oppor
tunity. Splendid opportunities for
keen enjoyment are passed by every
day by people who are amply able to
take the time and money to go and
aee places and events. They argue
that they will be better able next year,
That times will be more favorable
next year or the next.
Before you know it, your life has
slipped away and you are ready to
"pass in your checks" and your mind
Is dwarfed, your experience Is limited
your life Is empty, your enjoyment
has been neglected, your pleasures few
and you go out Into the great beyond
with half your life undeveloped, un
used.
Enjoyment brings out the best there
is In one. It awakens higher senti
ments and makes better citizens of
. men and women and the time to en
Joy Is every day, every hour, not next
year or the next.
What will half a cent on a bushel
of wheat mean to you In a century or
even 50 years? It will not prolong
your life a second nor add on. rich
experience to your years, no matter
how many you may live.
Be frugal, industrious and saving,
to be sure, but enjoy life as you go
through It. You cannot go back over
the road. You cannot retrace your
steps.
ARE YOU A CITIZEN,?
Within two weeks every man In the
tate of Oregon will be called upon to
do his duty as a citizen, in casting a
ballot not only for his choice of offi
cials, but upon 19 laws proposed by
the initiative for the good of the state.
Are you going to vote or are you
going to stay at home? Are you a
cltiztn, or Just a dummy? The Btate
election Is the test You prove your
Interest in the government on that oc
casion. The registration this year Is the
heaviest since the registration law
rent into. effect and the vote should
he the largest. The men of Oregon
Are alert, wide awake and aggressive,
a Is shown by the material progress
Spokane is a saloon town. It Is a
frontier town with frontier sentiment
still prevailing In the minds of a large
part of her people. She has been
filled up with easterners, but all about
her cling the air and atmosphere of
the west, the peculiar habits and sen
timents of the pioneers and the lin
gering devotion of the old-timers to
the old ways of the west
But the following editorial from
the Spokane Review shows an ad
vanced sentiment on the liquor ques
tion which Is now agitating every sec
tion of the country and proves that
Spokane, although In a measure a
frontier city, has yet a keen appre
ciation of the modern movement to
ward better moral conditions. The
Review says of Moscow's change t
a "dry" town:
The citizens of Moscow are con
gratulated on the "dry" vote which
they gave in the election Tuesday. By
814 to 392 they have decided that the
saloons must go.
In view of Moscow's position as
seat of the state university of Idaho
the result is particularly gratifying,
and will enhance its reputation with
many people who, on account of Its
educational advantages, may wish to
reside there, and who will be the bet
ter pleased that residence is divorced
from liquor influence.
Moscow's action Is another straw
Indicative of the way the wind Is blow,
lng In many sections of the country
against saloon domination. It Is said
that some of the temperance workers
there are disappointed because they
did not get a larger majority.
They should rather rejoice over the
display of strength which they made
It places Moscow in a favorable light
before the rest of the country, espe
dally with those who realize how
hard the fight has been.
Noah was the founder
indigestion-He forgot to
leave the pigs ashore
of
The American people in consequence have
ever since been victims of lard-cooked food
and indigestion.
Lard soaked food is not fit for human
stomachs because lard is made from greasy,
indigestible hog fat, and is bound, sooner
or later, to make trouble for your inner
machinery. ' '
Collolene is the only rational, national
shortening. It is a pure vegetable product,
and its source (the cotton fields of the Sunny
South) is in striking contrast to the source of
lard (the pig-sty).
Collolene makes food that any stomach
can digest palatable, nutritious and health,
ful. If American housewives but knew the
superiority of Collolene over lard, both from
a practical and health standpoint, lard would
never again enter any
well-regulated kitchen.
Cottolene is Guaranteed
We hereby authorize your
grocer to refund your money
in case you're Dot pleased after having given COTTOLENE a fair test,
Never Sold in Bulk cottolene u packed in pa".
- with a patent air-tight top, to
keep it clean, fresh and wholesome; also to prevent it from ab
sorbing the disagreeable odors of the grocery, such as fish, oil, etc.
Cook Book Free
We shall be glad to send any house
wife, for a two-cent stamp, our new
" PURE FOOD COOK BOOK," edited and compiled by Mrs. Mary
J. Lincoln, author of the famous "Boston Cook Book." Address
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, CHICAGO
pa
Nature's Gift from the Sunny South
The big events of the year In Uma
tilla county are now at hand. Don't
forget any of them. Today and to
morrow the Scots hold their picnic at
Athena. Next Wednesday all of Uraa.
tllla county will go to Hermlston to
see the gates of the Irrigation reser
voir open. The last three days of next
week the pioneers will celebrate at
Weston and then on June 1. Is state
election when every citizen should do
his full duty. Milton will celebrate
strawberry day on June 4, as a fitting
close to a long list of pleasant events
in the county. Don't forget any of
these events.
The best night's work the city coun
cil of Pendleton has done for many a
moon was when It ordered Olney cem
etery to be Improved. Every citizen
of the' city Joins heartily with the
council In that noble mission and
hopes to see It hurried to completion.
Let us have some trees - and grass
growing there this year.
WHY GO AWAY FOR EDUCATION?
If the taxpayers of Oregon will
stop to consider for a moment that
the expense of sending their children
out of the state for an education far
exceeds the slight increase in taxes
which the appropriation for the Uni
versity of Oregon would Impose up
on them, they would not for a moment
think of voting against the appropri
ation. This Is the cold, mercenary view
of the matter and the argument from
this standpoint is all in favor of sup
porting the Oregon university.
On the other hand there Is the
matter of state pride and patriotism
which should actuate every thought
ful and loyal citizen of the state to
support home Institutions.
What Oregonlan wants to see Wash
ington, Idaho and California outrank
ing Oregon In the matter of educa
tional Institutions? Who Is so deaf
to the sentiment of home pride as to
permit Oregon to go backward while
all her sister states are going ahead?
When you think of this you will
vote for the university appropriation.
Oregon education for Oregon's
children.
No cyclones, no tornadoes, no suf
focating nights, no hot winds, no crop
failures, no fleas, no malaria, no
itch In Umatilla county. Just sunshine
and good health and prosperity and
contentment, and a "little cosy cor
ner" for every homeseeker.
CAXADIAX RAILWAY BULBING.
Consul E. A. Wakefield, In the fol
lowing report from Orllla, describes
the progres In railway building In the
Canadian province of Ontario:
On June 15 next, service on the To
ronto to Sudbury Canadian Pacific
Hallway line will be Inaugurated,
which Is expected to make a decided
difference In freight and passenger
traffic to Winnipeg and western points
from Toronto and Buffalo. This
change practically puts Toronto on the
main line of the Canadian Pacific
railway and means a saving of eight
hours between Toronto and Winnipeg
The Canadian Pacific railway Is still
pushing work on the Peterboro to Vic
toria harbor (or Midland) branch, but
the date of Its completion Is not men
tioned as yet. The James Bay Rail
way (McKenzle & Mann system) has
been granted a charter to build from
the main line near Ortllla to some
point not yet named on the Georgian
bay.
The Ontario government Is to guar
antee bonds Issued for the construe'
tlon of this branch (30 miles long) to
the amount of $2,600,000. The Grand
Trunk Railway is preparing to dou
ble track the Midland Division from
Midland to Port Hope (150) miles)
during the summer. In fact work
has already begun on this undertak
ing. These Items are indicative of
the activity In railway circles In this
district and Illustrate the importance
the lake and rail grain traffic Is ex
pected to assume In the future.
The city council of Rossland, B, C,
has ordered the lid placed on all gam
bling In that city.
M ft
la an ordeal which all
women approach with
indescribable fear, for
nothing compare with
the pain and horror of
child-birth. The thought
of the suffering and danger in store for her, robs the expectant mother
of all pleasant anticipations of the coming event, and casts over her a
shadow of gloom which cannot be shaken off. Thousands of women
have found that the use of Mother's Friend during pregnancy robs
confinement of all pain and danger, and insures safety to life of mother
and child. This scientific liniment is a god-send to all women at the
time of their most critical trial. Not onlv does Mother's Friend
carry women safely through the perils of child-birth, but its use
gently prepares the system for the coming event, prevents "morning
sickness." and other dis-
comforts of this period. nliT7) fUjffQP(
Bow oy all druggists at UUUKdJ U UUlLtf
ti.oo per bottle. Book
containing valuable information free. HflfS 17 Ify)
TaeBradf.eld Regulator Co., Atlanta. Ga. U U MU LmmUJ LUJ
MIXED METAPHORS.
Edwin Markham, at a dinner, said
of mixed metaphors: "When I was
teaching In Los Angeles, I used to
read every week a little country pa
per whose editor's metaphors were
an unfailing Joy to me.
"Once I remember, this editor wrote
of a contemporary: 'Thus, the black
lie Issuing from this base throat, be
comes a boomerang in his hand, and
hoisting him by his own petard, leaves
him a marked man for life.'
"He said In an article on home life
'The faithful watchdog or- his good
wife, standing at the door, welcomes
the master home with an honest
bark.' In the obituary of a farmer he
wrote: 'The race was run at last.
Like a tired steed he crossed the har
bor bar and casting aside whip and
spur, lay down upon that bourne
from which no traveler returns.' "
EUMATISR
B 0DY RACKED WITH PAIN
No other disease causes sufb, wide-spread suffering as Rheumatism. II
A a nerve racking torture, and so thoroughly does it dominate the system,
when it becomes entrenched in the blood, that its victims are usually com-
Elete slaves to pain. Rheumatism is due to an excess of uric acid In the
lood brought on by stomach troubles, weak kidneys, indigestion, and a
sluggish condition of the system. The natural reiuse or tne ooay, insieau
of passing off through the ordinary channels of waste, Is left to sour and
ferment in the system because of these irregularities, forming uric acid
which is absorbed into the blood, and Rheumatism gets a foothold. As the
blood circulates through the body it deposits the acrid, irritating Sub
stances with which it is saturated, into the different muscles, nerves, tissues
and bones. Sharp, biting pains commence, the flesh becomes feverish,
swollen and tender, the muscles and joints throb and jerk, and the body
is literally racked with pain. Plasters, blisters, liniments, etc., can never
cure the disease : they relieve the pain, per
haps, temporarily, but do not reach the
trouble, which is in the blood. S. S. S. is the
proper treatment for Rheumatism. It goes
down and attacks the disease at its head, and
by driving out the poison and acrid fluids
which are causing the pain, and strengthen
ing and enriching the blood, cures Rheuma
tism permanently. S. S. S. is the greatest of all blood purifiers, just what
is needed in every case of Rheumatism. Book on Rheumatism and any
medical advice free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
PURELY
VEGETABLE
FOR. SALE
1280 acres, 1-2 in crop $32,000.00
240 acres $3,500.00,'
160 acres $4,500.00
City Property For Sale.
FRANK B. CLOPTON & CO.
1 12 . Court. St.. Pendleton. Ore.
What Makes a Bank Strong ?
In Judging . bank, always remember that It Is the
personnel of the stockholders, o I rector, and offi
cers that are behind the lnstltut'on which give con
fidence to the depositor that his funds are cafe.
The Pendleton Savings Bank
Is essentially a "Home" Institution. Its stockhold
ers are well known Umatilla county and Oregon
citizens. Its constant growth is the result of care
ful and conservative management, with the most
liberal treatment for all deserving enterprise.
Capital and Surplus $250,000.00
W. J. Furnish
R. T. Cox
Joseph Basler
E. Boettcher
L. Dusenberiy
E. W. McComas
A. C. Koeppen
J. N. Teal
Frank S. Curl
STOCKHOLDERS.
T. J. Morris
H""ert Boylen
,. a. Devlin
J. W. Maloney
A. E. Lambert
J. H. Raley
R. Alexander
T. G. Montgomery
Montle B. Owlnn
F. W. Vincent
E. L. Smith
C. E. Roosevelt
R. N. Stan fie Id
Clementine F. Lewis
Marlon Jack
Al Page
Estate of D. P. Thompson
g g g g g $ $ gt!$g'!f!i!
BRUIN DETECTIVE SERVICE COMPANY
Patrick Bruin, General Mgr., Portland, Ore.
Expert Detective Service by the Most Efficient and Com
petent Company in the Northwest. '
J. M. Manes, Res., Mgr.
Pendleton, Oregon.
Phone Main 143
Room 2, Savings Bank Bld'g
eeee
Hotel St. George
GJDOKGE DARVEAC. Propr.?.
Buropean plan. Everything first
All modern conveniences. Steam
beat throughout Rooms en suit
with bath. Large, new sample room.
The Hotel 8t George la pronounced
n of the most up-to-date hotels of
the northwest Telephone and fire
alarm connections to office, and het
and cold running water In all rooms.
FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT IN
CONNECTION WITH HOTEL.
ROOMS: $1.00 and $I.5q
Block and a naif from Depot.
Bee the big electric sign.
The Hotel Pendleton
W. A. BROWN, Proprietor.
r
Ci.mHrill..f
SO
1
i
i - "
Telephone and fire alarm connec
tions with all rooms.
Headqunrtcrs for Traveling Me.
Commodious Sample Rooms.
Free 'Bus.
Special rates by the week or month.
Excellent Cuisine.
Prompt dining room service.
Bar and Billiard Room In Connection.
Only Three Blocks from Depots.
Golden Rule Hotel
Corner Court and Johnson Streets,
Pendleton, Oregon.
J. POPEJOY, Proprietor
Heated by Steam
Lighted.by Electricity
Courteous treatment; reasonable rates
Free 'bus moots all trains.
Fine restaurant In connection.
Special attention given country trade.
An Ideal family hotel No bar In
Connection.
STATE SALOON
Ed. R. St ration, Prop,
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Thoroughly renovated. A
gentleman's resort
Hot Free Lunch Served
Balaneed Rations
For Incubator Chicks
Lice Killers and
Conditioners
For Poultry and Stock
at
COLESWORTHY'S
Feed Store 127--129 E. Alta
r0IEY$FJt:EYCU?:3
Makes Kidneys aed Bladder Right