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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1908)
EIGHT PAGES. PAGE FOUR. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENULETON, OREGON. THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1908. i "-f I It 7 COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. AN INPK1TNDENT NErSPAPK& Pobllilifd inily. Weekly and Semi-Weakly, it Pendleton. Oregon, by ths AST ORKGOX1AN lTULlBHl.NQ CO. " SlTiSCRIPTION BATES: D!lr. on year, by mull "222 Pally, ill months, by malt J" Dally, three months.-by mall ljjj Tsl!y. one mouth, by mall -JJ Pally, one year, by carrier -o Pally, all month, by carrier JT5 Dally, three muntha. by carrier 1JJJ Pally, one month, by carrier "' H'eeii oue year, by mall 1 Weekly, all monlha. by mall 7o "eek, four months, by mall .BO ml WeeHT. one year, by mall 1.50 Bern! Weekly. lx months, by mall... .79 Semi Week i four months, by mall.. .80 The Pally East Oregonlan Is kept on sal at the Orecnn News Co., 147 6th street, Portland, cn-tfoa. Chtcaco Uureau, 809 8ectirlty building. Wustlnctou. P. C, Burean. 501 Four teenth street. X. W. Member United- Frews AssocUtlon. Telephone M1" Entered at the poatofflca at Pendleton, Oreiroo. aa aecond clana mall matter. .UNiCN.SV iLABE A thousand creeds have come and gone; But what Is that to you or me? The root of love lives on and on. Though branch by branch proves withered wood, The rot is warm with precious wine; Then keep your faith and leave me mine; All roads that lead to God are good. Ella Wheeler Wilcox. ft BEGINNING OF THE PROJECT. It is often difficult to follow a river to its actual fountain head, among all the rivulets which Join to "make its rushing volume. It is dificult to de cide which one of the single rills, having Its source among the ferns of a remote and Isolated mountain can yon, may be properly designated as the very head of the stream. The East Oregonlan has tried to fol low up the Umatilla Irrigation pro ject to its source and learn. If possi ble, who spoke the word, who gave out the thought which gave birth. It is a difficult task but some progress has ben made. One day, shortly after the reclama tion law became effective In June, 1902, Judge S. A. Lowell and the lato Judge T. G. Halley, while law part ners in this city, were talking of the vast idle sagebrush plains of eastern Oregon and wondered If, under' the new law, it would not be possible for the government to bring water from Snake river, across Baker and Union counties or from some other source to reclaim the land in Umatilla and Morrow counties. Turning to the stenographer. Judee Lowell dictated a letter to Malcolm A. Moody, then congressman from this district, asking him to request the reclamation department under the new law, to investigate the project of from the Snake to Umatilla and Morrow counties. Sn far as is known now, tnat was the very beginning of the Umatilla lrrization project. Others had dis cussed irrigation here, to be sure, and for year9 the problem of reclaiming the idle lands of 'the county hail been a favorite theme with many progres sive and thoughtful citizens. But this Is believed to be the word which brought this project into life. Congressman Moody replied to the letter favorably and requested an in vestigation of the proposed project, and as a result Engineer Camp came to Echo In 1303 and made a prelimi nary survey of the buttes south of that place, but failed to find , a res ervoir site. The Snake river idea had been given up as not feasable. Engineer Camp and a crew of men worked for several months without results in the country south and west of Echo, and finally John T. Whistler came and continued a vigorous search for a reservoir site south of Echo, the Idea being to take water out on the south side of the Umatilla river at Ban-hart and carry It through a canal to a reservoir near the buttes south of Echo. Giving up the task of finding a suitable site on the south side of the River, Mr. Whistler finally turned to the north side, had several score pros pect holes sunk, made surveys, esti mates and examinations of every possible feature of that section and finally located the present Cold Springs dam site. His final estimates were made and aent to the consulting engineers, the project was recommended and $1,000, - 000 was set aside for Its construction. Bids were advertised for, plans were net on foot for its completion and on Wednesday, May 27, 1808, the gates were formally opened and the pro Ject delivered to the people. go the few words of conversation between Judge Stephen A. Lowell and the late Judgo T. O. Halley In their cffices In this city may be said to have been the very beginning of the Umatilla irrigation project. From that small beginning the thousand homes which are to be founded upon the project will owe their origin. WASTING Ol'U SUBSTANCE. The Rural Spirit says of the waste of soil forces through the continuous growing of wheat upon the land: Whore prices of farms should rise by inereaie of population, In many places they are falling. Between 18S0 and 1900 the land values of Ohio shrank $60,000,000. Official investi gation of two counties in central New York disclosed a condition of agri cultural decay. In one land was for sale for about the cost of Improvements and 150 va cant houses were counted In a limited area. In the other the population In 1905 was nearly 4000 less than in 1855. Practically identical soil con ditions exist in Maryland and Virginia, where lands sell at from $10 to $30 an acre. . The richest region of the west Is no more exempt than New England oi the south. The soil of the west Is be ing reduced in agricultural potency by exactly the same processes which have driven the farmer of the east, with all his advantages of nearness to market, from the field. But the fact of soil waste becomes startlingly evident when we examine the record of some states where sin gle cropping and other agricultural abuses have been prevalent. Take the case of wheat, the mainstay of single crop abuse. Many of us can remem ber when New York was the great wheat producing state of the Union The average yield of wheat an acre In New York for the last 10 years was about IS bushels. For the first five years of that 10-year period It was 18 1-4 bushels, and for the last five 17.4 bushels. In the farther west Kansas takes high rank as a wheat producer. Its average yield for the last 1C years was 14.16 bushels. For the first five of those years it was 15.14 and for the last five 13.18. Up In the northwest Minnesota wheat has made a name all over the world. Her average yield an acre for the same 10 years was 12.96 bushels, For the first five years it was 13.12 and for the last five 12.8. We preccive here the working of a uniform law. Independent of loca tion, soil or climate. It Is the law of a diminishing return due to soil de struction. Apply this to the country at large and it reduces agriculture to the condition of a bank whose deposit ors are steadily drawing out more money than they put in. When the most fertile land in the world nroduces so much less than that of poorer quality elsewhere, an this low yield shows a tendency to steady decline, the situation becomes clvar. We are robbing the soil in an effort to get the largest cash returns from each acre of ground in the shortest possible time and with the least possible labor. PORTLAND. The Oregonian, in a burst of patri otism and home pride, which is high ly creditable and worthy of the paper, gives a few center shots on the vital progress of that city which are wor thy of being repeated throughout the state. Here they are: The North Bank road Is building at Portland the largest wheat ware house In the United States. Meier & Frank are beginning work on the ten story annex to their department store, and Olds, Wortman & King are plan ning one to cover an entire block. Work on the largest packing house plant west of Chicago Is steadily pro gressing. Another national bank has been added to Portland's list of financial institutions. The largest commercial club In the United States has moved Into Its 6wn magnificently furnished building. The O. R. & N. has Issued orders to rush work on the Wallowa branch of the road. Wheat Is selling very close to the dollar mark and another record breaking crop is rapidly getting into a state of absolute safety. Hood River has Just begun marketing a 100-car-load crop of strawberries, etc., etc. These are Just a few of the reasons why Portlanders smile even when they read the baseball scores. Richmond P. Hobson, representa tive from Alabama in the national house, says the next congress will be called upon to authorize the constuc tlon of at least two 30,000-ton battle ships, equipped with turbine engines and having a maximum draft of only 29 feet. Representative Hobson is authority for the statement that plans for this type of vessel were being con sidered and that in designing an enormous battleship it would be possi ble to add stability by Increasing the width of the vessel. He called the type the "swan breast." Such a ship would carry almost double the battery f the present Delawares, which are 2-Inch guns, and would be tho equal of almost an entire squadron of pres- nt day battleships In effectiveness. THE 1.Y WAS DEAD. Tho day was dead, and tho flowers swayed In the bitterness of grieving; And twilight came with her eyes of shade As the spirit fair was leaving. The zephyrs crooned in a requiem And tho echoes low, replying, Sang softly sweet, as is wont with them, In the music of their sighing. The night came slow, while the sob bing sea Swept on In its stately surges; The undertone of a lullaby Rose up from its mellow dirges, The night came down to the sleeping clay That seemed of its noon-glow dreaming With starry candles In rich array The tomb of the day was gleaming. Tho day was dead and the word went forth To the farthest silent spnces; To the stars that stand west, south and north And forever have their places. The word went forth and the word went on Till it lost its tone of sorrow And it broke in light at the gates of dawn ' And awakened a to-morrow. W. D. Xesblt In Republic. CURED, BUT UNGRATEFUL. Miss Frances Wynne, of this city, is a shop girl, healthy alid withal beautiful, says a New York Item. One morning about a year ago she went to the department store where sUe was eninloved and was greeted with sneers, grins and giggles on, the part of her companions. The reason for these manifestations of levity was sup piled by a sympathetic friend. In a newspaper advertisement, illustrated with a picture of the beauteous Miss Wynne. Reading the advertisement the fair girl discovered to her horror that she had been suffering with divers pains, aches and maladies and that she had been Jerked from the Jaws of Jeop ardy and an untimely grave by thd medicine manufactured by a femin ine philanthropist of Lynn, Mass. So It came that Miss Wynne appeared In the United States circuit court, asking for $10,000 as a salve for the mental anguish, and mortifi cation she had endured. She declared that she had never suffered from the pains and aches de scribed In the testimonial, that she had never taken the vegetable com pound of the feminine philanthropist and that her picture had been ob tained by false pretenses. The Jury decided, after hearing all the evi dence, that $6000 would cover damages. the ANOTHER FOOL 'lULL. Many fool bills are Introduced in congress In the course of a year, says an "unknown writer, but fortunately only a few of them ever get out of the committees to which they are re ferred. One of the most insane bills thus far introduced in tho present houso In that of Congressman Cowdrey, which makes a publisher responsible for tho representations made by advertisers In his periodical. The name of tho advertiser Is published with every ad vertisement, and he can bo held re sponslblo by the public. To make it Imperative for every newspaper to go Into the stores of Its advertisers and see that ewry article Is what the advertisement says It Is would moan the ruination of the pub licity business of the country. Eu gene Guard. No man wfls ever truly wise. Even Solomon took more than one wife. A Most r-aluable Agent. The glycerine employed in Dr. Pierce's medicines greatly enhances the medicinal properties which it extracts from native medicinal roots and holds in solution much better than alcohol would. It also possesses medicinal properties of its own, being a valuable demulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and antiformcnt It adds greatly to the ofilcacy of tho Ulack Cherry bark, Bloodroot, Golden Seal root, Stoio root and Queen's root, contained in Golden Medical Discovery'ln subduing chronic, or lingering coughs, bronchial, throat and lung affections, (or all of which these agents aro recommended by stand ard medical authorities. In all cases whero there. Is a wasting away of flesh, loss of appetite, with weak stomarti, as In tho early stages of con-sum-itlpn, there can bo no doubt that gly cerineacts as a valuable nutritive and aids Mie Golden Seal root. Stone root, Queofcs rofit and Black Cherrybark In promoting digestion and building up the flesh aiiHlbtrength, controlling the cougu and bringing about a healthy condition of the wf le system. Of course, it must not be effected to work miracles. It will not cureuunsumption except In Its earlier Stages, will flro very qpvere. oh? tl nal? nan"if-rn"cTiron i c coyJ'S, broncTiiai and" j g f y ri are a l' t rojj t I "s, a n cli run I c sore tflniiityyifi hoarseness. In acute coughs t Is not so ellectl vo. 1 f Is In tho lingering hang-on coughs, or those of longstanding, even when accompanied by bleeding from lungs, that it has performed its most marvelous cures. Prof. Flnlev Llllngwood, M. D.,of J!m nett Med. College, Chicago, says of gly cerine: In dyspepsia It serve an excellent purpose. Holding a fixed tjuantity of the peroxide of hydrogen In solution, it Is one of the best manufactured productnof the present tiny In Its action upon enfeebled, disordered itom achs, especially If there Is ulceration or ca tarrhal gtfttrltl (catarrhal inflammation of stomach). It Is a most efficient, preparation. Glycerine will relieve many rases of pyrosis (heartburn) and excessive gastric (stomach) acidity." "Golden Medical Discovery"' enriches and purities the li'ood curing blotches, plmplei, eruptions, scrofulous swellings and old sores, or ulcers. Send to Dr. It. V. Pierce, of Buffalo. N. Y. for free booklet telling all about ttie native medicinal t composing this wonderful nd'clns. TU ir no alcohol la it I To the woman who bakes, Royal is the greatest of time and labor savers. Makes home baking easy, a pleasure and a profit Mil Baking The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar With minimum trouble and cost bis cuit, cake arid pastry are made fresh, clean and greatly superior to the ready made, dry, found-in-the-shop variety. ' ' OLDEST COIN IN THE WORLD. An archaeological find of the great est Interest has Just been made by Pastor Lohmann, chairman of the Gorman society for scientific re search In Anatolia. During his re cent Journey In north Syria a coin of pure silver, excellently preserved, was offered to him, which, on examina tion, proved to bear a perfect Arame- an Inscription of Pauammu Bar Ra- rub, king of Schamol, who reigned i 800 years before Christ. It is the i oldest known coin In the world. Up j to the present the Lydians have al ways been regarded as the Inventors What Makes a Bank Strong ? The Pendleton Savings Bank Capital and Surplus $250,000.00 STOCKHOLDERS. T. J. Morris i;--'iert Roylen a. Devlin J. W. Maloney A. E. LambTt J. 11. Raley R. Alexander T. G. Montgomery W. J. Furnish R. T. Oox Joseph Basler E. Boettcher L. Dusenberry E. W. McComas A. C. Koeppen J. N. Teal Frank S. Curl Local Option Ad. Read what the wise men have to say about the evils of drink: 'Oh, thou invisible spirit of wine, If thou hast no name to be known by Let me call thee Devil." Shakespeare. "The liquor traffic tends to produce criminality in the population at large and law-breaking among the saloon keepers themselves." Theodore Roosevelt. FOR RAILROAD COMMISSIONER VOTE, 29 X Oglesby Young The strong and capable nominee of the Democratic Party. Chickens Wanted Highest Cash Price Paid For Live Poultry Umatilla Meat Company S01 East Court 'IT Powder of money, but this new find shows that the Semitic Aramnens, who lived twi centuries before the Lydians, are the oldest coiners of money. The mayor of Jersey City today pressed the button which set In mo tion the largest clock 'in the world. It Is located at Colgate's factory. Is 38 feet In diameter and has an area of 1134 square feet. Boats in the river whltsled as the clock was start ed. The world is usually willing to step aside for a man, who knows where he Is going. In Judging a bank, alwaya remember that It ia the personnel of the st.ickholdeio, Erectors and offi cers that are behind the Institution which give con fidence to the depositor that his funds are safe. 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. Montle B. Gwlnn F. W. Vincent E. L. Smith C. E. Roosevelt R. N. Stanfield Clementine F. Lewis Marlon Jack Al Page Estate of D. P. Thompson Phona Main 101 Hotel St. George GEORGE DARVEAU. Proprintor. A ll Hm i 'w ' r) Jim. llli iWfe-l European plan. Everything tlrat- olaM. All modern conveniences. Steam beat throughout. Rooms en suit with bath. Large, new sample room. The Hotel St George la pronounced one of the moat up-to-date hotels of the northwest Telephone and flr alarm connections to office, and hat and cold running water In all rooms. FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT Hf CONNECTIOX WITH HOTEL. ROOMS: $1.00 and $l.5o Illock and a Half from Depot. See the big electric sign. The Hotel Pendleton W. A. BROWN, Proprietor. Telephone and fire alarm connec tions with all rooms. Headquarters for Traveling Me.. Coiuniodlous Sample Rooms. Frew 'Bus. Special rates by the week or month. Excellent Cuisine. Prompt dining room service. Bar and Billiard Room In Connection. Only Three Blocks from Depotd. Golden Rule Hotel Corner Court and Johnson Streets, Pendleton, Oregon. J. FOFEJOY, Proprietor Heated by Steam Lightediby Electricity Courteous treatment; reasonable rates Free 'bus meets all trains. Fine restaurant In connection. Special attention (riven country trade. An Ideal fumlly hotel No bar In Connection. STATE SALOON Ed. R. Strahon, Prop, Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Thoroughly renovated. A gentleman's resort . Hot Free Lunch Served Balanced Rations For Incubator Chicks Lice Killers and Conditioners For Poultry and Stock at COLESWORTHY'S Feed Store 127-129 E. Alta Et5IEYSI2lIilYCUr3 MakM Kid nays and Bladder Right wm if 1 v ifpl