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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1908)
I AGE FOUR. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON. ORKGOH. MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1W8. . TEN PAGES. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. Published lelly. Weekly and Semi Weekly, t IVndlfton. Oregon, by ths EAST OlifcUONIAN 1THLI8IUNG CO. srnscKUTio.N hates: Pally, one year, by Dull $3.00 Pally, li months, by mall 20 Pally, three months, by mall 1.25 Pally, one month, by mall 50 Pally, one year, by carrier 7.60 Pally, nil months, by carrier S.TB Pally, three months, by carrier 1.P3 Pally, ons month, by carrier ft Weeklf one year, by mall J Weekly, all month, by mall To Weekly four months, by mall SO RemlNefkly, one year, by mall l.M Semi-Weekly, six months, by mall... .78 ftetni Weekl) four months, by mall.. .50 Tbe Pally East Oregon I n Is kept on talc at the Oregon News Co., 147 6tb street, Portland, Oregon. Chlcco Korean, 909 Security bolldlng. Washington, P. C. D urea a, 601 Four teenth street. N. W. Ilember United Praaa Assoclatloo. Telephone Mala 1 Entered at tbe postofflca at Peodleton, Orecon. aa secondl mall matter. The present hour claims all that we can do. The rust we cannot change or yet recall, The future lies fast sealed from human view. Its shade may never on our pathway fall. Today alone Is ours! It Is enough to fill with gracious deeds. The swift unfolding of the present hour; Its light and sunshine comes to meet our needs, Its gladness is our birthright and our dawn. Take sunshine from today. When our today claims majesty of years, ' And whitening harvests left that we have sown, Gather our faithful days, our holy tears, Our hearts singing with their Joyous crown. Reaped from the sweet to day: Mary B. Heyler. eastern Oregon counties to be settled. The hardiest, most fearless and Intre pid class of people ever to invade any wilderness In the world, carved this county from the desert. They wrested It from savagery at the constant risk of their lives and we of the latter day who enjoy what they founded, Utile know or realize the thrilling history of their careers. Within a few years the original pio neers of the county will have passed away. The association will con'tlnue, to be sure, but those who will be en titled to the rank of an actual pioneer, will have answered the roll call for the last time. WINNING TEAM OF GIRLS. WESTERN PROSPERITY. The splendid prosperity of the trans Mississippi section of the United States Is now attracting the attention of the world. Every magazine, every newspaper, every traveler, tells the tale of the reclamation and upbuild Ing of the western states. It has come to be a subject of world-interest, a subject of absorbing fascination. The fabulous prices of orchard and garden lands in the once wild deserts, the unbelievable Incomes from these lands and the Immense fortunes made from them in a few years, have all turned the attention of the world this way. Charles F. Speare in the Review of Reviews for June, tells something of this wonderful subject, but" he does not grasp it In Its full significance He says: The nation's prosperity really rests on farm products. So long as these reach up to the value of former years approximately $7,500,000,000 , in If 07, this must continue to be so. There has probably never been a time In this generation when such splendid general crop prospects existed as at the beginning of May, and which have continued up to the middle of the month. The empty cars of today will al! be enlisted to move the wheat, corn, oats and cotton now seeded. One strong impression on the trav eler In the trans-Mlssisslppl country Is the utilization of the waste places of past years. The unsightly desert of today Is the blossoming erchard of to morrow, and the Irrigation ditch the advance agent of prosperity In mani fold forms. Some of the results of Irrigation In Texas, which promises to rival Louisi ana as a rlce-produclng state, and In Colorado, where land newly watered commands from $500 to $1000 an acre, and that In bearing orchards from $3000 to $4000 an acre,- are marvel ous to behold. Western Texas, cleared of mesqulte and cultivated for cotton, has witness ed an Increase In her annual rainfall of nearly 10 Inches. The change of climate In the new portions of the country Is study by Itself. Nature adapts herself to new conditions and helps those who help themselves. It is significant to note that the Lebanon high school debating team w hich has Just won the state debating championship of Oregon, la composed of three girls not a boy to share the honor. And It Is more significant to note that the question upon which this ex ctllent team of girls w3h the debating championship was upon that of pro portional representation, an abstract political question upon which but few men, but few of the voters of the state, are posted. And yet the mothers of these girls, the women of Oregon are denied tho privilege of taking an active part In the state government. Although the girls may excel the boys In education al and Intellectual attainments, al though they miy outstrip him In de bates upon questions of government, yet the cruel and selfish arrogance of man still denies them the right to vote. How long will man assume to be the "only" thing In the government? How long will he deny his Intelligent wife equal privileges with himself? WOMEN ARE SOLVENT. The executive committee of the Oregon State Equal Suffrage associa tion held Its last regular meeting preceding election yesterday, at the home of the president, Mrs. Abigail Scott Duniway, says the Oregonlan. The business of the campaign was ordered closed, with all bills paid and a comfortable balance on hand with which to renew the work on a better and more popular basis than ever be fore. If necessary, though the unani mous vote of the committee was to the effect that It believed the men of Ore gon were too patriotic to compel a renewal of the women's struggle for liberty. Resolutions were passed thanking the leading men of all political par ties who had financed, circulated, signed and certified . the Initiative equal suffrage petitions In the Inter ests of their mothers, wives, sisters, daughters and sweethearts. Miss Deama Clay of Kentucky, Miss Alice Stone Blackwell and the Massachu setts Woman Suffrage association, each received a vote of thanks for services rendered. Plans were, started for holding -the biggest ratification jubilee ever at tempted in Oregon, If the amendment should carry, In which, the president announced, men would be the guests of honor. In the event of failure to get votes enough to win out In 1908. It was unanimously decided to go ahead with Increased determination until victory should be won. Ill KIEI) CITY OF STON E At;E. THE CALL FOR SCHOOLS. Dr. Stephen B. L Penrose, presi dent of Whitman college In an address on the liquor Issue In this city Sunday afternoon, spoke enthusiastically of the call for higher education, for more schools, for better educational facili ties In the northwest states, and he proudly told of Whitman's ambition to become the Yale of the northwest, the one central educational Institution t-i which all primary educational In stitutions of this section will point the way. And upon the proper settlement of the liquor question In the northwest, he declared, depends the development of this educational spirit, the response to this Insistent call for schools. It is coming to be understood that cities and towns -must give up their vices In order to get the best class of citizens. They cannot hug their vices under a cloak and still InvUe capital, good citizenship and home hungry people. The call for schools means that peo pie must get right, must prepare the way for schools, must make moral conditions such that their schools will Oe patronized and must forever aban don the vices which have been wink ed at In this northwest country for ;ears. Burled a few feet under the classic soil .of the University of California campus lies a city of the stone age whose massive walls respond to tho Instruments of the members of the Berkeley society for physiological re search and show their well defined locations, according to the investiga tions made by Professor Joseph Voyle, president of the local Physical society, and other members, says an Item from Berkeley. The series of Investigations to find the lines of the burled city, which an tedates by thousands of years the time of Columbus, have been carried on, it is said, quietly for the last month since the society took up thld Im portant branch of their studies. None of the professors of the uni versity has as yet thoroughly Investi gated the findings of the society, but it is likely that If their discoveries are found to have a foundation excava tion work will be begun at once along scientific lines. yjuy mm fP FED AND J KEPT OPEN BY IMPURITIES IH THE DL00D If Old Sores were due to outside influences, or if tbe cause waa confined strictly to the diseased flesh around the ulcer, then external treatment and simple cleanliness would cure them. But the trouble is in the blood, which has become unhealthy and diseased, and keeps the sore open by continually discharging into it the impurities and poisons with which the circulation is filled. This poisonous condition of the blood may be the remains of some constitutional trouble; the effect of a long spell of sickness, or because ine natural refuse of the body, which should pass off through the proper avenues, has been left in the system and absorbed into the blood. Again, the cause may be hereditary ; but it does not matter how the poison becomes intrenched in the blood, the fact that the sore will not heal is evidence of a deep underly ing cause. Salves, washes, lotions, etc., may cause the place to scab over temporarily, uui mc uiuvu ia uu -j ? mrer by such treatment, ana soon tue oia nflamniation aud discharge will return and the sore be as bad or worse than before. S. S. S. goes down to the very bottom of the trouble, cleanses and purifies the blood, and makes a permanent cure. S. S. S. enriches and freshens the circulation so that instead of discharging unhealthy matter into the place, it carries rich, tissue-building, flesh-healing blood to the diseased parts and in every way assists in a natural enre of the sore. Book on Sores and Ulcers and any uiedical advice free to all who write. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, CA. PURELY o VEGETABLE DOIT. UMTS AND II ALLOTS. The other day we were reading aloud to the office force a letter de seriblnir a struggle In a recent local option campaign, In which correspon dent said that the temperance people served coffee, lemonade, gingerbread and doughnuts at the different polling places, that a prayer meeting was held from 6 In the morning till 6 In the evening, the bell ringing every half hour, etc., concluding with, "Why we failed with all these prayers, songs and remarks, I cannot ainderstond.' Whereupon the office girl, who takes the place of the usual printers devil. said: "Humph! A ballot will bust a doughnut any day." Woman's Triumph. The Miink Deer of Tibet. Consul General William H. Michael reports that a number of Tibetan tra ders who visited Calcutta In March, j 1908. brought with them, among oth er articles, a large quantity of musk which Is held In high esteem by the high-caste Indians. The little deer from which the musk Is obtained ranges In the Himalayas and Tibetan mountains, 9000 feet above sea level. The male deer yields the finest mid greates-t quantity of musk. The deer ar eshy and alert, and difficult of cap ture. mil lie They RKST ROOM NEEDED. THE PIONEER ROLL CALL. The roll call of the Umatilla Coun ty Pioneers' association shows that within the past year 10 members of that noble brotherhood have been summoned from earth. This Is the largest number to pass away In any one year since the organ ization of that association and reminds us that soon the founders of the .coun ty and the state will have departed. Like the Orand Army of the Republic, this noble order of pioneers cannot be recrulted.V Umatilla county was one of the first The largest crowd of country people ever to come to this city for a circus, attended the Sells-Floto circus here last Saturday and never before that day has the need of a rest room, a public place for country women and children to congregate and visit and rest, been so apparent as then. Hundreds of women and children walked the streets all forenoon and by the time tho circus began they were almost too tired to attend. They had done their shopping and had attended to all their errands and would have gladly welcomed a room In which they could have rested for two or three hours while watting for the circus to begin. The expense of maintaining such a room would be but slight and It would be used every hour In the day. The lack of such a place has always been the cause of bitter complaint by coun try people. There Is not a seat In Pendleton except In somebody's store, where people may rest after their shopplgg. It is time this was remedied. Peo ple would feel more friendly 'toward the city, they would feel more like coming here to spend their money and enjoy themselves If more were done for their comfort and convenience while In the city. PLANTING TIME. cheat themselves who never steal The Joy of triumph ere 'tis won. Who must possess their gains to feel The worth of labor nobly done; They are the best whose Joys begin When first the tendrils feebly climb. Whose smiles denote the Joy within Their hopeful breasts at planting time. They make their burdens hard Indeed, Who can not contemplate with glee As busily they plant the seed, The fair rewards that are to be; They bear a world of needles Ills Who can not join with them who sings While toiling on the trying hills The Joy that from the effort springs S. E. Klser. Those, who pay as they go find the Snlntr pleasant. "The Romance of the Reaper" by Herbert Jf. Casson, a story of the In vention, manufacture and conquest of the American reaper, told In a most fascinating vein and giving the Inside history of the reaper trust, has Just been Issued by Doubleday, Page 4c Co., of New York, and Is now on the mar ket It Is not all dry statistics and stereotyped- paid write-up, but Is a lit erary work, a story of one of the greatest Industrie In the world, told In a way to hold the Interest of the reader to the end. Thoosands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it Frevulencr of Kidney UUvasc. Most people do not realize the alarm ing increase and remarkable prcvalcncy oi Kiuney uiscasc. While kidneydis orders are the most common diseases that pre vail, they are almost the last recognized by patient and phy sicians, who con tent themtelrtt Kt'lh doctoring the efecti, while the orig inal disease undermines the system. What To Do. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or Wr and overcomes that unpleasant ne cessity of being compelled to go often durine the day, and to get up many. times during the night. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful enres of the most dis tressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by drug gists in fifty-cent and one-dollar Sizes. You may nave a sampic wine mm book that tells all ahniir it hoth'sentfree by mail. Address vr. HE Kilmer & Co.. Bing- hamton.N. V. When Homolwmp-Rpet writing mention this paper and don'l make any mistake, but remember tb name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y. GROUND BONE FOR CHICKENS. 3c pound Also fine fresh meats delivered promptly at reasonable price i. EMPIRE MEAT CO. Phone Main IS. Every mother feels a great dread of the pain unJ danger attendant upon the most critical period of her life. Becoming a mother should be a source of joy to all, but the suffering and danger incident to the ordeal makes its anticipation one of misery. Mother's Friend is the only remedy which relieves women of the great pain and danger of maternity; this hour which is dreaded as woman's severest trial is not only made painless, but all the danger is avoided by its use. Those who use this remedy are no longer despondent or gloomy ; nervousness, nausea and other distressing conditions are overcome, the system is made ready for the comiiig event, And the) serious accidents so common to the critical hour are obviated by the use of Mother's rriend. , "It is worth its weight u says many who have used it. bottle, at drug stores. Book containing valuable information of interest to all women, will FPsjrvM V4& be sent to any address free upon application to Efl Hal BRADfiaO REGULATOR OO.t Atlanta. Ca. 2 13 BLS Vj me critical M Mooters tg e e egge&el 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 s!!!!!!! g Hotel St. George GEORGE DARVEAU, Proprietor. ill V , J A . . European plan. Everything tlrst- AJ1 modern conveniences. Steam heat throughout. Rooms en suite with bath. Large, new sample room. The Hotel St. George la pronounced ne of the moet up-to-date hotel of the northwest Telephone and fir alarm connections to office, and het and cold running water In all room. FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT IN CONNECTION WITH HOTEL. ROOMS: $1.00 and $1.5o Block and a Half from Pf-pot. See the big electric sUn. The Hotel Pendleton W. A. BROWN, Proprietor. mm Telephone and fire alarm connec tions with all rooms. Ilcadqunrten for Traveling Mea. Commodious Sample Rooms. , Free 'Bus. Special rates by the week or month. Excellent Cuisine. Prompt dining room service. liar and Iillllnrtl Room In Connection. Only Three Block x from Depot. Golden Ruls Motel Comer Court and Johnson Streets, Pendleton, Oregon. J. POPEJOY, Proprietor 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 1 2 E. Court St., Pendletoii, Ore. Byers' Best Flour Is made from the choicest wheat thtat grows. Good bread Is assur ed when BTERS BEST FLOOR Is need. Bran, Shorts, Steam Rolled Barley always on band. PENDLETON ROLLER WILLS Tbe Eaa Oregonlsu. la Eaetera Ore gon't representative paper. It leads and tbe people appreciate It and show It by thrtr liberal patronage. It Is rhe adTertMns; medium of tbe What Makes a Bank Strong ? In judging a bank, always remember that tt la tbe personnel of the stockholders, dlreotors and offi cers that are behind the Institution which give con fidence to the depositor that his funds are safe. 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. Boettcber L. Du sen berry E. W. McComas JL C Koeppen 3. N. Teal Frank S. Curl STOCKHOLDERS. T. J. Morris H-"ert Boylen I. A. Devlin J. W. Maloney A. B. Lambert J. H. Raley R. Alexander T. O. Montgomery Estate of D. Montle B. Owlnn F. W. Vincent E. L, Smith C. E. Rooeerelt R. N. Stanfleld Clementine F. Lewis Marlon Jack Al Page P. Thempeon ' pip ' ' Heated by Steam Lighted by Electricity Courteous treatment; reasonable rates Free 'bus moots ell trains. Fine restaurant In connection. Special attention given country trade. An Ideal family hotel Xo par In Connection. STATE SALOON Ed. R. Strabon, 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 akea KMaeya a ad Bladder Right A