East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, June 09, 1908, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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DAILY EAST ORB UU.XIAX HENDLETON. OHKGON. TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 1908.
PAGE THREE.
GRIZZLED
VETERANS
CON FEDERATE HEROES MEET
IV ANNUAL REUNION
Men Who Fought on Many Iluttlc
fields for Iout Cause Will Recount
AkhIii the Stirring Decvb and Hurd
Hlilm of Civil War Death l ost
Thinning! tho IlunktJ.
Birmingham, Ala., June 9.
"Tramp, tramp, tramp, tho boya are
marching!" Again tho United Con
federate Veterans, grizzled heroes who
fought on many bloody battlefields
for a losing qause, are assembled In
annuul reunion. But the "boys" gath
ered in Birmingham today are old
and bent, and their "tramp, tramp,
tramp," lack Its old time military
precision and vigor, while the fear
some "rebel yell," which once rang
out so definitely, Is become quivering
and weak.
Death hus thinned the ranks visibly
since the general reunion In Richmond
'last year, und a hush of sadness has
fallen upon the remnants of the van
ishing hosts of tho confederacy be
cause of the recent death in Vlcks
burg of General Stephen D. Lee,
commander-in-chief of the United
Confederate Veterans. Tho conclave
commenced today In the Magic City
will be a time for recounting past vic
tories and defeats, from which all the
old sectional bitterness has departed,
and for last greetings and pwjtlngs
between many of tho aged veterans
who realize that on this occasion they
may answer to their last roll call on
earth. Many federal veterans are
here and are fraternizing with the
boys In gray, the enmity between
"Yanks" and "rebs" forgotten.
Despite the solemnity of the occa
sion, tho war time enthusiasm of the
old confederates will find expression
In a big parade and In many spectac
ular features which will mark the
encampment. Thousands of Son and
Daughters of the Confederacy are
here and will play a prominent part
In the three days' program. UirmlnR
ham citizens, with the true hospital
ity of the south, have thrown their
doors wide open to the visitors and
there will be many entertainments on
a lavish scale. Thousands of dollars
have been spent In decorating the
city and all the principal streets nre
swathed In bunting and lined with
flags.
San Antonio, Tex., and Atlanta, Ga.,
are the principal contenders for next
year's encampment and delegation
from the two cities will make a hard
fight to secure the 1909 reunion. At
lanta Is In tho field for the 1909 con
vention of both the United Confed
eral Veterans and the Orand Army
of the Republic, with the object of
having them meet simultaneously In
that city. Objection Is made to this
plan on account of the fact that no
city the size of Atlanta could possibly
furnish adequate entertainment for
Mich a gathering as would lie attract
ed by a Joint reunion of the blue and
tr- gray
BUM'S
F- Tmr'- riKn liir-hirm Vi?-' "
The back is tho mainspring of
woman's organism. It quickly calls
attention to trouble by aching. It
tells, with other symptoms, such as
nervousness, headache, pains in tho
loins, weight in the lower part of
the body, that a woman's feminine
organism needs immediateattention.
In such cases the one sure remedy
which speedily removes the cause,
and restores the feminine organism
to a healthy, normal condition is
LYDIA E. PIN KHAN'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
Mrs. Will Young, of 6 Columbia
Ave., Rockland, Me., says :
" I was troubled for along time with
dreadful backaches and a pain in my
ide, and was miserable in every way.
I doctored until I was discouraged and
thought I would never get well. I read
what Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable
Compound had done for others and
decided to try it ; after taking three
bottles I can truly say that I never felt
ao well in my life."
Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Karl,
Fa., writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
"I had very severe backaches, and
pressing-down pains. I could not Bleep,
and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pink
barn's Vegetable Compound cured me
and made me foel like a new woman."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. link
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remody for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-fng-down
feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration.
oa Um owf 1 and bla laat
SENSE IN EXERCISE.
Tha Waaknast That Comet With Great
Mutoular Exertion.
It Is a curious fact that perfect beaitb
is not consistent with high muscular
development Professional athletes and
all men who acquire phenomena!
strength seem to lose In length of life
and uctlvity what they gain for a few
years of record breaking powers. I was
privileged to see on several occasions
Louis Cyr, the Canadian giant, who
broke all weight lifting records. He
weighed 320 pounds and was all solid
bone and muscle. I saw him bold his
wife out nt arm's length wtU 0119
i7utid. f saw liim raise a 300 pound
barrel from the floor to hj shoulder,
using only one band and arm. I
saw him r.ct down on all fours un
der a platform bearing 4.000 pounds
of big men solected from the the audi
ence, and be raised the plutform with
his mighty back. Yet this remarkable
man was muscle bound and crippled
at thirty-seven, when bo should have
been at the height of his wonderful
powers.
Kennedy, the oarsman, who won u
diamond 1elt for lifting with bis hands
from the lloor absolutely without ap
paratus a thotisnnd pound weight, was
used up and crippled before he was
forty. Dowd, professbjd, strong man
and teacher of ath1e5wore himself
out and died at forty-seven. "Common
Sense In Exercise," by Charles II.
Cochrane, in Metropolitan Magazine.
NATURE CURES.
Medicine Helps, of Course, but Faith It
a Powerful Factor.
There's u truth ut the basis of all
this discussion of disease and Its cur1.'
which, despite the fact that ll lnw ben
apparent for generations, is still too lit
tle understood by pe plo In general.
In fact, appearances would lead to tho
belief that it is not appreciated by all
physicians. It Is the truth that not
the medicine, but nature, cures the ill.
The most that medicine can do Is to
place the patient in a condition most
favorable for the work of nature.
Here conies In the value of this ele
ment of faith. It is the best possible
help to nature the Urm belief that
you'll get well. It may well take the
place of many drugs. It may in In
stances displace the nerd of the physi
cian. Even the surgeon cuu do n
more. He simply cuts uway dcltrii.
puts the body In the best trim he
knows hew, adjusts merely mechan
ical breaks or displacements and waits
for nature to do the rest. The physi
cian who pours In an inordinate amount
of drugs thinks he is assisting nature.
As a matter of fact, he Is sometimes
Impeding her. The best physicians, hi
all except extreme cases, use few med
icines, and those as mild 09 possible.
New Haven Iteglster.
1
1
WASHINGTON COUNTY
OHLGO.V, IS CITED
On Hetv.n.
"If I could be out of physical pain,"
said a lifelong Invalid, "1 would ask
no other heaven." "If I could lie In a
place where I might know that my
husband never could lie killed on the
train!" cried one of the gentle "wor
riers" who?o capacity for suffering is
uelther understood nor respected by
the sanguine. "If I could take my
children to a world where every time
I hear a crottpy cough my heart did
not stand still with terror." urged an
other, "that would be heuven for me."
The mulatto girl who burst Into Joyful
tears at first sight of a marble bust of
herself "because it was white" bad a
glimpse of her heaven before Its time.
"Heaven must be like any other form
of happiness, only 'more so,' " said a
thoughtful man. "And the conditions
of happiness are three a clean con
science, something to do and Borne one
to love.'-EHzabeth Stuart Phelps In
Harper's Bazar.
1'urnn'M Jlnvo Increamil Their In
comes by Selling Milk to the Fac
tory Non-rrodiicflve Land Mudo
to InrmiHC ItH Yield and New Crops
Are Introduced.
The following letter from Caldwell
to the Uolse Capital News shows
something of the benefits of one Ore
gon Industry and shows what can be
done to build up a county and give
employment to people. The letter is
as follows;
Some of the following facts con
cerning a milk condensery were glean
ed from Dr. J. T. Wood, general man
ager of the Yakima Valley Condensed
Milk company of Amity, Ore. Dr.
Wood has been to Twin Falls where
he took part In the big drawing con
test where he was fortunate enough
to secure three 80-acre tracts, one for
himself and two for. other parties
whom be represented.
He stopped In this city a short
time oh his return homo and was In
terviewed concerning the condensed
milk factory of which he Is the gen
eral manager and as some of the peo
ple In this locality are Interested In
that business, what he has to say may
be of Interest.
His factory is now using o.bout 30,
000 pounds of milk per day. During
the months of June and July they
pay about $1.25 per hundred for four
per cent milk, which Is the basis on
which thiy figure. They claim that
thix gives the farmer his regular price
for the cream at the creamery and
allows him about 20 cents per hun
dred for his skimed milk.
Prices of milk vary, of course, with
the season the same as other estab
lishments of the same kind. Ex
perience has shown that where con-
denKerles have been established the
country adjoining the factory hus
been very prosperous.
He cited Washington county, Ore
gon, as an example, snowing now
prosperous the country had grown.
1 That county has been the most thor-
oughly developed of any In the state
j und nearly all the land has been divid
ed Into 20-ucre tracts.
The farmers are all well-to-do and
Independent through the sale of milk
to the factory. There Is another fea
ture about the business, according to
Dr. Wood and that Is the feed on
which the cows are fed. He says that
It makes a great deal of difference
the kind of feed the cattle eat, where
the milk Is used in a condensery.
There must not be the least unnat
ural odor or taste to the milk, there
foie he said he did not know Just
whether the alfalfa-fed cows would
produce milk that could be used in I
a condensery or not, but that could
easily be determined by making in.
o.uity of t 'e government experimental
station. .
He M;ti-d thi't the bct feed that
lias been found to li Is Knowledge, Is
the oat h.iy mixed with clover or a
kind of pea vine which wrov.s veiy
extensively In the Willamette valley,
lately the agriculturists are Intro,
during what they rail thousand head
ed Uile which Is proving to be very
beneficial.
Qmv, Imsoosil Sd&B
Embroideries to Fly Out at Astonishingly Low Price
Another sale of fine embroideries offered at only a
fraction of their real worth, $1 .25 and $1 .50 values 69c
The materials are fine Batiste, Nainsook and Swisses.
The patterns are dainty new eylet, Fillet, Scroll, open and
embossed designs. This .sale affords a great opportunity
to meet the demand of the Spring Sewing. We believe
you will agree with us in saying this is one best values
ever given" in Pendleton.
Begining at 9:30 Wednesday Morning June 9 at
Pendleton Cloak and Suit House
"BUY OF US AND IT'S ALLRIGHT".
They Go Together.
"Henry," said the young wife, who
had taken up physical culture, "how
do you think I am built?"
"My dear," replied her husband fond
ly, "you are built like a watch."
"Thank you, Henry. And, Henry?"
"Well."
"If If I am built like a watch, dou't
you think I should have a few jewels?"
And then Henry frowned und said
the man who compliments a woman Is
an idiot
A Force Proportioned to its Frame.
The war of 1S12 has proved that our
free government, like other free gov
ernments, though slow In Its early
movements, acquires in its progress a
force proportioned to its frame and
that tho Union of these states, the
guardian of the freedom and the safety
of all and of each, is strengthened by
every occasion that puts it to the test
-James Madison.
Not In Her Class.
Mrs. Spenders I wonder how you'd
like It if I ever got "new womanish"
and insisted upon wearing men's
clothes. Mr. Speuders Oh, I haven't
any fear of you ever doing that Men's
clothes are never very expensive!
London Opinion.
, Good at Keeping.
"And you call yourself honest, do
you?"
"Sir, I keep the commandments."
"That must be because you've got an
ldoa that they belong to somebody
else." Cleveland Leader.
Resented.
"And bow did you como to marry
hlmr
"I didn't come to marry him," an
swered the womanly tittle woman in
dignantly; "ho came to marry me."
First the thick cloud and then Um
Nlabow's arc. Bonar.
The licst Tills Ever Sold.
"After doctoring 15 years .for
chronic indigestion and spending over
two hundred dollars, nothing has done
me as much good as Dr. King's New
Life I'llls. I consider them the best
pills ever sold: "writes B. F. Ayscue
of IngUside. X. C. Sold under guar
antee at Tollman & Co.'s drug store.
25c.
Liquors at Cost.
My entire line of wines, liquors and
cigars must be disposed of by July
1. To do so, everything 'will be sold
at actual cost, nothing reserved. Xow
Is the time to secure absolutely pure
goods cluap. The Mint. J. F. Med
ernach, prop.
Often The Kidneys Are
Weakened by Over-Work.
unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood.
It used to be considered that only
irinary and bladder troubles were to be
traced to me Ktaneys,
but now modern
science proves that
nearly all diseases
have their beginning
in the disorder of
these most important
organs.
The kidneys filtei
and purify the blood
that is their work.
Therefore, when your kidneys are weak
or out of order, you can understand bow
quickly your entire body is affected and
low every organ scans to fail to do its
Juty.
If you are sick or " feel badly,'' begin
taking the great kidney remedy, Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, because as soon
S3 your kidneys are well they will help
!1 the other organs to health. A trial
.".11 convince anyone.
If you are sick you can make no mis
take by first doctoring your kidneys.
The mild and the extraordinary effect of
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great
kidney remedy, is soon realized. It
Jtands the highest for its wonderful cures
of the most distressing cases, and is sold
ia its merits by all
dmppistsin fiftv-cent
and one-dollar size 1 Wtf Wil
bottles. You may
have a sample bottle noraeotSwuBp-Root.
by mail free, also a pamphlet telling you
bow to find out if you have kidney or
bladder trouble. Mention this paper
when writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing
bamton, N. Y. Don't make any mistake,
but remember the name, Swamp-Root,
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad
iress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle.
. V - Xr:-:.
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