East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, June 11, 1908, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    DAILY EAST OKEGOMAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1908.
PAGE THREE.
Hotel St. George
E
I
GEORGE DARVEAC, Proprietor.
EIGHT rAGES.
KNIUfll
E
7
try
European plan. Everything tint
class. All modern convenience!. Steam
heat throughout Rooms en iult
with bath. Large, new sample room.
The Hotel St George la pronounced
na cf the moet up-to-date hotel of
the northwest Telephone and fire
alarm connections to office, and net
and cold running water In all rooma
FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT IN
. CONNECTION WITH HOTEL.
ROOMS: $1.00 and $1.5o
Block and a Half from Depot
See the big electric sign.
Golden Rule Hotel
Corner Court and Johnson Streets,
Pendleton, Oregon.
J. POPEJOY, Proprietor
. '..Mi0!
ilil:
Heated by Steam
Lighted,by Electricity
Courteous treatment; reasonable rates
Fry 'bus moots all trains.
Fine restaurant In connection.
Special attention given country trade.
An Ideal family hotol No bar In
Connection.
New
Hotel Sagamoro
BAKER CITY, OREGON
UXDKR NEW MANAGEMENT
(5(1) ALL OUTSIDE ROOMS.
Newly refurnished and refitted
throughout. Kleotrlc lights. Hot and
cold baths free to guests.
SAMPLE ROOMS IX CONNECTION
Free Auto Hus to and from all
trains.
RATES, .1.50 AM) $2 PER DAY
AMERICAN PLAN.
TOY L. YOUNG, Prop.
GROUND BONE
FOR CHICKENS.
3c pound
Also fine fresh meats delivered
promptly at reasonable price i.
EMPIRE MEAT CO.
- Tbono Main 18.
Balanced Rations
For Incubator Chicks
Lice Killers and
Conditioners
For Poultry and Stock
at
COLESWORTHY'S
Feed Store 127--129 E. Alta
PENDLETON-OKIAH STAGE
Dally trips between Pendletcn and
Cklah, except Sunday. Stage leaves
Pendleton at 7 a. m., arrives at Uklah
at I p. m. Return stage leaves Uklah
at p. m., arrives at Pendleton at i
p. m.
Pendleton to Uklah. $1.00; Pen
dleton to Alba. $1.71; Pendleton to
Ridge, $1; Pendleton to Nye, $1.1$;
Pendleton to Pilot Rook, $L
Washington, June 11. Theodore
Koosevelt, youngest president of the
United States, will be only a few days
over 60 years of age on election day.
Probablmy no man living or dead
has done, a greater variety of big
things than he In half a century or
has broken more precedents. His
every act, official and private, has
been a contradiction of established
usage, yet every time he has knocked
some moss-grown precedent Into the
proverbial cocked hat, the world has
declared, as soon as It has regained
Its breath, that the Roosevelt way
was best and has wondered why no
one else thought of doing It that way
years before.
Roosevelt was scarce out of col
lege before he claimed the center of
the stage, and the spot-light of pub
licity has been following him around
ever since. In the legislature of New
York state, as civil service commis
sioner, as police commissioner of the
metropolis, as assistant secretary or
the navy, he plunged into the midst
of events or, if there were no events
In reach worth mentioning, he made
them.
When the police force of New York,
Inefficient from dry rot and cancer
ous with vice, came under his control,
he shook It up until Its old bones rat
tled and gave the grafters a scare
that they remember to this day. He
didn't quite convert the force into a
band of evangelists, but he made the
Tammany Tiger shiver In Its lair and
caused the name of .T. Roosevelt to
he known throughout the land.
Made Dewey a Hero.
Once upon u time, when he was
second In command to that dear,
Rood, peaceable secretary of the navy,
John I). Long, his chief happened to
be away from Washington for a few
days. Buzz! Ring! Herore me se
di te bureau chiefj in the department
knew the day of the month, he had
Ii-.-ued orders that dispatched ship
loads of ammunition to the Asiatic
squadron and prepared George Pow
cy for the day that made him famous
f.nd sent the Spanish hulks to the
floor of Manila bay.
He was the something-different
politician. Ho told his political ene
mies, as well as his political friends,
the truth. He wore his heart on his
steeve. It was unheard of. Before
his day, to be a politician was to be
a liar. He became the greatest poll
tlclan of the age by telling the truth
He was the something-doing sol
dier as well as the something-differ
ent politician. When he went to Cu
ra, If there wasn't any fighting to
he done, his men found that there
was work to do. They dug kitchen
sinks, they drilled, they got ready,
and they stayed ready; so, when the
time for action came, the charge up
San Juan hill was a mere picnic to
trose bronco-busters and grizzly-eat
ers.
Roosevelt loves a fight better than
nine Irishmen out of 10, and the
strain of Dutch In his blood makes
him "stick" when once he mixes In.
Like the Irish, he doesn't know
vhen he Is licked, and many's the
time he has won out after he had
apparently been beaten to a finish.
Sticks to Friends .nnd Foe.
He sticks to his friends as grimly
as he sticks to his foes, and the same
dogged determination that makes him
fight to the last ditch for what he
lelleves Is right, places him at the
back of the man he claims as a
friend, no matter If there be a stack
of affidavits as high as the Washing
ton monument to prove the man unworthy-
Just to show his friendship
and his faith In human nature,
Roosevelt has appointed more than
one man to office whose record
reached back to the door of the pen
itentiary. Rut It should he said In
the same breath that he has shown
his uncompromising fairness by turn
ing upon men found unworthy of his
trust and has overwhelmed them with
his wrath.
There's nothing half-way about
Theodore Roosevelt. He likes a man
with all his heart and soul nnd vigor.
If ho doesn't like him ho hates the
rrnund he walks on, hates his family,
his relatives, his ancestors, and his
birthplace. What Is more, he is not
at all slow to let the fact be known.
Much as he loves a fight, ho loves
peace better. But he makes no bones
of saying that he's ready and willing
tc fight for peace. He wants the
United States to build the biggest
t'avy In the world so that peace shall
be universal. He wants the gun
pointers of our navy to bo dead shots
at five miles. If they are so known,
what nation would war with us? If
they are so recognized, what power
would go to battle with another If
Uncle Sam should say, "Let there be
peace?"
Lover of Work.
Roosevelt loves work, and the
harder the work the better he likes
It. He also loves play after work'and
he plays Just as hard as ho works.
That Is where the great big boy crops
cut In his disposition. He'd rather
take a'15-mlle walk In the rain or
a 70-mllo gallop over tho prairies,
than sit In a box at the opera. He
Isn't partial to grand opera, by the
way, and will tell .you that bis favor
ite melodies are "Garry Owen" and
"A Hot Time In the Old Town To
night." Walking, horseback riding,
tennis, boxing, and single-stick play
are his favorite recreations, and he'd
rather meet and hobnob with an old
backwoods guide than a politician In
a plug hat. He hates plug hats. "I
feel like a stuffed club In one ot
them," he observed one day, "and
If I were not holding a Job where I'm
suppose to look like a stuffed club
on certain occasions, I'm blessed If
I'd wear one."
Roosevelt does not use tobacco In
any form, and although no tee-total-ler,
he has very little use for a drunk
ard. On one of his recent trips when
he refused to take either a drink or
a cigar at a banquet, one of the la
dles present asked him if he had no
vices?
"I can swear like a blue streak,"
replied the president, with a grin,
"would you like to hear me" .
Roosevelt likes to preach little
sermons on personal conduct, but as
the world knows that he practices In
private life what he preaches In
public, Itforglves him for this trait.
His fellow citizens have come to
know that he Is very human, Indeed,
and they like hjm all the better for
It. They kiow that he is Impulsive,
that he often leaps before he looks,
and changes his mind with the ease
of a summer wind. But what mat
ters that, when they also know him
to bo honest and sincere, that he de
ttsts fpaud, that he places the mother
on a higher hero plane than the sol
dier, and that he is working with all
his might and main to right the
wrongs that oppress the people?
Tho world knows, too, that Wall
street has been scared stiff ever since
he has been In office; that he settled
the coal strike; that he stopped the
wholesale slaughter of Russians and
Japanese. It knows also that he
tiled to reform our spelling, that he
attempted to erase "In God We
Trust" from the coins of the realm,
and If ho liar his way the great
corporations of the country would bo
Controlled by the departments at
Washington.
For all these things, In spite of all
thcc tilings, the vote at the last elec
tion proved him to be the most popu
lar man that ever ran for offlee In
this or any other country, In this or
any other period of written history.
Best of All -
SUITSALE
All that is left of our new Spring
Tailored Suits continue at
HALF PRICE
A great variety of suits to choose from. All tho coats are
silk or satin lined. All the skirts are full gored or pleaded;
rome have one fold and some have two folds on tho bottom. The
. greatest variety of individual suits we have ever offered.
Salei Begins Today at the One Price
See Display in Big Window
Pendleton Cloak and Suit House
it
BUY OF US AND IT'S ALLRIGHT".
A Grand Family Medicine.
"It gives me pleasure to speak a
good word for Electric Bitters," writes
Mr. Frank Conlan of No. 438 Hous
ton street. New York. 'It's a grand
family medicine for dyspepsia and
liver complications; while for lame
back and weak kidneys It cannot be
recommended too highly." Electric
Bitters regulate the digestive func
tions, purify the blood, and Impart i
renewed vigor and vitality to the
weak and deblliated of both sexes.
Sold under guarantee at Tallman &
Co.'s drug store. 50c.
Hotel St. George.
J. A. Allison, Portland; Geo. Mc
Gllvery, Spokane; J. C. Jordan, Her
nilston; A. T. Jordon, Hermistnn; S.
R. Oldakcr, Hermistnn; O. W. Cherry,
San Francisco; T. J. Golden, New
York; Fred Beagles, Portland; W. F.
Mills, New York; N. Elmsted, Salt
Lake; Harry P. Hemoch, Chicago.
L. B. Bevans, Los Angeles; Mrs. R. S.
Bragaw, Boise; Mrs. M. G. Benslst,
St. Louis, Mo.; Miss Douglas, St.
Louis, Mo.; Mrs. Lelo and son, Spo
kane; W. J. Swart. New York; J. E.
O'Conncll and wife, Tacoma. Wash.;
E. J. Brown, Portland; A. W. Slfton.
Spokane; A. R. Coppock, Athena; J.
R. Staycrman, New York; A. M.
Moore, Echo; M. Gilbert, San Fran
cisco; Wm. Swan, San Francisco; F.
Swenson, Spokane; T. E. Clendenlng.
San Francisco; C. A. Black, Port
land; T. Y. Hanson, Spokane; H. C.
Yaughan, Spokane; W. H. Raymond,
Portland; R..R. Wallace, Astoria;
T. M. Lea bo, Portland; C. L. Mor
gan and wife, R. R. Johnson, Hermls
tcn; F. D. Nelderhamer, Spokane;
K. A. Schmidt, John Clancy. Portland.
You Should Know Tills.
Foley's Kidney Remedy will cure
any case of kidney and bladder trou
ble that is not beyond the reach of
medicine. No medicine can do more.
Pendleton Drug Co.
W ITl f X..-2T-s
Kenneth Palmer, a five-year old
boy, was killed In Portland yesterday
by being struck by a runaway team.
Several other persons had narow es
capes.
Making Good.
There Is no way of making InMing
friends like. "Making Good;" mid Doctor
l'lerce's medicines well exemplify this,
and their friends, after more than two
decades of popularity, are numbered by
tho hundreds of thousands. They have
"made good" and they have not mude
drunkards.
A good, honest, square-deal medicine of
known composition is Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery. It still enjoys an Im
mense sale, while, most of tho prepara
tions that nave come into prominence in
the earlier period of its popularity have
"gone by the board" and are never moro
heard of. Tliero must ho some reason for
this long-tlino popularity and that is to
bo found in its superior merits. When
once given a fair trial for weak stomach.
or for liver and blood affections, Its supe
rior curative qualities are soon manliest;
henco It has survived and grown In pop
ular favor, while scores of less meritorious
articles have, suddenly flashed into favor
for a brief period ana then been as soon
forgotten.
For a torpid liver with its attendant
Indigestion, dyspepsia, headacho, per
haps dizziness, foul breath, nasty coated
tongue, with bitter taste, loss of appetite,
with distress after eating, nervousness
and debility, nothing is so good as Dr.
l'lerce's Ooldon Medical Discovery. It's
an honest, square-deal medicine with all
Its Ingredients printed on bottle-wrapper
no secret, no hoeus-Kcu9 humbug,
therefore oVm't ocrrit a substitute that
the dealer may possibly make a little big
ger profit. InM on your right to have
wnat you can tor.
Don't buv Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip
tion expecting it to prove a "cure-all." It
Is only advised for woman's special ail
ments. It makes weak women strong and
sick women well. Less advertised than
some preparations sold for like purposes,
lis sterling curative virtues sun maintain
Its position In the front ranks, where it
stood over two decades ago. As an In
vigorating tonic and strengthening nerv
ine It Is unequal!. It won't satisfy those
who want "booze," for there Is not a drop
of alcohol In It.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pel eta. the oritii-
tial Little Liver Pills, although the first
pin oi meir Kina in tne market, still lead,
and when once tried are ever afterwards
In favor. Easy to take as candy one to
inree a aoaa. much tmuotea oat
tquaitd.
(Vi
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