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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1908)
PAGE FOUR. DAILY EAST OKEKONLAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1008. EXGIIT PAGES. - v COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. AN INDKrESPENT NEWSPAPER. rablUbrd Pally. Weekly and 8ml Wkly, t Pendleton, Oregon, by tha AST OKEUOXIAN ruiiL18BINO CO. SCnsCRIl-TIN BATES: ftolly. nnc year, by mall $5 00 Pally. all month, by mall 2.0 Dally, thre month, by mall 1.2S tlly, on mouth, by mall BO Dally, one year, by carrier T.60 ttolly. tlx mouth, by carrier 8.75 Dally, three month, by rarrler LOT tally, one month, by carrier 6 Verkl one year, by mail 1 Weekly, all month, by mall To Weekly four month, by mall 60 Heml Weekly, on year, by mall l.M eml Weekly, all month, by mall... .75 Vail Weekly tour month, by mall.. .SO The Dally F.aat Pregonlan It kept on Ml t the Oregon New Co., 147 fltb street. Portland, Oregon. Cblrat-o 11 u re a, 009 Security building. Waihlnirton, D. C, Burets, 601 Four teenth trect. N. W. Member United Press Assoclatloa. Telephone Mala 1 Entered at the poatofflca at Pn ditto, Oregon, aa aecond-elaat mall matter. A certain pasha, dead these thousand years, Once from his harem fled sudden tears. In And had this sentence on the city's gate Deeply engraved: "Only Is great." God So these four words above the city's noise Hung like the accents of an an gel's voice. And evermore from the high barbacan Saluted each returning caravan. Lost Is that city's glory; every gust Lifts with crisp leaves, the un known pasha's dust. And all is ruin save one wrinkl ed gate Whereon is written, "Only God Is great." Thomas Bailey Aldrlch. - 4 WORK OF THE O. R. & N. The excellent crops which are going to be harvested in the light soil and dry land districts of Umatilla county this year, prove beyond any question the wisdom of the O. R. & X. agita tion for better farming methods. If this land will produce crops with as little rain as has fallen this sea sen, and under the old methods of cultivation, what will the land do un der proper dry land cultivation, as advocated by the O. R. & com pany? But little of the land in the north vest part of the county has been cul tivated this year with any view to dry farming methods. If this land will produce crops with as little rain as has fallen this season and under the old methods of cultlva- lion, what will the same land do under proper dry land cultivation, as advo cated by the O. R. & X. company? Put little of the land in the north west part of the county has been cul tivated this year with any view to dry farming methods, and yet an average yield will be harvested. Suppose the Campbell system of surface blanket ing and frequent cultivation to hold the moisture had been carried out, Is I not reasonable to suppose that the yield would have been almost doubl d? The 0. R. & X. freight department Is not an Idealist or a dreamer. It is manned by hard-headed, practical men who watch conditions and results and know that certain practices will bring certain unfailing results. Wh"-n that department advocates the Campbell system of dry land farming, it knows that It is on safe and certain ground. It has seen the results of this system in other sections similar to the dry portions of Umatilla -county and It reasons, and correctly, to, that like methods will bring like results here. If the recommendations of the O. R. & X. were carried out In full by Uma tilla county farmers, especially those In the light land sections, the traffic from those sections of the county could easily be doubled. And If the diversified farming methods advocat ed by the O. R. & X were pursued In other sections, the products of those .sections would also be doubled. HONORS FOR PENDLETON. President Montle B. Gwlnn of the 'Oregon State Bankers' association, ai.d president of the Pendleton Sav ings bank, made a statement to the banker while in session at Salem last week which Is worthy of being repro duced In Pendleton. After his elec tion aa president ot that distinguish ed body of Oregon business men, Mr. Owlnn said: "I feel that thU honor Is not mine do much as It Is my home town's. I am glad to be your president, but I am far more delighted to know that this recognition Is given to Pendleton. I want Pendleton to claim and enjoy whatever honor may attach to the of fice of president of your association." It Is this spirit which has made Pendleton what she Is. It Is this feel ing that makes the Pendleton spirit. Ever Pendletonlan is always for Pen dleton. That is why Pendleton is the bist town In eastern Oregon and that is what Is going to keep her at the head of the list. ALL TOGETHER. Pendleton Is now at the open door of a new era. She enters a new phase of municipal life, a phase not alto gether untried, not altogether experi mental, for states and cities have met the same conditions before and have survived and flourished under these conditions. Pendleton will do like utaa . . the famous electrical scientist, glv Ue have lost the saloons andwhat- J ng nn account of hta marches while ever business they may have brought tc the city. We will lose some small part of the population which depend ed upon that Industry for a llvell- hood. But there will be compensat- lt)ft Albany he had been working at ing movements toward the city to off- his Invention of the electro-magnev set this outward movement of popu- 1 'f transmitting signals at a distance whereby dots might be made on pa-lat,on- 'per and bells struck, Indicating letters While we have lost the saloons we of tne aiphabet. still have Tendleton's excellent school i He refused to patent this Invcn svstem. We have Pendleton high Hon on the ground that It was Incom v v.. . no nn i n patible with the dignity of science to schoo , the best school of Its kind east r k.1 !,.,.. . t, I confine the probable benefits to the of the Cascade mountains and this ug(j of nny one ,ndlv,duoX school under its present highly effl- i jn his statement he says: "I think dent management and hearty support j the first actual line of telegraph-using from the people and school board i the earth as a conductor was made In , 'the beginning of 1S36. A wire was should bring more people to the city , extpnded ncros, tne front tnmpus than 40 saloons would have kept ! rrotT1 theupper story of the college here. ! library building to the philosophical And the population which the high j ha" n the other. Through this wire , ... . ...'signals were sent from time to time school and two academies will bring my house w my luboratory ... to the city will be a much more per- Tne opoI.ator at the other end of the manent and substantial class than line was usually Henry's wife, and that which followed the saloons.. The' the exchange of communications be- new settlers will be nome bUllderS school hungry people who will locate permanently and rear families here, spend their Incomes here and make Pendleton still the best town In the inland empire. There Is no use for Pendleton to "lay down" and say that there is no hope now, that the 23 saloons have been closed. If these 28 saloons wer the only resources of Pendleton It Is time we were finding It out. If the business from these 28 saloons consti tuted the bulk of Pendleton's commer cial and banking business, let us know the terrible truth and have done with the suspense. . ... iiut such is not tne case. renaie - ,..... . , i fler my insigniricant sell seemed to ton merchants will find business bet-: . ... . shrivel and my huge express rifle to ter in many lines. Such has been the dwndle lnt0 a mere pea shooter. Try case In Wallowa county. Bills were . ns I will on such occasions, I can nev nald more Dromctlv there, with prohi- er overcome my sense of terror, and .i. v tt-ith bition than before. Many men with large families who formerly spent their money for liquor now buy shoes. clothing and school books for .their families and pay cash. So let us meet the new condition 'with a "stiff upper lip." Pendleton has resources which cannot be ef fected by the disappearance of the li censed liquor traffic. She has re sources which' will be constantly de veloped from year to year and which will add to her population and wealth in spite of the pessimistic wail of the departing saloon men. Let us puU all together, every day, week and month for Pendleton. Hun dreds of homeseekers are coming to the w&t and' of these many are look ing for dry (owns in which to live and educate their children. That Pendle ton is now dry Is the best advertise ment ever sent out from the city. It is an advertisement which will reach the right kind of people. BUGABOOS FOR BRYAN. All is not smooth sailing for Bry an. Denver promises several spiruea contests and it is Impossible to say this time what the democratic plat form will be like. It Is certain that It can contain no more progressive, practical, vital demands than are con tained In the republican platform. Prohibition looms ud before the democratic platform makers, vast and threatening. What will the demo crats do with it? Mormonism, that perpetual buga boo of Idaho politics, threatens to stalk Into the convention hall. What will I'ryan do with it? Roger Sullivan and Tom Taggart are still clinging like parasites to the f VI 17 II VW iLe mother bending over the cradle. The ordeal nrougn wnicn tne expeci ant mother must pass Is such that she looks forward to the hour when KhaU feel the exquisite thrill of motherhood with i dread Every woman should know that the danger and pain of child-birth can be 3 r,h, nf Mfllher't Friend, a liniment for external use, which toughens and renders pliable work. By its aid thousands or women have passed tnis crisis In safety and with little pain. told M ft 00 per bottle by eruiiUU. Taaubl book to woaca test free. BMADrUlJt KTSffLATOM CO. Ailmmtm, mm democratic organisation and they are "stuck fast," Judging from the claims for recognition which their friend are making. What will Dryan do with them? All these and more, are before tho Denver convention. And In addition to these Is the one overshadowing question as to whether William Jen nings Bryan will again be selected as the standard bearer. Did you buy a kog of beer before It was to late? Back to the lee cream parlor. "Have something?" THE 1'IUST TEI.KGHAPH WIRE. In one of the locked nlcoves of tho library of Princeton University Is a written by Professor Josepr Henry, a professor at Princeton. It was across the Princeton cam pus that Henry strung what Is said to have been the first telegraph wire ever operated In America. Before ho 1 1 " Kllv IMV ornuru uiiuviihu- untes oi inose aays nine snort oi mi raculous. Telegraph Age. THE ELEPHANT AT BAY Twenty years of experience tells me that a whole regiment of lions cannot produce the same moral effect as one 12-foot African tusker when he ' cocks his big sail-like ears, draws i himself up to his full height and looks at you, letting off at. the same time a blood curdling scream; while In all probability others tnvsible to you are stampedjng on all sides with the din and vibration of an earth' quake. Surrounded fn a dense Jun gle by a herd of elephants they seem t0 block out the whole horizon. One I measured was actually 16 feet from I Ail nf aoi tn orio0 nf ,ar tvnn. p" - - - always feel Inclined to throw down ' ." i my elephant gun and ruu for safety till I drop. W. G. Fitz Gerald In Success. NEGRESS TURNS WHITE. "Aunt" Judy Jennings, a Fulton ne gro, irv her declining days Is losing her ebony appearance and actually turning white, says the Gazette. About half her body has changed color and it Is only a matter of time when she will lose her African hue completely, to Judge from the way the fading pro cess Is spreading! Aunt Judy U about 90 years old, according to the reckoning of Charles Bailey of this city, to whose family she belonged In slave days. The phenomenon In re gard to her changing color Is regard ed with some superstition among the town's colo:ed population. "IN DE NATURAL WAY." A flch northerner, walking In a southern negro settlement, came up on a house around which several' children were playing. Seeing that the family was destitute, tye called the oldest negro boy and gave him a dollar, telling him to spend It for a Christmas turkey. As soon as the generous man had gone, the negro woman called her boy and said, "Thomas, yo' gimme dat dollah and go git dat turkey m the natchal way." Success Magazine. THE TENDER THOUGHT." Harry is six years old. "Pa," he asked one day, "If I git married wlh I have a wife like Ma?" "Very likely." "And if I don't get married, will 1 have to be an old bachelor like Uncle Tom?" "Very likely." "Well. Pa." he said, after a mot ment of deep thought, "it's a mighty tough world for us men, ain't' lt?" Success Magazine. The earthworm considers the plow a harrowing calamity. Is the joy of the household, for without it no happiness can be complete. How sweet the sight of mother and babe, angels smileat and commend the thoughts and aspirations of the all the parts, assisting nature in its 73 AT a W E BS 3 rm W xaarn m.1 . J r m C fEPT OPEN BY BAD BLOOD Whenever a sore refuses to heal, it is because of bad blood. If the place existed simply because the flesh was diseased at that particular spot, it would be nn easy matter to apply some remedy directly to the ulcer that would kill the germ; or the diseased flesh might be removed y a surgical operation and a cure 'effected. But the very fact that )ld sores resist every form of. local or external treatment, and even cturn after being cut away, shows that back of them is a morbid cause vhich must be removed before a cure, can result. The impurities in the blood which keep old sores open, come from Jiffercnt causes. A long spell of debilitating sickness, which breeds Jisease germs in the system, is a common source. These morbid impurities get mto the circulation, and the blood becomes a polluted, m tectums tiutd, wnich, instead ot nourishing the fibres and tissues of ;he flesh, irritates and ulcerates them, and continually discharges its impurities into the open sore, and prevents the place from heal ing. Another cause for bad blood is the retention in the system of the refuse and waste matters of the body. . Those members whose duty it is to carry off the useless lccumulations, become dull and s!uccish in their action and leave '.heir work. imperfectly done, and ;liis fermenting matter is absorbed nto the circulation. The weaken ng or polluting of this vital fluid nay also come from the results of vjnie constimtional disease, while persons who are born" with an hereditary Mood taint are very apt 'o be afflicted with sores and ulcers. Local or external applications .an not cure an old sore, because they do not reach the blood. Sucli rcatment may reduce the iri.'iammation, lessen the pain and discharge, iivj tend to keep the place clean, and for this reason should be used, rut it can do no real good toward effecting a permanent cure. S: S. S. cures sores and ulcers by purifying the blood. It removes jvcry impurity and taint from the circulation, and completely doc.: nvay with the cause. When S. S. S. has cleansed the blood, the sort PURELY VEGETABLE md is an absolutely safe medicine for persons of any age. Under the purifying and tonic eiTects of S. S. S. the system is built up, and those A hose health has been impaired because of the drain and worry of an Did sore, will be doubly benefited by its use. Special book on Sores ind Ulcers and any medical advice free. S. S. S. is for sale at all drug stores. TGE SWI?T SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. Bilious Troubles Bile causes no end of trouble. Sick headaches, bilious attacks, jaundice, constipation and many distressing ailments arise from an excess of bile, or from obstruction of the bile duct. Inactivity, sedentary occu pations and indiscretion in feeding and drinking are bile blunders that need to be guarded against. When The liver is disordered the best bile correctives are EJEECIIAU'S PILLS because they relieve the overworked liver, and gently stimulate it when it is sluggish. These pills control the flow of bile, restore its right con sistency, and work for the immediate and lasting benefit of the stomach, bowels and blood. Whenever a furred tongue, dull, yellowish eyes, nausea, or headache indicate bilious conditions, use Beecham's Fills at once, to correct the bile and , . Regulate the Liver Boxes 10c and Me, with full directions Tho Pendleton Savings Bank Report of Condition, Jane 30, 1905, RESOURCES Loans and discounts 826,904.29 Warrants 193.25 Banking house -.. 60,000.00 . Furniture and fixtures 10,000.00 Other real estate 1,600.00 CuhIi and duo from bank9 , , 292,207.99 11,179,865.63 LIABILITIES - Capital atock $ 100,000.00 Surplus 100,000.00 Undivided profits 63,727.32 Deposits 916,138.21 $1,179,865.53 I, J. W. Maloney, cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement la true to the best of my knowledge and belief. J. W. MALONEY, Carfiler. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of July, 1908. .., , A. E. LAMBERT, (Seal.) Notary Public for Oregon. Byers' Best Flour Is made from the choioeat wheat that grows. Good bread Is assur ed when BYERS' BEST FLOUR Is used. Bran, Shorts, Steam Rolled Barley always on havnd. PENDLETON ROLLER MILLS ENTIRE FOOT A SOLID SORE. Some time ago I had a tore to coma on my foot, and nothing-1 used would do it any good. Itcontinuod to grow worse and eat deeper into the surround ing flesh, until the entire foot waa a iclid tore, and gave me a great deaVof worry and trouble. I tried almort every thing I henrd of, but got no benefit until I oommenoed 8. 8. S. In a abort time after commencing thie remudy I be gan to improve, and I contin ued to uso it until it drove the polaon from my blood, an'd completely cured thia obsti nate aoro. I recommend it moat hlffh'y aa a remedy for sorea and ulcers. DAVID C. MILLE3. 212 W. 49th St., New York.N. T. begins to heal, and ii is not a surface-cure, but the healing procc:: begins at the bottom, soon the pain and in flammaiion leave, the discharge ceases, and the place fills in with firm, healthy flesh. S. S. S. is purely vegetable, made only from roots and herbs. Hotel St. George GEORGE DARVEAU, Proprlotor. European plan. Everything first class. All modern conveniences. Steam heat throughout. Rooms en suits with bath. Large, new sample room. The Hotel St. Oeorgo Is pronounced one of the most up-to-date hotels of the northwest. Telephone and firs alarm connections to office, and hot and cold running water In all rooms. F1HST CLASS RESTAURANT IN CONNECTION WITH HOTEL. ROOMS: $1.00 and $1.5o Block and a Half from Depot. See the big electric slpi. Golden Rule Hotel Corner Court and Johnson Streets, Pendleton, Oregon. J. POPEJOY, Proprietor . .. II II V V. Heated by Steam Lighted)? Electricity Courteous treatment; reasonable ratss Free 'bus meets all trains. Fine restaurant In connection. Special attention given country trade. An Ideal family liotci No bar In Connection. New Hotel Sagamore BAKER CITY, OREGON UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT (50) ALL OUTSIDE ROOMS. Newly refurnished and refitted throughout. Electric lights. Hot and cold hnths free to guests. SAMPLE ROOMS IN CONNECTION Free Auto Rus to and from all trains. RATES, .$1.50 AND $2 PER DAY AMERICAN PLAN. TOY L. YOUKG, Prop. GROUND BONE FOR CHICKENS, 3c pound Also fine fresh meats delivered promptly at reasonable price i. EMPIRE MEAT CO. 'fhone Main 18. Balanced Rations For Incubator Chicks Lice Killers and Conditioners For Poultry and Stock at COLESWORTHY'S Feed Store 127--129 E. Alta Every 7oman I Interallied and thould know ooui in woMarmi Marvel "ii"1" ' vuuene Aik toot dnunttat tot M. If hsl Mln tint innnla Quwr. do i Mna lUunp ft JHqs- I bbdte MARVEL CO, 44 E. 234 SI. N Vor Daily East OregosUaa by cantor. I i f mm TSsVTs'-rfcj" k. w BBw m 'Ulll'ji m m ''Hi r m j only If cents per week.