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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 15, 1908)
EIGHT PAGES. page four. DAILY EAST OREGON! AX, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 1908. COniT OFFICIAL PAPER. ' AN IXPi:rF.XIEXT NEWSPAPER. Published Dnlir. Weekly and Semi-Weekly, t Pendleton, Oregon, by tbe EAST OltKtiOMAX PUKLlSHINa CO. sunscniPTioN bates : Dally, one vear, by mall 15.00 Dully, six months, by mall 2.50 Dally, three months, by mall 1.23 Dally, oue month, by mall 60 Dally, one year, by carrier T.50 Datlr, tlx months, by carrier 3.T3 Dally, three months, by carrier 1.93 Dally, one month, by carrier 83 Weekly, one year, by mall. 1.A0 "Weekly, six montba, by mall 73 "Weekly, four months, by mall B0 Semi Weekly, one year, by mall 1.60 Semi Weekly, six months, by mall... .75 Peml Weekly, four months, by mall.. .60 Tbe Dally Ha?t Oregonlan Is kept on sale at the Orueon News Co- 147 6th street, Portland, Oregon. Chicago Bureau, 009 Security building. Washington, D. C, Bureau, 601 Four teenth street. N. W. Member United Treat Association. Telephone Main 1 Entered st the postofflce at Pendleton, uregon. aa second-class mall matter. vUMON Sfc-jLABE . Unspoken VorJs, like treasures , In the mine, ' Are valueless until we give them birth. Like unfound gold their hidden beauties shine, Which God has made to bless and gild the earth. How -sad 'twould be to see a master's hand Strike glorious notes upon a voiceless lute, But, . oh. what pain, when at God's own command, A heartstring thrills with kindness, but Is mute! Then hide It not, the music of the soul Dear sympathy, expressed with kindly voice, But let It like a shining river roll Tp deserts dry to hearts that would rejoice. Oh, let the symphony of kindly words Sound for the poor, the friendless and the weak, And he will bless you! He who struck these chords VTl'il strike another when In turn you seek. John Boyle O'Reilly. THE WASTE OF CIVILIZATION. Have you ever thought of the wll ful and foolish waste of money, time and energy demanded by modern clV' lllzatlon? Take the waste of fashion, for In- stance. The alleged leaders of fash- Jon decree that a hat or dress is "out of style" and no matter If It has not been worn but once or not at all, It Is discarded. The price Is thrown away, the energy and time used In making it were worse than wasted. Manufacturers vie with each other in supplanting each other's products, in order that people will be forced to buy something new every month or every year. Hats, shoes, suits. Jewel ry, dressing apparel of all kinds, fur niture and almost every article used 'by man, is subject to rapid fluctua tion or change, through "style," "fashion," or other meaningless de cree. If all the money, time and energy that are now absolutely wasted to make business for caterers to the whims of humanity, were used In bona fide development, the country and every Individual In It. would be far advanced beyond the present status of society and government. THE RIGHT KIXD OF DATA. J A. J. Wells, who is gathering data and who will write the literary ma terial for the Umatilla county booklet to be Issued for the publicity com mittee by Sunset magazine, Is cer tainly securing the right kind of data. He is going among farmers, or chardists, sheepmen, cattlemen and itpresentatives of other industries in the county and Is collecting the story from them, first hand. What he says will be gospel truth, and it will be so attractive and so forcible that the homeseeker will not be able to resist It The East Oregonlan repeats again for the thousandth time, perhaps, that the plain truth about Umatilla county and Oregon is good enough. Ir, fact the whole truth cannot be told to easterners, with any hope of acceptance. It is too much for them. But It Is evident from the nature of the data being gathered by Mr. Wells, who Is a cultured, high-class gentleman and writer, that Umatilla county will fare well in her ad vert 1s . Ing contract with Sunset Magazine. SELF HEALING. ' .A few years ago people who de clared that they could heal their own ailments and without medicine, were considered hopeless cranks. The as sertlon seemed far from the accepted belief and thought of the world that it was considered fanaticism. With many well meaning people it seems the same today, but the number whom such assertions are not startling Is growing larger every day. ( Today hundreds of sincere, consci entious Christian men and women are able to check and In Jact cure their ills, by the simple application of thought force, will power, determina tion not to be sick. These people do much of this mi raculous work unconsciously, but they do it. They exercise their minds and will power and thought magnetism to such an extent that tho small ills of the body are made subservient to the mind. . x If the small Ills are subservient to the minds of ordinary men -and wo men why arc not the greater ills, the most stubborn diseases subservient to the minds of more practiced, more educated, more highly cultured peo ple? There Is no limit to self heal ing or mind healing. If only people will make the mind supreme over the body by constant discipline. WILL THE MILL GO TO PORTLAND The Portland Oregonlan announces that the new textile manufacturing town of Gordon Falls, InMultnomah county, will be founded by the re moval of the Pendleton woolen mill to that place, as a neuclus for a large manufacturing center. Will Pendleton pride and Pelidleton capital allow this property to be moved to Multnomah county? Is there not enough business enterprise in this city to keep that Institution here and operate It? Will Pendleton sit still and allow her resurces to be plucked away, piece meal? Pendleton has received greater' ad vertising from this mill and its pro ducts than from any other one indus try in the city. Her name has been carried to the ends of the world through this Institution. It has fur nished her a good payroll, has pur chased her wool, has kept money in circulation In her channels of trade and has made her name known far and wide. Now will she permit It to be moved away? . It can be made to pay a profit here. Pendleton is in the heart of the wool belt. There Is a demand for Its pro ducts. It is already established here and can be started within a wek, If Pendleton capital will say the word. But there Is another side to the question, also. Perhaps It will be better to have it moved away. Per haps it will be best for Pendleton to wipe the entire Institution and all Its appurtenances from the map of Pen dleton and then let some new blood and new capital start anew. It has been a hoodoo,' It seems, In many ways. So it may be best to obliterate every vestige and memory of the present woolen mill and then get out after some energetic new blood to make a fresh start and place Pendleton on the industrial map again. nils side of the question is worthy of thought, also. WHERE WOMEN MAY VOTE. Frieda Radel, the suffragist, has complied the following record of wo man's suffrage the world over. Australia: Women have enjoyed the suffrage since September 19, 1893. Xew Zealand: Of 140,000 women over age In New Zealand, 90,000 make se of their votes in the Interest of morals, progress and against alcohol. Great Britain: English women are eligible for the position of aldermen, wardens of the poor, and the right to ote In town and county elections. Norway: Women paying from $75 to $100 In taxes are entitled to vote. Sweden: Women paying at least 125 taxes annually are entitled to ote in all communal affairs. Denmark: Women are entitled to vote tinder the same restrictions as men. , Iceland: Women haye been entitl ed to vote on commercial matters since 1882. Finland: Women are entitled to vote under the same restrictions and conditions as men. The Netherlands: A bill is pending promising, women active and passive right to vote. France, Belgium, Austria, Switzer land and Germany: Women are strictly excluded from voting, but in Germany there are signs that the wo men are preparing to battle for the franchise, while In France, Belgium, Austria and Switzerland nothing of the kind has yet been attempted. WILL FORSAKE THE WOMEN. The national prohibition convention now in session at Columbus, Ohio, Is seriously considering the . matter 'of declaring against equal suffrage, for the reason that they feel the women are a "millstone" about the neck of the prohibition movement - The equal suffrage advocates of Oregon would be very glad If the pro hibitionists would separate themselves from the equal suffrage movement, as the local option fight In this state prevented the passage of the equal suffrage nmendment two years ago, It Is believed. Hud the women left local option and prohibition alone ' they would probably now be voting In Oregon. So Oregon suffragists will be satisfied tf. make the fight separately and alone. These two great reforms belong to gether and should go hand in hand, but If the prohibitionists are so selfish and narrow as to throw their friend overboard when their own Interests seem to be threatened, well and, good. The women can fight alone. They have always borne their own burdens and a part of man's beside, In tho past. They can do so In future. The election of a democratic mayor by a three-to-one vote In Walla Wal la, over an Ankeny man, looks like the senatorial situation In the state of Washington might be In an cx trentely shaky stage, as far as Ankeny Is concerned. TILLMAN' S START. An Interesting story is related in connection with Senator Tillman's Ideals of agricultural education. It was through a rebuke administered to him some years ago when he tried to explain his Ideals that he entered politics. , , There was an old agricultural col lege In the state In those -days In connection with it a meeting was call ed at Columbia, S. C. Mr. Tillman, who was then a farmer living on his lower plantation, attended the meet ing. He tried to address the meeting, but it is related that John C. Haskell, a son-in-law of Wade Hampton, rath er intimated that Mr. Tillman knew little about the subject, and he was not afforded an opportunity to air his views. Mr. Tillman smarted under what he regarded as a rebuke from one of the leading aristocrats' of the state. Returning to his plantation, he wrote art exposition of his views on agri cultural education and sent It to the Cotton Planter, then an . Influential journal among southern agricultural Interests. This article attracted attention everywhere, and Mr. Tillman, still a farmer without political ambitions, was asked to address a meting at Bennetvllle. He accepted. His views made a hit. He was asked to make another address. He accepted. Ori ganlzatlon was effected among th. farmers, and in less than a year Mr. Tillman was elected governor of South Carolina. Primaries came into vogue In South Carolina about that time, and the aristocracy of old families who had been In political control were un horsed under the leadership of Till man It was as governor that Mr Tillman brought about -the establish ment of the Clemson and Wlnthrop schools and it was the repukefrom Haskell that really forced Tillman into politics. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. TO OPEX WATERWAYS. . The plank of the national demo cratic platform concerning the open ing and maintenance of the water ways of the country, Is as follows: Water furnishes the cheapest means of transportation and the national government having control of navi gable waters should improve them to the fullest capacity We earnestly favor the immediate adoption of a liberal and comprehensive plan for Improving every water course In tbe United States which is justified by the needs of commerce and to secure that end we favor, when practicable, the connection of the Great Lakes with the navigable rivers and with the gulf through the Mississippi river and the navigable rivers with each other and the rivers, bays and sounds of the coast with each other by arti ficial canals, with a view to perfecting a system of inland waterways to be navigated by vessels of standard draught. . We favor the co-ordination of the various services of the government connected with waterways In one ser vice for the purpose of aiding in the completion of such a system of Inland waterways; and we favor the creation of a fund ample' for continuous work, which shall be conducted under the direction of a commission of experts Pumps Supplant Water Mains. A man who Is taking an active In terest In Irrigation hv numnlna- states that about 30 people In the city" are now using that method and state tney find It cheaper and more convenient than obtaining- water from the city mains, says the Boise Capital News. It Is argued that at any time or day thev can secure suficlent force for sprinkling, while at times' when on the public main the pressure Is so low that It Is Impossible to fully irrigate. He believes that in a few years when electric power can be supplied through the valley, all the small tracts of land will be Irrigated by means of pumps and mpny of , the larger ranches will secure their water by this method. Men who have made Investigations are of the opinion that an ample sup ply of water can be secured frpm the earth In nearly any section of Idaho and the only force needed Is electric ity to raise It from the bowels of the earth to reclaim much of the arid land which cannot be reached through ditches. That there is plenty of water In the vicinity of Boise was shown by the fact that the Short Line got an arte sian well with a flow of 80 gallons per minute to the surface at a dis tance of 601 feet For Rent fitore room on Main street In tbe East Oregonlan -building. Apply at this office. ill TREACHEROUS Contagious Blood Poison is the most treacherous of all diseases. It has its victims in its power almost before they realize its presence; because its first symptom, which is usually a little sore or pimple, is so insignificant that it does not cause alarm, or even excite suspicion. But notwithstanding the outward symptoms are not manifested in the beginning, this insidious poison is at work on the blood, and in a short time the patients find themselves diseased from head to foot. The mouth and throat ulcerate, the hair begins to come out, a rash breaks out on the body, copper-colored spots, and even sores and ulcers appear on the flesh. Unless the poison is driven from the blood it affects the bones, and literally eats out the life of the sufferer. There is scarcely anyjlimit to the evil powers of Contagious Blood Poison. It is often transmitted to others by a friendly handshake or from the use of the toilet articles of an infected person. And if the virus is allowed to remain in the circulation, its blighting influence will be handed down to offspring to ruin their innocent lives. Contagious Blood Poison is too' dangerous to trifle with. No time should be lost in ridding the blood of this insidious poison; and in no disease is it more important that the proper remedy be used. Medicines which merely check the symptoms for a time and leave the real cause smouldering in the sys tem, have brought misery and des pair to thousands. Faithfully the sufferers took such treatment, and when all outward signs had disap peared left off its use, only to find that the virus had been shut up in the blood, awaiting a favorable opportunity to break out again. S. S. S. goes down into the circulation, and removes every particle of the poison from the blood, makes this vital fluid pure and healthy, and does not leave the slightest trace of the poison for future outbreaks. S. S. S. is made entirely of roots and herbs of the forests and fields. It does not contain the least particle of mineral in any form to injure" the delicate parts of the system, impair the digestion or corrode and irritate the membranous tissue or lining of the stomach and bowels. PURELY VE GET ABLE the disease, and insure a speedy restoration to perfect health. We have a Home Treatment book, describing the different stages and symptoms of Contagious Blood Poison, and containing many sug gestions that will be helpful to you in curing yourself with S. S. S. We will send this book and any medical advice desired to all who write; no charge for either. S. S. S. is for sale at all drug stores. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. CAN' YOU PUNCTUATE TIHS? He Is an old and experienced man In vice and wickedness he Is never found In opposing the works of In iquity he takes delight in the down fall of his selghbors he never rejoices in the prosperity of any of his fellow creatures he Is always ready to assist In destroying the peace of society he takes no pleasure In serving the Lord he Is uncommonly diligent in sowing discord among his friends and acquaintances he takes .no pride In laboring to promote the cause of Christianity he has not been negli gent In endeavoring to stigmatize all public teachers he makes no effort to subdue his evil passions he strives hard to build up Satan's kingdom he lends no aid to the support of the gospel among the heathen he" con innlc's forward to the hour with by its penetrating and soothing"properties, allays nausea, nervousness, unpleasant feelings, and so prepares the system for the ordeal that she passes through the event witn J 1.00 per bottle ofdraiglita. Bookeon nlf Tsloabe Infonnauoa tree. THE BRAD FIELD REGULATOR CO. Atlanta, Ga. Tho Pondloton Savings Bank Reportf Condition, Jane 30, 1908. . RESOURCES Loans and discounts ; 825,904.21 Warrants , 193.26 Banking house 60,000.00 Furniture and fixtures ' 10,000.00 Other real estate 1,600.00 Cash and due from banks 292,267.99 $1,179,865.63 LIABILITIES Capital stock $ 100,000.00 . Surplus 100,000.00 Undivided profits 83,737.32 Deposits ? 916,138.21 11,179,865.63 . I, J. W. Maloney, cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. J. Vf. MALONEY, Cashier. 'Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of July, 1908. A. K. LAMBERT, (Seal.) . , i PliKi -DMGEROUS I am glad to be able to give my experience with your med lolne, S.8.B. M y son contract ed Blood Poison, and had an ngly absoess to form on his leg and he had all the other well known symptoms. He tried other medioines without any benefit, and I then had him to takeS.S.B. After he had tak en several bottles the Improve ment was very gratifying, and so he contlnned its use. A thorough coarse of 8. B. 8. cleansed his blood and oured the disease. The nloer healed nioely, and he has slnoe been In good health. O. OBEROHAXir, Taylor, Texas. It you are sutter-, ing with Contagious Blood Poison, S. S. S. will cure you, because it will purify your blood, and destroy every ves tige of the taint. It will act as the finest of tonics to build up and strengthen your sys tem, assist it in over coming the effects of tributes largely to the devil he will never go to heaven he must go where he will receive the just recompense of reward. Ex. IF THEY OXLY KNEW. There are millions of acres of land lying Idle and within easy reach of the large cities of the United States. There are millions of people who would be much better off If they were engaged In cultivation of this Jand. Very many of them would be upon the farms If they only felt that they could succeed. They could succeed by education. If these people only knew how nearly agriculture can be reduced to an exact science the prob lem of bringing landless peopls Into contact with the barren lands would be easy. "Is to love children, and no f home can be happy without them, yet the ordeal through, which the expectant mother must pass usually is so full of suffering and dread that she apprehension. Mothers Friend, Dut utue sunenng, as numuers n mm m Notary Publlo for Oregon, J The Best Soda Ice Cream and all Fountain Drinks at the coolest store in town THE Pendleton DRUG C0F.1PAFIY Large Quantity of the Famous Now on Hand The coal that produces heat and not dirt. Also fine lot of good dry wood. Dutch Henry Office, Pendleton Ice A Cold Storaf Company.- Thone Main 178. Safes and Vaults pacific safe cohpaht Exclusive agents for Herring -Ha II-Marvin Safe Company Manufacturers of The Genuine Hall's Safe & Lock Go's Safes and Vaults The Standard for Seventy Years, Correspondence Solicited Office and Salesroom 909 Riverside Avenue Empire State Building. SPOKANE, WASH. Jew Hotel Sagamoro BAKER CITY, OREGON UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT (50) ALL OUTSIDE IIOOMS. Newly refurnished end refitted throughout. Electric lights. Hot and cold baths free to guests. SAMPLE ROOMS IN CONNECTION Free Auto Bus to and from all trains. HATES, .$1.50 AND $2 PER DAT AMERICAN TTiAN. TOY L. YOUNG, Prop. GROUND BONE FOR CHICKENS. 3c pound Also fine fresh meats delivered promptly at reasonable prioe.i. EMPIRE MEAT CO. Phone Main 18. Dalanced Rations h For Incubator Chicks Lice Killers and Conditioners For Poultry and Stock at COLESWOtVTHY'S Feed Store 127- 129 E. Alts Is InUrttUd and should know bvuui id wonnsrmi Marvel "ii"" !" uouor Ask your dranriat ft If ha Msnnl Snnnl. lb MARVEL, scc.pt ns w 1 . na sump mr mis. nwa dooi mm, it htm piuewan idu airvcitona IBTUQfthM ladles. HMVEk CO, 44 1.1111., He re Dally East Oreconlao by oarrUv. only 16 cental per week. Rock Spring 'SIX Everv 10 J BO