EI GUT PAGES.
PAGE POUR.
DAILY EAST OREGON IAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 20, 1908.
COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER.
AX lXPEPKNDENT NEWSPAPER.
Published lllv, Weekly and Beml-Weekljr,
t Pendleton, Oreiton, bj the
EAST OREUOMAN PUBLISHING CO.
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The Dally East Oregnnlan Is kept on sal
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Member United Press Association.
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.l'N'ON,r,ILBE
Life? What Is life? Is it to
climb the heights
Of infinite possibility in glori
ous being:
To explore creation on the wings
of thought
In quest of knowledge which
alone can give
At once the zest and crown of
life dominion.
Is It to climb the heights, but
not alone.
Nor with the few; but (lest ye
die!) with all
The teeming multitude that
people earth.
In helpful brotherhood and mu
tual joy!
He lives Ignobly and dishonored
dies
Whose base ambition robs the
humblest soul;
Diverting thus the life-stream
of the race
From its appointed course, while
Virtue scorns
The tainted title to his spurious
fame.
They only live in Heaven whose
fame survives
On earth, embalmed in loving
memory
They only whose fair names
wax fairer still
In the clear vision of advancing
light.
Time writes the epitaphs of
men.
And Justice, stern, unerring,
guides the pen. ,
Edward Howell Putnam in
The Public.
TO MEET THE ISSUE.
Assessor C. P. Strain of Umatilla
county, is acting wisely in making up
his assessment roll for the year with
out entering the values of the assess
ments. This will give him an oppor
tunity to protect the taxpayers of the
county no matter how the Galloway
decision as to the unconstitutionality
of the tax law is passed upon by the
supreme court
It may be that full valuations may
be entered on the rolls without in
Jury to Umatilla county property
holders or It may ' be that a half,
third or fourth valuation may be en
tered. No matter how the supreme
court decides, or what the situation
after the case Is fairly decided, Uma
tilla county people are protected and
the county will pay but its Just and
equitable share of taxes.
Should Assessor Strain go ahead
and enter full values with each assess
ment, it might result in an excessive
state tax for Umatilla county, but he
is willing to perform the extra labor
and take this extra precaution to ful
ly protect the Interests of the coun
ty. C. P. Strain Is an assessor that is
an assessor. The taxpayers of the
county owe him a debt of gratitude
for his careful and honest adminis
tration of this office which cannot be
measured in dollars and cents.
TO YOU, MR. FARMER.
You are a resident of Umatilla
county. You are Interested In the
Umatilla-Morrow county fair. You
have something which Is wanted a3
an exhibit. You are urged, com
manded, In fact, to bring It In.
You have one lone sow; you may
have a dozen, half a dozen or even a
trio of poultry, or may be a pair of
ducks, geese or turkeys. You are
urged to enter them for premiums
and bring them In.
You have a good dairy cow; you
may have a good team, Bucking colt
or driver. Bring them In and enter
them in the fair. There is a premi
um here for you.
Your wife may have a picture, an
article of needlework, a Jar of fine
fruit, a fine bedspread, a fancy quilt.
These are all parts of the products of
Umatilla county and must not be
overlooked. Bring them In. There
Is a premium for them.
You may have a special kind of
fruit, a new kind of wheat, oats or
barley. Bring It in. Your neigh
bors will be interested and you ahould
mako it known. Bring it 1" and place
I: on exhibit and get a premium. The
fair is educational and the county
and state are paying out lrge sums
to disseminate agricultural and hor
ticultural information. Will you do
your part In this great work.
Every farmer lit the county could
bring in one or a dozen sheaves of
grain. This would be sufficient to
make the pavilion a dream of beauty.
And It would bo such a small matter.
Just think of each fanner bringing In
one sheaf of wheat. Every man's
name could be placed upon his ex
hibit and he would not only make an
exhibit of his product, but he would
help decorate.
Think of this. It is up to you. The
fair commission, the county court, the
state are all doing their parts. But
they cannot make a fair without the
individual co-operation of the farm
ers. You are the key to the success
ful fair.
If there Is anything you want to
know write in to Secretary Thomas
Fitz Gerald or President C. E. Roose
velt of the fair commission. Send In
for a premium list and study it up
o you will know when and how to
enter your exhibit. And then enter It.
This is a home institution and the
people must help make it go. You
are the people.
DR .COE ON CRIME.
Dr. Henry Waldo Coe, editor of the
Medical Sentinel of Portland, and
member of the Furnlsh-Coe Irrigation
company of this county, writes enter
tainingly of the treatment of crime
in the last Issue of the Sentinel. He
calls crime a disease and advocates
treatment of It on this basis. In his
editorial article he says:
The world has been so exceedingly
busy during the past fifty years of ex
ceptional development, that It has not
been able to keep pace with the needs-
of humanity in dealing with criminal
life. Medicine and surgery have
made great strides forward. The
world of Invention has progressed as
never In any preceding five decades.
The patent office has been 'crowded
with work in an unprecedented fash
ion. Business methods have engaged
the attention of .the best brains of the
world. Railroad management, elec
trical development, the work of the
steam engine on sea and land these
have been the great engines of pro
gress the! have had the greatest
amount of attention.
Here and there men with exception
al minds have taken time to write
great poems, stirring plays, operas,
symphonies, prose works, and some
great pictures have been painted.
Great performers on musical Instru
ments have developed their skill;
great singers have arisen to delight
the busy men and women of the age.
But alas ,the sickness of the criminal
the sickness that makes him crimi
nal has been unstudied. He has been
caught and caged, when possible.
Generally, he has gone unpunished.
There Is something wrong with the
mental process of a bright man who
would rather commit crime than not.
We all know men who. If they ex
pended their skill In lines of honest
endeavor, would make something for
themselves and their families; but
they would rather do wrong than
right, and they drift Into the crimi
nal class.
The nation, which spends millions
of dollars a year on Its criminals,
could well afford to have a depart
ment whose business It would be to
study the disease of-crime. We need
moral health officers, as well as the
other kind. The science Is undevel
oped. There is much in it that has
never been ascertained, partly be
cause the world has been too busy.
The theologians have touched the
outskirts of the question only. They
have occasionally assisted In the good
work of curing a man sick with
crime, and have turned his energies
Into useful channels. They have
worked a kind of mental or spiritual
cure on him.
But no scientific efforts have been
put forth that we have ever heard of,
looking to an exhaustive treatise on
the subject. The criminal usually
does not want to be cured of his
criminality. But Instead of permit
ting him to go at large to commit
more crime, as Is done with the penlf
tentlary Inmate, when his term Is
over, he should be cured of his crim
inality If possible.
The youth of the land who are af
flicted with criminal tendencies,
should be treated for their mental
disease before they are given a chance
to go forth and commit murder, burg
lary, and the other crimes that a cer
tain mental state seems to induce.
WHY THEY COME TO PENDLETON
There are scores of reasons why
people with money come to Pendle
ton and why they will always come
here. Three prominent sheepmen
from northern Montana, are In the
city this week buying choice rams for
use with their flocks. They come to
Pendleton because It Is headquarters
of all the leading sheepbreedera of
Umatilla county. They get what they
want here.
Slu'cpbuyers corno here lit the
spring and summer to buy feeders
and range sheep because at Pendle
ton tiny get the key to the sheep sit
uation of eastern Oregon. Woolbuy
eis make this tlu-lr headquarters dur
ing the season because they get in
touch with every sheepman in eastern
Oregon from this city.
People come hero for merchandise
because they find the largest stocks
In the state outside of Portland, and
It pays to trade here. They come
here fur school because It pays to
come here to educate their families.
They come here for farm supplies be
cause It Is the farming Implement
center of eastern Oregon. They come
In re to buy railroad and steamer
tickets because It Is the railroad cen
ter of eastern Oregon.
People will always come here for
these reasons. Pendleton Is so situ
ated In eastern Oregon that she will
also hold the key to the commercial,
banking, market and industrial situ
ation of this vast tributary territory.
No matter for prohibition or sa
le ons, people will always come to
Pendleton in Increasing numbers ns
the populayon of the surrounding
country Increases. And as the busi
ness of the city Increases the facili
ties which she will have to offer her
patrons will increase and so from
year to year there will be multiply
ing reasons why people should and
will come to this city.
IX) BEGIN DRY FARMING.
Prof. H. W. Campbell, originator of
Campbell's dry farming system says In
his magazine, the Scientific Farmer,
of the time to begin dry farming:
Someone asks when Is the proper
time to begin preparation for use of
the Campbell method of soil culture?
Begin when you are ready. Begin
as soon as possible. Begin just as
soon as you understand what you are
going to do and why. Begin when
the soil needs attention, and that Is
about all the time.
No special season of the year is
Just the one for, commencing opera
tions, for It all depends upon the con
dition of the soil and the general plan
for farm work. 'The first step would
obviously be different on corn ground
and on wheat stubble. The character
of the season has something to do
with it.
But as a general proposition It Is
safe to say that the time to begin is
right away. If your small grain Is
ripe for the sickle then prepare to
follow the binder wfth the disk and
thus to gain a big advantage over
nature. If your corn crop Is getting
high, prepare to follow between the
rows with some sort of soli stirring
process and to put a stop to the waste
of late summer. If you have a clover
field to be turned under be ready to
properly pulverize the soil and pack
U down.
Above all things do not make the
mistake nf supp's'n th t t'i" ti.nr1
to begin with soil culture is when the
crops are all harvested and you have
leisurely taken time to consider what
next. Begin right now. Nature does
no v.-.ttlrg-.
COMPOSITION OX PANTS.
Pants are made for men and not
for women. Women are made for
men, and not for pants. When a
man pants for a woman, and a wo
man pants for a man, they are a pulr
of pants. Such pants don't last.
Pants are like molasses they nre
thinner In hot weather, and thicker
In cold. Men are often mistaken In
pants; such mistakes nre breeches of
promise. There has been much dis
cussion whether pants Is singular or
plural. Seems to us when men wear
pants It Is plural, and when they
don't wear any It is singular. Men
go on a tear 'in their pants. and It Is
all right; when the pants go on a tear
it Is all wrong. If you want to make
.pants last, make the coat first.
THE FARMER AND THE TRAMP,
A farmer, who was a deacon lis) the
church and said grace before meals
and held family worship' every even
ing before retiring, hired a tramp to
work In his fields.
The tramp was Inclined to be pro
fane, and while plowing when a root
would strike his shins would vent his
anger In an oath. The farmer pro
tested. The obsequious tramp prom
ised not to do so again, but when
something got 'wrong with the har
ness he unthinkingly swore again.
The farmer again chlded him,
whereupon the tramp said:
"Deacon, you know I sometimes
swear a little, and sometimes you
pray, but God knows neither of us
means anything by it."
THE FASTEST STORY.
An Englishman, an Irishman and a
Scotchman were one day arguing as
to which of the three countries pos
sessed the fastest trains.
Said the Englishman, "Well, I've
been In one of our trains and the tel
egraph poles have been like a hedge."
"I've seen the milestones appear like
tombstones," said the Scot.
"Be Jabbers," said Pat, "I was one
day In a train in my country and we
passed a field of carrots, a field of
turnips, a field of parsley, one of on
ions and then a pond of water, and
we were going so fast I thought It
was broth!" Philadelphia Ledger.
Fine store and office room for rant
East Oregonlan building. -Eaqulre
this offloa.
0KTIMTE 1
MAY LEAD TO CANCER
There la no difference, at first, in the appearance of canceroui and
common ulcer, and for this reason every sore that is obstinate or slow in
healing should excite suspicion, for the sore is nothing more than tnt exter
nal evidence of a polluted blood, and if allowed to remain may degenerate
into Cancer. E fforts to heal the ulcer by means of salves, plasters and other
external remedies always result in failure.because such treatment can have
no possible effect on the blood, where the deadly germs and morbid matter
form, and are carried through the circulation to the place. No sore or nicer
can exist without a predisposing internal cause, and the open, discharging
ulcer or festering old sore will continue to eat deeper into the surrounding
flesh as long as a polluted, germ-infected circulation discharges Its impur
ities into it. S. S. S. goes to the fountain-head of the trouble, and drives
out the germ-producing poisons and morbid impurities which keep the
ulcer open. Then as this rich, purified blood
a , goes to the diseased place tne neanng oegins,
f C"' 07 6,1 discharge ceases, the inflammation grad
V2IV ? ually leave9 neT tissue and healthy flesh
6 Cif CSO are formed, and soon the sore is perma-
tlv cured. S. S. S. is made entirely of
PURELY VEGETABLE roots and herbs of a healing, cleansing
nature, and unlike mineral medicines,
which often do great damage to the delicate parts of the system, S. S. S.
tones up every part of the body. Boole on Sores and Ulcers and any medical
advice desired free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
VALUE OF TRAINED ANIMALS.
Barnum used to say that only one
elephant, lion or monkey In six which
he purchased brought him any profit,
and other showmen make similar
complaints.
The most aggravating part of the
business is, however, that often when
an animal has been trained, seems to
be thoroughly used to foreign- clim
ates and Is repaying some of the
money his owner has spent on Its pur
chase and rearing If suddenly dies. '
Take the case of Consul, for in
stance, Mr. Bostock's remarkable
chimpanzee, which died some time
ago In Berlin. This animal was In
sured for $125,000 and was earning
from $500 to $750 a week when It
died. Furthermore, Mr. Rostock had
honked contracts for It to appear at
a price of $1500 per week.
Luckily, Mr. Bostock was able to
discover two other exceptionally fine
specimens of the chimpanzee tribe,
which he named Consul I and Consul
must na5s is sn fmurht with dread
apprehension. There is no necessity for the reproduction of life to be
either very painful or dangerous. The use of Mother's Friend pre
pares the system for the coming event, and it is paised without any
daneer. This remedy is applied externally, and has carried thousands
of women through the cri6isTT,
with but little suttenng.
Writs for book containing Information
of tsIm to sll expectant mothers.
BRAOriELO REGULATOR OO.
Atlanta, Oa.
The Pendleton Savings Bank
Report of Condition, June 30, 1908.
RESOURCES
Loans and discounts 825,904.29
Warrants 193.25
Banking house 60,000.00
Furniture and fixtures 10,000.00
. Other real estate 1,600.00
Cash and duo front banks 293,207.09
$1,179,865.63
LIABILITIES
Capital stock $ 100,000.00
Surplus 100,000.00
Undivided profits 63,727.32
Deposits ; 916,138.21
$1,179,865.63
I, J. W. Maloncy, cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly
swear that the above statement Is true to the best of my knowledge
and belief. J. W. MALON'EY, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of July, 1908.
A. E. LAMBERT,
(Seal.) Notary Public for Oregon.
FOUR TRAINS
NORTH COAST LIMITED
TWIN CITY EXPRESS EASTERN EXPRESS
NORTHERN PACIFIC- BURLINGTON EXPRESS
Northern Pacific Railway
Visit Yellowstone National Park
Stopovers allowed on all tickets to enable
trip being taken through Park. i
r(?n
ROUND TRIP TOURIST RATES
To all points In the middle and eastern states.
Apply to any ticket agent Northern Pacific Railway and hava fares
quoted, routes explained, and berth reservations made, or call on
or write
S. B. CALDERHEAD,
Genl. AgL, Walla Walla, Wn.
A. D. CHARLTON, A. O. P. A.
IE
II. The former, which Is the cleaver
er animal of the two, will earn as
much as 800 per week. Consul II
Is generally booked at $360 per week,
while Esau, another of Mr. Bostock's
wonderful chimpanzees, appears at
$400.
These animals are most difficult to
rear, elephants, tigers and lions,
which cost anywhere from $1000 to
$2500 each, being also very suspectl
ble to climatic changes. They fully
repay the care and attention which
must be bestowed upon them, how
ever. Mr. Bostock, for Instance, has a di
minutive elephant for which he has
been offered sums varying from $500(,
to $12,000. all of which he has refus
ed. Tills Is the smallest performing
elephant In the world and earns from
$400 to $500 per week. Another
troupe of elephants earn from $450
to $625 per week, a groupe of tigers
from $500 to $750, while a groupe of
Hong brings In as much as $1000 per
week.
Nb wrjrran can be happy
w ithout children; it is her
nafureto love them asmuch
so as it is the beautiful and
pure. The ordeal through
which theexpectant mother
that the very thought fills her with
TO THE EAST.
W. ADAMS,
Agent Pendleton, Ore.
Portland. Oregon.
The Best
Soda Ice Cream
and all
Fountain Drinks
at the coolest store in
town
THE
Pendleton
DRUG COMPANY
Large Qyantity 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 8toragv
Company. 'Phone Main 178.
Safes and Vaults
PACIFIC SAFE COMPANY
Exclusive agents for
Herring -Ha II-Marvin
Safe Company
Manufacturers of
The Genuine
Hall's Safe & Lock Co's
Safes and Vaults
The Standard for Seventy Years.
Correspondence Solicited
Office and Salesroom
909 Riverside Aiemie
Empire State Building.
SPOKANE, WASH.
New
Hotel Sagamore
BAKER CITY, OREGON
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
(50) ALL OUTSIDE ROOMS.
Newly refurnished and refitted
throughout Electric lights. Hot and
cold baths free to guests.
SAMPLE ROOMS IX CONNECTION
Free Auto Bus to and from all
trains.
RATES. .$1.50 AND $2 PER DAT
AMERICAN PLAX.
TOY L. YOUNG, Prop.
GROUND BONE
FOR CHICKENS,
3c pound
Also fine fresh meats delivered
promptly at reasonable price w
EMPIRE MEAT CO.
'Phone' Main 18.
Balanced Rations
For Incubator Chicks
Lice Killers and
Conditioners
For Poultry and Stock
at
COLESWORTHY'S
Feed Store 127-129 E. Alta
Ycman
Marvel "Krt," ffn
Luuune
Isk rear draMit I
It If hs eon not sn
lbs IfARVKU tflcant
tbtr, bat srad sump for lilts.
trUi book-smltd. It kItm tall
WImUm. kASVlLC044l.tIltNlTwft
Dally East Oregon ln by carrier,
Rock Spring
Co&l
Every
only It matt) per