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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1908)
EIGHT PAGES. PAGE FOin. DAILY EAST OUEGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JILY 22, 1008, C ' COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. AN ISPKPEXnKNT NEWSPAPER. PoblUbrd lXlly, Weekly and 8ml Weekly, t IVndlcton, Oron. by the KA8T OltEUONUN rUULISHlNQ CO. srnacRiPTioji rates: Pally, on yesr. by mall $3.00 Pall?. lx months, by malt 150 Pally, thre montha, by mall 1.2S Dally, one month, by mall 50 Dally, on year, by carrier T.50 Dally, li montha, br carrier ITS Dally, thrra months, by farrier...... 1.05 Dally, one month, by carrier 69 Weekly, one year, by mall ". . 1.50 Weekly, six month, by mall T5 Weekly, four months, by mall .50 RcmnVeekly, ona year, by mall 1.50 Semi-Weekly, six montha, by mall... .75 Bern I Weekly, fonr months, by mall.. .50 TheDelly F.sst Oregonlan Is kept on sal at the Oregon News Co., 147 0th treat, Portland, Oregon. Chicago nureau. 909 Security building. Washington, D. C, Bureau, 601 Four teenth street, N. W. Member United Press Association. Telephone Main 1 Entered at the poatofflca at Pendleton, Oregon, as second-class mall matter. Smile and the world smiles with you. Knock, and you go alone; For the cheerful grin Will let you in" Where the kicker is never 4 known. Growl, and the way looks dreary, Laugh, and the path Is bright: For a winsome smlla Brings sunshine, while A frown shuts out the light Sing, and the world's harmonl- ous, Grumble, and things go wrong; And .all the time You are out of rhyme With the busy, bustling throng. . Kick, and there's trouble brew- Ing, Whistle, and life Is gay; And the world's In tune Like a day In June, . And the clouds all melt away. --Selected. PEOPLE MADE A MISTAKE. That the people made a mistake In changing the manner of filing Indict ments, taking this power away from district attorneys and lodging It en tirely with grand juries, Is now ap parent - The initiative vote on this change was strong and showed that the voting was done with full knowledge of the matter, but recent develop ments prove that they took away from the district attorney one of hU most useful prerogatives. In the Instance of former saloon men selling liquor In prohibition ter ritory, the district attorney Is power less to begin action at once. He must await the action of the grand Jury, two months hence. By that time most of the guilty parties will have finish ed their summer's work in prohibition territory and will be out of the reach of an Oregon grand Jury. If the district attorney had power t. file information against them and begin action at once he could un doubtedly secure a number of con victions, for it Is positively known that liquor Is being gold in prohibition territory. If the law enforcement league means business It will secure the de sired evidence now, while the work i going on, and be prepared to pre sent indisputable facts to the grand Jury when it convenes in September. It is an easy matter to secure the evi dence now, while it will perhaps be difficult for the district attorney to present any tangible proofs when the grand jury meets, unless he Is assist ed by private citizens now. Names, dates, places and witnesses bearing on the Illicit sale of liquor should be secured now and treasured up for the delight of the grand Jury. ROJESTVENSKY. The blackest spot left on the es cutcheon of Russia as a result of the Russo-Japanese war. Is the treatment which that miserable government has doled out to her heroes. General Stoessel, who held Port Arthur against a six month's siege of the Irrepressible Japs, was sentenced to life imprisonment because he sur rendered In the extremity after weeks of hunger, suffering and untold pun ishment at the hands of the Japs. In "mercy" Russia commuted the Ufa sentence to 10 years. This week Admiral Rojestvensky, who lost the sea fight with the Jap anese, only after his last vessel was sent to the bottom of the sea, and bis own flagship battered to pieces by the galling fire of the Japanese gunners, died of a broken heart In the realization of the disgrace which his government heaped upon him after his heroic effort to sustain the tottering standards of Russia. , Russia deserves annihilation for her treatment of her brave, soldiers. These men were not to blame If the Japanese were more numerous or better equipped than the Russian army. They did trolr part we'll. They faced the most tremendous onslaught of modern times. The fault was Rus sia's If theso men were defeated. Think of a-civilized nation con demning a general or admiral to death or to life Imprisonment, because the enemy overpowered his forces through sheer weight of numbers and better equipment. The nations of the world should re fuse to deal with Russia as a civiliz ed power, until she changes her mor al code. She should be rated with the Kurds, the brigands of central Asia, until she adopts a few of the modern customs and usages. AX EMPIRE GIVEN AWAY. In the last report of the land de partment of the Union Taclflc Rail road company, it is shown that during the last decade, from 1898 to 1908. that company has sold 9,125,000 acres of lands from the grants given it by the United States government. This land was a clear donation to the Union Pacific. The government simply sliced this vast empire from the putJllc domain and handed It on a sliver platter, as It were, to this railroad company. This amount of land has been sold by the Union Pacific In the last 10 years. It sold more than that amount previous to this decade. But taking this 9,125,000 acres, alone, as a basis for calculation, let us see what it means to the country. This tract of land divided Into 160 acre farms would mean 50,781 of such farms. On a basis of five to the farm, it would mean a population of 253,905. With three school children to the farm It would mean 152,343 school children or 1523 school dis tricts with 100 scholars each. It would mean a territory as large as five Umatilla counties, one-fourth the size of the entire eastern Oregon section. And to think that the government gave away this magnflcent territory lying adjacent to the transcontinental line of railroad. And the homeless thousands who are now searching for a small parcel of land, what would this domain mean to them today, were it available for homestead en try 7 No wonder President Roosevelt la trying to recover a 3,000,000 acre land grant given to the Southern Pa cific In, Oregon. He Is awake to the folly of such wanton waste of the public resources. And he will be numbered among the national bene factors for making a start to recover this magnificent empire for the peo ple. HIS WIFE OR THE KING. Jacob Rils, the--prominent Danish journalist, lecturer and Roosevelt biographer who lectured in Pendleton two years ago," called upon the king of Denmark this week and was warm ly welcomed. He gave the king the greeting of President Roosevelt and enjoyed his visit immensely. Finally the king waxed sociable and invited Riis to dine with him. "I will If I may bring my wife," re plied Riis. The interview ended abruptly and awkwardly. The king was unused to this blunt American way. The invi tation of the king had always been considered a sacred, almost divine recognition among the mortals in the shadow of the throne. But to this Americanized Dane it was nothing compared to a man's devotion to and respect for his wife. Rlls cared but little for the favor of the king. As an American citizen he Is a king himself. And because his wife was not Included in the king's favor, Rlls scorned it Every American thrills with pride at the simple dignity which charac terized Rlls' refusal to dine with a king. " The Increased school attendance In Umatilla county, as shown by the re port of Superintendent Frank K. Welles, and the Increased poatofflec receipts as shown by the monthly re port of Pendleton postofflce, are mat ters of pride and congratulation for this city and county. Despite the fact that the farming lands of the county is "being concentrated In the hands of a few men, the school enrollment and school attendance of the county are Increasing and despite the prohibition vote the business of Pendleton post office Is constantly Increasing. Let us quit croaking. There are Innum erable causes for rejoicing In Umatil la county. After all, the" Bryan bluster and ominous thundering about the repub lican anti-Injunction plank. It Is dis covered that the democratic plank la but a counterpart of that adopted by the republican convention. The same patriotic American citizens framed both planks. Both parties are equally Interested In the welfare of the American citizen and the Bryan plank Is no more vigorous in defense of the common rights of tho masses than the Taft plunk. So another bubble has burst. Where Is tho Co-operative Chris tian Federation of Portland which was to reclaim several thousand acres of central Oregon land, build several modern cities In. the desert and es tablish several manufacturing plants? Will the Gordon Falls textile maim facturlng city go the same way Into oblivion? Will Portland let all these vast .schemes die for want of capital with their boasted 330,000,000 In bank deposits? THE LOWLY MATCH, . Did you ever think of the part the lowly match plays In the progress of the world? Did you ever look upon the little' phosphorous stick as an agent of civilization? Everywhere throughout the world H the ever-present match. That old myth of savages starting fires by rubbing' two stk-Vs together is well nigh a lost art In these days. Take down In Brazil for instance. Consul General Anderson, writing from Rio, declares that even in the almost In accessible portions of the interior, where the seml-clvllized people are deprived of everything In the way of civilized supplies, yet there are matches, to light the Iniquitous cig arette, or kindle the campflre. There are. of course, some peoples 'yet unncqtiainted with the match but they are of the lowest stratum of civilization. Globe-trotters have have found the match to go hand In hand with the first evidence of civili zation. And the world's output of matches Is staggering In Its enormous aggregate. Thousands and thousands of acres of forest go down before the axemen each year to- be manufactur ed Into matches. 'In several countries match making (of the wood kindling variety) is a government monopoly; a great many more nations reap a goodly revenue Income each year from taxes on their manufacture. Just for example, Brazil's output of matches was 202,041,400 boxes In 1907, from which the' government de rived a revenue of 31.218.384 in taxes. The" tax alone amounts to over 31.50 for each man, woman and child In the country. MCSNT BOTHER BURBAXK Luther Burbank the horticultural Ist, has been compelled, out of sheer self-protection, to post the following notices a at the entrances to his grounds: No one could be more ''pleased to welcome the general public to my ex periment grounds, but over 6000 vis itors were received during the year 1904. All the Important experimen tal work was delayed beyond recall, grounds overrun with crowds from daylight to 10 o'clock at night no rest even on Sundays or holidays; business destroyed, rare plants died from want of care; attention con stantly drawn from legitimate mat ters; meals taken standing, sleep dis turbed, health at, the point of destruc tion, visitors calling at all hours with out regard to my own convlenlenc. each one being under the fixed and unalterable Impression that he or she was the one particular one who should be admitted , - Thi notice will now be found at every gate: Positively no Visitors Allowed Warning Any Person Entering or Trespassing on these Grounds Will Be Prosecuted. The general public has no moral, legal or other right to Invade my grounds, home, private office or la boratories. CONCRETE USED AT PANAMA. The concrete which will be re quired to build the concrete work of the Panama canal would be enough to build as many houses as would give shelter to the entire population of a city the size of Minneapolis. It would be large enough to build a solid string of houses from New York to Richmond, Va., by way of Washington. The spill-way of the Gatun dam will carry off 140,000 cubic feet of water a second, or more than 60,000,000 gallons a minute. The big water gates of the Gatun dam will have, an aggregate of weight of nearly 18 000 tons. The ones at the head of the upper lock will be a sort of steel bridge on wheels, the track for It being of 26 feet gauge. Each pound of water pressure on the dam would "have to push aside 63 pounds of earth before It could escape. The dam will make the Gatun lake afford deep water enough to furnish a safe riding place for half the ship ping of the world. All the sea-fight ers af the oceans might gather there as perhaps hundreds of them will at that eventful time, some eight or 10 years hence when with Uncle Sam as master of ceremonies, the Atlantic and the Pacific shall have their wed ding day. UNFORTUNATE CHILDREN It is stated on good authority that 100,000 children " pass through the criminal courts of the United States every year. That statement Is suffi ciently startling to arouse to thought all who are capable of thinking. There Is a cause for this vast army of criminal children, to say nothing of the still vaster army of criminal adults The author of the book. "The Way of God In Marriage," says: "The greatest tragedy of humanity has been the al most universal violation of God's laws In regard to the bringing Into being of a human soul. ' And she quotse O. Campbell Morgan, who says: "Animal ism; has been for ages the curse Of the marriage relation". CAUSED BY HUMORS III THE BLOOD The skin fs provided with countless pores and glands, through which an evaporation is going on continually, day'and night. This is nature's method of regulating the temperature of our bodies, and pre serving the natural appearance of the skin. These pores and glands are counected with tiny veins and arteries through which they receive, from the blood, the necessary nourishment and strength to preserve their healthy condition, and enable them to perform this duty. So long as the blood is pure and rich the skin will be free from eruption or disease, but when the circulation becomes infected with acids and humors its nourishing and healthful properties, are lost, and its acrid, humor-laden condition causes irritation and inflammation of the delicate tissues and fibres of the pores and glands, and the effect is shown in Eczema, Acne, Tetter, Salt Rheum, or somelother distressing, disfiguring skin disease. These humors get into the blood through a deranged or inactive condition of the system. Those members whose duty it is to collect and expel the refuse matter of the body fail to properly do their work,' and this surplus or waste matter is left in . the system to sour and fer ment and be absorbed into the blood. There are also certain other humors which get into the blood from without. The juice or milk from poisonous plants, such as poison oak, poison ivy, nettle rash, etc., enters through the open pores of the skin and takes root in the blood. This causes a breaking out which remains for a time and then . disappears, but returns at c.ertain seasons of each year. The cause of all skin troubles can be traced to some kind of humor in the blood. Smooth, healthy skins are only possible where the circu lation is pure; and therefore the cure of any skin affection can only come through a thorough cleansing of this vital fluid. Salves, washes, lotions, etc., are valuable only for their ability to keep the skin clean, allay the itching, and tend to reduce inflammation; they cannot correct the trouble because they do not reach the blood. S. S. S. cures skin diseases of every character and kind, because it purifies the blood. It goes down into the circulation and removes the humors that are causing the trouble, builds up the weak, acrid blood, PURELY VEGETABLE. every symptom passes away, the healthful blood, and comfort is given to disease-tortured skins. . Special book on Skin Diseases and any medical advice free. S. S. S. is for sale at all drug stores. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA, GJu SUN BATHS FOR HEALTH. "If you want to keep well, take sun hatha." In the latest health dictum. Not all of us can carry this treatment to the extreme of the enthusiasts, who spend the greater part of each day exposing their bodies to the air, but all of us can, with a little man agement, get more sun than we do. If you have a sheltered yard or back porch spend as much time as possible on It. Wear the airiest kind of costume. The neighbors may be horrified,' but shut out their prying gaze by screens. Barefeet or sandals, which make walking easier, may quickly be tossed off, and a low-necked and sleeveless nightdress or wrapper of sheer ma terial will allow lots of sun to get at your skin and do Its healing work on the pores. Let your hair dowfl.also, for that, too, Is benefited by air and sunlight. If you are not very strong. Just ly ing in the sun In a steamer chair will Tho Pendleton Savings Bank Report, of Condition, Jane 30, 1908. RESOURCES Loans and discounts 815,M4.Bt Warrants 1M.M Banking house IM&0.00 Furniture and fixture IfcMO.OO Other real estate 1,500.00 Cash and due from banks iM,J67. n.m.m.M LIABILITIES Capital stock I 100,000.00 Surplus 100,000.00 ' . Undivided profit i3.717.Sl Deposit IH.18S.S1 $l,17t,885.53 I, J. W. Maloney, cashier of the above named bank, , do solemnly wear that the above statement Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. W. MALONEY, Onahler. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of July, 1S0S. A. B. LAMBERT, (Seal.) Notary Public for Oregon. Byers' Best Flour la mad from the choicest wheat ed when BTEBS BEST FLOUR Barley always on band, PENDLETON W. 8. BYER8, Itoprletor. ' ' ECZEMA FORTY YEARS. X want to tell yon the great ' good I received from the use of 8. 8. 8. I am now 70 years old and had suffered with Zosema for forty years, and oould find nothing to cure me until I tried 8. S. 8. Z suffered Intensely with the Honing and burning; pustules would form from which there flowed a atloky fluid; oruata would oome on the skin, and when scratched off, the akin was left as raw as a pleoe of beef. I suffered agony the long years I was afflloted, bnt when I used 8. 8. 8. 1 found a perfect care. There has never been any return of the trouble. O. H. EVANS. Stockholm, Neb. ana completely cures Eczema, Acne, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Poison Oak, Poison Ivy, and all eruptions and dis eases of the skin. When S. S. S. has driven the humor from the blood, and cooled and cleansed the acid heated circulation. skin is again nourished with rich, huiiri vou ud. If vigorous enough, calisthenics In your airy costume is better still. ' The value of this exercise and sun bath combination has been proved In an open air .Institution for men and boys in Germany, whrre wonderful cures are being made of rheumatism, neuralgia, slight paarlysls and nervous affections. The patients exercise in a high walled space, clothed only in light bathing trunks. The grounds are equipped with an open-air gymnasi um, tennis courts, shower baths and couches for resting. Even when the snow Is on the ground this somewhat chilly cure Is vigorously carried on. Frank Fagan , alias Hugh Hagnn, who was arrested July 11 on a charge of burglary, was Friday afternoon ar raigned before Judge Brents at walla Walla, entered a plea of guilty, and was sentenced to an Indeterminate term "of from 1 to 14 years In the penK tentlary. that grows. Good bread Is aasur- Is used. Bran, Shorts, Steam Rolled . - - f ROLLER MILLS j The Best Soda Eeo Cream and all Fountain Drinks aTthe coolest store in town . THE Pendleton DRUG CO'lPAflY Large Quantity of the Famous Now on Hand The coal that produces heat and not dirt. Also fine let of good dry wood. Dutch Henry Office, Pendleton Ice tt Cold Storasy Company. 'Phone Main 178. Safes and Vaults picific safe company Exclusive agents for Herring -Ha II-Marvin Safe Company Manufacturers of The Genuine HalTs Safe & Lock Co's Safes and Vaults The Standard for Seventy Years. Correspondence Solicited Office and Salesroom 009 Riverside Avenue Empire State Building;. SPOKANE, WASH. .' Now Hotel Sagamoro BAKER Gin, OREGON UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT (50) ALL OUTSIDE ROOMS. Newly refurnished and refitted throughout. Electric lights. Hot and cold baths free to guests. S.VMTLE ROOMS IN CONNECTION Free Auto Bus to and from all trains. RATES, .$1.50 AND S2 PER DAT - AMERICAN PLAN. TOY L. YOUIIG, Prop. GROUND BONE FOR CHICKENS. 3c pound Also fine fresh meats delivered promptly at reasonable price t. EMPIRE MEAT CO. 'Phone Mala lft. Balanced nations For Incubator Chicks Lice Killers end Conditioners For Poultry and Stock at COLESWOKTHY'S Feed Store 127- 129 E. Alta , to IntareaMd ud ihonld know .boot tbt wonncrfal wniriine ipraj Douche lik tow orafttat tbt it If he cannot inooli lh MARVKU Hcnl M tnted bookMtltd. It rim tan BrtllM Md lllrav.tloaa Tlanlnahla blsdlM. MARVEL CO., 44 1.1101 New Yei Dally Bast OregoeUn by only 15 cents pef week. Rock Spring Coal Every 17c U?f Marvel Ilkff AW