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EIGHT PAGES.
PAGE FOUR.
DAILY EAST OnEGOMAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 108.
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COVXTY OI'FICIAL PAPER.
AN INIK.rK'IKNT NKWSl'AI'EB.
TnbllitirJ lxlly, Weekly ud Semi-Weakly,
I IViKllelnn. Oron, By tn
IABT Oil WOMAN lTilLIsniNQ CO.
smarm ption rates:
Ptlly, one year, by mill fS.OO
Pally, six tumulus, by mall i BO
IiIIt, three month, by mall 1 2.1
Oally, one month, by mall.......... .BO
Tally, one year, by carrier T.50
IIIt, six montha, by earner a. to
Pally, three montha. by carrier 195
Pally, one month, by carrier 85
Weekly, one year, by mall I SO
Weekly, lx month, by man.; io
Weektr. four montha. bf mall BO
Heml xVcklv, one year, by mail I SO
Heml-Ve'kly. lx montha, by mall... .75
Semi-Weekly, finr montha, by mall.. .60
The Pally Eat Oregonlan la kept on aal
t the Orcon Neaa Co., 147 6th street.
Tort land, Orison.
Chli-atw Itureau. t09 Secnrlty building.
Waahlncton, D. C, Bureau, 601 Four
teenth atreet. S. W.
Member Tnlted Preai Association.
Telephone Mall 1
Entered at the pmtofflce. at Pendleton,
Oregon, aa aeooini claaa mall matter.
IJN ON a,LBCl,
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Here'. to the men and women
who work,
To the thinking mind and
muscles strong,
Who look In the sun-lit face of
hope.
And greet each day with a
song.
And here's to the love we won
or lost.
And the kisses we gave or re
ceived, The shattered Idol, the broken
cross,
Or the troth In which we be
lieved. Here's to the flowers we gather
ed and pressed.
And the wild rose left In the
wood,
Before we had learned to un
derstand, Or hoped to he understood.
Arthur O. Lewis.
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MOKE IMXRMATAIOX.
If the Pendleton Tribune which is
attempting to conceal the fact that the
water power facilities of the Umatil
la river have been "cornered," will
watch the county records for a few
days, it will perhaps find that the
same company which has located
three water and power sites on the
river will also file on a number or
water and power sites on McKay
creek, thus completely shutting out
the city of Pendleton.
If It is not the intention to control
the water and power facilities of all
the streams adjacent to Pendleton,
why has the company Jumped out a
few day? ahead of the engineer em
ployed by the city and located on all
the favorable power and water sites?
Nobody will have a word to say U
these water and power sites are put
to a beneficial use. If the company
starts wheels to turning with the
water power of the Umatilla river anil
McKay creek, no man in Pendleton
will utter a word of complaint.
I!ut if those priceless facilities are
simply cornered and held for specu
lation, there will probably be som
"tall kicking" in this city.
FENCES ON RESERVES.
Fencing the range to protect sheep
from the attacks of predatory ani
mals has met with excellent results
In the Wallowa national forest, Ore
gon, says a forestry bulletin. The
problem was to find a strong fence
that would make the sheep secure,
even without the care of a herder.
The chosen fnce, which is built
of woven wire with barbed, wire on
the top, has kept out all the minor
animals such as wild cats, lynxes and
coyotes, but has not withstood the
attacks of the grizzlies, which are
apparently able to pass through It
with little trouble.
Sheep numbering 2200 head were
placed In the enclosure with their
lambs upon June 20th and have been
allowed to graze at their free will
with no attention whatever from any
herder. They have done splendidly
and as far as the observation of those
In charge of the experiment goes, a
given area grazed by sheep under
such conditions will carry more sheep
per acre than one grazed under the
charge of a herder.
Tracks along the fence show that
predatory animals come to the fence
constantly and follow it around but,
with the exception of the bears, do
not seem to be able to enter.
The hunter employed by the serv
ice for hunting predatory animals.
the vicinity of this fenced enclosure,
has killed no less than six large griz
zlies this season, besides numerous
other animals of the predatory class,
The results of this experiment are
so satisfactory thus far that private
Individuals are profiting by it. J.
W. Emmons of Troy, Oregon, has a
large area of private land fenced
with a special wire fence In which he
' has this season lambed a herd of
670 ewes without a herder's care and
with very little attention and great
success. Air. -Emmons Is extending
his fence, for he finds that It pays
direful record will be kept of the
weights of lambs raised Inside this
fence with a view of comparing thorn
with the same grade of lambs raised
outside the fence on the same class
of range, so that any gains or losses
In weight and growth may be deter
mined. TIIKY'ltK WORTH THE MONEY.
"There has been much wild talk as
to the extent oi tno overcapuauzauoii
oi our railroads," said President Roos
evelt in one of his speeches, says tht
Spokesman-Re view.
'The census reports on the com
mercial value of the railroads of the
country, together with the reports
made to the interstate commerce com.
mission by the railroads on their cost
rot construction, tend to show that, as
a whole, the railroad property of the
country is worth as much as the se
curities representing It, and that, In
the consensus of opinion of Investors,
the total value of stock and bonds Is
greater than their total face value,
notwithstanding the 'water' that has
bten injected In particular places,"
This condition may now be gen
erally admitted by those people who
have not blindly and ignorantly con
fused the many properly conducted
roads with the comparatively few
where abuses have been flagrant.
The capitalization of the railroads I
of this country is said to be lowei
than that of any other country where
railroads exist. The average Is $67,
000 a mile, in stocks and bonds.
Contrasted with France, our show
ing Is excellent. There the capitali
zation Is about $140,000 per mile; in
Germany, $110,000; In England, near
ly $273,000, and one English road is
capitalized for $600,000 a mile, and
pays 4 per cent dividends on its cap
italization. The French roads pay
an average of 4.3 per cent, the Ger
man 6.1 per. cent and the English 4
per cent.
DEMOCRATIC REVISION.
The democrats are calling for tariff
revision on the tariff-for-revenue
basis, but people with long memories
will remember the second Cleveland
administration and the passage of the
Gorman-Wilson tariff bill, the bill
that even Cleveland would not sign,
but let become a law without his sig
nature, says an eastern exchange.
They will remember the long period
of depression that followed this dem
ocratic revision of the tariff and will
view with alarm any tinkering along
the same lines.
Mr. Bryan was called into the case
at the end of the Cleveland adminis
tration and diagnosed the trouble and
prescribed the free silver cure and
stumped the country in a vain effort
to have the people dosed at the ratio
of 16 to 1, without waiting for th
consent of any other doctor on earth.
But when the guns were fired in the
first battle and the smoke had cleared
away the people passed up" the doe.
tor's remedy and applied the gold
cure and revised the tariff under th
supervision of the republicans, who
enacted the Dingley bill, and with
the assurance of an honest monetary
standard confidence was restored and
business expansion and prosperity fol
lowed. When democrats revise the tariff
ii.dustrial depression and hard times
have followed the attempt to put the
tariff on a revenue basis. Foreign
manufacturers have prospered and
the country has been flooded with
foreign goods, cheaper, perhaps, but
of no use to the American laborer who
was out of work and out of money.
WHERE AMERICANS ERR.
Germany, admittedly, has the big.
gest part of the foreign trade with
South American countries.
The reason may be that the South
Americans have their own ideas of
what they want, and the Germans will
get it for them exactly as they want
It.
The Englishman has a reputation
t maintain, he thinks, and makei
the same goods which his father and
grandfather made.
The American has certain standard
patterns, sizes and prices, and he n
too busy at home to bother about
what other people want.
Meanwhile, enterprising Germans
get the cream of the growing foreign
trade, and Italy gets the second skim
ming. Over 100 young men who have been
appointed to the naval academy at
Annapolis this year failed to pass the
necessary examinations and conse
quently the first year classes are about
100 short of the usual number. Does
this mean that the character of th
training and education given these
young men Is Inferior, or does It
mean that an Inferior class of young
men have been appointed? It means
something, because It Is nn unusual
feature In the history of the nnvin
academy.
Even a lazy man can make a sue
cess of a peach orchard in the sage
brush sections of Umatilla county. It
has been decided by many fruitgrow
ers that it Is better to leave the sage
brush on the land for a few years to
shield the young trees. So you don't
even have to remove the sagebrush.
Just dig. holes and set out the young
trees. Nature will do the rest for
you.
COMPANIONSHIP.
Men laughed In ancient Egypt long
ago,
And laughed beside the Lake of Gal
ilee;
And my glad heart rejoices moro to
know.
When It leaps up In exultation ton,
That though the laughter and the
laugh be new,
The Joy Is old as Is the ancient sea.
Men wept In noble Athens,, so they
say, -
And In' great Babylon of many tow-
ers,
For the same sorrows that we reel
today;
So, stranded high upon Time's latesi
peak,
I can with Babylonian nnd with
Greek
Claim kinship thrdugh this common
grief of ours.
The same fair moon I look upon to
night,
This shining, golden moon above the
sea,
Imparts a richer and more sweet de.
light
For all the eyes it did rejoice of old,
For all the hearts," long centuries
grown cold.
That shared this joy which now It
gives to me.
Whafe'er I feel I cannot feel alone.
When I am happiest or most forlorn,
Uncounted friends whom I have never
known
Rejoicing stand or weeding at my
side
These nameless, faceless friends of
mine who died
A thousand years or more ere I was
born.
R. M., In London Nation.
LOVE ANALYZED.
Perhaps we do not yet know what
the words "to love" mean. There ar
within us lives in which we love un
consciously. To love thur means mor
than to have pity, to make Inner sac
rlfices. to be anxious to help and give
happiness, it Is a thing that lies s
thousand fathoms deeper, where out
softest, swiftest nnd strongest words
cannot reach it.
At moments we might believe It to
be a recollection, furtively but exces
sively keen, of the greatest primitive
unity. There Is In this love a force
that nothing can resist.
Which of us but will find In him
self the recollection of certain strange
workings of this force? Which of us,
when by the side of the most ordinary
person, perhaps, but has suddenly be
come conscious of the advent of some
thing that none had summoned?
. Was It the soul of perhaps life thai
had turned within itself like a sleeper
on the point of awakening? ( I do not
know, nor did you know and no on
spoke of it. but you did not separate
from each other as though nothing
had happened.
To love thus Is to love according to
the soul and there is no soul that does
not respond to this love. For the soul
of man is a guest that has gone nun.
gry these centuries back and jieve
has it to be summoned twice to the
nuptial feast.
The souls of all our brethren are
ever hovering about us, craving for
a caress and waiting only for the slg.
pal. But how many beings are there
who all their life long have not dared
make such a signal?
It is the disaster of our entire ex-
A Lazy Liver
May be only a tired liver, or a starred
liver. It would be a stupid as well as
savage thing to heat a weary or starved
man because ho lagged In his work. So
In treating the lagging, torpid liver It Is
a great mistake to lash It with strong
drastic drugs. A torpid liver Is but an
Indication of an ill-nourished, enfeebled
body whose organs aro weary with over
work. Start with the stomach and allied
organs of digestion and nutrition. Tut
them in working order and see how
quickly your liver will become active.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
has made many marvelous cures of "liver
trouble " by it wonderful control of the
organs of digestion and nutrition. It re
stores the normal activity of the stomach,
Increases the secretions of the blood-making
glands, cleanses the system from poi
sonous accumulations, and so relieves the
liver of the burdens Imposed upon It by
the defection of other organs.
If you bare bitter or bid ttit In the mora
tag. poororieyUble appetite, coated tongue,
foul breath, cohstlpstedor Irregular bowel,
reel weak. eaU tired. BespondenU frequent
betdtcbes. ptln 4r dlstres&tn "small of back."
gnawing or distressed fcehog In stomach,
perhaps nausea.ijhNVVr"rUlno" In
throat after eatlnr. and klntkl symptoms
of weak stomach and torpid ll no medi
cine will reller. you more promptly or cure
Urn tiyrn,anentiy man uoctar fierce s
Uyloen weoirai iMwu'try. rerusp. win
part of the above sy mpioma will be present
at one time and yet point to torpid liver or
blUooiness and weak stomach. Avoid all
not bread and biscuits, griddle cake, and
other lndlg-Mtlble food and take the "Golden
Medical Discovery " regularly and stick to It
dm until you are vigorous and strong.
I The "Discovery" li non-secret, non-aloo-
bollc Is a glyceric extract or native medici
nal root with a full Hat of it Ingredient
printed on each bottle-wrapper and attested
tinder oath. It Ingredient are endorsed
and extolled br the moat eminent madleal
writer of the age and are recommended to
cure the disease for which It ! advised.
Don't accrpt a tubstltute of unknown
tr nilr,n fnw t,M Tinn-swrct MKDinixa
oy huw uiMt'Ottmox.
The Old Stand-by
The Pendleton Savings Bank
COMMERCIAL BANKING
Capital, Surplus and Profits
$250,000.0Q;
4 per cent. Interest on Time Deposits.
Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent.
"The Friend of Farmers and Stockmen"
istence that we live thus away from
our soul and stand In such dread of
Us slightest movement. Did we but
allow It to smile frankly in Its silence
and its radiance, we should be already
living in eternal life. Maurice Mae
terlinck. Down In New Mexico, not long
since, John Gosh was married to Jen
nie Dern; and the local editor did
lust what he might be expected to
do. The caption read: "Gosh-Dern
Wedding."
Ever notice how many toothpicks
you can accumulate by the time you
are vainly searching for Just one
more match? .
The Cause of Many
Sudden Deaths.
There is a disease prevailing in this
Country most dangerous lH.,catisso decep
tive. .Manysuclen
deaths are caused
by it heart dis
ease, pneumonia,
heart failure or
r- apoplexy are ofteo
the result of kid
itey disease. If
kidney trouble i
u alluwedtoadvance
tliekulney-ixjison-cd-blood
tvill at
tack the vital organs, causing' catarrh of
the bladder, or the kidneys themselves
break down and waste away cell by cell.
Bladder troubles almost always result
from a derangement of the kidneys and
a cure is obtained nuickf st by a "proper
treatment of the kidneys. If you are feel
ing badly you can make no mistake by
taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, tha
great kidney, liver and bladder remedy.
It corrects inability to bold urine aiid
Jcalding pain in passing it, and over
comes that unpleasant necessity of beiny
compelled to go often through the -day,
and to get up many times during ths
night. The mild and the extraordinary
eflect of Swamp-Root is soon realized.
It stands the highest for its wonderfoi
cutes of the most distressing cases.
Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and J
sold by all druggists in fifty-cent aft
one-dollar size bottles. You may have a
sample bottie of this wonderful new dis
covery and a book that tells nil about it
both sent free by mail. Address, Dr. Kil
tner & Co., Binghamton, X. Y. When
writing mention reading this generous
offer in this paper. Don't make any
mistake, but rememlier the name.Swamp
Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the
address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every
bottle.
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You Pay For Your Competi
tor's Advertising When It
Is Better Than Your Own!
OF COURSE the bills are not sent to you
he pays them, BUT he pays them out of
profits which would have been yours if your
advertising had been better than his.
You will continue to pay the other fellow's
advertising bills and, in the same way, for his
automobiles, his new store fixtures, his expan
sion in every way until you decide that you'll
stop it, improve and expand your advertising,
SET THEjPACE YOURSELF, AND
Me llim Pay For
Your Advertising !
St. Joseph's
Academy
Pendleton - Oregon
An Ideal School for
Boys and Girls.
Under the direction of the Sisters of
St. Francis, of Philadelphia. Resident
and day pupils. Special attention
given to music and elocution. Stu
dents prepared for teachers' examina
tions for county and state certificates.
For particulars address
Sister Superior
It's All in the Eye
Thread Your Machine
Without Looking.
Costa a little more worth a lot
more than the old style needle.
"Threadeasy" needles are made to
fit any sewing machine now In com
mon use In the home, and are made
In three sizes for domestic vue:
"Fine," "Medium," and "Coarse."
They are put up In papers of two
needles each.
price 10c per Package
of Two.
JESSE FAILING
Main street, near bridge.
Dally East Oregonlan . by
currier,
only IS cent per week.
The Best
Soda Ice Cream
and all
Fountain Drinks
at the coolest store in
town
THE
Pendleton
DRUG COMPANY
Large Quantity of the Famous
Rock Spring
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 Sloragr
Company. 'Phone Mnln ITS.
MY PlUE DRINKS BIAY
SAVE YOU A SICK SPELL.
Near Beer
24 Bottles to the case, Only
$1.25 per case.
Soda Water
All flavor, 24 bottle to the
cose, only $1.00 per case.
Delivered to any part of the city.
John Gagen
Eagle Bltlff. Phone Main (60.
GROUND BONE
FOrt CHICKENS.
Also Fine Fresh Meats
Delivered Promptly at
Reasonable Prices.
EMPIRE MEAT CO.
'Phone Mnln 18.
Lice ! Lice !
Kill them with
Lee's Lice Killer
COLESWORTHY'S
got it.
At the Feed Store
127-129 E. Alta
Every Woman
1 Intoremed and nhoulii know
, snout the womierriil ,
Marvel wr"" "
vouone
tok yonr dmpfrlat for
IL If h rannnt atirmi
th M A RVL I
uuiwr. ui una Piump lor mot- i
fMFtlfn1M fHu'ttA.. I I kt.
lsdlM. MARVEL C0 44 E. 23d St., NfrwYor
Pastime Parlors
COOLEST PLACE IN TOWN.
MOLITOft & O'DANIEL, Props.
A quiet game, orderly place for a game
of
Pool, Billiards or Bowling
SHOOTING GALLERY.
Cigars, Tobacco, Confectionery and
Soft Drinks.
Best Tables In the city.
I Our Specialty is
the Family Trade Z
We are fully prepared to fur-
X nish you the best of lard, sau-
sages and fresh, smoked or ' '
i cured meats and fish each day.
;: Central Meat Market I:
Carney A Tweedy,
TELEPHONE MAIN SS.
4444X44
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