1 PAGE IXHU. DAILY EAST OKEGOMAX, PEXDLETOX, OREGOX, THI KSDAV, OCTOnKH 15, 1908. EIGHT PAGES. covnty oiticial paper. av ixperf.npf.xt nkyvspai'kr. rnbllihwl Pally. Weekly and RrmlWMkly, It IVnnletnn. Oregon, by tha CAST OKEliOXIAS I'l :ilLISHt.NG CO. srnsrniiTioN rates: Dalit, one rear, by mall 5.oo I'ally. nil tnnnilia. by mill.. 2.M Pally, three monibi, by mall 1.23 I'allj. en month, by mall AO Pall?. iue year, by carrhr T 50 Pally, all month, by carrier ITS lail. thro month, by carrier 1.95 Pally, one month, by carrier 63 Weekly, one year, by mail 1.50 Week v. Fit m.iutlia. by mall TS Weeklr. fiiiir mouth, by mall 50 Resnl trUy, one year, by mall 1.50 Heml weekly, x niontha. by mall 75 "etui Weekly, fieir month, by mall.. .50 The Pa i it Fant Oregonlsn I kept oi Ml t the Oreifou .New Co., 147 0th street, l orPanl. Oregon. ChUau'o I'.ureau, 0O9 Security bnlldlnf. Waanliitfnn. P. C, Pureao. 501 Four teenth treet. X. V. Member I'olfed Treaa Auoclatloa. Tle(bone Mala 1 Eutered at the poatofflc at l'endletoa, I'recm. a iftvn.l rln mall matter. If that new life beyond this breath Should mean, oh love, for you and me, Oblivion of Identity. I'd call it death. Tou must be you, and I be I, There is no other help nor hope, An individual horoscope, Or else we die. Susie M. Best. POLITICAL FKEEDOM. In a republic where the source of power lies In the people themselves the safety of the nation depends up on the Intelligence and courage with which Individual voters perform the duties of citizenship. In America blind partisanship Is now and always has been the greatest obstacle to political progress. In speaking editorially of the present campaign in its last issue, Collier's Weekly said: "Pope defined party feeling as 'the madness of the many for the gain of the few.' The worst failures of gov ernment in America have been con nected with worship of the party label. In emancipation from this stupidity the northwest Is leading, but the signs become more favorable everywhere. . The free man on No vember 3 will be the man who votes from judgment and ceases to be used as any party's rubber stamp." This too is the creed of the East Oregonian and it is the creed of every honest newspaper of Independent mind. Because a man Inclines to wards a certain political faith It does not follow that he should always fol low the advice given by his party lenders and Jump Into line at the crack of the party whip. Citizenship should always come be fore partisanship. If there are dem- curat? who believe that Taft should be elected president, they should vote for him. If there are republicans j who believe that the policies advocat ed by Bryan are the best; if they be lieve th.it Bryan is entitled to the presicivner because of the I"11? ll3rJ fight he has made for the principles ?.lzz?:s. th?v should vote for him. The man who lets his partisanship overcome his better Ju Igment Is an ass. A democrat c;in vote for Taft and still retain his f.ilth in the gen era! principles of democracy. A re publican can vote for Bryan and still retain a general allegiance to the re publican party. Colli.-r's says that the northwest I' I- ad:;ig In th" emancipation from the stupidity of traveling blindly in party rut-1. It is a splendid compXnen?. l.t the people of th northwest sus tain the reputation they have ac quired. EN 1)1. ETON SPIRIT. For many years IVndl-tvn has ha 1 .m, enviable r'-putution all over the i.orthwest as a little city where the j coj.le are wide awake and ready to work for the advancement of the trwn. 'Pendleton spirit" Is an expression that has been heard far and wide. It has caused the business men of this city to be regarded as men with red blood within them. Men who have l.-ft !'.:!s c'.ty for other places never full to make It known that they are fiorn Pendleton. It Is a good testl- At no time in recent months has tho Pendleton spirit been so well manl r, :.tf I us in the movement for retain ing the woolen mill In this city. Rankers, business men and newspa pers have laid aside all petty Jeal ousies and animosities and have pull ed together for the common good. As a result of the earnest, united work that has been done the day Is all but won. The obstacles that were in the path of the movement have been re moved in tho Mine way a ro tary plow goes through a snowbank. So well has the work In behalf of the woolen mill been done that the retention of the Industry seems lnevlt able. It now 'only remains to make the formal arrangements nnd If they are carried out ueee.sfully the whirl of the looms will be heard within n few months. It is not yet time to rejoice, but the progress of the movement Is very satisfactory to those who want to see the mills retained and Pendleton built Into the better, bigger town It is en titled to he. POLITICAL lNCKMHAIUSM. In this morning's lsue of th,. Tri bune appears the following remark able statement: "The man who thinks t he ebvtbvi of Bryan would not precipitate th worst panic and business paralysis this country has ever known. Is as blind as a mole and perfectly incapa ble of distinguishing white from black." This is anarchistic talk with a ven geance. Such doctrine 1s more dan gerous than anything that Debs has ever preached. Financial panics are caused by scares. They have never been caus ed by anything else. Fright is pro duced by Just such talk as that In which the Tribune is Indulging. The man or the newspaper that predicts that dire calamity will befall this country If Bryan Is elected Is a political firebug. They threaten to burn the town unless things go to suit them. Predictions of a panic following Bryan's election are not only dan gerous, but they are dishonest. Com plete and competent evidence to this effect Is furnished every day by re publican papers which like the Tri bune are making desperate efforts to save the day for Taft. In one breath the republican party organs declare that Bryan Is In league with the Standard Oil and railroad interests. They declare that he la ac ceptable to the "Interests," that Roosevelt and Taft are the only orig inal, genuine trust busters. In the next breath these papers proclaim that Bryan Is the enemy of the business and financial world; that capital will go into spasms if Bryan Is elected and that the worst hind of a panic will be precipitated. The Tribune's editorial Is labelled "Common Sense." But where la there sense of any kind in such logic? There is none. Hut the Tribune and similar parti san sheets are lacking In a more se rious way. They lack common hon esty an element that should be ob served even In the beat of a political campaign. When the new city hall, the feder al building, the new depot, the new Christian church, the Bowman build ing, the new Jones building. McCoim mach'.s garage, the new Alta house, I'yers' new warehouse and other buildings are completed, Pendleton v.il! look even better than It does. Pendleton people are waiting pa tiently for the new O. R. & X. depot. It is badly needed both by the public and by the railroad people them selves. The depot has been promised and it has been planned. Now let us hKve it. Ivt us have something from 1794. If history Is to be brought Into the present campaign why not go back to the befcinning. In Walla Walla the Northwest f.ias & Electric company Is fighting more openly than It did In Pendleton. Chicago has won the ffhamplonshlp. N'ow for the campaign and that little war In eastern Europe. An aerial postal service Is now be ing planned; But they had that In Noah's day. WKIXG CHI MVS NECK DOXT HOB OF SCHOOL "It Is better to wring a child's neck and be done with it than to let It grow up without an education." This is the strong sentiment recent ly expressed by Judge William H. Mc Ifenry from the Polk county bench, says a Des Moines dispatch. His expression of opinion was brought forth in Juvenile court over v. hlch he presides. Sixteen-year-old Mae Curry stood before the Judge. Several years ago the girls was taken .'. -,;n her father, Joseph Curry and Kiven into the care of Mr. and Mrs. Krieson of Des Moines. Before she came to them the child had never been to school. She was Immediate ly started In the primary grade but the ridicule of scholars caused her to stop. The father, desiring to obtain possession of the girl again, brouKht the matter to the attention of the court. The Judge extracted a prom ise from the weeping grl that she would brave the ridicule of her play, mates and go to school. He left her with her foster parents and directed his stinging remarks to the father. Made in New York We alone sell in this city Correct Clothes for Men Made in to-day's New York Style by Jlwlffliffitei A label that guarantees the best clothes value obtainable BOND BROS. Pendleton's Leading Clothiers ONTARIO Pl'LP VOOI. Slackened American Demand Causes Losses t fit nnd inn Intt'rtXs, Consul R. S. Chilton, Jr., forwards the following statement by n lending Toronto paper in regard to the pulp- wood trade In northern Ontario: The paper war In the United States is seriously affecting the traffic re turns of the Temlskamlng nnd North- ern Ontario railway. At the com mencement of the, year the commis sioners of the railway estimated that during the resent 12 months 50,000 cords of pulp wood would be shipped over the road. These estimates were based on the actual contracts made with American buyers. The trouble In the paper world across the line has. however, led to only a very small pro portion of that amount being ship ped, although the wood has been cut; by the settlers and delivered at va lgus poir.ts on the railway. The po-i sition Is a serious one. If the wood is no't shipped soon It will become worthless. The railway authorities; have done all In their power to get ' the buyers to take the wood out. and a large quantity has been barked, but very little has been shipped so far. The unsettling of the wood pulp. market by conditions prevailing In the United States is likely to affect set- j tiers along the line of the Temisknm-: Ing and Xorthern Ontario Railway, i American buyers coming into compe-i tltion with Canadian firms during the ast two or three years has resulted n an advantageous rise In price so f;ir Ij the settlers, by whom the wool u princially cut, are concerned. As a matter of fact the price of pulp wood has risen In the last two and a half years from lu'T.O a cord t' nearly $5.r0. It will be easy to realize thatj the dropping out of competition of the United States buyers will be almost ; Inevitably followed by a fall in prices next year. The general traffic on the; Temlska ming and Xorthern Ontario ri;l!w;iy is also reported as being very li'Cht this year. American fnmeW. True camels are not found In this' country, except In zoological collec-! tlotis and menageries, but there Is ev idence that the race once existed on the American continent. Fossil re mains deposited In various museums prove t e fact, and It !s posllde that they might have appeared heve before they i1.!,! la Africa. Skeletons of a species which Is said to be somewhat unlike other American camels have be: p f innd wit' in the l ist few wreUs !n sandstone near Lusk, Wyo. The exact geological age of the deposit Is! tlot reported. What Ails YouT Do you feel weak, tired, despondent, have frequent headaches coated tongue, bitter or bad tu-to in morning, "heart burn," Isdchinu of gas, acid risings in throat after eating, .stomach gnaw or bum, foul breath, di..y i-pelK poor or variable appetite, nausea at times and kindred symptoms? If yoTNiitve a.iy considerable number of lhsabnve Sriptons you are. sulferlni? fromi!loucnfv,sN1riid liver with ln.il MtloniT.p"ft.QLr M edicnl Jf'i'.'erv.i.-J' iace up "I ' i :;cj." f t vnhinh!" niedi'Tii'l i" ' ! .:c---.'ii'v n th .lie .j seienee fnrjh e-tlOi'Ii'. W-H a'l.ic-riiiHi it la i. 'a elticient liver invigcrau-Xstoaach tonic, bowel recHktor a., rve s'ro-'heijcr. The "Colder) Vedlca! I'i cowry " Is ti at :. patent racd-tv.: .".vt n . M-nra, a full list of Its In-rredieiiM leir.r p.-inKd on Its bottMvruM':' "l' ' '1 nr;dcr oath. A glance at It" formula . ill show tliat It contains .I"-!'..)!, nr 'larmful liabit-forniliigdni-.-.. It is a I'ni .' extract made with pure tripb-r-Mned I'Vcerine, of proper strength. Irnin the root.- of t'ae following native Amei l Tin forest plants, viz., Golden Seal rooi. Stone root. Black Cherr bark, Queen's root, Illuodroot, r.nd Mandrake root. The following leading nnilir.il author! I If, among a host of oiheis, exu! the fmegoiM;! tools for the cure of Jits' seen uiluieiif is tho altoveoymiiiotiis linli. nte: i'n.f.it Hai I Imlow, M, I)., of .1 iTervia M-1. CuW!.. I'll. In : I'rof. II (' Wood. M. I).,'f I niv.nl I'a.: Prof Ktlwln M' Hale. M. !.. of llnliaeinaiin Med. College, Chicago; I'rof. John Iviiik. M. I., Author of American IHsrtcnia'i'r.v: Prof. .Ino. M. !-icua-der, M. !).. Aittliorof HistIIIc Medicines; Prof. Laurence Johnson, M. l.. Med. )ejt. bnlv. of N V.; Prof. I'lirley I.llingwood. M. 1).. Anther of Materia Sledica and Prof. In Bennett Medi cal College, Chicago. Send name and ad dress on Postal Caul to I)r. It. V. Pierce. Ituf falo, N. Y., and receive (rrr, booklet giving extracts from wiling of all the altore medi cal authors and many others endorsing, In the atrongest possible terms, each and every In gradient of which "Golden Medical DUcof err "Is composed. Dr. Plerce'a Pleiwani, Pellets remtate and Invigorate atomach, liver and bownla. They may lie used In conjunction with "flolden Medical Disco-eery " If bowel are much con stipated. They're tiny and lucsr-coated. PIX'I LIAU PACTS. A tallow candle bullet can be fired through a board A straw driven by a cyclone will penetrate a tree. A stream of water, under high pressure, will tear the skin off a man's hand. A copper disk rotating slowly can be cut by a steel cutting tool; but If ro tated at high speed It will turn nnd cut the tool. In many parts of Europe It Is cus tomary among the people to burn su gar In a sick room, a practice which is considered by physicians as an In nocent superstltutlon. neither bene ficial nor harmful. Prnr. Trlliiert. of the Pastenr Institute at Paris, has. however, demonstrated recently that burning sugar develops formic acety We Give The Pendleton Savings Bank, always known as the staunch Friend of Farmers, Stockgrowers and Merchants, is now a National Bank, con ducting its business under the supervision of the U. S. Government, under the name of The American National Bank NO. 9228 Capital, Surplus and Profits $250,000 4 per cent. Interest on Time Deposits. Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent. "Once Our Customer, Always Our Friend." October is the Finish of the westbound COLONIST FARES They epply from all points in Eastern and Southeastern states. Have you informed interested friends in the East?' UiNION DEPOT SERVICE. THROUGH TRAINS via 0 Amount of fare can be deposited with any agent o the NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY and ticket deliveries will be arranged at any point desired W. ADAMS, AGENT, PENDLETON, OREGON A. D. CHARLTON, A. G. P. A , Portland, Or. CAIIELESSNESS IS HESI'OXSIIILE for the soiling of many nice dresses and other garments, but little satis faction can be obtained from the cul prits You can, however, have the satisfaction of having your clothing carefully cleaned so they will look like new at Sullivan's dying nnd cleaning establishment. When spots cannot be removed, our skill and ex perience enables us to dye the gar ment a darker shade of most pleasing effectiveness. Gily Steam Dye Works Thone Main 169. 206 ft E. Alt lene-hydrogen, one of the most pow erful antiseptic gases known. Five grammes of sugar (77.16 grains) were burned under a glass bell holding 10 quarts. After the vapor had cooled bacilli of typhus, tuberculosis, chol era, smallpox, etc., were placed In tho bell In open glass tubes and within half an hour all the microbes were dead. If sugar Is burnt In a closed vessel containing putrlflcd meat or the contents of rotten eggs, the offensive odor disappears at once. The popular faith in the disinfecting qualities of burnt sugar appears, therefore, as well founded. lKxsn't Need (ilnwuw. Love Is seldom so blind that It can't distinguish the dollar mark. Philadelphia Record. Savings Bank Facilities with National Bank Security. ii("S A" YOU ARE WELCOME TO THE Democratic Headquarters 815 Main Street Rest and reading rooms for visitors, open all hours. Interesting literature. Meeting every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Dr. C. J. Smith, Pres. T. Tweedy, Sec.-Treas. Ten Good Reasons Why You Should Stop at "The Cornelius" The Best in Portland. Situated In the center of the shopping district One block from the clanging street care. Not to ezpenilve a aome other hotela . Sixty rooma with private bath. Long dlatance and local tele phone In every room. Writing desk In every room. Carpeted throughout In the beet velvet carpets. " The rooma are furnlahed In aolld mahogany. Every room contalna a heavy aolld Simmon hraea bed on which la a 40 or 60-pound hair mattreee. The furnishings and general ap pearance of the public rooma mart be seen to be appreciated. THE COHNELIU9. Park and Alder streets. Portland's newest and most modem equipped hotel, solicits your patronage and assure you good service and courteous treatment. An exceptional hotel for Eastern Oregon families who .'ome to Portland shopping and sight-seeing When next In Portland give ua a chance to make you look pleas ed. THE COrtNEI.U'S Free "Bus meets all trains. Europlan. N. K. CLARKE, Mgr. C. W. Cornelius, Proprietor SI. Joseph's Academy Pendleton, Oregon An 'deal School for Boys and Girls. Under the direction of the Sisters of St. Francis, of Philadelphia. Resident ami day pupils. Special attention given to miialr; and elocution. Stu dents prepared for teachers' examina tions for county and state certificates. For particulars addrews Sister Superior Tlioy Stand tho Strain. Our Winona Wagons and Hacks, nnd Hex Buggies are built to stand service. Let us show you our Fairbanks Morse Engines and Scales the best. We srdlcdt your wagon repairing, machine, work and carriage painting. Charges are moderate and only skill ed workmen are employed. NEAGLE BROS. JOSEPH ELL - : : INSURANCE j REAL ESTATE : Room 3, Savings Bank Building. Phone Black 2371. I X