East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, October 27, 1908, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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DAILY EAST OKKCOXIAX, rKXDLETOV, OREGON. Tl l-SUW. (HTOllF.lt 27. lltOS.
EIGHT PAGES.
EES
Vw
corTY ornmi, papf.r.
AX IIll'i:ITT XKWSrAI'KK.
Publlhei1 l'lillv. Weekly and Semi Weekly,
at IViidli'ton. Oregon, N Ill
EAST OliKtJi'NIAN lTHLlSHINd CO.
sriisnsimnx bates:
tllr, one Tear, by mull J!l 00
Pally, rIi ni .m ttii, by mall "J .".0
iHilly, three mn(ti. by mall
Pally, one mnnih, by mall r0
Pally, one year, by carrier T.r()
Pally, six ninths, by carrier 3 75
Pnllv, three ni .ntlis. .y carrier 1 !."
Pally, one ranith. by (arrler tt."
Wei,ly, onj! year, by mall 1 !rt
Week v. nix months, by mall 75
Weoklj. f' ltr Months, by mall SO
Retnl i i-. k!y, cue year, by mail 1 ."(
8eml Weekly, six months, by mall... .75
Send Weekly. ( n:r months, by mall.. .50
The Pally K.ist Oregon Ian Is kept on nle
t the Kic-.m News Co.. 147 tith street,
rortland. (ire.on.
t hlcati) l-iireaii. 000 Security building.
WlilnL'ton. 1 , lUireau. 501 Four
teenth street. X. VY.
Meaiber I'nltrd Press Association.
Telephone Mj0 l
KntereJ at the rotoffli- at Pendleton,
Oregon, a seeond class mall matter.
If we knew the care and trials,
Knew the effort ail in vain.
An.l the hitter disappointment,
I'ndeistood the loss and gain.
Would the grim external rough
ness Seem, I wonder, Just the
same?
Would we help where now we
hinder?
Would we pity where we
blame?
A.i! we judge each other harsh
ly. Knowing not life's hidden
force;
Knowing not the fount of ac
tion Is less turbid at Its source.
Seeing not amid the evil
All the golden grains of good;
Oh. w e'd love each other better,
If we only understood.
spirit as now prevails In this city.
Conditions are ripe for local develop
ment. There are many things that
are going to make this town go ahead
i". the near future. Hut towns do not
Kl-ow themselves. They are built.
Hecause the local business men had
not been in action for some time It
was not known exactly what they
would do. There were some who
feared that because of little sore
spots and petty jealousies the woolen
mill movement would fail. Put yes
terday's meeting "bowed that this
fear was groundless.
Pendleton's business men are still
of the fighting calibre they are still
Pt ndletonians.
ASIATIC MORALS.
DEMOCRACY'S INXIXG.
The world Is divided Into two
classes those who are anxious to see
the world move forward and the con
dition of mankind improved and those
who hesitate to change existing con
ditions. The former are liberals, the
latter are "standpatters."
For many years the democratic
party has been the liberal party of
the United States; the republican
party the standpat brigade.
The democratic party stands for re
vising the tariff in the interests of
the people; for the direct election of
senators; fur a banking law that will
bo highly beneficial to the mass of the
people and for other meritorious re
forms. The republican party opposes
all of these just propositions and In
lieu of them offers a few weak ex
cuses for reform in hopes of catching
votes.
In the natural order of thins the
liber il pirty should dominate in this
country, because the United States is
a nation of progressive people. Put
the democratic party has been kept
out of power because of three things
prejudice growing out of the civil
war: the fact that the economic con-
dltior.s of the country chanced to be I
out of order when the last democrat- j
lc administration was in povr. and j
because powerful interests have!
fought the democratic party because
U!id-r republican rule they are prof
iting imnu-rwly, but at the expense
of the rest of the country.
Put the time has arrived for a
char.?'-. The civil war is over; the
panic last year proved that economic
!sturb.i'
Speaking of one of the many re
i ent scandals growing out of the
American possessions in the orient,
the St. Iiuis post-Dispatch said:
"When the latest army scandal in
volves the family affairs of an Amer
kan "vice-presidential family," the
least said about It as a family affair
i soonest mended, no doubt. Cut the
country must take notice when the
family Itself explains its beginning as
the result of service In the Phlllp-
pines.
j "So we have It once more. It is
1 another case of Asiatic morals, which
ore as catching as "Asiatic cholera,"
if not more so.
"When we go into the work of up
lifting inferior races 'somewhere east
of Suez, where there ain't no deca
logue," the work demands volunteers,
and among the volunteers the picked
men and women who are sure they
are proof against the worst In the
strength of the highest and most un
selfish motives. For all the rest, go
ing where there 'ain't no decalogue'
means the best possible opportunity
to find the worst and bring It homo
with them.
"We need not think that Asiatics
are degraded to account for this, but
the sort of moral restraint they have
is so different from ours, that when
we send any sort of a miscellaneous
collection of Americans to live under
Asiatic influences. It means practical
ly that for them 'the limit is off.'
They may easily lose the restraints of
American morals, and we know only
too well that they despise those of
Asia."
The white rice never did mingle
with an inferior race without degre
dation. It never will. Let us keep
America for the Americans and leave
Asia to the Asiatics.
THE SALARIED MAX.
- i
He gets his "twenty'-per" each week,
enough to pay his way.
He doesn't own a country home, a
yacht out in the bay;
Three children romp about his door,
that self-same door Is rented,
Put still he smiles his way along, with
all the world contented.
He meets his bills as they fall due,
at night sleeps like a top,
And resting sweetly never fears that
copper stock will drop.
He plods along right faithfully, and
when bis work Is done
He calls his children' round him for
the evening hour of fun;
His weary wife looks through the door
and Smiles to see them there.
And In her heart there's gentle peace.
her soul is f.-ce from care.
she hums a little song of love and
kisses one and all.
She fears no market crash to drive
her husband to the wall.
i5re.it wea'th has never seared their
s u!s or spoiled their simple
lives.
And on their hearth rank envy's weed
seldom, aye! never thrives;
Modest their dress and plain their
food, the greatest of their Joys,
The love they bear each other and
the love they bear their boys.
Theirs Is a struggle, sometimes hard.
but all the odds they face
With calmness, for they have no fear
of run or disgrace.
C!o forth today and tread your way
along the city street,
Who Is the happiest man of all that
you may chance to meet?
N'ot he whose wealth uncounted Is,
not he of splendid frame.
Not he who boasts a world of power.
not he of public name:
Put he, the unassuming man, whose
face Is homeward turned
Tc greet his wife and little ones, his
dally wage well earned.
Detroit Free Press.
PPET tious when raised with
I 31 V I It M II
si :lv w; j l u u i i
H I tiumiMi I Vmr turn it IhcwJ LjJit.ii.iaTi1 1 1
HI ' IWi A an M mm am M stfX II
'WjjMj; The only baking powder' I
XyS'i made from Royal JI
The Taft supporters should have
known that their attacks on Kern
would bring forth an expose of Sher
m in. Kern may have faults, but com
pared with the republican vice-presidential
candidate he Is an angel with
golden- wings. Sherman has never
been anything but a flunky for the
interests. He has devoted his life to
polishing the shoes and dusting the
clothes of his Wall street masters.
The vice-presidential nomination was
a little matter that was left to them
and they gave it to Sherman as a tip.
W. R. Hearst hi.; ;,;-n playing the
rcle of a detective in the presidential
campaign. Sleuths often do benefic
l;.l work and they are entitled to the
jay they receive. Hearst has accom-
,.t'i.1 cfimn croo.l an,! Via is entitled
t 1 the notoriety he h is gotten out of
i. Beyond this he should not be considered.
FADKO RRF.AMS.
I want to be a gypsy, In the spring
time; I want to be a rover, in July.
Put November w inds have racked me,
and those things now don't at
tract me
I just want to be a (pilet Utile guy,
In a nice, steam heated dwelling In
the city.
With a carriage to condaet me to
my toil.
Which should last from 10 to 2 and
corral the revenue;
Yea, In winter I'm an alien from the
soil.
I want to be a farmer In the Maytlme;
I want to be a vintner In the fall,
Put I wake from such ecstatic dreams
for reasons iuite climatic
My ears no longer hear the wild
wood's call.
For me the simple joys of town ex
Ist'-nce, ""
Some twenty minutes from the prfb
lie sipiare;
Lost ideals! I wished in June, I were
trimp, or picaroon
Now. 1 only want to be a million
' aire:
Clev-dand Leader.
MF.XICAX 11U STRIAL SMTATIOX
The Ciovernment School of Arts
and Trades ut Mexico has been great-
foundries and an electric Installation
also with u motor of five horse-power
a.i well as departments for tools, etc.
In each of the departments DO stu-
Ten Good Reasons Why
You Should Stop at
"The Cornelius"
The Best in Portland.
Situated In the center of the
hopping district.
One block from the clanging
street care.
Not io expenilve as some other
hoteli .
Sixty rooms with private bath.
' Long distance and local tele
phones In every room.
Writing deak In every room.
Curpeted throughout In the best
velvet carpets.
The rooms are furnished In solid
mahogany.
Every room contains a heavy
solid Simmons brass bod on which
Is a 40 or 60-pound hair mattress.
The furnishings and general ap
pearance of the public rooms must
be seen to be appreciated.
THE CORNELIUS. Park and
Alder streets, Portland's newest
and most modern equipped hotel,
solicits your patronage and assures
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 us
a chance to make ynu look pleas
ed. THE CORNELIUH Free 'Bus
meets all trains.
Furoplan.
N. K. CLARKE, Mgr.
C. W. Cornelius,
Proprietor j
ly Improved lately, according to the! dents can work comfortably at one
Mexican Herald, which says: time.
The new foundry and blacksmith Among the new workshops which
shop have recently been completed, j will be used at the opening of the
The former has a reducing oven wlth'sihool year are the carpenter shop,
1 '4 tons capacity and a derrick with
a lifting capacity of five tons. It alsi
has departments for models, coai,
drying ovens, molds, and a complete
electric insulation to propel the ma
chinery. The blacksmith shop has 12
paint shop, and machine shop,
Worthy students w ithout means j
can obtain an education and acquire j
a trade at the expense of the govern
ment, with fool and clothes In addi
tion t ) the regular Instruction.
We Give
i.k;ht ) loyi:
Wallowa county is now upon
map. It has had a train wreck,
the
not
! occur Independently of
conditions an.l the people
ik'-nei to the ini'iuity of the
pr'-s'-nt time a heavy ti le is
towards liberalism ami the
ad'-r. William J. Pry.m.
Whether this will be sufficl'-nt to elect :
Prvi!: remains to be seen. Indlca- I
ti' '!- tint it will. Put whether
t.ef'-d or not the race is plain mat
Ik should be elected.
It i- time for democracy's innine.
po!:: '.
hav- aw
tru.-'s.
At'the
riiiii.i..z
literal I
, a serious one to be sure, yet a real
i train wreck. A short time ago Wal-
I Iowa could make no such boast. It Is
better to have a train wreck than no
Little Light o' Love.
Can yvu rot to tru"?
Every face and flower
Entrances you;
Every star you pra.sp.
Every' Joy you clasp;
Little Light o' Love,
Can you not be true?
I
Little Light o' Love.
Say. what will you do
When Father Time's white-wing
Sweeps over you?
Will you laugh or sigh?
Will you fear or fly?
Little Light o' Love,
Say, what will-you do?
Little Light o' Love.
Will you come to me,
Still your dancing feet,
Leave your ievelry?
Wander then no more,
Pest beside my door.
Little Light o' Love,
Will you come to me?
Torrence Penjamin In Ainslee's.
RLl'K DAYS.
train at all.
Many things come to the town that
Koes after them.
THE IIOMIXt;.
WIMil.PIOMWS.
If th'Te are any who f'-ar that the
P'tidVori spirit is dead and that the
bu-'in- tn'-n '' the town are not
ready to work and fight for the up
buil!:r of th- town they are deceiv
ed. At the woolen mill meeting at the
C mm'-mal ooeiation yesi'-"da- af
b moon it was shown that the fire
f,f town patriotism burns strong and
bright. At the meeting a dozen men,
banker-, iru-rc bants and prop'ity
owner laid aside all petty differen
cen and Joln-d hands in the common
cause .f saving the woob-n mill. They
will su'eeed because when unite,! as
they are at present these men com
pose a bunch that Is hard to beat.
Pendleton Is to be congratulated
upon the spirit that her buslnesn men
are showing. It In the spirit that
inn keB towns grow and It Is going to
produce a new Pendleton.
The time demands Just such a
, When my wayward boy came back
I From his reckless roaming,
j With his plumage ruth and wrack,
j Like a spent bird homing.
First I looked, and th'-n I smiled.
Then we clung together;
He was still my child, my child,
Iyne was still a tether.
N'e'er a word, reproach I said,
Asked not what had kept him;
Only when he lay In bed
Then (in mind) I wept him.
Wept the wounds upon him wrought
Those long years' bequeathing'
Thrice that night his threshold
nought,
Watchful of his breathing.
Listening, 'twixt time;1 afraid
1 st he be some other
Thanking Ood, h mercy made
M" to be his mother.
Edwin I Kabin.
The railroad commission of Louis
iana has ordered the Louisiana Western-,
the Louisiana EJist & West, the
Colorado Southern, New Orleans &
Pacific and the Chicago, Rock Island
and Pac.flc within 30 days to Install
and operate Interchange track con-ti'-ctions
between their lines as Eu
nice, La., the expense to be divided
as the lines themselves shall agree.
It's not worth while the grieving
About the chances lost;
What gain are you receiving
The while you count the cost?
Forget them, () forget them!
Look on ahead ami smile,
The blue days, though you've met
them.
Are none of them worth while.
Selected.
Savings Bank Facilities
with
National Bank Security.
, The Pend'eton 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. Governmen', under the name of
The American National Bank
NO. 9228
Capital, Surplus and Profits $250,000
4 per cent. Interest on Time Deposits.
SafeD eposit Boxes for Rent.
"Once Our Customer, Always Our Friend."
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.
j T. Tweedy, Sec.-Treas.
rn t tarsm
111- MP f . HJCT"
Ths East Oregonian-Jcurnsl Pcny Gonfesl
This Coupon Good for 5 Votes
Before Oct. 3 ! , 1 908
This vote to be countedjfer
Name of Boy or Girl
No. Street
SI. Joseph's Academy
Pendleton, Oregon
A
Ij.
R. F. D.
Postoffice
Send to the Pony Man, East Crania:!, PenJiiJoi, Or.
One of the
Essentials
of the happy homes of to-day Is a
vast fund of Information as to the
best methods of promoting health and
happiness and right living and know
ledge of the world's best products.
Products of actual excellence and
reasonable claims truthfully presented
and which have attained to world
wide acceptance through the approval
of the Well-informed of the World;
not of Individuals only, but of the
many who have the happy faculty of
selecting and obtaining the best the
world affords.
One of the products of that class,
of known component parts, an Ethical
remedy, approved by physicians and
commended by the Well-Informed of
the World as a valuable and whole
some family laxative is the well-known
Syrup of Figs and Lllxlr of Senna. To
get Its beneficial effects always buy
the genuine, manufactured by the
California Fig Syrup Co., only, $ and
for sale by all leading druggists.
An Meal School for
Boys and Girls.
Under the direction of the Slaters of
St. Francis, of Philadelphia. Resident
and day pupils. Special attention
to music and elocution. Stu
dents prepared for teachers' examina
tions for county and state certificates.
For particulars address
Sister Superior
TIIK I.IvMUM'.SHII'
In- rnrlnj; for men'n outer Kariix-nts
without iup.-tl(in belongs to us.
Our work Is thr kind thnt lasts,
anj adds to tho appearance and wear
of garments, yet our charges h ive the
winning way of being always satis
factory. City Steam Dye Works
'Phone Main 19. 2"06H E. Alts 3i
nmw sffr-sM-sr i nr nC:T'mKT'i
I nay
ML
N
SEi
Sunsrt Maiaine often the readers of tlili paper the beat opportunity
r.f Liie vcar
RCVICW CF riCVIEV3 . $3.00
SUNSET f.GAZtr.: .... 1.60
WOMA'4'C HC: COMPANION 1.26
v. i'.i vo t or. in. a b'nutl'ul premium, 73-pafa book
i.:u;rjt(.I In l; :r colura with 12) Western view.
ALL FOR
$3.00
T MAGAZINE
"nc:.cs. LuroNia
Tlioy Stand the Strain.
Our Winona Wagons and Hacks,
an. Uex Huggles nro built to stand
service.
Let us show you our Fairbanks
Morse Engines and Scales the best.
We solicit your wagon repairing,
machine work and carriage painting.
Charges are moderate and only skill
ed workmen are employed.
NEAGLE BROS.
JOSEPH ELL
insurance!
REAL ESTATE
Room 3, Savings Bank
Phone Black 2371
Building.