PAGE FVR DAILY EAST OIUSGON1AN, PENDLETON, OREGON, Tl i:slAY, M VltCH 2(, 1910. KIG1IT PAGES. - -'T'!J-'t AX IXOKPENDKNT XKWSPAl'EK. J'ubllslMKl lmlly. Wrklr and 8emlVeekly at l'endleton, Orepon, by the EAST OKKG0XIAX l'l UL1SU1NO CO. SIIISCKII'TION KATES. lmlly. one yer, by mall J3.00 Daily, six months, by mall J Ml Daily, three months, by mail 1.25 Pally, one mouth, by mail ."0 Inily, one year, by carrier 7.50 lil.v, six month, by carrier...' 3 75 l'aily. three months, by carrier 1.95 lmllr. one month, hr carrier 63 Weekly, one year, by mall 1.30! Weekly, six months, by mall 75 Weoklv. tour months, by mall 30 Seuil Weekly, one year, by mall.... 1.50 Semi- eekly. six momns. by mail... .75 Semi-Weekly, four months, by mail.. .50 The lnily K.aat (iregonlan Is kent on sale at the Oreeon Xews Co., 147 6th street, I'ortland. Oregon. Northwest News. Co. I'ortland. Oreson. Chicago liureau. fli! Security Building. Washlnston. P. C., Unrean. 501 Four teenth street, X. W. Uember I'nlted lrpss Asorlntion. I F.ntered at the postoiflce at Pendleton, . oreRon. as second class mall matter. I Telephone Main 1 Official City and County Paper. OV..,'-'iEO Some love the glow of out ward show. The shine of wealth and try to win It; The house to me may lowly he. If I but like the people in it. What's all the gold that glitters cold When linked to hard and hautrhty feeling? Whatever we're told, the nobl est gold Is truth of heart and honest feeling. A humble roof may give us proof That simple flowers are of ten fairest; And trees whose bark is hard and dark May yield us bloom and fruit the richest! ' There's worth as sure among the poor As e'er adorned the highest station; And minds as just as theirs, we trust. Whose claim is hut of rank's creation! ' Then let them seek. whose minds are weak, Mere fashion's smile and try to win it; The house to me may lowly he. If I but like the people in it! Charles Swain. V , i ; PARTY RKVISIOX XKFJK1. The fight that is being made in some states against the reelection or insurgent congressmen shows the need of a new political alignment in the United States. For instance In Nebraska desperate efforts are being made to defeat Xorris, the leader ot the insurgents in the house. XorrU has been marked for slaughter by the republican machine. So every pos sible argument is being made against him. His course in congress has been misrepresented to his constituents and his detractors are said to be making headway. In this attack on the insurgent leader many democratic papers of Nebraska are Joining. They may be acting from a sense of party loyal ty but it is more probable their at tacks are inspired by the same forces that are backing Cannon. It Is an old trick for the machine elements of the two big parties to unite to crush an unruly member of one party of the other, usually of the dominating rarty. Now regardless of the motives back of democratic opposition to Norris It la a fact that the "liberals" of Ne braska are divided. Some of them will be with Norris in the insurgent repub lican camp while others will be in the democratic fold. .The liberals being thus divided it is easily pos sible that the "regulars" may win out and succeed in defeating Norris. If they do Norris will go down as a vic tim of the present farcian political alignment and his defeat should serve as a warning to the progressive or liberals to unite under one organiza tion. THEY ALL NEED TRAIN IN(T." From educational meets such as the Inland Empire convention come many of the Improvements In teach ing methods and In general school policy. This statement Is brought forth by the comments that have been made by the papers of the, state re garding the debate between Messrs Ressler and McKinney upon the sub ject of school athletics. For the r.ost part the comments show approval of Prof. Ressler's Man'. In the discussion that gen tleman took the position that the present athletic system Is lacking In that too much attention Is devoted to turning out a "first team." He contended that systematic physical training for all students is of more Importance than the coaching of a few men for a contesting team. This Is a position that is undoubtedly well taken. Certainly it would be better to bring about a fair degree of phy sical development on the part of an entire student body than o oyer- train a few 'stars." This Is a fact that Is already quite well recognized by school authorities and the recog nition of the fact has caused n strengthening of courses In physical culture and the arrangement of more class games. All of this may be done without loweiing- the standard of the imerollegiate or interscholustlc games. On the contrary the participation in i'.thlctic work by the greater number of students should toiul to Improve the big sumes. Hut if there should he conflicts more consideration should be given class work and class games than to the bis contests. The ob ject in educational work is to develop the individual not to turn out victori ous high school or collegiate teams. A WHITK SLAVKK" CATGUT. The death of little Ruth Wheeler, m New York stenographer, at the imnds of Albert Wolter, should aid i werfully in the move to wipe out the curse of "white slavery." The murder of this girl was a horrible crime and if reports are true it was committed by a typical "white slave" trader. Wolter it fs said lured the s:rl to his apartments through an ad vertisement offering employment. He had no employment to offer her but instead wanted her to take up a life of prostitution. He probably killed her because she refused and threat ened to expose him and his nefarious business. It is too bad that Wolter and all of his ilk who are caught can not be burned at the stake. It would he fitting punishment and at the same time would break up. a fiendish practice that is becoming more and more a disgrace to civilization. WHY NOT IMPROVE IT? It so happens that Jackson street U one of the most frequently used thoroughfares of the city. Scarcely anyone goes driving or autoing in Pendleton without passing along Jackson street. It is one of the good residence streets of the' town. Yet there is hardly another street in Pen dleton in such poor shape for travel. The street is sadly in need of improv ing and if they care to do so the prop- j erty owners over there' may work wonders in that thoroughfare. They can have the street macadamized and provided with concrete curbs and the old wooden walks replaced with con crete walks. It would cost some money to do that work it is true. But property values would be enhanced to the extent of the cost if not more. So no one would lose. Why cannot Jackson street be Improved during the coming summer? In New York a man who wanted to become a naturalized American de clared the colors upon the flag are I green and white. He had evidently j seen a St. Patrick's day parade and jsi nie allowance should be made for I the mistake. Now that a motor car service has been secured between Penuleton and the west end country let everybody boost for an electric road to the southward. Roosevelt is at it already over In Egypt. The "malfactors of great wealth" and other malefactors also may well begin to tremble. This is the land of sunshine and good health. MISUNDERSTOOD. The budget has given rise to a num ber of good stories about Mr. Lloyd George, a particularly good one con cerning a recent banquet at which the chancellor of the exchequer was a guest. Sitting next to him was a young lady, who listened reverently to every word that fell from her hero's lips. "Ah," she ventured at last, "you have suffered a great deal in your life from being misunderstood, have you not?" "Yes," Mr. Lloyd-George is report ed to have replied, "I have suffered from being misunderstood; but I haven't suffered half as much as I would have if I had been understood " M. A. P. WETTING ON IN YEA US. During a Friday afternoon lecture on history in a Baltimore educational institute the Instructor had given a lengthy disquisition on the character of Oeorge Washington, incidentally touching upon his work as. the organ izer of the revolution. "Now," risked the instructor, "if George Washing ton were alive today, what practical part do you think he would play in president-day politics, Judging from the past?" A prolonged silence on the part of the pupils followed this. Finally, however, one lad saw a way out. "Sir." he queried, "wouldn't he be too old?" I.ippencott's. Household Remedy Taken in the Spring for Years. Ralph Rust, Willis, Mich., writes: "Hood's Snrsaparilta has been a house hold remedy in our home as long as I can remember. I have taken It in the spring for several years. It has no equal for cleansing the blood and ex pelling the humors that accumulate during the winter. Being a farmer and exposed to bad weather, my sys tem Is often affected, and I often take Hood's Sarsaparllla with good results." Hood's Sarsaparllla is Peculiar to Itself. There is no "Just as good." Get It today In usual liquid form or tablets called Sarsatabs. MY QIF.KN. He loves not well whose love Is bold. I would not have thee come too nigh. The sun's gold would not seem pure gold Unless the sun were In the sky. To take him thence and chain him near Would make his beauty disappear. He keeps his state. Keep thou thine And shine upon me from afar. So shall I bask in light divine That falls from love's own guiding star. So shall thy eminence be high. And so my passion shall not die. But all my life shall reach Its hands Of lofty longing toward thy face And be as one who speechless stands In rapture at some perfect grace. My love, my hope, my all shnll be To look to heaven and look to thee. Thy eyes shall be the heavenly lights. Thy voice the gentle summer breexe, What time it sways, on moonlit nights, The murmuring tops of leafy trees, And I sliall touch thy beauteous form In June's red roses, rich and warm. Hut thou thyself shall come not down From that pure region far above, lint keep thy throne and wear thy crown. Queen of my heart and quevji of love, A monarch in thy realm complete. And 1 a monarch at thy feet! William Winter. rHAUGKI) 1JY A I.IO. The lion stopped and lay down be hind a bush; jumping off I took a shot at him at two hundred yards, but only wounded him slightly in one paw; and after a moment's sullen hesitation off he went, lashing his tail. We mounted our horses and went after him; Tarlton lost sight 'of him. but I marked him lying down behind a low grassy ant hilli Again we dismounted at a distance of two hundred yards; Tarlton telling me that now he was sure to charge. In all East Africa there is no man. not even Cunningham himself, whom 1 would rather have by me than Tarl ton, if In difficultties with a charg. ing Hon; on this occasion, however, I am glad to say that his rifle was badly sighted, and shot altogether too low. Again I knelt and fired; but the mass of hair on the lion made me think he was nearer than he was. and I undershot, inflicting a flesh wound that was neither crippling nor fatal, j He was nlready grunting savagely j and tossing his tail erect, with his head held low;and at the shot the! great sinewy beast came towards us with the speed of a greyhound. Tarl- i ton then, very properly, fired, fori lion hunting is no child's play, and It Is not good to run risks. Ordinarily j it is a very mean thinrr to xnerif nee I Joy at a. friend's miss; but this was j not an ordinary case, and I felt keen I delight when the bullet from the I badyy sighted rifle missed, striking the ground many yards short. I was I oinW.tfnn- nnpnfll,, -iik,llllll ICIiriUMJ, IHilll 111, r I1:T, and I knew I had the Hon all risrht: for though he galloped at a great pace, he came on steadily ears laid I back, and uttering terrific coughing I grunts and there was now no riues- i tlon of making allowance for distance! nor. as he was out in the open, for the fact that he had not before been j distinctly visible. The bead of my I foresight was exactly on the centre I of his chest as I pressed the trigger, and the bullet went as true as if the place had been plotted with dividers. The blow brought him up all stand ing, and he fell forward on his head. The soft-nosed Winchester bullet Iiad gone straight through the chest cav ity, smashing the lungs and the big ! blood-vessels of. the heart. Painfully he recovered his feet, and tried to come on, his ferocious courage hold ing out to the last. From "African! Game Trails," by Theodore Roosevelt, ' in the April Soribner. I THE 'AKISTOCIt.VriO CAT. The cat has for me the manners essential to social relations. At first, in its early youth, it possesses all the graces, all the suppleness, all the un- wisely directed, will cruise her to give to her little ones only tlin most wholesome and beneficial remedies and only when actually needed, and the well-informed mother uses only the pleasant and pryitle laxative rem edy Syrup of Fijis and Elixir of Senna when a laxative is required, as it is wholly free from all objec tionable substances. To fret its ben eficial effects always buy the genu ine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. ANOTHER GOOD BUY 1C40 acres all fenced, good new posts, 800 acres In grain, 260 acre of alfalfa land mostly set, will cut 7f0 tons of alfalfa this year, a stream of water runa through which furnishes plenty of water for irrigating, good concrete dame and ditches, good buildings, lots of fruit trees anj ber ries. This Is an Ideal place for feed ing stock for the market. A railroad runs , right through the middle of It, Tou can buy this flue ranch for $48, 000. E. T. WADE, Office In American Nat Bank Bid. PeBdUton, Ore. (WWW A Motile Welcome Words to Women Women who suffer with disorder peculiar to (heir ex should write to Dr. Pierce and receive free llie advice oi a plivsiciun of over HO yean' experience skilled and successful specialist in the disease ot women. Kvcry letter ol this son ha the most careful consideration and i regarded as sacredly confidential. Mnny sensitively modest women write fully to L)r. Pierce what they would shrink from telling to their local physician. The local pbvaician is pretty sure to av tbit he cannot du anything without "an examinution." lit. Tierce holds that these distasteful examinations are Srncr.ilh need less, aad that no woman, excepl in Dr. Pierce't treatment will cure you right io Ihe privacy of ' your own home. Hit ' Favorite Prescription" hu cured hundreds of thousands, tome of them the worM ot cflics. It is the only medicine of its kind that is the product c:f 0 re'Vi f ':iilnned physician. The only one good enough that its makers I'-trc lc r ' ' 'cry ingredient on its' outside wrapper. There's no iicercey. Is will l 'illa tion. No ulcohot and no habit-forming druj; arc four.d in i; '.. -': i'l nlous medicine dealers may offer you a siilntitiite. !i;:n' t.i: !' ;' trills with your health. Write to World's Dt:pvu..ur Ni!:cr.l .V c V :. !)r. R. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y., take the advic rccciwd u.., oc v. til. expectedness by which the most ex acting, artistic fancy can be amused! It is adroit, it always knows where It is. Prudent unto caution. It goes everywhere, It exumlnes without soil ing, breaking nothing: it Is In Itself a warmth and a caress. It Is discreet and of fastidious cleanliness, which might bo well im itated by a number of its detractors. It wnshes Its face, and in so doing foi tells the weather Into the bargain. One can entertain the idea of putting a ribbon around its neck, never a col lar; It cannot be enslaved. It permits no modifications In Its race; it lends itself to no combinations that indus tries could attempt. In short the cat is a dignified, proud disdainful animal that hides its love affairs in the shadows, almost with in the clouds, upon' the roofs in the vicinity of the night-working stu dents. It defies advance, and tol erates no insults, it abandons the house in which it s not treated ac cording to its merits; in short, the cat is truly an aristocrat In type and origin. Alexander Dumas. It Is said that 65.000.000 cold stor age eggs a months are consumed In this country. Yet all the eggs in the groceries are "fresh ranch eggs." There Is a mystery here. It's difficult to convince a woman that other women are as good as they want her to think they are. Q2EKT OAKS KBOM -LITTLE-ACORNS QU6H i !K GREAT FORTUNES ARE MADE BY THE DOLLARS THAT WERE DEPOSITED IN THE BANK. KVJilUJODV .VOW OX KAUTIl would have to live five hundred vein's and work every second of both day and night, and count $21 a second, just to count what one dollar would amount to if put in the hank at 10 per cent compounded interest for five hundred years. Money grows if you will let it. We will pay yon 4 per cent interest on the money you put in our hank mid eompuind the info-rent every six months. THE American National Bank Pendleton, Oregon . UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY Orpheum Theatre J. P. MEDEIINAO II. IToprleior HJGH-CLASS UP-TO-DATE MOTION PICTURES For Men, Women and Children SEE PKMURAM I ' TOUU'S I'APRR, Program "liuiiscn on Sundays). TiickIh.v'h nml Friday'. Ryers' Best Flour rur'c- cases. should submit to lucm. In order to Interest others In your quarrels you must get busy and fight. A DEAD STOMACH. Of Whut Use Is It? Thousands? yes hundreds of thou sands of people throughout America are taking the slow death treatment dally. They are murdering tlvir own stom ach, the best friend thev 'Vive, -nd in ihelr sublime Ignorance they think they are putting aside the laws of nature-. ' This Is no sensational statement; it is a rfatling fnct, the truth of which an;' honorable physician -vill not de fy. These thousands of peo.i'c are swal !e ng daily .time quantl.is of pepsin and other strong digesters, made es pecially to digest the food in the stomach without any aid at all from the digestive membrane of the stom ach. Ml-o-nn stomach tablest relieve dls- tressed stomach In five minutes; they i do more. Taken regularly for a few v oeks they build up the run down I stomach and make it strong enough ; to digest Its own food. Then Indlges I tlon, belching, sour stomach and head- acho will go. ' Mi-o-na stomach tablet are sold i by druggists everywhere and by Tall ! man & Co., who guarantees them. bO ' certs a box. Booth's Pills cure constipation. 26c. a i A Is made from tin- choicest wheat that grows. Good bre.id is assured when BYbKS' BEST FLOUR is used. Bran, Shorts. Steam Rolled Harley always on hand. ' ' Pendleton Roller Mills Pendleton, Oregon Pneumonia Season Is Hero Better ours that sold bafora It Is teo late. TALLYMAN'S F. 8. cold capsuls will knock the worst cold In .two days. Manu factured and sold only by Tallman & C o. Leading Druggists of Hasten Onm. Just Received Cam 'ad of Poul- try supplies of all kinds COLESWORTHY 127-129 E. Alta Z Th. QUELLE Cus'La Fontaine, Prop. Best 25c Meals in North west First-class cookc and service Shell fish in season La Fontaine BIk., Main St. "4? EXPERIENCE rryy " 1 CnovRir.ura An. AnTnr ion. tin n ;H--h nr d (Wrlrvt.in mmf qut My am-erfMin . r ci'ii -t frit who: her mm Invention ' pruhnl'if pti nf t XninnitiKMsV ttunHiriri,yi"iiiii.i('iU i!. MAM'rOt) on tWnu aunt fre. i)Uit itf my t r 'unnic paiAtit. ffitfit9 taknn lie ui.-'i Vr- Co, rwmtwi special nHtce, wtt mui t hrc in it. Scientific Jtoscrican A hnndinmtf llluDTtnlo tNkif. I nr?t dilation of any F-irMtnic I 'tiT-'iat. 'crina, f$a taht; f.'iir mot'tbs L tUild L.ja.1 newadnalM MUNN&Co.30" New tort ilrmicb Ch'.uo. . V. P s:.. tVubiCKiun, u 0. That Dollar Will buy the MOST COAL here and also buy the most In rAi onl Quality. Wo are amply stocked with CLEAN, CLEAR BURNING FUEL In all alxea tliii will meet your most exacting re quirements. For that coal oualltv vmi'vn iw expecting and didn't secure go to HENR.Y KOPITTKE ffumo Main 17S. .WIHIAMvfON liAFFNERGD KVORWBR$PRlNTBRi . in 1 1 nc; naiidiui Phone Main 5 Calls promptly answered for all baggage transfer ring. Piano and Furnture mcving and Heavy Truck ing a specialty. FOLEi'SHOM'WMR Curos CjlUi, r-revjnts Fneumoolt) (fell