East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, April 05, 1910, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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DAILY EAST OKEGOMAX, PENDLETON. OKEUOX, Tl'KSl.Y, APItIL 5, 1I0.
EIGHT PAGES.
AX INDEPENDENT NKWSPAFER.
Published Dally, Weekly and Semi-Weekly
at Pendleton, Oregon, by the
EA8T ORKUON'IAN l'L'ULlSMNG CO.
SUHSCRIPTION KATtS.
Dally, one year, by mall
Dally, ilx monthi. by mall ,
Oally, three months, by mall
Dally, oae month, by mall ,
I "ally, one year, by carrier
lallj, tlx months, by carrier
Ially. three months, by carrier....
Dally, one month, by carrier
Weekly, one year, by mall
Weekly, alx months, by mall
Weeklr. fonr months, by mall
Semi Weekly, oae year, by mall...
&emi-Weekly, nix mimini, by mall,.
Semi-Weekly, (onr months, by mall.
$3.00
2.50
1.25
.50
T.50
8.75
1.05
.65
1.50
.75
.50
1.50
.75
.50
The Dally East Oregnnlan Is kept on sale
at the Orexon Xews Co., 14T 6th street,
Portland. Oregon.
Northwest Xews, Co. Portland. Oregon.
Chicago liuroau, PoO Security Building.
Waahlngton, D. C, Kureau. 501 Four
teenth street, X. W.
Member United Press Asoclatlon.
Hntered at the postoitlc: at Pendleton,
Oregon, as second class mall matter.
Telephone Main 1
Official City and Connty Paper.
A HAPPY LIFE.
How happy is he born and
taught
That serveth not another's
will;
Whose armor Is his simple
thought.
And simple truth his utmost
skill.
Whose passions not his masters
are;
Whose soul is still prepared
. for death,
United unto the world by .care
Of public fame or private
breath;
Who envies none that chance
doth raise,
Xor vice; who never under
stood
How deepest wounds are given
by praise;
Nor rules of state, but rulfs
of good;
Who hath his life from rumors
freed;
Whose conscience is his
strong retreat;
Whose state can neither flat
terers feed
Xor ruin make oppressors
preat;
Who ijnil doth hito and early
pray
More of His grace than gifts
to lend.
And entertains the harmless day
With n well-chosen book or
friend;
This man is freed from servile
bands
Of hope to rise' or fear to fall;
Lord of himself, though not of
lands.
And having nothing, yet hath
all. '
. . Henry Wotton.
WE SHOULD GET BUSY.
For many years eastern Oregon
vat known as the part of this state
vhere there were things doing. East
ern Oregon people were regarded as
more enterprising than their western
Oregon neighbors. Pendleton was the
i:rst town in the state outside of Port
land to secure paved streets. It still
has the lead for progresstveness am
ong the towns of eastern Oregon.
But there are signs that western
Oregon towns are waking up. Med
ford has been building miles of hard
surface paving. Ashland Is to have
two miles of asphalt. Grants Pass al
o has Joined the procession and In
addition to paving is going to have
1?3 'phone wires underground and will
toe supplied with cluster street lights.
Diversified farming is now being fol
lowed In all sections of western Ore
gon. As a rsult the country Is be
coming more closely peopled, land
values are advancing and the towns
are thriving. All of those towns are
doing extensive publicity work.
If eastern Oregon is to hold Its own
with the sister country west of the
Cascade mountains the people here
will have to bestir themselves. People
will have to get over the idea that
this is "frontier" country. The fron
tier days are p.i.-t. The resources of
eastern Oregon mint be more closely
developed. More land must be re-
!:irne,l by irrigation and the dry land
regions rnuiu be farmed along more
intensified lii.'-s. LaU-nt water powers
must be ! v !'!':. l so as to promote
manufacturing and to furnish power
for electric roaJn. We must do some
consistent, effective publicity work so
a:' to attract new people.
Eastern Oregon is rich In possibili
ties. Jt Is up to us to develop this
section and ho insure that eastern Ore
gon will not lag behind In the race.
JUDGE WILLIAMS.
Judge George H. Williams was en
titled to the honor of being called the
"Grand Old Man" of Oregon. He had
a notable record and of that record
the people of this state have Just rea
son for being proud. Few other
western men, if any, have risen to the
helghths attained by Judge Williams,
lie was supreme Judge of Oregon,
United States senator and attorney
g-eneral In succession. He would have
been the chief Justice of the United
States had it not been for unreason
able opposition on the pnrt if certain
eastern Interests.
Hut Judge William's part fn pub
lic affairs did not end when he re.
tired from President Grant's cabinet
He was actively Interested In public
matters until his death. Because he
Kept himself abreast of the times he
was made mayor of Portland a num
fi of years ago. It seems like on In
justice that the mayorality should
have been urged upon him. For a man
of Judge Williams' advanced age the
mayorality must have been a diffi
cult position. It is not surprising that
opposition arose to" his administration
and that when he ran for reelection
he was defeated by a younger man.
The wonder is that Judge Williams
ever consented to run for mayor at
all. He had already held more dis
tinguished positions.
Xow that this great man has passed
away all Oregon and the entire west
may well join in honoring his mem
ory. Judge Williams eurned a place
in the history of Oregon and In the
history of the United States and his
fame is secure for all time.
"Thus when a good man dies.
For years beyond our ken,
The light he leaves behind him
Shines upon the paths of men."
THE SKTTM.15S WILL COM E.
All that the west end uf this county
now needs Is settlers. Under the gov
ernment project there is much land
ready for Irrigation and cultivation,
It is good land too. At least It will
be after it has passed into the hands
of actuul settlers and has been cleared
and watered. The altitude of the land
is such, the character of the soil is
such, the transportation facilities ars
such and the climate is such that the
west end is bound to become a won
derfully productive region. The ques
tion now is how to people the project.
II is a problem that Is pretty well
understood by those who are in charge
of the big tracts. They know how to
secure settlers and if will not be many
months until the land under the Uma
tilla project will be owned by parties
having holdings ranging from five
acres to 160 acres each.
The "smart set" at Coronado have
taken up with the "chanticleer lunch
eon" which Is described In a report
as follows: "It consists in tossing In
to the air small pieces of cake and
other dainties that are caught before
they descend." This is about the limit.
The East regonian trusts that none
of the Umatilla county folk who are
sojourning In California will take up
with the habit. They feed sheep dogs
that way in eastern Oregon.
Roosevelt has been president twice
and refused a third term. He has the
biggest record of any man that ever
went Into the jungle. Therefore he
is in a position to be independent. But
he should not quarrel with the pope
who is a good man. Let him take
a punch at Kaiser Wilhelm or slap
King Edward If his spirits are Irre
pressible In the course of time perhaps we
will get that federal building and so
have suitable quarters for the federal
court during the sessions in Pendleton.
Pendleton has several "Sandy
Highflyers" but they don't seem able
to tear themselves loose from old
Mother Earth.
Did anyone see Hnlley's comet this
morning? It is an early riser.
Perhaps Teddy thought the pope
would be slow company anyway.
tand up for Pendleton.
KILLING TWO HIItDS.
A neatly-dressed woman rushed
Into a Euclid avenue grocery yester
day and priced the different sizes of
pots of baked beans that the grocery
keeps put up hot ready to take home
and serve.
"I guess the small size will do,"
she said, hesitating.
"How many do you desire to serve?"
inquired the clerk, ready to advise.
"Oh, I'm not buying them to serve,'
th" customer replied. "Of course I
shall use them, but I'm getting" them
to keep rny hands warm on the car.
I came away from home without
either muff or mitteds." Clacveland
Plain Dealer.
Mrs. A. Mrs. Frost always chooses
-i cross-eyed nurseglrl.
Mis. I!. Why's that?
Mrs. A. So when the girl has one
eye on the policeman she can have
the other on the children.
Who sows courtesy, reaps friend
ship. Basil.
Spring-Cleaning
The Human System Needs It,
Mrs. M. Morgan, 411 4th Ave., E.,
Braitierd, Minn., writes: "I take from
one to two bottles of Hood's eiarsapa
rllla In the spring to purify the blood
Just ns repruhirly as I do my house
cleaning. ,-ind go around light-footed
and light-hearted. I believe It Is the
best blood puriller known."
Hood's Snrsiiparilla so combines the
curative principles of roots, barks and
herbs as to raise them to their highest
efficiency: hence Its unequaled cures.
Get It today In usual liquid form or
tablets called Sarsatabs.
THE "SOVEHEHiX LOUD."
"Our Sovereign Lord the King" Is a
good sounding phrase. Austere re
publicans sneer at It, and lords and
courtiers roll It under their tongues
as a swet morsel; but whether we
like it or not we-have all got to recog
nize the tact that when any consti
tutional crisis comes to a head Ed
ward VII. Is the master of the situ
ation. He is our Sovereign Lord the
King, master of all the parties and
all the politicians. ' The supreme
power has come to him. It Is prob
ably a great bore to him. It is a
great burden and a great responsi
bility; but although he rigidly con.
fines himself within the straight and
narrow llnmits laid down for the con
duct of a constitutional king, he do-J
inmates me situation, it is a curious
outcome of a series of successive re
form bills, each of which was de
clared In Its turn to have surrendered
everything to the revolution and to
have sacrificed our ancient monarchy
to radical democracy, that eighty
years after the Introduction of the
first Reform Act the sovereign is more
influential in a moment of crisis than
any of his predecessors.
There are many ardent radicals who
will resent this frank recognition of
the power of the King; but it is well
to face the facts and to recognizo
things as they are. And, however de
plorable it may appear to be, the
plain brutal fact Is that in any time
of constitutional crisis we are all in
the hollow of the King's hand, and he
can do with us pretty much as he
pleases. Our Sovereign Lord the
King Is indeed no mere courtier's
phrase; it Is the solidest reality In the
politics of the day. From "King Ed
ward in England's Time of Crisis,"
by W. T. Stead, in the American Re
view of Heviews for April.
WHAT WILL YOU DO, LOVE?
What will you do, love,' when 1 am
going,
With white sails flowing,
The seas beyond?
What will you do, love, when waves
divide us.
And friends may chide us.
For being fond?
Though waves divide us and friends
be chiding,
In faith abiding,
I'll still be true;
And I'll pray for thee on the stormy
ocean,
In deep devotion
That's what I'll do!
What would you do, love, when homo
returning,
With hopes high burning,
With wealth for you
If my bark that bounded o'er foreign
foam
Should be lost near home, I'd bless
the morrow
In want and sorrow
That left me you;
And I'd welcome thee from the wast
ing billow.
My heart thy pillow!
That's what I'd do!
ISC'IIIAN CKADI.K KONG.
Where the purple seas were the yel
low sands caressing,
Where the fig and orange trees were
fruited lush and deep,
'Mid the fragrant vineyards that
wreathe Mount Epomeo.
I heard an Ischlan mother softly sing
her babe to sleep:
"Ninna, nanna, hushabye, my baby;
Nlnna, nanna, hush, my little son;
Naughty wolves have eaten all the
lambkins;
Xinna, nanna. sleep, my little one."
Once again I heard her, In a dark low
chamber.
In the mighty city, with its clangor
and its roar,
And her crooning took my vision
back across the shining waters
To the laden fields and orchards of
the fair Italian shore:
"Ninna, nanna, hushabye, my baby,
Nanna, nanna, hush, my littlg son
Naughty wolves can never fid out
mother's lambkin,
Ninna, nanna, sleep, my little one."
New York Sun.
"GOODHYE, MIL HOOKWORM."
Goodby, Mister Hookworm, you got
ter go yo' ways,
You got no chance er livin' in do million-dollar
clays.
De task Is took
You got de hook.
You got ter go yo' ways!
Goodby Mister Hookworm, you better
change yo' plan;
No chance at all fer livin' wid de mil
lion dollar man.
De task Is took
You got de hook,
You got ter go yo' ways!
The "Digestible" Shortening.
Lard is the most commonly used cook
ing fat, yet not 10 per cent of the
food cooked with lard digests naturally
and easily; the other 90 per cent, instead
of nourishing the body, merely clogs the
digestive organs.
Physicians and cooking experts have
long been seeking something to replace
lard, and repeated tests have finally
demonstrated that Cotlolcne, a vegetable
oil cooking fat, is not only pure, nutri
tious and wholesome as olive oil, but is
even more economical than lard. Such
noted authorities as Mrs. Rorcr and
Marion Harland both recommend Cot
tolcne as "much more healthful than
lard."
ANOTHER GOOD BUY
1640 acres all fenced, good new
posts, 800 acres In grain, 260 acres of
alfalfa land mostly set, will cut 750
tons of alfalfa this year, a stream of
water xuns through which furnishes
plenty of water for Irrigating, good
concrete dams and ditches, good
buildings, lots of fruit trees and 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 bur this flu ranch for $48,
000. B. T. WADE,
Office in American Nat. Bank Bid.
Pamdleton, Or.
sion or trade
titc, and lay.
your nerves all
I
lingering cough, bronchitis, or bleeding at tho lungs, it will bring about a
cure in 98 per cent, of oil cases. It is a remedy prepared by Dr. K. V. Fierce,
of Buffalo, N. Y., whose advice is given free to all who wish to write him. His
great success has come from his wide experience and varied practice.
Don't be wheedled by a penny-grabbing dealer into taking inferior substi
tutes for Dr. Pierce's medicines, recommended to be "just as good." Dr.
Pierce's medicines are op known cumposit'on. Their every ingredient printed
on their wrappers. Made from icots without alcohol. Contain no habit
forming drugs. World's Uibpensury Medical Association, Huftiln, N. Y.
THK PLIGHT OF THE LIAR.
Is there any power In cunning, in
shrewd, longheaded, deceptive meth
ods that can for n moment compare
with the truth, with absolute Integ
rity, asks Orison Sweet Marden in
"Success Magazine." There Is no ad
vertisement In the world, in the long
run, that can compare with that which
comes from the reputation of always
and everywhere telling the exact
truth, of being absolutely reliable.
This reputation nlone hns made the
names of some of the great business
houses In this country worth millions
of dollars.
, Every time a man deceives he
knows that he has to cover his tracks.
He Is always on thorns for fear of
discovery, for everything in his own
nature is trying to betray him; but
when he tells the truth, because he Is
built on the truth plan, he has all the
universe sustaining, supporting back
ing him.
What a difference there is between
the power of a man who is telling the
truth and Is conscious that he Is
backed by the eternal principle of
right and justice, and the man who is
lying and is conscious of it.
One can look the world In the face
without wincing, because he feels that
he is backed by eternal principle;
there Is victory in his eye, assurance
in his very bearing, while there Is
i n it mini
NvmcdWi wfijtAv yea jbfmvt,
ci wvdt yHL patifc- fifotvC
dcrnw num&tfJn lJu (hank
Jt&t 2mMowr ,ifow&L ccniH
m'm&&--umL lifts
5
6
ONE LITTLE DOLLAR, so onsik spent, if .ut in the
hnnk at 10 per cent, compound interest would in "00 years am
ount to -JOG qtiintillion, USt quadrillion, 190 trillion, 731, bil
lion, 220 million, GS9 thousand, six hundred and twenty-nine
dollars, ($490,984,lflC,731,22C,P.S9fi20.) Money ' grows if
on will let it. We pay 4 per cent, on deposits and compound
interest everv six. months.
'' THE
American National Bank
Pendleton, Oregon
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY
Dyers'
Best
Flour
Do You Feel This Way?
Do you feet all tired out? Do you sometimes
think vou iust can't work sway at your profes
any loniicr ? Do you have a poor ape-
awake at nights unable to sleep P Are
gone, and your stomach too ? Has am
bition to forge ahead in the world left you? If so, you
might as well put a stop to your misery. You can do it if
you will. Dr. l'icrce's Golden Medical Discovery will
make you a different individual. It will set your lazy liver
to work. It will set tilings ritfiit in your stomach, and
your appetite will come buck. It will purify your blood.
II there is any tendency in your family toward consumption,
it will keep that dread destroyer away. Even after con
sumption has nlmost liuined a foothold in the form of a
something within the other man which
says, "I am a liar; I am not a man.
I know I am not a man, but a sneak.
a make-believe."
There Is always hope In a man
that earnestly works. In Idleness
alono there Is perpetual despair
Carlyle.
Hay's Pa&S no
lU U
NEVER FAILS TO RESTORE
GRAY HAIR TO ITS NATURAL
COLOR AND BEAUTY.
No matter how old and
faded your hait looki, or how
long you hare been gray, it
ill woik wonden for you.
keep vou looking youni. pro
mote a luxuriant growth of
healthy hair, stop rU falling
tiadb mark out and Positively Re
move Dandrulf.
Will not toil skin or linen. Will sat injure
your hair, la Not a Dye.
REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES
11.00 and 50 e. Bottles, at Drugzuta
Phllo Hav SoecCo..MewarkJi.J..IJ.SxA.
PENDLETOX DRCG COMPANY.
inimniimmi i sis
n i
tn
fi-f Ui .
Wit fft-VW.
2
J,
d
- h
for every use.
Cut generous
Ijr fulL Two
hip pockets.
Felled seams.
Continuous
fly.
hfUtaslkaiRi
MURPHY, GRANT (CO.
Muufactorers n
SMfiadx
(tlHlil
Is made from the choicest wheat that
throws. .Good bread is assured when
1W KltS' I JEST FLOUR is used. Bran,
Shorts, Steam T'olled Harley always on
hand.
Pendleton Roller Mills
Pendleton, Oregon.
Pneumonia
Season
Is Moro
Better eure that st.lj before
It Is tso lats.
TALLMAN'8 F. 8.
sold oapsuls will knock the
worst cold In two days. Manu
factured and sold only by
Tallman & Co.
Leading Druggists of Barton
Oraaws.
COLESWORTHY'S
International Stock Food
the old reliable
The best for your stock
Try it
COLESWORTHY
127-129 E. Alt
Th. QUELLE
CuslLa Fontaine. Prop.
Best 25c Meals in North
west First-class cookc and service
Shell fish in season
La Fontaine BIk., Main St.
GO YEARS'
$"J&r EXPEIII6NCE
l-'X-'V TRADE Marks
rff H 1 Copyrights Ac
An rone ndlng sketch and (1fcrlnfron mf
qultulf urertuiu tr t ihiiIoh frw wlififrr-r
IitVf'iilon is itfohn'.'r vitMt :tM. Con.miihir.
tloiiiiaiiicily tvHui.hMi'i !. IImKUGOU on fa (rut
ajhl fr.'n. OMtMt n y f(-r ;rritf prtti-nm.
i'HftMii taken ii.ruuuh ,m.,imi . o. rectv
tydtd tv)(tc, without ehnrpu, in U-
Scientific American..
A hfin4lsnni.r lllnnfrnt wl rV!r. Trvest flttv
ctilatioii of nriy K'H'iifiiw j'timtul. Term, $3
rt'nr: ffMir nimiiba L bold by all newsxlealar
MUNN & Co3"B"' NewYoit
Branch OfTic. MS r Wuhltigton. iX(k
A HE THOSE WHO PUHCIIASE
OCK HOCK SPIUNO COM,.
Will kIvh tilt' l)fKt MOrvlna am, ASfAM
v. t uu
secured out of any fuel will give
you an amount of heat that Is truly
amiiKlnir for tho nuiiiiiii ,.r
ount of coal consumed. Every one of
ui cut-urn wno ever used our Rock
Spring; coal always specify It In their
orders thereafter. The reason Is plain.
HENRY KOPITTKE
'lione Main 178. '
.WILLIAMSON
riAFFNDRG3
ENORAVBR?-pRIMTFIM
PNVTSTr'Cni,n
ililno Transfer
Phone Main 5
Calls promptly answered
for all baggage transfer
ring. Piano and Fumture
moving and Heavy Truck
ing a specialty.
F0LEYS1!0HHMII
Cures (riiitlji Prevents Pnsumettkl
SB ml
pi
laoiw