East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, April 12, 1910, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    PAGE F"CR
DAILY EAST OKEGOXIAX. PENDLETON, OREGON, TVESHAY, AIMUl. 12, 1910.
EIGHT PAGES.
AX INDEPENDENT XEWSrAFER.
potiUbm Kalljr. weekly and Semi-Weekly
at rrodlWon. ureroo. oy in
BA8T ORKUO.NIAN l'liiHSHING
CO.
81'IWCRIITIOS RATK8.
Dally, on rear, by mail
Dally, all month, by mail
Dally. tar months, by mall
Daily, one mooU). by mall
wily, oct year, bj carrier
Iily, aix months, by carrier
ba:.y. three months, by carrier....
Dally, one month, by earner
Aeekiy. one year, by mail
Weekly, tlx month, by mail
Weeklr. four montta. by mail
fcetnt Weekiy, one year, by mall...
Setnl Weekly, ill tannins, by mall..
Semi Weekly, four months, by mail.
.50
.50
8.75
1 15
5
1.50 ! b,
5 t
.50
1.00
.7J
.50
The I "ally East Oregonlan Is kept on aale
at the Oregon News Co., 147 tth street.
Portland. Oregon.
Northwest News. Co. Portland. Oregon.
Chicago Bnresa. tK'9 Security Building.
Washington. D. C, Bureau. 501 Four
teenth street. X. W.
Member I'nited Presa Asoclatloa.
Entered at the pastoiric at Pendleton,
Oregon, as second class mail matter.
Telephone Main 1
Official City and County Paper.
i Ck at- laBE?
TAK1XG STOCK OK TIIOIBLES
Taking stock of trouble
a solemn day.
that's I
But it's mighty good. I tell you.
lo weed 'em out the way!
To tell 'em, high an' low.
It's getting time to go.
An' you're goin' to see
An' you're goin' to see the j
roses
Where the garden knew the
snow:
Takin" stock of troubles just
lay 'em on the shelf;
Make somebody harpy, an' try
a bit yourself!
Just teU 'em high an' low.
It's getting time to go,
An' you're going to see the
roses
On the hillsides of the snow.
Frank L. Stanton, in Atlanta
Constitution.
4 !
HANDS ACKOSS THE LINE.
i
and made heroes of the youtniui
Pendleton has been honored today ! Patricks, Isaacs and Isadores. Her
by a visit from business men of Walla ! fetches are au fresh and readable
Walla, and wiiile here the guests have.and thej. show a close sympathy with
been entertained in the best manner !,nt, jife 0f the liuie people that flock
possible under the circumstances, i fr,,m tne po0rer sections to the pub
Within a short time a trip to Walla 1 1:( schools to become Americanized.
Walla will be made by members of jjiiSs Kelly was plainly the friend of
the Pendleton Commercial club. Prl- ! tne little children and the glowing
or to receiving notice of Walla Walla's j tributes that have been paid her
Intended visit the managers of the lo- s;rlce hPr death show that by her
cal organization had planned o trip j -vritlngs she made a host of friends
to the towns in the east end of this j for nerself.
county and to the Garden City. i
Is it not well to do this? Walla President Taft spoke in a concil
Walla and Pendleton may be rivals j jatory vein at Washington Saturday
in a sense. Yet there are many things ! while Attorney General Wiekersham,
In common between the two places.
Pendleton is the metropolis of eastern
Oregon; Walla Walla of southeast
ern Washington. In many respects
the territory of Walla Walla is similar
to the territory tributary to Pendle
ton. The closer development and set
tlement of one section begets Im
provement in the other section. Then
why cannot each place boost the other.
Why should Walla Walla persistently
knock Pendleton and allow certain
Interests to misrepresent conditions
here to the injury of this place? Why
should Pendleton people endeavor to
pia'e any blocks in the path of Wal
la Walla's progress?
Here Is hoping that the exchange of
courtesies between the busine.-smen of
the two towns will result in good. If
the two places are to be commercial
rivals at least they should learn not
to "hit below the belt."
W ANTED, A CAPTAIN'.
It would be a fir.e thing could Pen
dleton secure an armory that could
be used for aud.tvriu:n purposes as
well as for the dr.iling of the national
guard. There are so many ways in
which an aud.lori.irn could be used
that it would be di'fic-uit to enumerate
thti.i ail. Such a structure would be
the place for hoiiing big conventions
and w:th such a building here Pen
dieton would be in position to eeek
more conventions. The more conven
tions the beuer.
Then armories are frequently used
for the holding of fairs an 1 shows.
Ppikane holds the famous National
apple show in its armory and the Spo
kane armory is not exceptionally large
either. That name armory housed the
national irrigation congress last sum
mer. Portland uses its armory for a
multitude of purposes.
Now it seems that Pendleton's
chances for securing an armory are
bright provided the ioccl guard com
pany is maintained. The guard com
pany can be maintained provided a
capable man can be found to take the
captancy. They why not secure such
a man, keep the company going and In
time obtain an armory.
RUSSIAN' AGRICCLTX'RE.
Even In benighted Russia the gos
pel of better farming is now being
preached and if reports are to be re
lied upon It Is being taught with good
effect In a recent report 'Consul
General John H. Snodgrass of Mos-
ccw tolj of the efforts of the Zem
stvos to better agricultural conditi
ons and the following selection Is
from his report:
In late years the Zemstvos have
employed trained specialists to study
tl.o capabilities and requirements of
t5 00!the various districts and to Instruct
iMjthe villagers In some higher branches
of farming. L naer mese inraui
improvements have been introduced,
increasing the yield of the cereal crop
better seed selection and modern
; I. K.tf I'ti'inci t in rrnn rotA-
tion, by sowing a greater variety of
grasses and roots, which serve as food
for live stock, have also been more
energetically adopted. Manure and
chemical fertilisers are more gener
ally and more scientifically applied,
and there is an Increased cultivation
o fruit and vegetables. Bulls and
stallions are kept at certain centers
for the improvement of the breeding
of cattle and horses.
There are about 33 agricultural ex
perimental stations maintained by the
Zemstvos. ranging In area from 54
to 13 acres. These experimental
stations are mostly in connection with
agricultural schools, the largest be
ing in Kherson. Odessa, and Poltava,
The efforts of the Zemstvos to In
duce more extensive cultivation have
been aided by the government, and
.. oetoKiichmenr nf nericultural
' societies, mutual credit associations,
jand village banks, to which In some
i cases the state gives assistance."'
This move should work for the ma
terial advancement of the peasants of
Russia and tend to do away with ni
hilism which is r.n outgrowth of un
satisfactory economical conditions.
SHE WAS THEIIl Fill END.
It is interesting to note the wide
spread notices of regret over the death
of Myra Kelly. Miss Kelly was a
New York school teacher and one
of the most sought after short story
writers the magazines have discov
ered in late years. All her stories
dealt with Juvenile life in the schools
of the east side. She wrote especi
ally of the little immigrant children
speaking for the administration, was
severe upon the insurgents,
"good team work."
Is that
If those "wire tappers" really made
a million dollars by bunkoing the
p. olroom operators Saturday it Is
merely another case of where the
stingers themselves were stung.
The New York Sun suggests Eever
i'Jze as the next democratic candidate
for president. He may be the next
republican candidate for that high
office.
Welcome to our city.
SOME SPORTING DOPE.
Hans Wagner and John Miller of
the "Champions" are reported com
panions. It is reported that this pair
ot star Infielders are seldom seen
around the hotel lobbies. They spend
their time playing seen-up in their
room. Wagner's only request this
spring when he reported for duty
was that he be assigned to a room
with Miller.
Having mastered a "half side arm
swir.g" Three-Fingered Erown expects
to win more games this year than
ever.
San Francisco has lost only one
opening game in eight years on the
Valencia street grounds.
The Chicago Cubs have seven new
left-handed hitters, but only one of
them throws left-handed.
Ty Cobb, the Detroit Tiger, works
just as hard in spring practice as he
does in champion games.
"Strangler" Smith and Emil Taneer
are training hard for their wrestling
match, which Is to be staked by the
PaHtirue Wrestling club next Friday
night. Tanner is an ambitious wrest
ler, who desires to make a showing
here in the effort to secure a match
with Eddie O'Connell. He Is tackling
a tough proposition in Smith as his
introductory.
Chapin, who win catch for Albany
in the Valley league, wore a Eugene
uniform at the time Roseburg, Al
bany. Salem and Eugene were in
league combination. Since that time
he has played In the Tri-clty and oth
er semi-pro leagues of the northwest
"Home run" Chapin was his soubri
quet in Eugene.
WHERE MICROBES ABOUND,
The alimentary canal is the most
perfect culture-tube known to bac
teriological science. No part of the
body Is so densely populated with mi
croorganisms. It Is estimated that
In the elementary canal of the aver
age adult about 126,000,000,000 mi
crobes come Into existence every
day. They crowd this region so
densely that scientists originally be
lieved that they were indespensable
to human life. Pasteur, who first dis
covered them, maintained this view;
but recent Investigations have rather
disproved it. There are many ani
mals that exist In perfect . health
without any intestinal bacteria at all.
Polar bears, seals, penguins, eider
ducks, arctic reindeer these and oth
er creatures in the arctic sone, have
few traces of these organisms. They
are absent from the digestive tubes of
all animals during the foetal period.
This fact led. some years ago, to a
noteworthy experiment: A young
guinea-pig was removed from its
mother by the v.aes:irian up.raiii-n.
kept under sterilized condition, and
fed upon sterilized food. Under these
conditions the an;mal lived. thus
showing that normal guinea pigs, at
least, could successfully worry along
without intestinal bacteria. Mc
Ciure's M.igazine.
AUK YOU AX INYEXTOK?
There are opportunities for the
making of money in perfecting any
one of the following devices:
A cheap cash register.
A simple device to quickly fasten
the ttids of shoe laces.
A satisfactory feruler for automo
biles. A simple door lock' that is burglar
proof.
Ar. umbrella that can be folded in
to a grip.
A contrivance for deadening the
noise of typewriters
A trolley wheel that will not come
off the wire.
An envelope that cannot be open
ed without detection.
An adjustable washstand that can
be raised or lowered.
A register that will automatically
indicate the number of passengers on
street cars.
A practical and cheap ice-making
machine which can be operated at
home.
A practical corn husker that will
cut and stack standing corn.
A machine for stripping tobacco.
A poison that will kill rabbits and
no other animals. This preparation
would find an immense sale among
owners of orchards, who lose thou
sands of dollars annually by the rav
ages of these pests.
A motor that may be operated by
wave power.
A safety stirrup, so contrived that,
instead of imprisoning the rider's foot
in case of a fall, it would release it.
A white indelible ink for marking
black cloth.
A potato parer that is simple and
practical.
THE CALLEIt LEFT.'
A quiet, bashful sort of a young
fellow was making a call on an East
Court street girl one evening not so
very long ago, when her father came
into the parlor with his watch In his
hand. It was half-past 9 o'clock. At
the moment the 'young man was
standing on a chair straightening a
picture over the piano. The girl had
asked him to fix it. As he turned
the old gentleman, a gruff, st'.ut fel
low, said:
"Young man, do you know what
time it is?"
The bashful youth got off the chair
nervous y. "les. sir, ne repneo i
w as just going."
He went into the hall without any
delay and took his hat and coat. The
s rl's father followed him. As the
caller reached for the doorknob the
old gentleman again asked him if he
knew what time it w-as
"Yes. sir," was th youth's reply.
"flood night!" And he left without
waiting to put his epat on.
After the door had closed the old
g'-ntleman turned to the girl.
"What's the matter with that fel
low?" he asked. "My watch ran
down this afternoon, and I wanted
him to tell me th time so that I
could set it."
OLD IRISH PROVERBS.
A blind man is no Judge of colors.
When the cat is out the mice will
dance.
Even a fool has luck
Fierceness is often hidden under
beauty.
There Is often anger in a laugh.
A good dress often hides a deceiv
er. Fame is more lasting than life.
A foolish word is folly.
Mild to the meek.
Hope consoles the persecuted.
The satisfied forget the hungry.
Long sleep renders a child inert.
Hurry without waste.
Drunkenness is the brother of rob
bery. It Is difficult to tame the proud.
Idleness is the desire of a fool.
Look before you leap.
The end of a feast Is better than
the beginning of a quarrel.
A wren In the hand is better than
a crane out of It.
He who is out, his supper cools.
The memory of an old child Is long.
Everything Is revealed by time.
A cat can look at a king.
Learning Is the desire of the wise.
Character is better than wealth.
Without treasure, without friends.
A hungry man is ancry.-
No man is wise at all time.
Every dear article Is woman's de
sire. Wisdom exceeds strength.
Wine is sweet; to pay for It Is bit
ter.
Sleep is the image of death.
Enough Is a feast.
Death is the physician of the poor.
Not every flatterer Is a friend.
Oregon was never so waked up be
fore. CLOSE TO PENDLETON IX UMA
TILLA COUNTY.
'l40 acres all fenced, good new
posts, (00 acres In grain, 250 acres of
alfalfa land mostly set, will cut 760
tons of alfalfa this year, a stream of
water runs through which furnishes
plenty of water for Irrigating, good
concrete dams and ditches, food
buildings, lots of fruit trees and ber
ries. This la an Ideal place for feed
ing stock for the market. A railroad
run right through tbe middle of It
Ton can buy this flue ranch for H,
000. E. T. WADE,
Office In American Nat. Bank Bid.
FeadletoH, Ore.
Woman s Power
Over Man
Vorean'i moit i'iri.i';s rndownc-nt i the power
t rt-ri'-rn rfd fcrH end hnnrtt love of
r.-oi thy man. Vt lien tY.t io: c it and mill loves on,
.;j one in the wid; worlj can knjiv the heart agony
ta.iures. T'le woman who suSTers from weak
; :ii a.-J d?rr.4cmeut of Iwr social womanly or
f'ji ivi'.: ti-tm liiics the power t: sway the heart of
i. ii.. u. iic j,eocl n.-iiu supers and she loses
I'rr ooJ looks, hir attractiveness, her amiability
-nj io.- p;.vcr and prent iie as a woman. Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N.Y., with
V.m L-.s-.tuno cf his staJ of able physicians, has prescribed for and cured many
t. : .:;:.cJs of obm, He ho devised a successful remedy for woman's ail
mr:??;. It is known as Dr. l'iercr's Favorite Prescription. It is a positive
rcr:ie for the weaknesses and disorders peculiar to women. It puri6es, reu
Ijtes, strengthens and heals. Medicine dealers sell it. No kvmrtl dealer will
advice you to accept a substitute in order to make little larger profit.
IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG,
SICK WOMEN WELL.
JV rvixys Plemsmat PtUrts reruA" Mad stnagtbem Slommeb, Llrwr iW Bowvlu
DEAD OH, WELLS.
Why do il wells, which - have
sprung so suddenly Into life, cease al
most as suddenly to pour gold Into
the coffers of the exploiters? Many
a well's flow has been reduced to
such an extent that it could no longer
be pumped profitably, not on account
of there being no 'longer oil at the
base, but for the reason that the pores
of the oil sands had become closed,
and would no longer permit of the
passage of the fluid.
The great majority of oil wells are
afflicted with paraffin wax. which
sticks to the Tock and closes the crev
ices and interstices and prevents the
passage ot the oil. This has long
been the bane of the producers
The first man yet to devise a suc
cessful means of overcoming this is a
resident of Jamestown, N. Y., Dr. F.
A. Moore, and the Invention has
brought him prominently before the
oil producing world Dr. Monroe's
invention, the efficacy of which has
been positively demonstrated by its
use in this section of the Appalachian
field, means that the flowage of the
wells now in operation may be mate
rially Increased, and that those in
which pumping has been suspended
may be rejuvenated.
The almost universal method up to
this time of ridding wells of the para
fin evil has been the blasting process,
which is, lo say the least, crude. The
Mi W MK3HT
iM.ni It Tf
MX
vain x vv vf v 9
WWE BANK?
y. WiA--v-
16
WHEN you HAVE money is the best and only time you
can save it. If you save only one dollar every day for twenty
years and pile up the interest on it at four per eent which we
pay on deposits, you will have a snug little fortune. No "rainy
day" can harm you then. Start a bank account for yourself or
for your children.
When?
Today.
We pay four per cent interest on deposits and compound
the interest every six months.
THE
American National Bank
Pendleton. Oregon
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY
Orpheum
. P. KEDEUXAcn. ITopriew
HIGH-CLASS UP-TO-DATE MOTION
PICTURES
For Men, Women and Children',
SEE PROGRAM IX TODAY'S PAPER.
Program Change on Sunday, Tnenrlsv'H and Frldaj'a.
Byers'
Best
Flour
use of nitro-glycerine for this pur
pose has always been expensive and
unsatisfactory.
That hot steam would melt the par
afin wax from the surface of the oil
rock and permit the oil to run freely
has been a well-known fact, but the
difficulty heretofore has been In the
degree of condensation which occur
red by the time the steam reached the
shot cavity. The boiling water which
resulted in addition to being injurious
t ) the oil-bearing sands, caused the
wax to set even harder than It had
been before.
Dr. Monroe's device consists, first,
of a metal tube twelve feet long and
four and a quarter Inches In diameter.
In the upper part of this tube Is In
serted a cylinder containing water,
with a small aperture at the bottom
regulating the flow and distributing It
evenly over the outside of a disk. In
the lower part of the cylinder are in
serted cast-iron billets which have
been heated white hot; the ends of the
tube are then plugged. At three
points In the tubing, near the top,
bottom and center are rows of small
holes. The water from the cylinder
dropped on to these heated billets,
generates steam which is forced up
ward and out of these holes with
great force, spraying the paraf.n coat
ed walls of the shot cavity with hot
dry steam. From "Making Old O.I
Wells Spout." in the March Technical
World Mngazlne.
IT. HI TJ1 OB fsp ni fMj rm IM
WITHOUT A
Theatr
Is made from the choicest wheat that
erows. Good bread is assured when
IJYEUS' BEST FLOUR is used. Bran,
NhorU. Steam Tiolled Barley always on
hand.
Pendleton Roller Mills
Pendleton, Oregon.
F
S
Cold Cure
Will knock the worst cold
in Two Days
Comes in capsules. Not
disagreeable to take
Manufactured and sold'in
Pendleton, by
Tallman & Co.
Leading Druggists of Eastern
Oregon.
COLESWORTHY'S i
International Stock Food
the old reliable
The best for your stock
Try it
COLESWOR.THY
I 127-129 E. Alt
Th. QUELLE
Gus'La Fontaine, Prop.
Best 25c Meals in North
west First-class cookc and service
Shell fish m season
La Fontaine BIk., Main St.
The Coal Prices
Of Suring are the lowest of the year
why don't YOU then purchase your
winter's supply.
You not alne s ture a very reas
onable figure but you're absolutely
certain of avoiding all troubles Inci
dent to a scarcity of supply that usu
ally exists in late Fall and Winter.
Place your fuel orders NOW for
Hock Springs coal with
HENR.Y KOPITTKE
Phone Main ITS.
vV3Vi 60 YEARS'
ttivi'-ii'on ir, ir
. -ni' frH. 4M ht i . f.r .in ir pittoiilH.
i'mnut Ink en fi-..-, y m rocelvt
Scieiiiiiic j..;.c. icaa.
dilution t nnf iv:niu.' l -ti'-tiril, 'Icrm & m
yinr: fmir imiiiths. L buiU lyll nowsHtoalerB
HAFFNDR GD
EN0RAVBR?rRNTHM
PJsmHDicn.yo
milne Transfer
Phone "sin 5
Calls promptly answered
for all haggrge transfer
ring. Piano and Furnrur
j moving pnd Heavy Truck
j ing a specialty.
Pally Kant Orrironlnn bv iarrir.
LJ?rt-i. ..........
Jfri fYjAUi a-if. -.."1 .
lauiw
only 15 cfnw pr week. '