DAILY EAST ORGUONUN. PENDLETON, OREGON, Il KsDAV. Al'lUI. 2. 1010. EIGHT PAGES. pake kvi or AN ISDKl'KNDENT NEWSPAPER. rubllihrd lllv, We.klT and Seml-Wteklj at lDiltatou, Oregon, by th KABT OKWUMAS I'VIILISUINO CO. SVUSrill lTlON IIATK8. PallT. one year, by mall $5.00 D&IIt, tlx month, by mall 2.50 IUy. three, months, by mall 1.25 ally, one nu.uib. by mall 50 pally. .ne year, by carrier 7.50 PailV. fit nt'Mitha. n 'arrltM' . 8.75 Dally, three month," by carrier 1.B5 Pally, one month, by carrier o Weeklv, on. year, by mall 1.60 Weekly, fix months, by mall 75 tveeklv. four months, by mall 50 teml -Weekly, one year, by mall.... 1.50 Beinl Weekly, six monina, by mall... .75 eml-Weekly, four months, by mall.. .50 The I'sIIt Kan: Oreconlan Is kept on aale at the Orecon Nena Co., 147 6th street. Portland. Oregon. Korthneat News. Co., Portland, Oregon. Calciuo Hureu. t'f Security Building. Waahiapton, l l, Unreau, 601 Four teenth street. N. W. Member I'nlted Press Asoclatlon. Entered at the poatmflce at Pendleton, Oregon, as second class mail matter. Telephone Main 1 Official City and Connty Paper. A MAX TO I.EAX OX. "A man to lean on" are you such, O neighbor In your pride? Where do you stand when comes death's clutch That will not be denied? For woe still stalks the old world through, And loving hearts still bleed; When dear ones fain would lean on you Are vii'i a broken reed? "A man to lean on" are you one To whom the grieving turn When some dread day's descend- ing sun- Is blurred bv tears that burn? Know you the words that bring' relief, That salve the hearts of men? When women turn in voiceless grief. Where is your man's strength then? "A man to lean on -faith' tis fine To earn those words as praise To know that, comforting, be nign. You helped o'er stony ways Some child of fate in mourn ing's dress, Some soul In direst need. Who turned to you, in weari ness, And found no broken reed. Arthur Chapman. RAISE MORE FLOWERS. In Pendleton the lilacs are now In full bloom and the "snowballs" will oon be white. Both these flowers thrive well in eastern Oregon. So do daffodils. While they are in blossom they add much to the attractiveness of a city such as this. But the trouble in Pendleton as in j most other uisy eastern Oregon towns j Is that sufficient attention is not given j to floriculture. Comparatively few people try to raise flowers. Those who-1 do try to and show a reasonable de gree of judgment and persistence suc ceed well. There are some homes in the city that have been made beau tiful through a little effort in this direction. But for every home of this sort there are 25 homes where nothing whatever is being done tow ards raising flowers. Some house holders won't even maintain their lawns properly. It would oe a splendid thing for Pendleton if every family in the city would become a charter member In an invisible society for the promotion of a more beautiful Pendleton. Mem bership in that society would Include an obligation to keep lawns in pre sentable condition and to raise all the flowers possible. Would it not be a pleasure to keep such a pledge? Certain it Is that such work would do wonders toward . improving the homes of the city. The house is not all there Is to a home. The lawn, the trees, the flowers anl the general surroundings t'uunt also. humble cottage looks beautiful and habitable when adorned by a well kept lawn ' beset with flowers and shrubs. A fine house without grass or flowers sur rounding It looks cheerless and un inviting. A WHOLESOME VIEW, In his weekly financial review Henry Clews has the following Inter esting comment upon the present situ stlon: "Much significance Is very proper ly attached to recent elections In New York state and Massachusetts. They have made two -things very plain: First. "that the tariff must be again revised, and this time downward, al so that the people are weary of po litical corruption and are selecting a higher type of men as their repre sentatives, to the utter discomfiture of those who have profited through bossism and corruption. nightly viewed such readjustments In busi ness and politics are healthful symp tlms. They mean that both business and politics will be on a sounder and more hopeful basis as soon as this corrective process becomes more com plete. Temporarily there may be more or lesis uncertainty and hest tanvy; but this should gradually dis appear, and later on trade should re suiYe normal activity, especially when it is found that prices have touched bed-rock. There is really nothing in the business situation to warrant any uneasiness." Mr. Clews evidently believes . that injustice nnd political corruption do not work for business stability. WHY SI) SKEPTICAL, AMOS? Amos Pond, chief of the Walla Wul Ir.s, does not look with favor upon the census and has been advising the Indians on the reservation to steer clear of Cieorge Strand, enumerator for that district. Just why old Amos should be so suspicious is not clear, it is possible though that he has a similar superstition to that held by ar old time Cheyenne chief. This particular chief and his tribesmen, according to the story, had been out upon a rampage such as were common In early days. After gome difficulty the Indians were rounded up by a squadron of blue coated troopers and the warriors were per suaded to go back to their reserva tion. When friendly relations had been established the major in command of I'ncle Sam's forces sought to perfect an agreement that would prevent any further trouble. The Cheyenne chief was very willing and assented to the ti rms of the agreement. However, when time came for him to sign the ; vr.ement by touching the pen when his "mark" was made he rebelled. He would not touch the pen and all el forts to get him to d: so failed. The old chief admitted again and again that the agreement was satis factory but he shied away from the !'en as t,,0USh il were a P'oned ar- ow. Finally the major asked him. it'T'Uigh an interpreter, why he would i not touch the pen and so make the '.-ereement binding. A lengthy con ;flvb in Cheyenne followed and finally j'.he interpreter addressed the major land said: "He says he has found that every time he touches that thing he loses , something.' The East Oregonian did not have a 'detailed report yesterday of the Her- miston-Umatilla ball game because the score keeper left for Portland Im mediately after the game and took the score book with him. At this time of the year such conduct as that should constitute "malfeasance in f ffice." There are only a few days left for the taking of the census In this city. Aid the enumerators wherever pos .Me. They catiuot find everbouy no matter how hard they try. So as sist them in getting as complete a count as possible. Jack Johnson the colored fistic champion says he likes "Hamlet" on account of Battling Nelson, the Dur able Dane. Yesterday was a very hot day for April, but it did not last long. Be sides it was better than a blizzard. The ministers should favor Improv ing the 'phone service. Our present service breeds profanity. Persians and Europeans in general seem to be bent on 9hoV-ing Roose velt a good time. More concrete walks and parked streets would also add much to Pen dleton's appearance. Quarrels never occur in homes tbat are protected by flower gardens. The fire bell rung "with the can be rope." heard when Next year the visit Tendleton. Odd Fellows should WHAT HE WANTED. The young man from the country look his green necktie and his best girl into a restaurant, and, like some other young man, he was disposed to be fa-eetlous at the waiter's expense. "Waiter, he said, "I want you to bring me a broiled elephant." "Y"ssir," replied the waiter, per fectly unmoved. ' "And, waiter, bring it on toast." "Yesslr." Then he stood there like a statue for a minute. "Well," said the young man, "are yotj not going to bring It?" "YeBslr." "Why don't you then?" "Orders Is, sir, that we get pay In advance for elephants, sir. Elephants on toast,, sir, are five thousand dollars nnd ten 'cents. If you take It without toast, sir. It Is only five thousand, dol lars, sir." The waiter did not smile, but the girl did, and the young man climbed down. Gentleman (to shop assistant) Thlsseems a good umbrella. Will It wear well? Assistant No; It will fade after the first wetting. Gentleman Hbw straightforward You are an honor to your profession. Assistant Oh, It's not that. I pro posed to the boss' daughter last night, and she rejected me, so I'm taking It out of the firm.- See? tit'AHDIXti THE CZAIt. M. Paolt, in his reminiscences of the Ciar of Hussia in McClure's V& gnzlne for May, shows the thorough ness with which' the French police lay their plans to Insure the safety of a visiting sovereign,. "We have established observation posts in all the frontier stations, posts composed of officers, who lost no time In fastening on the steps of any suspicious traveler. A special wauh had to be kept along the rail ways over which th.e Imperial train was to travel, and In the streets through which the procession would pass. Sentries with loaded rifles, posted at intervals on either side of the line, at the entrance and Is sue of tunnels, on and under bridges, prevent any one from approaching and had orders to raise 'nn alarm If they saw on or near the rails any object looking In the least suspicious. "We also Identified the tenants of al' the houses situated along the rail- way line and in the streets through which our guests were to drive. As a matter of fact, what we most feared was the traditional outrage perpe- tinted or attempted from a window. On the other hand, we refused (con- tiary to what has been stated! to ad- opt the system employed by the Spanish. German, and Italian police on rtie occasion of any visit from sovereign the system that consists in arresting all 'suspects' during a royal guest's stay. We sent swarms of po. lice to beat the forest and search every copse and thicket; and the chateau itself (where the royal party was to stay I was inspected from gar ret to cellar by our most trusted de tectives. These precautions, however, seemed insufficient to our colleagues of the Russian police." COMIXG Ol" T1IK JEWS. The last great element in present- day Immigration 1. properly ""speak- I ing. not European at all, but Orient.!'. K,.mir on in Iowa in the last two years. The migration of huiujreds of thou- . Cedar ltapids. Hurlington. Keokuk, sands of eastern European Jews; to the and Sioux City making, w ith Pes Cnited States is one of the stupen- Moines, more than three iiuarters of dous facts of modern times. It is I the city population of the State have unquestionably the most far-reaching J fallow ed !s Moines" example, event in the annals of Israel since the ' Today ninety per cent of tlve e!tle fall of Jerusalem. Purely from the ' of any Hize In Kansas have adopted or standpoint of numbers, history records .., ,., working under the new plan In nothing like it. In the two thousand , hiding Kansas City. Kansas. with years that this people has been home-jioo. i po.iple. Wichita. Topeka, and less, forcing its presence upon the ,,.liVl li ..rib. From these centeX of unw elcoming nations, of Europe. It i the movement it has spread in all dl has been subject to many expulsions. n-(.tjns. St. Joseph, Missouri, with many forced migrations; but never j have Its comings and goings rescm- j bled the present masslike movement j tto the United States. The expulsion of j (the Jews from England In the reign ot hdward I., is a sorry chapter In their history; yet this edict exiled - only about 15,000 people, less than one tenth the number that landed in,!,,,,,,.,. Four Massachusetts cities are New York last year. The expulsion operating under the plan. The legis-j ot the Jews from Spain by Ferdl- h.tures .if Kansas. Iowa. North and, nand and Isabella has been tragically , s.mth Dakota. Minnesota. Wisconsin,! described by many historians, but it ; lin( mtnots have passed bills allowing affected only 150,000 souls, less than one (uarter of the present Jewish population of New York. Jerusalem, in its greatest days, contained less tnan one sixtn uie numner or Jewsj.,,,,, lr,0.noo. like D.s Moines. Dallas. now found in the American metropo-i 1(lst,,n Memphis. Kansas City, and ns; inoeeu nDout one tenm or an mSl, Joseph. Missouri, the agitation for jews in me worm, or suu.uvu. live upon Jiannattan lsiann ana tne au- joining iriiii.Mj. in uir Mr.un greater cu one man In every four is FrrfTMcClnres. a Jew.- MI'.X AX1 HATS. The domination of man over the beasts of the field does not yet Include the rodents. Aurochs, cave-bear, and mammoth we put down with stone headed arrows. We have wiped out the buffalo; the lion and the elephant will soon be gone. But still the rab bits of Australia cost the colonies millions a year; traps, ferrets, and poison still fall to make head against the rats. mice, and gophers of the United States. While our animal ene mies have become smaller In size, they have grown more numerous. It Is as if Nature, after trying vainly to chas tise her Insurgent son with catapult, had gone after him with a shotgun. The fact Is that of all warm blooded creatures, there are just two that are really dominant, successful, increasing In numbers and range, and able to maintain themselves anywhere In the world against all rivals. These Household Remedy Taken in the Spring for Years. Ralph Rust, Willis, Mich., writes: "Hood's Sarsaparilla 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 ennui for cleansing the blood and ex pelling the humors that accumulate during the winter. Being a farmer nnd exposed to bad weather, my sys tem is often affected, nnd I often take Hood's Sarsaparilla with good results." Hood's Sarsaparilla Is Peculiar to Itself. There Is no "Just as good." (let It today In usual liquid form or tablets callwd Sarsatabs. A Reliable Remedy FOR CATARRH Ely's Cream Balm it quickly absorbed. Civet Rebel al Ones, It cleanses, soothes, heals and protects the diseased mora. braue resulting from Catarrh and drive sway aCold iu the Head quickly. Jtestore the Senses of Taste and HnielL Full size 50 cts. at Druggists or by mall. Liquid Oream Balm for use in atomizers 75 eta. Ey lirothers, 00 Warren Street. New York. CLOSE TO PENDLKTOX IX UMA TILLA COUXTY. 1(40 acres ail fenced, good new posts, 800 acres In grain, 250 ceres of alfalfa land mostly set, will cut 7 B0 tons of alfalfa this year, a stream of water runs 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 rallrocU runs right through the middle of It. Yon can buy this fine ranch for $, 000. E. T. WADE, Office tn American Nat. Bank Bid. Paadletoa. Ore. Fortune Telling Doca not take into consideration the one essential to wom an's happiness womanly health. The woman who nclect her health is neglecting the very foundation of. all good fortune. For without health love loses its lustre and Sold is but dross. Womanly health when lost or impaired may generally be regained by the use ol Dr. I'ierce's Favorite 1'rescriplion. This Prescription has, tor over lO years, been curing delicate, weak, pain-wracked Komen, by the hundreds ot thousands and this too In the privacy ot thrir homes without their having to submit to indeli cate questionings and offensively repug nant examinations. Sick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter frit. All correspondence held as sucreuly confidential. "Address World' Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pibhcb's Curat Family Doctor Boon, The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser, newly reviseJ up-to-date, edition 1000 pages, answers in Plain English hosts of delicate questions which every woman, single or married, ought to know about. Sent free, in pSuiu wrapper to any address on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to covcV nuiiling or;!-, nr in cloth binding for 31 stamps. j " ' two are man and the rats. The ; genus Homo Hnd the genus Mus go everywhere and eat everything. They 1 are the two creatures that dwell In ! houses and travel in ships. Each 'drives Its other rivals fx the wall; but ' neither, exci pt locally and for brief ; periods, has ever come near to ex- terminating; .the other. Civjlized man lias fought the common rat for two hundred years, and the battle Is still drawn. From the May Mc Clures. Till: COMMISSION l.'J.AX. ( i ieorge Kibbe Turner In McClure's Magazine for May. ) Following Galveston, with one or two exceptions every city of size In the State of Texas, ranging from Dal las and Houston places of 90.000 poonle downward, has taken up the crmmission form of government. TT'.r., r-t 1 ,. tln' t.ifl ,M.ito,c line ttnen j o-,, nIMI people, has come under -the. ,,.,. Memphis, with 160.000. nnd five! smaller cities in Tennessee: Tacoma. I Vasl.inu't.n; r.erlceley. Riverside, and) sn lieg.. California; Colorado; srlnirs and Orand Junction. Colo. , rado; and the principal cities In North 1 anii South Dakota. Idaho, and Okla- I cities to adopt the plan. In all, about seventy American cities have now adopted It. And now. from cities of ino.onn i ,p p,.ln ,M ndvr,ncing into the larger .., f tn (.nuntrv. Buffalo. New York, w th 400.000. has voted to ad- York, with 400.000. has voted to ad - I opt the plan; a lively nnd very prom- e- c 'or ! "rton ., '" - ing onrrie.1 on In Kansas City. Mis- sour;, and an agitation bss likely of success in Minneapolis. WHAT'S IX MCIJ ItllS. Cnd. r the title of "The New Am-jeil work. About this time a school iriean City Oovernment" Ceorge j friend came from a distant state to Klbbe Turner tells In the May Mc- ' pay a , brief visit, and, learning of her Clare's of the rapid spread of the com- j friend's predicament, suggested trying m'osion form of government; liurton th at a I. old-fashioned remedy .1. Hendr'ek has an article on "The j Known as HAY'S 1 1 A lit HEALTH. Skulls of Our Immigrants" which up- I And one single bottle of this time-tr.ed sets the belief so long held by scien; 1 preparation did more to restore the tists that the skull was the one thing lost color of her hair than the hun that could not change; W. A Du Pay 1 dreds of dollars she had spent in hair and K. T. Brewster show what the ' shops. HAY'S II A I It HEALTH Is not hat has cost us In lives and money, and M. Paoli elves his reminiscences of the czar .of Russia. Foremost in the fiction Is an unusual detective story "The Anthropologist At Largo," by Dr. R. A. Freeman, editor of the London Lancet. (it her stories are Orptieum Theatre J. I. MEDEnNAOII.vl'r..prtetor HIGH-CLASS UP-TO-DATE MOTION PICTURES For Men, Women and Children KK12 IM'.t;itAM i !!Ui:S I'.M'll. Program Changes du Sundays, Tiieilny' ami l-Yldsy's. Byers Best Flour "The Glamour" by Oscar Oraevo; "The Blue Pearl" by Nelth Boyce; "The Nineteenth Hat" by Arnold Hennett; "The Point of View," an oiher war story by "Ole Luk-6lo;" and "The Kducntlon of King Peter" by Rdgstr Wallace. Tin: riiH r sigukstiox. It was the reserve force stored up in the years of conquest and th habit of triumphing In whatever they under. took that gave such power to the Washington, the Llncolns, the Glad stones and the Disraelis, lays Orison Sett Mardoii in "Success Magazine It Is the reserve power which we feel back of the words and between the lines of a powerful book; not what Is actually In the printed words that Impress us most. We are not so much affected by what an orator like Webster actually says as we are by what he suggests; I the latest power, the mighty reserve force that we feel he might put forth were the emergency great enough, IIKK 1XDORSEMEXT. "I want this check cashed," said the fair young matron, appearing at the window of the pnying teller. "Yes, madam. You must Indorse il. though," explained the teller. "Why. my husband sent It to me, IK is .;..iy on business," she said. "Yes, madam. Just Indorse It sign It on the back, so we will know and your husband will know that we paid It to you." She went to the desk against the wall, nnd In a few moments presented the check triumphant, having written on Its back: "Your loving wife, Edith." MV1IY 11AIH. IVom Xnp In he Sand, A ladv of the Now York smart set had spent the summer at a ronton seashore resort whirr the principal 'occupation of the select colony was reading or taking naps on the beach between dips in the surf. Her hair, ! which wa originally a beautiful gold- ,. blown, cam out at the end of the j handsome mud color, wlth- I ,,, nil,ii,.,. nf hrllllanrv or life. ; Thln camo daily visits to halrdress- ng paiacc8 to restore the lost color. ;..; ;,,:. :., experience with lo- I I don, soaps, perfumes, pomades and ointments of different hues nnd odors many of them costing several dollars a botltie. I tut the hair did not Im prove materially. None of the magic lotions seemed to be doing Its intend- a dye. Instead, It Is a genuine restor ative for the scalp and roots of the hair. Nearly nil druggists have It in tiO-cent and dollar nottles, or It can be purchased from the manufactures Philo Hay Specialties Co , Newark, N. J U. S. A. Pendleton Drug Co. A Splendid Overall for every use.' Cut generous ly fulL Two hip pockeli. Felled seams. Continuous taSsXtftnta MURPHY, GRANT a CO. Mnulactataa ai Is mad! from th choiccfit wheat that crows. Good biTiiil is imsiirrd wlion IIYKIJS' IJKST FLOUR in uh.mI. Bran, Slio-.N, Steam Kollcjil Hurley always on hmnl. Pendleton Roller Mills Pendleton, Oregon. F ....&.... n Cold CureO 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. FARM FOR SALE 1 60 Acres of Good Farm Lan i 100 aeres In cultivation. Suitable for potatoes, ber ries or other produce. Two miles from Weston, Oregon. Call If interested on Mark Moorhouse Company US East Court Bt. Pboue Ma La S3. COLESWORTHY'S International Stock Food the old reliable The best for ' your stock & Try it COLESWOR.THY 127-129 t. Alt Tb. 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. AN OBVIOUS Tou make a bad mistake when yon put off huylns your coal until the Fall purchase It NOW and secur the bi't Itoek Spring coal the mine produce ut prices considerably lower than those prevailing in Fall and Winter. By stocking up now you avoid ALL dnnger of being unable to secure It when cold weather arrives. HENRY KOP1TTKE Phone Main 178. Milne Transfer Phone Main 5 Calls promptly answered for all baggage transfer ring. Piano and Furnture moving and Heavy Truck ing a specialty. CALL FOIt WARRANTS. All road fund warrants registered from the first ,dny of July, 1909, t the first day of April, 1910, will be paid at my office In the county court house upon presentation. Interest ceased upon date of publication. Dated Pendleton, Ore., April II, 1910. Q. W. BRADLEY, County Treasurer. iflSI