PACK fiVH DAILY EAST OKEGOMAX, PENDLETON, OREGON, SAITHDAY, JIXE 4. 1910. EIGHT PAGES. AN IXUKPEXDEXT NEWSPAPER. rMbllshed :i'y. Vi-eklj and Seml-Waeilj at Ptodletoo. Oregon, by the SAST ORtXiO.MAX PUBLISHING CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Daliy, on., year, by mail J3.00 Illy. all months, by mall 2 50 Eali. three month, by mall 1.25 Pall, on month, by mall 0 rail. one year, by carrier T.50 DalW. six months, br carrier Pal'jr. three months, by carrier 1.85 falli. one month, by carrier 65 eell. on. Tear, by mall 1.50 Weekly, fix months, by mall "5 Weeslr. fonr months, by mall 50 aVml Weekiy, one year, by mall.... 1.50 Sml-Wklv. ill munais. by mall... .T5 ml-Weekly. four montba, by mall.. .60 The Pally East Oregonlan ta kept in aal at the Oregon Xea Co., 147 6th street. Portiand. Oregoa. orthweat New. Co., Portland. Oregon. Ohl.-e.k-o Hureau, 6o9 Security Building. Washington. D. C, Bureau, 501 Four teenth atreet, X. W. Member United ITeaa Aioclatloo. Rotered at the pestoiflce at Pendleton, Oregea. aa second class mall matter. ffalapbone Main 1 Official CKy and County Paper. COXQVEST OF SELF. Talk not of strength until your heart has known And fought with weakness through long hours alone. Taik nn of virtue til! your con quering soul Has met temptation and gained full control. all un- tlon. They have done ao In Oregon. This state has twice elected legisla tures having a majority of Its mem bers pledged to vote for men 'having received the highest popular vote for senator. At the last state election the people voted overwhelmingly in favor of a law requiring that the peo ples' choice be made senator. Of ciurse that law is of moral force only. A iiooil way for the two Idaho sen ators to test popular sentiment upon this issue would be for each to make this subject an issue in his campaign ft-r reelection. If they do this Senator Koran will be a figure in the senator chamber long after his blatherskite colleague has been forgotten. A FIXE V1CTOHY. Pendleton's debating team won out a i Eucenc last night and by so doing sained the title to the high school de bating championship of the state. The victory means glory for the Pendleton high school and also for this city. It is a victory that was worth while. It was won by hard and consistent work on the part of the young debaters and on the part of those who trained the team. Last year the Pendleton team qualified for the championship debate by winning all preliminary contests. However the final debate was lost. I Not daunted by that failure to win the J jeoveted championship a new team went 'f rth this year. Under the training of Principal Hampton the team won con- I test after contest until once more the Jjstate championship was in sight. Now 'that the .final contest has been won Boast not of garments, scorched by sin, Till you have passed, unscathed through fires within. Oh, great credit is due Messrs. Crockett, Hartwell and Rice, the debaters, for their cnn.1 vvi-irlr nn.t Prini'innl TTninn. ; " o - - , - -. ------- j A'ton and others of the high school poor that pride the unsear- faculty are also entitled to congratu- red soldier hows, Who safe in camp, has never faced his foes. Ella Wheeler Wilcox. . A COWARDLY COOISE. It is a peculiar brand of courage possessed by a man who will kill XAFT AXP THE PRESS. j himself because of "business troubles and leave a wife'and five children to President Taft is not in sympathy battle with the world alone. Tet this with the "muckraking'' magazines and j " what a Wheeler county sheepman newspapers. Evidently he is stirred ''id at Heppner. Because he could by the attacks to which some of his not get enough for his wool, P. H. political advisers have been sub- l'ennison got arunk insteau and com mitted suicide. Possibly it is wrong speak harshly of the dead, but in Jccied. But in his sDeech at Ada the nresi- . to dent was not very specific. raking" has become a rather term. Is it to be taken for granted j act as becomes a husband and a man. that all who have criticised the ad "Muck, this case it is only the truth to say r broad that this particular sheepman did not SOME SHORT NEWS NOTES FROM ATHENA (Special Correspondence.) Athena, June 4. Mrs. Schrlmpf and daughter. Miss Eva, visited in Milton on Friday, the 4atter staid over for a few days visit with her friend, Katie Maloney. Miss Carrie Sharp is spending her vacation at the home of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Dr. Sharp. Mrs. Byron Hawks left on Wednes. day morning for Spokane to be pres ent at the graduating exercises of the Spokane high school. Her sister is a member of the graduating class. Mr. and Mrs. c. Norris were in Mil ton yesterday. Mrs. Lizzie Watts, mother of Hom er Watts, the lawyer, fell while In Weston, spraining her wrist quite badly. W. L. Kidder of Spokane, return ed to that city on Wednesday. Captain C. J. Fergusdn of Pen dleton, was in the city of Athena on Monday last. W. C. Dunning, the new O. R. & X. agent at the station has arrived and is being made familiar with the sltu- ition. Mr. Smith, the retiring agent. with his estimable family will short. lv leave for Crook Co., where they have agricultural interests. Col. Lucas, the live stock orator of the Blue Mountains, was In the city on Thursday. The terrific high winds of Wed nesday played havoc with all loose substances that did not weight over a ton. Tom Taggert's big awning went to the repair shop ns a result. , A young son of C. U. Grant of this city was thrown from the quarter deck of a cayuse the other day and sus tained a bad fracture of the left arm. Mr. Hugh McArthur and wife have returned to their Portland home after an extended visit in this city and vi cinity. John Estes of Pendleton has pur chased the saloon lately conducted by A. Sigman. The talented musician Annie Sel kirk Xorton, assisted by local talent gave a fine recital at the opera house on Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. John S. Wheeler of Pendleton were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Kidder on Thurs day. They were attendants at the strawberry festival In Milton On Fri day. .T. T. Lieuallen. mayor of Adams, and family passed through Athena on Friday, presumably to Milton to eat the luscious strawberry. B. C. Kidder was a conspicuous flg ire at the country crossroad of Mil, ten on Friday. ministration or the actions of ad- j ministration men are under the pres ident's displeasure? If so then this paper is surely upon the list. Is President Taft attempting to de fend Secretary Hitchcock for having sent Ormsby McHarg to Oregon to in duce members of the legislature to break the pledges they had made their constituents regarding the last senatorial election? Is it to be as sumed that President Taft fully up holds Secretary Ballinger in his course? If so then the president has undertaken a big job. The East Oregonlan is no "muck raker" and vilifies no one, but it does contend that when a cabinet officer sends a subordinate to mix in an af. fair like a senatorial election and to bribe, bulldoze or cajole legislators Into breaking the pledges upon which they were elected there Is something damnably rotten somewhere. This paper also confesses that in the controversy between Pinchot and Ballinger It has been upon the Bide of the former. This because It has believed Pinchot to be a true and pa triotic advocate of. conservation while It regards Ballinger as a slip pery official who though outwardly a friend of conservation Is its secret foe. Is this muckraking? By the way, while he was discuss ing the subject of journalism Presi dent Taft might with propriety have m'-r.tloned that class of newspapers and magazines that seeing the wrong and knowing of k do not attack It Worse even than the extreme "muck raker" is the newspaper or magazine that "fills its purse" by keeping silent when It should speak forth in denun ciation of men who betray their trusts. With all the railroads in the coun try combining to advance rates and the shippers up In arms to prevent such Increases a legal battle royal seems about to occur. J$. Do You FeeS This Way? i-ro you lev i ail iircu oui r uu you sometimes think you just can't work away at your profei- sion or trade any longer P Do you have a poor ape tite, and lay awake ut uifhts unable to sleep ? Are your nerves ull gone, ar.d your stomach too p Has am bition to forge oliead in tlie world left you p If so, you might as well put a stop to your misery. You can do it if you will. I?r. Pierce's Coldeu Medical Discovery will make you a different individual. It will set your lazy liver to work. It will set things riflht in' your stomach, and your appetite will cone back. It will purify your blood. If there is any tendency in your family toward consumption, it will keep thtt JicjJ destroyer away. Even after con sumption hns almost f:un,:J a foothold in the form of a lingering cough, bronchitis, or bleeding at the lun.'s, it will bring about a cure in VS per cent, of ull cases. It it a reaicJy prcpured by Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. V., whose advice is given free to all who wish to write hitn. His great success has come from his wide experience and varied practice. Don't be wheedled by a pemiy-iirnbhing dealer into taking inferior substi tutes for Dr. Pierce's medicine, recommended to be " y.tt m good." Dr. Pierce's medicines are oh known ccv.;?os it v . Their every ingredient printed on their wrapper.-:. Madj from motj without alcohol. Contain no habit forming drti;:.-. Y.'orU'd 'JipcI;a; Medical Association, rUif:..io, N. Y. ONE DAY'S DOINGS A! TIIK HONESTY OF SCIENCE, (Special Correspondence.) Hermiston, Ore., June 4. Dr. Hen ry Waldo Cue of Stanfield, was down yesterday looking after the interests of his Ilermistoii office. He has just returned from a six weeks' trip to Washington, 1). C. W.H. Skinner was a Pendleton visitor yesterday. B. P. Dodd transacted business In the county seat yesterday. H. H. Hickox and H. S. Burnham of Pendleton spent yesterday in Her miston transacting business. D. C. ISrownell came over from I'matill.i this morning ti spend the il-iy with friends. Mrs. Fisher, .mother of Mrs. J. Jones, returned to her home at Mr.ixvnsA illc, Oregon, after a short isit. A parly of Hermiston young peo ple are planning to picnic at Stan-fi-U next Sunday. Tomorrow's game will be between Stanfield and Hermiston on the Her-ni.-loti field Both teams have been l;ard at work the past week and it is likely the game will be a good one. F Cold Cure S Tyndall once declared that" Helen tific pursuits bring to their service a morality which In point of severity Is probably without a parallel In any other domain of Intellectual action. One of the most distinguished of liv ing chemists, Theodore Richards, In a similar vein speaking of the real ities beyond the mental horizon of our forefathers of those fundamental laws which can be perceived only with the help of devices which man invents to extend and amplify the use of his senses, which counts the pulse of a fain rny of light and tells the speed of an advancing star; the mlc secrets .of the organic cell; the test tube, the thermometer and the" bal ance, which together are "slowly helping us to know the unchanging laws underlying the existence of flaming star and living creature." These instruments, as Professor Rich ards explained, not only give us truth unknown before, but with the use of them comes appreciation of the final ity and incxorblehess of nature's laws, with which there can be neither tem pnrarlzing nor evasion. There Is no lie In nature. Science, the expositor of nature, is entirely and forever honest. Without Intellectual honesty In u high degree no man can follow her. Will knock the worst cold in Two Days Comes in capsules. Not disagreeable to take. Manufactured and sold in Pendleton, by Tallman & C o. Leading Druggists of Eastern Oregon. Do you take tl.e East Oregonlan? WHY HF. DIDN'T. Will the government be as rigid in conducting its big suit against the -Southern Pacific as it was in prose cuting eastern Oregon ranchers? With 22 passenger trains running :n and out of Pendleton daily we are enduring the worst railway mail ser vice In years. Why is this? WOMAN'S WORK. what I planned to P,ORAH VS. HEYBCRN. In the senate not long ago one United States senator from Idaho, Heyburn, denounced the direct elec tion of United States senators. He aaid the people- of Idaho do not stand for direct election. The other sena tor from Idaho, Borah, then took ex. ae.t'.y the opposite view of the situ ation. He toid his colleague of the senate that Idaho people are for the direct elecetlon of senators. According to the Idaho Statesman, the leading paper of Boise and of Idaho, Senator Borah's position is the nearest correct: "So one at all acquainted with the trend of sentiment In Idaho will have any hesitancy In saying that Mr. Bor ah comes much nearer gauging the sentiment of the people than Mr. Hey. burn," says the Statesman. Most assuredly Senator Borah Is right If the proposition Is ever put to a vote In Idaho, aa It surely will be, tbe people will speak out In very I have not done do, I have not lived as I meant to live. My youth untried found the world too wide For all the little I had to give. Yet my heart still hoped and my hands still groped In an honest effort to find the key And my faith kept strong, though much went wrong For a little woman believed in me. A little woman with eyes of gray, Who kept my feet In the better way, Whose tender trust always healed at length The wounds of failure and gave me strength. I have not sung as I longed to sing, To touch and better the hearts of men, Perhaps in vain in my simple strain, Yet I'll sing It o'er and o'er again, For I hope to cheer someone some where And help him to be what he ought to be And I've still the wraith of my old time faith, For a little woman believed In me A little woman with eyes of brown And with tender trust which will never down, Whose love Is stronger than pain or grief nod bless the women and their be lief! Kansas City Times. A small boy sat in one corner ofj an office building at Broad and , Chestnut streets, waiting to take an elevator. In his hands he held aj large thick sandwich. He eyed the i sandwich for a long time and then he carefully ' lifted off the top slice1. of bread, took out a piece of pickle, ate it and replaced all as before. In a few seconds he again removed the lop piece, extracted a piece or picKie and a piece of meat, and replaced the top. Several times the perform ance was repeated until all' the pickle and almost aJl the meat was gone, the sandwich, however, appearing intiict as in tlie beginning. "Why don't you eat up your sand wich and not pick at it that way?" asked the man at the news stamU'witli curiosity. "Why." he answered, looking up vith great innocence, "it ain't my sandwich." Philadelphia Times, A LINIMENT FOR EXTERNAL USE. No woman who bear3 children need suffer during the period ef waiting, nor at the time of baby's coming, if Mother's Friend is used as a massage for the muscles, tendons and glands of the body. Mother's Friend la a penetrating, healthful lini ment which strengthens the ligaments, lubricates and renders pliant those muscles on which the strain is greatest, prevents caking of the breasts by keep ing the ducts open, and relieves nausea, backache, numbness, nervousness, etc. Its regular use will prepare every portion of the system for the safety of both mother and child and greatly reduce the pain and danger when the little one comes. Mother's Friend is sold at drug stores. Write for our free hook, which contains valuable Information for expectant mothers. THE BRADFIELD CO., ATLANTA, GA. FOR SALE FOOI, AND YANDAIy. It is said that an ancient oak, one of the blazed trees of the old Oreen Bay Indian trail. Is to he marked by a commemorative tablet. If tho persons, whose worthy inten tions cannot be doubted, will give over their plan the probability is that the tree will live much longer with out the tablet than with It. The van dal relic hunters will get In their work when once they know what the oak Is. Trees, like other things, must be saved from their fool foes. In order to save the great elm on Boston Com mon from the chipping and chopping degenerates, It was necessary to build an Iron fence about it, and to put it nder special protection of the police. There are a good many "In dian trees" still standing in the woods on the north shore. Some years ago attention was called to one of the trees by a newspaper article. Within a few days the trunk had been hacked and mutillated and "adorned" with the men of the kind who. If given an opportunity, wou'd paint their names on the pyramids and the Washington monument. Chicago Post. MrTXINF.RS' RFSPONSIRILITY. New York Globe: It appears that we have been paying too much atten-l tion to the mote of the butcher's bill i and have not seen the milliner's beam, a'though as broad and bright as the ( comet's tail. Time was when "Miss Annie" used to take her customer's old trimmings and fashion new bows that were good enough for Easter Inspection. Now Mrs. Emily Post, In June Everybody's, gives It as part of her personal knowledge that one woman paid $260 for a .hat not riats In New York last winter. Simple dresses cost 1500, slippers up to $66 per pair, and a waist perhaps It should be called a "blouse" $100 and more. Other things besides automo biles and diamonds are causing strin gency In the money market. FRESH FISH Meats and Sausages EVERY DAY. We handle only the purest of lard, hams and bacon. Empire fIeat Go. Plionc Main 18. 010 acres, in Cold Springs, :!20 in wheat that will make from .10 to 40 bu. per acre, abundance of pure water piped Into the house and Imrn. 320 summer-fallowed. It Is nil yours for $.10.00 per acre, including nil the crop. Half cash, Ions time on balance at ." per cent Interest. I linvc several large tracts from $8 to $12 per iictc. Kany terms. Town proiierty, and suburban homos at your own prloe. E. T. WADE Office In rear of American Nat. Bank Bldg. PENDLETON,. OR. FARM FOR SALE 160' Acres of Good Form Land 100 acres In cultivation. Suitable for potatoes, ber ries or ether produce. Two miles from Weston, Oregon. Call If Interested en Mark Moorhouse Company 119 East Court St. Pbone Mala U. ll I COLESWORTHY'S International Stock Food the old reliable The best for your stock Try it COLESWOR.THY 127-129 E. Alta FOR. SALE 640 acres good wheat land, in south Cold Sj ririgs, 9 miles from wheat station. 320 acres now in wheat, one fourth to be delivered at station free to purchaser if land is sold before harvest; all fenced and cross-fenced with three wire fence. At $30.00 per Acre Good six room dwelling and good barn, shade trees, two wells, and wind mill pump. One and a quarter miles to school and two and a half miles to Iloldman postoffice. Easy terms. KEMLEPv & LIVERMORE 11 IE. Court Street. Pendleton, Oregon. itt Orpheiim TSieatre J. P. MEDERNAC II. PTt.prtewr HJGH-CLASS UP-TO-DATE MOTION PICTURES For Men, Women and Children SEE I'lidHi IIA.M . I N TODAY'S PAPER. lroiTam Change on Sundays, Tuesday's and Friday's. Pays $5000 for Ancient Bible. Vienna, Austria. A very rare old German manuscript Bible, a "Blblia Pauperum," without a date, but as cribed to the fifteenth or sixteenth century was bought In Vienna recent ly for the Tjelsnlir museum for 1000 certain terms In favor of direct elec- J pounds. An"e'LaHbJe CATARRI .v.iivmj 1 "" laaaaMiiiuii m Ely's to 32b PgSi aHs.irurr'O OTA jtcieuuseM, Hooines, heal anil protects . lCljl- brane resulting from Catarrh and drives away a Cold in tho Head quickly, lie. I j U CrUCT) rtorcs tho Senses of IJrtT LVLIi Imte and f::i-lL Full size 50 eta., at Drug, jints or by mail. In liquid form, 75 eenta. ly Brothers, M Warren btreet, New Xork. HAfFFVfD 'V)Zuf. ll i.-LMa-nniiwwiiMHiinw win East End Grocery JZtZSi Is always In front rank when It comes to fresh and seasonable Fruit and Vegetables. Don't forget us when you want something extra choice. Weston Potatoes, per sack Grand Ronde Apples, per box $1.00 $1.25 ll Th. QUELLE Gus.La Fontaine, Prop. MMSfasasaaaBjsBBB Best 25c Meals in Northwest First-class cookc and service Shell fish in season lmx Fontaine BIk., Maia St. m obvious You make a bad mUUnke when yeu put off buying your coal until the Fall purchase it N0,W und secure the best nock Spring coal the mines produce at prices considerably lower than those prevailing In Fall aa Winter. By stocking up now you avoid ALL danger of being unable to secure It when cokl weather arrives. HENRY KOPITTKE Phonn Main 178. Milne Transfer Phone Main 5 Calls promptly answered for all baggage transfer ring. Piano and Furniture moving and Heavy Truck ing a specialty. FOLEYSKOSEWTAn t!niw f-ovnnt Pnnumnnl) FOVt SALR Old newspapers wrap pud In bundle of iko each, suitable for wrapping, puiiing uudar clt peta, ete. Price He per bundle, two bundles lie. Enquire this oi-fla.