East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, June 21, 1910, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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DAILY EuST OKMiOMAN. PKDLt7ri)X. OKEtiOX. TTKsn.W. Jl'XK 21, 1910.
EXOIIT PAGES.
i .
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER.
fobilibed Ually. V.9ekl and Semi-Weekly
at lnrtlrton. Oreeoa, by tbe
cast orkgoman pTulisuing eo.
SIHSCKIITION MATES.
ouk year, by mall $5 00
ttallv, ati mootae, by mall J.W
lsJly, three month, by mall 1.20
I'tlly, one mootb, by mall 60
iiiy, one year, by carrier TOO
. ally, tlx montha, by carrlt 175
V ally, tbr mootba. by carrier 1.95
Dally, one muntb, by carrier 05
Weekly, one yer, by mall 1.50
Weekly. lz ronntha, by mall 75
eklT, four montba. by mall....... .60
aml-Weekly, on? year, by mall.... 1.60
eml Weekly, Hi monies, by mall... .76
4Wml-Weekly, four mootba. by mall.. .50
The Dally Kaat Oregonlan la kept o aale
at tbe Oregon News Co., 147 6tb street,
Portland. Orecoa.
aortbweat Ne. Co. Portland, Oregon.
Cblcaito Bareao. Security Building.
Waablngtoa, D. C, Bureau. 601 Four
teenth street. N. W.
Member United Preaa Aaoclatlon.
Entered at tbe poatoiflce at Pendleton,
vrgoa. aa aecond rlaaa mall matter.
eiephone Main 1
Official City and County Paper.
obtained In Oregon will serve all
practical purposes just as well aa one
obtained in Seattle, Chicago or evert
Boston.
T1IK WUOXG WAY TO EDVCATE.
GIVING AND LIVING.
Forever the sun Is pouring his
gold
On a hundred worlds that beg
and borrow;
His warmth he squanders on
summits cold,
" His wealth on the home of
want and sorrow,
To withhold his largess of preci-
ous light
is to tury himself in eternal
night;
The cry "mental discipline" evident
ly finds little favor in the mind of
George Horace Lorlmer, editor of the
Saturday Evening Post, for in a recent
ltue of the "read by more than a mil
lion and a half weekly he attacks the
present system of education in the
following language:
"Is mental wood-sawing useful?
Are the intelectual faculties of a child
strengthened by sheer drudgery?
Does brain-muscle increase by dog
sed pegging away at a task that fails
to excite the slightest interest?
These questions are not new, but
the judgment of Chicago a school su
pt rintendent against compound inter
tst. compound fractions and memor
ised historical dates in the elementary
grades naturally raises them afresh.
The conventional answer is that the
exercises named, whlle admitedly use
less in themselves, furnish splendid
mental discipline the harder and
drier the task, the more benefit a
child derives from it. The pupil will
certainly soon forget how to work
compound tractions ior nuoouy ever
. does work compound fractions, but
he will have gained much brain
' muscle.
j Is the mind of a child, we wonder,
, very different from the mind of a
man: and what intelligent man ever
j seeks mental Improvement In a task
which does not interest him? What
uulult, for example, will read an ab-
To give is to live. iSolutely uninteresting book? The old-
The flower shines not for itself
at all,
Its joy is the joy it freely . dif-
fuses.
Of beauty and balm it is prodi- I
gal, !
And it lives in the life it i
sweetly loses. i
No choice for the rose but glory
or doom I
To exhale or smother, to wither i
' or bloom:
To deny is to die.
He is dead whose hand is not
opened wide
To help the need of sister or
brother;
He doubles the worth of his life-
long ride
Who gives his fortunate
place to another;
Not one. but a thousand lives
are his
Who carries the world In his
sympathies:
. To deny is to die.
4 Exchange.
jllll
1 -IV
i
THE FARMERS' IN ION.
Pendelton, Ore., June 20.
Editor East Oregonlan:
It is iny opinion that there should
be co-operation between a'U legiti
mate interests, that our railroads
and our farmers have common
grouuds for It.
A farmers' organization should be
a harmonizing influence rather than
disrupting, and we are certainly work
ing toward that end.
We recognize in merchandising,
manufacturing and transportation
Interests just as legitimate and ne
cessary as farming but feel that in
the prosperity of the latter there Is
a protection to nil that must be re
spected.
Hy economizing in marketing our
products we are following a principle
which is recognized as just In every
institution and if by organization we
can effect the saving to home circu
lation of even one cent per bushel
just that much Is added to all legiti
mate local interests.
liy thus economizing farmers will 35.756. 615 persons, of whom 17.265
be able to pay up old bills and place TSu were males and 1S,4!0,835 were
mm
Honored by Women
vt hen a women r.pr.i.s ol r:r
silent score t cuiVcring s'. a
trusts you.' Mt&ons have be.'
stowed tliU t: r.rk o confi
dence on Dr. It. V. Pierce,
of Uu::j1o, li. Y. Lvcry
where thcte t:ro women who
bear witn-.-us to tho wonder
working, curi:i;'-porcr lit Dr.
Pierce's I'"avoriio Prescription
which saves the tajertag svx
from fnin, end successfully
grapp'.ci with v.omim's v.cuk-
noses onj stubborn i.'!s.
IT MAKES WEAK WOHEN STRONd
IT HAKES S1CIC WOMEN WELL.
5
No woman's appeal was ever misdirected or her con
fidence misplaced when she wrote for advice, to
the Woklu's Dispensauy Mkdical Association, Dr.
K. V. Fierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dr. Plane's Pleasant Pellets Induct mild natural bowel movement once a day.
fashioned educational theory was a
sort of continual driving of an unwil
ling horse to water; and It Is still sus
pected that the impression that a
iven task makes upon the mind of a
niid is in proportion to the effect put
f rth to master it easy come, easy
K. Kut every reading adult, we im
!agine, knows that the book to which
j he drove himself with a club was pre
cisely the first one to fade from his
memory, nud that his mind retains
things in about the proportion to the
pleasure experienced in acquiring
them. You can drive the horse to
water, but can you make him drink?
A PLEA FOR LOYALTY.
The domesticated berry is now hav
ing its inning but it will not be many
weeks until the far-famed Blue Moun
tain huckle berry will be enticing peo
ple to the mountains by the hundreds.
Reports say prospects are good for a
big crop.
The editorial writer on the Portland
Journal evidently had Pendleton In
mind when he wrote the following
under the caption, "Oregon Youth and
Oregon Colleges:"
Several young men from eastern
Oregon towns have lately returned
home from Seattle, where they have
been attending the University of
Washington during the past year.
This is the case every year and the
number of Oregon young people at
tending that institution and others
outside the state is quite large. Of
course, young people bent on secur
ing a higher education, or their par
ents, have the right to select what
ever Institution they plea&c, but it Is
regrettable that so many of themajro
out of the state for the purpose,
when Oregon is so well equipped
with excellent colleges, -fhere may
pr.Bsibly be some advantage for some
in attending a large eastern univer
sity, although this advantage is prob
ably largely imaginary, but it is dif
ficult to see why Oregon young men
should go over to .the University of
Washington, when this state has its i
state university, its agricultural col-1
legt, Willamette university. Pacific
university and several other good In
stitutions of higher education. These
colleges are certainly as good for all
practical purposes as the Washing
ton university Is, and it seems to be
a Fpecies of disloyalty to Oregon
for young people thus to turn their
hacks upon hT excellent educational
ii.stitutloiis. They are maintained at
great exp'-n are being constantly
Improved, an 1 are realy Dp to date
and worthy In every respect, and the
people of Oregon should take pride
Ir them, and support and encourage
them by their patronage and favor.
Young men ought to be proud to
ray that they had graduated from a
home state college, and to feel glad
to have been themselves factors in
1-s upbuilding and success.
The Journal hopes to see the Ore
gon colleges more loyally supported
by Oregon ycuth and their parents
hereafter, In this recpect. In this
rase as in others, the motto, "Pa
ttonize home industry" should be
odopted. Build up the Oregon col
leges and make them. If they are not
so already, the equal of any in the
country. Many Oregon youth will
enter college for the first time next
falL and some of them have per
haps not yet decided where they will
go. and we hope that this appeal
may decide any who are doubting In
fsvor of some Oregon college. Be
come an Oregon-made graduate, and
be proud of it.
It now develops that the farmers
had their scare for nothing and that
there will yet be a great harvest of
l.oth wheat and barley as well as a
monstrous crop of grain and alfalfi
hay.
business on a cash basis, which Is one
of their main objects.
As to the methods of accomplishing
this it is expected that we look at tViem
from our own viewpoint rather than
that of the men who are constantly
endeavoring to place profits Into the
hands of our great distributing ter
minals. I believe that the mischief done is
due to unscrupulous men who, by
their system of speculation and un
just price making, are working a
hardship upon all fair and high
minded men. and that merchants and
manufacturers as well as farmers arc
at their mercy.
It looks to me as though the present
financial unrest Is due to the hoggish
ness of our great American termin
als, that, as distributors of farm pro
ducts, have found such a fertile field
in farming the farmer, and to my
mind the question of allowing the
many millions yearly accumulating In
their hands, representing far more
profit than received by all farmers
combined, to continue to go with
them or with the farmer, Is a pedti
nent one.
The farmers therefore, are " the
great home protecting force that must
be organized. He is strong, for he
can live Independently without the
aid of others while others cannot live
three days without him.
Potentially the farmer Is the great
est power in the world. In reality,
until of late, he has had less Influ
ence over his own destiny than any
other class.
Among us are successful business
and professional men who have gone.
into farming because of the possibil
ity of better and surer profits; suc
cessful educators, who have found In
the farm the consummation of their
Ideals of living and. greatest of all
there are successful farmers. who,
after a lifetime of toil, are satisfied
that no better profession can he at
tained. I cannot help thinking that under
the capable leadership of our state
president. F. A. Sikes. of Milton,
these men will exert a powerful in
fluence upon the destinies of the
Oregon farmer.
O. A. HILU Organizer.
ft males, the excess of females over
males being 1.225.1135. There were
260.239 marriages, equal to a rate of
14.6 per 10(10 of all the people, but
this was below the rate in 1908 and
below the average rate for the pre
vious 10 years. The births were near
ly double the number of deaths. There
were 914.621 of the former, equal to
that followed your former presi
dent's speech In Paris, when he call
ed attention to the decline of the pop
ulation In France.
"All England admires Mr. Roose
velt," added Mr. Groom. "No for
elgner ever visited Europe who gained
greater admiration and applause than
he has. They like his candor and his
courage. There mny have been some
criticism of his speech regarding Eng-
25.6 per 1000. and while this wasi land's policy in Egypt,' but I firmly
lower than in any year on record. It
far exceeded the number of deaths,
51S.075. which was the lowest on rec
ord. No fewer than 99.454 deaths
were those of children under 1 year
of age. It is worthy of note that of
the total number of deaths 20 per
cent, or 1 0S, 384. occurred In work
houses. Infirmaries, hospitals, or pub
lic asylums.
"The recent report shows that
London Is continuing to grow, for it
was estimated that the population In
lfi9 was 4.833.93S. The birth rate
in the English metropolis continues to
decline, as it has in nearly every
large city in the world. ind this
doubtless accounts for the applause
believed that a majority of the English
people approved it." Washington
Post.
To Head Off German Railway.
(Constantinople. The porte has en
tered into negotiations with British
capitalists to build a railway from
Hassorah to the north shore of the
Persian gulf, whereby the German
Itagdad r.illwa'y will be permanently
headed off from the gulf.
Men, not having been able to cure
death, misery and Ignorance, have
managed to make themselves happy
by not thinking of these things.
Pascal.
That school election yesterday was
as harmonious as a democratic "as
stmbly" in Oregon or a meeting of
the Umatilla county republican cen
tial committee.
Yojj Feel Solid and
WELL ARMED
WITH MONEY
IN THE BANK.
IT IS YOUR
BEST FRIEND
AND
IT IS SAFE
It is probably fortunate for the
home folks and the servants at Oys
ter Bay that Teddy had a chance to
relieve his mind in Africa and Europe.
Press dispatches say the people of
Nevada are enthusiastic over the prob
able staging of the big fight In their
n:ldst. In many respects Nevada Is
still a frontier settlement.
Nicholas Z. Mlrando In his race for
the presidency of Mexico, has adopt
ed the campaign slogan, "Three cent
beer." Evidently Mlrando Is a stu
dent of human nature.
One great need of Pendleton Is a
Y. M. C. A. building where young
inen could find wholesome employ
ment for their leisure hours.
Now that Roosevelt Is home the
cable companies will be able to re
duce the number of their operators.
Teddy is now domiciled at Oyster
Bay away from the maddening crowd,
nequiesrnt in pace.
Many wonder if Teddy Jr. shares
his father's views on race suicide.
That was a mighty good ball game,
even if the other fellows did win.
Eastern Oregon weather can usu
illy be depended upon.
The harvest of the golden fleece Is
ended.
Two more stars In Old Glory.
The Motor Was Working Well.
A bailiff went out to levy on the
contents of a house. The Inventory
began in the attic and ended In the
cellar. When the dining room was
reached, the tally of furniture ran
thru:
"One dining room table, oak.
"One set chairs (d) oak.
"One sldeboark-.oak.
"Two bottles whisky, full." .
Then the word "full" was stricken
out and replaced by "empty," and the
inventory went on In a hand that
straggled and lurched diagonally
across the page until it closed with:
"One revolving doormat. 6' Every-
The education to be i body's Magazine.
RFPLY TO .inGF. I.OWFI.I..
Pendleton, June 21. 1910.
To the Editor:
I thank you for the kind invitation
to use your columns, to continue a
discussion with Judge Lowell anent
assembly. T feel that further dis
cussion at this time, by individuals.
would be most untimely. The public
at large can but feel we are both
usurping space, which properly be
longs to the editor, and our friends
the enemy, would be only too pleased
to have us thrust and thrust again
that they might rub salt In the
wounds.
"A wise old owl sat on an oak,
The more he looked, the less he
spoke,
The less he spoke, the more he heard.
Let's imitate this wise old bird."
If I have failed to convince the
judge of his errors, my effort has been
wasted, and I feel after reading his
lengthy effusion, that those who
would destroy organization can but
produce chaos.
The judge is prepared to burgeon
on most any subject, and will no doubt
find ample use for his pen.
E. W. M'COMAS.
WOMEN IX PRI'.nOMIX ANCK.
"In England as in the United States
there are more women than men."
remarked ,S. A. Groom, a solicitor of
London, at the Arlington.
"The annual summary, which he
cently was published, states that the
estimated population of England and
Wales in tin- middle of last year was
Years of Suffering
Catarrh and Blood Disease
Doctors Failed to Cure.
Miss Mabel F. Dawklns, 1214 Lafay
ette St., Fort Wayne, Ind., writes:
"For three years 1 was troubled with
catarrh and blood disease. I tried sev
eral doctors and a dozen different rem
edies, but none of them did me any
good. 'A friend told me of Hood's Sar
saparllla. I took two bottles of this
medicine and was as well and strong
as ever. 1 feel like a different person
and recommend Hood's to any one suf
fering from catarrh."
Get It today In usual liquid form or
chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs
IN THE
BANK
ejrn-"ss.
. VOr CANNOT sncecfullv filit tlit luisi nos.s battles of
life wiiliout iiioncv. Oold makes die lest armor for these
business battles. Have von ever said to yourself; ''If T onlv
bad $.-,000 NOW."
THE
American National Bank
Pendleton, Oregon
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY
We are Sole
Manufacturers
and
2"'rs Distributors
of the
Celebrated
in
l -V" Celebrated M
ill! w
'SJt&ji Cream U
Mm Cream
EMM luul" ft
IW Powder rl
plglm Mt. Hood M
jpp Cream M
IPI Tallman &
Company b
h Leading
Druggist g
OLD LINK LIVE STOCK IN
SURANCE. Indiana & Ohio
Live Stock insur
ance Company
Of Crawfonlsvllle, I mil ana.
Has now entered Oregon.
Policies now good in every
state In the Union. Organ
led over 25 years ago. Paid
up Capital 1200.000.00. As
sets over $450,000.00.
UEMEMHEK, this Is NOT
n Mutual Live Stock Insur-
we company.
ftlark Moorhouse
Company
Agent, Pendleton, Or.
1 1 J Kast Court at.
Phono Maim M.
1 COLESWORTHY'S
5 International Stock Food
the old reliable
8 The best for your stock
1 Try it
Si
1 COLESWORTHY
127-12V b. Alia
JKKSK' CATARRH
Ely's Cream Balm
It quickly absorbed.
Civet Relief at Once.
It clean -mm, woollies,
heal? and protects
the dtecwwu mcni
brnue ri-HiihiiiK from
Cutarrh and drives
away a Cold in the
Head rjuicl.ly. Ite
ttores tlio Keimeg of
1' ifit'j and S.ih'll. Full size 50 eta.. ntDru
irUln or ly mail. Ia liquid form, V j rcnU.
tiy JJcotlwrs, 51 Wnrreu Htreot, New York,
VSrt-l
SAY FEVER
Stock Ranch For Sale
1600 acres, all fenced, ndjoins i im i-v on ..two fides, water on every
40 acreH, fine orchard and Kiirden, nine million feet of fine saw tim
ber, there is 40 acres of limerock on the ranch assays 9 per cent
lime, and no other jmc within Sd inilrs of It.
There Is no better stock ranch in eastern Oregon than this, it Is
well adapted to either sheep, cattle or horses. There Is a right on the
reserve goes with it. You can buy it with all the machinery on the
premises for 7.50 per acre, pnrt cash, Iouk time and low rate of In
terest on balance. ?J
The QUELLE
Gus La Fontaine. Prop.
Best 25c Meals in Northwest
First-class cookc and service
Shell fish in season
Lki Fontaine BIk., Maia St.
m OBVIOUS
The owner has made a fortuni'
ness, and now wishes to retire.
on this ranch In the stock bust-
E. T. WADE
PKX DLKTOX, OHKliOX.
iiniwdimiwii in ii i n n n 1 1 1 i i m ii 1 1 ii iin'i-'uiwi)iij-i'iii tmiiiiiiiiiwi
-wmrniTrrn ...arrvrarv.'.-:.: .i-.mmmmnrmimtm-.'tee
ft f f
i eiepnone
Main 536
East End Grocery
Ii always in front rank when It comes to freih 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
minium 1 1 'i i 'wwraturttP'.MrwiuKarju
Tou make a bad mistake when you
put off buying your coal until the
Fall purchase It NOW an.l mwora
the best Hock Spring coal the mines
produce at prices considerably lower
than those prevailing In Fall tad
Winter.
' By stocking up now you avoid ALA.
danger of being unable to secure It
when cold weather arrives.
HENRY KOP1TTKE
Phone Main 178.
tops the cough and haiaJa luntfi
LEGAL BLANKS of every descrip
tion, for count court, circuit court.
Justice court, real estate, etc., for
sals at East Oregonlan office.