PAGE FOVH OAaXAsIOKEW)XLLN. rEXDLETOX. OltXUON. TCESDAY, JCXY It, ltlO. ciuur PAGES. 4 IM'LI'KM'tXT NEWPPAf'EH. tt rd)on. Oruon. br tb CO. SIBHCRIPTIOS BATES, a!.', tliv jr, bf sail $5.00 J it. n awtiii. Dj mm .... itrr mooUm, b mail.. olj. oae OioottL, bj null Iit uot yrar. by carrier.... t.lj. tlx mootbi. bj rmrrlr... tviif. three motub. by rrlr. b:ij. ooe m.oto. by crrir... !. 4 jer, bj mil "eiT. tlx oiooth. by sail... -. f.mr month, br oatl... 2.&0 &o T 60 175 1 M l.bO .75 .50 1 50 .5 .50 ani W id yrr. by Ball. omti:j. u mvoiiM. by sail... Ii9i riy, fcmr nootba. by nail.. Tt Dally ilaat Oregoouuj la ktpt oa aala t t!. Vrrton Nw Co.. 147 6th Itrctt. Portland. Olrnm. jrtbt Newi. Co., Portland. Oretoo. ( tararo Hurras, t SJ Security Holldlnf. Mhltift oo. D. C. Herein. 501 fcrnr (MQtb (trett. N. W. Member lotted ITeaa Aaoclattoa. Entered at the poaOMflce at Oodletoo, rv. aa aecond claaa Ball Batter. ;pnoae Mala 1 official City and County Paper. '; ' -. i - e i v L-t me live .n a house by the Ride of the road Where th- nice of men go by The nw-n who are good and the men who are bad, Aa good and an bad aa L I would not sit in the scorner's eat. Or hurl the cynic'a ban Let me live In a house by the aide of the road And be a friend to man. I see from my house by the side of the road By the side of the highway of life. 4 . i The men who piess with the ar- ! dor of hope. The men who are faint with the strife. Eut I turn not away from their smiles nor their tears, Uoth part-? of an infinite plan Let me live In a house by the Hide of the roa-l And be a friend to mm. Sam Walter Fosa. , ! :i abusixc; the ixmvnvK. Ti e initiative privilege is a valu able right and the people of Oregon are f rtunate in the possession of the ame it is a right houM be uxed with though that ! discretion. '-.If ' the Init'atlve is Invoked Indiscrimi nately it will be of Injury rather than of benefit. t, the nature of- things the fnltl a'ive should be used for the settle men, of questions that are of general tat Interest and questions upon which the people at large are capable of Juiging. It was proper that the direct primary law be enacted under trio Initiative. The law could not have been enacted In any other way. Legislatures elected under the old convention system would never have passed the direct primary' 'aw' It was proper that the corrupt practices act enacted under the initiative , eating fact that he has not been re- n-l referendum. That law pertains moved from office despite the fact t-- political morality and the peopte : that he testified against Secretary were able to Jud;re of the merits of j Pallinger during the recent investiga th law. It Is alright to f-eftle the ( tion. Neither has Direr-tor Newell norma; school problem under the In I'la'lve. The legislature has utterly Hit! 10 namie me quej-uon. 3ut measures have been ubmitted ! for months. He has predicted their for consideration at the coming elec- . removal yet they are still at the head tion 'hat are plainly "out cf order." j of the service. What will the out For instance both the manufacturers J Mme r,e? It )s possible that Ballln- n 1 the labor unions have submitted 2er v !!! go Instead. Wouldn't that !! for th creation of employers liability acts. Now It is evident that ea-.h bill as proposed is designed to hen.'fit the element proposing It. The manufacturers bill Is probably unfair i to hbor and quite llke.ly the labor union bill Is unjust to the inanufac-( tur"-s. Poth these measures should be voted down and the subject left i with the leglnlature. In the legls lure the matter may be worked out and doubtless a compromise meaaur aitr"" upon. J Put the most glaring abuse of th i Initiative Is on the part of those who Iisve proposed county division meas ures Right bills have been filed ak Ing for the creation of new counties or for the changing of boundary lines. In each ens the question Involved Is f a purely loral nature; not of tot Interest. It will b Impossible for the people of the state to Judge Of theso measures with Intelligence. II division disputes should have been rild In abeyance pending the passage of a law calling J"or the settlement Of nu'h disputes by the people di rectly concerned. The county dlvls-li-nisfs however, have refused to wait They have submitted their bills In hopes the people will vote Mindly for them. They have abused th Initiative privilege and they should be rebuked for doing no. Rvery county division bill should he votd down. 'Insist that th Initiative be us1 only when It may be Invoked with propriety. A MIVIOXARY FARMER. Out on the Umatilla reservation, I l:v. J. it. Cornel. son, Presbyterian missionary among the Indians. U prac- ir.g "dry firming" and is succeeding xhlt yer he has a garden in iRhlch he is raisir.g .weet corn, pota- t . t'jiah. vanu;ou;.e and water melons. He is using ordinary' land MKh as l. u-ti eiclu.-iveiy for wheat raUir.g by his neighbors. He has not ,iristtt-d his garden lit all. He raises vegetable rr.ereiy by careful tillage or the -i; an I by :he use of fcrti liirrs that are available. He raised a g.-'M garl-r. Ir-". y-ir in j.it ,,f the fJc: tha". it w.if a dry season. The )..s.--f Rev. Orne'.l.son In this iine Indicates the possibilities of this section of the state when the l.r;.er efforts are put forth. This country is go-id for southing better 1'iar. the ra':ng of a crop of wheat every other yenr. Ey proper tillage and by sr.:l '.e rotation of crops an annual yield may be secured through out mo-t . ' the county. All th: ,y -dry farmin?" If the ln.!o r. rs -.v-iuM bu: make use of tV-ir opr o:-tur.!t!. s to water their Irinl. through water pumped from C; ar.d through using the flood wa ters of the Umatilla and tributary s.re.-.ms they .-.-.u-. .! mu:h r.tter. On flood irrigated land, so it is esti mate', enough alfalfa may be raisej annually to pay interest on $500 per acre. That would be better than wheat raising even when bumper i crops are harvested and sold at high price. Some day the farmers in this vi cinity are going to make use of the'.r opportunities. They will not sit by t,"ieei jui h;h.i ine water to now i ; to the sea while the growing crops ; n'-c-.l moisture. ; Men like Rv. Cornelison ten! to hasten this day because they po'.nt lout the poslbII!tie3 of the country. It Is good work too. The man who "makes two blades of grass grow where but one gr-,v before" Is of ser vice to humanity. THH WORLD IS STKRX. F-r.I!i:nnl PInney Eirle. the art!t '. affinity fnrr.e. says he will reform and have no more- "afflrfty" wives It matters little to the world whnt F'rdinan! pjr.ney Earle may think or do. H-- Is of as mj"h importance a a wart on a to;t l. Xo more. It i' of sie-nificanre though that this Mlo-.v has found tlmt it does not do to disregard the conventional rus oon'-r-rnin-i dcpn"v and mnrtnall'v "thera haye learned the same lesson, fome of them are of the class of v hi' h E -rle i a part or waas. Others are of a lower strata and they are designate J by terms more repulsive tban those use, when pevp!e speak j of the elite who have taken the prim i rose pr-th. The world has many j faults, but It la sound of heart and i gives promise of always remaining j that way. This is a truth that all Isl.ou'd know but which some. at times, forget. snix ON" DECK. The presence in this city yesterday : A. P. Davis, chief engineer of the '-clamntlor. service, recalls the Inter- who also gave damaging testimony against the secretary. Against these two men Balllnger has been storming be tcrrib: after njl the whitewash that has ben use- upon him? Speaker Cannon Is out defending PrnMor A:,1.-t-l, ' nator ba ler of the sen- jate - But from appearances Uncle Jr e 'il; l.ave about all he can do If answer the critics of the speaker of ,h" llT hou";- j What ! when th v.!" happen to those slates the work of people "revlsa" tr,p assembly? When they meet In conventions the Irish are known as Hibernians. Pendleton bns. never had a fatal auto'r.ccldent We don't want any. rRrisixo IV THE AIR. "Z. Ill sailing at 3 p. m. for Mann helm." Th alr-h'p's orders were mor like a fancy of Jules Verne 'han reality to the writers In the summer of 1S09 at Frankfort-on-the-Maln. It -is (-. ,-.! of Count Zeppelin's fi nal testa before beginning regui-ir tj-.iffi'- I'll-. .ummer. A throng of Placid Germans srnnned the bulletin board as 'bey would a railway or steamship table. "What about the weather?" A st .rfl- l Teuton glanced wi'h surprise ,v the skopt c. saw he was from America, and replied "If you are going, be her: Zeppebn haii-i wether or no -'-ith'r," That had the convincing sound of near air-navl-gstlon. At 2:.'!fl a ctronir wind swept over the "air-harbor" a long massive bull-ling like a steamship pier, that held 4i feet of airship. The morning had been breezy, and heavy gust g-lffen--d the flags Rilloons on the ground v-ere nklng from side to s;d and i ha spectit irs held on to their hats. Fashion arr v.-d in touring tarn. Those who were "bo-iked" for the alr-voy-1 age aeernod to be famitfar with sea- I travel. The men wore yachting caps, the women long storm coats and hats b.tte-e, doWn by v,il!t Marine bi r.ocu'ars ani small cameras were slung frJm the shoulder. Ti-. s rsuticial atmosphere deepened Inside of the air-harbor where a large c-rp cf -air-men" made ready for he --y;iB. Ore immediately lost all Idea tha- the Rlunvnu-n skeleton of this mammoth hull encased n c,nh was simply stowed with great a chamber, ar.,J float-! i:ke a balloon. A c.i'n ,.f anchors htin? from the '... .-..:. of r.,p lay along the ''.cks of tj, f re an.j a,, car r. ...rob; rz rnm !aunch In s;ie and ?! pesrar.-e. Thes were of soli, nlu-tn!'u:n- Punwales having side- r v r-n! cangways for going aboard Narrow footways of th same mitf. r:al ra-d between both cars and the ciih'n spnee and amld-hips. Twenty seven no'sy passengers and friends who were seeing them off. clambered along a slender rail toward staring mica ports of a seml-clrcular door set in a bow-shapd companlonwav. which cuts the win-l so It doe, not imped the ship's flight, and prevents drafts from sweep'ng the lone cabin whh h Is provide, with leather divans along the sides. Thoueh this enclos ed spiop j, on!y ,Pn fect w(1(?t t wag like walking along the passageways from salon to smoking room on "a steamer. The imr.re.sion was inten sified by ;de port.. In sponsons. con verting the cabin, amidships Into an open promenade d- ck. in fair weath er. Hven mor,. c--nvinc!ne were pas sengers" voice, from remote parts of the craft From "Mak'ng a Business of Flying." in August Technical V.'orld Micazine. HUT HE WASN'T. Senator Derew. In his Washington residence on his 7th birthday, told a reporter that his health was perfect. "You do. in lee 1. sir." said th re-1- -rter. h. artily. ":0ok the picture of health." "Tes" s .id the senator -j shouldn't have s-.iI I was wU if my appearance ;"',n 1 h"nr " "Ut- A ce'f.contradic b.ry statement Is merely ludicrous lou have hear al,out the census ta ker? "A r,"-n''i" taker rang th bell of a I..l;yer place residence the other day and an elderly gen-k-man ornd the door. M ,T - ... , i n iiko to see the head of the house.' ai, ho rensus taker 'f-sh: Xot so loud" whispered the elderly gentleman '.Vow, what is it? I'm the head of the house'" P.-troit Free Press. Ti:i:orr.n run meadow. The .summer sun -was soft and bland As they vent through the 'meadow land. , The little win-l that hardly shook Tiie silv-r of th sleeping brook nien- the gold hair about her eyes A mystery of mysteries! So he must often pause and stoop. And all the wanton ringlets loop Behind her dainty ear, emprise Of .'.-- ev-nt and many sighs. Af-ro.- t -And yet :e ptr-ani was scarce a step, she f..:,rd to try the lean- .n, ne to still her sweet alnrm Tust lif; her over on li s arm. She could not ke. p the narrow wav, For still the little feet -om strav, -And ever must he l,en.i t' undo The tangled grasses from her shoe From dainty rosebud lips In pout. Must k'ss the perfect flower out: Ahl little cofiuette: Fair deceit! Some thing are bitter that were sweet. Wii'lam Dean Howells. SCIENCE NOTES. China's capital. Peking, has sup planted its Insanity wells with a i thoroughly modern water works sys tem, including a filtration plant. There are more than 400 wireless stations on the coast of the maritime nations. The adulteration of food in France is said to result in a profit of J100, of.,i.(M,o a year. Although Aberdeen is the homo of S"tch gr mite, a shipment of 350 tons recently was exported to that city ffom South Caroline quarries to meet a demand for a variation in color from the native stone. Cadets at the United States service college at Windsor. England, are taugh the principle, 0f aeronautics. Following Philadelphia's example, New Y'-rk has established a free per manent exhibition of building mate rials. The olive tree pro-luces alternate crops, a full yield generally being fol lowed by a scanty one th" next year. A new sanitary mouthpiece for tel ephones is made flush with the trans mitter case to avoid Merni catching - o!-Me-. TIIE DENTIST I. A I (, 1 1 1 il). At a r'-ront dinner of the Authors' clul, iu London to Owen Sfamnn. the editor of Punch, Walt, r Emanuel an other member of the staff of Punch, referred to the fact that the man with the largest sense of humor he had ever struck as an Englishman a dentist. "I had a friend," said Emanuel, "who hud suffered agony from a toothache for two days and nights be fore he could got the courage to visit a dentist and have the offending mo 1 ir extracted. Rernea3r,e CATARRH Ely's Cream Balm RgS It quickly absorbed. fen COtO Oi,e, R..M . Once. MfeyWM 1 1 cicun -es, soot Iii-s, g."i rtvcn W? heal an l j-ioteeU GV, cAic the (ii-e-m ,f ,,,,. W S&WA Wane resulting from Cut .mil U!ni drives iw.iy u CnM iu the tores 'L Senses of I! AY FEVER i-M.e.uil II. Full six 50 eta. , at lint. f.-u"r ' I" li'iui 1 form, ,.; ents. 1.1 .: Uci i, 5'1 Waireu Utrect, Kew York. Women's Secrets There is one man in the United States who hat perhaps heard more worn-. n't secrets than any other man or woman in the country. These secrets are not secrets of guilt or shame, hut the secrets of suffering, and they have been confided to Dr. R. V. Fierce in the hope and expectation o( advice and help. 1'aat (ew of these women huve been disappointed in their ex pectations is proved by the fact that ninety-eight per cent, of ell women treated by Dr. Fierce have bc-cn absolutely and cltojether cured. Such a record would he remarkable if the cjiics treated were numbered hj UunJreik oi ly. But when that record applies to the treatiient of m-.:rc than half-a- mil lion women, in a practice of over 40 years, it ia nhcnomenal. ajd entitles Dr. Pierce to the f-ratituje accorded h.ra by women, as the first of ap.cia-iits in the treatment o! women's dbeaes. i.cry sick woman may consult Dr. Tierce by letter, absolutely without c!iar4e. -V!! rcplie are maiit-J, sealed in perfectly plain envelopes, without t-.y p; ir.tini or advertising whatever, upon them. Write without fear aa with cut ftc, to World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Prest., LuiTjIo, N. V. lii. PIKRCE'S FAVORITIJ PRESCRIPTION IVtxl.o Woalt Womoi: 'T't-oii,- Slolt Women V oil. "Finally he found himself In the dentist chair. He refused to take gas. Tlie dentist pulled the tooth, which seemed to have been bed.ded in ce ment, so hard did it pull. My friend lay back In the chair writhing- in two kinds of pain and the aching tooth pounding harder ICE IgMkCE but it mimmm mce eu3 m?'m w. I Si ; .--- I FIIT IT IHraEIMME CREATE OR CRUMBLE. Every man should create a foundation for success before old age crumbles his earning powers. A small savings account started today, NOW, will start you on the road to independence. The farther you travel ,n this road the less you will wish to turn aside. We will pay you 4 per cent interest on the money you put in our bank and compound the interest everv six months. THE American National Bank Pendleton. Oregon UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY The First National Bank PENDLETON. OREGON Report of the Condition, June 30, 1910 to the Comptroller of the Currency Condensed Resources Loans and Discounts , Overdrafts . . U. S. Bonds (at par) . Other Bonds and Warrants Banking Building Cash and Exchange . . Total Liabilities Capital Stock Surplus and Undivided Profits Circulation Due to Banks . Deposits . . Total I, G. M. Rice Cashiei of the above named bank do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. G. M. RICE, Cashier Subscribed and sworn to before me. this 1 st day of July. 1910. C. K. CRANSTON, SEAL Notary. Public for Oregon Km than ever. Meanwhile the dentist held up the extracted tooth and laughed uproarously. " 'What's the Joke' groaned my friend. "Why, I pulled the wrong tooth,' said the dentist In another spasm of laughter." .-r ' -. T;V r-tj r " $1,655,082.16 48,149.54 . 250,000.00 11,875.25 10,000.00 311,014.13 $2,286,121.08 $250,000.00 201,174.21 240,000.00 186,824.74 1,408.122,13 $2,286,121.08 Headquarters For Toilet Goods We are Sole Manufacturer and Distributor of the Celebrated F4S TOILET CREAM COLD CREAM TOOTH POWDER nd BIT. HOOD CREAM Tallman & Co. Leading DruggldU of Oregon. Eaaterj OLD U" LITE STOCK IN 8CRAXCE. Indiana & Ohio Live Stock insur ance Company Of Crawfordnrllle, Indian. Ha now entered Orogon. Policies now good in every etate In the Union. Orsan ted over 25 yean ago. Paid up Capital 1200.000.00. Aa ets over $450,000.00. REMEMBER, Ula la NOT a Mutual Lire Stock Insur ance company. Mark Moorhouse Company Agent, Pendleton, Or. Ill East Court at, Pfaoue MaU . ? 9 tULWWORTHY'S 2 I International Stock Food .i ii t . it tne old reliable I The best for jour stock Try it COLESWOR.THY 127-129 E. Aita The QUELLE Gus La Fontaine, Prop. Best 25c Meals in North west First-class cooks and service Shell fish in season Li Fontaine Blk., Main St. Tou makeVnad mlxtukc when you put off buyln your Con until the Fall purchase it vnw nn.i the bent Hock Spring conl the mine. produce at price connlderahly lowar than those prevailing In Fnll an4 Winter. By stocking up now you avoid ALI danger of being unable to secur It when cold weather arrives. HENK KOP1TTKE Phone Main 178. SO Y PAHS' 'tfW' COPVUiiMTJtlo. AnT(-.ll.'"f:.ii'"- a .'.:irh a:, 3 ,1.- .. , ; (, ., , q:ilcklf i,.f-irtit'n inr ,miii:.ti fi..,. n iti-lttor r. r,i,M.ll,.n ;. !. i i"f .- , :,,,..,,' ttiiiKlrlsllreilili,lKiill!i. I'l'I'TnK nil l-nlnn. -"I '" "I'teM ii. ' - ir.a p.ii..:ii. r.-ltriitfl tnkivi tlir'.iu.-li M..i .1 r-. ri-i'iil :f l.tl W'.fKT Villi. .(It li. -... it. ' .,) Sclcniiflc Jiiitfiican ChIhLh.h of mif n'MMidili J iiiriuil. 1'ortti kb $ . inr ; lour muntlit 1. tioidbvall new ! er aflliSS Co New Tort Prmicb onica. ca IT WailiiLuiou. u C