East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, August 06, 1910, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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DAILY KA9T OREGOJOAJi. PENDLETON. OREGON,
8ATTHPAY, AVGUST 6, 1910.
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AH INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER.
rafcilslad nail., Weekly and Seay-Weekly
at PeadWtoa, t)rccoo, by tte
aABW OEBdONlAN PCBU8HIHa CO.
lCSCBlPnOli EATKA, ,
ally, os m bj sun tAM
ally, atx moatiia, by mall AM
ally, Una aontba. by mall l.tt
ally, oaa month, by mall 60
Baity, oaa year, by carrier T.60
Dally, atx mootna. by carrkr - ATS
Sally, tbrw mootna, by carrier 1M
ally, one month, by carrier 68
Weekly, ooa year, by mall 1.60
ITaraly, ell moot ha, by mall TS
STartlr, four moo the. by mall AO
(ml-weekly, one year, by mall.... 1.50
seal-Weekly, six mooiha, by mall... .IS
11 Weekly, four months, by mall.. AO
Fba Dally Eaat Orefoolan m kept 1 aala
tt the Oreron News Ca, 14T titb street,
Pertlaad, Ofroa.
lortnirest News. Co.. Portland. Oreroe.
Chicago Bureau. SJ9 Security Bafldlnr
Washington, D. C, Buret a, 501 roor-
Maath atraet. X. W.
Member Calted Press Aaoclatloa.
atercd at the poetoiflce at Peodletoa,
Bragoa. aa second class mall matter.
eataptooae Main 1
Official City and County Paper.
.. VCM.fc.l.ABEO .
WHAT'S YOVK IICIUVY"?
friend,
so
Where you going
fa."t?
VThat's your hurry?
Think of all the Joy you've
passed
In your hurry.
Take It easy, spare a minute for.
pleasant friendly talk.
There are blessings all about
you if you travel at a
walk.
There are smiles to cure your
worries, kindly words
your care to balk.
What's your hurry?
Won't the prize you strive for
weep ?
Must you hurry?
If It won't, it's surely cheap,
Cut the hurry!
Many years the world has wait
ed for your message or
your song
If the world still waits a little,
it will likely get along.
And the song will be the sweeter
and the message just as
strong.
What's your hurry?
Life rewards us day by day
What's your hurry?
Don't forget to take your pay
In your hurry.
By and by, you say? But listen;
by and by you'll have to
rest
With a ton of earth and granite
pressing firmly on your
chest
As a delicate reminder that to
travel slow is best.
What's your hurry?
Newark News.
In time this remedy is going to be
applied. The great wheat tracts of
this county are going to be divided op
and become Inhabited. This is as cer
tain as the fact that water runs down
hill and- that the sun shines In the
sky. Are we now ready to enter upon
this period of closer and greater de
velopment? Is the tide turning?
THE HOX011.V1U.I-: fOl'KSE.
In opening his campaign for the
republican nomination for governor
Judge Grant B. Dimick said:
"I feel that the course I am pur
suing as a candidate for the republican
nomination for governor is the most
dignified, open and honorable method
of securing the endorsement of repub
lican voters in the several counties of
this state." ,
Judge Dimick U right in this mat
ter. He is taking the open and hon
orable course. He is going straight
to the people for the nomination. It
he is nominated and elected he will
owe his office to the endorsement of
the people not to the support of any.
clique or the aid given him by any
special interest. He will have no
strings upon him and will be in po
sition to do his duty by all the people.
This very thing constitutes the
beauty of the direct primary. It -does
away with bossism and with machine
control. When a candidate seeks an
office he does not go to any political
boss with whom he makes a secret
deal which may interfere with the
honest discharge of his duty in the
event of his election. He gets his
nomination from the people and so is
free to serve them properly. If an
executive he will enforce the law alike
against great railroad systems as well
a3 against the humblest individual. If
a judge he will interpret the law alike
U the rich and the poor. If a law
maker he will be free to enact laws
for the common good. Labor using
corporations will have no greater pull j
with him than will labor unionists. To
the man who has secured office by
going straight to the people for en
dorsement all men and all Interests
look alike. He owes his nomination
and election to the votes of the people
not to any closed chamber compact
with a boss having the power to man
ipulate a convention and not to the
special interests that are always back
of every political boss.
The man who lets the bosses alone
and goes direct ts the people' for sup
port .akes the upright and tne honor
able course. He Is entitled to the
rtspect and the support of the people.
The candidate who refuses to do this
should be viewed with suspicion.
have anything to do with Inferiority
in your thoughts or your actions; that
whatever you do shall bear the stamp
of superiority, of excellence.
The intensity, the vigor, the per
sistency of our desires and longings
will have ever)- thing to ao with our
realization of them.
It does not matter how Improbable
or how far away this realization may
seem, or how dark the prospects may
be. if we visualize them as best we
can, as vividly as possible, hold to
them tenaciously and vigorously strug
gle to attain them they will gradually
become actualized, realzed in the life.
But a desire, a longing, a yearning
abandoned or held Indifferently will
vanish without realization. Human
life is so constructed that we live
largely upon hope; the faith that runs
ahead and sees what the physical eye
can not see.
.What we believe is coming to us is
a tremendous creative motive. The
dream of home, of prosperity, the ex
pectancy of being a person of influ
ence, of standing for sotnethng, of
carrying weight in our community
alt these things are powerful motives.
IfiWTUnPlnl'l
I II II II j-ll I-" JVI '
FlEfffl
A LINIMENT FOR EXTERNAL USE.
FATHER'S YACATIOX.
When sister's school was over
She thought that she would go
A-camping in the mountains
Where the cooling zephyrs blow.
Then mother faintly yielded.
She chose the surging sea,
And went where briny billows
Filled her soul with majesty.
Then Willie made selection.
And chose the rural charm
Of outing, sleeping and troutlng
On his Uncle Nathan's farm.
The twins, a pair of damsels,
Aged respectively 16,
Went to a summer hostel,
Where grass alone Is green.
And father stayed a-tolling.
Oblivious to his fate.
He can't afford vacation,
For he has to pay the freight.
FARCE OF PAItTY NAMES.
IS THE TIDE TURNING?
Cheerfulness and a bright disposition during the months before baby comes,
are among the greatest blessing a mother can bestow upon the little life about
to begin. Her happiness and physical comfort will largely govern the proper
development of the health and nature of the child. Mother's Friend contributes
much to the mother's happiness and health by the relief and mental comfort it
affords. It is a liniment composed of penetrating oils and medicines which
lubricate the muscles and tendons of the body, soothe the swollen mammary
glands, cause a gradual expansion of the akin and tissues, and aid in the relief
of nausea. The regular use of Mother's Friend greatly lessens the pain and
danger when baby comes, and assures a q.uick and natural recovery for the
motner. Mother's Friend is sold at drag stores. Write for our free book, con
taining valuable information for expectant Mothers. '
THE BRABFIELD CO., ATLANTA, OA,
la it possible that bonanza farming
has reached the limit in Umatilla
county and that the tide is now to
turn towards a closer system of agri
culture? There are some signs that indicate
as much. For example it is frequent
ly reported these days that big land
owners who rent their places are now
figuring on reducing the amount of
land they will rent to any one man.
From experience they are finding out
that when they rent too much land
to one tenant he Cannot farm it prop
erly. He lets the weeds grow to an
alarming extent and in his keen de
sire to farm as much land as possible
he allows the place to become gener
ally delapidated. So land owners are
figuring on cutting down the amount
Cf land one man may rent They say
that if a tenant will take a reason
able amount of land and farm it thor
oughly he can make more clear profit
than from an enormous acreage and
at the same time the land will be
kept in better condition.
Do"s this not indicate that the day
of the "big' farm" is passing?
Then there Is another feature to
the situation that is making big wheat
l.!nd owner think. It is the fact that
through years of prosperity and
through the eagerness of farmers to
luy aut their neighbors and increase
their hoi lings the price of wheat land
fcas been unduly advanced. Some men
are finding out that when they con.
sidr-r the value of their investments
whoat firming is not as profitable aa
they thought it was. Land owners
who desire to sell out learn to their
surprise that they cannot sell at the
pric-a at which they hold their land.
An investor cannot afford to pay so
much for land that yields only a bien
nial wheat crop. It would be more
profitable to Invest in government
bfnds than in some of our bonanza
wheat ranches.
However, there is a remedy and
firmer who want to see land values
maintained will do well to be think
lrg about it. The remedy lies In
closer farming. It lies in the digging
of more wells and the erection of
more wind mills. In the raising of
more hogs, more chickens and of
other crops along with wheat It lies
Jr. the raising of vegetable gardens,
made possible through well irrigation,
and In the irrigation of greater tracts
tliroug the use of the flood waters
J the Umatilla and other streams.
AFTEK THE DUNCE CAP.
Clark Wood, of the Weston Lead
er, goes straight to the point with the
following:
"The dean of the Lewiston Normal
faculty is in this county, hustling for
students. Last year this school re
ceived H20.000, or considerable more
tnan the sum which all three Oregon
normals asked for. Yet a howl arose
in the Oregon legislature that could
te heard from. Jericho to Kalamazoo,
and the worthy Bowermans and Coles
threw fits of vigorous indignation and
frothed at the mouth over the "graft.
ing normals" that dared ask for dor
mitories and maintenance. These
pious patriots succeeded finally in
closing the schools and forfeiting the
state's contract with their teachers
whereat the blind goddess sweated
blood. Meanwhile, Idaho with two
normals and Washington with three,
are proselyting In Oregon and cap
turing its best young people and
Eowerman Is asking for the governor
ship on his record as a school-killer.
By his election Oregon will establish
her eminent right to the dunce cap In
the sisterhood of states."
When the original pilgrims landed
at old Plymouth Rock there were no
v.arships at hand to fire salutes and
It was a rather cheerless welcome that
awaited them.
But if Jack Johnson buys a house
in the exclusive district of Brooklyn
Heights and tries to travel the pace
o the fast set he will soon lose the
championship.
Senator Gore is a blind man but ap
parently he was able to see through
the deal that Hamon and others tried
tc work.
It Is now less than two months un
til the opening of the district fair.
THE DIVINITY OF DESIRE.
Every life follows its ideal; is col
ored by It; takes on Its character; be
comes like it. You can always read
a man's character if you know his
ideal, for this always dominates his
life, says Orison Swett Marden, In
"Success Magazine."
Our Ideals are great character
molders and have a tremendous shap
ing influence. Our heart's habitual
desire soon shows itself In the face
out-pictures itself in the life. We can
not long keen from the face that
which habitually lives in our minds,
We develop the quality of the
thought, emotion, ideal or ambition
which takes the strongest bold upon
us. Therefore, you should let every
thing In you . point toward superiority.
Iet there be an upward trend In your
thoughts. Resolve that you will never
(Medford Mail-Tribune.)
Humanity may politically be broad
ly divided into Jtwo general classes,
progressive and reactionary, or, If you
will, radical and conservative. Under
whatever name political parties pa
rade, In reality they are one or the
other, and political history of nations
is the story of the struggles of these
elements. The progressive is the par
ty of new ideas, of change and of ad
vance. Tht reactionary is the party
of stand-pattism, of vested rights and
plutocracy.
All new parties voice the demands
of the people for change and all start
existence as radicals. As the radical
of today is the conservative of to
morrow, so the radical party at birth
becomes the conservative with age.
The radical republican party of Jef
ferson became the conservative of
Monroe, and the radical democratic
party of Jackson became the conser
vative of Buchanan. The radical re
publican party of Lincoln's time be
came the conservative of McKinley.
Under Orover Cleveland, the demo
cratic party was conservative. Under
Bryan, it became radical, and the con
servatives joined the republicans. Un
der Parker It again became conser
vative, and the radicals in It either
refused to go to the polls or voted
for Roosevelt, who showed radical
tendencies. Taft got the conservative
upport of both parties, oiirf through
Roosevelt's Influence, the votes of the
republican radicals.
The civil war created animosities
and prejudices that have since blind-
d t'.-.e people to the real issues. The
south became solidly democratic be
cause the democratic party was the
white man's party not for any other
economic problem involved. The
north became republican through the
ccntiued waving of the bloody shirt
The large mass of voters vote it
straight blindly because of the pre
judices born and bred In the bone.
not because of the principles involved.
This has left the Independent vote.
the vote that thinks, holding the bal
ance of power.
There are today both radical and
Bonservatlve wings In both parties
and their "differences are irreconcila
ble. There is vastly more difference
within the parties than there Is be
tween them. Under present condi
tions, it would puzzle anyone to define
what constitutes a republican or what
constitutes a democrat. The defi
nition of one would answer for the
other. If Cannon and Aldrich ar5
republicans, then La Follette and
Cummins are not. If Harmon is a
democrat, Bryan is not. But Har
mon and Cannon have much more in
common than La Follette and Aid-rich.
It would be an excellent thing to
drop the old party names and adopt
the more honest English system of
calling parties by what they stand
for radicals and conservatives to
get rid of the associations and pre
judices that blind the people and
keep them hoodwinked and Serve as
cloaks to promote their fleecing, in
order to place elections tipon the
merits of the principles Involved.
Russell was being questioned by his
mother regarding some mischief which
he was supposed to have committed.
"Now. Russell." said she, "If you
don't tell me the truth, I'll have to
whip you.
"But, mamma, I've lied to you be
fore and you never whipped me," re
plied the boy.
Ely's Cream Balm
i quickly aiitorbed.
Cies Relief at Once.
It cleau-, foothes,
aeuls iiuil protects
the diseavil mera
orane riu!tjns from
Calarrli artl drives
away a Cold in the
itorcs tl,e Senses of HAY FEVER
Taste and Smell. Full size 50 cts., nt Drug
gists or by mail. In liquid form, 73 cents.
X!y Brother, Z", W'arreu Street, Now York.
I
All kinds ol
Farm Ma
chinery and
Extra Parts
Made to Order
General
Jobbing
Structural Casting
and Foundry Work
Repair work on all kinds of machinery a specialty.
Steam and Gasoline Engine Repairing
Automobile Repairing
Satisfaction Guaranteed we make our work FIT
....Pendleton Iron Works....
Pendleton. Oregon
Marion Jack, Pres. A. F. May, Mgr.
M. L. Akers, Sec. and Treas. .
Headquarters For
Toilet Goods
We are Sole Manufacturer, nad
Distributor of the Celebrated
F 4 1
TOILET CREAM
OLD CREAM
TOOTH POWDER
MT. HOOD CREAM
Tallman & C o.
Leading Drug-gists of Kaatarm
Oregon.
mi
$10
Good For
This Amount
$10
If used on or before next Monday, August 8. this advertise
ment will be accepted as $10.00 as part payment for a six or
nine months' Scholarship In the
Pendleton Business College
An excellent chance to save $10.00 and $10.00 saved 1s
$20.00 made. Only one of these will be accepted on each
scholarship and
Only Ten Scholarships Will Be Sold
at thl9 figure, so you'll have to hurry.
School Opens Monday, Sept. 6
and your scholarship will be dated from that date, or later, If
you desire.
Cor. Main and Webb Sts. Phone Main 148
Call NOW. E7 O. DRAPER. Pres.
OLD UJT1 LITE 8TOCK IN
SURANCE. Indiana & Ohio
Live Stock Insur
ance Company
Of Crawfordsrille, tm--Has
now entered Oregon.
Policies now good In eyery
state in the Union. Organ
aed over 16 years ago. Paid
np Capital $300,000.00. As
set over $450,000.00.
REMEMBER, ttda la NOT
Mutual Live Stock Insur
ance company.
Mark Moorhouse
Company
Agent, Pendleton, Or
119 East Court St.
COLESWORTHVS I
IntemationalJSStock Food
the old reliable
The beat for your stock
Try it
fir
ft
So
0
0
W
I COLESWORTHY I
I 127-129 E. Alt
ThG
Known For Its Strength
First National Bank
PENDLETON, (OREGON
CAPITAL, SURPLUS and
UNDIVIDED PROFITS .
RESOURCES OVER
1450
B,
000
I SECURITY
Just Arrived
Quality Toilet Soap,, fine floral odors,
10c cake, 3 for 26c. Look at our
window.
SPECIAL Duroy's Claret Soda,
6 cents. Delicious and refreshing1. -
Tt. J. DONALDSON,
RellaLle Tr- jglst.
MUKSWUXWS
The East Oreconian is eastern Oregon's representative paper. It
leada and the people appreciate it and show it by their liberal patro
axe It is the advertising medium of this section.
The QUELLE
Gas La Fontaine, Prop.
Beat 25c Meals in North
west First-cl ass cooks and service
Shell fish in season
La Fontaine BIk., Mait St.
You Make a
Bad Mistake
When jron put off buying your
Coal
until Fall purchase It NOW
and secure the best Rock
Springs coal the mines produce
at prleea considerably lower than
those prevailing In Fall and
Water. jjg
nv ntruAt I n t nn w.. -
avoid ALL danger of being an-' j
able to secure It
weather arrives.
when cold
Henry Kopittke
Phone Main 178.
it ft?
1
: i .:
Copyrights Ac.
AnmnamHrf katrh mi J i-wrimi .
qnKkly nsirrnlu omt ol'lnmn freii whclltrr nr,
Inrpiiliiiti l proonlrf piuer.i. .)(. :-!mi,titti,'i,
tloii.o'rlclljr ronlMotil '.ill. H'lfinUHOK pi' I'nli'iil.
3v it fre.. OMfflt .filtry fur .(rurtnii 1h!mIm.
rniunu i tHiim i.i- in.-', y.:.n A .'. rwuit
tjrc'ttt nof(. without ciif-'.?. in tlie
Scientific Jte.ca.t
eolation ut nf dfifi'titlt l-mrtHit. 'lerm-. f
II J W if 1 1 V WWj ' IUII
Urnnefa OfDce. 635 F 8t- WaihlDtttoo,
FOLEYSHONFrHTAII
Cures Coldai Prevents Pneumooss)
4