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

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DAILY EAST OKBGOXIAN, PEUDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY", OCTOBEK. 6, 1910.
EIGHT PAGES.
AN INDEPENDENT NKW8PAPKB.
rabllahul Pally. WeAly and Semi-Weekly
at Protlltton, Ortgon, by Ue
AST OKKliUMUN PUBLISHING CO.
8LB8CR11T10N KATBB.
ally, one year, by mall $5.00
ally, ii months, br mall 2.50
ally, tbre oaths, by mall 1.15
ally. os month, by mall 60
alii, one fear, by carrier 7.50
lly. all months, by carrier S.T5
umilj. three months, by carrier...... 1.95
Oallj, one month, by carrier 85
Weekly, one year, by mall.. 1.50
Weelrly, six months, by mall 75
Weekly, four month, by mall 50
mi-weekly, one year, by mall.... 1.50
(mi-Weekly, six month, by mall... .75
4aml-Weekly, (our months, by mall. . .50
Tbe Dally Kast Oreronlan la kept on aale
t tbe pregon Newa Co., 147 6th street,
fort laud. OrtiHi.
orthweat News. Co.. Portland. Oregon.
Chicago Bureau, V0 Security Building.
Washington. D. C, Bureau. ' 501 Four
Mntb street, N. W.
Member Vnlted Press Asoclatlon.
Entered at tbe postofflce at Pendleton,
Oracon. as second clasa mall matter.
telephone Main 1
Official City and Couaty Paper.
union :
SOME BRIGHT DAY.
Joy is coming right along
Some bright day;
Hints of flowers and of song
Some bright day.
And that mocking-bird I see
Where the blossoms used to be;
He'll be singing sweet to me
Some bright day.
Winter will not seem so drear
Some bright day;
There'll be sweetness in the air
Some bright day.
From the windows of the blue
All the Promised Land you'll
view;
Angels waving hands to you
Some bright day!
Hasten o'er the meadows sweet.
Oh bright day!
Scatter violets at Love's feet.
Kind, bright day!
Kiss the shadow all away,
Leaj us where Love's sweet
hearts stray,
To the red deeps of the May,
Kind, bright day!
Frank L. Stanton in . Atlanta
Constitution.
4
J
PICK YOUR MEN.
At this time there is virtually noth
ing at issue between the republican
and democratic parties. Throughout
the entire country people are now
gr-'uped as progressives and reaction
aries rather than as democrats and
riT'U'-ilieans.
In Oregon there is absolutely noth
ing at Issue between the two old par
ties. The live issues In the present
election are not partisan issues. The
Important questions that are up are
ol a moral rather than a political na
ture. One question is, shall the direct
primary law be observed In spirit and
ti letter or shall bossism be restored
through the operations of the assem
bly scheme? Another Important ques
tion at Issue in this elettlon Is shall
the people elect legislators who believe
In and subscribe to statement No. 1
or shall they choose men who want
to go back to the old system of giving
Urrted States senatorshlps to the
highest bidders and the shrewdest
manipulators?
Because the Issues Involved are not
partisan Issues people should not fol
low party lines in this campaign. It
would be silly and wrong to do so at
a time like this. The men who say
"Vote the party ticket and vote It
traight," make an Improper plea.
That plea made under present circum
stances Is an insult. It is an appeal
to embecllity. Furthermore the men
who make that plea are not sincere.
This because they themselves refuse
to vote their ticket straight. They
themselves are out with long knives
and are fighting men of their own
party who refuse to line up with
them. w
In this campaign the East Oregon
Ian is disregarding party lines entire
ly. The paper has been supporting
and will continue to support the men
It believes best fitted for the offices
to which they aspire and men who up
hold principles that are for the best
Interests of the public. (
The East Oregonian supports re
publicans and It supports democrats.
This paper worked earnestly for the
nomination of Judge Dlmlck, a re
publican, for governor. Tiia paper
supported C. A. Barrett for the repub
lican nomination for joint senator and
It la now supporting him for election
against a democratic opponent.
This paper is suporting Dr. C. J.
Smith for state senator and it Is back
ing J. W. Maloney for county judge.
It supports Senator Smith because he
Is far and away the most capable
man in the county for the position
and has a record that makes him
richly entitled to a re-election. Mr.
Maloney is supported for judge be
cause he has business ability and ex
perience that particularly fits him for
the post and because his personal In
tegrity has never been questioned and
cannot -be questioned.
Other candidates are being sup
ported for similar reasons. Some of
those candidates are republicans and
some are democrats. This
paper
cares no more about their partisan
beliefs than It does about the color
of their hair. It Is not a partisan
fight
In making up your mind how you
are going to vote in' November use
ycur Intelligence, Mr. Voter. Pick
out men In whom you have confi
dence and men who stand for the
principles In which you believe. Don't
li.-ten for a moment to talk of party
regularity. That is all rot.
JIM MALONEY.
Vmatiila county is a great business
concern. This year the county col
lected In taxes the sum of $441,663.
That money will be expended during
the year for various purposes, notably
for the maintenance of schools, the
construction and repair of roads and
bridges, payment of salaries and cur
rent expenses.
Now in view of the important work
that is to be done and the large sum
of money handled annually It Is of
vast Importance that the county judge
who Is the business head of the coun
ty, should be a man of the proper
calibre. He shold be a man of good
business capacity and of business ex
ptrience. He should be a cool head
ed and practical man. He should
know the ways of the business and
industrial world. He should know
the wiles of shrewd men who wish
to get the county's good money and
he should be a man of sufficient In
tegrity to stand faithfully and firmly
for the Interests of the county.
In J. "SV. Maloney such a man is now
running for county judge. For many
years Mr. Maloney has been a resi
dent of this county and his ability
and character are well known. That
be makes a good official people know
because he served two terms as county
recorder and served in a most capable
manner. Later as cashier ut the Pen
d'eton Savings bank Mr. Maloney had
one of the most important business
positions in eastern Oregon. He made
good. When he resigned that position i
to devote his time to farming and to
lather business interests the owners
I of that bank deeply regretted his ac-
,tlen. They had reasons "for their
i feelings because no local banker ever
held the confidence and respect ot
people of all classes so thoroughly as
does Jim Maloney.
In running for county judge Mr.
Maloney is not seeking the salary that
attaches to that office. He is making
the race because scores and scores of
people of all political faiths urged
him to run. They want him to run
because the office is an important
one and they want it filled by a man
in whose business ability and In whose
honesty they had confidence.
If Mr. Maloney is elected county
judge the business affairs of this
county will be conducted In a busi
nesslike manner and the administra
tion will never be charged with graft
or dishonesty.
VIVE LA PORTUGAL!
The news of the revolution in Por
tugal shows that the world Is advanc
ing even In Its darkest corners. For
centuries Portugal has been ruled by
a dynasty that has been notoriously
unfit. Royalty has held Its unjust
sway through the power of the army
and navy and through the Ignorance
and superstition which the govern
ment fostered among the people.
But with the passing years the light
of the modern world has penetrated
the kingdom of the Braganzas. Peo
ple have grown tired of bowing be
fore titled plnheads and libertines,
who have neither governing capaelty
nor proper personal morality, and they
have grown tired of seeing the money
of the nation squandered as King
Manuel has been spending It. So they
have risen In their power and have
kicked Manuel and his retinue out of
doors.
Long live the republic of Portugal!
No newspaper can succeed that Is
willing to serve as an organ for any
political clique or party. The experi
ment has been tried here and else
where many times and the result has
been Invariably the same. The duty
of a legitimate newspaper Is to the
public at larger and only by serving
the public at large can a newspaper
hope to live and enjoy permanent
prosperity.
King Manuel lost his throne be
cause of infatuation for a French
dancer, so it is reported. But Manuel
is not the first king who has lost out
because of a woman. It Is an old
story, but is the fault with the man
or the woman?
Is It possible those suicides felt that
after the Round-up was 'over life was
no longer worth living?
The horse Partisanship has been
brought upon the track again. But he
U a sorry old skate these days.
Point of View.
"Ho owes a lot of money."
"Poor fellow:''
"Why." '
"Debt Is so harrassing."
"That Isn't the way he looks at It"
"No?"
"No. He Is always thinking what
a food time he had spending- It."
HOME
There's a little old house on a little
old street
In a little old bit of n town
Where the honeysuckle is breathing
sweet.
And nights as the sun goes down
A childish treble Is raised In song
That fits in the perfumed gloam;
And, oh, the days they are hot and
long
When I am away from home.
There's a little woman whose cheeks
are red
With the roses of days gone by
And you would know by the bedding
head
And the red lips curving why
That wheresoever his path may lead,
How far In the world he fares,
The man's heart turns when the days
recede
To the woman and babes upstairs.
There's a big soft place in the daddy's
heart
Thnt aches when the night comes
down
When the woman and he are whole
miles apart,
And far from the dear old town.
He knows the babies are by their bed
With their mother near by, and then
The whisper comes from each curly
head:
"Bring daddy home safe, Amen."
J. M. Lewis, in Houston Post.
IF WE HAD THE TIME.
If I had the time to find a place
And sit me down full face to face
With my better self, that stands no
show
In my dally life that rushes so.
It might be then I would see my soul
Was stumbling still toward the shin
ing goal
I might be nerved by thoughts sub
lime. If I had the time.
lf. I had the time to let my heart
Speak out and take In my life a part,
To look about and stretch a hand
To a comrade quartered on no-luck
land.
Ah. God! if I might but just sit still
And hear the note of the whip-poor-will,
I think that my wish with God
would rhyme
If I had the time!
If I had the time to learn from you
How much for comfort my word would
do;
And I told yon then of my sudden
will
To kiss your feet when I did vou
ill
If the t?.T-s aback of the bravado
Could force their way and let you
know
Brothers, the souls of us all would
chime,
If we had the time!
Richard Burton in National Maga
zine.
THE FIVE FALL SEASON".
Rosy appies fallin' to suit yer wish
an' will;
(They caused the fall of Adam, but
we're likin of 'cm still.)
Honey, my honey,
World is Just so bright.
Ef they made it any brighter
We'd Lose ourselves In light!
'Possum up the 'Simmon tree don't
you pass him by,
But let him eat a-plenty, till he's fat
enough to fry.
In the Anutumn sunshine
World is Just so bright.
Ef they made It any brighter
We'd lose ourselves in light!
Frank L. Stanton in Atlanta Con
stitution. An Admission.
"Jones is an ass. He told me your
wife was an old, ugly cat, and that
you only married her for her money."
"Hum! What did you answer?"
"I told him he was a liar."
"Thank you, old man. But er
you've never seen my wife, have you?"
Although anthracite caal was min
ed in Pennsylvania In 1814, none was
used elsewhere than locally until six
years later. Since that time about 2,
000,000,000 short tons have been pro
duced. Hay be permanentiy overcome
by proper personal efforts
with the assistance of the one
trim beneficial laxanve-syrup
Cr FIGS AND tUXIR SENNA.
WHICH ENABLES CT0 FORM REGULAR
HABITS WILY. SO THAT ASSISTANCE TO
RAHrRf HAY KGftWJALiY DISPENSED
WITH WHEN RO IC3S HEEDED. AS THE
BEST OF RENQSfS. WHEN REQUIRE!
ARE ID ASSIST CSKSE ftKD SCI TO SUP
PLANT THE NAIURAL JUNCTIONS. WHICH
"'IT urnrjifc tsf TaaaarriV iwii ariAftrn
nt W.rLfW vuttiniuJ Vrvii rnviln
HOURlSHMENT.ROreR EFFORTS AND
RIGHT LIVING GENERALLY.
TO 6CT ITS BENEFICIAL ETTOTS. ALWAYS BUY THE
GCNU1N.SYMXft6S AND ELIXIR "SCNNA
California Fig Syrup ($
FOR SALE BY Mi. LEADING DRUGGISTS
ONE SIZE ONttf. pmCESOf ABOTTLF
Tililno Transfer
Phone thin 5
JTT CALLS PROMPTLY AN8
Mi, WISHED FOR ALL
BAQQAOE TRANsriRRINO.
PIANO AND FURNITURE
MOVINO AND HEAVY TRUCK
INO A SPECIALTY.
Greatest
of modern time
helps to perfect cooking.
Makes Biscuit,
Cake, Pastries, Crusts,
Light, Delicious, Wholesome.
Best famiiies, world over, use M
3
3WW
LO, THE POOR OYSTER.
Everyone loves an oyster, and the
fight now on between the oyster
growers and Dr. Harvey Wiley, chief
of the Government Chemistry Bureau
is therefore bound to be generally in
teresting. The poor oyster, it seems,
refuses to grow fat in his salt water
haunts and the growers to stimulate
him take him out and put him, with
thousands of his .conferes, on a raft.
This raft, by means of a derrick. Is
dipped into brackish or fresh water
several times a day.
The oyster seems to like this treat
ment, for his lean figure fills out and
he becomes, therefore, a much more
salable article.
Dr. Wiley holds that this is an un
healthy bloating, an adulteration,
and as such a violation of the pure
food laws.
The oyster growers take the view
that as the bivalve is mostly water
anyway, the addition of more water
is only supplementing his original
bulk. They say that Dr. Wiley's ob
jections to the floating proeess Is
stretching the Interpretation of the
law beyond all bounds, and they are
Ihe Spirit of Idaho
by Arthur W. North.
Greater thai. Gold
(The harnessing of Western Rivers)
by Clayton M. Jones.
October Sunset Magazine
Now on Sale at all News
Stands
1 5 cents
Onheum Theatre
. r. MXDBRNAC H, Proprietor
HIGH-CLASS UP-TO-DATE MOTION
PICTURES
For Men, Women and Children
mm PROGRAM IN TODAY'S PAPKR.
Program Claaages oa Saadaya, Tweday'i and Friday.
Byers'
Best
Flour
ra
rena
V90ER
getting up a petition to congress to
protest.
Meanwhile, lf the epicure finds his
bivalves lean he can console himself
with an extra drink of water, and,
according to Dr. Wiley, he will lose
nothing after all. Examiner.
PITY THE CLOCKS.
Postmaster General Hitchcock, on
his arrival in New York on the Kaiser
Wllhelm der Grosse, said he would at
once resume the organization of the
postofflce saving banks.
"This work." he added, "must be
conducted carefully and scientifically.
You can't establish postal savings as
the cobbler of my native Ahmert re
paired clocks.
"A visitor to the cobbler's shop
noticed one day a barrel full of tiny
brass cogwheels.
" 'Why,' he said 'what are all those
for?'
" 'Goodness knows,' answered the
cobbler with a careless laugh, 'I get
about a cupful out of every clock 1
mend." " Washington Star.
Save money by reading today's ads.
in
Is made from the choicest wheat that
trrowB. Good bread is assured whan
BYERS' BEST FLOUR is used. Bran,
Shorts, Steam Rolled Barley always on
hand.
it n n
exon no er mi s
Pendleton, Oregon.
Headquarters For '
Toilet Goods
We are Sole Manufacturers and
Distributors of tbe Celebrated
F4S
TOILET CREAM
' COLD CREAM
TOOTH POWDER
and
MT. HOOD CREAM
Tallman & C o.
Leadlug Druggists of Kastare
Oregon.
OLD Liy-, LITE STOCK IN
SURANCE. Indiana & Ohio
Live Stock Insur
ance Company
Of Crawfordrrllle, Indiana.
Haa now entered Oregon.
Policies now gooj In erery
state In the Union. Organ
ed over 15 years ago. Paid
up Capital t200.000.90. As
sets over $450,000.00.
REMEMBER, Uila la NOT
a Mutual Live tone Insur
ance company.
Mark Moorhouse
Company
- Agrut, Peudletoai, Or.
IIS Fast Court at.
Phone Main M.
COLESWORTHY'S
International Stock Food
the old reliable
The best for your stock
Try it
COLESWOR.THY
127-129 E. Alta
J
Th. QUELLE
Gus La Fontaine. Prop.
Best 25c Meals in North
west First-class cooks and service
Shell fish in season
La Fontaine BIk., Main St.
You Make a
Bad Mistake
When you put off buying your
Go&D.
until Fall purobaae It NOW
and aocnro tbe beat Rock
Spring ooal the Mines prodooe
at Brioes oosnaderably lower than
those prevailing In Fall and
Waiter.
By atocklng up now yoaj
avald ALL dancer of being na
Ma o aeoare It when aold
weather arrives,
Henry Kopittke
Phone Main 178.
yAHrfaV, 60 YEARS
V - TEXPERieNCE
HsBVasasfew ' arUfclWsTa
J .
1
-i Tboe Marks
Dr.BIO.NS
COPVRiaMTB Aft.
Anrnno Mnrtlng a tketnb arid riMtcrintlnn rim
qiilcMT Bcrlalil our opinion fre wheilixr nr
lUTMiunn la prohnhlr Mlouiuiiin. o.nimiinlrn
UnasiuloUionaSdnital. HANDBOOK on l-atoi u
oeiitrraa. (JldMt SKonrr for n"niringpiktmi.
rmuu takes thriiiiKli Mimn ft 0o, roceln
Otriol noite, without otiwrpo, tu tUa
Scientific Jltnericati.
a handaomaly lllsatratad wmkly. IjuwaM en.
oalaUon of any olanuso Journal. Tarmi, N t
jrmr i four months, L Bud bf all nswadealata
Braaob Ofloa. OH F Bt. Waahlnstoa. U. Q
Cures to!Jti PbvaiiU ncuauaig