PAGE SIX DAILY EAST OREOOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1910. EH G ITT PAGES Democratic Ticket JOHN MANNING For Congress OSWALD WEST For Governor WILL R. KING Six year term W. T. SLATER Four year terra. For Supreme Court Judges. TURNER OLIVER For Secretary of State HUGH MeLEAN For Railroad Commis sioner. F. M. SAXTON For Water Commis sioner. JAIES E. GODFREY For State Printer. M. K. IIALL For Joint Senator. BEN HILL For Joint tive. Representa- County Candidates C. J. SMITH For State Senator. T. D. TAYLOR For Sheriff. J. W. MALONEY For County Judge, J. B. SAYLOR For Commissioner. TOM J. TWEEDY For Treasurer. B. G. MONKMAN For Coroner. JOHN HAILEY, JR. For Justice of Peace, Pendleton District. JOHN M. BENTLEY For Constable. (raid AdTertlaement) G. W. BRADLEY (Present Incumbent) REPUBLICAN NOMINEE FOR COUNTY TREASURER T. D. TAYLOR (Present Incumbent) DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE FOR SHERIFF Indorsed by Republican Party. "For Direct Primary-Statement No. 1" BEN HILL PROGRESSIVE CANDIDATE For Joint Representative Umatilla and Morrow Counties. ZOETH HOUSER INDEPENDENT REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR SHERIFF A man who baa held the office and "made good." J. W. MALONEY DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE FOR COUNTY JUDGE An advocate of better roads and a economical administration of County affairs. the Well Known Chinese Doctor! Cures any and all dls-1 eases that the! human flash t Is heir to. M wonderful and f powerful! roots, herbs) remedies ares composed o I Chinese! buds, birkik :ind vegetables that are entirely! jnknown to medical science of the present day. They are harmless J is we use no poisons or drugs. No? operations. No knife used. t We cure stomach troubles, liver " ldney, catarrh, lung, throat, asth ma, nervous debility, female com plaints and rheumatism and all disorders of the blood. We cure to stay cured, and guarantee to cure all kinds of Plies and Private Diseases of men and women. Call and see him or write. Consulta tion free. If yon are unable to call and see him, send two cents In i tamps for symptom blank. Ad dress: THE L, CTHXO WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. j 309 W. RfW ?t. Walls. Walla. Wn J FRESH MEATS 8ACSAGE8, FISH AND LARD. Always pure and delivered promptly. If yon phone ths Central Ueat Uirket 111 K. Aha M Pbonw Main St. CANDIDATES few MADE WELL AM) STROM By Lydia E. Pinkhcm's Vegetable Compound Jefferson, Iowa. "Wliou my baty V;-.S JUSlt'.VOlMOllUU o 1 '.1 . 1 w a s c o m pletely run ilova am' my iiiteniil or C.i'.is wvro in tt'rri IW s!::v. .'. 1 boyr.i taking Lv lia L I -i ; kk 1 A m's c sio t ;. -Lie Compound, an.l mother wrote anl toll you just how I was. 'I bi'ira.i to pain at once ami now i am real well." y.rs. "W. li. iUmolk, 700 Cherry St., Jcllerson, Iowa. Another Woman Cured. Glenwood, Iowa. " About thrro years aero 1 had falling and other fe male troubles, ami I was nothing but skin and bones. I was so siek I could not do my own work. Within six months 1 was made sound and well by Lydia E. l'inkhaiu's Vegetable Com pound. I will always tell my friends that your remedies cured me, and you can publish my letter." Mrs. C. W. lr"N Glenwood, Iowa. If you belong to that countless army Of women who suffer from some form of female ills, just try Lydia E. Pink ham's VecretaV.e Compound. For thirty years this famous remedy has been the standard for all forms of female ills, and has cured thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displacements, fibroid tumors, ulceration, intlammation, ir- resmlanties, backache, etc. If yon want special advice write for it to M rs.Pinkha m, Lynn.Mass. It is free and always helpful. UMATILLA RECITAL PLEASES AUDIENCE (Special Correspondence.) Umatilla, Ore., Xov. 5. The recital given by Miss Jewell Franklin In aid of the new Catholic church Friday evening, was a decided success from an artistic as well as a financial standpoint. The program was well rendered and each number was re ceived with hearty applause and was in every way deserving to the talent ed young lady. Miss Franklin's original panto mime of "Dressing for the Theater." and her rendering of the 'Trlal of Rebecca," "I and My Father In law," were considered lier best numbers. The following is the program: Instrumental Solo ....Mr. E. Pound Monologue "A Woman's Inquiry About Trains." Reading (a) My Rosary. (b) Break! Break! Break! (c) Crossing the Bar. Original Pantomime Dressing for the Theater. Tenor Solo Mr. W. F. O'Conner Reading (a) The Trial of Rebecca. (b) The prayer Meeting at Hill dale. Baritone Solo Mr. H. N. Dryer Monologue I and My Father In Law. Instrumental Solo Mr. E. Pound Reading Star Spangled Banner. Catarrh Cannot Be Cored with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, they can Dot reach the seal of the dlceau. Catar- n. Is a blood or eonstttndonai disease, aad In order to cant It yon unit take internal remedies. Hill t atarrh Care Is takes la ternally, and acts directly on the blood ana mocone sio-fxr Hall's Catatrh Core ti not a niKi t medicine. It was prescribed by ne of i tie heit ntiTnlclaos la this conotr; for yeara anil I a regular prescription. It it i-tunrcfd if rtoe v tonlrt known, combln i itn rue Iwhii omod purifiers, action di rectly on the nuifnni inr'arm The perfect i-nmMrmMrin of the two Ingredients Is what pnxlu - nrh wnnrlerfnl remits ' eurlnf Catarrh. snrf fi r leetiisonlais free. F. J. I'HKNKY :... Crops., Toledo, O. f.i hi by Ihi.kkou. price 75c Take Hail's Family Palls for Coastlpa :ioa. Etniy Notice. There left my place near Myrick sta'lon on November 2, one black mulo. weigh ntr about 1101 pounds: 8 years old and branded U on shoulder. LilxTal reward will left raid for Information leading to re covery bv F. H. Hudemann. Adams Ore. I More moving pictures shown than 1 any other theatre In the city the ! I Pastime. CATARRH. , Quickly Cured by a PIciiMtint, Gcnn i Klllint; Antiseptic. ; The liHle Hyomei (pronounce it : High-o-mc) inhaler Is made of hard i rubber, and ean easily be carried In i pocket or purse. It will Inst a llf"- ! time-. ; Into this Inhaler you pour a few drops of magical HYOMEI. This is 'absorbed by the antiseptic gauze within, and now you are ready to breathe It In over the germ-Infested membrane, where it will speedily begin its work of killing catarrh germs. HYOMEI is made of Austral Ian eucalyptus combined with other antiseptics, and is very pleasant to breathe. It is guaranteed to cure catarrh, bronchitis, sore throat, croup, coughs and colds, or money back. It cleans out a stuffed-up head In two minutes. Sold by Tallman & Co. and drug gists everywhere. Complete outfit. In cluding indestructible pocket Inhaler and one bottle of HYOMEI, $1.00. And remember, if you need a second bottle of HYOMEI, it will coat only 60 cents. Free trial bottle of HYO MEI from Booth's Hyomei Co., But falo, N. T. WORK UNDER WAY ON NEW LIGHT PLANT (Special Corrospondence.J Hormiston, Ore., Nov. 7. B. A. Chisolm, head of the electric lighting enterprise, states work is now fairly under way. He and two other men are now busy on the river. The wheel pit has been finished and no matter lu.w low the water may go they will get the benefit of whatever there is. On the other hand precautions have hi en taken to protect it against high water unless it be an unusual flood. In a few days the contract will be lot for the canal leading to the wheel pit. From now on until the plant is r.udy to furnish juice to the city there will not. be an idle moment. Should the weather for a time pre vi nt work the men will Mi" kept busy vetting poles ready. It there is no gnat delay and there is no reason for any, Mr. Ohosolm says his plant will ne in operation early in the sprln Yesterday's local brought In the first shipment of machinery. Thursday evening Ernest J. Sias gave the first of u series of five en tert;;inmi nts under the auspices of th tugn school lyceum course. 1 1 is su'i- Jt ct was tlie 'I-.ost c hord. It was pronounced by nil present a treat. The next number of the course will be on Wednesday evening. Nov. 30. at which time Miss Hess Gerhardt Morrison will give a reading. GKHMAX CJI.VNCKLI.Oli'S corsix fights Berlin. It has become known that Ilerr Joachim von Bethmann-Holl-weg of Runowo, cousin of the chan cellor, fought a duel in the Grune- wald forest, outside of Berlin, a few days ago, with the owner of a neigh boring estate. Count Heinrich von dor Goltz. The grounds for the combat are not stated, but they must have been of an unusually grave nature, as the conditions approved by the court of honor were an exchange of shots till one of the party was incapacitat ed. A curious incident brought the duel, nevertheless, to a bloodless conclu sion. At the second shot a bullet from Herr Bethmann-Hollweg's pis tol rlcochetted off a tree and struck his adversary in the abdomen. Count von der Goltz, who Is 55 years old, though not wounded, was so severely i KiiaKen uy ine iiiipneL inui iiiv ptri.:- onus ueciuea mm ne wim iiienimciiiii ed under the conditions agreed upon. A Hair Breadth Escape, Do you know that every time you have a cough or cold and let It tun on thinking it will just cure Itself you are Inviting pneumonia, consumption or some other pulmonary trouble? Don't risk it. Put your lungs back In perfect health and stop that cough with Ballard's Horehound Syrup. Price 25c, 60c and $1.00 per bottle. Sold by A. C. Koeppen & Bros. STATE OWNERSHIP FOR ENGLISH ROADS London. There are signs here which point to a coming nationaliza tion of English railroads. The army of railroad employes want It with all their hearts and the actions of the railroad companies themselves are hastening its coming. Following the example of the Am erican roads, the railroads 'of Eng land have formed combines and sign ed working agreements, and even In a country as conservative as England, It Is generally admitted that this grouping of the roads will eventual ly give them such monopoly and pow er that the suffering public will de mand that the state must own them, as it now owns the' telegraph and tel ephone service. At the recent congress of British railroad employes a resolution was al most unanimously carried that they must encourage the coming of state ownership by every means within their power, and also that they must see too. that they are adequately rep resented in the house of commons when the change comes. Not one member expressed a doubt that come it must. John Vnuglfan Has Moved. .Tnhn Vaucrhan has moved his elec trical supply store from 815 Main Xo fniso prrteiiNe has marked the street to the store room next door ; career of Ely's Cream Balm. Being south from the postofflce, formerly ; entirely harmless, it Is not respon ocrupled by the Wonder Store. Mr sible like the catarrh snuffs and pow Vaughan will share the building with , ders for minds shattered by cocaine, the Pacific Power & Light Co., and The great virtue of Ely's Cream Balm intends earrvinir a larger and more i that It speedily and completely complete stock than ever before. DC . IIOIT.KIJ OF CRIME St. Petersburg Considerable at- -nt'.on has hen drawn to a rather ti.irming account of the condition of! rural ci.str"'ts of the Rn-i m interior, f M'hich h's just i-ecn putliM"d by M. Vermoioff, ex-minister of ntrrViilture ' iil'ter a personal Invest gat;.n in the , provinces. From 'his it would ap- ' pear that the fotute or peasant airairs is worse in some respects than ever before. Not only has 'incendiarism all over the country not diminished, but Is now being perpetrated from quite new motives, the result being at least two new forms of agrarian crime. The peasants no longer set fire to the landlord's property, but burn down their own and that of their fellow villagers. For instance, emigrants to Siberia destroyed their Insured homes In this way as the easiest and most advan tageous method of liquidation before starting, and worse than this, mem bers of the village communes burn out those of their fellow members who separate themselves from it, un der the new law, to become proprie tors of small holdings. Many of these new peasant farmers told M. Yermo loff that they live in terror of this kind of vengeance from the members of the commune. A clean and careful shave always at Mark Patton's shop. Across from j Alexanders. Phone for patrons. SAYS QUININE WILL NOT BREAK A COLO HOW TO ri KK OOI.DS AXD CJKirPK IX A IT.W UOlTtS You will distinctly feel your cold breaking and nil the grippe symptoms leaving after taking the very first dose. It is a positive fact that Tape's Cold Compound, taken every two hours, until three consecutive doses are taken, m ill end the grippe and break up the most severe cold, either in the head, chest, back, stomach or limbs. It nroniptlv relieves Ihe most mis erable neuralg:a pains, headache, dullness, head and nose stuffed up, feverishness, sneezing, sore throat, running of the nose, mucous catar rhal discharges soreness, stif;'m-s and rheumatic twinges. Tape's Cold Compound Is the re sult of three years' research at a cost of more than fifty thousand dollars and contains no quinine, which we have conclusively demonstrated Is not effect've iii the treatment of colds nr grippe. ' Takv this harmless compound as directed, with the knowledge that there Is no other medicine, made any where else in the world, which will cure your o'.d or end grippe m sery as promptly and without any other assistance or bad after-effects as a 2" cent panikage of Tape's Cold Com pound, which any druggist In the world can supply. NOTES AND NEWS (Special Correspondence. Milton, Ore., Nov. T. George T. Hamlin is in the city from Oklaho ma. Mrs. Minnie Dorothy Henderson was the guest of relatives In Milton today. The teachers of the public school will entertain the patrons of the schools at Central school this eve ning at S o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. X. T. Manela enter tained last Friday in honor of the 10th birthday of their son, Dorian. The evening was spent In games and a general good time. The tables were decorated in blue crepe paper and red apples. Those present were: Vernon McEwen, Alice McQueen, Vic tor Coeklmrn. Bertha Miller, Glen Steen, Eunice MeKwon, Hazel Cock hur". I.vsi.. '".I'l'y. Huth Steen and Dorian Muuela. Not Sorry for Blunder. "If my friends hadn't blundered In thinking I was a doomed victim 'f consumption T m'pht not be alive now," u rites D. T. Sanders, Harrnds burg Ky., "but for years they saw every attempt to cure a lung-racking cough fail. At last I tried Dr. King's New Discovery. The effect was won derful. It soon utopped the couch and I am now In better health fia.i f have had for years. This wonder ful live-saver is an unrivaled remedy I for coughs, colds, la grippe, asthma, croup, h'-morrhagen. whooping cough or weak lungs. 60c. $100. Trial bot tle free. Guaranteed by Koeppen Bros. MIES. WEST ATTEMPTS TO SELL NEW PLAY London. Frederick Townsend Mar tin has been' commissioned by Mrs. George Cornwallis West as envoy plenipotentiary to sell her play In New York, and he will sail on this voyage of hope early in November. It Is an ojien secret that Mrs. West's son, Winston Churchill, the home secretary, has given his mother a good deal of advice as to the con struction of the play. Should the play be accepted Mrs. West will go to New York and remain there, for the first time In many years, for the whole wintnr. Her young husband, twho manages to get a good deal of en joyment out of life, will accompany her. I overcomes nasal catarrh and hay fe ! ver. Back of this statement Is the testimony of thousands and a reputa- tlon ofmany years' sueccss. All druggists, 60c, or mailed by Ely Bros., j 66 Warren street, New York, OREGON. The Lost Call or the West. (By Walter V. Woehlke. Beautifully illustrated In four col nj. in November Sunset Magaz'ne. "' -w on sale, all newstands, 15 It certainly Is a wtate of money for mo to buy the ordinary kind of ba king powder. For all leaftlng grocers now sell Cleveland's at the uniform price of 1 pound, 46 cents; 3 pounds, II, and 8 pounds, tl B Settle It Now Settle It Right For constitutional amendment giving to cities and towns exclusive power to license, regulate, control, suppress, or prohibit the sale of Intox icating liquors within. the municipality. 328 X Yes ENDORSED BY v 40,000 OREGON CITIZENS . ' ' John Manning Democratic Candidate for Congress who is making a campaign upon a platform pledging a reduction in the cost of living. Manning opposes trust prices and trust extortion. I raid AriTrt'aRimt.t i i i fell...-? ;i Y-; . VvVe- I-Wv' . , T-V ; J -'' r i . , .,-- WILL R. KING JuJj,ro of the Supreme Court, CANDIDATE FOR 1 IE-ELECTION, SIX YEAR TERM, WUOSE PLACE IS SOUGHT BY GEO. H. BUR NETT, ASSEMBLY NOMINEE. Eastern Oregon has a preat friend on the Supreme Bench in Justice Will R. King, who is a candidate for re-election and whose place George II. Burnett, nominee of the Republican Assembly, is trying to secure. Judge King is a candidate on the Non-Political Judiciary movement, together with Judges Slater, McBrido and Moore, The Non-Political Judiciary movement was started by the Oregon Bar Association and has as ita object the removal of tho Supreme Court beyond the reach of political influences. Tho State Bar Association, in common with these four judges, took the stand that the Su preme Court would have nothing to do with politics and poli tics nothing to do with the Supreme Court In addition, Judges King, Slater, Moore and McBrido have the vast amount of work before the Supreme Court well in hand and the or ganization of the Supreme Court well perfected. Judge King, whose cut appears above, haa made an envi able record on the stipreme bench. He waa the author of the noted opinion in case of Hough vs. Porter, which is now used till over tho West aa authority on irrigation law and is used as a textbook in some Eastern law schools. Three months work required in examining tho law and evidence in writing this one opinion. Other notable opinions by Judge King, which have commanded the admiration of the people and tho bar alike, r.ro Straw vs. Harris (54 Ore., 424), 'upholding and clarifying the initiative and referendum system of law making and Hough vs. Porter (51 Or., 318) which has become a leading case on irrigation law. . He has turned out many other heavy decisions, yet the total number of opinions bo has rendered is as great as that of any Supremo Judge in many years, tho false reports of tho Orcgonian notwithstanding. J udge King has the support of practically all Oregon law yers, who have manifested great approval of the thoroughness of his research work in the Supreme Court He was nominated not only by tho Non-Political Judiciary convention but also by the Democrats. In addition thousands of republicans wrote in his namo on the primary ballot (Paid t .... V ?-"r 1 :'4 ;v ;-v t--v mm -v : !.,-'V