PAGK SIX DAILY EAST ORKOXIAS, PENDLETON, OREGON. MONDAY, DECEMBER 10. 1910. TEN PAGES. AN INDKIENDKNT NEWSPAPER. rnklUbcd I'I1t, Wekl aa 8enil-Weekly at ivad.etoa. Oram, by the BA8X OBKUON1AS l'L HLlsHlNG CO. BtbscKirriON rates. I ally, oae year, by mall $5.00 ally, kIi montha. by mall 2.60 l-aily. three mnntba. by mall 1.2 raliy, one month, by mall 60 ll!y, ana yar, by carrier 7 60 llly, all mom Urn, by carrlor S.75 I'ally, three month, by carrier 1.93 iallT. one month, Or carrier 65 ekiy, oae year. By mall 1.50 Weekly, all montha, by mall 75 -!, four months, by mall 50 ml Weekly, one year, by mall 1.60 k.ml Weekly, tlx montha, by mall 73 em'l-Weekly, (our montha, by mall... .60 The Pally Eaat Oregonlan la kept oo aale at the Oregon News Ce., 820 klorrlaoa treet. I'onlaad. Orrtfoa. Nnrthweet Newi iV, rortland, Oraaroa. Chiracs Knreau, 89 Security Building. Waahlnrton, IV C, Hureau, 501 Faur Mutt a treet, N. W. Member Cnlted rreaa Aaaoclatloa. Entered at the poetofflce at Paodletoo, tToRgn. aa second clasa mall matter. Telephone Main 1 Official City and County Paper. MAKE THIS A DAY. Make this a day. There U no train In brooding over days to come; The message of today is plain. The future's lips are ever dumb. The work of yesterday is gone For good or ill, let come what may; But now we face another dawn. Make this a day. Though yesterday we failed to see The urging hand and earnest face That men call Opportunity, We failed to know tne time or place For some great deed, what need to fret? The dawn comes up a silvery gray. The golden moments must be met. Make this a day. This day is yours; your work is yours; The odds are not whj rs.r? your hire. The thing accompUshe-i endures. If it be what the days rea-To-He who takes up "h-S daily round. As one new armored fjr tie fray. Tomorrow steps on solid ground. Make this a day. The Talisman. the unoqualed loveliness beneath them." Then the description Increases in loveliness as it portrays Arhrodite rising to her full height from the shell, "the mystic cestus glittering round her waist In deep festoons of emeralds and pearls, and stepped for ward upon the marble sea-floor, wringing the dropping perfume from her locks as Aphrodite rose of old." Then her dance Is described ns "a miracle of art such as was only pos sible among a people of the free and exquisite physical tra'nlnir and the delicate aesthetic perception of those old Greeks even In their most fallen days." That same spirit was invoked when those Russian girls were trained says the Salt Lake paper, for the same effect was sought for that ruled in Greece, the effect that perfect phys! cal beauty linked with exquisite art always has and always will cast a spell around savage and civilized man alike. There were people In the the' atcr watching those dancers and US' tening to th wonderful music who never once thought the scene sug scstive. so perfect was the beauty and the ar. There were others who ought not to have been there, neith er they nor their descendants for the r.ext sfven hundred years. INTRODUCING MYSELF. tUARDlG THE CANAL. Fy the time the Panama canal Is completed it will have cost the TJnit .ed States the sum of $400 000,000. Surely such a piece of work is worth guarding. Especially so since one of the best arguments for the canal was that it would be of great value to this country from a naval standpoint When the canal is finished the presi dent may order a fleet from one ocean to the- other and it won't be neces sary for the ships to go around Cape Corn. This will be of enormous bene fit in time of war. Tet there are many wno object to fortifying the canal. They point to the enormous cost of the fortifica tiorj and hold the big ditch should i-e made safe through an internation al treaty. By the same sort of logic its men cou'.d argue that banks f's -z". i is away with expensive vaults i re'y for the protection of their c t ir. cp -rn the laws ariinst thievery. A CITY OF LIGHT. I'm not the fellow you read about But only the man you know. The chnp you meet on the busy street Where the hurrying thousands go; I cannot class with the ::starvlng poor" Nor yet with the "men of means," I'm Just the sort that you are your - self The salaried "in betweens." I've never handled a spade or pick, I'm hardly "a son of toll," I cannot plow for I don't know how To "wrest my bread from the soil," I'm only nn ordinary dub With commonplace things to do, And so oh common-place friend of mine I'm singing' my songs to You. .. If you've never made your summer suit Suffioe for the winter's chill, If you've never gono with a soiled shirt on . save the laundry bill, It you've never eaten a buffet lunch To save u nickel or two. If you've never worried about the rent These ballads are not for you. Put you wl worry and puzzle out Kach item of daily life. Who work and fret in the fear of debt Along with your faithful wife. Maybe you'll find In these songs of mine A strain that you know is true, And thought I'm harldly the soul of song I'm singing them all to Tou. Berton Braley, In December Pacific Monthly. THE COMMISSION PLAN. ARE COAL MINERS CHEAP Christmas will be a sad holiday this year for the famil.es of the miners j that have been killed In the numer ous bad mine "accidents" in differ ent portions of the country. So fre quently are these explosions occurring that the question arises as to their cause. Are they really accidental and an unavoidable feature of coal min ing or are the disasters due to a cold blooded policy on the part of the mineowners? Could the accidents be avoided if the owners would content themselves with smaller dividends and spend more money safeguarding the lives of their employes. It Is evi dent that sufficient attention is not given to the safety of the men. Fol lowing the Leyden disaster the state labor commissioner of Colorado pre dicted others disasters unless radi cal steps are taken to safeguard lives. He declares the mines are in a bad condition. Perhaps in the opinions of the Mor ganheims who own the coal resources of America, and are conserving most of the coal for future profits, coal miners are cheap and the supply in exhaustible, while it would not do at all to reduce the dividends. THE RCSSLVN DANCERS. Pavlowa and Mordkln, the great Russian dancers, have been In Salt Lake and their appearance brought forth some criticism. There ' were people who saw their dancing and be lieved the first part suggestive. In defense of the famous dancers, a Salt Lake paper repeat part of Xlngsley's discretion of Plelagia's dance before Oreatea and the thou sands in the great amphitheater. He tella how the snow white ele phant marched around the stage. "Then a choir of nymphs swung round bJm hand In hand and sang aa they danced along the conquering might of beauty, the tamer of beasts and men and deities." Then the rising of Plelagla from the shell on the back of the elephant la thus described: "Tee; whiter than tae snow white elephaat more rosy than the pink-tipped ah ell In whtcn fee lay, among crimson cushions and liver causes, there shown the goddess, thrilling all hearts with those (Ultclous miles and glance of the ha all fa 1. playful eres and grateful waving ef the tin bands aa the whole (heater rose with ae evooera and tea strata! aa The strings of lights on Main and Court streets aid to the brilliance of th. fe thoroughfares and the Pacific Light & Power company is Int. tied to credit for furnishing thJs illumination without cost during Christmas week. It would be fine if the business sec tion could b well lighted all the time. On Main street the merchants are now installing cluster lights so rapidly that it will not be long until that street will have a truly metro politan appearance. Also this paper is informed that Court street people are going to "get into the game" by providing additional strings of in candescant lights for their street and by having them turned on every eve ning. Go to It, gentlemen. Make Pendle ton the City of Light. By sending a man to America to see America in 36 hours the London Mail has shown a spirit of enterprise that was unexpected. It looks like they have "put one over" the New York Journals and It will be up to the Gotham newspaper men to get busy and redeem their lost laurels. Senator Lodge seems to favor every thing that Senator Cummins does only he does not want cummins to be the leader of the senate. If that Little Walla Walla irriga tion suit is actually and finally settled someone is liable to drop dead from astonishment. After so much consultation and dis cussion surely the roads will be -good In the summer time at least. ON FALLING IN LOVE. There's something the matter with me And I guess it's a girl. I met her last evening, and Gee! But my head's In a whirl. My heart acts peculiar aa well, For It thumps as It goes, And as near as I'm able to tell It Is love, I suppose. It wasn't so much what she said Just the usual line, But somehow It went to my head Like a bottle of wine. Perhaps I said something to her But the Lord only knows. What happened Is simply a blurr And It's love, I suppose. I'm ten different kinds of a fool, But my foolishness grows, I try hut I cannot keep cool It la love, I suppose. My folly Is easy to see But my brain's In a whirl. There's something the matter with me. And I know It's a girl. Berton Braley, m December Pacific Monthly, (Duluth Herald.) Did you ever notice that not many business men go into city politics? Did you ever notice. In the govern ment of the average city, that busi ness methods are about the last thing thought of and did you ever think that there miht be some connection between that and the fact that ca pable business men with valuable business don't go into city politics? There Is a very close connection be tween those things, and the fact is that it is the hardest kind of a Job. In the average city, to get business men, the kind who ought to fill most of the places, to become candidates for mayor alderman. Why? Too much politics. The business man is afraid of politics, and Is more than glad to leave it to the profes sional party politicians, even though he knows that politicians aren't com petent to handle large public affairs, and that he isn't getting the kind of government out of them that he ought to have. Rid government hurts bus iness. Good government helps busi ness. Bad business means high tax es, waste, extravaeance, corruption and poor service at heavy cost. Good government means economy business ; methods in public affairs, low taxes ; and a full return in public service f "T the tax money spent. I True though this all Is. it Isn't j strong enough to induce the business ' men to take hold of public affairs, becans they are afraid of politics. If a business man becomes a candi date for mayor, he mut run as a re publican or as a democrat, and he knows rieht at the start that that puts a lot of citizens against him be cause his partisan label is different from theirs they are going to call him a horsethief, charge that he puts sand in his sugar, weighs the holes in his cheese and robs the widow and orphan. No wonder he balks. There Is exactly where the com mission form of city government comes in. At one blow it knocks politics out of the box. It absolutely forbids any man to run for office as a republican or a democrat. It refuses to put his party label on the ballot even If he wants it there. It throws politics out of the field altogether, and settles the whole business down on the sensible bas's of fitness. No man who Is the right kind of a man is afraid to eo Into a contest where personal fitness alone is the issue, and that's the pre cise and exact and solo issue In elec tions under the commission form of government. Then business men with level heads and sound experience need no longer fear any more Just city business. That's the way it has worked out In the cities where it has been tried. For instance take Leavenworth. Leavenworth was a blind pig town In prohibition Kansas, and you can im agine what kind of government It had. Its chief revenue was from blind pig fines, Imposed -monthly. It adopted the commission form of gov ernment, and elected a hardware mer chant, a soap manufacturer, a lum berer and a big drayman as commis sioners. With the loss of 180,000 In revenue from blind pigs, these hard- headed business men kept the city Bums, paia oit tzz.ooo n bonds, and reduced the tax levy 126,000 a year top or mat. Tnat was merelv an plying business methods to a business mat had been run Into the ground by politics. Good husbands are made, not born; a man la Just the raw material to which hla wife puts the finishing tooeaea Notice. Masquerade ball at German hall, December II, Saturday evening. An apostle of painless dentl.ti-o now accompanies his bill with anaes- tnetics. aaxjLia H0VW0JL8 aaivuaiii U31131S0 Pi n Jutaaq no waul nrttwiVH pus addMO 'WO wra tpstnois joj "I I son qons of PJaotu bthi u -jf araM aol daq mjunvi oql ! qiraaq poof jaoi ssof aavq noi ai ft A Superb Display of Xmas Gift Articles 7 ISITORS at Schaefer8 are impressed v with the great variety of gift articles in all the different lines, the many new designs in each, and the wide scope of prices DIAMOND JEWELRY, WATCHES FOR LADIES, WATCHES FOR GENTLEMEN, CIAVKS OF ALL KINDS, TOILET ARTICLES, SILVERWARE. OUT GLASS. VMRRELLAS. Also gold, silver and enameled Jewelry of every con ceivable kLnJ, design and price. A Word about Diamonds Did it v?r occur to you that based upon the way In which diamonds are purvhatM!, depends the price you are compelled to pay. We buy our diamonds direct from the largest and leading cutters of the United States, pay cash for every order and discount every bill. Yon Receive the Benefit of Our Buying Right. Tou save paying a profit to the "middle man" and Interest on "time accounts." PRESENTS OF WORTH, TIL1T ARE PRACTICAL AND CHERISHED, AT A. L. SCHAEFER'S Leading Jeweler. v GIVE FURNITURE and make the place you live, a HOME We have presents for the wife, the family aad you. Oufs are useful, ornamental and lasting. A Rocker A Rug, large or small Library Table A Carpet Sweaper A Go-Cart A Doll's Go-Cart A Daren port A New Dining Table An Ostermoor Mattress A. Kitchen Cabinet A Buffet A Chiffonier A China Closet A Morris Chair A Lounge Nice Dining Chairs A Music Cabinet A Dresser An Iron Bed A Boofc Case Many other articles for the home are to be found in our large stock of practical gifts. JOHN BAKER OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Chickens! Chickens!! Chickens. !! All kinds, size and colors, young and old Pot choice dressed ones phone your order night before. We dress none exeept for orders so If you like cold storage pool try patronise the other fellow or store yourself. East End Grocery Residence Phone Black bsi. Byers Best Flour mm & ekejeett wWat tkat CW Wk Mai wiN. Ston RTIe4 Snley liwuy. tm Padloton Rollor Mills Headquarters For Toilet Goods Wo are Hole Maonfactnrers a ad DUtrisutof of the Onirttrated PS TOILET CUKaM COLD CREAM TOOTH POWDKM ami MT. HOOD ClUtAM Tallman & Co. Leading Druggists of Bastsra Ol OLD LIN 1 LITE STOCK IN. BURANCm Indiana & Ohio Live Stock Insur ance Company Of CrawfordsrUle, Isilaaa Has now entered Oragon. Policies bow good in srery tats in the Union. Organ sed over IB years ago. Paid op Capital 10, 000.10. As sets over 1460,000.00. REMEMBER, this Is NOT a Matual Live aaock lasar toce company, Mark Moorhouse Company Arent, Peadletaa, Or. ill East Oow M. Mate 8. THC PENDLETON DRUG CO. WE DEAL II DBD6S I0T PROMISES You Make a Bad Mistake When yon pot off tmylng yoor Goal! ontll Fall purchase it NOW and secure the bext Ruck ftprlng coal the mines produce at prices connlrierabiy lower than those prevailing In Fall and Winter. Ity Mocking up now yon avoid AI.L danger of being en able to secure It when rold weather arrives. Henry Kopittke Phone Mala ITS. Fresh Fish Meats and Sausages EVERY DAT. We handle only the purest f lard, hams and bacon. Empire Meat Co. Phoae Mala IS. FRESH MEATS SAUSAGES, FISH AND LARD. Always purs and delivered promptly. If yon phone the Central Ueit Uirket 1S K. Alt U Phone Mala S. i 3 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE "J ivM tsaaaa Tiia.DK Marks laiQNS CoPvaioMTa As. linn aia Anrnne wmalng a tkatnti an tfuwiripilnn a Mn I a W 1 amrarl al rn, nnftlnn frMl whttaST lnntlfm la prnhnhlT iatanlhlA "Comipunlfla. (IhollrnnnlldonMal. HANUBOOK raiama fttlVAnnnri jont fro. (llriMt nof for ncurlna patanta. Flnta takan thrnnal) Munn Co. aoi SMctal tullct. trl( hont oharaa. In toe Scientific Jfcericati A knadtntitlf maatratas veailr. Uftst s enlatla of mnf MtaMllf Inaraal. Tr, ) a aoatre Uafamtsfced tor rent la the taa. All Bast Oisaaiilaa aM ssanelsaias. Me It b fie cdrwfiakgi wmdmm ef CSt mHL vw jalrs at O