PAGE POCR DAILY EAST ORBGOXIAN, PKXBLETTON, ORBGOlt, I'll I DA V, JA.VCARY 20, 1011. PAfl AN INDKl'KNLiKST KKW8PAPBR, ro!tl)I 11 It. Wsrkly and Seml-Weeklr at lyodVton, Oregon, bt tas A8 OKHiioM AN in.llLISHl.Na CO. 81HSCKUT1QS RATKA lT. oaa year, by mall $5.00 in month, bj mall 2 0 thr moattM. a- mall 1.3S 0Uj, one month. by mall 60 fcally, on year, by earner T.W tially, alx months, by carrier 4.73 fcai'.y. three months, by carrier 1.9S JllT, on month, by carrier........ .63 rtiy. one "r. By mail 1.00 ., alx month, by mall TS WklT, four month, by mall 50 avwnl-We-kly, one yrar. by owill 1.50 Mml-kly, (lx month, by mall.... .TS ml Weekly, four months, by nail... .60 The IXJIy East Orefrootan to kept oa sale t the Orvcoa New Co., 829 Morrison ret. Portland, Orwoe. Northwest Neva Co., Portland, Oragoa. OhU-afo Ilnrean, 909 Security Building. Washington, D. C, Bureau, 501 Pour aUi street. N. W. Member Cnlted Preaa Aortatlon. Entered at the pontofflce at Pendleton, ."woa. aa second clan mall matter. Velephooe Main 1 Official City and County Paper. L A B THE WHITE MAX. Wherever the white man's feet have trod Oh far does the white man stray) A bold road rifles the virginal sod And the forest wakes out of its dream of God. To yield him the right of way For this is the law; by the pow- er of thought For worse .or for better, are miracles wrought. Wherever the white mans path- way leads, (Far, far, has that pathway gone) The earth is littered with broken creeds, And always the dark man's tent recedes, And the white man pushes on. For this is the law; be it good v or ill. All things must yield, to the stronger will. Wherever the white man's light Is shed, (Oh, far has that light been - thrown) Though nature haa suffered, and beauty fled, The goal of the race has been thrust ahead And the might of the race has gTown. For this is the law; be it cruel or kind, The universe sways to the pow- er of mind. Ella Wheeler Wilcox, in Cos- mopolitan. 4 ' AX UNNECESSARY SQCABBLE. As the East Oregonian feared the branch asylum location has precipi tated a fight in the legislature. Bow erman and h'S friends are seeking to Justify the selection made by the for mer acting governor. Just what the outcome of the controversy will be re . mains to be seen. Sad the proper view been taken of he new board's action there would Have been no need of this. Governor West and Mr. Kay were not trying to discredit the old board. They have held all the time that the Oliver Carpenter place is worth all that the state paid for it. Th-y have mor'.ly held that more ground should be pur chased so as to provide a better building- site than is to b.- had on the lani originally purchased. Since Messrs. West and Kajr are the men who will have to build the new asylum and will lie responsible if any blunders are made :n connection therewith their views with reference tn the site should prevail. They must; prevail. Were Mr. Eowerman gover nor he would be doing exactly as they --re doing. If he found the site se- Ir-cted unsatisfactory he would pick out a new site, otherwise he would be j tailing in his duty. Why should he objwt w hen M'sr.. West and Kay I t.-jke this course? I As far as P'-ti'lli-ton is concerned it does not matter at all whether the! isylum is hu'.h on the Olivr-Oarpen- j ter trart or upon adjoining ground. The thing we want is the Institution, fijrely we can leave it to the state h .ard to place the aylurn where it should be placed. They are responsible for what they are doing. We are not. KAKMJXt; VS. HALF FARMING. Treating of the subject of close j farming a Salt Lake magazine says: The farmers have skimmed over! rhe surface of the United States. Big farm! have ben the rule and Im perfect farming has also, too often "You are as well as your stomach" ' HOSTETTER. KMEMHP.B THIS HOSTEfTER'S STOMACH BITTERS Is excellent In cases of Poor Appetite, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Coids, Grippe and Malaria been the rule. Now we are told that the public domain fit for farming is well nigh exhausted, and statisticians figure up the time, not now far off, when we shall cease to export farm products and begin to Import them. Would it not be a good time to be gin anew? If a majority of farmers and plant ers would sell half their acreage and put the work heretofore done on the whole tract, upon the half left, would they not realize, on the average, as much as they do now? We think they would. And with the result that the farming population would be doubled and the products of the farm would be doubled. In this way the cities would not grow quite so rapid ly, but that would not be such a great misfortune. A boy in South Carolina this year raised from three acres as much corn as his neighbors on either side raised on thirty-three acres. That was not luck but intelligent farming. He put all his time on three acres, and every hill counted. First he pre pared the soil, then he planted only the most perfett seed; then he watch ed It, cultivated it incessantly when the ground was dry, and guarded steadily against damage from, the wash when heavy rains fell, and gave his neighbors far and near an object lesson of what might be done. If men would alternate their crops; see to the drainage and fertilizers; as the ranges grow scarce make more of a feature of their sheep and cattle; who knows what they might accom plish? But that would mean intelli gent work every da in the year. Is the average farmer ready to under take that kind of farming? A BO IT SENATOK IiOt'KXE. In the state senate the other day various derogatory speeches were made regarding Senator Jonathan Bourne. He was held up to ridicule in every form possible. Some of those attacks were justified, ' others were not. The East Oregonian neither defends Senator Bourne, nor defame him. But Senator Bourne is in office and he will be re-elected unless a better man is brought out to run against him. He has come to the front in Oregon largely because under the old machine system the republican party in Oregon fell into the hands of small and narrow mfnded men. The . old system was one under which "peb ples were polished and diamonds dimmed." An able, fearless broad minded man had no opportunity un der the old order of things. The old system developed a set of peanut pol iticians who stood for nothing them selves and wefe controlled by unseen wires pulled by men behind the scenes. When the direct primary was adopted those men fought it and by their fight they placed Jonathan Bourne in office. He was elected not because of personal merit but because he had foresight enough to stand for popular measures and because he was fought by forces the people of Ore gon distrust As Ion? as Bourne is fought by the old time crowd he will win. If he is to be beaten he must be beaten by a man from the "new school" and that man must be big enough and stron "nough to gain and hold the esteem of the people of Oregon. Whether 'such a man can be developed between now and the next election remains to j be seen. There are many men who . . r.not beat Bourne. PEXDLETOX S1IOIL1) ACT. If as an outcome of the controversy now on Pendleton should lose the i):;ineh a.sylum no small part of the '.;,i:ne may he traced to local sources. At a time when Pendleton people should be working together with an ye single to the welfare of the cUy u.'Te is discord. During the past :Vw days, lying, vhdous attacks have jten made here upon Governor West nd State Treasurer Kay. Out of po li.i .il spite thfi.se men have been as soib-d at a time when s-:ch attacks ;'.y do vast hrirrn. Petty politics Is being placed above local patriotism and if this course is continued Pen dleton will reap a bitter reward. It U up to local people to show In a '.i ineing mariner that the attacks upon the new board are not sanrtion- ! by the responsible people of the i'y. Messrs. West and Kay are tho ; .v.eis that be. They are the men . I10 will be lespotihiblo for tiie new asylum. The men who are fighting iibein aro under no such constraint. I There Is but one proper, sensible eourso open to local people. We I should show the new officials every courtesy and aid them In every way possible In the big task they have to perform. Rut we cannot expect to get a half million dollar Institution if we per mit dirty, vilifying attacks upon the rnen who are to build that Institution. Some people seem to forget that Wet and Kay are now In power and have the legislature with them. It la beautiful spring weather any way. PIIYSICAIj charm The question may seem a trlval one to the serious, minded, yet there was never a woman so serious or bo spirit Itual who did not feel secretly pleas ed at the consciousness that she pos sessed physical charm or secretly sen sitive nt the thought that she was de void Of It. Fhyslcal charm does not always ne cessitate beauty. Many of the most fascinating women in the world's his tory, women who have Inspired grrp.' loves and helped mold the destiny of nations, were devoid of actual beauty. But they possessed the charm of man ner and of magnetic quality which leave the Impression of beauty, upon the beholder. When beauty of ac and form Is supplemented by these attributes the world gives way before it. Wrhen it Is devoid of them It Is often n Inef fectual ns a snow Imnge to arouse more than a passing nonce. But even she who Is possessed of nil the charms must yield her scepter eventually to time. Man. the higher animal, however his development may be aided by culture and religion, finds woman at tractive only during the years when she suggests the possible mother. To the immature girl he Is indifferent; the elderly woman he respects for what she has been. But his Interest revolves ahout the young maiden or the ripe matron. He may be a bookworm and a crusty bachelor; he may despise child ren and believe In the extinction of the human race, yet without knowing his glance rests with pleasure and In terest only upon the woman who could perpetuate his' species. We may expatiate upon metal com radeship and preach of spiritual vir tues, yet it is the eternal mother In woman which attracts. It does not hold unless the other nunllt!es sup plement It. , There are women who seem never to possess the suggestive physical charm so dear to the sterner sex; woman who are pronounced spinsters of fifty at sixteen, and there are others who seem to retain it into old age. American women are wonderful in the present day for their skill In look Ine seeming young at a time when their mothers were old ladles. At one of our army posts a few years ago a woman who hP"?m a reigning belle n-jis dlsevprd by 'nvpofeMlr.r rivals to be past fifty years of age. To the young girl of fifteen twenty. five seems old age. Tet when she finds herself in this era of prolonged youth In the very morning of life. To the woman who has found her happiness only in the light of men's admiring eyes the passing of physical charm is tragedy. The greatest tragedy, however, is when she fails to recognize what Is patent to all observers and when she demands from men, by coercion or strategy, the attentions she once received as voluntary tributes to her attractions. Ella Wheeler Wilcox No Trouble. It's a Pleasure Perturbed Parent Who has eaten the cake In the pantry? 1 Undaunted Infant I did. ! Perturbed Parent And what did I you do that for? Undaunted Infant I heard you tell ; Jane always to keep the cupboard ; shut. Yesterday she forgot It, fo 1 j thoueht I would punish her by eat !ng all the cake. IMAGIXATIOX "Has your husband a mind of his own.?" "Well, he thinks It's his own." Spokesman-Review. BLOOD TROUBLES COHSTITDriOm INFECTION Constitutional Blood Poison is the uiodt iiisiuious oi ail di.-n-ases. It begins in an insignificant manner, usually the appearance of a tiny sore being the only outward evidence of it3 presence. But down in the blood the treacherous infection is at work, and ia a short tiv.ie its chain of symptom3 h'?';in to cr-p ot:t. The mouth and tLro.nt ".leer.:!.., : 'tin eruptions break out, sores and sr. appear on the body, the gin; :.: rjroin swell, and some-thr.e.-i L..:r comes out. M!n.--i! ;:: '.i ::-'-S :.u:not cure Co:i ft;.t::Vr!. ! 3! V;r.: '-y only shut the .'.L.... c . v ' tii-j stem to smoulder.i:..'. tv..;l v.r. opportunity c breaking oat afresh. The- only pos sible way to euro the disci.-'e is to KEMO VK .he ire-rms from the blood. S. S. S. y.ui) the blood, raid while removing the nu'cetioii nukes the blood pure, iresh and healthy. This causes a general upbuild:::;,- ;.f the entire system, andwb.f: S. S.S. has ma le a cure th.re is ::o K-tum of the hideous s y m p to 111 3 . S. S. S. is made entirely of vege table matter, containing not the least particle of mineral in any form. It is 1 perfectly safe medicine and a certain cure for blood poison. We have a Home treatment book which we will r,e glad to send free.to all who write and request it, also any medical advice without charge. TEE SWIFT EPECIl'10 CO., Atlanta, On. To Enjoy Life you need a healthy stomach, ac tive liver, kidneys and bowels. These organs and the nerves and the blood are better, do better, when helped by BEECHAiVfS Sold EvaywW. '- k" 10c and 25c m Mother and Son Give Words of Praise Mrs. Barbara Burke suffered for years from malaria and chills. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey drove the disease from her system and keeps her healthy and happy. Her son says Duffy's is "one of the family." He would not be without a bottle in the medicine chest. j,- 'j MRS. BARBARA BURKE and her son, Mr. VALLY BURKE Mrs. Burke writes: "Fifteen years ago I was a sufferer from malaria fever and chills. On the advice of a friend I took Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey and was cured. It proves effective in keeping malaria from my system and is a grand medicine for aged people. I have continued to use it ever since as a tonic." Mrs. Barbara Burke, 730 So. Liberty St., New Orleans, La. In his letter Mr. Burke says: "It is with pleasure that I say and write and it is a pity that I cannot write these words in gold, 'Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is just one of the family, a good help in need.' Good luck to you." Vally Burke, Adv.. Agent, Winter Garden Theatre, New Orleans, La. Duffy's Pure Walt Whiskey has always been and is now a pure.'wholesome, healthful medicinal whiskey, produced without regard to expense in compliance with the requirements of the Foods and Drugs Act, the doctors' "Materia Medica" and the "Pharmacopoeia " the two recognized authorities on drugs and medicines in the United States. Great care is used to have every kernel thoroughly malted, thus producing a liquid food, tonic and stimulant, requiring no digestion. Its palatability and freedom from injurious substances render it so that it can be re tained by the most sensitive stomach. Its gentle and invigorating properties influence fon good every important organ in the body. It makes the old feel young and keeps the young strong and vigorous. CAUTION.-When you ask your drueflst, frrocer or dealer for rmffy's Purt Malt Whiskey, be sure you get the genuine. It Is sold In SEALED BOTTLES 0NLT never In bulk. Look for the trade-mark, the "Old Chemist," on the label, and make sure the seal oyer the cork Is unbroken. Price $1.00 a Urge bottle. . Write Medical Department, The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. Y., for doctors' ad Tlce and an Illustrated medical booklet containing testimonials and rules for health, both sent free. THIS IS GUARDS WOT MONEY THAT I5 NAT. Ak n -3.ix.-...v.i' rea ,."11 Our kink he in jr. a National Ihiuk, places us umler Government Supervision, mid .trim ran lee"- s:ifrty to every deositor. We re iVr tlio-e who have not dealt with us to those who If AVE. Make OUU Honk YOUR Bank. Wo r.ay 4 per centintercst on Time Deposits, compounded .-emi-nnnunlly. THE American National Bank Pendleton, Oregon I UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY Orph eum J. P. HEDETtNACH, Proprietor HIGH-CLASS .UP-TO-DATE MOTION PICTURES For Men, Women and Children SFK PROGRAM IN TODAY'S PAPER. Program Changes on Sunday's, Tuesday's and Friday's. Tho East Oregonian is eastern ()r :on'9 representative piper. It leads and the people appreciate it and show it by their liberal patro age. It is the advertising medium of this section. SW! IN A Iheatrs It . . ( Headquarter For (Toilet Goods W are Bole MiiwJuHui aad Distributor! of th OttofeMto PS TOELB7T GRKAM OOVD CREAM TOOTH POWDER Ml 1IT. HOOD CREAM Tallman & Co. Leading Dragfiiu of Batten Orecwa, THE PENDLETON DRUG CO. IEDEUII OIIIIS-IOI PROMISES Detroit Engines 2 to 50 H. P. Uaea common Kerosene (lamp o!l for fuel, also gasoline, naptha or dis tillate. No change In equipment to necessary to change from one fuel to the others. For prices see J. W. Kim brell, agent, Pendleton, Ore. Phone Main 180. Sample engine at Long Brothers 114 A IK K. Webb St Phone Mala 7 f You Make a Bad Mistake When jron pnt off baying four until Fall pfirchaae It NOW and secure the bent Rock Springs coal the mines prodaov at prices con-ldrrably lower Uian tluioe prvralllng In Fall and Winter. Ily stocking up now row avoid ALL danger of being fin able to secure It when old weather arrives. Henry Kopittke Phone Main 178. Fresh Fish Meaw and Kaiisagee EVEUY DAY. We handle only the pares! of lard, he m and bacom. Empire Weal Go. Phone Mahi IB. FRESH MEATS H.M HAtJES, FISH A XI) LAUD. AI'Anys pure nmj deliver 1 promptly. If you phone the Centra! Meat Market ins E. Alta St., Hione Main S3. r.l Si n c Transfer Phone Main 5: CALLS PROMPTLY ANS WERED FOR ALL BAQUAQB TRANSFERRING. PIANO AND FURNITURB MOVINO AND HBAVT TRUCK INO A SPECIALTY. Dally East Oregonian bj only 65 cents par 1 Sill