East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, February 01, 1911, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    EIGHT PAGE
FAGS FOCB
DAILY KAST OREOON1AN. PEJfDLETOJf, OREOOSf, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1011.
aaBaBBBBanBBaBassBaBaBaBsr .j dlLV
AM INDEPENDENT NEW8PAPEB.
rllsh Dally. Wckly sod 8eml-Tkly
St Pniil-toD, Oregon, by ta
BU8I ORKUOMAN l'L 11L18U1NG CO.
8UBSCRUT10X BATES.
allr, omt Jar, by mall 15.00
ally. Hi month, by mall 2W
Pally, three month, by mall 125
Dally, on month, by mall 60
ally, on year, by carrier 7.50
fwlly, lx months, by carrier ...... 1.75
Dally, three month, by carrier IM
Dally, one month, by carrier 4
Vekly, one year, fly mail 1.50
Weekly, ill month, by mall 75
Weekly, four month, by mall 50
ml-Weekly, one year, by mll 1.60
ml-Veekly, lx month, by mall 76
Semi-Weekly, (our montba, by mail... .60
Vn Dally East Oregonlan la kept o al
II ta Orecos Neva Co., S2i Morrlaoo
Itreet. Portland. Oreson.
Morthweat New Co., Portland, Oreffoo.
Chlcaco Bureau, 009 Security Building.
Washington, D. C, Bureau 601 Four
Main (treet, N. W.
Member Cnlted Press Association.
Kntered at th postoffice at Pendleton,
Oregon, as second clas mall flatter.
aHlephon Mala 1
Official City and Connty Paper.
T1IE SWEET, AYIDE WORLD
Never askin' time or tide to
wait for you a minute:
Thank the Lord, the world is
wide with greenest
pathways in it
Still we Journey
High an' low
Glad of blossoms
And of snow.
Little time have we to wait in
the vales of sighin';
There's a rosy, airship route,
an' we'll go a-flyin';
Slngin' happy
High an' low,
Glad of blossoms
x And of snow.
Frank L. Stanton.
ed. The purchase of the machine
was endorsed by the very men who
are now "muckraking" the superin
tendent. He boldly charges tha( the
hold over committee make no actual
investigation of the asylum and that
their attack upon him was prompted
by petty politics and not by meritori
ous reasons.
If tr. Steiner's statements are cor
rect and they certainly have the ring
o; sincerity he has been badly ma
ligned and a great injustice has been
attempted against the inmates of the
asylum. In order to fight the present
state board and Dr. Steiner a legisla
tive ilttiue has tried to greatly reduce
the asylum appropriation. They have
taken this stand upon the assumption
that citizens of Oregon are penurious
people and will endorse any move
that looks like economy. It has been
a heartless move for the reason that
the blow would fall most heavily, not
upon the superintendent, but upon
the unfortunate people under his
charge.
Out with such politics as this. It
has no place in a civilized state.
IT WOULD UK UNJUST.
SAN FKANCISCO WINS.
Umatilla county should object and
object strongly if the constitutional
amendment being fathered by the sen
ate committee on taxation looks to
taking the taxation of public service
corporations away from the counties
and giving it to the state.
As pointed out in a news story In
the East Orcgonian yesterday such
a change would work a heavy annual
loss upon this county and upon all
other counties, which like Umatilla,
have considerable railroad mileage. It
would inure to the benefit of Mult
nomah county and of interior counties
that have no mileage.
Evidently it is the intention of
those behind the move to raise all
money needed for state purposes from
the taxation of public corporations
if possible to do so. But it is an un
fair plan for this reason. Money
needed for state purposes should be
raise! from the various counties in
proportion to the wealth of those
counties. Now Multnomah county haj
an assessed valuation of 277 millions
while Umatilla has but a 10 million
assessment. In other words Multno
mah county is approximately seven
times as wealthy as Umatilla and
should consequently pay seven times
as much in state tax-s as does Uma
tilla, But see here. Multnomah's assess
ment of public service corporations
amounts to less than twice as much
as docs that of Umatilla. The cor
poration assessment in Multnomah
totals 24 millions while in Umatilla
the corporations are assessed at over
12 millions. So If the state raises its
funds from the taxation of corpor
ations Umatilla county will have to
pay more than half as much as does
Multnomah when this county should
Justly pay but one-seventh as much
as Multnomah. ' Interior counties
that have no public service corpora
tions would be excused entirely from
payment of state taxes.
In the view of the East Oretronian
there is no Just reason for taking the
taxation of corporations away from
the counties an giving the same to
the state. Th'-re may be sound ar
gument in support of the plan for
having the assessments of corpora
tions made by the state tax commis
sion, rather than by the various
county assessors. But that plan Is
now already In operation and hence
this phase of the subject can have no
bearing upon the move said to be con
templated by the senate taxation
committee.
After a hard and furious fight San
Francisco has won out in its efforts
tc land the Panama exposition. The
issue was practically decided yester
day when the house of representa
tives at Washington voted for the
Pacific coast city. Under the circum.
stances it was a notable victory and
San Francisco deserved to win. The
people of the city by the Golden Gate
will arrange a good exposition and
they will see that the enormous
crowds are properly handled. They
do things that way in San Francisco.
Then San Francisco and the state of
California will finance their own
show. They ask for no money from
the federal government. Again it
will be more appropriate to hold the
Panama exposition in a Pacific coast
city than at New Orleans. The Pa
nama canal will mean more to the
west than' it can possibly mean to
the gulf states. '
TRIED REMEDY
rC Xl POP? THF ftRIP'
ar mm m ih wa
IfcaYdHl DWl
ft.
Asy Your Druggist for a Pre Peruna
Almanac for 1911.
A SPINSTER'S PARADISE.
I Known For Its Strength
The Frst National Bank
PENDLETON, OREGON
CAPITAL, SURPLUS and
UNDIVIDED PROFITS .
RESOURCES OVER
52,
000
SECURITY
IMPROA'E JACKSON STREET.
Preliminary steps towards secur
ing a new Main street bridge are be
ing taken and there are few who
will deny but that the move is a pro
per one. The present bridge is old
and it is but a question of a short
time until it must be replaced. But
what is being done towards street
improvements this summer? Worse
oven than the Main street bridge is
the condition of the streets in many
portions of the city. Jackson street
i. one of the very worst. It is a dis
g;ace to the city and now that the
branch asylum is to be located below
town the improvement of that street
Sand also of Ualey street will be Im
perative. Yet the East Oregonlan
has as yet heard of no move to pave
or macadamize those streets. Would
it not be folly to build a fine new
steel bridge unless the north sid.
thoroughfare leading away from that
hri'le is also to be improved?
Local people will care but hull
whether the branch asylum is to be
located upon the Daniels place or up
on the Oliver-Carpenter tract. ( What
we want is the institution. The so
li c-tion of a site is up to the state
hoard. Those men must be respon
sible for the erection of the branch
hospital and they are in the best po
sition to judge of building sites.
Roosevelt says he is a progressive.
Assuredly he is. He is the man who
put "the breath of life" Into the pro
gressive move that Is now sweeping
the country and is .making trust mag
nates foar God and even have some
respect for the laws of the land.
A wag once declared that all good
Americans went to Paris when they
died.
In like manner It may be said that
all good old maids come to New York
when they die. 'If they are really
clever and good for much they don't
wait to die before they come; they
come while they are still a'lve and
able to enjoy the terrestrial paradise
of the spinster.
No other city In the world shelters
so many unattached women, and the
number grows every year by leaps
and bounds, for word has been pass
ed along the line of spins that New
York is the really and truly Mecca
for the unmarried woman; the only
place where a woman without a bus
band is frankly regarded more as an
object of envy than a subject for pity.
As a result every unappropriated
blessing the country over who has
the price packs her trunk and hikes
out for the promised land, where a
woman has the right to stay single or
double as she pleases, without having
to stand for the contemptuous com
ments of her neeiualntanwu.
Not by accident does that eternal
old maid, the Goddess of Liberty,
stand guard at the gateway of New
York. She Is a symbol of the free
dom that the greatest city in Ameri
ca offers to the spinster. .
The hegira of unmarrrea women to
New York has been accomplished so
quietly that few peopre realize how
great It has been or how large is the
colony of husbandless ladies, but they
are counted by the tens of thousands,
and still their number grows.
To begin with, there is an army of
professional women, writers, artists,
actresses, designers, stenographers,
buyers and so on who naturally find
New York the best market for their
talents. Besides these, however, there
is a legion of women who do not have
to work, women who are rich or well
to do who have simply come to New
York to live because this city is the
one place in which a lone, lorn woman
suffers no inconvenience from not
having a man tied to her apron strin.
or, "Miss" on her visiting card.
The reason for this ts eny to find.
In Now York the unmarried woman
occupies nn entirely ditlerent status
from that which she holds In any
other place. Elsewhere, and especial
ly in the provinces, mere Is a tacit
belief that when a woman is a spin
ster she is one by force of circum
stances in a word, that she didn't
marry because she couldn't. New
York assumes that the old maid is
an old maid by choice, and that she
didn't marry because she didn't want
to.
Whatever the facts in the case, this
latter theory is naturally a soothing
one to the spinister's vanity.. It is also
agreeable to dwell among those who
regard it as no reflection upon a
woman's charms for her not to be
able to exhibit some man's scalp as
the result of the prowess of her bow
and spear, but who on tne contrary,
are disposed to think tnat the woman
with a good profession or an ample
income, and her own latchkey and in
dividual poe-ketbook, and nobody with
a legal right to tell her of her faul's,
has, as St. Paul says, chosen the bet
ter part. Selected.
1 1 Kit UNREASONABLE 'JEALOUSY
EVHE5sW
!
Mfl
IIOTION OF uUiLlTY
ESJtK Ometm
(f JUtrl a
Vat. rait nata)
IMaaffiMpaMUr.
Soaa it Is ratal
tens wd Hart itortai
tenant antral
Ml tMQirtn.
For Good Heading Gel
UPPINCOTT'S
MONTHLY MAGAZINE
Erch hint CmmpUto in Htf
Its contents is of sack a compelling natar as
to cause the reader to boy nuaoW and wajrf
the next. LIPPINCOTTS bow carer a wide
field of discriminating reader wka Meat saty
that which is boat in FkMon. Fad. ami tVa
ONE YEATS SUBSCRIPTION WILL IKING Tt YH
1 2 GREAT COMPLETE NOVELS ens in each bra.
50 TIMELY ARTICLES by competent writera.
75 SHORT STORIES clever, clean-cat, and vital,
60 PLEASING POEMS that need no Interpreter.
200 PAGES OF NEW AMERICAN HUMOR in "Walm
Wine," the most widely quoted humor section in America.
2000 piges yearly of exhilarating reading.
M seat osr
Send all orders to thb paper or mt
uppiNCorrs magazine
mt rot on sncui muzm omn
Headquarters For
Toilet Goods
We are Bole Maa(aetaren aad
Dlatrlkaton of the Oelefaa4
s
TOILET CRKAV
COLD CREAM
TOOTH POWDER
MT. HOOD CREAM
Tallman & Co.
Leading Druggists of Casterr
!
Detroit Engines
2 to 50 H. P.
Usee common Kerosene (lamp oil)
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 & 116 E. Webb St. Phone Main T
Money to Loan on Good Secur
ity. Will Accept applications
ft for 1000, $ 1500 or $4000 Loan
filARK ?i100RH0USE COMPANY
Orpfeeem Tfeeat
HIGH-CLASS; (UP-TO-DATE MOTION
PICTURES
Ft r Men, Wcmen and Children
SEE PROGRAM IN TODAY'S PAI'KR.
Irograni Changes cm' SunJaj's. Tuwlay's etnj Erlday'a.
Yoti Cannot Do Better
CT.OTIIIXG MADE OF WOOD.
DR. STEINER'S IEFEXSE
Dr. Steiner, superintendent of the
a-lum, has b.- n allowed to defend
Mmaelt and he makes a strong show
tog. He presents facts showing that
Instead of being extravagantly con
ducted tho institution under hid
charge Ik one of the most economic
ally managed In the United States.
The pf-r capita cost of living there Is
lower than at any similar Institution
In the north or weL The airylum
farm instead of being an expensive
luxury made a net profit last year of
$38,000 for the tate. Th auto,
-which he la criticised for buying, he
shows to have been absolutely need-
Cloths made literally from wood
are the latest sartorial venture. A
besinning is being made with the
making of waistcoats. The discovery
of this new process is largely due to
the fact that bleached cotton is
known to be composed of very nearly
purr; cellulose.
Working on this basis, scientists
have discovered a method of manu
facturing a thread of cellulose ex
tracted from spruce wood.
Cotton spinners are exceeding opti
mistic about the discovery, It is as
serted, and with material manufactur
ed from this latest process expect to
produce clothing at prices far below
those now charged. The finest pro
duct will, It Is said, be cheaper than
cotton In tho bale.
In addition to this cardinal advan
tage, the new material can be dyed
nny color, and a very important
point the dye will not fade. Lastly,
the material Is nonlnflammable.
"The new process should bring the
best up-to-date attire within tne reach
of almost all," said an expert on
clothing matters yesterday . "Also,
since waistcoats are to be manufac
tured of this cellulose thread extract
ed from spruce wood, x can see no
reason why all the rest or one's suit
should not be made of a similar ma
terial. In fact, the discovery should
revolutionize the price of all cotton
goods." lyondon Correspondent New
York Times.
A certain main line resident
returned home early the other
morning. Ife inserted his key in the
keyhole of his door with difficulty,
but managed to crawl upstairs with
out awakening his wife, he thought.
At tho breakfast table next morning
one look at her reproachful face told
him ho was wrong.
"I'm sorry l"narried you!" she ex
claimed. "You're a brute! I saw you
on .the corner hugging the lamppost
at 2 o'clock this morning."
"Why, Mary!" expostulated the
penitent John. . "Don't you think that
a bit unfair? Who'd a-thought you'd
ever be Jealous of a lamppost?" St.
Paul Dispatch.
17 ROOM HOUSE
On South Main, $1300 on
ly requires $500 cash to buy.
12 ROOM HOUSE
On South Main, will
for wheat or alfalfa
Would pay $"000 to
difference on good
ranch.
trade
land.
$7000
wheat
A Souring? KxKtI'iio
"Don't you feel that it Is pleasant
to be kind and generous? Don't you
experience happiness In giving?"
"No," replied Senator Sorghum,
"not since I got Into a mix-up by try
ing to be kind and generous to our
state legislature. Washington Star.
"Maud's hair Is what you would
call Titian. Isn't It?"
"Well, Titian or Iml-Tltlan." Bos
ton Transcript."
sS' CELEBRATED V"wrom a
V STOMACH U'
BITTERS
The amount
you
receive
r rkrrom a snori
STOMACH Jfr"irse of the
TMUots wj 1 1
surprise you,
psrieelnllv In
Sour Rtnmncli
Indigestion,
CoHllveness,
Golds, Grippe,
and Malaria.
Try It Today.
SPKV',
BEAUTIFUL NEW BUN
GALOW fine location, worth $"000
price today only IjvlOOO,
$1500 cash, balance easy
terms. -
7 BOOM HOUSE
On West Court, worth $1500
but "A sold at onco Sj51050
cash will buy it.
C BOOM HOUSE
On Union street, partly fur
nished, worth $000, price
$650, -2 cash, balance
monthly payments.
$2500 HOUSE
in Payette, Idaho, to trade
for Pendleton property.
Fine new bungalow in
Portland to trade for Pen
dleton fioine.
NICE 5 BOOM HOUSE
On Anu street, worth $1050,
$1250 cash will handle it.
Lot ,60x100. Splendid shade
trees and lawn.
. 10 ACBE TRACT
in Walla Walla to trade for
Pcndlc'ton property.
You Make a
Bad Mistake
When you pat off baying your
tutU Fall purchase It NOW
and secure the bent Rock
Sprinjra coal the mlnea prodaos
at prior considerably lower thaa
those prvralllng In Fall and
Wlntrr.
By stocking; op now yoa
avoid ALL dangrr of belnf Ba
silic to secure It when aald
weather srrivra.
Henry Kopittke
Phone Main tJB.
Fresh Fish
MeaU and Bannaires
EYEKT DAT.
We handle only tfte , pnrast
of lard, hams and bacon.
Empire F.lcat Go.
Phone Main IB.
LEE TEUTSCH
Phone Main 5 550 Main Street
The Real Estate and Insurance Man
Byers
Best
Flour
Is tnade from the choicest wh- that
(Trows. Good bread is assured who
DYERS' BEST FLOUB is nsL Bran,
Shorts, R'cpm Boiled Barley alwayftou
hand.
Pendleton Roller Mills
Pendlerton, Oregon.
FRESH 1.3EATS
SAl'SAGES, FISH AND '
LARD.
Always pure and dollvsrsd
promptly, If you phone the
Central Meat Market
108 E. Alia U Phone Mala SS.
.Sr-,iM-jAV, CO Y-r;S'
A?JiLr v-;-':.T? CXPSntf NC3
ij-iViC
'OH W
- m
4 a t-'W'-ihrt-'
'PYnr ConvniGKTt. Ac.
Anrnno amidirtK a rkHrh hI iVrrljittnn m)
Vl!rl:ly r" iTtniH nur i.i'iinn fri'O ,iif,mr AO
Invention m I1!-"!-!, Mf puiiMif utitii romnnifitfit-
tx iiHM.ru'ttrr'iiiiiii. Mti ii. n, ;; )! 10K " rmii
rntonlfl tki.pn
C'dai ivdiu. Willi
CDltttlon i f n arifhUUfl.Joiirhiil, Term, A
par: l'"ir kuonthn, L Bo I J ly n on 1 outer
Cc,?blSrow' New Yoit
.iiwHj; omcj. ( lr ft- Waabiiuiou. u.vi
Fililnc Transfer
Phone Main 5
C CALLS PROMPTLY ANS
WERED FOR ALL
BAGGAGE TRANSFERRING.
PIANO AND . FURNITURB
MOVING AND HBAVT TRUCK
ING A SPECIALTY. '
FOR SALE Old newspapers wrap
, psd In bundles or 110 each suitable
for wrapping:, patting under car.
pets, etc. Price, lie per bundle,
twa bundles, lie. Enquire this at.