page roro DAILY EAST OREGOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, 'IIUKSIAY, FKIMXIWRY 29. 1911. EIGHT PAGES AX INDEPENDENT NEW SPATE it. Published Pally. Weekly and Semi Weekly at Pendleton, Otvpou, by the EAST OIIKUOMAN PI HUSHING CO. smsruii'Tiox hates. I 'ally, one year, by mall $3.00 Dally, Mi months, by mall ., -.oU lal!y, three mom lis. by mail 1.23 Dally, one month, by mall oO Daily, one year, by carrier 7.50 Dally, tx months, by carrier 3 75 Daily, three months, by carrier 1.95 Dally, one month, by carrier 05 Semi-Weekly, one year, by mail 1.50 Peml Yeekly, six months, hy mail 73 Senil-W eekly, four months, by mall... .50 The Dally East Oregonlnn la kept on sale at the Orcjon News Oo., 3JS) Morrison treet. Portland. Oreson. Northwest News Co.. Portland, Oregon. Chlcaco litirrau, !H'0 Security Itullillns. Washington. IV C, Hureau, 501 Four teenth street, N". W. Member Vnlted Tress Association. cure to the mall order habit into which some of them have fallen. Those who attended the meeting esterday realize now, if they did not before, that each of the six organi sations represented at the convention l.r.s a worthy and legitimate purpose. No organization does work that is inimical to others bu in a general way each organization is working for the benefit of its members and Inci dentally for the betterment of the county at large. The six organiza tions should pull together better than they have been doing In the past. WHY SITU A TREATY. r.ntereo at tnp posiuiuce ai I cnuieiuu, frtnn us mumii rh mRll matter. ' Telephone Main 1 Official City and County Taper. CUnio n a: label? FATHER. He had never made a fortune, or a noise . In the world where men are seeking alter fame; But he had a healthy brood of girls and boys, Who loved the very ground on which he trod, They thought him Just a little short of God; . Oh, you should have heard the way they said his name "Father." There seemed to be a tender little prayer In their voices, even when they called him "Dad," Thought the man was never heard of anywhere, As a hero, yet you somehow understood He was doing well his part, and "making good"; And you knew it by the way his children had Of saying "Father." He gave them neither emi nence nor wealth. But he gave them blood un tainted with a vice; And the opulence of undiluted health; He was honest, and unpur chasable and kind; He was clean in heart, and body, and in mind; So he made them heirs to ' riches beyond price This Father. He never preached nor scolded; and the rod Well he used it as a turning pole in play; But he showed the tender sympathy of God To his children in their troub les and their Joys. He was always chum and com rade with his boys; And his daughters oh, you ought to hear them say, "Father." SHOULD PULL TOGETHER. At the "Get Together" convention yesterday many things were said that were timely and right to the point They bear directly upon the business relations existing between the "dif ferent classes of men who made up the gathering. It is well those senti ments were voiced aa they were be cause good generally results from a free and fair expression of opinion. In speaking as president of the state organization of the farmers' union J. W. McAllister told of the stand of the union with reference to trading. He believes that farmers should trade with their home merchants rather than with outside mall order houses. But he contends also that In making purchases of produce merchants should treat farmers with the same consideration that they, the mer chants, ask of the farmers. That is enly fair. Speakers representing the local bus iness organizations also made timely remarks upon thi3 subject. If a far mer is receiving credit from a mer chant he should not send his cash away to a mail order establishment If he wishes to make cash purchases get, cash quotations from your home merchants and spend your money with him. When you buy at home you can pee what you are buying and make an exchange If an article is un satisfactory. The home merchant payB taxes, direct and Indirect, that serve to keep up local government and local Institutions such as schools roads and churches. The mail order house does nothing of this sort. A mail order house never extends you credit when you may be In poor cir cumstances and when your family may be In need of the necessities of life. In the view of this paper whole- erne results will follow yesterday's meeting. It was a "get together" af fair in spirit aa well as In name. Bach roan present was ready to listen to the ether fallow's side of the question and did so. Incidentally he learned some things that he should know. Mefj. chanta deserved to be reminded that they are under obligations to local produce raisers and farmers were in need of a few cold facte with refer- In return for the administration's support of tfan Francisco for the Fa t.nma exposition the people of Cali fornia, or at least some of them, have tiaded off their right to object to the admission of Japanese coolies to this country. What will be the outcome of this bargain? Since Japan has assumed an obli gation of honor to keen her laborers it home it will require some time to test the new treaty. It is evident though that the new arrangement bodes trouble for the Pacific coast. No doubt the Japs will flock to this country in greater numbers than In the past. They will tend to drive the American laborer from the construc tion camps and will enter Into com petition with white men in other lines of activity. They are already doing this to a dangerous extent in Califor nia. White men cannot compete with Japanese because the latter have a standard of living that permits them tc exist at but slight expense. Why is the Taft administration soJ favorable to the admission of the Japanese coolies that the president was willing to trade his Influence in Keating the Panama exposition in order to tie the hands of the Califor nians? Is the president afraid of the mikado and wishes to await the com pletion of the big canal before fac ing this issue in a firm and manly way? Or has he listened to the plea of railway magnates and others who desire to secure cheap labor from the orient? The meadow larks are here, the baseball fans have formed a league for the summer and there are many other signs of spring. But now comes the snow to show that Old Winter has not yet left the stage. In order to land a contract for two Argentine warships for a shipbuild ing concern someone has given away secrets of the American navy. The thing looks bad but of course the se crets may have been of an open sort. Lorimer seems about as hard to ditch as was the Honorable J. W. Bailey. Barnacles are always hard to cast .off. "All for one; one for all." THERE ARE MANY RENTERS. Editor East Oregonian: This may look as if I were trying to keep in the limelight when in reality no noe cares less for such things than myself. But there Is one phase of the situation that I should like to have seen mentioned at the get together meeting. The relation or the renter to the so-much-talked-of progress of Umatilla county. The question is frequently asked of the farmers' union people, why don't you do things? Why don't you take part in the public enterprises that are being exploited The district fair, for instance, etc. Mr. Smythe said in his address, put your society on a sound financial footing. Mr. Gwinn cites us to the large number of rich farmers in the viclajty. The fact is that the wheat fields of this county are passing Into the hands of the renter almost entirely. Every year he is squeezed a little tighter. For instance, he gets permanently located, so he thinks, at least Some one comes along and raises the rent on him. He moves on to the next place that he can get, or tries some other locality. There Is little chance for perma nent Improvement under these con ditions for either the country or the renter. He is little more than a chat tel, a mere pawn to be moved about the board, or rather the wheat fields of the country; He couldn't do things If he could afford It. He is not fixed in one place long enough. He Is not identified with the best In terests of the locality In which he lives. The Farmers' Union In this partic ular region Is mainly composed of these men. They are making a half hearted effort to protect their own Interests, and that's about all. The rich retired farmer, as a rule, nas no particular Interest in our move ments. In other places where condi tions are different, the union Is do ing things. And are making them selves a power in the land. The ques tion Is, are we drifting towards con ditions that exist and have existed In Ireland so long? And If so, what Is the remedy. This is no personal complaint, but facta that concern your country and your city more than they do Yours truly, L. T. EATON, a Renter. Pendleton, Ore., Feb. 23. Some reformers want to make the world better so that there won't be so many temptations for them to yield to. SUMMER AFTERNOON. (A Toem by Edith Wharton in the March Scribner.) Not all the wasteful beauty of tho year Heaped in the scale of one consu- mate hour Shall this outweigh: the curve of quiet air That held, as In the green sun-fluted light Of sea-caves quivering In a tidal lull, Those tranced towers and long un rulned walls, Moiit-girdled from the world's dis solving touch. The rook-flights lessening over eve ning woods, And. down the unfrequented grassy slopes, The shadows of old oaks contempla tive Reaching behind them like the thoughts of age. High overhead hund the long Sussex ridge, Sun-cintured, as a beaker's rim of gold Curves round its green concavity; and slow Across the upper pastures of tho sky The clouds moved white before the herding airs That In the hollow, by the moated walls, Stirred not one sleeping lily from Its sleep. Deeper the hush fell; more remote the earth Fled onward with the flight of cloud and sun, And cities strung upon the flashing reel Of nights and days. We knew no more of these Than the grey towers redoubling In the moat The image of a bygone strength transformed . To beauty's endless uses; and Itue them We felt the touch of that renewing power That turns the landmarks of man's ruined toll To high star-haunted reservoirs of peace. And with that sense there came the deeper sense Of moments that, between the beats of time, May thus inspire in some transcend ent air The plentitude of being. I1CDDAHISM. Sometimes the offlceseeker ' who makes the slowest run scatters the moat "dust" It must be said of Buddahlsm, how ever, that it has left one Indelible mark all over India, China and the East, and that is the teaching of gen tleness and kindness to one another and to animals. Buddha tausht that life is but a prolonged endeavor to escape from suffering, and that, therefore, to cause others to suffer is the unforgivable sin. By medita tion a man is to lose the sense of the painfulness of life, and to earn some mitigation, from the cycle through which he must pass before reaching Nirvana, where all rebirth ends at last and one loses consciousness forever. This creed is pure agnosticism, hold ing that a man's ow n acts alone make up the tale of his faith. Agnosticism everywhere throws a man back upon himself, and every where and always produces one of two results. It makes men. as in In dia and China, pessimists hopeless, helpless and without ambitions for either their souls or their bodies; or it makes men colossal egoists who worship themselves. Nothing can oe more portentous of evil to the race than our agnostic democracies of the west, which are putting man on a ped estal and waving the incense of eight hours' work, old-age pensions, no con scription, a vote for each adult, state support, and so on, before him. It was a moving spectacle, for ex ample, to all students of the ethnic religions when Mr, Keir Hardie, as the exponent of western agnosticism or man as his own god, came out to India to preach this dostrine to the Buddhist impregnated Indians, steep ed in pessimism. They immediately dubbed him the "King of' the Coolies" and could not wrench their Imagina tions to see how a man of no caste could be worth Imitating or follow ing. The first flash of a picture that will some day be a terrible conflict between the Yellow and the White was revealed when the man who cared everything for man and met the men who care nothing for man, and neither understood the other in the least. From "Religion and Cas.e in India," by Price Collier, in the March Scribner. THE REASON. "When Lincoln was on circuit in his lawyering days," says a Chicago veteran, "he used to put up at some pretty bad taverns taverns where, big as he was, by Crlnus, ho and the Judges and the lawyers would have to sleep two and three in a bed. "And what beds they were! Once after a wretched night Lincoln got up and walked In his long night shirt to a notice on the wall that said: "No smoking In the bedrooms.' "He chuckled grimly. Then " he took a pencil from his night shirt pocket and scribbled beneath the no tlce:- 'The-fleas don't like It.'" Dignity Is a way we have of mak ing people believe we are what they know we ain't. IHlood's Sarsaparilla Is the most effective medicine for the complete purification of the blood and the complete renovation of the whole sys tem. Take it this spring. Oet It today In usual liquid form or tablets called Sarsataba. 100 Doses $1. Read the want ada today. . Makes the most nutri tious food and the most dainty and delicious. TOOTED Absolutely Pure The only Baking Powder made from Royal Gjrape Cream of Tartar No fussing or fretting over the biscuit-making. Royal is the aid to many a cook's success. Royal Cook Book 800 Receipts Free. Send Name and Address. ROYAL BAKINO POWHER CO., NEW YORK, HE WAS NOT DISINTERESTED. Andrew Carnegie at a dinner in New York said of the war scare that started up coincldentally with his $10,000,000 peace fund gift: "It wasn't, perhaps, a coincidence, that war scare. Let us remember what large interests are involved in the maintenance of armies and arma ments and navies. "These war scares that, arising so opportunely, shut off so many peace movements, make me think of Smith. "As Smith frowned over a long dressmaker's bill at breakfast, Mrs Smith murmured: "'Who was lfsald that a woman's best friend was her dressmaker?" " 'Probably the dressmaker,' growl ed Smith." Oosslp is when a woman tells her neighbors what one of her husband's friends has told him. The real hero Is the one who goes through the world without hurting any one. For Sale or Trade Fine 8 Room House nicely furnished, fited up for house-keeping apartments is now renting for $45 a month, would consider proposition from some wheat man who wants to exchange 1 60 acres for a good home. Only two blocks from Main Street, this is a splendid piece of property. If you have a trad ing proposition see about-it at once. 4-room house partly furnish ed, worth $1000, If sold in next few days $650 will pay for It $300 cash, balance monthly payments. Modern cottage on North side. If sold at once 13200 will buy It. Part cash, balance easy terma. TEUTSCH The Ileal Estate and Insurance Man. 550 Main St. Phono M. 5 Your Doctor Is Honest Honest in his knowledge of diagnosis and treatment. Honest in his endeavors for his patients' benefit. We put his medicines together in the most scientific way, under the best and safest conditions .'. Your doctor and your druggist guard your health "We are in business for your good health." THE PENDLETON DRUG CO. Byers' Best Floiir la made from the choicest wh. that grows. Good bread is assured whea BYERS' BEST FLOUR is used. Bran, Shorts, Steam Rolled Barley always on hand. Pendleton Roller Mills Pendleton, Omgoan. Headquarters For Toilet Goods We are Sola Manafaetnrete and Distributors of the Orlefcrated F'S TOILOT CREAM COLD CREAM TOOTH POWBKR and MT. HOOD GRKAM Tallman & Co. Leading Druggleta of Eaaterr j Oreceau i Cure Your Rheu matism AND OTHEn ILLS OP TFIE DODT AT TUB Hot Lake Sanatorium The neuse of Bffleiency) HOT LA KB, OREGON THJB Oregon-Vashingten Railroad & Hav.Co. Sella round-trip tickets, goad far three months.allowlng It.tt worth of accommodation at the Sanato rium, at Portland and all O.-YT. R. ft N. Btatlena. For further Information and Illus trated booklet, addresa Dr. W. T. Phy, Medical Supt and Mgr., Hot Lake, Oregon, any O.-W. R. ft N. Agent, or write te WM. NoM CURAT, General Pasaeager Agent, PORTLAND. AREOON. FRESH MEATS 8AC8AGES, FI8H AND LAR. Always pare and dellrered promptly. If yen phoae tke Central Ueat Uarfcet 18 E. Alta BU Phone Mala IS. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Marks Copyrights Ac. Anyone .ending a .ketch and dewrtptlan tnaj flnlrkly ascertain fir oplaien f re. whettier .0 Invention l. pr.b.bl? patentable. C.aimunlca. tlon.iitricilrrni.oiiHil. HANDBOOK pn Curat jenl free. IMfloat fap.nrf fur tecuruiit patent., I'iitau taken through Mutin i Co. teoalM special notice, wll hout ctmrra. In the Scientific American, k hA&dsoniAlr INnirtrat4 wktf. fjimatt Mt niUUsn of any flenUdo Ion real. Trtt, $1 jflftr; fur month, $U Sold t)f All nwMM)r uraoct) Offlc. (36 F BU Washington, IX O T i 1 Cass Matlock, Prop. BEST PICTURES MORE PICTURES LATEST PICTURES and illustrated songs in the city. Shows afternoon and eve nings. Refined and en tertaining for the entire family Next to French Restaurant Entire change three times each week. Be sun and tec the next change. Adults 10c Children under 10 years, 5c v