DAILY EAST ORBGOXIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. MONDAY, OCTOnF.n 23, 1911. I SPORTS j PACll lC COAST lUCVK. 0at Season Closes. San Francisco, Oct. '.':( Portland won first place in the coast loa.su pennant race that ended esterd.iy. 1 J'orlland also won tne pennant i.im year. The championsmp was nosvi contested. Portland hoinjr hard press ed l.v Happy HoRan. The race was virtually settled last week when Ver non w as badly beaten in the series j ilh Oakland. Below is the standing, of the teams at the windup. I Club. W Portland 113 Vernon 11$ Oakland 1U ss Fucrainuilo San Francisco . !5 103 SC) 112 Los Angeles S2 12' lYisoo X-7; Portland- 1-3, San Francisco. Oct. 23. Th reason of the Pacific Coast baseball ; serve to the country its brilliantly plu-K-ngue came to an end here yesterday maged and shill-tungued birds, which when San Francisco captured both have been carried out of the big is Kames of a double header from Port- lands in hundreds by the sailors of land, winners of the pennant. The all outgoing vessels. Then, too, there northerners played as they pleased are regular consignments of other and apparently didn't care whether hundreds of birds to dealers in such they won or lost. Portland registered nine errors in the second game and also tried out a new pitcher. Young fcy name. He was touclied up lor n hits and seven runs striking out one man. Score: First game Portland San Francisco Seaton and La Longe; Schmidt. Second game IHirtland San Francisco 7 11 0 most gaudily colored birds of Aus- Young and La Lige; Miller and tralia. Superintendent Carson says Ifrrry. I that the prices on many of the varie- Angi-ls 6-8; Vernon 7-7. ties now shown have advanced ma- Los Angeles. Oct. 23. -With players terially in the 4ast few months, and changing positions between nearly dealers say that not only will they every inning and Happy Hogan cap- continue to go up, but that some of ping the climax by going in to pitch, the rare varieties will not be in the Los Angeles and Vernon brought the, market at all in a year if the Aus 1S11 Pacific Coast League season totralian embargo continues. Even at a close here yesterday in a joke con- present prices the birds are scarce, test which Los Angeles won. S to 7. j Australia is not alone in these re It took ten innings to decide the s:r eting laws The Philadelphia Zoo winner, ine apparent euoiis oi eacn . team to make the other win caused the game to go ten innings. Vernon won the morning game, a featureless affair, score 7 to 6. Scores: Morning game: R. H. E. Los Angeles 6 10 3 Vernon 7 12 2 Criger and Brooks; Kilroy, and Brown. Hitt j Afternoon game: ' II. H. t.. i Los Angeles 6 21 4 i Vernon 7 21 2 , Palmer. Delmar and Brooks; Ra-j leign, riosp, Mogan ana r.rov.n. Hasty. Oakland 0-8: Sacramento 4-7. Sacramento. Oct. 23. Jack Fitz pernlj's shut out pitching in the first game, and the uual end-season com- edy stunts in the second game, were the features of yesterday's double j header which the Oaks and Senators ; divided evenly. Sacramento took the j first game 4 to 0, making all of their I scores in the four innings. After that! Martononi held the locals to one hit', j In the second game O'Rourke and j Wolveiton took the.. mound and both ere found for twelve hits in Oak land's S to 7, eight inning victory. AVolverton knocked out two home runs. Scores: First game R. H. E. j Oakland 0 5 lj Sacramento 4 5 0, Muninoni and Tidemann; Fitzger-1 aid and Thomas. Umpire McOreevyJ Second game R. H. E j Oak!:.nd 8 12 0 Sacramento 7 12 0 W.dverton and Tidemann. and O'Rourke and Price. Umpire Knight. J SATURDAY'S FOOTBALL ! GAMES. Navy 0. Princeton 0. Urown 6. Pennsylvania 0. I;Ttsmouth 23. Williams 5. Ahmv 6. Yale 0. Cornell 6. Washington and Jeffer son 0. Lafayette 10, Syracuse 0. O-e 28, Kenyon 5. Carlisle 17. Pittsburg 0. 'men College 3, Iowa 0. Lehigh 5. Ursinus 0. Michigan 19, Ohio 0. Minnesota 21, Nebraska 3. Chi ago 24. Illinois 0. Northwestern 5. Indiana 0. Ames 6. Missouri 3. Virginia Military Institute 25, Ran dolph Macon 0. St Iiiiis University 0. Depauw 0. Harvard 11. Amhert 8. COMES QUICKLY. Don't Have to Walt for Weeks. A Pendleton Illustration. Waiting is d'scouraglng. Prompt action pleases everybody. A burden on the back Is a heavy weight. Hard to bear day after day. Lifting weight, removing the bur den, Brings appreciative responses. Pendleton pepole tell of It, Tell of relief that's quick and sure. Here is a case of It. L. Greenawald, 414 Lincoln Btreet, Pendleton, Oregon, says: "I had se vere attacks of backache and there was' Borcness across my kidneys. I was also annoyed by a burning sen- sation when voiding the kidney se cretlons and the passages were too. frequent. Bc.ng advised to try Doan's Kidney Pills, I d:d so and the con tents of one box cured me. I have liad no caufe or complaint since." For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, Mew Tors, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. Wisconsin 26. Colorado College 0. Georgia 12, Sewanec S. Prake 65, Coe 6. Marquette 11, Wabash 9. Pennsylvania State IS. Villa Nova 0. Washington and Lee IS. Lake For Ohio Wesleynn 7, Western He serve 0. est 5. I.aurence S. Heloit 0. Kansas' I'nlversity 6. Kansas Agri t'ulture 0. Denver 5. Taker 0. Western IWlliall. I'niversiiy of Washington. 35; I'nii v, , ,v ,,f pu-vt sound 0 Kverott Hlsh 20; Broadway High, (Seattlel, 0. Fallard High 10; Puyallup High 0. Multnomah 17; Willamette 0. Taooma High 16; Olvmpia High 0. SAFETY K)B WORLD'S D1UDS. Pi't-1 1'iilYcrsuI Move Reing Made tu Care for Man's Feathered Friends. 53 , Philadelphia. When Australia re .52S cently passed laws which will prevent .46 the future exportation of her feather . 4 5 s j od natives she had no thought of the .392 j needs of the various zoological gar j dens of the world at large. The new 1911 measures were formulated to nre- exotics. To this constant loss has 1 l.een opposed the legal bar of the I Australian government, and in this ac- tion of the far-aw av conntrv vhlr.Vi I produces kanenroo ,Cw j ;.s w ombats, that build tunnels and II H. E. , s, w curtains for their abodes, has a 1 10 4 . dose interest for Philadelphians as . . . . S 13 l.v. oil as Australians. Meikle and; In the zoological gardens at Fair j mount pary the birdhouse at the pres R. H. E. ' cnt time contains a fairly complete 3 8 9 c Ueetion of the most interesting and i.: patiently watchin? for nn nnn,,rt. nity to add a few octrltches to its col lection, but ostriches are almost as rare as summer snowstorms. The reason is dual. Africa, in the person of the British government, has said that no more ostriches may be export ed. The American will be even more Interested in the second part of thv reason when he recalls that there are various prosperous ostrich ranches in Texas. Arizona, New Mexico and Cali- fcrnia. The owners and managers of these feather farms cling sturdily to every live bird and refuse to sell them The -pure food law" is designed by the government to protect the public from injurious ingrM ents In both foods and drugs. It H beneficial both to the public and to the conscientious manufacturer. Ely's Cream Balm, a successful remedy for cold in the head, nasal catarrh, hay fever, etc., containing no injurious drugs meets fully the requirements of the new law, and that fact is prominently stated on every package. It contains none of the injurious drugs which are required by the law to be mentioned on the lab'l. Hence you can use it safely Mis Florence SimmoixN to Wod. Freewater, Ore. Miss Florence Simmons is to be married next week to Dale Wilder of Montana, and Sat urday evening the Misses Amy and Elsie Philiippi enterta ned young peo ple in honor of Miss Simmonds Tickling in the throat, hoarseness losi of voice indicate the need of Bal lard's Horthound Syrup. It eases the lungs, quiet3 the cough and re.-tores heal h in the bronchial tubes. Price i 2jC. ,0e and SI on nni c?ni by A. c Koeppen ft Bros Sifts Vht Slave Caw. Raker, Ore. A deputy United States marshal from Portland was in the city in connection with the white slave case for complicity in which Roy (lentry was arrested in this city. One witness. Rose O'Orady. was arrested hrf. about the fame time and was recently .--ent to Spokane where the case- is being tried. Hard Colds People whose blood Is pure are not n"arly no l.kely to take nara coins as are others Hood's Sarsaparilla makes the blood pure; and this great medicine recovers the system after a cold as no other medi cine doe.s. Take Hood's. COOKING IS VULGAR, SAY GIRLS High School Pupils Rebel Against Do mestic Science. Roswell, N. M Seventy-five high school girls have sent a petition to upenntendent M. H. Brasher of the city schools, asking that thev be ex cused by the authorities from taking the course in domestic science. They aver in their petition that they believe dish-washing to be degrading and not conductive to higher mental ity. The petition also sets forth that the girls are not accustomed to such menial work at home, and that they do not care to learn the art of cook lng. No indication of the disposition to be made of the petition has come yet from the authorities. Fraternal Sign to JudifC. Seattle. In a careless and Injudi cious moment, Charles Hollenbeck convicted of blackmail, recognized Judn Wilson R Oay as a brother member of a secret society and slip ped him the signal of distress togeth er with the hl5h s'gn of the order. As soon as the court sensed the sltuat'on he reached for the Balllnger code, and discovering that the maximum serr.ence was five years under the in determinate sentence law, he sent him up for from four years and 364 days to five years. (F. J. Milnes. Minister) Oar Spiritual ItesoiirvcH." "Alt my Springs are In Tluv.' Psalm b : 7. True morality can thr've only as it craws its life from spiritual resour ces. The roots of character run back into God, and only a'ter li s :p!r.tu:il sap has rushed through th.. the seul can the tree of life yield its! ur.ei iruiu or righteousness. Life c. mes only from life's source. Spon taneous genera. Ion is an exploded humbug. boUi in the physical and in the spiritual world Hence, all mor ality which doe not fructify into re ligion is spurious. Every princely type of manhood, every exhaulted civ ilization attest this truth: "All my springs are in Thee." Hut our generation has apparently overlooked this fact, and continually man fests a tendency to rule out God. It trusts in systems and policies and changing administrations and pruden tial utilitarianism. When social in equality and political corruption stul tifies progress, either in municipality or state, they cry for a new system or a new admini-tration. When the li quor traffic becomes unruly and in tolerable, they advocate some new method or device of regulation. All this makeshift of man's wisdom, to my ininkmg. is pueril,. and silly. Our worthy editor in his Satur.lav ediii,,,, ,.-.tt . L . . .1", uur alun can proceed in the legitimate business in a legiti- ! mate manner and that few would de- ' sire any change of legislation upon : the subject. Aside from the correc- I tion tha: their traffic, which is the source of S3 per cent of the world' misery and crime, is neither a busi- ! ness nor leg timate. the statement Is in keeping with New Testament' teachings. Personally I am rowin! emiiusias ie fi- nrohihftinn . loiui option - or any other "regula-I Hon" as a system Change of mere! llflV nA . i . i -.-... ...mj fcruicnes the surface of the question. All wrong graft cor ruption, and crime demands a change of heart. You can never leg islate sin -out of the world. We have been trying it now for a- generation, and with the following results; The marriage law Is more questioned than ever before in history; the Sabbath day is all but gone; reverence for parents, Bible and Cod almost extinct in the lives of our boys and girls; the -New Testament and its teachings thrown out of our schools and out of our homes; sacred things In general losing their halo; suicide on an alarm ing increase; in fact, a general all around moral slump. In th rtv when we went to church, read our j " a reverent ed sacred things, we had a higher moral tone. Why Because we relied upon spiritual re sources. We put our trust in God and not in the devices of men. "All my springs are in Thee." Back to your Biblej) and to your knees, and leanness of who Is president, we shall hnv Ih. ..l.i.. . I 6"'utu use. uo not tiust your own strength The arm of tlesh will fail you. it demands the spir.tual dynamics of God to make a man or a nation good. The blinding power of desire, the sophistry of elf.shness, the madness of lust, the defiance of se.f-wiil, the irrationality of temper, the illusions of wanton fancy, the ins.stence of immediate gam and pleasure only the puisant forces of Deity can mas.er, subdue and control these wicked potencies of ine lower world. The little dai.-y of the field owes its shape to the action of the vast, terr.ble iaw of gravita tion, its 1 l'e to infinite electric forces, j its color to mil, ions of vibrations of ether, and its growth to tne energies I of the gigantic orb p hundred million niiles away. And in the foreo, ,v,;,.hi can "renew a right irit within me" must be no less intinite. If some men appear to have a high type of man hood without reuding the bible at tending church, or acknowledging God they are like the "vegetable robbers" we read about in our Bot anies, mey draw life from some' other root while assuming to flourish ' in their own strength. Jesus has ere- j a'.ed an environment salubrious to the growth of manhood, whether we ' acknowledge Him or not. He l tho I sublime source of all nobility of char acter. When we have Jesus, we have all there Is; and we rnu.it say of every new cult or - teaching or doctrine: if it agrees with Jesus it is mere repe tition and plagiarism to formulate it under any other name or to ascribe its authorship to any other person, while, if it diff -rs from IfLiu i. (.. antagonistic to my deepest experience, I unci i wm n(J, hear t "I L,,....- i Whom I have believed." "He that hath the Son hath life." "I ain the true vine," and that is the totality of our fpiritual and moral resources. All my springs are in Thee." This is true in reference to the individual and also In the larger sphere of na tions. In the sixteenth century two great streams of influence flowed from the heart of Europe. One from that incarnation of intellectuality and learning, Erasmus; the other from that spiritual genius, Luther. The one drew his sustenance from erudi tion and culture; the other from the Word and Spirit of God. The one became an affluent of Roman Cathol icism and emptied Into the civilization of'Itaiy, Spain, Austria and France; the other poured into Holland, Eng land. Germany and America. "By their fruits ye shall know them." Thus history speaks In unmistakable terms. i wo centuries later, two other movements, connected with two other names, relate the same story; Vol taire and Wesley, the philosopher and the, evangelist. What did Voltaire do rfor France He led It Into a river of blood and perhaps the most ter CASTOR! A Fur Isi&nti Mi tMifhun Hta Kitf You Have Always Bouti Hlgiiato. of t252& rible revolution that ever blasted mankind. What did Wealey do for England? England had as much reason for a revolution as did France. Why didn't the flames of French frenzy leap across the channel and ignite the pa sions of the English people? Because Wesley drew his influence from spiritual resources and uined his people back to God. A youth, a favored child of culture, sought through his own strength to pertett h's nature Into a harmonious and .-ymmetrical development of character. But like all unsupple nieiitcd human ambitions, however worthy, h-s efforts met with disap pointment. After brooding over his b.ifilcd purposes, heart-sick and dis couraged, he related the story of his failure to a venerable old man of wider and deeper experience. The old man's reply asserts our message in poetic form: "Ah me. my son, A wery course your life has run; And yet it need not be in vain You have suffered all this pain Nay, deem not of us as at strife Because you set before your life A purpose and u loftier aim Than the blind lives of men claim may For the most part, or that you ought By fixed resolve and solemn thought, to lift your being's eaim estate out of the realm of time and fate. Glad am I that a thing unseen, A spiritual Presence, this has been Your worship, this your young heart stirred. But yet herein you proudly erred, Here may the source of woe be found. You thought to fling yourself around The atmosphere of light and love In wh'ch it w as -your Joy to move; Y'ou thought by efforts of your own To take at last each jarring tone Out of your life till all should meet in one majestic music sweet; And deemed that In your own heart's ground The root of good was to be found, And that by careful watering Ami earnest tendance you might bring, The bud and, blossom and the fruit To- grow and flourish from that root. You deemed you needed nothing more Than skill and courage to explore Deep down enough in your own heart To where the well-head lay apart Which must the springs of being feed, And that these fountains did but need The soil that choken them moved away To bubble in the open day. But thanks to heaven it is not so; That root a richer soil doth know Than our poor hearts could e'er supply-That stream Is from a source from high; From God it came, to God returns, Not nourished from our scanty urns. But fed from His unfailing river, Which runs and shall run on forever." ECHO OF A JOY RIDE. Prisoner Forgets from Whom He Filched Earring. Indianapolis, Ind. Frank Van Slack alleged thief, who is in the county jail awaiting grand jury ac tion, "wants to do the right thing." and for this reason Detective Dave Lancaster Is conducting a parade of women's pictures between the detec tive department and the jail. It's a game of who ge'.s the diamond, and Van Slack looks at the pictures, one after another, and says, "No. she's not the woman." It seems that all the girls in Nash ville, Tenn., want the diamond that reposes In the big detective's vest packet. Lancaster says the Incident would make an interesting chapter In the biography of a thief. He went to Nashville some time ago to take Van Slack Into custody The latter had been wanted in Indianapolis for months for some one of his numerous offenses. Van Slack was frank with his custodian. Among other things he told of stealing a diamond from a woman while In an automobile ride In Nashville prior to his arrest. "I was a little hem-er had been drinking a little. Wo all had," ex plained Van Slack. Didn't learn the young ladies' names. So I don't know whose diamond It is." Van Slack went on to say that he had been searched by the Nashville police for the stone but had a con venient hollow tooth and some chew ing gum, so the stone was not found. He offered to return the stone If Lan ca ter could find th owner. The detective Is trying his best but It stems all the women who take late night motor car rides in Nashville are willing to send their pictures on the lucky chance the game offers. But the winner hnsn't turned up yet. Lan Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard J. A. BORIE LUMBER CO., Props. JUST RECEIVED Carload of Cedar Posts and. two carloads of Cement. All orders promptly filled. Phone Main 7 Large and Complete Line of Lumber Carried. caster has written back to the Nash ville police to send another consign ment of photographs. The dlumond Is still in his vest pocket. ALEUTIAN TKIHES FACE EXTINCTION Revenue Cutter Manning ' Konorts That Discus Menmrs Nutions In North. Seattle. .The revenue cuttur Man ning, Captain K. W. Perry, which ar rived on Puget Sound trom Bering Sea, where the has been on patrol duty, brought news that the various tribes of natives on the Aleutian Is lands are In danger of being extermi nated by disease ur.'ess the govern ment takes Immediate action and fur nishes them with medical attention and food. In nearly all the settle ments visited the ship's surgeon found the natives Inflicted with various ail ments, Including trachoma, which is increasing at an alarming rate. The Manning started the cruise April 17, covering a distance of near ly 13,000 miles. The return trip from Unalaska was made in the record time of six days and five hours. On St. Paul Island the government put up a large quantity of seal meat for the use of the natives on Burka, Atka and TUu islands on the Siber ian const, because sickness left tho natives unable to procure sufficient tjh for the winter. During the season there were about 25 Japanese and four Canadian sealing schooners In Bering sea, but no American. AH made good catch es. There were few violations of the law reported. Three Japanese who landed on St. George Island were ar rested and sentenced to six months in Jail, but before their sentences ex pired they were deported on a Jap anse Realing schooner homeward bound. Four Japanese who were caught sealing wjthiif the thrce,mlle limit, are now serving in the Valdez Jail. j Just before the Manning sailed south the revenue cutter Bear com pleted a cruise to the Arctic ocean,' going as far north as Point Barrow. The invariable experience of revenue' cutters and all other vessels has been to encounter great fields of ice, but this year the Bear met none. The of-1 ficers are at a loss to account for such a condition. IT ILLICIT STIU.S SEIZED, Officers Think "MooiislUners" More Activo Tluin- Ever lh-fort. Roanoke, Va. Revenue Officers W. A. Hendrlc, J. P. Burnett, W, E. Hodges and H. C. Weaver and two possemen returned from a successful raid on Illicit distilleries In Franklin county. Seventeen "moonshine" plants were destroyed. One copper still of 350-gnllon canneitv -.a nm. ong those wrecked by the revenue "incers. several thousand gallons of beer also were Seized nnd nonred out. Will Moran was arrested. Others were recognized and probably will be indicted at the next term of tho fed eral court. The officers believe that vintntlnna of the revenue laws were on the wane nut are now of the opinion that more illicit distilleries are being operated In the mountains than ever before. I Killed ly Explosion. Rellingham, Wa.-h., Oct. In an ex plosion wh'ch took place when a steam shovel working on the Belllng-ham-Skaglt interurban, three miles south of this city, unearthed an un exploded blast, blew Nick Popovltch and John Llndiiuls to atoms. so frightfully mangled M. L. Green. A. L . Lockwood and .Tames Merimiiren Foley Kidney Pills TONIC IN ACTION - QUICK IN RESULTS Give prompt relief from BACKACHE, KIDNEY and BLADDER TROUBLE, RHEUMATISM, CONGESTION of the KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION of tho BLADDER and all annoying URINARY IRREGULARITIES. A positive boon to MIDDLE AGED and ELDERLY PEOPLE and for WOMEN. Mrs. II. W. Allen, qulncy, 111., says: '"About a year ago my kidneys be can bothering me. I had a swelling In my ankles and limbs, then head aches and nervous dizzy spells, and later severe backaches I was getting worse, when I began taking Foley Kidney P.'lls. I kept on taking them until I was once more freed of all kid ney trouble. FOR ."ALE BY ALL DEALERS. NATURE'S CURE FOR CHRONIC ULCERS Only by removing the cause can any chronic Ulcer or Old Sore be cared. No one will question the truthfulness of this statement. The cause is always- from an inward source, never an oatwward influ ence, and therefore the only possi ble way to get rid of these places is to take internal treatment. Pare blood is the one unfailing care for chronic ulcers; just as long as the circulation is allowed to remain in an impure condition the place will be kept open from the constant dis charge of imparities into it from the blood. But pare blood will change this condition and the flesh tissues will be nourished and made healthy, and then nature will promptly and permanently heal the ulcer. S.S.S. is recognized as the greatest of all blood purifiers and therein lies its power to care, old ulcers and sores. It goes into the circulation, and removes every trace of imparity or infectious mat ter, and so enriches this vital fluid that it nourishes all flesh tissues in stead of irritating them with impuri ties. When S. S. S. has cleansed the blood and the place has healed over it is not a surface cure, but the tntire ulcer is filled in with healthy flesh. Boole and medical advice free. 6. S. S. is for sale at drug stores. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta. Co. that they died within 10 minutes, and Beriously hurt Earl Clcvenger, John Olson and Thomas Hugg. Absolutely nothing of Popovitch's or Llndquist's bodies remained, but the other three dead and the three badly Injured were brought Into tho city. The dead and Injured were all employed about the steam shovel. Sells Hotel at IVeewutor. Freewater, Ore. Frank Johnson, proprietor of the Palace hotel, has sold the business to Mr. Charles Otto from Wisconsin for $2400 CHICHESTER S PILS W 1 ItK IHAMONt flUAK 1-liM la K, nj l'l, cled mitt. p olr. IIMV T roq. !IaVuni iiuanii rli.Pi, so yr.it know m lie. SalcM. Alvtyi kelut SOLO BY DRUGGISTS f VERWHERF "She is Waiting' ' and so are those she Is waiting on. And mind you, a good hlffh-ball Is well worth waiting for. Good, pure, wholesome Rye Whiskey, like the brands we are now selling, will make one wait patiently, but enjoy the wait when the liquid arrives cool, comforting, and refresh ing. If you are a high-ball lover, better try a bottle of this splendid Whiskey of ours. You will always want that brand afterwards. And the price will satisfy you, too. TheOlympia Bar Phone Main 188. and Pioneer Bottling Works Phone Main 177. PET ICRS & MOIUUSON, Props. I s.rnllkVV 1 Hlua niUwB. VX J