PAGE SIX. DAILY ETjOKTX OREGON. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1912. EIGHT PAGES BEHOVES THE CAUSE OF CATARRH No remedy that docs not entirely remove the cause of Catarrh from the Wood v ill ever make a permanent cure of the trouble. Just as long as the circulation remains cont aminated with the impurities and catarrhal matters which produce the trouble, the mucous membranes or inner linings of the body will be kept in a state of irritation and disease. Sprays, lotions and other local applications will sometimes temporarily relieve the tight, full feeling in the head, buzzing noises in the ears, uncomfortable, stuffy feeling of the nostrils, and help to loosen the mucus in the throat; but Catarrh is a constitutional blood disorder and until it has bceu entirely driven from the system there can be no permanent cure, S. S. S. cures Catarrh by removing the cause from the blood. It attacks the disease at its head and by thor oughly purifying and cleansing the circulation, and ridding it of every par ticle of impurity, and at the same time enriching the blood, allows the inflamed and irritated membranes to heal, improves the general health, and stops every disagreeable symptom. S. S. S. reaches down to the very bottom and leaves no trace of the disease in the system. Book on Catarrh and any medical advice free to all who write. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. ROOSEVELT FLAYS (Continued from page one.) it was used with excellent results. Then there remains the recall of judges. Courts have repeatedly de feated the morals of a commonwealth. "By the abuse of the power to de clare laws unconstitutional, the courts have become a law making instead of a law-enforcing agency. Here again the settled will of society to correct of applying the recall in any shape is one of expediency merely "Either the recall will have to be adopted or else it will have to be made easier than it now is to get rid not merely of a bad judge, ibut of a jitd.ee who. however virtuous, has grown out of touch with social needs and facts that he is unfit to longer render good service on the bench. "When a judge decides a constitu tional question, when he decides what the people as a whole can or cannot do, the people should have the right to recall thai decision if they think it wrong. We should hold the judiciary in all respect, but it is both absurd and degrading to make a fetich of a judge or any one else. Again and again in the past Jus- iTinfesse.l evils li.ls heen cpt fit nqncht t.y those who place 'metphysicies tice nas been scandalously obstructed above life. . It is the courts not the constitutions, that are at fault. It is only by the process which James Rus sell Iwowell when answering the critics of Lincoln called 'pettifogging the constituii'm,' that constitutions which were designed to protect society can thus be ma le to defeat the common good. Here again the recall is a recall of the administration of jus tice back from academical refine ment to social service. "Never forget that the judge is just as much the servant of the peo ple as any other official. Of course he must act conscientiously. He must not do anything wrong because there is a popular clamor for it. But in their turn the people must follow their conscience and when they have definitely decided on a given policy they must have public servants who will carry out that policy. Keep clearly In mind the distinction be tween the end and the means to at tain that end. Our aim is to get the type of judge that I have described to keep him on the bench as long as rossible, and to keep off the bench, and If necessary, take off the bench the wrong type of judge. In some communities one method may work well which in other communities does not work well and each community should adopt and preserve or reject a given method according to its prac tical workiog. Therefore the question CATAISIW, ASTHMA, COLDS AND CATARRHAL DEAFNESS QUICKLY GO. Here are some symptoms of ca tarrh; if you have any of them get rid of them by breathing HTOMEI; it is guaranteed to banish catarrh. Is your throat raw. Do you sneeze often Is your breath foul Are your eyes watery? Do you take cold easily? Is your nose stopped up Do you have to spit often? Are you worse in damp weather? Do you blow your nose? Are you dosing your sense of smell? Does your mouth taste bad morn ings Do you have a dull feeling in the head? Do you have a discharge from the nose? Does mucous drop in back of throat? Complete HTOMEI outfit, which includes inhaler, $1.00, extra bottles, if needed, 60 cents, at Tallman Drug Co. and druggists everywhere. by state courts declaring state laws in conflict with the federal constitu tmn. although, the .supreme court of the nation, has never so decided, or had even decided in a contrary sense. When the supreme court of the state declares a given statute unconstitu tional because in conflict with the state or national constitution, its op inion should be subject to revision by the people themselves "Many eminent lawyers who more or less frankly disbelieve in our en tire American system of government, for, by and, of the people, violently antagonize this proposal. They be lieve, and some times assert, that the American people are not fitted for popular government, and that it is necessary to keep the judiciary inde pendent of the 'majority. or of all the people;' that there must be no appeal to the people from the decision of a court in any case; and that therefore the judges are to be established as sovereign rulers over the people. I take absolute issue with all those who hold such a position. If the American people are not fit for popular govern ment, and if they should of right be the servants and nof the masters of the men whom they have put in of fice, then Lincoln's work was wasted and the whole system of government on which this great democratic re public rests is a failure. I believe, on the contrary, that the American peo ple are fit for complete self govern ment and that we of this republic have more nearly realized than any other people on earth the ideal of justice obtained through genuine pop ular rule. "Our whole history shows that the American people are more often sound in their decisions than is the case with any of the governmental bodies to whom for their conveni ence, they have delegated portions of their power. If this is not so, then there is no justification for the ex istence of our government; and if it is so, then there is no justification for refusing to give the people the real, and not merely the nominal, ul timate decision on questions of con stituti'Wial law. "A typical case was the daeision rendered but a few months ago by the court of appeals of my own state, the state of Xew York, declaring un constitutional the workmens' compen sation act. In their decision the Judges almitted the wrong and the suffering caused by the practices against which the law was aimed. They admitted that other civilized nations had abolished the wrongs and practice. But they took the ground that the constitution of the United Slates Instead of being nn Instrument to secure justice, had been ingenu ously revised absolutely to prevent justice. They insisted that the clause in the constitution which forbade the taking of property without due pro cess of law forbade the effort which had been made in the law to distrib ute among all the partners in nn en terprise the effects of the injuries to life or limb of a wage-worker. No anarchist orator, raving against the constitution ever framed nn indict ment so. "Many of the judges of that court I know personally, and for them I have a profound regard. Even for as flagrant a decision as this I would not vote for their recall; for I have no doubt the decision was rendered in accordance with their ideas of duty. But most emphatically I do wish that the people should have the right to recall the decision itself nnd authoritatively to stamp with disap proval what cannot but seem to the ordinary plait) citizen a monstrous misconstruction of the constitution, a monstrous preverslon of ihe consti tution into an instrument for the perpetuation of social and Industrial wrong .and for the oppression of the weak nnd helpless. "No ordinary amendment of the constitution would meet this type of case; and Intolerable delay and in justice woulj be caused by the effort to get such amendment not to men tion the fact that the very judges who are at fault would proceed to construe the amendment. In such a case the fault ia not with the eonsti tution; the fault is in the judges' con struction of the constitution; and what is required is power for the peo pie to reverse this false and wrong construction. "The judges and courts have de cided every which way, and it is fool ish to talk of the sanctity of a judge made law which half of the judges strongly denounce. If there must be decision by a close majority, then let the people step in and let it be their majority that decides. According to one of the highest judges then and now on the supreme court of the na tion, we have lived for a hundred years under a constitution which per mits a national income tax, until suddenly by one vote the supreme court reversed its previous decision for a century and said that for a century we had been living under a wrong interpretation of the constitu tion (that is, under a wrong consti tution), and therefore in effect, es tablished a new constitution which we are. now laboriously trying to am end so as to get it back to be the con stitution that for a hundred years everybody, including the supreme court, thought it to be. "While it is necessary to have the right kind of governmental ma chinery, yet that the all-important matter i sto have the right kind of a man behind the law. A good consti tution, and good laws under the con stitution and fearless and upright of ficials to administer the laws all these are necessary." HELD AT WESTON (Special Correspondence.) Weston. Ore., Feb. 21. The church of the Brethren began their revival services Saturay evening and will continue during the week. Mr. Payne Shangle spent a few days with relatives in Milton last week. Miss Grace McBride of Athena, was in eston during the week. Miss Pauline Wyrick of Athena was in Weston Saturday and Sunday vis iting with Miss Gladys Smith Miss Eunice Gregory of Pendleton was in "Weston this week visiting friends and relatives. Mrs. James Stanfield of Weston who has been in Walla Walla for some time receiving treatment for her eyes returned home Monday evening. Mrs. L. J. O'Harra of this city was a visitor in the Garden City during the week. 'FIRST IN WAR, FIRST IN PEACE AND FIRST IN THE HEARTS OF HIS COUNTRYMEN" BORN To Augustine ami Mary Wn.-luugton, at Tope's Creek, Westmoreland County, Virginia, on February 22ml, 1732. a son christened 'George, and known to the world as the first President of the Uni'.ed States of America. Tito greater Alexander Department Store joins in celebrating the birthday of George Washington, the founder of pence, prosperity and happiness, in the graudest country that God ever made. . The Greatest Array of Fine ever shown in Pendleton at the price. 40c, 50c and 60c values on sale FRIDAY at 10 o'clock for See Our Window Display T. STORE Miss Ida Powell of Walla Walla was In Weston Saturday visiting with Mr. and Mrs. L. J. O'Harra. Mrs. Wm. McKenzie and Miss May Barnes of this city spent Monday in the Garden City. Mrs. John Harris spent a few days with relatives in Athena. Miss Wllma Harbor of this city made a trip to Pendleton Sunday. Mr. Robert Wheeler who has been working in Pendleton for th past few weeks visited with relatives in Weston Sunday. Miss Edna Ross of Athena was a Weston visitor during the week. Rev. Stleninger of the Methodist church of Weston has returned from a few days visit at La Grande. Mrs. Ralph Kinnean was in Pen dleton during the week. Miss Lucile Kemp was in Athena Saturday visiting with friends. Mr. Chas. Lucious of Weston was In Pendleton during the week. Almost lost Ills Ufo. S. A. Stid, of Mason, Mich., will never forget his terrible exposure to a merciless storm. "It gave me a dreadful cold," he writes, "that caus ed severe pains in my chest, so it was hard for me to breathe. A neigh bor gave me several doses of Dr. King's New Discovery which brought great relief. The doctor said I was on the verge of pneumonia, but to continue with the Discovery. I did so and two bottles completely cured me." Use only this quick, safe, re liable medicine for coughs, colds, or any throat or lung trouble. Price 50c and $1. Trial bottle free. Guar anteed by Koeppens. STO UK KXPKCTKI) TO VISIT IIOMK OF COLOXKI, ASTOK Newport, R. I. Members of the ultra-fashionable smart set here learned that the stork Is expected to visit the home of Colonel John Jacob Astor in July. Astor married Miss Madeline Force of Philadelphia a few months after he had been divorced by Mrs. Ava Willing Astor. TIIP.KK WOMKX JURORS ACQUIT IX LIQUOR CASK Stevenson, Wash. The first time the gentle sex was called upon to act as Jurors in this county was in the Justice court of Stevenson, when Frank James, a wood chopper, was charged with giving intoxicating liq uor to a minor. The Jury consisted ot three. men end three women, Mrs. H. K. Sawyer, wife of a leading hard ware man; Mr A. C. Sly, wife of the telephone mar. ger, and Mrs. Kate Stalker, propr! iress of the Johnson hotel. All thr e are strong temper ance advocates, but the evidence was not sufficient ;md the defendant was acquitted. Deafness Cannot lie Cured by local applications, aa tby cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There ia only one way to cure deafness, and tbat la by constitutional remedies. Deafness is cansed br an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian . Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have rumbling sound or Imperfect bearing, and when It is entirely closed. Deafness Is tbe result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroy ed forever: nine cases out of ten are caus ed by Catarrh, which la nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bend for circulars free. o li CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Hold by DrngglBts, 75c. Take Hall's Family rills for constipation. TTA t' 'li I ml i lb 01 The musical success of the season at -the Casino Theatre, New York City. The cast includes such notables as Chas. Bigelow, Eva Davenport, Robert Warwick, Flora Zabelle, Adele Rowland, Elsa Ryan & W, M. Pruette dt Scene from "THE KISS WALTZ" Casino Theatre, New York hi si oil: ds Iosobib f! Di so die is one cf tne catchiest numbers from the show The music is written by the "Viennese Waltz King' C. M. Zeihrer. Matt Woodward wrote the words- T. B. Harms, & Francis, Day & Hunter, New York Gity, owners of copyright. This Song Free in Next Saturdays East Oregonian 9?