East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, March 21, 1912, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX.
DAILY EAST OREGONM, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1912.
EIOnT PAGES
DEMOCRATS HAD
BIG LOVE FFEO
(Continued from price five.)
t.itlurs riniiiiu n.'fil the career if
this iiati.'ii under the must propitious
.f . ii cinii tam'. s. I.inl untillt'd. for
vsls unfilled, stre.uns un-navigated.
Minos of Miriisslnjr rnlmess await
ing only the slroke of tin minor's
hummer. The war of independence
l.:,d plont.-d deep in the lieort of
cvrn American the love of freedom.
Itvery Inn" Amrri.nn breathed in
the rrf-atn'--. of the country. its
mountains, its fertile a.-rcs, its for-
KITH THE CANDIDATES
(Taid Advertisements.)
: v .,
7 . s '
.a i
I. - .
rev:-
1 . -v p-. .-s i ," ;. i"' " 1 n
GEO. T. COCHRAN
Progressive Republican Candidate
for nomination
Representative in Congress
Second District.
JAMES P. NEAL
Can.Jijte for Republican
Nomination for
District Attorney
H. A. Waterman
Of H--rmir?tn, Oregon,
r.ei uV'iican C:in'.i-3?.te for Nomina
tion for
COCXTV COMMISSIONER.
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for C iuaty Commissioner, sub
ject to the ai pr val of the people at
"he Kepublican Primaries.
I stand for an economical admin
istration of county affairs as a busi
ness basis, and for permanent im
provement of our public roads.
J. F. WALLAN
Of Adams
Candidate for County Clerk
Subject to wishes of the voters In
Republican primaries.
'Ijct Tlic t.ixxl Tiling Go Itouml."
If elected I will give accurate and
fctraijiht-forward servic . to all the
jieople. A native-born Umatilla
county mar. I ask you to give me
your suj.purt and influence.
Candidate for the Republican Nomi
nation for County School
Sup.-rintendent.
FRANK K. WELLES
"Tin- Children's IVi-iid"
"For the p: -t f.vef.ty years Mr.
Welles ha? gi' n his entire time and
energy to p :'! - s hool work In Uma
tilla coun'y I!" i d voting his life
to the edue:itl';n and welfare of our
boys and girl."
T. D. TAYLOR
Democratic Candidate for Nomination
at the Primary Election
For Sheriff
Present Incumbent.
FRANK SALING
Kepublicnn Candidate for Nomina
tion at tho Primary Election
For County Clerk
Present incumbent.
part
and parcel of the Rreat and new
form of (tovernineut. If he wished he
could take n new homo upon fertile
land, could start a factory, could
open a bank if ho had the money
or credit, build a railroad, without
boinsf first compelled to ask and have
the consent of Wall street. The free
air and free conditions, the hope of
reward, aroused a spirit of invention
that will be the marvel of ages yet
to be. l?y these Inventions we have
lu'en enriched beyond the wildest
dreams of our fathers. The printing
press, the steam engine, electricity,
and hundreds of other inventions
make lifo in America today more
pleasant and comfortable than was
ever before enjoyed by human be
ings. It is plain deception to claim
the greatness of our country to be
the creation of any political party.
IHiring the early years of our na
tional existence, business was tran
sacted by individual and then by
partnership. If money was borrow
ed It was with the expectation of
paying the debt. Hut as business
grew, the corporation idea came, sev
eral persons came together forming
the corporation. The Civil War gave
this modern idea, a corporation, n
great stimulus. It increased the fa
cilities for doing business with limit
ed ability. With the coming of .cor
porations came the influence of mon
ey and business ipon congress and
legislatures. Early in our history
our fathers asked, "is it right?" "Is
it best for our country . When busi
ness assumed the reins of govern
ment, the question asked and ans
wer demanded front every legislator,
was "will it pay?" "What will be
the dividends?" One corporation
would want a law practically pro
hibiting the importation of steel, an
other one glass, another wool and
still another would demand an em
tire of land to build a railroad. Most
of these demands were granted by
congress and legislatures. Legisla
tive bodies were too, often filled with
men who were the special agents of
these interests. t
T . v. .
"u"s me last quarter of a
tury we have been unwilling
nesses to another growth n our
nomic affairs, the trusts, wherp
ceil
wit
oco
sev
erai corporations in the same line of
business come together, either with
a gentlemen's agreement, or a hard
and fast contract limiting production,
controlling prices, and regulating
profits. The demands upon legisla
tive bodies and the courts by this
modern invention, the trust, has in
creased, and in almost every instance
their demands have been granted. In
deed, they have gone farther and
have made rules and decrees far
more effective than ever monarch of
old, regulating the price of those ar
ticles which we have to sell and of
those articles which we have to buy,
until today practically one half of the
wealth of the United States, actual
valuation of one hundred and thirty
billions of dollars Is in the hands of
these trusts that absolutely control
their respective limes. They have re
pealed and established the natural
law of supply and demand so far as
that law pertains to the articles they
handle, until they can and do pay
enormous annual dividends upon in
flated valuations of their "property.
The .steel trust is the most striking
example with its billion and a half
dollar capitalization earning in nine
years a net profit of one billion one
hundred million dollars with an or
iginal actual investmen of less than
seven hundred million. After re
building its plants, and acquiring
vast quantities of new property, they
have gathered and distributed eigh
teen per cent during the nine years
of their existence. They have charg
ed the people of the United .States
twenty-eight dollars a ton fur steel
rail?, while selling to the people of
Canada the identical rail for twenty-one
dollars per ton. The labor
cost f.f the production of their steel
i J1.7S a ton. They have manu
factured at a net profit of $11.00 a
ton. No wonder they have made
eighteen per cent annually.
In 1S07 that corporation was strong
erough to go to what is generally
called a great and brave president
Years of Suffering
Catarrh and Blood Disease -Doctors
Failed to Cure.
Mls! M':b-! F. mwklr.a. 1214 If.iy
ette St., I'ort Wayne, Ir.l., wr.t"s:
"For three ye.irs 1 was trouble:! v. ith
catarrh ar.d blood disease. I tried sev
eral doctors and a dozen illflercnl iV.i:
edles, but not e t tnni ?H nil i.y
good. A fri' nd told rno of Hood's S :r
sap'irlll.i. I f ok two borP4 of thW
jne-Icir.e cj ! wis as wii and ?!it.:ii
as ever. 1 f el & dirT' rent n -rso:i
and rtr-.-.rc.n.Mid Hood' to tuy one .-uf-ferin;?
!Yom cu'auh." ,
Ot it '-.day hi usual ll'i'ii.: f:i:m or
Chocolate, J. ublcu tailel SarsutuiiS.
,nwt rnJi. itl Hnuiint.Chick
riCIOiTl PAiC - N.fwf,. Utnp. (Mlwl tS.rrii.f . bt
fpft V'niAl, CWtrvCUOfi iA Ikrtl wall, ill . ilh tM)o
8t Hlni Incubator Co., Toledo, Washington
Gas in Your Stomach
-It's Nervousness
Y'jur Vervri y-y itri nmfce ymir Stmriarli irritable.
It nL ii rrV; f'od dsj tvit dif-st &tvi Cai frrr:i.
T': A'f'W kind uf Ix;';ni.'i, tl)C"m'ij.iind,iind tliis
t'.ul y,'j K.rt ct:ro:Jy b)' a Hcriiedy ttatmadirertlyon
I'.c Pt-.tr.wh SVnn.
I'.-iiifiR(i'i';r.Ti;-U lo f r Vj r.erf Tti',0. Tlitynre
r-j.de tTliii; f'.r 0-i". T'.'-y act on your SVmiarh
.'.'i-rvt?!, tUy I'.i' t the irriU:, ntj'-llinua gut f'inrjaf
iirnsfh, ai.d IV .t i.ly njvr( l; ;t ci:r Ow jiermanefctly.
Rr.Hy it n-ifl a j-ity if you sufTur from Go in th
Fl. iTtac-h an-1 IV.wirls lif.t t try Rvihnann'i Ge-TabU-ta.
TSimo iv jiif Uii.leu are ..l for jO- by evrry drifrijt,
or ar.-l i.int to 11 .hm-mann Iliarmju-y, J6 Sutler 8L,
&.II 1 rftDtuy.).
fsts Ho felt and know ho was
I.' " li Lit w.if
and say to him, "dive us an Immun
ity bath before we commit a crime.
Pardon us before we break the law.
Guarantee to us, Mr. President, that
we will not be harmed for taking I
over the Tennessee Coal and Iron Co,.
cur largest competitor with their!
property worth two hundred million!
We are going to give the stock hold
ers thirteen cents on the dollar or
twenty-nine millions for their prop
erty, not in gold but In stock and
bonds," and a great president, a
fighting president, declared, "De
lighted am I to grant you Immunity
for committing this crime and I am
thankful you do not deem It best at
this time to take over the rest of tho
property of the United States."
Who ruled in 1907? Oh, if there
had only been in the White House
then a man of th type of Old Hick
try. Seventy years before, Nicholas
Diddle told President Jackson that
he must not destroy the United States
bank, and that he must renew Its
charter, and if he did not he, Nichol
as Diddle, would financially wreck
the country. Old Hickory's reply
was, "Uy the eternals, if you have
that much power It is too much for
any man or group of men. Do your
worst." For years the White House
was freed from the domination of
the money power.
J. P. Morgan & Co. received $69.
300,000 as a promotion fee for or
ganizing the Steel Trust. Money
enough to buy every acre of land,
every animal, every mile of railroad,
every house, every piece of property
in Umatilla county. Yes, Umatilla
county, a present to one firm for one
promotion. In face of the law which
forbid the promotion, $69,100,000,
enough to provide 69.000 twenty acre
irrigated homesteads in Oregon for
settlers free.
Twenty-five years ago the sugar
trust owned property worth nine mil
lions of dollars. During these twenty-five
years the sugar trust has paid
three hundred millions in dividends
and their property today Is worth an
other three hundred million. Money
not made in honest trade and fair
dealing, but by reason of a controlled
market, enabling them to raise the
price at their will, dropping the price
of sugar to break and ruin a com
petitor so they might buy his prop
erty for ten cents on the dollar, and
then raising the price to make the
public pay for tho purchase,, mak
ing the greatest sugar eating nation
on earth pay tribute at every turn.
Their methods have nil been Just as
crooked and just as dishonest as thoso
they employed when they fixed the
government scales in New York har
bor to steal from this government
millions of dollars by false weights.
No wonder Havemeyer could wm
a hundred millions in twenty years
and still a subserviant congress plac
es a duty on sugar of nearly two cents
a pound.
During lilll the International Har
vester Co. declared dividends am
ounting to fifty-two per cent for the
reason that the trust controlled
market, compelling the farmers
pay four times its actual cost
the
to
for
farm machinery.
On some branches of the tobacco
trust they have exacted more than financial depression, prices or con
one hundred per cent annually. To trolled lines are not declining. In
help the Southern planter? No. no. 1S73 everything declined In value.
So that Duke might be able to
squander millions in building a pleas
ure gardens at his home in New
Jersey, rivalling the ancient hanging
gardens of Babylon, for the reason
that they controlled the market,
could dictate the price to the to
bacco grower, and then dictate just
as effectively the price to the tobac
co user.
The Standard Oil. the first great
offender, has distributed millions up
r.n millions of dollars in dividends
and they are worth many more mil
lions because they control the mar
ket. The beef trust control the price of
i'.ojfs, cattle and sheep from the gulf
to Cue northern forests, from the
Hoekii-H to the Atlantic Coast. Hut
now comes the greatest trust of
them all. the money trust, controlling
the credits of all our large cities, al
lowing no man or firm to have a
credit unless he is subserviant to the
interest. The money trust today
says to the man who wants a large
credit. "If this money is to be used
to promote an enterprise that may
compete with any one of the estab
lished trusts, then you cannot have
It." No independent railway build
ing, no independent factories, no in
dependent electric jdants. Activity
is gone. New enterprises forbidden.
-Money in quantities is only loaned
on terms of the few men who control.
Business must be renewed from the
bottom, not the top. Today the or
dinary business man is discouraged,
the chill Is In the heart, he feels !
the grip that freezes enterprise and j
independence.
Now the money trust seeks to fas
ten inLself permanently upon the
country by means of the Aldrlch
Currency 1:111. The present trust
busting policy of this administration ,
as well as the past is farclal in the ;
extreme Has it given the tobacco ,
grower any more money? Has it re-J
duced the trust dividends? Has it
reduced the price to the consumer? (
More drastic measures must be ap-
plied if we maintain independent In- ,
ilustrial life In America.
The obi, careful, honest, shrewd
business man has given place to the
smooth trust agent who takes his '
orders by successive steps from one of
the dozen nun who control indutri-'
al life in America.
The sunken rock that will wreck
the ship of Industrial life, unless It
be removed, is fixed and regulated
price. The products of nature.
nod's gifts to man, coal, oil
forests,
tumbling water, have all been cap
italized beyond reason and the pub
lic today pays enormous prices for
the privilege of using gifts intended
for the use of all mankind.
The finished products of the in
venting genius of Morse. Edison, Boll,
have been capitalized over and over
again. The actual Investors in most
Instances receiving a mere pittance,
but the public Is today paying many
times what it ought for tho use of
telegraph, electricity and hundreds
of other conveniences, that, are no
BETTER FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN THAN CASTOR OH,
SALTS, OR PI 1X5, A3 IT SWEETENS AND CLEANSES THE SYSTEM MORE EFFICIENTLY AND
IS FAR MORE PLEASANT TO TAKE.
ySYIHJPofFlGS -
IS THE IDEAL FAMILY LAXATIVE, AS
IT GIVES SATISFACTION TO ALL, IS
ALWAYS BENEFICIAL IN ITS EFFECTS
AND PERFECTLY SAFE AT ALL TIMES.
7 MS 1 1 1 1 -t i III 11
K ft. m. M m m in i 3ki-ivii : j
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
in the Circle,
on everij Package of tho Genuine.
ALL RELIABLE DRUCC1STS SELL THE ORIGINAL AND'
CENUINE WHEN CALLED FOR, ALTHOUGH THEY COULD
MAKE A LARGER PROFIT BY SELLING INFERIOR PREPARA
TIONS, YET THEY PREFER TO SELL THE CENUINE. BECAUSE
IT IS RIGHT TO DO SO AND FOR THE COOD OF THEIR
CUSTOMERS. WHEN IN NEED OF MEDICINES, SUCH
DRUGGISTS ARE THE ONES TO DEAL WITH. AS YOUR
LIFE OR HEALTH MAY AT SOME TIME DEPEND UPON
THEIR SKILL AND RELIABILITY
WHEN BUYING
Note tfio Fuff Name of tfiQ Gompamp
rjlll.iiltll J rjl -i'l .1 1 1 .IJ.W
mil ri. iffli ftii'ii rjiib
. J. I Jill ii.i vFuit-jt-i-rv
PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS.NEAR THE BOIBDM. AND IN
THE CIRCLE.NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACKAGE, OF THE
CENUINE. ONE SIZE ONLY, FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING
DRUCC1STS. REGULAR PRICE 50c PER BOTTLE.,
SYRUP OF FICS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA. IS THE ONLY PERFECT FAMILY LAXATIVE,
BECAUSE IT IS THE ONE REMEDY WHICH ACTS IN A NATURAL, STRENGTHENING WAY
AND CLEANSES THE SYSTEM, WITHOUT UNPLEASANT AFTER-EFFECTS AND WITHOUT
IRRITATING, DEBILITATING OR CRIP1NG. AND THEREFORE DOES NOT INTERFERE IN ANY '
WAY WITH BUSINESS OR PLEASURE. IT IS RECOMMENDED BY MILLIONS OF WELL
INFORMED FAMILIES, WHO KNOW OF IIS VALUE FROM PERSONAL USE, TO CET ITS
BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ALWAYS BUY THE GtNUINE; MANUFACTURED BY THE
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. J
longer luxuries but absolute neces
sities. It is true the price of some ar
ticles have been reduced by some of
the trusts. The Standard Oil once
sold its refined product for thirty
cents a gallon. t cost them then
twenty-five cents a gallon to refine
oil. Their net profit was five cents
a gallon. The same oil sells today
for twelve cents a gallon but the
cost of refining is now three cents.
Their net profit today is nine cents.
The amount we pay for nothing is
what hurts. The amount we nay In
net profits for articles in controlled
lines was never as great as it Is to
day. The savings the trust have ef
fected by new and better business
methods, improved machinery and
complete organization have not ben
efited the people, but have reverted
to the trusts, and not to the con
sumer. The cost of living has been
steadily increasing for years in all
the civilized word, not bcause it costs
more to manufacture goods (modern
machinery makes the actual cost
less) but because trusts nnd combi
nations control and fix prices.
Hard times are here now for some
people and fast approaching for
others but differing from all other
The same In '91!, but not so now be
cause the natural law of supply and
demand has been replaced by these
modern monarchs of business who
control our coal beds, our railroads,
our factories, our electricity, in fact
centred our land by controlling the
lines of transposition. Their factory
warehouses are bare. It does not
matter how hard times become, h-iw
many men are ou of work, or how
hard it is to secure money, prices
of the necessities of life are not go
ing to decline. How like the French
revolution, when the aristocracy own
ed practically everything, wheat sell
ing for $3.00 a bushel in Paris, a
wild eyed woman exploded the bomb,
rivers of blood flowed In the streets
of Paris.
We differ from till other people
who have ever lived. In that we ha.ve
a greater degree of intelligence ani
on;; the masses. We have been taught
and have enjoyed a standard of liv
ing from which we are not going to
recede. A millstone has been erected
on the road of human progress back
of which civilization will never
move. We have been taught the uso
of the telegraph, electric lights, the
railroads, the automobile, and hun
dreds of Inventions that we are not
tolng to give up. Some solution must
jand will be found so we may enjoy
! modern Inventions, necessities and
MtiYiirlet sit tiriees we can nfford to
pay.
More than fifty years ago Lincoln,
I he emancipator, said "This govern
ment cannot exist half slave nnd half
tree. I do not expect this govern
ment to pass nw-iy but I do expect it
to become all fr e or all slave" Com
ing from the firing line of active
business, feeling most fully the the
effect of keen competition on one
hand, fixed and regulated prices on
the other, I say to you that the indus
trial world cannot long exist with half
of its business in the hands of a doz
en men who fix and regulate prices
upon their commodities according to
their own whims and notions and
with complete disregard of the law
of supply and demand, whilo the
other half of the Industrial world Is
feeling the sharp triplo edge of the
jtilleto of unfair competition.
. Tho wealth of tho United States
increases annually three per cent, but
more than half of the business of tho
There Is mere Catnrrh In this auction of
the country tlmn all other limeades put
together, and until the last few yenrg vn
Hiipposed to be Incurable. For a great
i mnny years doctors pronounced It a local
fllHR&Pe Hnu T rem r i lieu iiieui reiueuien, aim
' by constantly fnlling to enr with local
treatment, announced It Incurable. Science
lina proven catarrh to be conatltiitlonal
1 disease bthI therefore requires eonstltu
I tlonal treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure,
I manufactured by F. .1. Cheney ft Co., T
' ledo, Ohio, Is the only constitutional cure
on the market. It la taken Internally In
dimeg from 10 drops to a teaspnonful. It
'acta dlrertlT on the blond anil mucous aur-
faces of tho nyatem. They offer one hnn-
dred dollar for any rase It falls to cure.
I Kend for circulars and testimonials.
Address: F. 1. CHENKY ft Co., Toledo,
) Ohio.
Sold br Druggists. 75c.
Take Holl a Family I'l 11a for constipation.
EMXlRofNNA
Ill
Jr ,0F $
mm $!
PENNftl I i!,
UnoTsiAiSs IVrxTtK-fl III ,
IMci n r. ok ai.coiiolK Mi '1
n . .. m , t H
rliH.'!i;i:"-';-"ul ill I I
HAUIJUUroNMIMTHM, ft jj'e l
A UMUMftMMMtS. V
mmmml
aunjRuncsvRL'prS
if .!-., ?5
.1 mice. H lix
MINIAtl'KF. Plt'TUKE
world is done by combinations forc
ing more than five times that am
ount annually In the shape of divi
dends and profits Into their already
swollen treasuries. How long before
they will own all the property
Continued on page 7.)
Svn.i M.i of the aniiunl atateini'nt of the
LONEON ii LANCASHIRE TIRE 1NSUR-
ANCE COMPANY. U. 8. BRANCH,
of Liverpool, in Knt'I.nnl, on the 3 1st day of
Iiereniher. 1111 1, rimde to the liiRurnnri t'oin
misaionor of the Htate ol On-gnn, imihuuiU
to law :
Capital.
Deposit in United Slates $ 310,000.00
Income.
Premiums received during the
year 2,.r71,CO.2 1
Intercut, dividend, nnd rents
received durine the year.... 1 .'-, ICG. 24
Iiirome from oilier sources re
ceived durinj; the yeur 11I,0'2I.20
Total income $2, 861, 7l0. 74
Disbursements.
Losses paid during the year, in
cluding adjustment expenses,
etc $1,211,057.43
Commission nnd salaries paid
during the year 6;17.2J9.37
Taxes, licenses, and fees paid
during the year 79.050. go
Amount of all other expendi
tures 5J0.40S.01
Total expenditures 2, 514, 421.70
Assets.
Value of real estate owned.... 300,000 0
Value of stocks and bonds
owned 2. 820.505. 06
Cash in l.anks and on hand ... 570,417.00
Premiums in cmtrsp of collec
tion and in transmishion .... 52H, 375.56
Interest and rents due and ac
crued 42,152.1n
All other assets lii.1.072..'il(
Total assets
Less special deposits
State
. 1. 424. 012. OS
in any
20.37S.S1
Total assets admitted in
Oregon . . . .' l.3:i".
Liabilities.
J3 I.C8
Gross claims for losses unpaid
. lit. 173. 10
Amount, of unearned premiums
on all outstanding risks.......
I)ue for commission and brok
2.570,07 I. C7
erage 10, 000. 00
All olhcr liabilities (10,471.37
Total liabilities 2. 704. 010.20
Total premiums in force De
cember 31. 101 X 100.115,040.00
Business In Oregon for tbs Year.
Total risks written during tho
year fl.5sG.34 1.00
(iros.s premiums received during
the year
Premiums returned during the
year
t.osseH paid during the year . . .
Losses incurred during the year
07,017.02
33.4 M 17
24.5SS.HO
24, 00.1. HO
Total nmount of premium out
standing in Oregon December
81, 1911 2,410,832.00
LONDON It I.ANOASIUUK FIKK IN'Kl'K
AN'CK COMPANY, lly Jus. Wyper, Mgr.
StaHitory resident general agent and attorney
for eervice: O. L. Ooodell, 220 Chamber of
Commerce Hldg., Portland, Oregon.
m
Oregon Theatre S 24th
Last Eig Musical of the Season
MORT H. SINGER
bliss Nobody From
Siarland
COMING I XC II C.i;i) H!OM ITS nix oitn MVS OF 300 NIGHTS AT
Till', I'RIXCKSS TIIF.A'lltK, CHICAGO, WITH OMVK VAIFj TIIK
ALIj ST A 1 1 CAST TIIK OKK.INAIi PRINCESS THEATRE PHODl'O-
TION DANCERS AND FAMOUS RKAUTV CHORUS,
OTF THIS IS TIIK SAME COMPANY PRODUCTION AND
CASTTHAT PLAYED TIIK JIEMLS THEATRE IN PORTLAND
LAST SEl'TEM HER.
'
"There's a laugh In every mlnuto
of Miss Nobody from Starlnnd."
Denver Timrs, March 4, 1912.
"Miss Nobody from .Starland" is
ono of the best and most Complete
musical attractions sent to the
Coast for seasons. Vancouver
World, Aug. 29, 1911.
"It Is to be doubted If anythlnr?
funnier thnn the Second Act of
'Miss Nobody from Starlnnd" has
been seen here in seasons." Spo
kane Spokesman Review, Aug. 21,
1911.
Prices.-Lower Floor $ l.50
Gallery 50c-Sale
We Sell
Sulphurro
Koeppen's
The drug store that tervet
you lest.
Taxicab Service
DAY AND NIGHT
Stand at Hotel St. George
25C to Any Part of City
Phone Main 1 2
Joseph N. Bohl, Prop.
BRING IN
YOUR
PONY
VOTES
In order to avoid confusion
as to -tending of contestant to
our big Tony Contest, we would
like to have all vote cast a
soon as possible.
Standings of each boy and
girl In the contest, are now dis
played at our store.
Tallman Eb Co.
The
Pendleton Drug
Co.
Is In business for
"Your Good Health"
REMEMBER THIS WHEN
YOU IIAVE PRESCJRITTIONS,
OR WANT PCRE MEDICINES
CHICHESTER S PILLS
l.adlral Ask Jour II
s'lit-hoa-ler'a Ilium-
l-llls In K-d ami
Mlt1 with
ftue no tner. llu mr Tnnr
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OUTG1XAI, AND ONL.Y COMPANY PRKSKNT
INO CHICAGO'S mr, MUSICAL, HEVUK
"Miss Nobody from Starlnnd" Is
ono of the three biggest winners
in tho Musical Comedy World.
Portland Oregonlan, Sept. 10, '11,
"Miss Nobody from Starland"
greatly pleased crowds at The
Moore Theatre. Seattlo P. I.,
Sept. 4, 1911.
"Miss Nobody from Stnrland''
was presented nt the Victoria
Thentro last night to a house
which thoroughly enjoyed a de
lightful evening. Victoria Dally
Times, Sept. 1, 1911.
- - Balcony $1.00 and 75c
of Seats Friday