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r.u.i: roi it DAILY EAST OKEt.oXIAN, PKXPLITTOX, OREGON. T1HKSDAY. SKPTEMnEK U, EIGHT PAGES. Ekajr' ftyrC ' A (! vrv fm-ii. TArnL j i; v; i n: :vt newpaI':r . f-v a'.pl i -a i t u.'r lid sml Wwktj. I Mt n. ey tr. A UN lUiLIelllVJ CO. i I.sr:'TIS EATK8: - )' fj . -. :. ;.. br mail .. .- - .... ... ' t-- ;- r r . , .13 00 . 1 25 j . M ' . TH ' . 75 , . I M . M ! . 1 i . .75! . no : . 1 50 ! . .75 . .80 ' y !' ' ' ft It. V- u . ' , .t Bill... t. tl It'll. T- 1'3 7 i ' l.'-lf"t.9 ! t i- n. -.jo S I'u, M7 ti n Ml J ,r: ! r ..a. fill. !'.;. -. Fwnrltj balldlnf. i. 1' Hurna. 501 Four th! !. . N v. -r t'i,!1 I'rM AnocUtlo. Wtla 1 . i i ! xjitoffirt tt rDd:rtoa, ..ii'I-im Ei'l mittrr - i V "- ' -i.'. CH n. Li.-' 4 I i - i T i I ! tiii: ( u.. Aii .!itoii'y ;n h-'iir ,,f I rna I- a c r.ir of j.ain. So. in r;r;. f drew tw-ar, jkiu-' I to liiar, An.l .ir.jj thf f-aJ r-.'rain Atrairi a nl y-t attain. an J Th-n retkl'-y !n tr.y tji-r..i:r, I ii.s of Y.' nr i!ay. Ar.r J..y turne.l Vir k upon lif-.-'s trark. An.l .HniN-l. an 1 cam tny way. An 1 fat her down to stay. K::a Wheej.-r Wilcox In " toU-r Nautilu-", - i 4 MKiK TO TIIV HTl liK. For week i,at the 1'eri'lleton wat'T ci.mmiJfM ha-i b'n considering l"""' lirninary plariM for a gravity water !-item for the town. With respect to ti;e future of the city the ta.-k they l.ow have before them Is of a mighty in portanct- an.l It In to be hopel that no mistakes will be male. The Ea-t Or. gonlan know only in I the most general way concerning the , ;ar, t.fore the commissioners and it ha no desire to tell them what to do. liut then- is one mggestion It b lii-v.-i can be offered with proprl- ; r ety. It i.s this: I.i providing a mountain water sup ply the source should be selected not nith reference to I'.-ndleton as it Is at present, but for the Pendleton of the future. I'.-ndleton now has a population of 1 ut 6000 or 7000 people and during the past few yearn its growth has be.n comparatively !ow. Tills has caused s.-'ine p. op!..- to th'r.k the tow n hs. r.-ai h- I Its limit. Hut It has not. It H the center of a large country that jr. a modern sen'.- I- practically un developed. Some day L'matllla coun-t.- is going to Ix; settled up In a man ner undreamed of now The recla i.o.tion of the- arid land In the west end and the coming of the intcrurban line mark the opening of ths era of development. When the county is developed t the extent of Its possibilities Pendle ton uill (trow and the people who are here now will be Mit a small fraction of the population th n. It Is for this future population that the water com missioners should plan. Then then, is another argument for a wat.-r system with an abundant supply. It lies in the fa'-t that th right kind of a water system will In itself make the town grow. Th giowth of Pendleton is ti iw hamper- i by the lark of wat'T. flood build ing !i ads ate lying Vacant and near ly worthless because the water system cannot be extended to them. When the electric line cotnej people will then live farther out and water will l, wanted at places now beyond the city limits. Should an inadequate gravity system be Installed the growth "f th" town would then he r tar l' d as It Is now. The water commissioners have be fore thern a Job that re'iulrcs fore sight atid courage. The future Pen- diet:.) will bies.f th- m ir t s ; tl.ose qualities now and It will prob ably cui.-e thern If they don't. TUtVING STATE'S EVIDENCE. Law. vein themselves are now com Ir.g to realize that modern court pro ci dure Is not what It should be. Iri a I article upon "loopholes of the I.aw," In the last number of f'ol licr'H, f. P. Connelly says:t ' Lawyers of prominence' through out the count y have for years public ly and prlvat. ly c: ltlc'zed the present grow ing tendency towarif a too tech. nkal construction of laws lrj th c riminal departments ftf our state courts. The evil hasAfiown to ueh agnltude that the d'-fflslons tit court of appeal In case lifwhli Interest him been .used 'which a publlo ed are made the subject of rlbajfl Jest among the l.arned us well (xi the Ignorant. It lins brought Wito ilsrepute the temple rij in puV 'I vh.-t of all in e.M-rly Ji;. n- j 1 ' "lr rn.Ii-::i civilization." Mr ..!ly. a : ,r !ir, p to the in- tt. iucti.-.n V his M "tv. was ff,r ev-.!.-.; y.Mf th- d;Mrkt attorney at I'uf.e. h. 'hi'iill In- ; : ; f r mr.J up- " . i his mJ'j'-ct. H- l ii"t the- only ..'"rr.ey w!.o hus turr.l '.-t.it"' evi ;." within th- j .it y.-ar. Another . f jT'-mirH rn e- w;i tin- linn- . WK'i.irn !I. T.'ift. ill ( ki.i t.i:i.i:ii:s vs. n. ms. Tn- )v r ! :y. wh'-n he f'-KUl.ir er w.i. nff ;i:r of th- T'li'orn.i 1 ,ty, t;;.- :u.i: i.jnutir w i .illo--! t. ilo hi w.-ik for him. an. I lhi :.-L'uih- 1 youth iul tho !! -o r in a i 1 hoi.-, ."ny.- the Yakirna H-uWio. rn.ilf If (ii-t .om' u n 1 -- ri t :(!. .r.y ui- -n lh.- hu k!'-h'-rry, :i ti J lu'.y x.i!t-.l t!i.- f!nn. Tti" n iju- .-i.n.r .trt.r-' .at- tin- hU' k-lj-:-- ry at i '.ru.' w.ith. "hi!.- th- marine I i.-j...rr i. vi'l'-r.tiy a lo.i l,.irn cati'f ! . ho !"-. not kn-w th- J:ff. r-n-- - . ti a h'j k!'-''-rry an.l a niountai": Th r- a mu'-h l:ffer tn-- he te.-ri a JJi''' hu' ki'-:i' rry. wit.l th- perfume of joyou hiils iin.l woo.l i to It. an J a vlllair.ou- clam. i there I- tietw.-en one of our freh. -ieet North Yakima t-'irl- an.l a i t-rfi.-.l EKyi-ti.-.r. :;-'"-"" "ri" liv'''' 300 .- 4 - " 0 y.-ars h. f.ire M. .-. Nature made the huckleberry : e of her rarest an.) rno.-t Kr.icioii" rt.oo.K It grows out in the jure an 1 h-ai:hful air of the hilJj. In tho. sun. lit open :-paces where the .bw sp.ir- jk: like .l.arnon'l- th" tnorn. ami the lit!!..- z.-phyrs gambol ;ui s:irh ami piay tag with the tumblewe.-cN a' the j'.iy comes on apace. It i" a chiM of PL-re delight. The huckleberry pb ii to whch It ripens, is the noblest oik of the housewife, the climax of culinary skill, the List and best a f hicvement of the woman w hose hu-baiul loves her well enough to buy l:i r a gas rang.-. The clam is a filthy beast. lk hah no ideals, no ambitions, no place In I try T song. He reaches his high- -t development In the muck of the n.ympla tideflats. lie looks down. i-nd not up. He i.s a creature of thn ''"-' "d sllrne, and never n.-s above It We d not know what be .was ale for. THE IiKTIOXAItY si ITEItS. With the new words added to the l.'.r.guagc by the automobile not yet thoroughly assimilated, our vocabu lary Is put to the strain of digesting the crop of unfamiliar terms created ' . airship Invention, complains the :. I."UIh Dispatch. In the wake of compression. chauffeur. garage, chassis, differential, etc., come aero plane, monoplane, aerodrome, heli copter and all their brood. And the folnage has but begun. The man who has Just succeeded In distinguishing In tween a carbureter and a commuta tor and Is still somewhat hazy as to tile difference between densimeter aro) manometer. Is now called cm to pii..tc over the transformation of aviator from the name of a particular kind of airship to a general designa tion for navigators of air craft. j Seemingly the little children of Pendleton will have to conlnue the j drinking of tubercular milk and th? (dairies will be left uninspected. The I East Oregonlan thought the council was going to take a forward step, hut instead of that the aldermen slipped Possibly the dairymen poured milk 'i. the path. Star chamber sessions of the coun c i! are always very Interesting. Th'! councilmen then have something to 1. 11. THAT THII'.ST. Alfred fjwynn Vanderbilt at a din ner in .Newport, talked of the (Iran i Prix, the famous French race that concludes the Paris season. "Very sumptuous entertainments are given on the evening of the Grand Prix." said Mr. Vand'-rbilt. "A Itus s an grand duke will entertain a party of 100 or so at a dinner at the Ititz. Atmeiionvlll", the fashionable restau rant in the Pols, will be crowded with gay parties supping under the trees. All the theaters, all the restaurants, all the hotels will overflow with the .-ristocracy of France, England, Ruh h a and America. "They tell a story about n New York man who celebrated 'the flrand Prix too well. He gave at the Cafe America in a large supper, and the next afternoon an overseer saw a val id carrying to this man's room a fresh water bath. "'What are you doing with that bath?' the overseer asked. " 'I am taking It to No. 72, sir,' said the waiter. "'Put It's nearly 5 o'clock.' " 'He Is still In bed, sir.' " 'Hut I thought,' sab the puzzleol overseer, 'that I saw you carrying a very large fresh bath to No. 72 a couplet of hours ago?' " 'Ho you did, sir,' said the waiter. He drank that.' " Kt. Louis Post Dispatch. He that neglects the little lovea the' greater. Latin. ill )l --U'li Newark Style Show The Fall 6c Winter Fashions of Correct Clothes for Men Made in New York by are now being exhibited by us exclusively in this city BOND BROS. I.II E IS A II.Ef.E. Life is a privib e. Its youthful days v' in-- with the radiance of continuous Mays. To live, to breathe-, to wonder and d.-slr-. To f I v illi dreams the h !' per il, tuil fin;) To thri I with virtuous pa-.-ions and to glow With gt'-at ambitions - in one hour to know The depth and heights of f.-iing , ''."i! in tiutli,- j How beautiful, how beautiful Is youth! Life is a privilege. Like some rate rose I The mysteries ii the human mind: till' lose. What marvels lie in earth and air and sea. What stor of knowledge wait ourj opening key, What sii'n.y roads of happiness lead! out j R. yond the te lnis of indolence and i doubt, i nd what lirge leisures smile upon and bless . Ti e busy avenues of usefulness. Life is a privilege. Tho' noontide fades And shadows fail along the windingi glades; I Tho Joy-blooms with' r In th" au tumnal air, ) V't the s.veet s.ent of sympathy is there. j Pale sorrow leads us closer to our kind, j And In the sorl .us hours of life we find j Depths ill t e- soul of me n which lend new worth j And rnajostv to this brief span of, earth. ; Life is a privilege. If some sad fate Se nds us alone to seek the exit gate; If men forsake us as- th,. shadows fall. Still doe., the supreme privilege of all Come in that reaching upward of the sou! j To find the welcoming presence at the K'tal, And in the knowledge that our feet have trod Path that leael from an 1 must lead hack to floel. ! YOUl PLACE IX THE WOULD. There is Just one t' ing in t' world which we have a right : be proud o, cn i that is what we are doing. g.".'i kite he n girl has a right t" be proud "f her work. A bootblack has a right to hold his he ad and look you square In the- eye if he has give n an extra good shine And that is just when he feeds like tloing it. liut the man eer woman who shirks work in order to maintain his or her "position In socledy" generates only shame and all manner of disease for s'-lf and others. We must le:yn that we elo not "come down" to doing the things we can do we are never above what we can do. .See? That Is your level, no matter how The .General Demand of the Well-Informod of the World has always been for a Hlmple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physi cians could sanction for family use becatiHe Its component parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial la effect, acceptable to the Byntera and gntle, yet prompt, In action. In supplying that demand with Its excellent combination of Syrtip of FIkb and Elixir of Henna, the Call fornla P'lg Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for Its remarkable success. That Is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna Is given the preference by the Well Informed. To get Its beneficial effects always buy the genuine manufac tured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. . Price fifty cents per bottle- Pendletcns Leading Clothiers. much money you may haw or how high toned your relations "r yourself may have been. i Then be homst and set yourself to d what you c..n do, if it Is only! wrshing windows or shining shoes. 1 Instead of "1 ow ei ing" jmi in any-! body's estimation it will raise you. I Yes, in spite? of all our artificial standards of society It will raise you ! Folks will say. "Well, there Is some-! thing in that fellow after all." I I'd rather law a man say that of: ilje than to he able to say 1 inherited, all the wealth of th- Koths, hllds. or ..in first cousin to all the rulers of. Europe. j You never were higher in the world t'Tan the things you can do. and do-i ing any one thing well fits you for doing something "higher," w hich I means something more delicate, com-' I dex, "refined." Continue to let "pride" keep you fr..m d"!ng what you can do and you starve vut what little "respect" the world or you may now have for yourself. And not only that but you effect ually block your own way to better th'tigs and open wire the door which i'-ads to every crime In the catalogue. Elizabeth Towne In October Nau tilus. AUDIT WIMil i: WIMf.llT. I was at the L" Mans race track la.-t month" said a correspondent. ' whin Wilbur Wright made his first public flight. "Our American aviator's triumph was tremendous. The French aerial .!..;: ps admitted that the Wrights wen. euite 10 years ahead of Farrnan, De La firange and plerlot. They gave Wright a wonderful ovation, embrac ing him. shaking his hand, trying to lift him on their shoulders. "He took the whole thinit indiffer ently. He seemed rather bored. He smiled and shook his head, disengag ing himself as soon as possible, and. with Ills hands In his pockets, walked awiiv to his workshop whistling. "I never saw such Indifference to I fame. sab somi-thiiii- to Wright about it. He laughed and answered: " 'Well, I am Indiffere nt to that sort of tiling. I want to fly successfully. I To become a public Idol Interests me NO. 9228 The American National Bank Formerly The Pendleton Savings Bank Capita!, Surplus and Profits $750,000.00 Savings Bank Facilities With National Bank Securities. 4 per cent. Interest on Time Deposits. Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent. Are YOU Being "Hunted?" One of today's want ads may bo hunting you ransacking the city for you. It may have a message for you of urgent personal Import ance one that, when you get It, and hoed It, may chango the Immediate currents of your activities, of your Interests may even place around and about you now environments, .new asso ciates; may give you an entirely new start In a business way. Isn't It worth while to try to find out whether this may not be true today, tomorrow, or very soon? as little as racing used to interest the Shah of Persia. When the shah was In London they wanted to take hi in to floodwood; but he declined to go "Thru one horse can run faster than another," he said, "I am perfectly aware; which one It is doesn't matter to me In the least."'' St. Louis Post Dispatch. When some prodigals return It Is the fatted goose that should be killed. Dfteo The Kidneys Are Weakened by (her-Work, tihealthj Kidneys Slake Impure Blood It usel to e considered that only finary and bladder troubles were to t traced to mc Kiuneys. but now modern science proves tha nearly all disease have their beginniDB in the disorder oi these most iinjxrtaij organs. The kidneys filter and purify the blood that is their work. Therefore, when your kidneysare weak r out of order, you can understand how :uickly your entire body is affected ami .0 every organ seems to fail to do it ..stv. It vou are sick or " feci badly," be"it: tkin'1 the preat kidney remedy, Dr Clinic's Swamp-Root, because as 6oo: j your kidneys are well they will he'j dl the other organs to health. A tria. rid convince anyone. If you are sick you can make ro mis Mics'by first eicxtorin voar kidneys ;TiS mild and cite extraordinary effect o' Jr. Kilmer s Swamp-Root, the great idney rcme.lv, is soon realized. 1; tdnds the holiest for its wonderful cure: f the most distressing cases, ami is sole on its merits by ill 'linguists in fifty-cunt tid one-dollar size Nittlei. Yoit may l-ivs a Bamttle bottle y mail free, also a pamphlet telliti; ycr. ;.ow to find out if you have kidney m bladder trouble. .Mention this paper irhen writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co., King hamton, N. Y. Don't make any mistake, hut rememDcr the name. Swamp-Root l)T. Kilmer's Swamp-Knot, and the ad Iress, Biitghaintoii.N.Y., on every bottle. Itome. of Swamp. Root. Ten Good Reasons Why You Should Stop at "The Cornelius" The Best in Portland. Situated In the center of th shopping district. One block from the clanging street cars. Not so expensive as some other hotels . Sixty rooms with private bath. I. ong distance and 'local tele phones In every room. Writing desk In every room. Carpeted throughout In the best velvet carpets. The rooms are furnished In solid mahogany. Every room contains a heavy solid Simmons brass bed on which Is a 40 or 60-pound hair mattress. The furnishings and general ap pearance of the public rooms must be seen to be appreciated. THR COrtNELlirS. Park and Alder streets. Portland's newest and most modern equipped hotel, solicits your patronage and assures you good service and courteous treatment. An exceptional hotel for Eastern Oregon families who .onto to Portland shopping and sight-seeing When next In Portlund give us a chance to make you look pleas ed. THE CORNELIUS Free 'Bus meets all trains. Europlan. N. K. CLARKE, Mgr. C. W. Cornelius, Proprietor Best Standard Makes of Pianos, Organs and Sewing Machines Buy from a local house which In sures you satisfaction, makes terms to suit you, carries only standard makes and are always here to back up their sales. If costs you nothing to look over our lines. JESSE FAILING Main strcrt, neiir bridge. SI. Joseph's Academy Pendleton, Oregon ct: fj.' u u mm An Ideal School for Boys and Girls. Under the direction of the Sisters of St. Francis, of Philadelphia. Resident and day pupils. Special attention given to music and elocution. Stu dents prepared for teachers' examina tions for county and state certificates. For particulars address Sister Superior He will have to keep on digging with his hoe If he does not get his wagon repairing, machine work and carriage painting done at Neagle Brothers', where charges are moder ate and only skilled workmen are em ployed. Winona hacks, Rex buggies, Fairbanks engines and scales for sals. A'e solicit your patronage. NEAGLE BROS. JOSEPH ELL INSURANCE HEAL ESTATE Room 3, Savings Bank Phone Black 2371, Building. lit mi