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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1910)
ALLY EAST ORBGON1AN, PENDLETON, OIUDGOH, KDN'ESDAY, JFLY 13, 110. EIGHT PAGES. TAGU EIGHT. California Soused, Tomato or Mustard Dress ing Just the thing for those hot day cold meals, and picnic or fishing lunches. 25 cents a Ca& Standard Grocery Co. 214-216 East Court Street Phone Main 96 WEEKLY ORCHESTRA CONCERT TOniGHT SPLENDID PROGRAM IS ARRANGES) FOR THIS EVENING Music Will Begin at 8 O'Clock The Weather Promises to Be Fine and a Good (TOHd Is Expected. PROGRAM FOR TONIGHT'S CONCERT . l PART I. March For the Flag. .Lampe Selection from II Trovatore. Verdi Waltz Love's Caresses Hildreth March Onward Forever ... Cooke PART II. Intermezzo Winnebago .... ; . . Allen Dawn of Love Bendix Waltz The Dreamer. .. .Keith March The Charlatan. . . Sousa Lampe, Verdi, Hildreth, Cooke, Bendix. Keith and Soasa are the com posers who have been called upon to furnish the music to be rendered this evening by the United Orchestra In ABSOLUTELY FREE to the readers of this Paper PORTFOLIO OF 12 PICTURES BY WELL KNOWN ARTISTS Mounted on Picture Mats to Match, Size 10x12, thus Requiring no Frames. Who take advantage of this Speci al Offer now made In connection with the JuBt Published MASTERPIECES OF THE WORLD'S BEST LITERATURE Eight Volumes, 2560 Pages and Book-Rack to Match. Artistically bound in Buckram cloth. Over 200 World's Greatest Au thors fully represented in over 700 Master selections. This New Library Prepaid Shipped Direct from Factory, Including FREE picture offe $3.05. Order NOW from this adr. or send for Descriptive Matter of this and other Book Sets. Send orderi to FRANK E. GREEN Manufacturers' and Publishers' Broker 20 E. 15th St. PORTLAND. ORE. This is proving to be the most success full sale we have ever held Clean-up Sale Prices Prevail in Every Department See the Suits in the window for and you can easily realize why we are making such an increase in busi ness over last year. VORKINGMEN'S CLOTHING CO. rdines another one of the summer series of open air concerts. The musics will begin at 8 o'clock in the fair pa vilion aa usual Tha nroirmm niwrrt. " " ' r i3es to be oe of th most Interesting yet rendered. The weather also promises to be all that could he desired for such an occasion. Though several score of Pendleton's population' has already gone to the coast or to the moun tains, several thousand yet remain tains, several mousunu yei remain i it is expected that because of the warm weather that the crowd this evening will be the largest that has yet greeted the appearance of the or chestra. Rickard lu Los Angeles. Los Angeles, July 13. Tex Rick ard arrived here today. Within an hour he had telephoned Jeff and made an appointment for tonight. He admitted he will try to get Jeffries tc fight Johnson. If he can, Labor day will probably be set for the fight. Birthday of Newspaper. St Louis, July 13. One of the oldest continuously published metro politan newspapers of the country, the St. Louis Republic, today cele brated its 102nd birthday. Birthday of Astor. New York, July 13. John Jacob Astor, soldier in the Spanish-American war, Inventor, author, yachtman and globe-trotter, Is 46 years old today. RODENT LIVES MANY MONTHS WITHOUT DRINK Portland, Ore. That a rat can live for an indefinite period without wa ter Is the original discovery made by O. H. Collamore, manager of the Classen Chemical company of Had lock. His assertions are backed by the ordinary house rat, taken from a mammoth copper kettle shipped from France December 7 of last year. The kettle was unpacked at Had lock and the rat was alive and, seem ingly, enjoying excellent health. By no possible chance could the rodent have obtained a drop of wa ter during the seven months' impris onment. There -was not the slightest opening In the package. A number of machinery parts had been packed in the straw. This the rat had threshed over and gleaned carefully. The kettle is part of the equipment of a by-products plant being erected at Hadlock. All the machinery Is be ing imported from France. If you fall in love, you are soft and silly; if you do not you are cold, un emotional and phlegmatic. We Take Ze Plezaire-- of introducing to you THE FACT That our cleaning and dyeing will please and even surprise you for Its excellence. Pendleton Dye Works 206 E. Alta St. Phone Main If. as Newsy Notes of Pendleton Official Weather Report. Maximum temperature, 96. Minimum temperature, 49. Funeral from Church. Instead of being held from the family residence as announced yes terday, the funeral of the late Mrs. J. P. Temple will be held from the Presbyterian church. The service will be held at 10 o'clock tomorrow fore noun. ' M. J. ItiK'klojr Hero. M. J. Buckley, general superintend ent of the O. R. & N., came In this morning from a tour of the Washing ton division and left on train No. 1 for Portland. He reports poor crop prospects in the Palouse country and was glad to hear of Umatilla county's bright prospects. Pendleton (iiii Will Wed. Humors have been circulating about the city for the past few days to the effect that one of the popuhir young ladies of Pendleton has been persuad ed to kneel at the altar of Hymen and thus Join the ranks of the sum mer brides. The groom, to be, it is r;aiil, ! nt a Pendletonian nor art IPUI'I, 0regon an but pails from another state, and claims his bride &s the cul- J mination of a school day romance. For the relief of the curious, it is very probable that an announcement party will be gKen in the near future. ... ,, . ,.u "'i1. lrt favor of Mr. and Mrs. Antone Kraft against Chris Stannul, was awarded by a Jury in Justice of the Peace Parkes' court this morning. The Krafts had sued Stannul for the care of Mrs. Mollie Dempke and two children. Mrs. Dempke Is the niece of Stannul and it it was alleged that she and her children were cared for by the Krafts at the special instance of the uncle. They sued for $93 and were awarded $85 by the Jury which was composed of L. C. Rothrock, Fred Raymond, A. Ruppe, V. Stroble, C. Branstetter and George McGinn. The defendant will also be compelled to pay the costs. Will M Peterson was attorney for the plaintiff, while R. J. Slater represent ed the defendant. Volunteers Are Wanted. call for volunteers to assist in planting the brook trout fry, due to arrive tomorrow morning, has been issued by President G. I. LaDow of tne anglers association. Unless two own ers of automobiles will volunteer 10 meet the train at 5:30 tomorrow mor ning and take the McKay and Birch creek consignments to their destina tions it will be necessary' to take the entire shipment to the mountains. Other volunteers are wanted to go up on the morning train to Gibbon and North Fork bridge to plant the trout In those streams. Those who wish, can make the trip and return tomorrow morning on the 10:15 train. Anyone desiring to make trip Is urged to report to C. K. Cranston or G. I. LaDow. OLD TIME PCGS MAY BOX. Sullivan and Kllraln May Pull Off Bout In Walla Walla. Walla Walla, Wash. An exhibition fight under the old London prize ring rules, by two of the former masters of that branch of fighting will be one of the attractions of the Walla Walla county fair, if arrangements now pending are carried out. John L. Sullivan and Jake Kllrain are the two men who are to give the evxhibltion, and while the fight will not be a duplicate of the famous bat tle for the championship, which was fought in the south many years ago, it will illustrate the difference In the methods of fighting. The Walla Walla Fair association has been in communication with the two men and has all but completed the arrangements for their appear ance Just before the Jeffries-Johnson mill a telegram was received by the secretary of the fair association stating that the two were willing to come if the proper monetary consid eration was arranged. Thie, it Is un derstood, has been done. The two old-time scrappers are to appear in other cities of the north west as well as in Walla Walla, if they can fix the matter up. In fact, the two old fellows hope to follow the circuit of the North Pacific Fair association, taking In Salem, Portland, Seattle, North Yakima Lewlston, Spo kane and Boise. Some of these towns have turned down the ex-pugs, but It is thought enough of them will fall In to line to make the proposition worth the while of the old-timers. BABIFS STOP THE TRAINS. Wives of Strikers Put Infants on Tracks Before Engines. T'aris. Quarrymen who have gone on strlKe ni wiery-sur-uiHe, in me uc- partment of the Selne-et-Olse, are re sorting to measures of violence and the situation has become critical. One night 20 strikers and their wives turned the Mery station Into a camp ami Hlept with their families on the rnlls In order to prevent trains leav ing the quarry works. Mothers deliberately laid their ba bies on the lines, ran alongside the locomotives and defied the engine drivers to proceed. The strikers made bonfires of sleepers and passed the night in the open air. A force of gendarmes has been sent to the dis trict. Nasal Catarrh, an Inflammation of the delicate membrane lining the air passnges. Is not cured by any mixtures taken Into the stomach Don't wa.ste time on them. Take Kly's Cream Balm through the nostrils, go that the fevered, swollen tissues are reached at once. Never mind hof long you have suffered nor how orten you have been disappointed, we know Ely's Cream Balm is the remedy you should use. All druggists, 50c. Mailed by Ely Bros. 66 Warren Street, New York. MANY BABY TROUT FOR COUNTY STREAMS Twenty thousand eastern brook trout fry are to be planted today and tomorrow In the Btreams of Umatilla county. The first shipment was re ceived this morning from the hatch ery at Clackamas and consisted of 9000 young fish to be distributed be tween Bear creek, Camas,' Bridge and Cable creeks. The baby fishes arrived on train No. 6 at 6:25 this morning and imme diately thereafter the Bear creek as signment was loaded into a wagon and has already been deposited In that stream. The fry for the streams In the southern end of the county were taken to Pilot Rock on the train where they were met by Frank Hu bert and taken to their destination. The consignments for the Umatilla river, Meacham, Birch and McKay creeks will arrive tomorrow morning at 5:25 and Secretary Cranston Is now busily engaged In looking for volun teers to assist in the work of plant ing the young fish in the streams. Anyone wishing to assist in the work is requested to report to Cranston. PAYS GREAT TRIBUTE TO THE PASMORE TRIO When the Pasmore Trio gave their big concert in the Greek . theater, Berkeley, last fall, Walter Anthony, the eminent musical critic of the San Francisco Call, had the following to say, in part: "Welcome was given to the Pas more Trio at the Greek theater last night. Dorothy Pasmore played the Salnt-Saens A-mlnor concerto and an arrangement of "The Old Folks at Home" on the 'cello. Her rendering of the difficult number was scholarly and sure. Particularly appealing was her tone in the allegretto movement. From the first short dlssonantal chords, to the finale, she was mistress of the sit uation and played with emotional fervor and academic accuracy. Mary Pasmore, the violinist, presented La lo's Spanish symphony. The essence of her presentation was delicacy and purity. Her tone was broad and full, her musicianship undeniable and her technic adequate. Virile strength Is compensated by an alluring sweetness and beauty, and she plays from the heart." The Pasinores will appear at the Methodist church Friday, July IB, under the management of Fitzpatrlck & Norwood. BAM'OrR, THE GOLFER. Wins Parliamentary Goir Handicap fop the Third Time. London. Arthur Balfour, leader of the opposition, has achieved the dis tinction of winning the parliamentary golf handicap for the third time on the Royal St. George club's links at Sandwich. His previous victories were in 1894 and 1897. No other player has secured the handicap winning but once. Almost any member of parliament will say that to win this tournament Is better than to enter the cabinet: Mr. Churchill has won his way Into office, but he has not yet mastered the art of playing golf. However, he Is trying hard. When he was elec tioneering at Dundee he found time to play several rounds, and his handi cap Is now 24. rrom this figure.it is a little difficult exactly to estimate his form, for 24 Is, In1 me case of the majority of clubs, the biggest handi cap allowed. Mr. Asquith is a keen golfer, whose good intention are not Invariably fraught with good results on the links. Some seven years ago Mr. Lloyd George took part In the tournament at deal, and in the qualifying round of eighteen holes against bogey re turned a card of 17 down, having with a handicap of 24 succeeded In halving one hole. His score pointed a fond ness for big figures that one might have expected of a chancellor of the exchequer. But Mr. Lloyd George knew very well that this kind of play would never get him into high office, so off he went to Nice where he did the seventeenth hole in ,1. A real loss to the tournament is Lord, Gladstone, who ought to have at least one win to his credit, for only bad luck has stood in the way. His handicap is 2, and In 1907 he won the medal at Littlestone. The competition this year took for the first time the form of a round against bogey. Mr. tialfour was in excellent form, and, playing off a handicap of 11 he made the fine re turn of 1 down. There were eighty-one players, all members of parliament, but thirty nine did not hand In their cards. Mr. Balfour showed all his old form. He missed only one tee shot (that at the eighteenth hole, when his vic tory was assured) and appeared to be driving distinctly further than for sex '. 1 years past His approaching and putting were consistently steady, and with a handicap of 11 he return ed a card of 1 down. Among those who knew the links it was expected that a return of two down would be sufficient to triumph. It would have been good enough, but Mr. Balfour beat. The greatest ob stacle to low scoring was the Inordi nate length of grass on either side of the somewhat narrow fairway. Any thing like a long shot out of It was impossible. It was reported that a two handicap player, practicing on the preceding the competition, lost nine balls in the rough. STRANGE TOURIST SIGHT. HenmhiH or 1.000-Year-Old Building Yet to lie Seen. London. Every American who comes to London visits Westminister AIiIh v as a matter of course, and this summer tourists from the other side will find an added Interest in the an cient church. This Is the "Norman Undercroft," the only complete por tion now remaining of Edward the Confessor's original building, and thus dates back nearly 1,000 years. This Undercroft Is a low vaulted The Busy Boston Store Now Located at 725 Main Street West side between Atla and Court Sts. chamber which formed in other davsl the substructure of the old dormitory of the monks. Preserved In the Un dercroft are the effigies In wood and wax of kings and queens from Edward III to James I, which were carried at their funerals and placed upon their coffins In the Abbey. The figures, In various stages of decay, are dressed in rich clothes' worn by their living counterparts, and ' the exhibition is the most curious, If! not the most beautiful to be seen In the Abbey precinct. I PLD STAGE LINE QUITS WORK AFTER 20 YEARS Leahy, Wash. For several days Leahy wns cut off from the rest of the world, owing to governmental change of postal service. The Brewsfe r-Coulee City stage line was discontinued June 30, after a contin uous run of more than 20 years, and Mansfield is made distributing point for the surrounding country. After a week's delay, Leahy Is again receiving a daily mail over the new sttage line from Mansfield to Leila, but Is a day later with Spoktne mall. J. H. Harper has traded his home stead and other property to Mr. Hook for real estate near Belllngham. This makes no less than a dozen exchanges of property between these localities within the past 10 months. After an absence of more than a year at their California home, Mrs. Daniel Leahy and children have re turned to their fine ranch, a half mile west of Leahy, for a summer visit. Squirrels have done no little dam age to whea crops, taking on the big fat, but now are hibernating. Leahy ball team at Coulee City, July 4 and B won the $100 purse. "Shorty" Leavenworth, Leahy's ex pert catcher, Is playing with Bridge port this week at points across the river. Woman Sen tenectl as Spy. Lelpsic, Saxony. Charged with de livering German military and naval secrets to the French government, Anna Zarlemga was sentenced to six years in Jail. Accused of similar offenses, Albert Lueck and Aloyys Weisskopf each received a sentence of four years' Imprisonment, and Karl Lueck was given two yenrs In Jail. Hero Fund for Parisians. Paris. The administrators of the Carnegie Hero Foundation today awarded pensions varying from 140 to $3oo annually to widows and or phans of policemen, firemen and other persons who lost their lives In the perfurance of heroic duty during the paris floods last spring. SPORTS Paclflo Coast league. W. L. P. C. San Francisco 58 47 .543 Portland 50 42 .643 Oakland 54 50 .519 Los Angeles 54 60 .519 Vernon 51 48 " .514 Sacramento 35 63 .361 Scores. , Oakland 2, Portland 0. Sacramento 8, San Francisco 6. FOR : Fire, Life, Accident and Automobile 550 Main St. LEE TEUTSCII The Real Estate The Wonder Store Policies Wo are not selling you anything worth $1.00 for 60c, nor are we going to pretend to do so, but w arc selling lots of things for less than you have been paying for them. and it Is on the strength of tills dif ference we ask your business. Tumblers at doz 60c Jelly Glasses at, dot 40c Hammer Handles at 6c Hand Shaved Ax Handles.. 30c Baby Wonder Store Despain & Bonney AT THE PICTURE SHOWS The Orplieum. " ' 1. The Miner's Sacrifice. 1000 feet. A picture that will add to the already high reputation of the Kalem pictures. I. Our New Minister. 1000 feet. One of those thrilling love stories told In the superb Sellg way. 8. A Russian Spy. Eclipse 1000 feet. This will be of Interest to all who see It 4. I'm Awful Glad I Met Tou. The Pastime. The following excellent program for Tuesday's change: "The Marked Time Table." Blo graph. Drama, lOOo feet. A power ful story, told In the Blograph way. "The Marriage of Esther." Dra matic, 1000 feet long. A sumptuous and historically correct story of Esther as told In the Bible. There is more than entertainment in this picture. There is instruction of a valuable sort. The ancient world, or a portion of it, la brought to our doors, "White Doe's Lovers." Dramatic. Like all the Melles dramas this pic ture will appeal to all. "The Stranded Actor." Comedy. A humorous picture. "Lerin's Abbey on St. Hnnormt's Ia Island." Scenic. J) AP-A-LAT& Will brighten I in Your Home THE HIGHEST QUALITY VARNISH AND STAIN COMBINED. Can be used on wood or met al floors, woodwork, furni ture, picture frames, etc. Comtt ready mixed. Easily applied quickly dried. For sale by Murphy Bros. Dale Rothwell Optometrists Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Lenses Duplicated With Wm. Hanscom THE Jeweler Pendleton Phone Main 5 and Insurance Man. Mop Sticks at 15c Cups and Saucers, set 60c 7-ln. Plates, set 60c Meat Saws 85c Big Mule Palls 50c Main and Court Streets Insurance