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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1911)
' r ic ,t. it J TEN PAGES. tAILT MAgft OKBGONIAH, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1911. PAGE SEVEN ficovllle winning championship of the world on "Steam- Doat, greatest bucking hoiso ever under saddle. COSY THEATRE TO SHOW tin: iwmois i:xii.oiti:n in HIS HASH TO THE POLK, KATl ICDAV AM) St X-1AV. THE TRUTH ABOUT THc POLE Moving I'U'tiirt'H. 1'liolngrapliH Taken Hi "The Top of llio Earth," Aceom ,(Minlcl liy InlervMlng Jvluro by .Mr. Itort HollircMik Hour llio Doc tor's Side of tlio Controversy. "" "' I IH 0 Hl il 0 0 Hill 0 0t 0' 0l 0 ''III ! IllW HI 1 ' - - DR. COOK IN Irg PENDLETON fl GRAND THEAT CHEYENNE .FRONTIER CELEBRATION" HELD AT CHEYENNE, WYOMING, AUG. 24, 1910 Teddy Roosevelt Traveled 3000 Miles to See This Show Friday, Saturday and Sunday Only. Admission 1 5 c Doors;Open: Matinee 2 p, m., Evening 6:30 p. m. Your money refundedjf not the most sensational Pictures ever produced. Manager Cooper has mado special nrraiiRenients enabling him to present thlH great feature In connection with hit regular program, nt the regular price, 6c and 10c. Thin picture wan made primarily for the purpose of presenting the Is sue uh to the Ptdar controversy before 1 v"t . til; 1 tho people. Dr. Cook consented to personally appear In tho pli ture be cause he felt that it would be a means whereby ho cojitd rench a great many of the American people with tila ver sion of what actually occurred. This he has not been able to do through the press and he sincerely hopes that thoso who see the picture will con sider the story It tells well and decldo for themselves as to whother or not he hns had fair treatment. The Cosy will present for the first time In this city, "Till: TRUTH ABOUT Till: POMV Sal unlay and Snnday. 1 THE XKWKST FASHIONS. START OF THE V II.I JIORSF. RACE. One of the lot Thrilling View h Taken from tli,- Moving Pictures of tho (.real Clteyiiuio lYontier CVIcbr atiou now Showing at the Grand Theater. cause It hardens the face, for one rea son, and for another it requires an ir nduclhle n.lnimum of hair. While It la quite true that the colfure Is grow ing strangely less every week, It has nut yet been reduced enough to satisfy the demands of the helmet. Possibly ene. can get this hat on the head with the aid of the shoe horn, but the dif ficulty is in getting It off without si aliing oneself, it would be perfect ly Impossible to go on with tho coif fure as it l when the hat is remov ed; one would have to begin at the In ginning and do their hair over from the scalp out. The little Dutch bonnet called the Wilhelmlna, with several modifica tions of it, are most attractive. They all have the short brim in front, the n und crown, and the upturned flaps over the ears. One of the most at tractive shaps Is In Delft blue, with a flat bow or black velvet In the back and a large straw butterfly in blue and yellow posed In front. These hutterfies are on many huts and are made of varied fabrics from Jeweled gauze to straw braid. Neckwear is also novel and more charming than ever. Ties of narrow velvet, edged with tiny satin flowers, continue In favor. One to be worn with a lingerie blouse Is made of an Inch-wide strip of Irish crochet. It rounds the neck, crosses in front and falls to the bust in round ends. The crossing Is held by a bunch of pink satin roses and green leaves, while a w reath outlines each end. association open motor car show. Thursday. Ohio-rennsylvania league of base ball clubs inaugurates 1911 pennant race. Kansas state trapshooting tourna ment commences at Hutchinson Gun club. Metropolitan association champion ship gold meet opens at Atlantic City. Friday. Cyclone Johnny Thompson and Hugo Kelly will fight ten rounds at Milwaukee. Saturday. Spring race meets open on Lex ington, Ky., and Pimlico, Md., tracks. Seventeenth annual intercollegiate relay meet at the University of Pennsylvania. SPORTING CALENDAR. THE COMING WEEK. Sunday. Three hundredth anniversary of the publication of the English Bible will be observed in churches throughout the country. Monday, Miss Marjorie Hobbs, daughter of Rear Admiral Hobbs, and Ezra Gould, Washington banker, will be mar ried at Newport, R. I. Ninth conference of the World's Student Christian Federation will be opened In Constantinople, Turkey, and continue four days. New York. There is much in a name this year, particularly in the world of dress. One would require a prodigious memory to know all tho names of tho new hata. Take first, as a handful, these: the Jockey, the Windmill, tho Aeroplane, the Quo Vadls, the Medici, the Fireman, tho Russian Police. All of these aro worn for each suits a different kind of face. Tho helmet is the most trying of all. It Is tho Ehapo used for the Quo Vadls tho Fireman, tho Jockey, and tho Rus Klan Police. It Is not so extreme in tho latter shape as tho others. It is shaped exactly like' its name implies, is high, is with or without a visor brim, hns a deeply dented ridgo across tho entlro top, nnd is more or less trimmed. It is difficult to wear bo- Monday. Franklo Hums and Tommy Houck, bantams, will fight fifteen rounds at ' New Haven. i Spring meet of the Talo track and ' field team at Yale field, New Haven. ' Massachusetts Horse Show associa tion will open exhibition in Boston Hig Wour Lcaguo trapshooting tournament opens at Wamego, Kan. Tuesday. Nineteenth annual Brooklyn Horse Show opens at the Riding and Driv ing club. Lakewood, N. J., Driving club's eighth annual spring matineo race meet. Vancouver, B. C, Horse Show asso ciation opens fourth annual exhlbl tion. Harvard's baseball nlno opens reg ular home schedule with Trinity col lege. Washington state trapshooting tournament begins at Spokane Gun club. Wednesday. Central Leaguo, composed of Ohio, Indiana and Michigan cities, opens season. Utlcu, N. Y., Automobile Dealers' Orpheum Theatre 9. P. MEDERVAOB. Proprietor HIGH-CLASS; UPTQ-DATE MOTION PICTURES ForMen, Women and Children BEE PROGRAM IN TODAY '8 PAPER, Program Chaagea oa mr, Tamriarl Hd TtUf Tuesday. National meeting in commemora tion of the tercentenary of the Eng lish Bible will be held in New York. Campanile, famous bell-tower of Venice, which collapsed in 1902, has been rebuilt and will tie dedicated. Second Progress League of the United States win meet In Washing ton fi,r a conforen e on the subject of parcels p:..-t. Twenty-niiiiii n 'l uiai congress of the Protestant K opal church will open in WasVngt-'n with an address by President Taft. Southern Conference on Woman and Child Labor, composed of labor unions, women's clubs and civic bod ies will convene in Atlanta. Convention of State Sunday school as-oria'ions will be held in Virginia, at Richmond and in Alabama at .n niston. Wednesday, Fifteenth annual international ex hibition of oil p.iintinns will open in C.irnegii; Institute, Pittsburg. Southern Hardware Jobbers' asso ciation, representing fourteen states, will open convention in San Antonio, Texas. Second annual National Real Estate and Ideal Homes Show will open in Madison Square Garden, New York. Ninety-second anniversary of the founding r,f the Independent Order of Odd Fellows will be observed all over the country. National Congress of Religious Liberals, composed largely of Uni tarians, will begin three-day session In New York. National Electrical Manufacturers' and Jobbers' association will open annual convention at Monterey, Cal. President Taft will visit New York to open the Blind Workers' Exhibition and attend the dinner of the Hun garian Republican club. Confederate Memorial Day will be observed as a legal holiday in the states of Georgia, Alabama, Florida anw Mississippi, Thursday. Joseph G. Robin, confessed looter of the Northern and Washington Sav ings banks, Nek York, will be sen tenced. President Taft will speak nt the an nual dinner of the Associated Press of American Newspaper Publishers' association in New York. Bokemian branches of the socialist party in The United States will open a convention in Chicago. Friday. Eclipse of the sun, appearing to tal on the Pacific coast and partial In other sections of the country. National Real Estate and Home Show will be opened in the Coliseuiu, Chicago, to continue to May 7. Saturday. Centennial of the birth of Jacob W. Bailey, prominent American scientist. ' Jay Gould, son (,f George Jay ' GoU!d, and Miss Annie Douglas j Gr.Vi.'.'ii. d-iusHer of a f irmer pr n- c s of Hawaii, will :: married in ' New York. 1 King an. I queen of Italy will for mally in;u:'t;rr!to tile internati Tal ex i o-'t'en a' Turin, which will e ntinii" to October SI. Stor kh 'd-'i-s of tl,,.-Che ap, eke & I ' i . i.".ci e.n iiicci in Kieninonu , ti c nth. an i-.-iie nf 1 2". mm una j i !vc p. r ' nt bonds. I l EPIDEMIC TXKES A WAV M XY PRAIRIE DOGS Jn t.;e e vent that the epidemic i imong nrMrie doits i-i not shot r,ff ' -n in the southe rn part of the suit,., iind the r.mehers are hoping that it i won't be, there will i no ne ed of I the ranchers ,.,f that district banding ; t-'gi thep for the purpose .f canyins on a war of extermination against them, aeceirding to Joseph C. Lewis of Albion, who is in the r'ty on busi ness connected with his nursery. . "There' have been hundreds of the animals which have died within the past two weeks from some unknown cause'." said Mr. Lewis yesterday. "It is seldom that one ever has an op peirtunity to see a dead prairie dog lying on tlie open range, but they are there by the scores in certain districts of the southern part of the state. It is considered possible that some ranch man may have put out poison ed grain for the animals, but whoever that kindly disposed person was iv li-.eve not been able to determine, if such there was. It seems more prob able that they have got hold of some peiisonous weed which is new in the district. No one has as yet found' out what it is. but it is a God-send to the country, no matter what the cause may be. Last year there was hun dreds of dollars' worth of wheat lost by the farmers because of tho inroads made' by the prairie dogs, and prep arations were being made to fight the pests this year, but it appears that some other agency was respon sible for the destruction of the dogs. "They constitute a far greater pest in the district than eb the grasshop pers and the efforts of the farmers thus far against them have been without avail." Boise Statesman. .RWX.NOX's TR WFI.OGI ES AM) WU.I.ARI) COMING j At the Or.gon e,n Wednesday 1 : n.l Thur.-l:i.v. April 20 and 27, John i :' Famous Travelogues, eombineel 'i;h W'iiiard. the man of mystery, j w'll 1" the . ff, ring, and it is safe to iy that ":h 's will prove the greatest id liofi h. d. i I i? i - if uV'.'' v" Osa Jolinson, With tlu JolniHon-Wll !unl Show. Oregon Theater, Wcd .cs- II is Inceiiue. "What's your husband's income " n.sfced the settlement worker. "It averages about 2:30 in the morning." answered the lady who was standing for the interview. 1IOW SHE DODGED. Miss Marie Dressier was lnvitine her friends to a birthday party. "There'll be a birthday cake, I suppose?" some one remarked. les, there 11 bo a cake, never fear." was the reply. "Anil candles, of course?" went on the alleged wit. "My friend," said Miss Dressier, 'this Is to be a birthday party, not a torchlight procession." Rochester Herald. 1. -I ?.oi.,i;.,i. r. ;.-. l .rr....:., . i ... i . . i i ii,,,ii; at bis season. Two and a uvs of wholesome entertain ;i n live, as well as amusing, f ; : i vi ning rare, in towns the of Pendleton. I! ;i"e bilge? eires. this nttrae-- s proved a wonderful drawing i'i De nver, at 'he Auditorium. over in. in. it children attended the Tr tv, Joifueii alone. To offer them Ti-iv.-h.u.i..;; alone would be a big at tr.icth.n. but when combined with '"'"" r attr.ictie.n. it makes, what is Wthout tloubt. th,' greatest and best show at the Trices, that has ever been se. ii h"r. The sab nf seats opens on i ties, lay at the following scab prie-. 15, 25 and 35 cents. Com- pb'te ehanae ,,f i,rogram each evening. of Do you read the East Oregonlan? PASTIME IIEftlfit Cass Matlock, Prop. BEST PICTURES If ORE PICTURES LATEST PICTURES an' iiiujfrateei songs in the city. Shows afternoon and eve Tii:n:s. Iviifii.f.l apej i tertniniiic for the entire family Next to French Restaurant Entire change three timee each week. Be sure and 'oo the next change. Adults 10c. . Children under 10 years, 5c. I r mi in inir rTtiinmr'Trrirrt iirt in. nun i i m in iiii iiiiiwiiiiuiitaiw Wednesday and Thursday, April 26th and 27th JACK LONDON PRESENTS THE Johnsoi-WiIlard Co. -WITH WILL ARD The t;ivnttst Mi Man of Mslory," ComblncHl Willi MARTIN E. JOHNSON'S I'AMOI S SOI TH SEA Isf, N1 Tl! Wlil.Otil lis ASSISTED RY ORA dOHNSoN NATIVE SONtiS IN COST I'M E TWO AND ONE-HAl.l' HOI RS OE ENTERTAINMENT. (ireak-st and Dost Atlrao tion of its kind on tour. A Dollar Show at Pop" uur Rrlivs. "Willard is indeed a w onder " Dost. "Johnson's Travelogues are in themselves tho most marvelous and Interesting ever seen In thLt city, and well worth while. Ho should fill the theater at every performance." News. Souls on sale nt Hansoom's .Icwclry Store. SIMXTAI, l'RUES 1X)R THIS ENi; At. I M ENT ONLY 15, 25 & 35c. day nd Tlilirsduy Mjlit , Al eil