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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1911)
DAILY EAST OKKJOMANV PEXDUSTTON, OREGON, SATURDAY, JUXE 10, 1011. BIGHT PAGES ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooiooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeooooooooooooocooooo o o r.GE SIX The Best Stories . by the Best Authors and All the News the Day it Happens GOOjD) summer. READING Two Extraordinary Offers Special Offer A Pacific Monthly with Daily E. O. o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o c o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o III I BMW I Bill M W " -: : 3 .' - ;t -"'-.'.Wi! I;,.;.:,, 'y One Year Paid in Advance, New Subscribers or Renewals . . RegnlarlPriceJPacific Monthly $1,50 Regular Price Daily . O. by mail $5.00 $60 Special Offer B The Pacific Monthly and Semi-Weekly E. O. One Year Paid in Advance, New Subscribers or Renewals . . ' Regulmf Price Pacific; Monthly $ .50 Regular Price Semi-Week!yE. O. $1.50 $30 S.0 82 00 The Pacific Monthly la the leading magazine of Western America, published on the Pacific Coast, edited by Western men, and Its entire contents are Western. The East Oregonlan, as you all know well, la the leading paper of the . Inland Empire, and la the official paper of Umatilla Co. and City of Pendleton. No home can afford to be without It This is a short-time offer PLEASE STATE IF NEW OR RENEWAL. East Oregonlan Pub. Co., Pendleton, Ore. Enclosed find for which please end your premium offer to the following address: Name ; Address CUT OUT AND MAIL, US TODAY. o p o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o s o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o ooooooooocooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooootoooooooooooooooooooo SPOR TS outplayed In all departments. Score: R. H. E. Fitt.sburs 3 8 2 New York 6 13 2 Lfifeld anl Pimon; Mathewson, Meyers ami Wilvon. NATIONAL LEAGUE. AMEKICAN LEAGUE. i Philadelphia 1; Cincinnati 1. Cincinnati. June 10. Alexander was effective with men on ha.ses and Philadelphia won. Suggs was hit hari only in one inning. Score: K. II. E Philadelphia 4 10 0 Cincinnati 1 8 2 Alexander and Dooin; Suggs and McLean. St. Louis 2; Iiostun 1. St. Louis, June 10. St. Louis won from Boston, Sallee besting Curtis in a pitchers battle. fiocton scored first, a base on balls.- a single and an error In the third netting them their only tally. The locals scored their runs in the seventh inning, on a trip le, a Fingle and on an error. Score: R. H. E Boston 1.5 7 St. Louis 2 5 1 Curtis and Graham; bailee and Eresnahan. ISrooklyn 4; ('liU-ago 1. Chicago, June 10 Pitcher Brown was hit hard for two innings and Brooklyn won the final game of the series from Chicago. The local's lone run was a homer by Doyle. Rucker was in fine form and kept the locals' hits scattered. Toney ateo pitched a fine game, after relieving Browne. Score: R. H. E. Chicago 1 6 0 Brooklyn .4 8 1 Brown. Toney and Kling; Rucker and Bergen. Xew York 6; Pittsburg 3. Pittsburg, June 10. New York finished the series by winning yester day. This gave them three out of four games played. Pittsburg was Ni-u York 9; Chicago 2. Xew York, June 10. The locals turned ihe tables on Chicago, win ning a griii'e featured by heavy bat ting. Baker, Chicago's first twirler, ilid not ti'.t'Out the fir.-it inning, as the firt four men who faced him hit the ball safely. Score: R. H. E Xew York 9 13 4 Chicago 2 7 4 Bakt-r, Scott and Payne; Fisher, Quinn and Blair. IMiilnilt-lpliia 5: lx troit I. Philadelphia, June 10. Phila I lphia Jt fi at-d Detroit in a contest filled with thrilling plays and which clos.-d :i!i two iat n on bases when (.'"inns' nun)'4 a running one-handed stop of Cobb's grounder and threw the batsirian out. Score: R. II. E Detroit 4 11 2 Philadelphia 5 8 0 llullin and Stanage, Casey; Krause and Thomas. CWtcImikI 5; alilnton 2. Washington, June 10. "Cy" Young pitched his first game of the season against Washington and Y'oung allowed but Groom was driven Score: R. H. E Washington 2 5 3 Cleveland 5 12 3 Groom, Hughes and Street; Y'oung, and Smith. St. Loiii 5; Boston 4. R. H. E. BoKton 4 10 1 St. Louis 5 8 0 Collins, I'ape, Kleinow and Nuna maker; Mitchell and Clark. Cleveland won. five h'ts, while from the rubber. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE. O Standing of tlie Teams. W. L. Pet. Portland 37 28 .569 San Francisco 38 33 .535 Oakland 38 35 .507 Vernon 36 33 .522 Sacramento 32 35 .478 Los Angeles 38 43 .394 Angela Defeat Bearers. Portland, Ore., June 10. Portland showed off splendidly at the ladles' matinee performance yesterday by setting shut out by Los Angeles. While the visitors from southern California were lambasting Steen all over the baseball park, Criger was holding the Beavers absolutely helpless. Steen was retired in the fifth and Fanwell sent in to pitch. Before he had pitched two minutes Fanwell split his finger and Fullerton finished the game. Fullerton held the visitors down but Criger continued invincible and gave Portland not the ghost of a show to get away from the goose egg score. Score: R. II. E Los Angeles' 6 11 0 Portland 0 4 1 Criger and Gilndle; Fullerton, Fan well, Steen and Kuhn. I'tIm-o 7. Sacramento 0. San Francisco, June 10. A sacri fice fly by McArdle brought in the winning run for San Franciscq here yesterday in the fourth game of the series with Sacramento. It required an extra Inning to settle the contest, and Sacramento was blanked. Schmidt singled, and was sacrificed to second by Henley. He reached third on a single fly by Shaw and reached hojne on McArdle's sacrifice fly. Sacramen to was outplayed, three errors being charged against the visitors and Hen ley bested Byram in the pitcher's bat tle. The score: R. II. E Results Yesterday. Vancouver 4; Portland 2. Seattle 4; Spokane 3. Tacoma 3; Victoria 2. Vancouver Downs Portland. . Vancouver, B. C, June 10. Van couver made It six straight from Portland yesterday, winning 4 to 2. The game was played In a drlzllng rain that made fast work Impossible. Both pitchers were wild. Score: R. H. E. Vancouver 4 6 2 Portland ., .-.2 4 3 Erlckson and Lewis; Tonneson and Bradley. Seattle. 4; Spoknno 3. Spokane, June 10. In the best played game of the year Seattle won from Spokane In the 11th Inning, 4 to 3. Two close decisions, two hits and a hit batter gave Seattle the winning run In the 11th. Score: R. H. E. Seattle 4 11 2 Spokane 3 11 2 Wlggs and Shea; Kraft, Bonner, Hasty and Ostdlek. Tncoma 3 Vancouver 2. Tacoma, June 10. Annls and Thomas were both wild and erratic this afternoon, but luck broke with the Tigers, and they won, 3 to 2. An nls was scored with everything of which a pitcher Is capable of per forming. An unusual feature of the game was a put-out by Rockenfleld and Fisher. The ball took a bad bounce, and Rockenfleld, seeing that he could not reach it, kicked It. The ball went squarely Into Fisher's hands, retiring the side. Score: R. II . E. Victoria 2 6 Tacoma 3 5 1 Thomas and Splesman; Annls and Burns. Save money by reading today's ads. and Honored by Women hen woman sprakt of her ilent secret suffering she trusts you. Millions have be stowed this mark of confi dence on Dr. R. V. Pierce, o Buffalo, N. Y. Every where there are women who hear witnett to the wonder working, curing-power of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription which saves the tufferinf ttx from pain, and successfully grapples with woman's weak nesses and itubborn lit. IT MAKES WEAK WOflEN STRONQ IT FLAKES SFCK WOMEN WELL, No woman's appeal was ever misdirected or her con fidence misplaced when she wrote lor advice, to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo,' N. Y. fVaaaaai P I let a Induct mild natural bowel tmvtmant ooca a 4my. ' Wmmrnw: wit wm$ .ON n - . IS Dr. Pttrca't Sacramento ..0 San Francisco 1 Byram and Thomas; Henley Schmidt. Vernon 6; Oakland 2. Los Angeles, June 10. Vernon's two pitchers, Castleton and Raleigh defeated Oakland, 6 to 2 yesterday, Klvlng the Villagers two out of three games played so far In the present series. Castleton struck out seven of the commuters and the hits were held widely scattered. Score: R. H. E. Vernon 6 8 2 Oakland '. 2 8 2 Casleton, Raleigh and Hogan, Brown; Pernoll and Pearce, Hitze. NORTHWEST LEAGUE. .Standing of the Tennis. W. L. Pet. Spokane 34 16 .680 Tacoma 33 18 .647 Vancouver .....31 20 .608 Seattle 22 28 .440 Portland ...19 29 .396 Victoria H 89 .220 For an enjoyable and invigorating vacation, spend the summer at Weimalhia Springs The popular family and tourists resort of the Blue Mountains. Season of 1911 Opens June 1 5 $2.00 and $2.50 per Day $12.50 to $15 per Week 4 weeks or more, 10 per cent reduction Tents rented furnished or unfurnished. . Cottages rented for sleeping room only. Camping privileges $1.25 per week each adult Swimming Pool free to guests of Hotel or campers. AUTOMOBILE STAGE FARE $1.00 EACH WAY. EXCESS BAGGAGE AND FREIGHT CHARGES 50 CENTS PER CWT. Tents, per week $2.00 - Bed Springs, per week 25c Bedsteads, per week 25c Mattresses, per week 25c EXTRAS FURNISHED TO CAMPERS: RATES MADE TO FAMILIES ' ' ""v Further information furnished upon application to P. A. McPHEE, Manager Wenaha Springs, Ore. Gibbon P. O, Wenaha Springs will celehrato July 4th in the good old fashioned way. All are invited to spend the day in tho shado of the Mountain Pines. Fireworks, speaking, Music Dancine and picnicing. . ... (( I