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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1911)
rAGE FJGITT DAILY EAST OREGONIAX, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATl'RHAY, Jl'XE 10, 1011. EIGHT rAGES (II Fruits and Vegetables the fresh, crisp and jucy kind. Everything the market offers in fresh fruits and green vegetables is found here first Tou'll find our quality highest and prices lowest. Newsy Notes of Pendleton 'County Court Adjourns. I ine county court iook adjournment yesterday arternoon arter finishing : the consideration of the many road petitions before it. at the Indian reservation and esti I mates that over 600,000 peoplo look led at his exhibit and listened to his I talk. From Itoston he went to At lantic City where his daily routine was similar to that in Itoston. Leaving Atlantic City ho went to New York and on his return to Oregon stopped at Oklahoma City to visit his parents. I conomy jars Just received, large line of Economy fruit jars, which we are selling at the lowest prices. Tops always on hand. STANDARD GROCERY COMPANY INC. WHERE ALL ARE PLEASFD. FRANK O'GARA, Pre. BERNARD O'GARA, Sec-Treas. I ' T?nln.l t?.A 1-l,.--l..ft A I viuvru c-iuico jLiiMin-i. ..-Liurnry dunu iMcCourt, formerly district attorney of this judicial district and located in ' Tnrii1 lui.m n I ill I il t I v iviu, ui i r in wua viiy una morning to represent the government I -- - - v. ---v tii n lill.il ICOll mony win oe taken next week. ; Deputy Sheriff Joe Blakely is in j Milton today on civil business. County Commissioner M. M. Cock- burn returned to Milton following the adjournment of the regular monthly term of the county court. Representative S. D. Peterson la transacting business in Pendleton to j nay, having come down from his home at Milton this morning. Shnkespeare to French. Boston, June 10. Rev. John II. Shakespeare, secretary of the Bap tist Union of Great Britain and Ire land, will be the preacher at Har vard tomorrow. The distinguished clergyman will address several Am erican congregations before returning home. Dakota Celebration, Yankton, S. ., June 10. Dakota territory, comprising the present states of North and South Dakota, was organized In 1S61 and the semi-centennial will be celebrated here in a lavish style during the week begin ning tomorrow. Many visitors from all over the northwest are expected. OUR. GREAT OF WINNING CONTEST BEAKS AND BVCKAROOES WILL CLASH TOMORROW Walla Walla Coming Over Strong to Take Final Game of the Series Berger to Be on Mound for the Lo cals Ttie Line-up. Games Tomorrow. Walla Walla at Pendleton. Athena at Milton. Weston-Echo game cancelled. Greatest of all games that have been played in eastern Oregon this season will be the Pendleton-Walla Walla contest in this city tomorrow afternoon and local fandom Is fairly agog over the approaching struggle. Ever since that game two weeks ago when the Buckarooes took the hides of the Bears In a thirteen Inning game, there has been much excitement and speculation over the next meeting of the old rivals. Walla Walla is coming over strong, determined to take tke de ciding game of the series, and the locals are confident they can dupli cate their victory of two S&hbafhs ago. Berger will be on the mound for the Buckarooes but It Is still an un answered question who will do the twirling for the visitors. However, it Is safe to predict that they will have a top liner. Secretary Cooley of the league has t igured out the batting averages of the eighteen men who will probably compose the two teams tomorrow and the figures show that the local players have a considerably larger team, av erage than the Bears. Keefe, who will wear a Buckaroo uniform to morrow, has the best average of any of the men "who have played In a ma jority of the games during the sea son. Ee has been clouting the ball at a .432 lick, which Is "going some." However, Berger, the clever mound artist of Uie locals, has a better av erage still for the three games it which he has figured, as the figures show a .533 percentage to his credit. The following are the figures for the two teams. Pendleton. Dickson, 3b Xevlns, 2b 19 Shafer, cf 40 Bliss, If 21 AB. H. 49 14 Snooks, c ... Borger, p .... Whitten, ss .. Clark, lb Keefe. rf .... Team average .16 .15 .10 .39 .37 . 4 8 3 5 8 S 5 16 Pet. .286 .210 .200 .143 .313 .633 .333 .130 .432 .277 Two Vngs in Court. Judge Fitz Gerald wa called upon to administer justice to two vagrants In police court this morning, Charles "WRONG NUMBER" ENDS RIGHT Welsh and John Linden by name. In asmuch as the former was a persist ent beggar, he was given five days in jail to reflect upon the advantages of a life of toil. Linden was allow ed one more ehance, sentence being Matthews was connected suspended while he hiked for the city limits. Common Error or "Hello Girl" Has I'neonimon Conclusion. - Owosso, Mich. The marriage to day of William Matthews, an Owos so molder, formerly of Detroit, to Walla Walla. Both Hanks Postal Depositaries. By a dispatch received at this of- MIss Georgtana Shaw marked the consummation of a telephone romance that had Its Inception through a mis take made eight months ago. Asking for the number of a friend with the Shaw residence ,and it was Miss Shaw's sweet voice that answered. Matthews said more than was really necessary to rectify the error, The next time he talked with the AB. H. Pet. ! fee today from Washington, both the lrI over th w,re 11 no JnWAke. Seacrrst, cf 31 5 Pembroke, rf 16 5 Harmon, If ". 40 8 Bade, lb 13 4 Houston, 2b ....10 2 Xadean, ss 12 4 Segrist. 3b 41 6 Mcintosh, c-sfT; 6 2 Parkes, p 2 0 Team average There may be two umpires In the game tomorrow, one of whom will be .111 first national and the American Xa .313 tional bank of this city have been des .208 isnated as depositaries for postal sav- 222 ngs 'unds from the postmaster. An .200 , annnncement was made some time '333'ago that the former bank had been Hgjthus named but it now appears that 333 Dotn ' tne local Institutions are to be 000 ' glven deposits. .212 Soon afterward they met. ABE ORDERED TO BATHE. TrnlnloHil of Stock to Otnuhii. Umatilla county sent out twenty-one carloads of stock over the Northern Muskogrc Jurors in Hot Weather Cause a Novel Edict Muskogee, Okla. One of the re quirements of a Juror In Muskogee county Is to keep his bodly clean. District Judge W. R. Allen Saturday made a court order requiring all members of the jury In his court to take a bath before they entered the court room Monday morning, WW SUIT SALE Is Now Oi We assure you a perfect fit in the latest styles and best suits made for the summer of 1 1 for the above price Remember $15 gives you your choice of "any suit in THE BOSTON STORE rsuerscaue. waua wana has sent in ... . " """""icourt room Monday morning. -Facirir this mnrninc- nlnntonn Ko (no I . an objection to him and asks that a nf tK "" . The oroer followed a petition by Portland man be secured, but Presl-'- ? h?M8- Jurors who complained that some of dent Frazier declares there Is no tea- "C.V' -T Y ".. .. luo, their fellow members were objection son why the official umpire should not be used. QCAIL ADOPTS CHICKEN'S. Hovers Brood of Orphans and Teach Them to Fly. May Odessa. Mo. In one in will be surprised If sporting Wood gets the better of a brood of moth erless chicks which a quail has adopt ed for her own. In fact, the children of Edward McCaulley, the street commissioner, are waiting expectantly for a whir and the sudden flight of the mother quail and Us adopted chil dren. Last winter children found the quail fluttering with a broken wing In the street. While they effected a cure in the house the bird became suite tame. It became reconciled to civilization and took a place is the chicken yard. Shortly fterwards a brood of chlch ens was hatched and the mother lien died. The quail, seeming to under stand the situation, took charge of the orphans. The chicks follow It about the yard and take Instruction in the matter of diet as the law. They can hardly be said to hover under its small wing3 at night, but it covers them as much as it can, and, unused to anything better, it Is a happy family. sheep while J. P. Jones was the con signer of the horses and the destina tion of all was Omaha. Mr. Hale will able to them especially when confin ed In the jury room. Some of the "hill billies" of the Jury signed the " " J . "" selves. The order was made In open Pendleton shipment at Pasco. An Exchange of Property. By deeds filed with Recorder Bur. this town i roughs today there has been an ex change of property between Luella B. Plnkerton and husband and George W. Cralgen and wife, all of Weston. The former transfers to the latter 120 acres, sixty of which is located In sec. 4, twp. 3 N. R. 36 and sixty In sec. 19, twp. 4 N. R. 31. for a consid eration of $2500, while the latter signed over to the former 110.86 acres In see. 4 twp. 3, N. R. 36 for $3500. court and filed for record. MAKING PIES BY MEANS OP ELECTRICITY Tliornliollow Road Is Open. Local people will receive with pleas, ure the news that the Thornhollow road is now open for traffic A tele gram was received this afternoon from ' rollers In two P. A. McPhee, manager of Wenaha thereby flattening Springs, btatlng that the bridge across, trifle larger In diameter Now they make pies by machinery. To the novice this would seem quite Impossible but it Is an establish ed fact In every modern bakery. It Is well known that most of the baker's products are made by electrically driven machinery but the latest ad dition to the mechanical baker Is the pie making machine. Mixing and kneading machlnesre pare the dough and cut It Into lumps of Just the right size for a single pie crust, which lumps are dropped one by one Into the hopper of a pie ma chine. Each lump passes between different directions. it Into a disk a than the So you read the East Oregonlan? BOYS AND GIRLS SHOES SAMPLE ' SAMPLE OXFOEDS AND PUMPS.' Wc sell them at a bargain. Give us a chance to prove our statement. v THE HUB 745 MAIN ST. Between Taylor Hardware and Pendleton Drug Co. the Umatilla at the foot of Thorn-1 needed pie crust. The disk of dough hollow rrade, was completed and the thus formed slides down over one road thrown open. This will enable 'of the ten pie tins on a revolving automobile parties to make th trln1 table, and when it cornea to the nth. up to the popular resort tomorrow and'er side a baker pours a ladle full of il is very jrooaoie tnat a numuer or filling on it. Then, when it passes people will do so. Sterf Splinter In Eye. Clarence Wheeler, who is in the em. under the rollers a second time, an other disk of dough drops on It, form, ing the upper crust. This Is pressed down tightly by the roller, which nl- pioy or Ray p.ew, sustained a very so trims off the projecting edge of painful injury yesterday. While 'the crust, leaving the pie ready for grinding an axe n an emery stone the' the oven. With such a machine, steel splinters flfcw on his hat and. three men can make from 600 to 600 when lying down Jater, one of these ' pies an hour. minute fragments tell in his eye and! A small electric motor perched nt was forced into the ball just below the top of the machine supplies the the pupil by rubtlns. Suffering great ' power. Such a pie machine Is snld pain, he went to the fflee of Dr. R. to pay for itself even with an output ningo and had the ef fending steel of only J000 pies per day. removed. His eight will not be af fected as a result of the Accident. WPTO j 1rod Man lirotlier Arrives. I brother of Vlrtor Pohl, the young man ' 'who was run over and Instantly killed' Inear Cayuse Monday morning, arrived i In Pendleton this morning and will j bury the body here. He states that 1 j his dead brother left home four years' i atm f . I f t Vl ll'UL't n n .1 I. ' ' v... ,, .-.-iv atiti nun iitrvci uc'ri . ... . back since. He Is a well dressed " Z1 . , 1 "a 10 011 PPW young man of pleasing appearance. In. 1 7 K7'Ptos are the same as young Jjdlclting that the dead boy came of ,i , , Ii, wu" nothing to dls- goo(J family and was not a profes-' ' 1 'er out the. in"- i OPtCTACLESfr EYEGLASSES With them the eyesllght of youth HANNAH S. LOWELL HAS PASSED AWAY MOTHER OF EX.JV1GE STEPHEN A. LOWELL Aged and Highly Respected Resident of Pendleton Plea at Her Home In This Citj Widow of William Low ell Funeral Tomorrow. Mrs. Hannah S. Lowell, widow of William Lowell of West Mlnot, Maine, and mother of Ex-Judge Stephen A. Lowell of this city, died at the family home in this city on yesterday after noon. Mrs. Lowell was an aged wo man, having reacher near eighty seven years, and her decease resulted from the failure of vital forces. Her last Illness extended only from April 30, but tier strength has been .falling since an attack of the grip about Christmas time. Toward the end sho suffered from partial paralysis of the right side, and she has been confin ed to her bed since May 19. Mrs. Lowell was born in Main Oc tober 24th, 1824, and her maiden name was Hannah fr'haw Attwood. She married William Lowell, who died in that Ftate In 1889,, and 1891 she came to Oregon with her son, and has made her home with him in Pendle ton since that date. Here she has liv ed a quiet, retiring life, having little taste for society, and making few ac quaintances, but charming all who were brought In contact with her bjr her never falling kindness and cheer ful temperament. "None know her but to love her; none named her but to praise." She was reared in the Unlversallst faith, but after her mar riage united with the Congregational church, and was an active member of that denomination In her younger years, and an attendant upon Its min istrations as long as services were maintained here. For the past few years she has been somewhat deaf, and her religious life has been In bible reading and In the family service. The funeral will be at the family residence, 725 Johnson street, at 9 o'clock Sunday afternoon. The re mains will be temporarily Interred In Olncy cemetery, later probably to rest beside those of her husband at West Mnot, Maine. Mrs. Martin, widow of the late Capt. Martin, a warm Mend of Judge Lowell in his life time, has expressed the desire that the Martin lot be used. , Get There Quick Phone Red 3961 for the AUTO CAB Twenty-five cent fares to any part of the city. Special rates for out of town trips. REST SERVICE IN TOWN. Stand at 614 Main St. A GREAT BARGAIN 640 acres, all in wheat, well watered, good improranaafe This land has produced 48 bushels to the acre, and raaj da it this year, the prospect is fine. $40.00 per icrt boji it, Including entire crop and machinery, terms easy. I have some fine alfalfa and fruit farms on McKay aa4 Birch creek, prices very reasonable, terms easy. If you are looking for business property, a residence, Off suburban home, drop in and we will talk it orer. E. T. WADE TemDle Big. Office phono Main 455 ; TCcs. B. 3271. Pendleton. On. Pendleton Dye Works CUT PRICES FOR JUNE LADIES' SUITS CLEANED AND PRESSED $2.00 LADIES' SUITS PRESSED $1.00 MEN'S SUITS CLEANED AND PRESSED $2.00 MEN'S SUITS PRESSED 75c Have your clothes cleaned at an up-to-date place and by up-to-date methods. - f Phone Main 100. 206 1-2 E. Alta. slonal hobo. Young Pohl will return ii5 nil home, flu goon as he has per formed his sad mission. of Rev. CorneiiwMt Returns. Rev. J. M. Cornellson, missl' ""ary at A j . . . morning after a two mont .v time he had exhibit at the at the general a byterian ehur one whole Ing wh' Eost tua rr.... - . . v"v -jutuuia mission, 1-turnp in the east during which charge of the Indian missfnnflrtr ftvrtnaltln of ,. , " -rt at Boston and jembly of the Pres- n in Atlantic City. For month at the Boston meet- h was called "The World at . Vn nm.M Inn mlniiti. t&fihi.n. p." I lie avc i ' " i ii in u I v. i, i. n I . : ,il day long on the missionary work wearers own nleasant Vnmij thai. . -0 ties. Without P- - "ear ouaU edges to m or cement, no , cclt dirt, cr become tiokTXl nt lggcd In cleaning. Just perfect sight with the discomfort and unslghtlincss left out. They should be worn by all who need double vision glasses. We fit them to give you comfort and satisfaction. DALE ROTHWELL OPTOMETRIST. WIUi Wm, Ifanscom, THE J""ct. Straw Hats Full lino for all both work and , Misses Sailors Sun Hafs M.ciis Dress Straws 23, 35, 50 15, 20, 25, 35 35 to ?1.50 Our $5.00 Panama cannot be beaten. July PICTOMAL REVIEW Patterns now in UTe WONDER STORE 1 o o o o o o D O O O o o BASEBALL ,eeYe S&tS. i BASEBALL oooooooooooooooooooooooo;aQOOOooooooooooooooooooooocoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o WALLA WALLA vs. Sunday, June 1 1 th, at 2:30 P. M, x Both teams have strengthened and are out to win. This is the last time Pendleton and Walla Walla meet this year. ADMISSION 25c GRANDSTAND 25c o ooooooooooooooooooooioooooooooooooqoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo