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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1911)
PAGE SIX. PAILY EAST OREGOXTAN, PENDLETON, OIlEGOff, TVKSDAV, DECEMBER 6, 1911. EIGHT PAGES. ne Piaaos 21 S1&.& A 1 Pail An Astounding Proposition--Why it Occurred, Lowest Prices Ever Seen in Print. A HUANG EMENTS woro complete, last week, in coinpli aiuv with inst ructions received from the piano inanu iftj faetnrers to tJie effect that our entire stock bo turned ijjto liionoy or interest Itenriii"; paper at once, A long drawn out rvhersal of the several unforseon circumstances that have com pelled us to make this move would not be of general interest, and only oocupy valuable space, so suffice it to say that our en lire ft.ck of pianos and organs must be disposed of before Mon day, December 11th. There remains for us no other alterna tive. We have to close out every instrument in stock offering every piano and organ at. such low figures as will dispose of them quicker than we could have them boxed, carted and ship ped and in pursuance of this undertaking, we desire to frankly state, that while we regret to quote such low prices as to disar range, the immediate future music trade here, we feel obliged to make such figures and favorable terms as will insure the sale of every instrument within the next twelve days at which time this store will be. for rent and it shall be vacant. In this stock are included some of the finest, most costly instruments to bo had in America. Xew and beautiful Baby Grands and some 39 uprights and a most complete assortment of the latest 1911 and 1912 styles and designs, including the nation's greatest, the Chickering, and the world's renowned and justly celebrated Kimball, besides numerous other Xew York and Chicago makes the sale and distribution of which was controlled by this store. THE PRICES In order to protect the interests of the dealers who handle these makes of pianos, no prices at which these instruments are now for sale can be quoted here,b ut every new piano and organ will 1h sold at less than its actual factory cost. Discounts of from 10 to 15 per cent on the. actual cash cost of instruments will be made on slightly shopworn or those that have been rented ,c-r Ixiconie second hand. You will find here now several square pianos for sale at $17. $G(, strictly modern instrument with carved legs and round corners, worth $100 and $125, respectively at the lowest esti mate. Several second hand uprights and used organs for a mere song. We must have them out of tho way. One $38 and one $47 and one for $5G. $275 upright will go for $174, these are well known Xew York makes and have never been sold East or West for less than $275 heretofore. There are others that will go for still less uioncv, though all are. good reliable pianos. The Chickering, the Sohmer, the Stock, the Kaakauer, the Story & Clark, the Kimball and other well known makes are the nation's highest grade and most renowned makes. We offer tomorrow a strictly high class seven and one-third octave piano, beautiful polished plain panels, full swinging duet mu.-ie iek, revolving lock board, continuous nickel hinges and ihrec pedals (the third a soft or practicing pedal),' for $2S8 which is less than half price. A fancy mottled figured walnut or a mo-it beautiful dappled San Domingo mahogany case costs $:;0 more. Suine plainer, yet very beautiful instruments can le had for ?227 and for $195. Almost $200 below the lowest retail price if this grade of instrument in any other city. Largest cabinet grand size, thoroughlv warranted upright pianos, in Mahogany or Oak -standing four feet nine inches lii'Ji, with late.-t duet nm-ic desk, rolling fall board, three ped-tl-1 and all up o d:ite improvements, instruments that we guar ;.r.'ee can not be Lontrlit at the Xew York factory for less than k'l'0 eaeh. go durinr this sale for $227 and plainer styles for $195. The dark and -mailer cases are still less. Another well known make, recognized everywhere in the trade a? most honestly constructed, mo-t perfectly finished and j:i ter t ouraWe pi.iiio nui'i-'. m oeautitui plain manorany or qtiar- 'IV.'Ul o:ik case. refill; price $150, now $312, on easy terms. ON EASY TEHMS 'tA7r l 'I 'lie exception of the four lnght priced, very VV I ,. i , i i i 1 , .i ,r .i,;,.i, :. 1 M : " 'I . I ' J J 1 ii 1 I (Ji M 'I t 11., un: Ul H1IH11 I.T ver and on which terms of payment will not made 'li.in $50 d.nvn and $15 a month, all piano; : ie for sale en payment of $15, $20 or $25 down and at li e rati' of op i yen $0 per month, according to makes, -tvie- and de-ijj.s. Since all prices are based upon actual i-ci.iii i-o-t, tlio-e taking advantage of the above named easy terms, will pav interest on deferred payments at 8 er cent per annum. Every piano or organ .sold will le accompanied by the respi-ctive manufacturer.,' five years' warranty, duly cotintei-.-igni !, liins fii!!y piotecting a customer in every way. 'Jhis .sale as above will be at .-13 Main Street, and com mences at 8 o'chx-k tomorrow morning and if everyone could realize tlie exact situation as it is. nothing would bo left for sail- after fo'iiorrov. Store and office fixtures, typewriters, desks, etc, for sale for delivery in ten days and no decent offer will be rejected. Store open day and night till sale cIosch. ny&er Music Co. 813 Main St., PendUtcn, Ore. H. F FFNEIX, Fictary Representative spoors All-Star Team Selections. Selections of the sporting writers of three of the leading daily news papers of the NJmhwest, for an all- gjar football team composed of play eds of the Northwest, are as follows: (Spokesman-Kevlew.) lAtt end V. Uraham, 1SS (Wash ington.) Left tackle Bailey, 22. (Oregon). Left guard Griffiths, 185 (Wash ington). Center Harter, 100 (W. S. C.) Kight guard Noill, 100 (Whitman). Right tackle Bliss, 175 (Washing- ten). lilght end Sutton, 165 (Washing ton). Quarter and captain Coyle, 150 (Washington). Left half Main. 175 (Oregon). Right half Mucklestone. 190 (Washington). Fullback Xiles, 175 (Whitman). Average weight of line 189 pounds. Average weight of backs 170 pounds. Average weight of team 182 pounds. (Journal.) Ends Sutton, Washington, and Enberg, Oregon Agricultural College. Tackles Bliss, Washington, and Bailey, Oregon. -Guards Laird; Washington State and Pullen, Washington. Center Carlson, Oregon Agricul tural college. Quarterback Coyle, University of Washington. ' Halves Main, Oregon, and Muckle stone, Washington. Fullback Xiles, Whitman. FSrst Tram. (Oregonlan.) Enberg (188) Or. Agr. Col., left end; Bliss (180) Washington, left tackle; Laird (221) Wash. State, left guard; Kellogg (189), Oregon, center: Bailey (227), Oregon, right guard; Patton (185), Wash., right tackle; Sutton (165), Wash, right end; Coyle (150), Washington, quarter; Main, (175), capt., Oregon, left half; Muck lestone (180), Wash., right half; Niles (177), Whitman, full back. Second Conference Team. Grimm fl87i. Washington lpft pml- jFishback (189), W. State, left tackle; LMiMiau hi ij, u. a. u., leu guara; Carlson (175), O. A. C. center; J. Har ter (201), W. State, right guard; Nell (190), Whitman, right tackle; Brad shaw (165), Oregon, right end; Lat ourette (155). Oregon, quarter; Wand (168). Washington, left half; Per kins (174), Idaho, right half; Spargar, (175). Washington, full back. K I RELIABLE DEFENDERS OF OUR COUNTRY, THE SOLDIER 5 5? 4, a1 3 14 3 9 Ou-.fmntd UDlr Ui Vood ml Pro?- it ut Joiie auth, 19 4. Serial N. (M, Itr H. K. Bulk lull 10. Si mm Atcom LrtR cnT. lumms romrrrp cRt-otoroJiM re FLOID OtViT MOOtHlt mvilU IMAIOttlTt. Gffi.ll-'NiRA. !h. CHICACO. ILL. f QUICK TO REPEL ATTACKS BE. KING'S NEW DISCOVERY. JUST AS QUICK TO REPEL ATTACKS OF COUGHSandCOLDS And all Diseases of THROAT AND LUNGS QUICKEST AND SUREST WHOOPING COUGH AND BRONCHIAL REMEDYl Price 50c and $1.00 SSS SOLO AND GUARANTEED BY KOFPPEN'S 1 mmrm Il.Ki:U TEAM GLAD TO SEE PEXDLETOX WIN Baker, Ore. For the first time in several years the lnterscholastic foot ball championship of eastern Oregon does not rest with the local high school, as Baker, after going through the seaton without a defeat, lost the deciding game at Pendleton to tho Pendleton high school by the score of 8 to 0. The Ioca's, however, had the satisfaction of playing a tie game with the southern Idaho champions the Nampa high team, holding them to a 6 to 5 score on Thanksgiving day. Baker won easily from all east ern Oregon teams except La Grande, wich team and Baker played a no score game In a field covered with nearly a font of snow. The Baker team, however, is not Inclined to feel sore over the result. believing that the honor should be passed around, and being fairly de feated in the "Round-Up" town, were satisfied to relinquish the title to Pen dleton. 1 l-YEAIt-OLI) AOM ITS SHE STOLE HAIlY roil I.EWAKI) Providence, R. I. Fourteen-year old Grace Studley, wearing a wedding ring which some man gave her for a jr.ke, confessed to Chief Inspector Horton that she stole the ten-months- eld baby of Julius and Xora Rubin of Attleboro, Mass., from the entrance of a df-partment store. She said she stole the child In hope of getting a re ward and did not know when she took it that It was that of a poor couple She had been missing from home fnr two weeks and when her mothcl1 saw her at police headquarters the older woman was only restrained from spanking the girl when the de ttctives Interfered. The confession came wholly unex pected, after the police had tried sev oral hours to get the little girl to tell the truth. She had stuck to hes story that she met a man named Walter Johnson In the street, with the baby But confronted by the infant's moth or and father, she calmly admitted! that she took the child, having been I told that she mlsht get a reward for j It. Later she stated that no one had told her about a reward and she took ' the child entirely on her own re sponsibility. ".Vow, tell the mother and father what you took thoir baby for," In spector Horton finally urged. "I thought I'd get a reward," was j the simple answer. The girl astonished tho police not J only by her youthful and apparently innocent appearance, but by the non chalant and careless manner in which she answered questions and tho ap parent unconcern she showed. ORE. DAY AI LAND SHOW TO BE GOOD Telegraphic advices received by Wm. McMurray, general passenger agent of the Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation company, from the O.-W. R. & N. headquarters of the Land Show at Chicago, indicate that "Oregon Day," which is to be observed on Thursday next, the 7th, I will likely be the most brilliant event of the entire season. Several of Oregon's representative citizens will be present and are sched uled for stirring speeches. Twenty four lectures will be delivered by the experts of the Harriman lecture bu reau, most of which will relate and Illustrate the advantages of Oregon for the homeseeker from the east. Se lected specimens of the best products of Oregon orchards will be given to the public and every effort made by every department of the great exhibi tion to give Oregon the send-off that its resources and the energies .of its people command. The interest in the shew continues, although -It is now In its third week. To th's date 329 lectures have been given in the big $20,000 theater or lecture room, maintained by the Union and Southern Pacific and on each occasion to a crowSed house. The total attendance up to Sunday eve ning was 122,500 which is equal to 70 per cent of the total admission to the coliseum and 45,000 more than attended the lectures during the tw6 weeks last year.. The voluntary testimony of exhib itors in the main hall is that these big lecture rooms are the best features of the show, and afford to Oregon as to other Etates of the great empire west of the Missouri very ample and unu'-ual facilities for their orators and the everyday lecturers present Ing in words and beautiful pictures the attractiveness of the empire be yond the Missouri. All the various community book lets issued in such abundance from all parts of the northwest through the co-operative bureau of the Oregon Washington Railroad & Navigation company are be'ng handed out liber ally from the literature department, a Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury. as tnureury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when enterlnir It through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be lined except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the ilamnge they will do ll ten fold to the good you can possibly de rive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Tole do, , contains no mercury, and Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buy ing Hall's Catarrh Cure lie sure you set the ecu n I tie. It is taken Internally and made h Toledo, Ohio, by P. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Hold by Druggists. Trice, 75c per bottle. Take Hall's Family l'ills for couHtlpatloa. counter sixty feet long In one end of the theater. This department Is manned by well Informed representa tives from the vurious parts of the west, and their undivided attention U required to unswer correctly the in quiries stimulated by the lectures and the exhibits. Special preparation are now going on to concentrate the entire energy of the large theater and the main hall In all that pertains to Oregon on "Oregon Day." Tom Richardson has arrived and will participate In the "Oregon Day" program. KICKS HIMSELF INTO FAME; BOOTS FOOTBALL 30 MILKS Dan Sargent, Harvard Junior, Wins llet by Covering Distance from Sphinx City to Ipswich Without Handling tho Oval. Cambridge, Mass. Dan Sargent, a Harvard junior, literally kicked him self into fame when he booted an as sociation football from Harvard to the town of Ipswich, thirty miles away. Sargent Is of the "Goldcoast crs,'.' and comes from Wellesley, Mass. In accordance with a bet made with Gordon Grant, a fellow collegian, and others, he was to kick the ball to Ip swich wlth'n twenty-four hours, but he went Grant eeveral points better by finishing the course In eight hours flat, averaging four miles an hour and thereby breaking all football kicking records, plain and fancy. Sargent, who Is a member of the soccer team, is estimated to have won nearly $1000. Grant ran from th's city to Ipswich last week In six hours and thirty-four minutes. A remark by Sargent that this was not any thing "to get fussed up over" led to Sargent's lecluratlon that he could kick a football over that distance In a day. Sargent, it was agreed, should not put hands on the ball unless It ggot Into such an Inaccessible placo that MILLIONS OF FOLKS USE ONLY CASCARETS Tlii'y Never llavo Headache, IliLoug ness. Sluggish Liver or Bowels or a Sick, Sour Stomach, No odds how bad your liver, stom ach or bowels; how much your head aches, how miserable and uncomfort able you are from constipation, In digestion, biliousness and sluggish Intestines yu always get the desir ed results with Cascarets and quickly too. Don't let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable another moment; put an end to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness, sick, sour, gassy stomach, backache and all other ditress; cleanse your in side organs of all the pol.-on and ef fete matter which is producing the misery. Take a Cascaret no ; don't wait until bedtime. In all tho world there is no remedy like this. A 10-cent box means health, happlnexe and a clear head for months. No more days of gloom and distress If you will take a Cascaret now and then. All druggists sell Cascarets Don't for get the children their little Insides need a g'iod, gentle cleansing, too. the contest comm'ttec gave him that privilege Ho nearly lost it In a brook in Middlesex Falls, but did not han dle It. The st;irt was made at 3 a. m. from In front of the Sphinx club. Sargent wore ordinary clothes and rubber soled leather shoes. Ho was accom panied by two automobiles filled with students. "Could go twice as fur." ho said scornfully as he finished, fresh and strong. Absolutely Pure Bottled inBotitt HERMAN PETERS Bl PENDLETON - - OREGON BIG PIMI'KIV HIS I'UIDK. Oregon FnrtnfT Produce, Three Whoppers on One Vine. Albany, Ore. Threo pumpkins, each weighing eighty pounds, grew this summer on the fame vine In the garden of R. A. Marsh, four miles south of Albany. Marsh brought two of the pumpkins to this city and plac ed them on display in local stores. One pumpkin weighed seventy-nine and one-half pound, and the other was larger. Tho third large pumpkin which Is at least as large as tho other two, still is on the vine, ripening. A pumpkin weighing ninety-pounds wh'rh grew on the farm of H. T. Bidders, In Ronton county, about sev en m'les from Albany, Is on dl play In tho window of an Albany real es tato office. Lumber and Building Material A Large and COMPLETE STOCK Always on Hand and PRICED RIGHT The Best Mill Work to Be Obtained in the Northwest LET US FIGURE WITH YOU 'ON YOUR NEXT ORDER Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard COMPANY, Props. MAIN 7