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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1912)
TEN PAGES PAGE TWO. DAILY EAST OREGON I AN, PENDLETON. OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1912. ! M If i i Mm AT THE PICTURE SHOWS Cpheum. Where everybody goes often and early to see the very best that Is nrown on the screen. Sunday's pro gram is a winner. 1. "Sergeant White's Peril." Lu ton. Sergeant White, a gallant young offner, rescues a pretty senorlta from the clutches of a wicked Mexican and is in return rescued by his faithful horse after he has been shot by the Mexican and is drifting wounded down a stream. The horse brings the troop of soldiers to his master. 2. "From Pity to Love " Gaumaut. An absorbing story of a royal inva lid and a tender hearted maiden whose devotion finally leads to love. 3. "Scenes Off the Coast of North Africa." Gaumont. Showing the curious customs and dwellings of the inhabitants of some of the Canary Is lands. 4. "An Indian Vestal." Selig. A strange story of a white Indian maid en. The call of race comes to a white Vaudeville TONIGHT (B p a Dndl THEATRE re-opened under the former management that made the show-house ss popular and gave to Pendleton the best acts in vaudeville and latest motion pictures. We Recommend Tonight's Program Doors Open at 7. Vusal Prices. PflSTIC THEATRE CASS MATLOCK, Prop Best Pictures More Pictures Latest Pictures and illustrated songs in the city. Shows afternoon and eve nings. Refined and enter taining for the entire family. Next to French Restaurant Entire change three times each week. Be sure and see the next change. Adult 10c. Children under 10 years, 5c Save Your Trading Stamps girl who has lived among Indians all her early life as -one of them. 5. "How Sir Andrew Lost His Vote." Edison. From "In the Fog," by Richard Harding Davis. Through a group of amateur actors. Sir An drew is made to beiteve that a ter rible crime has been committed and so loses his vote oh an important bill in the house of commons. But unfor tunately for the conspirators, their scheme miscarries. It is high class comedy, refreshing In its originality. The Pastime. The home of Good pictures. Single reel Selig feature for Sunday and Monday: No. 1. "Brown of Harvard." Se lig. An elaborate and cleverely en acted visualization of Henry Wood ruff's greatest dramatic success. Pro duced by special arrangement with the owners of the copyright. Elg boat race scenes. The story deals with Tom Brown's efforts to save his fi ance's "black sheep" brother from disgrace. No. 2. "A Village Romance." Lu bin. A cute little story of how John Cummins, a rich society man, wins out in his wooing of a pretty little country girl, who is being sparked by Si, the clerk of the general store. No. 3. "The Stage Driver's Daugh ter." Essanay. A western drama with many novel situations. "Enjoy a thrilling ride on the stage coach." Ko. 4. "Providential Bread." C. G. P. C. A drama rich In sweet sen timent No. 5- "In the Park of the Sacred Does." A view of the land of Nip pon. Musical program: No. 1 The Holy City. Shephen Adams. No. 2 The Rosary. . E. Nevins. No. -3 The Lost Chord. Author Sullivan. No.. 4 Palms. J Faure. No. 5 One Sweet Solemn Thought. Cosy, Friday and Saturday Mother Goose brings forth a procession of great his toric leaders. "Yankee Doodle" Champion "Mother Goose" fairy tale showing all the great American heroes in peace and war. Uncle Sam and young America. "Our Navy." Champion. Gigantic array of stately battleships riding the Hudson. A grand naval pageant. See the big guns salute President Taft. "The Greater Love." Reliance. A graphic story of love, passion and self-sacrifice among the fisher folks, with fine views of the sea. A ship wreck and rescue are shown. "The Parting of the Ways." Rex. The boy forgot to deliver a love note and by so doing changed the whole course of two lives. "Eeneath the Veil." Thanhouser. Theatre J. P. MADER-N'ACH, Prop. High-Class Up-to-Date Motion Pictures For Men, Women and Children Program changes Snnday's, Tuesday's and Friday's See Program in Today's Paper First Showing of Women's Latest Style, New 1912 Spring Suits SMART styles, skilfully designed, correctly made and tailored so that they will retain their, shape and beauty -made to attract and hold our trade. Many beautiful cloths are here Eng lish whipcord, fancy mixtures, plain serges-made in strictly plain tailored models, also fancy novelties, lined with preau de cygnecollars and cuffs of gros grain silk of contrasting colors, trimmed with loops and buttons of silk braid. All moderately priced. Peoples Warehouse WHERE IT PAYS TO TRADE The girl was badly hurt in an explo sion and told her lover that her face was marred and gave back the ring. But it was only a test which he stood and so proved his love. At the Grand. Commencing Saturday night, under new management, in addition to reg ular picture program. Sterling & Sterline Musical Novelty Act Jos. B. Sterling, World's famous trumpeter the school house but on account of and solo cornetlst, veteran of Cuba, general interest Bhown it was thought Philippines and China. Lenora Ster-ibest to change the time to evening ling, government nurse demonstrat- and hold it in the hall, ing and grand transformation scene. Kev. Andrew Warner, district su This act comes highly recommended perlntendent of the Methodist Eplsco from the Pantages circuit as one of Pal church, was here on Wednesday the best of its kind in existence. night and preached the second quar- Jos. B. Sterling was a 'trumpeter terly conference sermon, with Roosevelt's Rough Riders in Cu- j L. T. Link, teacher In this district ba; was also chief trumpeter of the at the Spike school, Is suffering from Third U. S. Heavy Artillery, aid to a severe attack of la grippe and is General McArthur in Philippine ser- now at St. Anthony's hospital InPen vice; also aid to General Liscomb dleton. During his-enforced absence when the general tell In battle at Chas. Hosklns is teaching in his Tien Tsin, China. ' place. Trumpeter Sterling was shot down ; Rov Ward ieft yesterday on a snort on the wall of the city of Pekin. Chi- pleasure trip to Portland na, as he was fixing the line that he n R Lewia Jg a Dugine'gg vaitor ln had scaled the wall to fix, so that the Spokane. other men could swarm over and open! Mrs c E WeIU returned Wednes. the gate. j day evening from Milton, where she AT THE OREGON THEATRE i n. . xnuinjiaun is transacting business in Portland this week. Miss Blanche Small and Miss Opal A Rare Treat. Callison visited with, friends in Pen- Manager Matlock of the Oregon dleton today, theater, says he has one. as he has George Saling, who has been Can just closed a contract with The Le- gerousjy ill with brain fever Is re Moyne Stock company, who will be ported some better, in our city four nights, changing the ' Mrs. Alllce Moore of La Grande ar bill every night at popular prices. j rived this morning on a visit to her This company, the No. 1, comes brother, John Saling. with the best of credentials and from Mrs. L. W. KeeTer and little daugh what the press of Los Angeles says ters, were passengers to Pendleton op as well as the other large cities, they the motor this monung. should give a very meritorious per formance. They have been in stock in Los Angeles and are now en route to the east, opening in Kansas City after Lent for an indefinite run. This is not the first visit of the Le Moyne Stock company to our coast and they have been heralded with praise and success wherever they have played. They carry all their own scenery and electrical effects, as well as a company of well seasoned actors and actresses to the number of 12. Prominent among them Is Miss Charlotte Mundorf, leading lady who will no doubt be remembered by some of our citizens who have vis ited the larger cities. They not only play drama but comedy dramas as well, aa Mr. Le - Moyne does not believe hi sticking to the serious plavs altogether. The opening of the engagement will be Sunday night. February 11, for four nights. Change of bill nightly. Prices 25c, 33c and 50c. Reserved seats on sale at Pendleton drug store. Curtain at 8:30 sharp. BEATS PENDLETON TAKE BASKETBALL GAME BY SCOIUi OF 38 TO 10 Regular Seml-Monthly Literary Pro gram of Public School students At tracts Large Crowd School Teach er Is Sick. (Special Correspondence.) Echo, Ore., Feb. 10. An Interest ing and hotly contested basket ball vu .id a . "o - tween the Pendleton team and Echo's n.gn. ine score was 3 to 10 in la-1 Pftpe.B Cold compound is the re vor of the latter. A large and en- BUlt of three years' research at a cost musmsuc crown was in attendance. xne uneup ana Bcore were as 101- lows: 2; McDon - Pendleton Strain, F., aia, ; liouser, c, 8; Ferguson, a.; 1 ""., v. Echo C. Hosklns, G., 8; F. Hos- kins, F., 24; Moore, C, 2; Markham, v., t; Kipper, u., z; JstaD, sud. On Thursday evening at 8 o'clock the Echo public school gave its reg- umr emi-mmniy merary program assistance or bad after effects as a at the I. O. O. F. hall. A very inter- n cent package of Pape's Cold Com estlng program, consisting of singing, pound, which any druggist in the speeches and a debate. The subject world can supply. See Wind ow Display Sunday I was. "Resolved, That Capital Pun ishment Be Abolished." The major ity of the debators were seventh and eighth grade pupils but they handled the subject In a very capable manner which would have done Justice to old er scholars. The negative won by - fourteen points. Music was furnished by the orchestra. Previously !the nroeram "ad been given at the auditorium in I has been visiting with Mrs. Eugene Wells. J. W. Coppinger has taken charge of the Echo Bakery. k T rr. i i . . . O. D. Teel Is transacting business at the county "eat today. . Miss Lulu Crayne visited friends In Pendleton today. T. D. Matthews returned home this morning from Pendleton. Mrs. Baker Chapman Is here on a visit to her sister, Mrs. Jos Leezer. FIGHTS THREE MOUNTAIN' I.IONS i Montnna Rancher Kills Two Beasts When Attacked Troy, Mont Frank Swanson, a rancher of this vicinity, while working in the woods on his ranch. He was suddenly surprised by three mountain Hons and after a desperate battle suc- ceeded In killing two of them , third escaped. I The Now the tariff ta'ces the center of the congressional stage again. What- ever else falls out, the tariff always bobs up. BREAKS UP A COLD L A ITCW DOSES EXD MOST SKVEKE CIUPl'E MISERY There Is not one grain of quinine in Pape's Cold Compound, which, when taken every two hours, until three consecutive doses are taken, will surely end the grippe and break up the most Bevere cold, cither ln the head, chest, back, stomach or limbs. It promptly relieves the most mis erable headache, dullness, head and nose stuffed up, feverishness, sneez ing, sore throat, running of the nose, : eatarrnai arrections, soreness, neg and rheumatic twinges. stiff- of more tnan mty thousand dollars, ari(1 contain no oulnlne. whlrti w I have conclusively demonstrated Is not . ffVHv In h treatment nt rntria or zrlw j Take this harmless Compound as directed, with the knowledge that there Is no other medicine made I nnvwhern else in the worM which will cure your cM or end m,Bery M pr0mptly and without any other ANNIVERSARIES OF 2 WEDDINGS SAME DAY; PARENTS OBSERVE 23TJI; D.UGIITK.It 1IKK FIRST I rlcmls Surprise Mr, and Mrs. Con nelly nml Mr. and Mrs. Carr Near StanflHd wonipii Study Club Holds Reftulnr Mooting. (Special Correspondence.) Stanfield, Feb. 10. On Wednesday evening; a number of friends of Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Connelly surprised them at their home on the Furnish project four miles northeast of town, it being their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. It was also the first anniversary of the marriage of their daughter, Mrs. Chas. C. Carr. The evening was spent in a very pleasant manner with cards, etc., after which delightful refreshments were served. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Bagan, Mr. and Mrs. E. Lund wall, Mr. and Mrs. P II Bachholz, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Bartholomew, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. It. Hazon, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan W Dunning Mr. and Mrs. Chas. C. Carr. Miss Lundwall, Mrs. Perl Nolten, Hon. James M. Kyle, F. Smith. Miss Eva Dunning. O. B. Gray and Mr. and Mrs. Connelly. The Stanfield Women's Study Club held their regular meeting Thursday afternoon at the soino of Mrs. G. L. Dunning, two very Interesting papers being read. Mrs. John F. Bagan took as her subject "Industrial Evolution," and Mrs. F. A. Baker read a paper on the subject, "The South, Old and i New." After the usual open discus - sion of the papers by the members te cured without an operation, but present the subject of civil Improve- thanks to Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable ment was brought before the club Compound I am cured of that affliction for discussion and considerable inter- ttnd have rccommended it to more than est was-manifested therein. It has oneof my friends with the best results." been practically dec ided by the club M uA JolINSXON 324 Vine St that they vtll undertake through spe-1 , , ' , ... cial committees, to accomplish some- 1 v wont special adTlCO write to thing along this line though definite Lydia E. IMnkhum Medicine Cot (confl plans have not yet been formulated, dentiul) Lynn, Maws. Your letter will Father Butler of the Franciscan be opened, read and answered by A Capuchin Order, with headquarters ' ironmn and held ill strict confidence. at Umatilla, was in Stanfield Thurs- 1 day attending to matters ln connec-. Hon with the construction of the new ' He sod hla patent on the toy bal Catholle church here. Work Is pro- loon for $500. gressing thereon In a very satisfactory He now earns $ 8 a week and saves manner and workmen are already half of it. busy putting the first coat of paint on the exterior. j( you don't workfor a living you Frank Nudo, a young Italian well are only waiting for death, known in Pendleton, arrived here Thursday and is arranging to culti vate a tract of land on the Houser ranch near here. Mr. Nudo, who Is an experienced gardener, will con centrate his efforts to a few acres, making a specialty of celery and oth- er kinds of vegetables which can be ; grown to good profit on this class of soil. 1 1 - 1 W. H. Copeland a well known mer chant of Astoria, is spending a few days here looking after the Improve ment of his land under the Furnish project. Mr. Copeland Is one of the pioneers In the project and Is heav ily Interested therein, his holding's amounting to a large acreage, all of Osier Isn't the only man who turns which he is having Improved In first down old ago. In the business world class shape. the "young man" is always the on It. N. Stanfield has returned from who picks tho plums. It Is an age of a business trip to Portland, where he "new thought," "new talent," etc., spent most of the past week. and the Old man Is passed by ln the Jack O'Xell, trfeling passenger race, agent for the Oregon-Washington It j One of the first signs of coming R. & N. Co., was in Stanfield Thurs- ngo Is the appearance of gray hairs, day attenting to business for his when you see them, act promptly, company. j Wyeth's Sago and Sulphur Hair Kern Dr. Henry Waldo Coe is spending edy will correct this sign, which so a few days In Portland on business. often deceives people Into thinking j lnnt af,Q j3 renliy upon them. It Is AIR SPEED HECOItD BltOKEX. a well known fact that Sage and Sul- Iphur will darken tho hair. Wyeth's Jules Vcdrlnes ('overs 88 Miles In One Sago and Sulphur combines theso old Ilour nt Pan. I time remedies with other agents, Pau, France. Jules Vedrlnes, j which remove dandruff and promote French aviator, beat the world's speed . the growth of the hair, record by covering about 88 1-3 miles The manufacturers ofMhls remedy In one hour fn hli monoplane at the authorize tho druggists to sell it un- Pau aerodrome. Cost of I.lviti2 Down Pat. Elizabeth. X. T Peter Henry Car penter of Went field, inventor of the toy balloon, has Just celebrated his seventy-seventh birthday. Here are some of his unusual rules of life: He sleeps In a bathtub. He believes f0 cents a day enough for any one to live on. He never wears locks. SYNOPSIS OF THE ANNUAL STATEMENT OF THE Rhode Island Insurance Company of Providence, ln the state of Rhodo Island, on the 31st day of December, 1911, made to the Insurance Commissioner of the State of Oregon, pursuant to law. CAPITAL. Amount of capital paid up r. 300,080.00 INCOME. Premiums received during the year ln cash....$ 482,374.74 Interest, dividends and rents received during year 40,183.64 Income from other sources received during year 8,906.25 1 Total income '. $ 531,4.4.83 DISIJLItSE.MENTS. Losses paid during the year S 245,336.99 Dividends paid during the year on capital slock. . 30,000.00 Commissions and salaries paid during the year.. 138,754.12 Taxes, licenses and fees paid during the year... 14,759.08 Amount of all other expenditures 8,271.08 Total expenditures . $ 437,121.27 ASSETS. Value of stocks and bonds owned 957,680.00 Cash ln banks and on hand 82,123.85 Premiums ln course of collection and ln trans- - ' mission : 123,847.17 . x Interest and rents due and accrued 11,304.60 Total assets $1,174,856.62 Total assets admitted ln Oregon $1,174,855.6 2' LIABILITIES. Gross claims for losses unpaid $ 64,665.25 Amount of unearned premiums on all outstand ing risks 371,154.70 Due for commission and brokerage 37,164.15 T All other liabilities 9,647.49 Total liabilities $ 472,821. 6- Total Insurance in force December 31, 1911 $75, 922, 07. 0 BUSINESS IX OREGON FOIt THE YEAR. Total risks written during the year $ 8M60.0o Gross premiums received during the year B3t.Sk Rhode Island Insurance Company By EMIL G. PIEPER, Secretary Statutory resident general agent and attorney for service: ORLANDO W. DAVIDSON. WIFE'S HEALTH RESTORED Husband Declared Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound Would Re store Her Health, And It Did. Ashland. Ky. - " Four years ago I Beemed to have everything the matter with me. 1 had le maleand kidney trou ble and was so bad off I could hardly rest day or night. I doc tored with' all the best doctors in town and took many kinds of medicine but noth ing did any good un til I tried your won derful remedy.Lydia E. Tinkham's Vege table Compound. My husband said it would restore my health and it has." Mrs. May Wyatt, Ashland, Ky. There are probably hundreds of thou sands of women in the United States who have been benefitted by this famous old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over thirty years ago by a woman to relieve woman's suffering. Kea(l What Another Woman says: , , Camden, N. J.- I had female trou- ble and a serious displacement and was tired and discouraged and unabletodomy . work.- My doctors told me I never could j TO CHI IE A COLD IX OXE DAY I Take LAXATIVE BROMO Qjlnlne Tablets. Druggists refund money If It I falls to cure. E. W. GROVE'S slgna- ' ture 18 " cncn pox OSLER RIGHT; YOUTH SUCCEEDS AGE der guarantee that the money will be refunded if It falls to do exactly as represented. Don't look old before your time. Get a bottle of Wyeth's Sago and Sul phur today, and see what an improve ment It will make In tho appearance of your hair. This preparation Is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle and Is recommended and sold by special agent, Pendleton Drug Co. i ... i i.