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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1912)
1WGE TWO. DAILY EAST OREGON IAN. PENDLETON. OREGON, FRIDAY,' MAY 3, 1912. TEN PAGES Everwear Hosiery Double T. P. W. Trading Stamps Sat, till 1 o'clock. at Special Prices for Saturday By a special arrangement with the Ever wear Hosiery Co. we are permitted, to make mlueotl prices on Everwear hose for Satur day and still guarantee them. . CIIILDREX'S HOSE 1-2 doz. in hox, f pair sruaranteeil for 6 months. Regular price $2.00 hox. Special price $1.78 AYOMEX'S HOSE 1-2 doz. in hox, G pair gnarantml for 0 .months. Regular price $2.00 hox. Special price $1.78 1-2 doz. in Ixix. mercerized, hlack and tan, nair guaranteeil G months. Regular price $3.00 Ixix. Secial price $2.68 1-4 doz. Women's silk hose, hlack and tan, 3 in lox, .1 nair guaranteed 3 months. Regu lar price $2.25 lox. Special price $1.98 "MEN'S SOX, G pair in hox; regular price $1.50 Ixvc; come in tan, hlack and all the wanted colors; G pair guaranteed 6 months. Special price $1.38 MEN'S SOX, fine mercerized, G - pair guaranteed G months; G pair in lxx, menhir price $3.00 hox. Special price Imix $2.6S You'll never find a Wttor sock value than these; you'd hotter invest. What the Old Reliable Will Bring You in Our Famous Premium Dept.' j lisl "L' 1 Premium X I coupon 16-in. Lemonade or Punch Bowl on stand with 12 handled glasses to match for 1 hook These are suitahle for church sociables and lodges. Glass Fruit Bowl, 10-inchos high 5 pages Lemonade Set, jug and G glasses to match, come in azure, pearl and gold, a set for 5 pages Lemonade Set, jug and G glasses to match, come in green and gold, crystal and gold 10 pages Wine Set, consisting of tra' with decanter and G wine glasses to match, per set 10 pages Glass Set, 4 pieces, butter dish, cream pitcher, sxou holder and sugar bowl in three qualities 5 pages, 4 pages and S pages. Coin Gold Set of G tumblers, each 4 pages Venetian Gold dcosit set of six tumblers, each G pages Star Cut Jug with G glasses to match 8 pages Glass Vases, 14 and 1G inches high, each 1 page Fancy China Cups and Saucers, ea. 12 p., 8 p., G p., 4 p., 1 p. Fancy Plates, ea 1G p., 12 p., 10 p., 8 p., G p., 1 p. Haviland China Ransom pattern, stock complete from afterdinner coffee cups to largest, meat platters, all to bo had for the Old Reliable T. P. W. trading stamps. Pictures in a great variety of subjects from 3 pages each to 1 hook. Rogers 1SS1 A-l Silverware, guaranteed by the manufac turer and The Peoples Warehouse as heing 18 per cent iickel base and full standard plate. We have Windsor, La Vigue and Carlton patterns in complete sets, table dinner ware, plated, tea sets, coffee sets, butter dishes, fruit baskets and pickel dishes. Wicker Rockerd ... . ...l hook Wicker Rockers 2 hooks And a great many other articles that we cannot tell about in this limited space. F. J. DONALDSON The Reliable Druggist gives T. P. W. Trading Stamps. Women 's SUITS SPECIALLY PRICED For Saturday Women's Suits in all the new Spring Models. Plain serges, fancy mixtures in light and dark colors. Plain tailored and fan cy styles. Skirts, two and three piece, also pleated models. Coats in the newest cutaway effects. $22.50 Suits go fo'r $17.50 $25.00 Suits go for $19.98 $27.50 Suits go for $22.50 $30.00 Suits go for $24.98 $33.00 Suits go for $28.49 $37.50 Suits go for $32.50 Phono Main 17. All Other Departments Main 22. Maraschino Cherries, Wtles 35, 60 and 90. Heinze Peanut Butter, jars 15, 20 and Fig Pudding, the health dessert, cans 15 and 25S Fancy Loganberries, Blackberries, Rasp-In-rries and Stravlerrics, can .... 30 Home Canned Huckleberries, 1-2 gallon jars $1.15 Mrs. Porter's Home Made Salad Dressing, botthM ... 25 and 45 Fine Ripe Oranges, dozen 2l Fancy Maine Sugar Corn, 3 cans 50 Fancy Solid Packed Tomatoes, 3 cans 50 Fancy Sifted Peas, can 20 Jersey Baked Sweet Potatoes, can 25 Extra Table Beets, can - 25? First Choice Mushrooms, can 40 Fancy Roquefert Cheese, pound 75 Fresh California Strawberries lx 25 2 Iwxes 45 We have the choicest of . vegetables and thev arrive fresh each morning. The Peoples Uarehouse Where It Pays to Trade-Save YourT. P. W. Trading Stamps i prlmTum ; COUPON ; Purchase Your Sunday Table Supples from Pend leton's Cleanest and Best Grocery in Our Model Sanitary Basement. Newsy Notes From the Sporting World LOCAL BUSIERS DEFEAT WHITMAN COM AX IS PAVING. Work of I'aWiiK With IMuIilliic Cov ers Greater Portion of Street Area f t'fcv. The work of grading the south end of Main street preparatory to paving has started at Colfax with a large force of men and teams and the pav ing company's steam plow, says the Spokane .Spokesman. The work of es tablishing the grades and construct ing the curbing on both sides of the Mrcft l almost completed, and it l expected that within two months Main treet wilj be paved from the Catholic church north to the court house. Thfc sharp grade at the south end of Main street will be finished with a rough surface, with will eliminate the slip pery condition of the street during rainy and xnowy weather. While thb rough finish was not stipulated In the contract existing between the city and the Warren Construction company, the company will add this feature to the paving of all steep grades free ot extra charge. After the south end of Main street is finished the paving- crew will be di vided and the work of paving the res idence district in the south end and the north end of Main street from the court house to the O.-W. It. & N. de pot will be started. After this Is ac complished the company will start work on paving the Perkins addition district and the Cooper street district which In all, comprises almost the entire street area of the city south of the O.-W. R. & N. tracks. Notice to Stockholders. Notice Is hereby given to the stockholders of the Pendleton Wool Scouring and Packing Co., that a meeting will be held In the office of the company In Pendleton, Oregon, on Tuesday, May 7th, 1912, at 2 p.m. E. T. JUDD, President. EDWIN J. BURKE, Secretary. COAST LEAGUE GAMES. Iluin Stops Game In Seventh Inning With Score SUUKllnjr Four to Three. Garrett's Buckarooes hung another amateur scalp at their belts yester day afternoon when Whitman col lege's snappy team was given the short end of a 4-3 score. The game was called in the seventh by Umpire Nelson on account of old Jupe Pluv'tr dissatisfaction with the exhibition. The contest was not exactly the best that has been pulled off in Pen dleton in recent years but the flucta tlon ,of tho advantage was sufficient to keep up Interest when the charac ter of the play lapsed at odd instants Into a No. 2 variety. Hits were rather scarce, but that fact was not' suffi cient to keep the bases cleun for when errors did not turn the trick the pitchers charitably issued passes to the batters. In this lutter act the Whitman twirier was unusually be nlficent and it was to his philan thropy rather than to a cannonade on the part of the leaguers that the game went the way it did. He permitted eight batters to make a safe landing on first by the four ball route, one by the h p way and three via the safe blngle. Mountain opened up for the Buck aroes and was touched up a bit be fore he settled down. Osborne twirl ed the last two lnnfngs and the col legian s uggers forfeited their title to tlie name before his bewildering speed and slants. The Walla Walla lads were first at bat and their opening action made the fans gulp hard for awhile. Hughes, first up, put one down to short which Augustus failed to get to first by a scant foot in time to catch the run ner. Gaie then laid down a neat sac rifice whereupon the hardhitting Nlles laid his bludgeon on the pill for three clean bags. Peringer followed with a corking single over second and the second run was registered. Here Mountain tightened up and after catching Peringer off second, fanned liolstead and retired the side. In their half the Buckarooes man aged to come back with one. With the first two down, Lodell slammed out a double and came home a min ute later when Xadeau's high fly was dropped through a collision of Hughes and Meese. Number two came in the second by reason of a base on balls, a wild pitch and an error while the third canto gave them the lead. Two men had gone dead when Nadeau was Issued a pass and purloined Becond, from which station Da volt brought him In with a hot single. Mensor followed with a single through short, but, with two on, Pembroke failed to get the ball past short. The collegians evened up the score In the fourth when Peringei made the circuit through the assist ance of two errors and a wild pitch but in their half of the Inning It look ed for a minute as if Garrett's men were going to make a bunch. Three men were put on bases by Captain Cleman's wlldness but a crossing of signal-j resulted in Augustus being caught between third and home for the final out. In the fifth, however, they again took the lead when Davolt was enabled to travel all four paths by a pass, a passed ball, an error and a sacrifice fly by Mensor. At this Juncture, the skies began to leak and, after another inning and a half, Umpire Nelson waved the players off the field. Tubulated Score. AVhitman. AH It 1H PO A E W T. Dnl Oakland ;.20 6 .769 ernon 14 12 .538 San Francisco 13 13 .600 Sacramento .12 15 .444 Los Angeles 15 .423 Portland f 7 i6 ,3(H Oakland 17, Angeles In. L03 Angeles, May 3. A total of 27 runs, four hits and 10 errors were made In yesterday's game between the Oaks and Angels in one of the weirdest exhibitions ever witnessed on the home grounds. The visitors cinched the game with eight runs in the fourth Inning. - Score: ,t Oakland 17 24 3 Los Angeles !!!!.10 IS 7 Batteries Tozer. Slagio, Nagle and Brooks; Parkin, Martoni, Gregory and Mitze. Portland Hosts Vernon. Portland, Ore., May 3. Portland won from Vernon yesterday. Koest ner and HIU both pitched splendid ball. 1 ,,Scor: n.H.E. ernon . . Portland 2 9 3 Batteries Hitt and Brown'; Koest ner and Harley. Sacramento fl, lYlsoo 4. Oakland, Mav 2. tu- a ting rnlyy the ninth Sacramento n irom s?an Francisco yesterday t Score: It.H.E Sacramento g 13 . San Francisco 4 g ; Batteries Arellanes, ' Baum an. Check; Baker. Meikle and Schmidt. Hughes, 3b 3 1 0 0 0 Gale, lb 2 0 Oil 0 Nlles, cf 3 1 2 3 0 Peringer rf 3 1 1 1 0 liolstead, c 2 0 0 2 1 Meese, ss '...3 0 1 1 3 Churchman, 2b ... 0 0 0 0 0 Green well, if 3 0 0 0 0 Cleman, p 2 0 0 0 5 Totals 22 3 4 18 9 Pendleton. Rader, 3 b Robinson, cf Lodell, lb . . Nadeau, 2b . Davolt, rf . . AB R IB PO A E 3 , 3 3 ...... 3 2 Hensor, If 2 Pembrooke, c 1 Augustus, ss 1 Mountain, p 1 Osborne, p 1 Totals 20 Score by Iiuilnas. 12 3 4 Whitman R 2 0 0 1 Whitman H 2 110 Pendleton R 111 Pendleton H 10 2 21 13 5 5 6 7 1 0 0 03 0 0 0 04 0 10 4 0 0 0 3 Earned Summary. runs Whitman 1. Two base hits Lodell. Three base hits. Nlles. Home runs None. Sacrifice hits flale, Churchman, Mensor. Mountain Sto'.en bases Robinson. Nadeau, Mensor. Pembrooke. First on ball.s Off Cleman S; off Mountain 1; off Osborne 2. ' Struck out By Cleman 1; by Mountain 6; by Os borne 3. . Left on bases Whitman 2, Pendleton 9. Doable plays None. Wild pitches By Cleman 1; by Moun tain 1. Passed balls By Rolstead 1. First base on errors Whitman 3, Pendleton 2 Hit by pitcher Davolt. Time of game 1 hr, 20 mln. Um pire Nelson. Scorers Chessman, and Drake. Hits off Cleman 3; off Mountain 4. Innings pitched Cle man 6; Mountain 5, Osborne 2. Western Iieflgne. At Denver Denver 8, Wichita 8. Tie game. At St Joseph St. Joseph 7, Sioux City 2. At Omaha Omaha, 9; Dea Moines 3. X. W. LEAGUE GA3IES. W. L. Pet 6 7 8 7 8 10 .600 .563 .500 .500 .46 .371 hit poor In 'I'll When at Your Desk Smoke mild domestic ci gars. Reserve heavy, rich Havanas for leisure hours in your easy chair. As a business smoke, try the Genl Arthur Miw Cigar 10c and 3 for 25c M. A. Ounst C& Co, Inc. Victoria 9 Vancouver ...9 Portland !!.'!.'!! 8 Spokane .7 Tacoma 7 Seattle 6 TncoiniL 7. SimbaiiA R Spokane, M.ny 3 Spokane erfough to win vesterdnv hni fielding gave the visitors the wlnnin run. Spokane tied the spnro In h ninth, but Neighbors and Moore broke up the game in the lithe with Ion nn. coenrane was wild. Myers five times ud eot five hi Tacoma ' 7 s , Spokane !!.!!!!!!5 13 Batteries Cochran ami rwn O.-Hdeik; Hunt and Ludwlg. Vancouver , Portland 5. Vancouver B. C. Mav 3 Except ing In the fifth ! nd sixth Innings Oer vals proved n puzzle for the Portland batters and Vancouver won. Score: ' j jr j;. Vancouver u jj' 1 Portland !".!!! 6 9 4 Batteries Gervals and Lewis; Vca sey, Thomas and Harris. Victoria 8, Seattle 0. Seattle. May 3. Seattle could not hit Wilson when hits were needed, while Victoria got to both Seattle pitchers and won. Seattle played a poor game In the field. Score: xt. jj, r Victoria g n 0 Seattle 0 8 6 Batteries Barrenkamp, Mclver and Whaling; Wilson and Meek. terday, 6 to 4- McGraw's men were outhlt and outflelded but their work on the paths pulled them through winners. Score: R. H. E. Philadelphia 4 10 1 New York 9 2 Batteries Moore and Graham; Te sereau and Meyers. Umpires Klem and Bush. KimIs 10, St. l.ouls 0. St. Louis, May 3. Hank O'Day'a Reds slaughtered the Browns, knock ing their star pitcher, Harmon out of the box and winning, pulled up 10 to 0. Cincinnati 10 15 0 St. Louis j 0 4 0- Batteries Gaspar and McLean; Harmon. Willis and Wlngo. Umpires Johnytone and Eason. AMERICAN LEAGUE GAMES. NATIONAL LEAGUE GAMES. PillllfH . Cubs 0. Pittsburg, May 3 Expensive Mar ty O'Toole gave fresh proof that he was worth the money here yesterday when he blanked the Cubs In a battle In which Mclntyre and Reulbach were opposed to him. Pittsburg won, 6 to 0. The score n. H. E. Chicago 0 5 1 Pittsburg 6 11 1 Batteries Mclntyre, Reulbach and Archer; O'Toole and Gibson. Umpires Brennan and Owen. Boston i, Brooklyn 7. Boston, May 3. Brooklyn contin ued Its batting streak yesterday trim ming Boston to the tune of 11 to 7. Nine errors marred the contest. The score: R. H. E. Brooklyn 7 7 3 Boston 11 14 6 Batteries Knelzer Schardt and Ylnllng, Erwin, Hlggins; Brown and Gowdle. Umpires Rlgler and Finneran. Gin ills fl, Phillies 4. New York, May 3. Fast and heady work on tho bases won another game for the Giants from tho Phillies yes- Sox 3, Na,ns 1. Chicago, May 3. The White Sox took another game yesterday, winning from the Naps, 3 to 1. Hitting was light, but the game was featured by several circus fielding stunts. Cleveland ... 1 5 2 Chicago 3 & 2 Batteries Kaler and Easterly; Walsh, Lange and Block. Umpires Dlneen and Perrine. . Boston fl. Senators 5. Washington, May 3. Groom was hit freely In yesterday's game with Boston, and tho Senators were de feated, 6 to 5. Hale wus given fine support. Score: K. il. E. Boston 6 11 1 Washington 5 7 3 Batteries Hale and Nunamaker; Groom and Henry. Umpires Con nolly and Hart. New York II, AtliletUvi 5. Philadelphia, May 3 Wolverton's-tail-end Highlanders kept up their belated spurt yesterday, trounching the champion Athletics 11 to 5. It was a heavy hitting game, with hon ors at bat about even, but tho High landers were fasier on tho bases. Score: It. H. E. New York 11 11 3 Philadelphia 5 11 S- Batteries Vaughn, Hogg, Qulnn and Street; Morgan, Banforth and Thomas, Egan. Umpires O'Loughlln and VVester vclt. Tigers I, St. Louis 0. Detroit, May 3. It took all the Ti gers could show yesterday to hang a blank on the Browns' record, and' with two ragged errors to their dis credit they were lucky to get by. Works, however, held St. Louis safe. Score; R. h. E. St. Louis 0 5 0 Detroit 1 $ 2 Batteries Bailey, Luke and Krich ell; Works and O'Neill. m Umpires Egan and Evans. American Association. At Minneapolis Minneapolis 2, Louisville 3. At Kansas City Toledo 3, Kansas City 1. At St Paul St. Paul 8, Indianapol is 4. At Milwaukee Columbus G, Mil waukee 1. Some men are born trouble seekers. If they can't bump Into it any other way they get married. Absolutely Bottled inBomf OLD Smooth Mellow Rich f CMt'Q,. Va H B M t ? Jv 'Mil 11 HERMAN PETERS 1gl PENDLETON - - OREGON $