East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, May 09, 1910, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    DAILY EAST OREGON'IAN , PENDLETON. OREGON, Tl'KSDAY, MAY 10, 1910.
EIGHT PAGES.
$20 to $25 Ladies' Suits
DREGS Of DEFEAT
FdDlP
LOCALS LOSE 'IX) PILOT
lUX'K HY' 6 TO 4 SCORE
TAGU TWO.
$14 MS
Up to $25.00 values iu the largest assortment of fine garments we have col
lected under one special price for a long time.
They combine several recent purchases of high class suits, added to a large num
ber of regular stock suits all from the best makers we deal with. Each suit is lined
with guaranteed satin or fine silk, and are strictly high class throughout
The materials are fine worsteds, serges, and diagonals in the latest colors and navy
or black, also shepherd checks. The size assortment runs from 32 to 48. Tuesday and
Wednesday, special price $14.85
Women's Spring Coats
HALF PRICE
This week we will close out our lot of wo
men's spring coats, the latest styles. Both
full length and 34 length, some full lined
and some quarter lined.
All the latest materials, serges, cassimeres,
worsteds and mixtures. Regular prices
$15.00 to $25.00. This week your
choice,
ONE-HALF PRICE
Free of Charge to You
Hay 11, 12, 13 and 14, we will make up
Skirts free of charge of material bought at
our Dress Goods counter. Material from
$125 upward. We guarantee a perfect
fit; 2 fittings.
Come in and see our large display of new
goods. Serges, Panamas, Mohair and many
other new pieces.
Imported Pattern Hats
going at One-Half Price
During this entire week, closing Saturday
ewning, May 14th, we will offer every pat
tern hat in our immense stock at exactly
ONE-HALF PRICE
Rich and original examples of the milli
ntis best work in creating styles. Hats that
have set the fashion for Pendleton' this sea
son. Constructed of rich quality materials
and showing that rare touch of originality
and distinctiveness that appeals to the really
fastidious. Regular values from $5.00 to
$20.00.
This Week One-Half
' Price
t
..The Peoples Warehouse..
Where It Pays to Trade
FROM TIE SPORTING WORLD
Pacific Coast League.
' W. L.
San Francisco 22 14
Vernon 21 16
Portland 18 15
ZyOs Angeles 20 19
Oakland 17 21
Sacramento 11 25
' Blue Mountain League.
Won. . L.
"Weston .. . . 6 1
Pendleton '. 5 2
Pilot Rock 3 4
Athena 0 7
Irrigation League.
W. L.
Hermlston 7 2
Stanfield 6 3
Echo 5 4
Umatilla 0 9
P. C.
.611
.568
.45
.613
.447
.324
P. C.
.857
.714
.429
.000
P.C.
.778
.667
.556
.000
COAST LEAGUE.
Frisco Takes Two. '
Los Angeles, May 9. San Fran
cisco took both games from Los An
geles yesterday and did it easy. In
the morning Bodie hoisted the ball
over the fence twice for home runs
and scored more runs himself than did
the Los Angeles team. Hard hitting
was the feature of both contests, San
Francisco bunching six safe drives for
seven runs in the sixth inning of the
second game. Byrd, a new man,
started the morning game for the vis
itors but lasted only one third of an
inning. Score:
Morning game R. II. E.
San Francisco 6 8 3
Los Angeles 2 5. 0
Eyrd, Miller and Williams; Brls
watler and Smith.
Afternoon game: R. H. E.
San Francisco 9 11 3
JLos Angeles 7 8 2
Henley and Berry; Thornsen, Na
S'.e and Orendorff.
Break Even.
San Francisco, May 9. Rightfield
t?r S wander of Oakland set a new rec
ord yesterday afternoon when, re
peating his performance of Saturday,
ne stepped to the plate with the bases
full and waited for a bail of his choice
and sent It over the right field fence
for a clean cut home run. Such a bat
ting feat is seldom witnessed on two
successive days in the same lot, and
tiy the same batter, and the big crowd
at Recreation park cheered lustily as
the popular player completed the cir
cuit of bases at the tail of the proces
sion of runners he had scored with his
long drive . It was in the sixth in
ning. Oakland had Just broken the
ice with a run after the score stood
2 to 2 and victory v.es in sight when
8wander came along and took a deed
to it. At the finish the score was 7
to 2 In the morn ng Oakland was
less fortunate. Pitcher Baum of Sac
ramento held the Oakianders In check
making them scatter their hits and
winding the game up with a score of
4 to 2 In his team's favor. Oakland
used three pitchers and two catchers
but could not change the result. The
scores:
Morning ' game: R. H. E.
I Sacramento 4 9 4
uawana 2 7 1
Baum and Spiesman; Mozer, Chris
tian, Lively and Thomas and Mltze.
Afternoon game: R. H. E.
Oakland 7 10 3
Sacramento 2 7 1
Mozer and Mltze; Whalen and L&-
Longe.
lernon 2; Portland 0.
Portland, Ore., May 9. Portland
not only lost yesterday's game with
Vernon, a hotly contested affair that
went 16 innings, but dropped as well
Into third place in the club standings.
The local team fought hard. Time
and again they landed on Hitt for hits
but the Vernon pitcher allowed no
bunching. Garrett pitched eight in
nings without allowing, a single hit,
and it was only after 30 ciphers had
been chalked up, that Vernon finally
succeeded in grouping three hits in the
16 th inning that netted them two runs,
the only score ofthe contest. Score:
R. II. B.
Vernon 2 5 2
Portland 0 10 3
Hitt and Hogan; Garrett and G.
Fisher.
American League.
Cleveland 2, Chicago 0.
Detroit 6, St. Louis 2.
National League,
Pittsburg 7, Chicago 4.
Cincinnati 5, St. Louis 0.
iost Senses Restored.
Bridgeport, Tex. Frank J. Blocker,
the railway mail clerk who was sud
denly stricken deaf and dumb In Fort
Worth, February 1, supposedly ;by
hypnotic suggestion. ha he
suddenly restored to the power of
speecn and nearing. The cause of
the strange affliction has never been
learned by specialists.
one town 310,000 has been subscribed
to build a people's brewery, which
will provide the national beverage at
a moderate price.
The beer boycott has not reached
Berlin, but the butter boycott, be
cause of the increase in price from
26 to 36 cents a pound, is growing.
POPE TO IN VESTIGATE
CONDITIONS OF CRIME
Canton, Ohio. Rev. J. Adolph Cas
clanelll, D. D., nas resigned the pas
torate of St. Anthony's Italian Roman
Catholic church of Canton, to fill an
appointment to investigate the Italian
situation in the United States, in an
effort to get at the rnnf nf Tfoltnn
crime," particularly black-hand out
ages, it win require about four
years. When the report of the find
ings is made to the DODe. it will rnn
tain suggestions for the remedy of
mese conditions rrom a religious
standpoint
Rev. Cascianelll will begin work In
mis diocese, making Cleveland his
temporary headauarters. and will rnn
tlnue his work through one . diocese
aiier anotner, until he has toured the
entire United States.
"It is the aim of this movement,"
saia Rev. Cascianelll. "to Increase re
liglous restraint upon the Italians of
mis country in order to help them
control tneir fiery tempers."
GERMAN'S DRINK WATER:
CUT PRICE OF BEER
Berlin. The beer war in Bavaria is
being prosecuted with trreater vtrni-
-ery aay. wnne Munich and other
urge cities haven't yet been reduced
to drinking water altogether, there
".in Deen a vast decrease in the con
sumption of beer.
The Germans say beer Is too high
nd the brewers must reduce the price.
This the brewers have declined to do,
"id in many towns the people are
signing a pledge to abstain from the
use of beer until the price has been
reduced. Even at funerals and wed
ding feasts beer is no longer served.
The farmers have been nivi tn
sow less barley this spring, in order
io teacn the brewers a lesson. At
MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
IX DOUBLE WEDDING
Towanda, Pa. Mother and daugh
ter became brides in a double wed
ding here, performed at the Methodist
parsonage.
Lnester Parsons and Mrs. Lettle
Stevens, formed one pair. They had
Just obtained their license from the
town clerk when Floyd Newport and
Miss Elsie Stevens came Into the of
fice. Newport asked for a marriage
permit, but as his Intended bride was
not of Irtral ape he was refused.
airs, aievens came to the rescue.
gave her consent to the marriage, and
the second license was granted. All
four then paid a visit to Rev. D. D.
Campbell, who performed the double
ceremony. .
Each pair acted as best man and
maid of honor for the other.
Not to the tioori Playing of Visitors,
But By Blunders of Home Team, Is
Result Ascribed Errors Galore mid
Pitchers 11 ( Poor Control.
HAMILTON', OHIO, PEOPLE
SURE OF SAXE FOURTH
Hamilton, Ohio. The dealers in
fireworks have sold out to the people
of Hamilton and the city Is sure of
a "safe and sane" Fourth of July.
The fireworks, bought with a fund
of 1500, popularly subscribed, will be
set off at a park on the night of July
4, and in the meantime an ordinance
forbidding the sale of fireworks will
become effective.
The common council has refused to
pass the ordinance If it should cause
loss to the merchants that had stocks
on hand.
Liquid Foot Earn.
Relieves tired, aching and sweaty
feet Happiness for eredy one at 26c
bottle. First Class Drag Stores.
Friutier's Colts, the pride of Pen
dleton fandom; tho self-confessed he
roes of many a swatfest; who for sev
en long weeks had maintained their
foothold on the percentage summit,
and over whose heads the hope-inspiring
pennant had waved in the gentle
zephyrs with a caressing flutter as If
instinctively asserting a future pro
priety privilege; whose transcript fea
tures had appeared In the columns of
the Portland press as the leaders of
the Blue Mountain league; this con
stellation of glory and brilliance has
been rudely plucked from Its pin
nacle position and forced to shine
with a secondary gleam. When the
fiery steeds of Phoebus started on
their dazzling course In the full glory
of a Sabbath morning, the spirits of
the diamond defenders of Pendleton
rose like the foam on a- tankard of
bitter brew and the blood In the veins
of the baseball bugs surged with a
Joyous madness that is only born of
the thrills of anticipatory triumph.
But when the golden orb of day had
sunk Into the fathomless western sea
and the orange glow of evening had
faded Into the sombre shades of night,
the spirits of those same defenders
were sunk as low as the valveless
shell fish of the deep blue sea, and
the faces of the fevered fans were
cast in a forbidding gloom. For dur
ing that brief interim a tragedy had
been enacted within the four fences of
Matlock park. The howling mob of
bleacher gods had seen their gallant
champions ruthlessly slaughtered by
the revengeful pirates of Pilot Rock
and thus the pall of sadness which en
shrouds the sporting , circles of the
county seat today.
Yes, Pendleton lost the game yes
terday, the first defeat on the home
grounds, the second of the season, and
the last that can be afforded. Credit
for the result is not difficult to place
and can be passed around without
much show of favoritism. With the
exception of Powell, no man In a blue
uniform was in any other form, either
in the field or with the stick. The
poor Spauldlng pellet was booted un
mercifully, and of the six runs that
the visitors pocketed, not one of them
but was directly due to painful blun
ders. But in this regard the Pilots
made frantic endeavors to outdo their
fumbling rivals and when the final
gong was sounded honors in the er
ror column were evenly divided, each
team having eight there written. V'.ie
batting record, too, was about the
same, therefore an analysis of the
comparative box work might serve to
solve the problem as to why the lo
cal Colts got the little end of a 6 to
4 score. To Lobaugh. the Pilot Rock
siabster, let all due credit be given for
he was in-fine fettle and his control
of his shoots was wonderful. Harlan,
Pendleton's premier mound dweller,
was out of town and young Milne and
Dickson assayed the task of bewilder
ing the willow wielders from the Rock.
They did bewilder them, indisputably,
as only five safe bingles were secur
ed off their delivery, but they, unfor
tunately, could not make their bend
ers conform wholly with their Inten
tions. Five times was the leather
sphere driven against the an
atomy of a would-be slugger, and four
times were players issued free passes
to the first base by the four ball route.
Therefore It is safe to conclude that
poor control aided and abetted by
bungling support, was primarily re
sponsible for the final outcome.
Story of the Game.
Briefly chronicled, the sad tale
reads thusly:
Neither team could accomplish anything-in
the first canto, but both un
limbered in the second. Lobaugh,
first up for the visitors, laced out a
two-sacker, but was retired there
when he made an unsuccessful at
tempt to reach third on Oakley's liner
down third. The latter player reach
ed first on a fielders' choice and pur
loined the second bag. Milne sent
the ball Into the ribs of the next two,
filling the bases. Westgate hit to sec
ond base and Leonard neatly cut off
Oakley at home. The next play was
the fatal one, and caused a mighty
sigh to Issue from the bleachers. Smith
sent out a long fly to Nelson, who
let It leak through his fingers with
the result that two runners cavorted
to the platter. In Pendleton's half
of this Inning after two men had gone
down, Hays drew a pass, went to third
on a hit by Milne and rang the boll
when Lleuallun fumbled Collins'
grounder.
Tho Pilots made a cipher In the
next but the locals tied up, when with
two down again, Rader took first via
the error route and raced home on a
corking drive by Powell. In tho
fourth tho visitors pulled down an
other couple, after two men had drawn
blanks. B. Gilbert got to first by an
error and Westgate ndvanced him a
couple of bases by a clean single.
Smith reached first on another er
ror by Rader, and a hit by Lleuallen
followed by a passed ball by Collins
allowed two men to record at the rub
ber. In the fifth, Dickson beat out a
bunt and Nelson rapped one out to
B."Gllbcrt who lost the ball In a cloud
of dust and before the pellet could be
rescued Dickson had bounced on the
tally pan.
Pendleton had a fine chance this
Inning to win tho game for the Bases
were full with only one down, but Lo
baugh was equal to the occasion and
struck the next two batters out. Pilot
Rock's remaining two came In the
seventh when the first three men up
were allowed to reach the Initial land
ing by errors which likewise allowed
two of them to make the circuit. Pen
dleton's last score came'ln the ninth
by the sensational base running of
About 1 5,000 Acres of
Sherman County 9
Oregon,
. now under Crop Leases in
varying sized parcels re
newable or subject to can
cellation at buyer s option.
Price about $40.00
Per Acre
(Crop rental 1 909 reserved)
Terms
Part Cash Part on Time
Apply to
Eastern Oregon
La nd Company
Care of Balfour, Guthrie & Co. (
Board of Trade Building
Portland, Oregon
Leonard at second in the ninth. First the creditors, It Is said, as vultures,
up, he sent out a hot one to short and although. In the Interests of the
which was badly handled and then young wife, they are willing to pay
when Dickson sacrificed, he spurned the creditors half their claims, they
the earth over two more pathways, , declare they will not go beyond that
finishing at third with a marvellous offer.
slide. Nelson's sacrifice enabled him , Evidently the manner In which
to sprint homeward, while the crowd Counte BonI de Castellane dissipated
howled full-lunged. That was all, the dollars of his wife has taught
though, for the next two batters drew American parents to be cautious when
long zeros In the scorer's columns. j their children contract alliances with
Summary, . foreign nobilities.
Pendleton. AB. R. IB. PO. A. E. ' '
Dickson, cf-p ... 4 1 1 0 3 0 Telephones for Turkey.
Nelson, If 4 0 0 0 0 1, Constantinople. By the end of
3 this year the chief cities of the Ot
0 , toman empire will, It Is hoped, be
2 Joined by a telephone system extend
0 Ing from Constantinople to Jerusa
0 ' lem and Mecca. A committee to make
2 ' preliminary estimates has been ap-
0 poinieu oy me government.
"I
8
Rader, ss 4 1 1 3 3
Powell, 3b 5 0 3 5 2
King, lb 4 0 0 3 0
Hays, rf . . ; 3 1 0 1 0
Milne, 4-cf 4 0 1 0 1
Collins, c 4 0 0 7 2
Leonard, 2b ...3, 0 0 3 3
Alexander, 2b... 1 10 0 0
Totals 36 4 6 27 14
Pilot Rock .
Lleuallen, ss .
Rlvinger, If . .
M. Gilbert, 3b
Lobaugh, p
. AB. R. IB. PO. A. E
.3
.3
.5
.4
1
0
3
1
11
0
2
0
9
27
0
0
0
8
0
0
0
0
2
10
Announcement.
For the benefit of those who did
3 not see St. Elmo at the Oregon the
0 nter last evening, the Orpheum will
' present the same In a moving picture
2,
Oakley, lb 5
Donne, rf 3
B. Gilbert, 2b ...4
Westgate, cf ... 4
Smith, c 4
Totals 36
Earned runs None.
Two base hits Lobaugh.
First on balls Off Milne
Dickson 2, off Lobaugh 1.
Struck out By Dickson 6, by Lo
bnugh 11.
Left on bases Pendleton 9, Pilot
Rock 12.
Passed bail Collins.
First on errors Pendleton 6, Pilot
Rock 7.
Hit by Dickson 3, by Milne 2.
Sacrifice hits Dickson 1, Nelson 1.
Stolen bases Dickson, Rixlnger, M.
Gilbert, Lobaugh, "Oakley 2, Westgate,
Smith.
0 tonight for the same price of admls
O slon, 10 cents, ;
2 Hughes' branching whtskfjrs will
j I be a novelty on the supreme bench.
1
KREBPnflt!HB i0
I ill fv" ii1'1 "Tr"
hi
State cl Ohio, City of Toledo. Locas Cons
ty, t.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that be la
color partner of the firm of F. J. Che
ney tt Co., doing business In the City of
Toledo, Connty and State aforesaid, and
that Raid firm will pay tbe inn of ONR
HUMMED DOLLARS for each and every
case of Catarrh tbat eannot be cared bj
tbe nae of Ball's Catarrh Cor.
, FBANK J. CEDCNET.
Sworn to before me cad subscribed Is
my presence, this 8th day of December, A.
D. 1888.
A. W. OLEAHON.
(Seal) Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Core la taken Internal!
end acts directly on the blood and mncons
inrfaces of the ayatem. . Bend for testlmo
tlala free.
F. J. CHENEY CO.. Toledo, O.
Sold by all Dmgkiats, TBe.
Take Rail's Family Pills for coaatlna.
tloa.
WIFE'S FORTUNE WITHHELD.
Pay
Whirlwind Alexander, who replaced J into before marriage. They regard
American Family Will Not
Prince -Miguel's OU1 Debts.
Paris. The Duke- of Vlzen, better
known as Prince Miguel of Braganza,
is finding tnat although he has mar
ried a rich American wife, the latter's
relations are not going to allow the
lady's millions to be used for the pur
pose or getting him out of the finan
cial difficulties he had got himself '
If
Mi
(Hi
'??7
Looking
for More
Business?
A picture of the right kind is
worth more, as a trade-puller,
than a whole page of type.
It attracts attention, and
this is the first essential in
successful publicity.
Our engraving department
.is producing cuts for the high
est grades of commercial
printing, including three- and
four -color process plates;
engravings that will give j our
booklet, catalog, mailing card
or other advertising matter
added selling power
Write for estimates.,
WHITE ADVERTISING
BUREAU
tacororat4 Advcrtiama
Ag.nu aSa
vtrt jWMlTEJ
ArtKie Photo-Engrivc
plrit At. at Union St., SEATTLE