East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, May 21, 1910, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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DAILY CAST OBEUOMA.N, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY. MAY 21, 1910.
PAGE FIYX.
Tonight After
Supper
From 6 to 9 o'clock
225 Black and Black and White
stripe Morie and ' Heatherbloom
PETTICOATS
All You Want,
68c Each
F. E. Livengood & Co.
June Ladies Home Journal Patterns and Style books
Ready
LOCALS
Pstime pictures please all.
Hay for sale. Phone F. I 17.
Ice cr.-am at Hohbach's. Court t
Fresh buttermilk at Jei.fn cream
ery. Furnished house for rent. 501 Wa
ter. Oats and timothy bay fed at thi
Commercial Barn.
let your horse clipped at the
Commercial Barn.
Farmers' blacksmith coal cheap.
Crab Creok Lumber Co.
Good gentle saddle horses for la
dles. Commercial Barn.
Stop the Cheney Jersey dairy wagon
for the best milk and cream. v
A shipment of best cedar posts. Just
arrived. Crab Creek Lumber Co.
Room and board in private family.
33 College street, phone Red 2017.
We make a specialty of caring for
private horses and rigs. Commercial
Barn.
Loose wheat hay, baled hay aad
chopped hay fed at the Commercial
Barn.
More moving pictures shown than
any other theatre In the city the
Pastime.
Frank Nodo.v shoe shining parlor,
located in front of State saloon. Eight
shines for 60 cents.
For rent House corner Alta and
College streets, opposite Presbyterian
' -virch Apply ti F E IjJl
Fix up your roofs with the best
shipment of shingles ever received In
Pendleton. Crab Creek Lumber Co.
Just received, a car of Rock
Springs nut coal. This Is what you
need for cooking. Price 19 per ton
delivered loose or $10 per ton sacked.
Oregon Lumber Yard.
' Madison Square Theater Co.
Sunday, May 22, will mark the
opening at the Oregon theater of
Lowe's Madison Square Theater com
pany for a summer stock engagement.
This company is under the manage
ment of Geo, W. Lowe and this alone
Is a guarantee of the organization as
he has for many years been Identi
fied with the leading popular'-stock
companies of the west and middle
west. In his own words, he believes
in giving the people a little more
than they expect at a reasonnble price
of admission. .
The plays offered will be good,
wholesome comedies and dramas, giv
en alternately so as to please all pat
rons. The company includes twelve
carefully selected artists and is head
ed by Miss Ollle Cook, an emotional
leading woman, who Is favorably
known in this part of. the county, hav
ing visited this city several years ago
In support of the eminent Shakespear
nn star. John Griffith. Mr. F. Byron
Rognrdus Is leading man and stage
director and as such he Is recom
mended very highly, having been as
sociated with leading stock compan
ies of the roast. Among the cast are
such well known actors as Mr. Bert
Hadley, who made such a good Im
pression here with the Streeter-Bryan
company a year or two ago, Mr, B.
Ryerson Howland. Mr. J, E. Simp
kins, that funny comedian, Mr. T. K.
Post, Miss Louise Lowe, Miss Odllle
Fletcher and Miss Beatrice Post. The
management promises several high
class specialties with each perform
ance. The bills will be changed twice
a week. The opening offering is the
laughable comedy "Who's Your
Wife?" Popular prices, only 10, 20
and 30 cents. Reserved seats on sale
daily at the Pendleton drug store.
AT THE PICTURE SHOWS
, Orpheum Today's Program.
1. The Two Brothers. Blograpb
drama. In the days of the pardes.
2. The Witch of the Ruins. Pathe.
Drama.
3. Diamond Cut Diamond. Pathe.
Comedy.
4. The Cowboy Girls. Sellg. Com
edy. 6. Yankee Doodle's Come to Town.
Program for Sunday.
1. Roosevelt In Cairo. A number
of beautiful scenes in Egypt and good
dear picture of Roosevelt In every
scene. This picture Is no fake.
2. Purged by Fire. Eclipse. Dra
ma. 3. Chief Blackfoot's Vindication.
Kalem. Drama.
4. Mr. Mix at the Vt:r Crns. Se
lig comedy.
6. Sweetheart's n Iv-tiv Xame
When It's You.
The Pastime.
The following excellent program
will be on at the Pastime Sunday.
"The Gold Seekers." Blograph.
Dramatic. 1000 fet. A story of the
California gold fields. In this Bio
graph subject there Is an intense
thrill from beginning to end.
"Through tht Darkness." Vita
graph. Drama. Length 1000 feet. A
story which will appeal to a large
number. The settings of the play are
admirable, and the acting of a supe
rior quality.
"The Merry Medrano Circus
Clowns." Comedy. A, reproduction
of the amusing antics of the clowns
in the Medrano circus in Paris. It Is
perhaps the most successful vaude
ville film put out and cannot fail to
please.
"The Subterfuge." Drama. A pret
tily worked out romance which ends
very happily. f
Font MKX KILLED IX
HUE AT TACOMA PLANT
Tacoma, May 21. An Inquest will
be held tomorrow to fix the responsi
bility for the deaths of four men last
night at the Pacific Coast power plant
near Sumner. A small push car In
which the men were riding dashed
down an incline and crashed into a
freight car. The bodies were fright
fully mangled. A cable which held
the car became unhooked at the
top of the hill. The dead are James
Law, Frank Bimson, Seattle, Willis
Harvelle, Sumner. Ray Sisk. Kent.
The 'remains were brought to this city
city today.
Household furniture for sale cheap.
Must sell at once, going to leave city,
("all at 617 Madison street.
The most commonplace things
would be as full of interest as fairy
tales If we knew enough about them.
Koeppens' Bed Bug Destroyer
Gets Them All, Even Bed Bugs
25c The Bottle
It is in liquid form and so thin and penetrating that it goes
into all the little ernclvs, killing the hugs and destroying the
cpga as well, being of an antiseptic nature it gets the germs
also. Each bottle is equipped with a shaker cork which
makes it quite easy to apply.
DC' EPF BM9
The Drug Store That Serves You Be$t.
ATHENA WINS FIRST
GAME OF SEASON
CAPTURE CONTEST FROM '
WESTOX YESTERDAY
New Pitcher Helps Tallcndera to Break
Hoodoo Game Won In Eight In'
nliiKs When Five Runs Are Chased
Over.
(Staff Correspondence.)
Athena, Ore., 'May 20. Athena
baseball fans are possessed of ' an
ecstasy, of Joy ' which approaches al
most a state of happy delirium. The
great hoodoo spell which has , held
them in Its power for two months and
which lias forbidden them to break
Into the pastures where the sweet
grass of victory grows, has Ween brok
en. The Yellow Kids have won a
game and the manner in which it was
won assuages to a great degree the
pain of past defeats. Before a mon
ster crowd .gathered to celebrate the
memories of old Scotland, they gath
ered In a game from the leaders of the
league, donating the Weston Moun
taineers with the 2 end of a 7, to 2
score.
Th game was won in the eighth in
ning when the Weston balloon was
released from Its leashes and allowed
to soar to the .celestial realms, there
to hold communion with the wander
ing comet of the heavens. This dis
astrous ascension was the result of
a terrific batting rally by the home
sluggers which demoralized . Slabster
O'Harra and was responsible for five
complete vlrcuits of the bags.
Game in Detail.
The game In detail reads as follows:
W. Nordean, first man up for Wes
ton, hit over short stop for a single
and stole second, went to third on hit
over third base by A. Nordean and
scored on a passed ball. Peters fan
ner. Groves fouled out to catcher
and W. O'Harra went out by a
grounder to pitcher. One score.
In Athena's half, Stone hit over sec
ond for a Bingle. Willaby hit a hot
grounder between first arid second
advancing Stone to third. Smith
fouled out to first base. Langberg
next up, bunted to pitcher, who fum
bled, scoring Stone and advancing
Willaby to third, putting himself out
at first on the sacrifice. Lleuallen
then hit to pitcher, who again fum
bled and threw to first, but too late
to catch the runner and allowing Wil
laby to score. -Lleuallen was caught
trying to steal second,' retiring the
side. Two runs.
Weston tied the score. ' Wheeler
.reached first when catcher missed
third strike. Blomgren hit to short
stop, who threw high to second in
trying to head off Wheeler, who
reached third on the. play and scored
a moment later on an overthrow to
second In an attempt to catch Blom
gren who stole second and advanced
to third on the same play. Lansdale
and N. O'Harra struck out and Blom
gren was caught between third and
home in an attempt o steal home
when the catcher had fumbled the
ball. For Athena DePeat and My
rick struck out and Booher grounded,
out to pitcher.
Doing Weston's half of the third
inning both W. Nordean and A. Nor
dean grounded out by the third base
route and Peters struck out.
For Athena. Picard grounded out
to shortstop. Stone hit through short
stop for a single, stole second and took
third on a wild pitch, but Smith hit a
srounder to- shortstop and was re
tired at first and Willaby flew out
to center field, retiring the side and
spoiling a good chance to give Athena
another score ns Stone died on third.
There was nothing doing for Wes
ton in the fourth as Groves flew out
to second base, while W. O'Harra fan
ned and Wheeler grounded out.
Athena went out In one, two. three
order. Langberg fanned, Lleuallen
grounded out and DePeat fanned the
breeze.
In the first half of the fifth Blom
gren flew out to left field. Lansdale
went out on a grounder to pitcher and
N. O'Harra was ozoned.
In Athena's half n short session was
held as Myrick grounded out, Booher
flow out to shortstop, and Picard
went out on a groirhder to second.
Sixth inning W. Nordean went out
on a grounder. A Nordean repeated
the operation and Peters struck out.
For Athena Stone struck three holes
In the atmosphere. Willaby got a
lilt over shortstop and stole second.
Smith flew out to shortstop and Lang
berg swung three times nt the ball,
retiring the side, leaving Willaby to
die on third, which he had In the
meantime reached, and Athena again
lost an elegant chance to score.
In the seventh, nothing doing as for
Weston, Groves and W. O'Harra were
"whipped" by the three strikes route.
Wheeler got a hit over second and
stole the latter hag. but was left there
to die when Blomgren was fooled
three times by the new Athena pitch
er. Picard. Athena made very short
work of her half, as Lleuallen and
Defeat were quickly fanned by
O'Harra. and Myrick grounded out to
first base.
Weston went out In record time
order as Picard took the measure of
Lansdale. N. O'Harra and W. Nor
dean and fanned them In a hurry.
And right here Athena seYit up the
airship, broke the hoodoo and won
her first game, making five runs so
quirkly that the speed of Halley's
comet was no comparison. It was
done as follows: Booher grounded out.
Picard walked, likewise Stone. Willa
by hit to left field scoring Picard.
Stone advancing to third. Smith
hit a grounder to the second baseman,
who threw home to catch Stone, but
th latter was called safe, Willaby
going to third and Smith to second
on the play. Langberg then hit to
right field, scoring Willaby and
Smith, and going to third on the play
and scoring when Lleuallen made a
beautiful bunt down the thirdbase
line. DePeat went out by a grounder
to pitcher, but Lleuallen advanced to
Saturday After Sui
May Sole Prices on
Corsets
The best $1.00 Corsets for
The best $1.25 Corsets for
The best $1.50 Corsets for
.79
$1.20
The best 45c Mercerized Dress Linens, May
sale, yard 32
The best 25c -India Linens, May sale,
yard , 17 'f
The best 12 l-2c Silkolines, May sale price,
yard , 9
The best Oil Cloth made, regular 20c val,
May sale, yard 1 16
The best 12 l-2c Percales, 36-in. wide, May
sale : 9
The best 25c Long Cloth, May sale price,
yard 16
The best 15c Curtain Swisses, May sale,
yard 10
May Sale Prices on Silk
Petticoats
The best $5.00 Silk Petticoats. ?3.95
The best $6.00 Silk Petticoats ?4.75
The best $7.00 Silk Petticoats $5.15
The best $7.50 Silk Petticoats...- $5.65
The best $8.00 Silk Petticoats... $6.00
The best $8.50 Silk Petticoats $6.35
The best $9.00 Silk Petticoats. :$6.75
The best $10.00 Silk' Petticoats.-$7.35
The best $12.00 Silk Petticoats ?8.45
The best 25c Ecru Curtain Swiss, May sale,
The best 35c Madras Curtaining, May sale,
yard 22
WOHLENBERG DEFT STORE
"Better Goods for Less Money1
off that sack a moment later, retiring
the side.
Weston was unable to break the
spell In her final attempt as A. Nor
dean went out by a grounder to short
stop, Peters again fanned and Grooves
was thrown out when trying to reach
second, having reached first when the
flrstbaseman dropped the ball on a
throw from the pitcher who fielded
his grounder.
Notes of the Game.
Picard, Athena's new slab artist,
pitched a splendid game and won a
home In the hearts of the Athena peo
ple. He was given good support by
his team mates and especially so by
Lleuallen, who by the way is a clever
little catcher and on the job all the
time.
O'Harra pitched a fine game for
Weston except for his hard luck in the
eighth, when the "balloon went up."
Peters, the heavyweight catcher for
Weston, who Is a "knight of the grip"
by profession and who assisted the
Weston team on account of the un
avoidable absence of Jack Keefe,
caught a good game and plainly dem
onstrated that when in trim he could
"go some."
Bert Cartano again umpired in his
usual fair and fearless manner and
the players and fans were well pleas
ed with his work.
Tomorrow Athena plays Adams, and
Sunday will try their, luck with Pilot
Rock. ; 4
The new nrk ball ground is fast
getting in good shape and is already
one of the best if not the best ball
park In eastern Oregon.
Held Sports.
In the field sports the following
were the events and results:
Pole vault George Cheard, Athena,
first. 8 feet 5 inches; Harold Githens,
Athena, second.
Shot put George Strand, Pendle
ton, first, 37 feet, 6 inches; Goff.
Athena, second, 87 feet 3 Inches.
Tossing the Caber Potts Athena,
first 47 feet; McDonald, Athena, sec
ond. 40 feet 11 Inches.
100 , yard dash McEwen, Athena,
first, time 10.3; Worthington, Athena,
second; Githens. Athena, third.
220 hurdle McEwen Athena, first,
28 seconds; Githens and Worthington
tie for second.
Broad Jump McEwen Athena, first,
17 feet 6 inches; Worthington Athe
na, second, 15 feet 1 Inch.
Boys' 100 yards for boys under 15
Payne, Athena, first, 11 seconds;
Grant Athena, second.
Girls' 100 yards for girls under 15
Miss Wheeler, Athena, first. 12 sec
onds; Miss Grant. Athena, second.
Egg race Payne Athena first; Mc
Lntyre Athena, second.
TRAINLOAD OE SHEEP
SHIPPED FROM ECHO
TWENTY CARLOADS ARE
BILLED FOR CHICAGO
Boy Wanted.
Boy wanted at the East Oregonian
office to learn the printing trade.
Good opportunity to advance; steady
employment. Apply at once. Must be
over 15 years old.
Wherever the Divinity of Manhood
is taught, the bribe giver has money
to burn. Where there is nothing to
sell, tho bidders are scarce.
Have Privilege of Grazing in Idaho,
While in Transit This is Third
Load Shipped Out , Recently
School Pupils are Entertained.
(Special Correspondence.)
Echo, Ore., May 21. Another train
load of sheep consisting of twenty
cars were billed out of here yesterday
for Chicago, with the right, in transit
of summer grazing In Idaho. The
sheep were bought of Stanfield and
Sperry'by D. M. Turner. This Is the
third .train load of sheep sent from
the Echo stockyards this year by Mr.
Turner and there will be another
train soon to follow. This being a
central point Is not the only attraction
for shipping, but the efficient service
rendered by the O. R. & N. Co.'s em
ployes under the management of
Agent P. C. Hunter, also is a strong
drawing card.
Miss M. E. Winiford gave the pu
pils of the fifth and sixth grade,
which she has taught the past year,
a pleasant reception last night at the
lawn of the M. E. parsonage. A
plesant time was experienced as only
children can enjoy. Ice cream and
cake was served and at 10 o'clock the
youngsters reluctantly bid their
teacher good bye and , disbanded for
their several homes.
Rev. A. M. Lambert is able once
more to resume his ministerial duties.
He will preach tomorrow evening at
the temporary Methodist church quar
ters. His text will he 2 Peter 8:18 and
Mat. 28:72.
. Rev. B. F. Harper of Milton will
fill the Presbyterian pulpit at Bethel
hall tomorrow both morning and
evening in the absence of the pastor,
S. L. Clark who left for Irrigon last
night to fill appointments both there
and at Umatilla.
Miss Alice Copeland of Milton is
here the guest of her cousin, Miss
Wlnford. She will remain until af
ter the commencement exercises Wed
nesday evening.
H. B. Gillett shipped his traction
engine and freight outfit last night
for Shaniko.
Mrs. C. M. Boreland returned home
yesterday from a visit to Walla Wal
la. She was accompanied by her
young sons, Merrell and Lonnle, who
have been visiting the past few-months
with their grandmother.
Miss Arlle Rounzoin returned ' last
evening to her home at Milton, after
visiting the past few days with
friends here.
For rent Furnished house "Close in.
North Side. Tel Red 2537 mornings.
Baker cab stand, Hotel St George.
Phone Main II.
302 E. Court St.
Phone Main 45.
Old
Spots
Never come back when cleaned
X by the
: Berlin Dye House
I Jack Webster, Mgr.
Dry, -Wet, Chemical and Steam
Cleaners.
Work called for and delivered.
FOR SALE Haines-Houser combined
harvester, 16-foot cut; good con
dition. Address, Chas, Hamilton,
City, R..F. D. 1.
Fop SaDe
290 acre wheat farm four miles from Pendleton, good
house and barn, young orchard, plenty of water. 4 horses
and harness. 2 cows, 8 dozen chickens. Gang plow.
Drill, Harrow, Weeder, Mower, Rake, Fanning Mill, 2
Wagons, 1 Hack, 1 Buggy, other articles, too numerous to
mention.
All for Eight Thousand Dollars
Five thousand cash, easy terms on balance. Must be
sold by June 1 st. This is one of the biggest snaps I have
for sale
DAN KEMLER, 210 W. Bluff St. Pendleton, Ore.
Aeston Mountain
POTATOES
80c per Sack
As fine a quality of potatoes as can be obtained on the
market. Phone for free sample mess and be convinced
INGRAM'S GROCERY Bi"er gL8L
an ever
Phone Main 37
imra on me sacrmce ana was caugni