East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, May 27, 1910, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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EIGHT PAGES.
DAILY KAST OHKGOXIAN, j'ENPLBTON, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 17, 111.
PACK flTK.
THE CLASS OF 1910 .
This Store will be Closed Monday (Decoration Day) from 9 a. m. to 12 m
SHIRT WAISTS
PASSES INTO HISTORY
ast, Week f The Big
COM 51 ENCKMENT EXERCISES
WERE OP HIGH ORDER
Large Crowd Assembled to Hear Pro
gram of Graduating Class of High
School Orations Reflect Credit Up
on Institution.
mm
Saturday Is Last Day
With every Wash Dress
or Suit sold we will give
you Free a pretty
white Waist
The largest stock of Dresses
and Suits in Pendleton to
choose from, Every gar
ment strictly Up-to-date
No charges for alterations
F. E. Lavengood & Go.
Ladies Home Journal Patterns and Style Books
LOCALS
Pastime pictures please all.
Help wanted at Domestic Laundry.
Oats and timothy hay fed at the
Commercial Barn.
Get your horses clipped at the Com
mercial barn.
Good gentle saddle horses for la
dies. Commercial Barn.
Stop the Cheney Jersey dairy wagon
for the best milk and cream.
Furnished rooms for light house
keeping. 719 College street.
Room and board In private family.
23 College street, phone Red 2087.
We make a specialty of caring for
private . horses and rigs. Commercial
Barn.
Loose wheat hay, baled hay and
chopped hay fed at the Commercial
Barn.
More moving pictures shown than
any other theater In the city the
Pastime.
Frank Nodo, shoe ehlnlng parlor,
located in front of State saloon. Eight
shines for 60 cents.
For rent House corner Alta and
College streets, opposite Presbyterian
church. Apply to F. E. Judd.
Fix up your roofs with the best
shipment of shingles ever received "In
Pendleton. Crab Creek Lumber Co.
About 4000 feet Goodyear Rubber
company hose, beat and cheapest In
the market, for sale at Sharon & Ed-
dings.
Do you care whether you use the
best coal? Then see us. We Just re
ceived the best shipment of coal ob
tainable. Crab Creek Lumber com
pany. Lost Ladles gold watch with gold
fob attached. Name of owner In back
of wntch. Finder please leave at
Hanscom's Jewelry store and receive
reward.
Just received, a car of Rock
Springs nut coal. This is what you
need for cooking. Price 19 per ton
delivered loose or J 10 per ton sacked
Oregon Lumber Yard.
FREE BAD CONCERT
IS POSTPONED.
'
Will Ingram, chairman of the
music committee, announced
this afternoon that on account
of the bad weather and the plo-
neer's picnic at Weston, that the
concert scheduled far this eve-
ning will be Ikhiihk(1. The
date for the con.'Wt will be an-
nounced later, bul it will prob-
ably be some evening nxt week.
AT THE PICTURE SHOWS
Orpheum Today's Program.
1. The Stolen Fortune. Essanay
comedy.
2. History Repeats Itself. Edison
comedy.
3. The stuff that Americans are
Made Of. Edison Drama.
4. A Romantic Girl. Pathe com
edy. i. Customs of the Buddhists in In
dia. Scenic.
6. It's Great to Be a Soldier Man.
a famllv black sheen shows black
est when his long green is all used up
painting things red.
The Pastime.
Has an extra good program for Fri
day's change. Three big feature
films:
"The Unchanging Sea." Blograph.
Drama. 1000 feet. Suggested by
Charles Klngsley's poem, "The Three
Fishers." There Is perhaps no work
from the pen of the eminent English
clergyman and poet better known
than this tragic pnem.
"The Lost Trail." Vitagraph. Dra
ma. 1000 feet. A nowerful storv of
the great northwest. Thrilling In ac-l
tion and plot and marvelous in scenic
Investure.
"Mario's Swan Song." Vitagraph. I
1000 feet. A picture story that will
win the praise of the most cultured
as well as the entire picture public.
You are not only assured of better
prices by figuring with us, but you
get better material when you. buy of
us. Tt pays to see us. Crab Creek
Lumber company.
Before an audience which taxed the
capacity of the Methodist church to
the limit, twenty-three students cam
poslngthe largest class ever graduated
from the Pendleton high school, were
last night awarded diplomas at the
completion of a splendid commence
ment program. Nine of the out-going
seniors represented the class by ora
tions which were of a high quality,
both In composition and delivery and
amply fulfilled the hope voiced by the
salutatorlan that they would reflect
credit upon the Institution in which
the class has received its Instruction.
After an organ voluntary by Mrs.
A. J. Owens and an Invocation by Rev.
Ralph E. Storey, Miss Pansy Ireland
delivered the salutatory, bidding the
people welcome and expressing in a
few words the significance of the oc
casion. She was followed by Harvey
McDill in an oration on "Scientific!
Farming," in which he pointed out the
advantages of modern methods, ro
tation of crops, conservation of mois
ture, diversified and intensive farm
ing, and at the same time sounded a I
warning to those who persisted lni
their obsolete and ruinous ways of till-1
ing the soil. Two vocal solos by Miss,!
Bernlce Ruppe were heartily received
by the audience. "j
Miss Laura McKee In an oration, j
"The Storehouse of Literary Treas-(
ures," told something of the great j
value of the heritage which the men
and women of letters have bequeathed '
to the world. She was followed by
Lyman Rice, who urged the adoption
of a central banking system by the'
United States in vigorous language
and In a forceful manner. A vocal j
solo by Mrs. J. S. Landers was,
greatly appreciated, and an oration
Conservation of Our Natural Re
sources," by Hawley Bean, very ef
fectively presented one of the most
Important of our national problems,
and advocating a policy securing a
maximum of efficiency with a mini
mum of waste.
Miss Lottie Mentzer's oration on
"The Work of Jane Addams," was a
deep appreciation of the worth and
work of one of America's greatest wo
men. Hans Struve followed with an
oration entitled "Conquest of the Air"
which traced the history of man's
achievements In soaring since Its orig
in and predicted Its advance In the
immediate future.
Miss Edith Crockntt in her oration,
"The Twenty-first Century," held the
entire attention of the audience as
she ra'sed the veil of the future and
showed the life of the next century,
with its advancement in all lines.
Lawrence Whitman concluded the stu
dents' part of the program with a
splendid valedictory address In which
he expressed all that commencement
meant to the class, its obligations, its
regrets, and Its promises.
In the absence of Dr. C. J. Smith,
chairman of the board of education,
Rupt. J. S. Landers made the conclud
ing address and presentation of di
plomas. Two beautiful-vocal selec
tions by Miss Edna Gates and a bene
diction by Rev. Nathan Evans com
pleted the program of the evening.
A number not on the program
brought forth great applause from the
audience. When the last diploma had
been awarded which marked the pass
ing into history of the class of 1910,
a thread was pulled and a large ban
ner on which were the numerals
"1911." was unfurled and dropped
over the heads of the graduates as an
emblem of the class which had Inher
ited all of the power, wisdom and
dignity which attaches to the name
"senior."
The personnel of the outgoing class
Is as follows:
Hawley Bean, Grace Bean. Iva
Helen Black, Thomas Boylen, Jr.,
Ceclle Cole, Margueriette Cooley, Ed
ith L. Crockatt. P. Campbell Crock
att, Aubrey G. Graham. Gladys Ham
Icy, Pansy Ireland, Kathereen Lea
Klikpatrltk, J. Harvey McDill, Lot
tie Mentzer, Laura Isabel McKee,
Zettn Price, Lyman G. Rice, Jewell A.
Roork, Cleo F. Straughan. Hans
Struve. Freb Weber, J. Laurence
Whitman and Qulndora Wilcox.
All were' the recipients of many
benutiful gifts.
May Sale
Positive Proof of This Store's Absolute
Supremacy in Value Saving
May Sale Prices on
Corsets
The best $1.00 Corsets for 79
The best $1.25 Corsets for 89
The best $1.50 Corsets for ?1.20
The best 45c Mercerized Dress Linens, May
sale, yard 32f
The best 25c India Linens, May sale,
yard i 17
The best 12 l-2c Silkolines, May sale price,
yard 0
The best Oil Cloth made, regular 20c val.,
May sale, yard 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 Money"
-M
Cynicism is soon diluted by a lit
tle success.
Koeppens' Bed Bug Destroyer
Get. Them All. Evented Bugs
25c The'Bottle
It is in liquid form and so thin and penetrating that it goes
into all the little crncks, killing the bugs and destroying the
eggs 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.
K 0 E P'P'B M'
The Drug Store That Serves You Beat.
NATIVE Of ECHO
DIED THIS MORNING
MRS. J. L. M'CULIiOUGH
EXPIHES KATHEK SUDDENLY
Berta and Bessie. Some of the chlU
dren are very young.
Decoration day will be observed
here on Monday, May 30. The morning-
will be devoted to decorating In
the cemetery. In the afternoon the
Umatilla baseball team, in response to
an Invitation will come up on the 4
o'clock train and play a game with
the Echo nine.
The game will be called Immediate
ly upon the arrival of the train. In
the evening a dance will be given by
the Echo firemen and Echo cornet
band. A large attendance la expected
from Umatilla and neighboring towns.
A pleasant time is assured. The bust,
ness houses will all be closed in the
afternoon.
Mm. Margaret Wlnlford, who has
taught the fifth and sixth grades In
the public school here the past two
years, left last evening for Milton,
where she will visit a short time and
then go to Spokane for the summer.
Miss Wlnlford does not expect to
teach the next year as she feels she
deserves a rest. She made many
warm friends here who will long re
member her.
Miss Thelma Malcome went to Pen
dleton last evening where she expects
to spend the summer vacation wlt"h
her aunt, Mrs. F. W. Hendley.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hoskins are In
Pendleton on business and pleasure
combined.
Miss Elita Gillette spent today In
rendleton returning home on the mo
tor. Travis Hoskins Is a business visitor
in Pendleton today.
Mrs. Alice Compton, who has been
visiting here the past week, returned i
last evening to her home In Milton.
Mrs. P. E. Everltt spent today In
ftanfield visiting with her mother
Mrs. A. Reld.
Now that school has closed a num
ber of farmers who resided here dur
ing the winter to send their children
to school, are returning to their
farms with their families, among those
ore Geo. Copponger, Al. Ha loom and
Al Moore.
C. C. Conner of Milton who has
been here advertising the horso show,
farmers' picnic and strawberry day at
Milton on June 3, left foT his home
this morning.
Speak on Floor of Senate. denounce his accusers, on the floor of
-Washington, May. 27. Senator the senate. It is possible, however,
William Lorlmer, whose election has! the senate will not be in session Sat
been charged to the misuse of money urday, for it will adjourn over until
in the Illinois legislature, announced i Monday if a vote is taken on the rail
last night that Saturday he will rise road bill today. In that event Mr.
to a question of personal privilege and Lorlmer will speak Monday.
The
of Kings
yAVL The
CSS
We want you to hear the
to
ison Records
For Juno
Funeral Services Tomorrow Decor
ation Day Will bo Observed on Mon.
,lay Game With I'nintllla In After
noon Short Notes.
(Special Correspondence.)
Echo., Ore., May 27. Mrs. J. L.
McCullough died at her home In this
place at S o'clock this morning after
an Illness that lasted for several days.
She is to be buried here tomorrow
and the funeral service will be held at
2 o'clock in the afternoon.
The deceased was a native of this
vicinity, having been born in 1865, on
the old Jimmy Taylor place near
Echo. She was a daughter of John
Dickey, long since dead and her maid
en name was Sarah Dickey. She was
married to Mr. McCullough In 1884.
Aside from her husband she leaves
nine children. They are Mrs. Charles
Ward, Mrs. Voss Fulford, Mrs. Lillian
Price, and the following unmarried
children, Hoob, Travis, Frank, John,
A Man Wants to Die
only when a lazy, liver and siugglsh
bowels cause frightful despondency.
But Dr. King's New Life Pills evpel
poisons from the system; bring hope
and courage; cure ail liver. Btomach
and Kidney troubles; Impart health
and vigor to '.ha weak, nervous and
ailing. 25c jt Tallman & Co.
Notice.
Social in the basement of the
Christian church tonleht. Strawber
ries, cream and cake served for 15
cents.
Rave money by reading today's ad.
802 E. Court St.
Phone Main 46.
iOld Snots
Never come back when cleaned
by the
j Berlin Dye House
5 Jack Webster, Mgr.
Dry, Wet, Chemical and Steam
Work called for and delivered.
When you are tired out from your
days work, you need music and fun to
refresh you and drive away your cares
Nothing like the Edison to do that.
If you haven't a machine, come in the next time
you are passing or write and we will sell you one
for as low as $5.00 per month.
Licensed dealers of Edison Phonographs
Victor Talking Machines and
Columbia Graphaphone
A full line of machines and records always on hand.
Pendleton's
Fop Sale
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, I 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 sU This is one of the biggest snaps I have
for sale.
DAN KEMLER, 210 W. Bluff St. Pendleton, Ore.