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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1913)
EIGHT PAGES. DAILY EAST OREGONIAN. PENDLETON. OREGON, MONDAY, APRIL 21, 1913. PAGE FIVE. THE BIG BIRTHDAY SAL A GRAND SUCCESS. Hundreds have taken advantage of our liberal olferings and are telling their friends about it. This week will be better than ever. Come in, bring your friends and let us show you all the pretty things we are giving away absolutely FREE. Silk Petticoats FrCO with any Suit in the house DreSS Skirls Free with any Coat in the house Shirl Vaists FreG with any Dress in the house C J4 Silk H:S3 Frae with every pair of Ladies Shoes Silk Lisle liose Fr8 with Misses, Childrens Shoes Dress Trimmings Frea with Dress Goods ANOTHER LADIES' or MISSES' SUIT Will Re GIVEN AWAY SaturdvJight Dozens of Articles That You Will Need Right Now at Greatly Reduced Prices utni F. E. LIVENGOOD & COMPANY THE LADIES AND CHILDREN'S STORE LOCALS United Orchestra. Phone Main 1 Early spraying. Phone I. C. Sny der. If you warn dry siab wood, phone Main 8. Ice cream every day at O. Floh bach's. Court Btreet. Wanted Good, clean rags at the East Oregonian office. For bottled sodas and beers, phone John Gugen. Main 177. Joe Ell, insurance, room S Ameri can National Bank bldg. Wanted Housework. Will work by the hour. Phone Red 3842. For sale cheap Coming four year old Jack. A. T. Matthews. For Rent Furnished housekeeping rooms. 811 Vincent. Wanted Dressmaking. BIO Jane street Phone Black 2211. Horses to Rent Will bring and re turn. John Baldwin. Phone M 337. Ladles wanting hair work done, call on Mrs. Cornwell, 617 Cosbie. Just received, one carload of cedar posts at J. A. Borle Lumber Co. Have your wood sawed by the gaa ollne wood saw. Phone Main 13. I. C. Snyder has Sulphur Lime pray for sale. 513 Oak street. Wanted to Rent Four or 5 room house. Address L. H. B.. this office. Get your Victor records at War ren's Music House, with Brown furni ture Store. Experienced woman wants posi tion us nurse in prlvato home in city or country. Address "B R." this office. For Rent Furnished rooms with board one block from Main street. Phone Main 661). 201 Water St. For Pale White Leghorn day old chicks and Mammoth White Holland Turkey cegs. Address Box 32. City. For teas, coffees and spices, try the Pendleton Specialty Co.. 628 Main trect. Phone Main 476. All goods delivered. For teas, coffees and spices, try the Pendleton Specialty Co., 628 Main street. Phono Main 4 76. All goods delivered. If you want to learn to play the mandolin, Kiiltar, banjo or violin cor rectly, see II. M. Warren, 302 E. Al ta street. Call Pcnland Brothers Transfer, phone 339, for furniture and piano moving or for storing household goods. Ponlnnd Bros., 647 Main street. Wanted Capable girl or woman to do general housework. Phone or write R. B. McEwen, R. F. D. No. 1, Athena. For Sale Modern seven room house, corner lot. srone wall, fruit and shade trees. Furniture for sale. 601 Jackson street. Call Mrs. Henry Laatx. Anyone who has lost a light gray checked overcoat, size 40, nearly now, call at police station. Wanted Furnish d house for sev eral months by couplo without chil dren. Apply at this office. First class repairing, alterations, dry-cleaning and pressing, by an ex perienced tailor. H. T. Lester, with Fchubert-Taylor Clothing Co., phone Main 833. Lost Greek letter fraternity pin, shield slipped, with diamond center. Kinder please, return to this office. For rent Good furnished front room, close In Call at 118 Jefferson street. Phone Red 2652. For sale Six head of good work horses and three sets of pood double harness, all for J400. Address Box 129, City. For Sale A Si rich & Zoldler pi ano; high grade Instrument. and nearly new, $250. Also a visible keyboard typewriter. Smith-Premier No. 10. Good as new, $65. Address Box 64. Hermiston, Ore. Wanted Horses to graze, at $1 per head per month. No charge for suchlng colts. Land located eight miles south of Pilot Rock. For fur ther particulars, address Charles Ogilvy, Pilot Rock Oregon. NEW YORK'S GREAT TURKEY TROT WAR New .York, April 21. Not in de cades has New York seethed so wild ly as It is. now doing over the ques tion of dancing. Incredible as it may seem, to outsiders this question with a very great number of people throughout the city, people of every class, is overshadowing everything else. Compared to It the income tax Is a side Issue and the tariff a mat ter of little importance. For New York Is in the midst of a great turkey trot war. To a very much lesser de gree this h:is spread to some other parts of the country. Here, however, tho struggle has assumed tremndous proportions, which it Is believed only legislation at Albanv can settle. There nro many who believe that even this j will be Inadequate. The average New ' Yorker apparently believes that his right to dance when he pleases, where lu pleases, and particularly how he pleases, Is guaranteed under the con stitution, or if it Is not, should be. The mayor's recent order closing nt one o'clock places at which New York I? accustomed to dance caused a mar which could have been, and undoubt edly was heard nt Albany. The few places which got around the order coined money and soon New Yorkers in their insatiable desire to dance caused open violations. Afternoon turkey trotting, even Sunday afternoon tiotting flourishes, and New York is apparently dance mad. The an nouncement of the mayor that the ban would be put on certain kinds of .lanc es evoked fresh howls of rage and de rision and the battle waxed only fier cer. Passengers on incoming steam ships report that the affair is assum ing International importance since de velopments are eagerly followed abroad. There Is no doubt of the seri ousness of the situation, or Its Import ance In the eyes of New Yorkers, though It is hard for an outsider to understand such a tempest In a tea pot. But apparently to limit New Yorkers as to the quantity or quality of their dancing is the one thing they will not stand for, and the turkey trot hnttle is likely to go down in history as one of New York's fiercest. Our Ice Gold Soda Delightful Bever ages AUE ALWAYS ON TAP. We use only the best fresh fruits and rock candy syrup and have Ice cream absolutely the best that can be bought, served by experienced dispenser. F. J. Donaldson Reliable Druggist yio give T. P. W. Stamp. Attention Knight. Damon Lodge No. 4. K. of P., will work In the third rank this evening. A full attendance desired. II. M. ELDER, C. C. R. W. Fletcher, K. R. S. PERSONAL MENTION P. C. Hunter of Echo, spent Sun day In the city. Henry Sehmitt of Athena, Is spend ing the day In the city. F. G. Lucas of Weston, was a week-end visitor in the city. T. B. Ames of Walla Walla, was a Sunday visitor In Pendleton. Lawrence Lleuallen of Adams, Is down today transacting business. John Lester of Irrigon, was among the Saturday visitors in Pendleton. Carl Ris of Pilot Rock, was among the people from that town In the city yesterday. P. T. Harbour, prominent resident of Weston, is among the day's visit ors in the city. I. W. Durrill of Echo, came up from his homo Saturday evening and spent the night here. Mr. and Mrs. Walter De Lamp of Reno, Nevada, were guests at the Bowman yesterday. Elmer Boamant and H. F. Lash of Heppnor, were guests of one of the local hotels yesterday, Ivan Sturtevant, well known Pen dleton boy. went out to the south end of the county today. J. R. Kanaga of Hermiston, was among the Sunday visitors from the west end of the county. George W. Proehstel, well known Weston pioneer citizen, came down this morning on the local. Raymond Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs Horace Walker, was up from Stanfield to spend tho week-end. Burr Johnson returned this morn ing from Ellensburg, Washington. where he had been visiting a daugh ter. John Bradburn, Pilot Rock saloon man, returned to his home this morning after spending Sunday in the city. Charles Jost, manager of the Walla Walla Athletic club, came over this morning and will be present at the Parres-Duartc fight tonight. Roy T. r.islmp of tho Pendleton Woolen Mills has returned from a trip of several weeks to various states in tho interest of the mills. Dr. H. E. Pinkerton. of the bureau of animal industry, who is now sta tioned in Walla Walla, was here yes terday to spend Sunday with his fam ily. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Tenland and Mr and Mrs. Roy Penland, came in this morning from Helix, where the former couple spent Sunday at the home of the latter. Levi Ankeny, former United States senator from Washington anil a prominent Walla Walla banker, came over this morning on the local to vis it at the home of his son, Nesmith Ankeny. and to attend to business matters. ' Mr. rfhd Mrs. Elmer Brewer, the former a traveling salesman for a hardware house, have located In Pen dleton and have rooms at Mrs Thompson's house on Madison street. Mrs. Brewer now has her mother as her guest. SPORTS BUCKAROO TEAM DEFEATS P. P. L. The Pacific Power & Light Co. of Walla Walla neglected to send any "juice" along with Its baseball team to Pendleton yesterday and as a re sult its battery was ineffective when brought into action against the Buck aroo team. At the end of nine in nings, the score board showed that the Garden City electrlfiers had been drubbed by a 14 to 3 score. The game was not exactly a stellar exhibition of the national pastime, McKune's men having things pretty much their own way, but the fans felt amply repaid for their money expended at the gate by the manner In twiiieh the team, which opens the season for Pendleton tomorrow, per former. It was a smooth running machine that Terry has developed and incidentlaly showed that it has possibilities with the stick. As a matter of fact the errors of the visitors were largely responsible for the manner in which the Bucks raced around the circuit but these same Bucks bludgeoned out enough hits off the delivery of Spencer and Doc Voneman to win a couple of games. In all sixteen safe ones were registered, six of which went for x tra bases. The bombardment commenced in the second when a triple by Haworth, Si! LADIES! SECRET 10 DARKEN FADED GRAY HAIR-USE SAGE TEA Sage llixexd With Sulphur He-. flrugis,s tney usually use too stores Xatural Color and Lustre to Hair. Why suffer the handicap of look ing old Gray hair, however hand some, denotes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youth ful appearance. Yoor hair Is your charm. It makes or roars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks dry, wispy and scraggly just a few applications of Sae Tea and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundred fold. Either prepare the tonic at home or get from any drug store a 50 cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy." ready to use; but lis ten, avoid preparations put up by much sulphur, which makes the hair sticky. Get "Wyeth's" which can al ways be depended upon to darken; beautifully and is the best thing known to remove dandruff, stop scalp; Itching and falling hair. By using Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur no one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair. It does It so naturally and evenly you mois ten a sponge or soft brush, drawlng this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time which requires, but a few moments. Do this at night and by morning the gray hair disap pears; after another application or two its natural color is restored and it becomes glossy and lustrous and you appear years younger. P.P.L & P. HO 010110104 Pendleton B0 -6 0 3 4 1 0 0 14 Pendleton HO 4 1 4 3 2 1 1 16 Summary Two base hits, Rader, 2; Lodell, Doherty, 2. Three base r ts. Howorth, Spencer. Home runs, Cowan. Niles. Stolen bases, Niles, 2; Spent or. Lodell, Doherty, Varian, Haworth, Augustus, 2; MeKune, 2; Wells. First on balls, off Spencer 1 ; Voneman, 2. Struck out, by Spencer 3; Voneman, 1; by Berger, 7; Wells. 2: Krause, 2. Left on bases, P. P. L. & P., 2; Pen dleton. 5. Double plays. Ring to Par rls; Wild pitches, by Voneman 1. I Wells 1. Passed balls, by Parris S. First base on errors, P. p. L. & P. 1: Hit difficult task, but love and persever ance win the battle. The Sheriff's Baby. Biograph. The Crab and the Lobster. An in structive as well a extremely inter esting subject showing how the crabs and lobsters are captured In nets. The PastinK. for Tuesday's sincles bv Herger ami lioneriy ano " i, , "i,.- rnimin.l ' withitus by Spencer; Spencer by Wells STOCK RANCHES Having resided In the county 28 years, and In the stock busi ness 12 years In Umatilla coun ty, I am In a position to show you something good In the way of a stock ranch. I know the country thoroughly from the Columbia to the John Day. See me before you buy. E. T. WADE Temple Bldg., Main 61 Phone M. 479. Pendleton, Or. llou.MckwpInf; ltoonw for Rent. Suite of unfurnished housekeeping rooms for rent in East oregonian building. Gas rango In kitchen, elec tric lights, steam heat, hot and cold water and bath. Apply at once to E. O. office. three errors and a few stolen bases enabled six of the loca'.s to ring the bell. Singles by Cowan, Lodell, Do herty and a double by Rader annexed three more in the fourth. Voneman replaced Spencer on the mound in the fifth and, after issuing a couple of free passes and contrib uting a wild pitch, he was found for a couple of doubles and a single, Lo dell. Doherty and McKunc being the men who did the slugging. The fourteenth tally -was added In the sixth when Augustus hit safely, stole second, went to third on a passed ball and scored when McKunc connected safely with the pill. Berger officiated on the mound for the first three innings for the Bucks and succeeded in striking out seven men in that short period. Wells took up the work for the next three and in turn was relieved by Krause in the seventh. Both of these twirlers had but little trouble mystifying the power and light batters. The visitors managed to send a couple around the diamond In the sixth when McCool got to third on the only Pendleton error and a wild pitch. Niles poked out a nice single, scoring McCool, and himself purloin ed second and third, to bo brought in when Barnard hit out the ball to Lodell. Niles' freak homer in the eighth gave the Walla Wallans their lost score. P. P. L & P. Co. AB R 1BPO A E N'iles, as 4 2 2 3 3 0 Bernard, cf 4 0 0 1 0 Ring, lb 3 0 0 10 1 0 Larnox, rf 4 0 0 1 0 0 McKenna, 2b 4 0 0 1 2 1 Parris, c 3 0 1 I 2 1 Thompson, If 2 0 0 0 0 1 Voneman, p .2 0 0 0 1 0 Spencer, p-df 2 0 1 2 0 1 McCool, 3b 3 1 0 2 1 Time of game, 1:40. Umpire, Dick son. Innings pitched, Berger. 3; Wells ,3; Krause. 3; Spencer. 4; Von eman. 4. Hits off Berger. 1; Wel'.s. 2; Krause. 1; Spencer. 9: Voneman 7. svu kday's games. Good program chan ge: "The Burden Bearer." Lubln Fea turing Arthur Johnson and -Vivian Pates. The picture has been splen didly staged. Vivian Pates has the role of Acnes, with whom two broth ers are in love. Florence Hackett has the difficult part of an adven turess, who at first hires the favored son, Dudley, and later falls in love with Mr. Johnson, a naval officer. "Bede'ia Becomes a Lady." Vita graph. With aspirations for society. Beddia leaves home and launches in to the swim, but in the end she Is glad to return to the old home. "With Eyes of the Blind." Edison-. Featuring Mary Fuller and James Horton. There is much b.-;utv in this picture story. "Broncho Billy's Way." A now story that is dramati a punch. The Pastime will install this week a sanitary drinking fountain. and it tells a dramatic Essanay. and has X. W. 1. 11G I K At Vancouver T.icoma Vancouver Boice. and Byrnes; Hall nick. At Spokane Portland a 1 i ()v fpoitane " Hynes. Fitchner and Murray; ers, Krait nnu -uer. At Seattle Victoria " Seattle 3 Scholtz and Shea; Dell and (.ad man. (11 innings.) ivi ict i r icrr At Portland . .' .' . R. H. E. snwing some dandy view s of Pana- 1 (I 1 ""l - ...31 3 4 24 12 Why Ho Was J Ate. "What made you so late?" "I met Smlthson." "Well, that Is no reason why you should be an hour late getting home to supper." "I know, but I asked him how he was feeling, and he insisted on telling me about his stomach trouble." "Did you tell him to tak Chamber Iain's Tablets T" "Sure that is what he needs." Sold by ail 'dealer; Totals . . Pendleton AB R IB PO A Cowan, rf 5 1 2 0 0 Lodell. lb 5 3 2 8 0 Doherty, If 5 1 4 1 0 Varion, cf 5 2 0 2 0 Rader, 3b 5 0 3 1 1 Haworth, c 4 1 111 1 Augustus, ss 3 2 1 2 1 McKune, 2b 4 2 2 2 1 Berger, p 2 1 1 0 1 Wells, p 1 1 0 0 1 Krause, p 0 0 0 0 0 R. H. E. 1 3 1 3 6 0 and Kon- R. H. E. S 11 1 3 6 4 Ton-1 Monday and Tuesday a three-reel ' 101 Bison Civil War drama, "A R. II. E i House Divided." with lots of speedy 2 7 2 action and some lively battles. There 6 l'are plenty of thrills as the plot un folds and a big cast to make tho mill tary maneuvers realistic. "In Old Panama." Imp. Comedv Los Angeles 3 Portland 1 6 2 Ryan and Brooks; James and Fish er. At San Francisco R. H. r. Oakland 5 9 2 San Francisco 2 6 2 Fernoll and Pierce; Standridge. Thomas, Arlett and Spencer. At Los Angeles R. H. E. Venice 8 14 3 Sacramento 5 9 0 Raleigh and Kreitz; Stroud and Bliss. Imp. "Rinks, the Black Hand, Lively and very laughable. Miss Gladys Rahe. soprano soloist. We have installed an exhaust fan which takes 2300 cubic foot of air out of the house every minute. In 10 minutes it completely changes the air. thus Insuring cool, pure air, however crowded the house may be. There's nothing too good for our patrons. 1 Totals 39 14 16 27 8 1 Score by innings. P.P.L. A P. R 80002010 S Tlio Orpliemii. An exceptional good program for Tuesday's change: Dick. The Dead Shot. Vltagraph. Trashy novels prompt little Dick to do things that are astonishing and laughable. His mother's slipper puts the finishing touches on tho end of it. Bread on the Waters." Edison. A mother's note, begging her disgraced son to make a man of himself leads to the redemption of another man who, In gratitude, undertakes to restore the young chap to his parents. It Is a Return of Musical Tonicity at the Grantf. A return engagement of the pop uar players, Daisy and Arthur Resell, at the Grand theater win be hailed with delight by all lovers of musical comedies. There Is a brand new chorus, six pretty singing and danc ing girls. Baby Wanda will be one of the main attractions nt each per formance, delighting tho patron with her singing and dancing and her specialty should be seen by every child and mother This popular com pany will open Saturday night. First performance at 7 o'clock. Second performance at 8:45. Admission, 15 and 25 cents. Matinees Saturday and Sunday, 10 and 15 cents. A good rlace to spend the evening. The East Oregonian will buy your old rase- Must be large and oleen. Brlnx or send them to this office at your earliest conveniens,