East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, July 21, 1913, EVENING EDITION, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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FIOTTT PAGER.
DAILY EAST OREGONvTAW.' PEXPLKTOV. ORKOON. MONDAY. JULY 21, 1010.
PAGE THREE.
IP
GAME SATURDAY ENDS
IN VICTORY FORW.W.
A brace of two-baggers In the eighth
frame from the sticks of Sheely and
Lundstrum Saturday broke up what
was probably the fastest and cleanest
game played In the league this year.
By virtue of those two clouts, "Walla
Walla won the game by a 1 to 0 score.
Peet and Welch, the same two
heavers who once before engaged In
a sixteen Inning battle, fought a pitch
ing duel from the first Inning to the
last and, save In that 'eighth, there
was nothing to chose between them.
Welch allowed four safe ones and
Peet five. Welch struck out three
while the red topped boy whiffed ten.
Both walked one man, neither hit a
batter and neither contributed a wild
pitch.
Making the game more remarkable
is the fact that, despite the one score
of the game, there were but four run
r.ers left on bases, two Bears and two
Bucks. All others who reached first
safely, excepting Sheely who made the
circuit, fell victims to doubles or were
caught out on bases. In the first
seven Innings but 21 men faced Peet
while lii the last seven Welch pitched J
to only 21. The game was played In
one hour and twenty minutes, a rec
ord breaker.
Wal.a Walla. AB R1BPOAK
Johnson, rf 4 0 0 1 1 0
Chllders. 3b 4 0 1 1 3 0
Davis, 2b 3 0 1 4 5 0
Martini, If 3 0 0 1 0 0
Sheely. lb 3 1 1 13 1 0
Harmon, cf .......3 0 0 0 0 0
Lundstrum, ss ....3 0 2 3 3 0
Brown, c 3 0 0 3 2 0
Welch, p 3 0 0 1 2 0
Totals 29 1 5 27 17 0
Pendleton. AB It 1BPO A K
Naughton. 2b 4 0 1 1 1 0
Lodell, lb 4 0 0 4 1 0
Varlan. cf 3 0. 1 3 0 0
Haworth, rf 3 0 0 5 1 0
Beid. If 3 0 0 1 1 0
McKune. 3b 3 0 1 2 1 0
King, c 3 0 1 9 2 0
Augustus, ss 2 .0 0 1 1 0
Peet, p 3 0 0 1 0 0
Totals 2S 0 4 27 8 0
' Score by Innings:
w. w. . ...n o ooooooi o 1
W. W H 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 15
Pendleton. It 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
The Kind YoaHais Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
NEW CITY
SCAVENGER
SERVICE
We will haul your trash and gar
bage at the following small cost
to you:
OXK TRIP A WEKK FOR 75c A
MONTH.
TWO TRIPS A WEKK FOB tl.25
A MONTH.
Let us keep your premises sani
tary and sightly at a cost to you
so small you'll never miss the
money.
Anything ami Everything Hauled
Away.
E. T. MILLER
612 Walnut Street, Pendleton.
Don't Make Your
: GetVisl
- (poK
PACIFIC POWER & LIGHT
"Always at Your Service"
To)
Pendleton. H 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 04
Summary: Earned runs Walla
Walla 1. Two base hits Lundstrum
2, Sheely, Davis. Stolen baBes Da
vis. First on balls off Welch 1; off
Peet 1. Struck out by Welch 3, by
Peet 10. Left on bases Walla Walla
2'; Pendleton 2. Double plays Ha
worth to Lodell; Johnson to , Sheely.
Time of game 1:20. Umpire Hall.
NORTH YAKIMA IS '
VICTOR SATURDAY
NORTH YAKIMA. July 21. While
Umpire Starkell's decisions were no
worse than usual Saturd'M-, they
seemed always to give Bflse the worst
of It. North Yakima won 7 to 1.
The Braves got three earned runs
to none for Boise.
North Yakima scored two In the
second on a walk, a hit by a pitched
ball a sacrifice and a single.
The Braves got two In the third on
a walk, a sacrifice and three singles.
Another came over in the fifth on a
single, a steal and a single.
Yakima took another In the sixth
on an error by Reams, two stolen bas
es and an error by Blausser who tried
to bluff tha he thought the winning
was over when Starkell had called
Ford safe stealing third.
The Braves got one In the eighth
on three sing'es In a row.
Boise got men to first every inning
but the last three Their one score
came In the sixth on two walks, and !
a single.
Woods fanned two ad walked four.
Kile fanned ten and walked four. The
Braves stole second four times and
third onoe. The Irrigators stole sec
ond once. The score: R. II. E
Boise l 4 2
North Yakima 7 12 1
Woods and Gard; Kile and Taylor.
DECISION GOES TO
WELSH OVER O'BRIEN
VANCOUVER, B. C. July 21.
"Young Philadelphia Jack O'Brien"
.'or the first time In his brief ring ca
reer attempted the 15 round route at
Brlghouse arena Saturday afternoon
against Freddie Welsh, the' light
weight champlonand though he fail
ed to lower the colors of the British
er, he gave him a worthy opponent.
Welsh received the decision at the
end of the 15th round from Referee
Jimmy Hewitt and the cheers for
Welsh indicated that the decision was
a popular one.
O'Brien showed all the wonderful
speed and eluslveness claimed for him
but only In flashes. Most of the
time he ww too busy hanging on in
the clinches to escape the Infighting
of the British champion to show his
need.
There was very little long range
boxing, the boxers coming Into clinch
after clinch throughout the 15 rounds.
When they did stay at a distance
though, O'Brien more than held his'
own and In one round particularly,
the tenth, he clearly outfought Welsh
In the final round. Welsh was on
top of O'Brien all the way.
Jack was tired and hung on desper
ately In every clinch, forcing the
referee to pry them apart while Welsh
kept on ringing In punches at every
opportunity. The gong found them
In a clinch .
At the conclusion of the bout neith
er boxpr showed much evidence of
the milling.
SOME IMPROVEMENT IX CHINA
PEKINfi. July 21. The situation
brought about by the rebellion In the
southern provinces of China was im
proved somewhat Friday as regarded
from a northern point of view. Few
er soldiers have deserted the govern
ment of Provincial President Yuan
Shi Kai than had been anticipated.
Heavy fighting Is reported at Kal
Kulng. after a lull following the re
cent defeat of the southern forces at
Hu Chow. The leaders of the south
ern forces Issued a proclamation an
nouncing the appointment as presi
dent of the republic of Tsn Chun I
Hsuan, former viceroy of Canton, and
Yuan Chi Kai's old enemy. The
southern rebels Thursday killed 20
officers who remained .loyal to the
Peking government
Home a Bake Oven This Summer
1 w
Wit
Gas iVJL-
SUNDAY'S GAME
THE WORST YET
liut-karooe Play Like Hunch of Town,
lot Kids Hears Rat' at Will,
Winning 15-4.
if
If Saturday's game was the bexi
that has been played in Pendleton,
the Sunday fiasco was the worst. The
Euckarooes played like a bunch of
townlot kids and the Bears wielded
the big stick like nine Teddy. Roose
velts. The result, a 15 to 4 victory
for Walla Walla, could hardly have
been otherwise.
The first inning was good and gave
promise of a royal battle between the
southpaws, Homer Jamleson and Paul
Brldger, the latter late of the Boise
squad. But In the second the Pen
dleton support put the pitcher In a
hole and the fireworks started, ending
In a homerun by Johnson which
brought the score for the Inning up to
fcur.
In the next and the npxt there was
a repetition and In the fourth there
was a shakeup, Osborne going to the
slab, Jamleson to first, Lodell re
tiring and King and Haworth chang
ing positions! The result was the
Hi;mi Osborne got his bumps too
and In the seven Shortstop Augustus
was shoved Into the box In response
to a throaty demand from the grand
stand. Only then did the rungetting
stop. For the final three Innings, he
held the slugging Bruins to one
scratch hit and no scores.
Brldger was master of the situation
at all times. He had plenty of stuff
on the spheroid and good control. He
was not striking them out but kept
the ball on the ground within easy
reach of the Infield or high in the air
for the outfielders. In the third, a
walk, a single by Jamleson and a
scratch hit by Naughton gave the
Bucks oije and In the 7th a pass, a
single by Osborne and Varian's home
run gave them the other three.
The big feature of the game was the
number of homeruns batted out. Five
four-ply swats were clouted. Walla
Walla getting four. Martini, who
leads the league In the homerun col
umn, added two to his string. In the
fourth he hit the ball over center and
Haworth never did find it until Marty
was on the bench. In the sixth, he
swung on one of Osborne's offerings
for tne longest hit ever seen on the
local diamond, the ball traveling over
Reld's head into the Round-up pad
docks back of the bleachers. In the
same Inning, Lundstrum made the cir
cuit on a long hit to center. Johnson
made a homer In the second and Varl
an one in the seventh.
Walla Walla. AB R H PO A E
Harmon, cf 4 1 1 5 0 0
Chllders. 3b '. 5 1 2 1 ,1 0
Davis. 2b 3 1 0 0 1
Martini, If 6 3 4 5 0 0
Sheely, lb 5 3 3 7.0 0
Lundstrum, sa ....5 2. 2 .1 3 0
Johnson, rf 5 2 2 3 0 0
Brown, c 5 0 1 5 1 0
Brldger, p 5 2 1 0 0 0
Totals 42 15 16 27 8 1
Pendleton. AB R H PO A E
Naughton. 2b .....5 0 1 1 2 1
Lodell, lb 1 0 0 6 1 0
Osborne, p-ss 2 1 1 4 1 0
Varlan. cf 4 1 2 4 1 0
Haworth. rf-c ....4 0 1 2 0 0
Reld, If 4 0 0 1 0 0
McKune. 3b 4 0 0 0 1 0
King, c-rf 4 0 0 2 0 1
Augustus, ss-p ...2 2 0 2 5 3
Jamleson, p-lb ...4 0 2 5 6 0
Totals 34 4.. S 27 17 5
Score by Innings:
Walla Walla 04242300 015
Pendleton ....00100030 0 4
Summary Left on bases. Walla
Wal'a 3. Pendleton 6; home runs.
Martini 2, Johnson, Lundstrum; two
base hits, Harmon, Sheely; three base
dilts, Lundstrum; stolen bases. Chil
ders. Martini. Sheely; double plays,
Jamleson to Lodell, Chllders to Brown
to Sheely, Varlan to Osborne; passed
balls. King 1; umpire. Hall; time of
game. 1:50; struck out by Brldger 3.
Jamleson 1, Osborne 2; base on balls,
off Brldeer 3. Jamleson 2, Augustus
1; Innings pitched. Jamleson 4. Os
borne 2. Augustus 3; hits off Jamleson
9. off Osborne 6, off Augustus 1; de
feat charged to Jamleson.
1
'
COMPANY
Phone 40
N. YAKIMA PLAYS
HERE THIS WEEK
After breaking even with their old
enemies last week, the Pendleton
Buckarooes will engage this week in
a six game series with the North Ya
kima Braves who finished the first
half of the season in the cellar but
who are starting on the second half
In a way that makes them serious
contenders for first honors. The ser
ies will be played here In Pendleton.
North Yaklha has strengthened con
siderably since her other series here.
The acquisition of Fitchner to her
pitching staff, Nadeau to the outfield
and Harrod and Netzel to the Infield
has added much to her strength in
the field and at bat, so much in fact
that she took four out of six last
week from Boise, the league leaders.
Pendleton, on the other hand. Is
probably weaker than at any time this
season. Berger and Peet seem to be
the only pitchers able to do creditable
work while the sale of Rader will be
felt both In the fielding and batting
departments. Altogether things do
not look propitious for a victorious
series.
JAPAN IS NOT
YET SATISFIED
International Question 1 Said to
Have Reached Deadlock
Further Negotiations.
TOKIO, July 21. Considerable dis
appointment is felt In Japan in con
nection with the American reply V
the last two Japanese notes on the
subject of the California land legis
lation which does not accept any of
the Japanese contentions that the
bi'.l violates the Japanese-American
treaty and does not offer any sugges
tion for the solution of the difficulty.
The situation here has reached a
deadlock. Japan has not yet decid
ed on her next step but Is so desirous
of maintaining friendly relations that
li Is believed she will not adopt re
taliatory measures, such as the de
nunciation of the treaty on the
ground that it is useless or the reduc
tion of the right of American citizens
in Japan.
The Japanese public has been led
by the press to the belief that Wash
ington would afford some relief to
the situation and therefore the gov
ernmnt's task has been difficult
The public generally Is absorbed in
the development of the Chinese situ
ation, in regard to which official ad
vices show that the rebellion in
southern China has become grave.
SMOKES OPIUM
ON A PULLMAN
Man 1 Found in Berth With Com
plete Outfit Conductor Con
fiscates Lay-out.
BAKER, Ore, July 21. A few
evenings ago as No. 5 O.-W. R. & X.
train pulled into Baker the fumes of
burning opium were detected by the
Pullman porter, who notified the con
ductor, and together they went to a
berth occupied by a through passen
ger and found him smoking opium
Just as they do It in Chinatown. A
full opium layout, consisting of the
long pipe, lamp, tray and all the other
accessories, Including a tael of opi
um, were found and confiscated by
the conductor.
RAKER CHERRIES MAKE A HIT
Box of Lanilierts In Portland Do
MiK'li to Advertise Eastern
Ore roil Product.
BAKEF. Ore., July 21. Baker
county's Truit Industry received some
valuable publicity the past week,
w hen a box of Lambert cherries, rais
ed by Matt Welter at his ranch at
Newbridge Eaele valley, was on ex
hibition for two days at the Portland
Commercial club. The cherries, which
were of the highest quality and as
Tine fruit as produced anywnere. were
sent by the Baker Commercial club,
and Publicity Manager Meacham re
ceived a letter from Secretary C. C.
Chapman stating tht the cherries had
been the center of attraction and
highly commended by the many who
observed them.
They were not sufficiently well pre
served for processing, according to
Mr. Chapman, who says,the exhibit
certainly turned the eyes of many in
terested In fruit culture on Baker
county He wants some of the cher
ries and other Baker county fruit pre
served for the Oregon exhibits at the
eastern land shows, and Mr. Mea
cham will prepare the same as re
quested. fiOI.I STRIKE CAVSES RUSH.
Miners Hasten to Shushanna River
Rich Placer leposlt3 Re.
ported Found.
CORDOVA. Alaska, July 21. Con
firmation of reports of a big placer
strike on Shushanna river have caused
a great stampede among Alaskans to
the new diggings. A special train
left here with a large number of men
aboard and at Chltlna extra coaches
were coupled on to accommodate the
stampeders. Men are quitting the
copper mines and the railroad to join
In the rush. Another train w ill leave
for McCarthy with a large crowd and
a special stock car. reservations hav
ing already been made for 17 horses
ENDS PAIX RV Sl ICIDE.
DECATUR, Ala . July 21. Pinned
beneath his overturned locomotive,
Huston Fleming, an engineer, put an
end to his torture by cutting his own
throat late Thursday night, when spec
tutors of his plight refused his request
to kill htm. Fleming, with Floyd
Hamlin, ntr Inspector, was testing a
new locomotive In the Louisville &
Nashville yards when It was hurled"
from the tracks by a switch engine
and overturned. Hamlin died Friday.
MANY LAMBS
SOLD LATELY
Wallowa County Sheepmen Close
Deal for 16.000 Animal ,
Bring 11-1 Cents Pound. J
ENTERPRISE, July 21. The Rec
ord-Chieftain says that more than 16.
000 lambs have been sold by Wallowa
county sheepmen within the last few
days to Samuel Palmer of Denver.
He bought coarse wool lambs only,
paying 4 1-4 cents a pound. They will
be delivered from the first of Sep
tember to the middle of October and
will be shipped from Enterprise, Wal-lc-wa
and Elgin according to con
venience to grazing lands.
Mr. Palmer will feed part of the
lambs and will sell part to other
feeders in Colorado, at Greeley, Fort
Collins and other points. When fat
tened they will be shipped to the
Chicago market. About half of them
will be ready for the market when
shipped from this county, Mr. Palmer
believes. He saw the sheep on the
ranges and found them In fine condi
tion.
The sellers af Jay H. Dobbin and
Fred W. Falconer, 12.000 lambs; L
C. Johnson, 1,400; J. Ray Johnson
2,100; Ray E. Vest, 1.275.
Mr. Palmer and Mr. Dobbin went
together Into the mountains west of
the Grande Ronde river to look at the
letters band. The buyer came back
reporting he had had the most stren
uous trip of his life with Mr. Dobbin
as his guide. In the roughest country
he ever had seen. Mr. Palmer also
was at Mr. Dobbin's ranch with which
he was completely captivate.!.
PARACHUTE DROPS
-MAN IS KILLED
Francis I,. Thayer, An Old, Perform
er, Falls When Contrivance
Falls Him in Air.
SEATTLE, Wash., July 21. Fran
cis L. Thayer, aged 4 7. a parachute
jumper known all over the world, was
drowned Saturday while making a
parachute descent from the aeroplane
as part of-the Potlatch air sport
He went up In an aeroplane with
Johnny Bryant At a height of 600
feet he dropped from the aeroplane
and his parachute spread above him
and the descent began. At a height
of 500 feet he broke loose from, the
parachute and fell Into the water.
Thayer was seen to fall, turning
over as he left the parachute. He
was fully 500 feet above the water
when he fell. The man seemed to
realize his danger for he rolled him
self Into a compact ball as he ap
proached the water, striking on his
face and left shoulder.
Wire Witnesses Fatal Accident.
Mrs. Thayer, Mra. Frank Bennett'
wife of the manager of the aeroplane
exhibition and Miss McKay, an avia
trlce, were in a launch which was to
pick Thayer up and they made all
sneed toward the spot where he went
down but were unable to find any
trace of the body.
Johnny Bryant will be remembered
In Pendleton, as he and Miss Alys Mc
Kay flew here several weeks ago. He
also made a flight from this city to
Athena and back, delivering copies of
the East Oregonlan. Bryant is re
garded as one of the best aviators in
the country.
FX ION MEAT CO
3LX VISITS STAX FIELD
(Special Correspondence )
STANFIELD, July 21. Wm. H.
Daughtry, president of the Union
Meat Co. of Portland, was here the
last of the week. While here he
shipped several carloads of fat cattle
to the Portland market.
Miss Emma M. Unthank of Tacoma
arrived here Thursday and will spend
some time here. Miss Unthank has a
hundred acre ranch on the Meadows
between this place and Echo.
F. W. Page of Portland Is here for
a few days looking after his Interests
at the Tage orchard.
Messrs John Moore and Fred Lan
ghtry of Butter Creek, were attend
ing to business In town this week.
E. E. Cleaver of Pendleton was in
Stanfield Saturday. t
Dr. W. G. Staplsh of Hormlston was
calling on friends here the latter part
of the week.
E. S. Severance returned Saturday
from a visit to his old home at Minot,
N. D
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Cotant visited
with friends In Hemleton Sunday.
F. P. Riley of Echo Sundayed In
Stanfield.
H. E. Allen of Potland is in the city
James Hoskins went to Portland
Saturday to buy a carload of cows for
his ranch on the Furnish project.
R. A. Holte was a Pendleton vis
itor this week. ,
WHY THE ENGLISH KEEP THEIR
WONDERFUL COMPLEXIONS I
WITH WHITBREAD
Ert doctors of the world will tall
yon that your blood must bo In good con
dition to ghre that rosy cheek and that
bright aya that ererr one admires. For over
1M years the great doctors In England
hare recommended for sleeplessness,
anaemia, nursing mothers and those In a
run-down condition the famous Whltbread
Kntitih Ale or Whltbread Renowned
6tout (Malted Extract), because they are
made from the finest barley, malt and
hops, and beln matured In the bottles,
contain no artificial ptas, making It very
easy to digest Whltbread la absolutely
unlike all other English Alea or Stout It
aids the weakest digestion and makes rich
lood.A glass of either the Whltbread
ST. J.MKS IMP
CVTTTT 1 .;. West BrtMviw
FIGHTS LONG
WITH CURRENT
Enterprise Man Has Exciting Adven
ture While Fording a Stream
Nearly Drowned.
Jonathan Haas had an experience
in the Imnaha river last week that
he is lot anxious to repeat. He has
not come back from the river yet,
but C. F. Graves was in a few Jays
and told of the incident says the En
terprise Record-Chieftain.
It seems that Mr. Haas had set out
to go up Horse creek. At the mouth
of the creek he had to cross the Im
itahifto get on the south side where
the creek flows In. He was riding
one mule and leading another that
carried a pack.
The mule Mr. Haas was riding was
tender footed. As it was urged into
the river it flinched on the rough
stones and refused to keep its course
straight across. Thus It shortly got
Into deep water where It had to
swim. The rider became alarmed and
slid off Into the river and struck for
the shore. He got hold of overhang
ing brush and was In a fair way to get
out on dry land when the mules, fol
lowing along behind him crowded In
between him and the bank.
This forced Mr. Haas to loosen his
hold on the brush and he was car
ried away on the swift current. The
river Is high from the, melting snow
in thy mountains and It rushes down
the valley in a torrent that no one
cares to breast.
The current, however, carried Mr.
Haas near the bank a short distance
down stream and he again seized a
friendly bush that hung over the river.
Tliis time the mules did not Interfere
and he climbed out safe and sound on
the bank. He caught his mules and
frund the chief damage done was a
bad scare and a thorough soaking.
SWEETEST THING IX THE WORM)
Is a baby, yet how many women are
denied this blessing because of some
physical ailment which may be cur
able. It has been said that hundreds
of children owe their existence to
Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com
pound, which we believe has brought
health and happiness to more women
in this fair land of ours than any
other remery. Adv.
0. S. GRANT WAS
WED WEEK AGO
Secret Wedding Took Place, An.
nouneetnent of Wlikii Was Made
Saturday to Friends.
SAN DIEGO, Cal., July 21 The
wedding of LV S. Grant, Jr., of this
city, and Mrs. America Workman Will
of Los Angeles which was to take
place at 7 o'clock Saturday evening
in a local hotel, did not occur.
Instead of a wedding it was an
nounced to those present at the ap
pointed time that the marriage cere
mony had been performed one week
ago by Judge George Peterbaugh.
Loss of Appetite is commonly grad
ual; one dish after another is Bet
aside. It is one of the first indica
tions that the system Is running down
and there is nothing else so good for
it as Hood's Sarsaparilla the best of
all tonics Adv.
MANY CAMPERS
TAKE TO WOODS
BAKER, Ore., July 21. Camping
out is now the order with Baker peo
ple, the fine weather of the past few
days having been the call that has
lured many to the mountains and
trout streams, and many other parties
are planning to hie forth In the next
veek. The many attractive places
offered to Baker people as a place to
spend their outings leaves it up to the
camper to select a location in almost
any direction as near or as far from
the city as desired.
For Cuts, Burns and Bruises.
In every home there should be .a
box of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, ready
to apply iln every case of burns, cuts,
wounds or scalds. J. H. Polanco,
Delvalle, Tex.. R. No. 2, writes:
"Bucklen's Arnica Salve saved my
little girl's foot No one believed it
could be cured." The world's best
salve. Only 25c. Recommended by
Koeppens. Adv.
VCHESTER S PILLS
TIIK 1I1AJHIMI i:i(.VM.
I.adlrvt AnU yor Draga'tAl for .
t ul'liM-Kr'l Uiamond ItraaaY
I'tlla in Ktd and Void aietallicN
Nues, seaie.1 with Blue Rit4oa.
Tale a athpp. Rnr of tuf
I'rarrM. Ask l II l- IIV-i-TFlTS
HIAMONO l!KM I'l U.S. fnc S
years known H Rest, Safest. Always Reliable
SOI D BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
HI
Ale or Whltbread Stout (It depends on
the taste, which one prefers) with your
supper and again at bed time lives that
peaceful sleep.
It has brought comfort to thousands et
ailing women throughout Europe. The
most temperate people keep Whltbread
Ale or Stout In their homes, because It
Is not only a delicious beverage but a
wonderful tonle and blood giver. Doctor. ,
clergymen and professional men drink It '
to build up their systems and keep them
In perfect condition. Do not accept any
other English Ale or Stout as a substitute
for the famous Whltbread because Whlt
bread Ale or Whltbread Stout are unlLk
all others. For sale locally by,
OlillM. COm'ANa
ny, No York Chj.
(