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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1915)
VAC.V. FIGHT DAILY EAST OREGON'IAN. PENPLETOX, OREGON. TUESDA Y. JUNE 15. 1915. EIGHT PACO 'J. IT t K.INO Maijonnaisc 'Bowb You pride yourself on your Mayonnaise dress ing. Surely it is worthy a special bowl and ladle of Sterling Silver. Here from various designs, you may select one that will best match your other silver and suit your purse. For a friend, one ooulil hardly choose a more pleasing gift. Because of reasonable prieesaiid highest quality we would c.ill specie! attention to Gorham ware in exclusive and artistic patterns. Itoyiu 51. Sawtelle Established 188 SIWALU WALU filOQSE litrtAI LUUAL ItAM I'K.XDl KVON LODGE RAM. 1U.AT- 1.H.S IOSK 11Y SCOKK H' 4 IX) 2 Sl'XAY. i At Walla Walla Sunday the Pen dleton Moose team went down to de feat before the Walla Walla Moos with the score standing four to twe The players for Pendleton were Ett- banks, Moore. Elliot, Senner, Carrol, Hopper, Kruger, Hanset and Gelsel. The following abbreviated score tells the tale: R. H. E. Pendleton 2 4 Walla Walla 4 9 3 Summary Stolen bases, SUival 1, Beck 2. Hopper 2, Senner 1; two base hits, Stoval 1, Beck 2. Russell 1, Jo nas 1. Jennings 1, Moore 1. Senner I. Dywer 1: double plays, Eubanks to Elliott to Kruger; wild pitches. Gel sel 1, "Jonas 1; rnssed balls, Hanset 1; left on bases, Pendleton 6. Walla Walla 4: struck out by Jonas S, by Geissel 6: time of (tame, 1:50; con dition of field, Rood; weather, hot; umpire. Bade; scorer, Bowman. Newsy Notes ol Pendleton V . ' Away on ItiislncKS. Deputy sheriff Blakely left today for Weston mountain to appeal- In a civil action. Iirfelta lull. Lewis Cook, arrested last night for being disorderly, failed to appear In police court this morning and forfeit ed a bail of J 5. Will l.enve on Vacation. Assistant District Attorney R. I Keator will leave tomorrow for sev eral weeks' vacation at Monroe, Wash., and other sound points. He will be away until the first of September. ller, to f;t Stock. tfeorge Drumheller and John Cns uer, well known stockman of Walla Walla, were In the city today and left .later by horseback for Pilot Hock to mure stock which will be sent to Moiftana. To Attend Dedication. Local members of the lodge of Elks are planning to attend the dedt- j cation tomorrow of the new Elks' edifice at La Grande. Arrangements leaves for Testis. .McGinn Funeral Held. The funeral service for the lat Mrs. John McGinn who passed awaj Saturday night, was held this morn ing at St. Mary's Catholic church. Rev. Father Durgln officiating. Members of Daphne circle, Women of Woodcraft, attended and conducted services at the grave In Olney ceme tery. The pall bearers were William Hale. Peter Anderson, Ole . Olson, Henry Swarti and A. D. Sloan. Mrs. McGinn was born In New York In 1860. HI SINESSMEXS BANQUET. (Continued from Page l. are being made today to have quite a delegation go over to the Union county city. Marriage Licenses Issued. The following marriage licenses have been Issued at the office ot County Clerk Saline: Warren M. Darling studies the town with th Walter and Anna E. Black: Ortis O. eye ot the expert.. His lecture her6Harrls of Spokane and Zelma L. De- Peatt; Walter W. Allison and Edna LVSITAXIA VICTIMS. (Continued from page one.) CajHain Turner's Story. Capt. Turner swore his vessel didn't carry guns when he sailed from New York. Turner blamed the Cunard of ficials for the fact the Lusitania was firooeeding slowly when attacked. He ?ud the company ordered only nine teen of the vessels twenty-five boil ers worked. "We were proceeding at only eigh teen knots an hour when the ship was truuk," said turner. "I was on the tott side of the vessel when an offi t.T calld out. 'there comes a torpedo.' astern but there was no response. The engines had been put out of commis sion. Within a few minutes the ves sel listed fifteen degrees, rendering the boats on the port side useless. I gave an order for the women and children to be first In taking the boats, then I went to the bridge. I was there when the ship sank." Sheep Are Sold. A large sale of sheep was complet ed here yesterday when F. Wigles- worth a prominent farmer of the But ter Creek district, sold a band of 2500 to David McCool of North Yakima No mention was made of the price but i; ct down and saw the torpedo just I it was said to have been a good one. 'tidAire It struck. The explosion was The sheep are now quartered out near between the third and fourth funnels. the county poor farm awaiting ship I immediately ordered full speed! ment to North Yakima. f i!iimmmit:ii!iiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IF YOU HAVE FREQUENT HEAD ACHES WHICH MEDICINES DO NOT CURE; if you see distant objects more (or less) clearly, or need to hold printed mat ter nearer to or further from the eyes than formerly; or need more light. If you have observed any of these things, your sight needs the aid of correctly adopted glasses to assist as well as preserve it. Accurately fitted glases are only possible when the sight has been sciertifically tested. We have every facility for doing this and exercise the greatest care so that you may receive the utmost benefit from wearing glasses. A thorough examination and explanation of your con dition will cost you nothing. W. H. HILL Optician With Wm. Haascom, Jeweler. lllllll!lllllllli:ni!lllllli:ill!lll!!lllllllllllllllllllli:ill!l!ll!lllllllllllllllllllllll!llllll will be one ot his strongest. He will speak In the evening at the regular Chautauqua time. The speech to be given at the Commercial Association C. Meengs. lttxlstod Arres. banquet is to be for business men. It t Thomas Campbell and Frank Holn will be as hot and fast as the burning were Brrested last evening by Chief coals. Nels Darling knows the prob-'of p0ce Kearney In the 0 -W. R. A lems mat conironi rrnuieiun met- N. freight yards. Both men were chants He Is coming here to help . drunk but Holn resisted arrest and them line up their campaign to fight , force& the chief to use his club. They the forces which are in any way acting vfre given a J5 flne or tnree ,javs ) in a manner detrimental to tne great est realization of business methods. Towns put on a new air after Dar ling leaves. They look more prosper ous The business men "hang togeth. er for the good of the town" as he puts it. Darling brings about a busi ness revival that is a lasting one. He Attorney B. L. Ballard, who has been associated with Will M. Pater son the last 14 months, left last night for Dallas, Texas, where he will en ter a large law firm of which one of his relatives Is a member. Mr. Bal lard returned this week from Alaska where he thought at first he might locate but the conditions there did not please him so he decided to re tourn. Mr. Ballard's home la In Dal las but he came to Pendleton from Nashville, Tennessee, after his grad uating from law school. jail In police court this, morning and chose the latter. iMiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimi iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiimnmiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiim!,', Its the Way We Buy Our filer- f chandise For 83 Busy Stores that f 1 Enables Us to Give You Values I You Can't Get Elsewhere. E Then too, you get nothing but new, clean good. Qur i prices don't let it get old and shopworn. BETTER THINK IT OVER j IT'S WORTH WHILES. Idaho K. of P.'s Here. A delegation of Knights of Pythias from southern Idaho were here for a short time this morning on the way to Lewlston to attend the grand lodge tells merchants how to keep money atj convention. Two special sleepers car home, in the small cities and country! ried the delegation. Delegates of the towns which are the backbone of j Pythian Sisters were also In the party. the nation. Among the notable Idaho Pythians Every Pendleton business man were Charles E. Harris of Blackfoot, should hear Darling. Commercial , Grand Chancellor of Idaho and Sher clubs throughout the state have ar-jmanG. King of Boise, supreme repre ranged banquets as the local assocla-, sentative. tion has done. In California Darling J created a great furore. He appeared (linutaiiqiia Committee Meets, at Bakersfield, California, one even- Members of the Chautauqua com ing following his regular address, j mittee met last evening and discussed Two hundred representative business! the campaign which will be carried men heard him hand out burning j on by local merchants during chau thoughts for two solid hours. He tauqua week here. It is the plan of told them what was wrong with their, the merchants to get as large a num cltv and thev took it, asking for; her of visitors In the city as possible more. Crops Are Enormous. That southern Idaho will have enormous crops this year, particularly In sugar beets, was the Information given here today by Charles E. Har ris, Grand Chancellor of the Idaho Knights of Pythias, who passed through here with a delegation on the way to the grand lodge conven tion at Lewlston. Mr. Harris Is also register of the United States land of fice at Blackfoot. He said that within the past few months thou sands of acres of new land has been thrown open for settlement and It la being seized upon rapidly. From eastern states and middle western states, as well as many settlers from southeastern Washington, are anxious to secure land In Idaho. One of the most prosperous years for crops Is predicted by Mr. Harris. 8-4 Foxcroft sheeting 21t 8- 4 Pepperell sheeting 2l 9- 4 Pepperell or Foxcroft sheeting, 27c value 23t Full size sheets 39, 49 Extra heavy sheets, every day price 69, 73S 83 Tillow slips 8Vs, 10 i2Vs nvt- All linen crash 8Va 10?, Best quality gingham Red Seal gingham 10t Best American prints.... 5 Bungalo aprons, 75c values at 49 Gingham house dresses, a good $1.50 value 9S Tub dresses for afternoon wear 91.98, $2.98. ?3.98, 84.98. Children's dresses 49; G9 9St. This warm weather will re quire thin dresses ; we are showing dainty tub material at 5?, SVzt 36and 40 inch tub . goods, E 35c and 50c values 18f , 25, 35. Mercerized poplin, 25c val- ue at 19 Dainty French voil, others Ejj get 75c, Golden: Rule ; price 49 E Rippletts, you don't have to E iron, every day pi .- 12V2 E rercale GVif, 10V 12Vtt 1 Apron check gingham, 5, E 6V. Galatea cloth 15 f India Linons 6V4, SVi,. S io, law. Dimity 10, 12.Vi, 15f, 2 18. 27-in. silk mull 25 Messaline silks, $1.00 val. S at 69 Chiffon Taffeta, a $L50 value 98 S S VOU CAV DO S BETTER AT S31 WE LEAD OTHERS FOLWW -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,':iiiiiiiiniiiiMiii3 skin was prettily marked but Mr. Pierce mussed It up considerable In making an end of the snake. Before getting Into Bakersfield he was met outside pf the city by a mer chant. The Bakersfield man urged Darling not to talk about certain business conditions. Darling did talk about them. He did tell the people what they should remedy. Then they raised an additional fund to bring him back again. The commercial club sent the following message and to make their visit worth while not alone for the benefit they derive from the Chautauqua but also In the ray of bargains In merchandise. The committee discussed a publicity cam paign and will work in conjunction with the merchants to make the plan a success in every detail. 'rUoners E--ae. John Heathman who has had throughout California to the various charge of the city's prisoners in work organizations: ' on the roads about the city, returned "Commercial Club: Get busy for j yesterday afternoon and reported that Darling. Meeting last night livestjtils quarry had made their getaway ever held In Bakersfield. Two hun-,with the exception of one man. dred representative men heard Dar-j Heathman went out with a gang of ling. Greatest speaker we have ever six and while his attention was be heard here. You cannot afford to !rg directed to another part of the miss the opportunity of having him work five of the me escaped. As the lecture in your city. Every town prisoners were an in iur """s uiu.. need at least one "Darling treat-, Chief Kearney ( based by a Itattlcr. To be chased by a rattlesnake was the experience Sunday of George Pierce, well known clerk at the Cen tral market. He had been fishing at Thorn Hollow and was returning home along the railroad track. He heard the warning rattle and jumped out of the way just In time as a big rattler appeared from under the rail. The snake showed fight and as Mr. Pierce did not wish to take any chances he started to run. The rep tile followed and for several yards along the right of way a pretty race took place, according to the story Mr. Pierce tells. The latter fired several shots from a revolver at the animal but missed it. Finally, the man was able to seize a heavy club lying along the track and soon dispatched the snake. The reptile was about four feet long and had Beven rattles. The Will l"ace Serious Charge. Lizzie Hothrock who was arrested last evening for disorderly conduct and I.elriK Intoxicated will have to face a more serious charge, says Chief of Po lice Kearney. After Investigating tho affair today. t'bJef Kearney announced that he will hold the woman for the September grand Jury. Tho charge against her will he Indecent exposure. To Muke lrWlmlnary Plans. Preliminary plans for the survey of the road between this city and Uma tilla will be madu Friday when County Judge March Is arranging for a trip of Inspection over the highway. This will be the first road surveyed by the county, authorization for which has alreudy been made by the count court, it is not definitely fixed yet at what time the survey will be made but It will be done as soon as County Surveyor Bradley Is able to get his in struments ready for the work. Othor roads which will be surveyed by the county will be from Pendleton to Cold Springs; from Athena to German Hall; from Pendleton to Pilot Rock frmn Milton to the etat line. and Standing of ConUwtunU at (Xw Theater wlilrii close at N'oou Tomorrow. Mlldrud Allen I 100 MIk Urotherton 4,180 Mrs, Body 14,120 Miss Calllsoii 7,880 Miss Eggerth 13,020 Mrs. Finch 7,290 Miss Froome 6.S10 Miss Graybeal 64,275 Mrs. Knight 58,730 MI.hs Klnman 2.725 Mrs. H. T. Lester 18.380 Mrs. Morrison 64.350 Miss McDonald 6.1S0 Mrs. Etta Prultt 11,765 Miss Alma Schoor 63,595 ment." Get on your toes. (Signed.) OTIS HYMER, Chautauqua Association and Commer cial Club, Bakersfield, California." This shows what live wires think of Darling. He is coming here to add additional glory to his name. Ev ery Pendleton booster is anxious to hear what he will have to say about local business conditions. this morning said he was not worrying about their getting away. If they are picked up, how ever, they will have to serve the re mainder of their time. PASTIME TODAY AND TOMORROW! ANITA STEWART, JULIA SWAYNE GORDON, HARRY NORTHUP AND ALL STAR CAST in Broadway Star.Feature. Vitagraph's Most Sensational Drama "The Painted World" It is truth stronger than fiction. A mother tries to bring up her daughter in ignor ance of her own character and her father's baseness. The child cannot escape the noxi ous taint of heredity and the pernicious blight of environment. THE STORY. The advent of her child, Yvette, arouses in Elois, an actress, the one fine trait in her nature, a tremendous mother-love. To protect her child from the influence of her own life and that of its dissolute father, becomes the one passion of her soul. She sends Yvette to a fashionable boarding school, impressing upon the child that she is a born lady and her mothtr a wealthy widow. Yvette dreads her visits home, where she has to suffer the passionate suffocating embrace and dreary companioship of her mother. On one of these visits she meets her father under conditions so strange she is led to be lieve she is dreaming, as her mother says, and that the scar her mother carries across her eye is the result of a fall. Her schooling over Yvette returns home. Her mother leaves her alone the first evening and her father, deep in his cups, discloses the fact that her mother is an actress. Unbelieving, Yvette rushes to the theatre, sees her mother there posing in the semi-nude. Her inherited tendencies break through the thin veneer of moral training inculcated by her mother, and unknown to Elois, she becomes a bur lesque queen, through a friend of her father's, a theatrical manager. Her mother re turns home one night to find her drunken husband there and her daughter missing. )She beseeches him to tell her where Yvette is, but he refuses. Just then Yvette, now a member of the "painted world," enters the room. Elois realizes that her daughter is al ready on the downward path, saves the sirl's soul by slaying her body, destroys herself, and leaves evidence placing the guilt upon her miserable husband, who has been the cause of all their sorrow. WEBER & FIELDS the World's Greatest Comedians in One Reel Comedy Star Feature "TWO OF THE BRAVEST" See these well known comedians in this side splitter. Admission, Adults 10c, Children 5c Itotlirocks In Again. Andy and Lizie P.othrock are again in the city Jail. Lizzie was only let out a day ago after serving a 25- day sentence and last night drank too freely of the cup that cheers and! caused the neighbors along West Altaj street such annoyance that the police department was notified. Officer i Stevens went to the scene and brought the woman In. Her husband sought to interfere and he, too, was arrested. They appeared in police court this morning and Judge Fitz Gerald gave each a $10 fine or five days in Jail. They each took the Jail sentence. A citizen, George Pierce, assisted In the arrests of the couple, Not Pleased With Land. Chief of Police Kearney yesterday returned from a trip to Portland and the Willamette valley. In the latter place he looked at some of the high priced wheat land but says It does not compare with the land In Uma tilla county. Land in the valley la selling between $200 and $300 an acre. The gardens there also, says the chief, does not compare with those in this county. He declared that he returned to Pendleton more pleased than ever with the conditions here and was not at all favorably Impress ed with the land offered around Sa lem. Chief Kearney had been away since Thursday. Gypsy Pays Hue. Stealing $10 from an open till In the Central market lact evening, a gypsy, who gave the name of Mary, was arrested, and In police court this morning paid a fine of $15 for telling fortunes without a license. The charge of larceny against her was dropped because of the fact that she has several small children. The wo man appeared at the market last eT- enlng and wanted to tell fortunes. Seeing the till open she purloined $10 and beat a hasty retreat. Zoo Carney shortly afterwards discovered the loss. He and Deputy Sheriff Estes set out In an automobile to try to find the woman and they discovered her on the way out of town. She was brought back and locked In Jail. When It was found she had several small chil dren, Mr. Carney was willing to drop his charge against her and she was let go with the payment of a $16 fine for not having procured a license to tell fortunes. ' TO WHOM IT MAN CONCERN. One person in every ten wearing glasses never have them changed, because they were fortunate and found some one who actually knew how to fit glasses. In Pendleton and vicinity we have five hundred patrons who are absolutely guaranteed that they will never have to have their glasses changed except for the reading distance. We are here to make good. Is it economy or good policy to buy glasses and eye testing that will answer the purpose for a few months or possibly three or four years? D. N. REBER, M. D. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Suecialist. Schmidt Building, Pendleton, Ore. SMAMi D1.FIXTS OF THE EYK GROW TO GREAT ONES Uncorrected errors or refraction are the cause of most eye trouble. lropcr flttlnir glaive In tlmo con serve your eyesight. There are tens of thousands who waited too long that would gladly pay any price for good eyesight. The best time to have your eyes fitted with glasses is when they first begin to fail. If you have any reason to believe that your eyes need atten tion It will pay you to come at once and have them thoroughly ex amined. I have nothing to do but fit and grind glnsfes and can refer you to pleased patrons by the hun dred. My prices for glasses are not hlKh. DALE ROTHWELL Exclusive Optician American Nat. Bank BIdg., Pendleton. Phone 609 , . . ,. ,j, , Today and Tomorrow! EMILY STEVENS, NIECE OF MRS. FISK, PLAYING THE TITLE ROLE IN 99 The thrilling drama of modern city life. The conflict between right and wrong, the endeavor to lead a good life amidst discouraging circumstances, and finally rising high above all, make this a memorable picture. 1 Vaudeville: Black Face Charley Mack FUNNY SAYINGS AND SONGS New Program Today. THURSDAY MARY PICKFORD, AMERICA'S FOREMOST FILM ACTRESS, IN "TESS OF THE STORM COUNTRY." The Alta Theatre