PAGE TEN. DAILY BAST OIU2COXIAX. PENDLETON. OREGON ' FRIDAY. NOVEMBER ii, i9il. TEN PAGES. STAND AR.D Just what our name implies, every article purchated from our new stock of staple nnJ fancy groceries will be found of the HIGHEST STANDARD. Fresh and Priced Low Pesldes we are Just as careful In filling phone orders as if you made the selection yourself. New stock arriv ing dally at the STANDARD GROCERY COMPANY, ISC. PHONE MAIN 96. WHERE ALL ARE PLEASED. FRANK O'GARA. Pre. HERNARD O'GARA, Sec-Troaa. Newsy Notes of Pendleton No Pollvo Court. Offenders were lacking In the po- : lice court this morning and the mu- chinery of that mill of Justice was not sot in action. AGED NEGRO WOMAN DIES FROM BURNS. Mrs. Caron Stewart, an and colored woman and mother of Mrs. Al Richard on, died at her home on Iiluff street at 2 o'- clock this afternoon as a result of burns received two days ago when her clothing caught fire. 1 Story Hour Tomorrow. i The regular children's hour will be; 1 held in the public library rooms to- I . morrow morning, with IUius I.edl 1 '. Evans in charge. Mi'Oominuu-li-Ilalos Lifrnso. i True to the rumors circulated yes terday, a marriage license was issued yesterday afternoon to John E. Me- ; Cornimaeh and Miss Hilda Hales and the young people were married last evening. Just as much Jealousy and political I ........ ...ii; . i ! niitii fulling no t hici.'iiii ui x I republican assembly, according to all ' reports reaching the city. There are several candidates who would like to make the trip back to the home of j the White Father and the result will not be known until the ballots are counted. DEVITTS WIN BOWLING MATCH U:.I HOOVER'S ROLLERS DOWN IN FIRST MATCH City Ivoajrue of Four Teams Organize ami Will Play Series of Matches During Sonjmii Another Rattle .SclHHluled for Monday Night. In the first of a series of bowling games which is to last until March, Pat McDevitt's team last night won Out over L. E. Hoover's rollers by the score of 2310 to 22S5, and the big turnament which is to decide the per sonnel of the team of five which is fo represent Pendleton at the ,big national tournament in Los Angeles was formally launched. (.". llonday night a league of four terras was organized. Ray Crystal wid Adolph Molitor being the respec tive captains of the two teams which have not yet clashed. Their bowlers vvill meet next Monday evening, af .er which some idea may be secured as to the comparative strength of the teams. , Each team will meet each other one five times and these games will make the tournament last until March, when the five men having the best Mal scores will be chosen for the representative team to go to the Cal ifornia tournament. A dance is to be given soon after Thanksgiving for the purpose of rais ing funds with which to defray the expenses and it is probable that others will follow later on. According to members of the teams, seats will be irranged in the Pastime parlors and ladies will be invited to attend on the evenings set as'de for the tournament games. I Tako Thanksgiving Initiations. j The d'fferent schools of the city ' are today contributing donations of clothes, provisions and money as a Thanksgiving gift to the boys' and girls' aid society of Portland. This is an annual custom of the schools In this city and indications are that the response this year will be fully as generous as In the past. HUNTERS IN ROCKIES .MAROONED BY BLIZZARD Cumberland, Wis. John W. Hogan arrived here and relates a thrilling ex perience while on a hunting expedi tion in the Sun river range of the Rocky mountains. With a guide Mr. Hogan started from Choteau, Mont., for the moun tains, and when traversing a narrow trail on a mountain ledge they were overtaken by a terrific blizzard and the thermometer fell to twenty below zero. In the blinding snow storm the horse carrying the pack of provisions was struck by an avalanche of snow and hurled over the ledge Into the Sun party with nothing to eat excepting a ty with nothing to eat excepting a few graham crackers. The other horse caught its foot In a crevice and broke its leg. They killed this horse and subsisted upon crackers, horsemeat and a quart ot Scotch whisky for four days, when the storm subsided and they followed the trail back to civilization. Stoekjrrowera Want Location. Secertary Jack Keefe of the Com mercial association is in receipt of letters from two California men who are desirous of engaging In the stock business in this county. They wish to secure all of the advance Information possible on the conditions and oppor tunities here and this the secretary is sending them. Haley Is No. 13... On the official ballot for the mu nicipal election which was placed in the hands of the printers today, J. R. Raley, 'candidate for mayor, is No. 13, but he declares his superstition runs contrary to the popular signifi cance attached to this number and believes it is an omen of good fortune. FATHER OF 32 VERY ILL. Virginian. Married Three Times, Con sidered a Romeo In His Days. Cape Charles, Va. John W. Guy, father of more children than any oth er known man in the county, Is dan gerously ill at his home near Melfa. Guy is 79 years of age and father of thirty-two children. He has been thrice married and there was enough romance in one of his marriages to write him down as a Romeo at the time. To Repair Injured Tooth. Frank Judd. the young son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Judd. who lost the half of one of his front teeth recently In a fall from his pony, left this morn ing with his mother for Portland, where he will have the tooth repair ed. Dr. Tom Vaughan has been doing the preparatory treatment and his brother. Dr. Eugene Vaughan, will complete the dental work. . 15 j $f You are counting the days to Merry Christmas. And you are also racking your brains to find the best way to make it a cooking event that will bring praise from your family and friends. This Store Will Aid You All die latest dainties are carried in stock the finest materials .., in::ke that delicious idum pudding, that appetizing mince pie M.d all the other delights of the season. Turkey and Cranberry Sauce Learns Wlwt't. in a Name. S. E. Jackson, popular and well known traveling insurance man, has found that there Is something in a name and that something has been erief for him. He lives in Portland and has had trouble for many years because his mail is frequently deliv ered to Sam Jackson, publisher of the Oregon Journal. Just now he is wait ing in this city for the return of a few necessary letters which went to the wrong Jackson and will then leave on a long-postponed trip to Pilot Rock. Basketball Game Tonight. Tonight will witness the opening of the basketball season of the city and the girls of the high school will have the honor of doing the opening act. The freshmen and sophomore girls have selected a team to represent the two classes and to mix In a fray with a team from the two upper classes. The game will be played in the high school gymnasium and will com mence at 7:30. The following is the line-up of the two teams: Freshman sophomore, Lola Hampton and Zella Thompson, centers, Lillian Boylen and Arline McMonies, forwards, Edna Ccutts and Ha Sturdivant, guards; Junior-senior, Ella LaZinka and Marv Jchns, center, Lillian Gulllford and Francis Smith, Forwards, Helen Johns and Hazel Wagoner, guards. Injured Man Recovering. Harry Leese, the young man who suffered a severe fracture of the bones in one of his feet yesterday while work ing on the Alta street water trench, is reported to be getting along in splen did shape today. FIGHTS EAGLE FOR LIFE. Little Falls. Minn.. Nov. 24 -Klmer Peterson, 15 years old, living four miles west of this rltv. had a JinrH battle with an eagle and was saved trom serious Injury only by the ar rival of a brother. The bov had shot the hlrrl utiloh was In a tree. The eagle fell to the ground and immediately vent nl th. boy with its talons. The bird's claws oecame tastened In the boy's cloth ing and the lad was unable to free himself. Elmer was badly frightened and his strength was giving out when nis orntner arrived and killed the eagle with a club. The bird measured five feet across the wings. Attel Bout Johnson. New York, Nov. 24. Abe Attell. featherweight champ'on, gave Leo Johnson, who claimed the colored featherweight title, a bad beating here last night In the 5th round John son's seconds threw a towel Into the ring but Jc!.nson kicked It out, pro testing that, he was strong enough to continue, but the referee stopped the bout, which was scheduled for 10 rounds. BEATTIE ADMITS MlRDER AXD PAY'S PENALTY We continue 2 days more our great savings in Shirts fC (1T For any style shirt J) ijvf, C that is worth twice as much. While they last 69c BOSTON STORE Goinr out of business knew he was guilty. Reuluti Slept During Execution. New York, Nov. 24. As Henry Clay Beattle, Jr., was being shocked Beulah Binford, the woman for whom he murdered his young wife and al so died slept soundly, following a cheerful night spent at a theater with a party of friends and members to death this morning at Richmond, j of the home where she is staying. (Continiued from page one.) Indians Holding Council. For the purpose of selecting a member of each of the three trihe3 on the reservation to attend the con ference at Washington, D. C, on Dec. 4, at which the Brotherhood of North American Indians will be organized, the local Indians are holding a coun cil at the agency today, and there Is Finnan Haddie Sealshipt Oyster?, daily Kippered Salmon Jones Dairy Farm Sausage Mince Meat Imported Maccaroni Flaked Hominy Loaf Roquefort Cheese Fancy Apples Gray Bros. Grocery Co. ErrYOU CELEBRATED g ft R C STOMACH O1 llAll SITTERS win back your health and o v e r c o me a spell of Indigestion, Constipation Biliousness, Colds, Grippe Malaria, kZ t I. e Bitters tow7 ' Try It fdav Small Defects of the Eye If neglected grow to great ones. Many eye diseases as well as poor sight are caused by eye strain resulting from errors of refraction. Properly Fitted Glasses are a great help In times of eye trouble. If you want the best come here. Our methods of fitting are the latest and best. Hundreds of satisfied patrons recommend our work. DALE ROTHWELL Optometrist. At Hanscom's Jewelry Store, Pendleton. to answer any question relating to his Intimacy with Beulah Binford. But during the morning Paul Beattie, Henry's cousin, had confessed to the Richmond police that on the Satur day prior to the klll'ng he had bought a single barrel shotgun for his cousin and had turned It over to him, with three cartridges Paul later Identified the gun found on Midloth ian turnpike as the gun he gave his cousfn. The inquest adjourned at noon with Beattie still on the stand and while he was eating lunch at his home, of ficers accompanied by Paul Bettle en tered the house and arrested him. At the afternoon session of the Inquest, Beulah Binford took the stand and told of her relations with Beatt'e. She told of the renewal of these relations shortly after Beattle's son. Henry Clay Beattie III was born, and her re turn to Richmond from Norfolk where she met Beattie. The coroner's Jury after a brief consideration held Beattie for the ac tion of the grand Jury. On August 14, the grand Jury re turned an Indictment against Beattie for murder 'n the fr.U degree, nnd on August 21, he was placed on trial. Then ensued one of the strangest, bit terest legal battles that Virginia has ever known. Out In the little Chesterfield coun ty court house, fourteen miles from Richmond, five miles from a railroad, a courteous, kindly southern gentle man, Judge Watson, took charge of the trial. D'str'ct Attorney Gregory assisted by Louis O. Wendenburg. one of Rirhmond's leading criminal Jawyers conducted the prosecution and Harry M Smith and Hill Carter made the fight for Beattle's life. The physical facts surrounding the cr'me. and contrad'rtory nature of the stories told by Henry Beattie, h's unfaithfulness to his wife, and the story "of his cousin Paul were the foundation upon which the state rest ed Its case. The father, sister nnd friends of Beattie took the stand in a va'n effort to estnhl'sh for him a reputation thnt would convince the twelve Chesterfield county farmers who made up the Jury, that he was Incapable of the' crime charged against him. Throughout the trial. Paul Beattie, the star witness for the prosecution, and little seventeen year old Beulah Binford, sweetheart of the prisoner, were kept locked In Henr'co county ja'l Paul was on- the stand for two days hut the seventeen year old girl was never taken to Chesterfield court hoiie to tell her story. She had been summoned ns a witness by the prose cution but the shrewd lawyers believ ed that her attachment for Henry Beattie would make her an undesir able witness, and she was never plac ed on the stnd. In her stead, her mother, a big. middle-ngod woman, told the story of her daughter's relntlons with Henry I Beattie; his love for the girl and h's j renewal of the'r Intimacy after "his marrlge. After three weeks of tak I Ing testimony, nnd argument, the twelve Chesterfield county farmers re ' tired one evening to the Jury, mom. ! knelt down and prayed for Divine 1 guidance, discussed the ev'dence, knelt and prayed again and then filed Into the court room with a ver dict of gu'ltv. Judge Wnt'on Imme diately pronounced the death sentence fixing November 24, today, as the date of the execution. An appeal to the higher courts failed, nnd Beattie f'xed h's hope on an nnnl'otlon for pardon, reprieve or eommuttlon of sentence to Oovernor Mann After ft siort consideration, however. Governor Mann. In a scath lnr statement declined to grant the pardon, nnd expressed the opinion that Bentt'o was aftmptlng to escape the penalty of a crime of which he Headquarters for Drummers' Sample Work Gloves Mr. Workinginnn, don't buy thnt next pair of gloves until you have seen our large lino and tho big savings wc can afford .you on every pair. No matter what size, what leather or what price you want to pay. You can do better here THE HUB Drummer's Samp es at Lower Prices Specials for Saturday .'35c. Lustre Mohair, yard 25 20c Kimona Cloth, 3 yards .. 50 3.'c Dress Good 23 $1.00 Table Linen 80? Lot Children's Bear Skin Coats $1.50 Men's Outing Shirts 45 $2.00 Misses' Sweaters $1.50 Lot Children's Underwear ' 15 THE WONDER STORE The Store for Thrifty Teople, " Cut Prices Now On LADIES' SUITS CLEANED AND PRESSED $2.00 LADIES' SUITS PRESSED .' $1.00 MEN'S SUITS CLEANED AND PRESSED $2.00 MEN'S SUITS PRESSED 75c Have your clothes cleaned at an up-to-date place and by up-to-date methods. ' Pendleton Dye Works Phone .Va'" 189 200 1-2 E. Alt. Fresh Goods Every Day Here's the Place to Cet II Fl l7' MINCE MEAT, CHOW CHOW IICI 11 L PICKLES AND SAUER KRAUT Jeo cranberries, celerj and cauliflower and meata of all kinds Pendleton Cash Market Cor E. Court and Johnson Sta. Phone Main 101 CLARK'S GROCERY WHEN YOU ORDER GROCERIES. INSIST THAT THEY BE FRESH That is one of the nice features of trading at this store. Our low cash prices keep the stock a changing and new lines ar riving daily. THE THANKSGIVING DINNER CAN BE SECURED IN ITS ENTIRETY AT CLARK'S GROCERY PhoneJMain 174 612 Main Street