TATT.V nRffinVTlW TTrvrrT -rTw rmr. ... ....... . mni;riw,x. "nmim I J I lj I i. I I J. ' K nil) 1 T mil l - - . . ; " - i..'ii.h ii, lint. TWELVE PAOES I t " - ' - - -- ' i I .ii . . . I . Our HlilM '!trre?t-r-v-v- are BUTTER CHEESE AND EGGS the kind that maie friends for tin's jwoeery. But ter of the real creamery kind, choose that is full cream and cs that are really strictly fresh. Give this department a trial You will like it we know. All particular people do. STAND Where all are Pleased FH0NE.96 ARD GROCERY GO. Court and Johnson Sts. Newsy Notes of Pendleton Ilnlng Room and nurfot Open. The dining room and the buffet of the Hotel Pendleton are now open to the public, the dining room open- tng Tuesday and the. buffet yester day. Both are elegantly furnished. Sheriff ricks up Man. Sheriff T. p. Taylor yesterday ar rested Jesse Durbln, wanted In Am erican Falls, Idaho, on a statutory charge. The man was located on the ranch of Walter Cress well. and his associates are now almost through with, their work here. Opens Waffle cafe. Madame Louise has Just opened "The Paris Waffle Cafe" at 225 East Court street and will give both; day and night service. SENSATIONS OF ARE TOLD III A LONDON. Sept. 17. A diary, found fceside the body of Hermann Schley, a Oermnn who ended his life by sev ering the arteries in his arms, has routed the greatest interest In medi cal circle as .Inscribing the sensa tions of a roan bleeding to death. Bfhicv was employed at the Cafe Rojil. The coroner held that ss ev-! ryone was distress by the war, It u possible the German had wor ried over the conflict la which his country was engaged until he became Insxee: The dairy follows: 'I am dying! Treat humanely the German when In trouble. My heart no longer beats, but I am still living, as I am breathing. Goodbye, my I rlends from the Cafe Royal and my ; old father. Ah. how beautiful. For (he Insults I forgive you all. An re volr. S pounds 2 shillings 9 pence will I for rent for Mr. Hurtens. "Oh. what a disaster war Is! "1:25 a. m. Wednesday, Sth (sic) August 21st eclipse of the sun: grrest slaughter. My pals may enjoy themselves and sing my memories. "4: JO. Goodbye.- old Judah (man ager of the Cafe Royal), and the old miser. Xo Christmas box wanted. "4:35 I feel so happy now. No more' worries now like yesterday. Thank you. All getting dark row, but beautiful. I say good-bye to all. Don't think unkind of me. Ah, my head! :10 Old Mona. Maltre Chef, see to your Chaetau. It is dark, and I forgive you all Insults, and there were many from some of you. Goodbye, my pool friend Gassard, Gralff, etc "4:55 I canont see, but I am not able to light the gas." WESTWARD HO PARADE WILL BE BETTER THAN BEFORE mori: liuiixiAXT, moue spec- T YCVLAR WILL BE LAST DA rKATUKE. Administratrices Appointed. Laura Monterastelll was yesterday appointed administratrix of the estate of her mother, Amanda Latourelle, and Blanche Moorhouse was appointed administratrix of the estate of her husband, Mark Moorhouse. Tags for Hospital. The local graduate nurses are plan ning to make the second day of the Round-up a tag day for the benefit of St. Anthony's hospital. It Is plan ned to have tag sellers stationed at different places and to sell tags at 10 cents each. Waters llaby Dies, Lucil Eletha Waters, infant dau ghter of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Waters, died yesterday of Intestinal trouble and the funeral was held today at the family residence on the north side, Rev. C. A. Hodshire officiating. The little one was born May 3 of this year. Suit to Collect. Edison Thacker has commenced suit against T. F. Howard to collect $43.75, alleged to be due on a not executed to R. Alexander and -assigned to plaintiff and $33.20 alleged to be due for merchandise purchased. J. E. Perry is attorney for the plaintiff. sT r i Dale Rothvell i I optician m j Glasses Ground l and Fitted Lene Duplicated oo short Notice . m g All work guaranteed H H With Haute oin THE Jeweler Hi P.O. B'ld'tf. Pefull4nii WmmmOsWrnSBL More brilliant and more spectacular than ever before will be the Westward Ho parade on the last day of the Roun l-up next week. There will be prettier floats and more of them, more cowboys, more In lians and more specii.1 features symbolical of the old west. This is the promise of Fred Earl, director of parade. Director Earl has been working quietly but none the less diligently for the past month preparing for the gorgeous pageant which is one of the prettiest features of the Round-up. The floats this year will eclipse any thing heretofore seen in Pendleton and will typify in tableaux the pass ing of the frontier. Aside from the Westward Ho parade, which Is held between 10 and 11, on the Saturday morning of each Round-up week, there is always & parade each day of the show, and this, too, Director Earl has In charge. To Attend I.aundrynien's Meeting. J. F. Robinson, proprietor of the Domestic Laundry, will leave Satur j day noon for Portland where that j evening he will attend a banquet i Riven by the Portland Iaundrymen to the iaundrymen of the Willamette j valley. All of those present will Sun ! day go on to Seattle to attend the convention of the Iaundrymen of the northwest. Six Churches Flreraps. MEDFORD, Ore.. Sept 17. Accord ing to Fire Chief Lawton. who has completed a fire survey of the city, six of the Medford churches are fire traps. Chief Lawton has ordered them to make changes In conformity with the city ordanances. The exit doors open in Instead of out, and other re gulations are not observed. One hundred and sixty property owners have been notified to bury their gasoline tanks as prescribed by city ordinance. Milton Youths Drought Here. Deputy Sheriff Joe Blakely , re turned home la?t night from Lcwlston with Claude Givens, arrested there up on a statutory charge, and 'Deputy Sheriff West of Freewater arrived this morning with Herman Cochran, who was arrested in Dayton on a similar charge. Both are Milton youths and are Implicated in the same case for which Joe Beller was recently arrested. Fashionable Dressmaking PARLORS itmiiiiiiiiiminiiiiiiiiiiiiimiui Mrs. C. E. Pattern ROOM 7 Temple Bldg. Didn't Mean to Deny Guilt. George Geonakopulos, who was fined $25 in police court for speed ing, declares today he did not mean to plead not guilty to the charge. He says he stated to the court that he didn't know how fast he was going but estimated his speed at IS or 20 miles an hour. He was ignorant of court procedure, he says, and was not try ing to enter a denial to the charge. The collision with the car of Lou Johnson he explains by stating that his foot slipped on the brake. He stopped after the collision to examine his car, he states. Letter From English Mother. J. W. Darby, one of the butchers at the Central market. Is In receipt of a letter from his mother, who is a resident of Farthingston, North Hamptonshire, England, in which she pictures very' clearly the effect the European war has had upon that country. Business is demoralized, she writes, and the villages are almost deserted of young men who have answered Lord Kitchener's call for volunteers. Mrs. Darby does not want her son to come home to Join the army and, unless a graver danger threaten hls native land than does now, the son will be very contented to remain In Pendleton. $400 Inverted In a concrete cellar, Just completed, to Insure finest quality proerf. to our trade U only a portion of the advantages offered to customers of JOHN W. DYER, GROCERYMAN We call attention to the excellent line of fresh vegetables fruits and produce In our store. ' THE EAST END GROCERY Phone S36 East Alta Street CUr Has Good lire Protection. That the fire protection afforded Pendleton by the new water system, the electric fire alarm and the auto truck Is exceptional for a city the size of Pendleton la the statement of M. R. Colwell, one of the surveyors of the Underwriters' Equitable Rat ing Bureau who Is here to rerate the city. He has made a thorough in spection of the water system and the I equipment of the fire department and declares that no city in the north west that he has visited 'has super ior facilities for fire protection. He PORTLAND 10 SEE ID- Having walked the entire distance from Portland to Pendleton in order to take in the Round-up, Buster Love and W. L. Morgan, Jr., two Lincoln high school boys of Portland, arrived in the city at 2:30- this afternoon, somewhat dirty, somewhat tired but in high spirits over their experience. Young Love is a brother of Miss Marian Love, one of the teuchers in the Pendleton high school, and will visit his sister while here. Both boys intend walking back to' Portland after witnessing the frontier show. They left Portland at 5 o'clock in the evening of Friday, Sept, 4 and thus took a little less than two weeks for their trip.. They -carried a com plete camping outfit on their backs, their packs welshing about SO pounds each. In addition each carried a rifle They camped out every night but were fortunate enough to find hospit able farmers along the road who were glad to Invite them to their tables. They came up the Columbia high way to The Dalles and from that city to Umatilla followed the railroad track most of the way. They en countered some very stormy weather which slowed their progress some. The boys are enthusiastic boosters of the Round-up and carried on theli packs signs indicating the reason they were making the long hike. Hiking, by the way, seems to run In the Love family, George Love, an elder brother of "Puster" having walked from Portland to Mexico a few months ago. REUTIVES OF LATE AJ. STURTEVANT CONTEST WILL SEND IN YOUR ORDERS FOR THE EAST OREGONIAN ROUND-UP SERIES Don't Put it off Mail in Today. Date ion Eat Orcgomau Pub. Co., 1'iiiuileton, Oregon. KiieloMvl find 25c for which please send your special iC'jundUp Wit ions postpaid as per your "epeeial offer," to the iouiwiiir nddnro: Xante , 1W Office TCsnio of Sender ., That New Soap NYAL'S Face Cream SOAP 'uifuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniutiiiHiiiiiiiir For Sale by Koeppen's The Drug Store That Serves You Best On four different counts the In strument, purporting to be the last will and testament of A. J. Sturtevant was yesterday contested In a petition filed by Vivian I. and Lowell E. Stiytevant, minor children of Clark Sturtevant, deceased, by Myrtle F. Carnes, their mother and guardian. Acting upon the allegations set forth therein. County Judge Maloney has cited Mark A. Sturtevant, his wife. Alma, and his daughter, Fay, all of whom are named as respondents, to appear In court at 10 o'clock on the morning of September 28 to show cause why the letters testamentary issued to Mark Sturtevant should not be cancelled and; the will declared In valid, void and fraudulent. The first grounds upon which the Instrument is attacked, as set forth In the petition, is that A. J. Sturte vant was mentally and physically ill for a long time prior to the executing of the will and was incapable of mak ing a valid Instrument. In the next paragraph it is set forth that deceas ed was susceptible to suggestion and persuasion and that under Influence was exorted In securing his signature t the will. It Is further set forth that the will was made from memoranda compiled by another and that the testator was not mentally capable of distinguishing between a will and a petition for the removal of a guardian. Furthermore, it is set forth, for sev eral years prior to the making of the instrument, A. J Sturtevant was an adjudged incompetent and was, there fore, to all Intents, an insane person Incapable of transacting business. The fourth grounds, as set forth, Is the alleged fact that the testator had for many years suffered from a delusion that the father and mother of the contestants had burled money belong. Ing to him. The' last will and testament, as ad mitted to probate, cuts off the Con testants with $2.50 each and gives to the respondents the $10,000 estate. Contestants claim that they should be entitled to half of it. S. A. Lowell. W. M. Peterson and Frederick Stelwer are attorneys for the contestants. CHARGES ARE MADE AGAINST GERM AX SOLDIERS LONDON', Sept. 17. "These Ger mans are not soldiers; they are mur dereds In uniform." writes an Ostend resident to an English friend. "It has been proven that they kill the wounded and shoot women and chil dren. At one of the charges at Lie ge the colonel of the 9th Belgian reg iment of the line killed at the head of his troops by a shot through the head When his body was recovered later In the day It was found to con tain twenty bayonet stabs." MOXEY CANT BUY BACK MEX LOST IX FIGirn.VG LONDON, Sept. 17. "If I were a rich man," said an Englishman the other day, "I would donate large sums for relief in Belgium. Those Belgians fought the Germans think ing that, almost any day, the English end French troops would come to their relief. But, the English and the French didn't come and the Bel gians were almost wiped out I think rich Englishmen ought to make very generous donations to Belgium." "Money doesn't buy new daddies," Answered an American. And the Englishman went away thinking. Pastime Tlieafer ilGlO TOPAY in y. , ., , . MtaSfouQrtinooDHGb!! VITAGRAPH IN TWO PARTS Don Wilson, Sally Crute, Gertrmlo, McCoy in Edison one-reel feature "The Mystery of the Octagonal Room." Friday Saturday Mary Pickford in "All on Account of the Milk" ' One Heel liiogruph Ctunedy. Kathlyn Williams in Selig Two Part Feature "The Speck on the Wall' "HEARST SELIG latest news from the front Sunday O'DELL & HART Promoters of tlie lanph trust, in sinpinp:, daneinir and rapid fire comedy. A Pastime Vaudeville Headliner. LILLIE LESLIE Who played the load in ''The Third D.-rcc' in I.ulin Two Part Feature "AS WE FORGAVE THOSE" WARREN CONSTRUCTION CO. TO MOVE TO WJklU WAIU CONTRACT SECURED FOR PAV ING STREETS IX WASHING. TON CITY. .After operating for three years In this city, during which several miles of gravel bltulithlc pavement was laid ' the Warren Construction Co. will soon ' move Its plant to Walla Walla, hav- lng secured a contract in that city for paving Clinton street and Alvarado ' Terrace. The company will have Johnson street completed within a week and does not anticipate any more work until spring. The fact that the Warren Ponstruc. tlon Co. secured the Wulla Walla con-j tract at $ 1.4 8 a square yard in open competition with a number of other hard surface pavements is a refuta-! troops have Joined the Servians and fighting under Servian generals, headed by General Vukotoch have re pulsed the Austrian along the Bos nian frontier. "There was fighting Saturday, Sun day and Monday," the dlspitch con tinues, "and the Servians now are pursuing the enemy. The Austrian casualties amounted to 4000, Seven hundred men weretaken prisoners and 600 men of Slav nationality deserted tlon of the charge that the Pendleton city charter and the council have pre- J vented competition and given the Warren company the work at its own' price. All of the gravel bltulithlc laid In this city cost $1.45 a square yard, three cents less than the price Walla Walla secured In open competition. According to Walla Walla papers, there were three other bids received there. One from a home contractor for a six Inch concrete pavement quoted 98 1-2 cents & yard, another for an asphaltlc concrete surface with crushed rock base quoted $ 1.20 a. yard and the same surface With a con crete base was quoted for 1 1.40 a yard. All of these bids were under the bid for gravel bltulithlc yet the property owners wanted the latter. A delegation of Walla Walla property owners came to Pendleton recently, inspected the pavement here and in terviewed many residents. Most of the pavement now In Walla Walla Is of concrete or asphalt- anl the change now being made Indicates that Pen dleton's Judgment hits not been a bad one. H ItMON ) J 5O0A A Box of Our Beverages Means a whole lot of whole some pleasure. Whether it be our Lemon or Cream Soda, Gin ger Ale, Root Beer, or other bottllngs, you'll find them one and all refreshing and palatable. They are drinks that contain no regrets, nothing but pleasure and refreshment. A box will prove their dellghtfulness. Quick Auto Truck Delivery. Pioneer Bottling Works Paul Ilemclgarn, Prop. Phone 177. Factory 222 E. Court the Austrian and Joined the Servian." ClevelanJ, Ohio, employs 700 fe male candy workers, who average IS o week. Under Auspices Episcopal Dioceie of Oregon FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 23rd, 1914 Crammer School and College pre paratory courses. School estate com prises 100 acres of fertile land. Com plete gymnasium, Indoor and outdoor athletics. Library, study halls, com petent Instruction In all branches. Bend for rates and booklet: "Where boye are trained to think." Address: Bishop Scott School YAM1IILL, OREGON. . Noted Vlollnfot on Guard. ST. LOl'IS. Sept. 17. A letter from Albert Stoessel, a St. Louis mu sician who Is studying In Germany received by his father here, says that "Krelsler is guarding bridges In Vi enna." This Is supposed to refer to Frits Krelsler, the welt known vlonlllst who recently made an American tour. A letter tells of German victories and adds: "For the first time the Germans used their new cannon which they kept a secret from the world. One shot weighs 120 pounds and destroys a fort, goes through the strongest steel and costs 80,000 marks. Two lo comotives are required to transport the cannon. Austro Deserters join Serbs. ROME, via, Paris, Sept. 17. A dis patch received here from San Gio vanni, Albania, says the Montenegrin 66 TODAY ONLY 99 STARRING CARLYLE BLACKWELL The Yacthing Story in Film Wo Ate Itea "Where the Famous Players Play."