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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1906)
f3 1 1 A MlOTr C L OsSfiJllLMIill . 60 t lull Mil U r, Bou. I I : I Owing to the condition of business in La Grande I have decided to go out of business. My stock consists of A complete line of Dry Goods, Notions, Millinery, Ladies' Coats, Suits and aiWc Silk and Sateen Underskirts, Shirt Waists, Ladies Children's and Gents' Shoes, Gents' Furnishings, Trunks, Valises and Jewelry Mever in the history of La Grande or Grande Rondc valley has thet e been such a SALE. Instead of selling ... .i, ; nn. nr.m bt thPV a'nne mav make the orofit that I am willing to saciidce, I have deeded to give the people cf la G'ande and Grande Ronde Vally the beneft of this CRcAT SALE. There is no joking about llvs GREAT SALE I am goini out of business, and in doing so I will sell my , . I! Entire Stock Below Wholesale Costj A call at my store is all that is nrcessiry to convince the most skeptical of my intentions of quiting business in La Grande. COMMENCES MONDAY FEB. 5; ENDS WHEN WE ARE ALL SOLD OUT First Come, First Served TH E K A 1 N b I Next door Wr.ranrie National Bank, La Grande, Oregon. ow STORE E ROSENBAUM, Proprietor WV-W , . - . . - - " 1 r ll mi ! r ' V mi ! The Good Old Standby. Nothing like a nice out of juicy corned beef with cabbage or sieur-kraut or.ee in a while! We can offer most of the time whole or half round, if you can use to much, or whatever quantity you require, of well fed and carefully corn ed beef-tender, "tasty" and wholesome. If you're in the notion today, phone us the order and we'll have tne meat around in no time. Grandy & Russell I y i m"3 !, ..... "fa"" Governor George E. Chamberlain THE MINER'S INCH In California the miner's inch is the flow of about 8.796 gallons of water per minute. Fifty miner's inches art equiva lent to one cubic foot per second. The most common measurement is under a mean pressure of four inchss. through ah ancratura two inches hish and two inohes above the bottom of the box. the plank being 1 M inches thick, and the height of water above the aperature 3 inches, oivinn a mean Dressure of four inches. Each square inch of the . aper ture represents one miner's inch or about 1.2 cubic feet flow per minute. A USEFUL HEN A New York boy learned many things during a visit to the country. Everything on the farm was new to the little fellow, and he especially delighted in the live stock. . When he found out that hen s made eggs be was anxious to see one of them at work. Boing a patient waiter, his desire was finally gratified. Proudly seizing the pro duct of the cackling fowl, he marched in to the house with his prize. "Let me have it," said his aunt, "and we will cook it for your dinner." "Oh, 'taint necessary." replied the boy "The hen cooked it. It's still warm." ANOTHER CANDIDATE The Portland Telegram is authority for the statement that S. Z. Henderson has resigned his Dosition as deputy United States marshal to enter the race for District Attorney of the tenth Judicial I District and leaves next week for his home at Enterprise. Mr. Henderson is quite well known in this city being for a short time associated with Col. Ivanhoe, who is also a candidate for the position. mm nioht time, because those who commit these crimes intend to take life if necess ary, and refuse to give their victims any chance for life." , O a fine art unless you can trust your , IO butcher. win t . .: nrrt.r f vou are wh la to give u -llkinafora thoroughly reliable market looking ror . ' where vou can o , .. Z v'rUty of first-class meat and poultry " ' . ... vmi with our We can sureiy nu. i xtt. Rphr & Company ON (MAI WHO IS IT ON? Men are judged by the company they keep, but it isn't as easy to size up a woman by her hat Judge her by the amount of Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea she takes. 55 cents. Tea or Tablets. Newlin Dnuo Co. TBI fldliT FOR LEGISLATION RECOGNITION OF OSTECPATHY IN MANY STATES TO BE FOLLOWED BY SlMt IAR OFFICIAL ACTION HSEV- . ERAL OTHERS THIS WINTER. Once in a while some one, devoid of any betier argument against Osteopathy, brings up the point that the new has system of the work of treating the sick. In tome of the states which have recog nize 1 Osteopathy the new school hat a-' member on the state board of medical ex aminers, while in others there is a separ ate board of Osteopathic examiners. Th ,"1" latter is by far the preferable way, K-d f candidates for licenses to practice Osteo- pathy should be examined only by those who are themselves versed in the princi ples and technique of the system. Prac tically all legislation will hereafter be on the basis of a separate Osteopathic exam- ning board; and in states which already nave Osteopathic laws amendments will .ntroduced providing for separate boards. Last winter a New York law was. passed, but not by the necessary two- thirds vote, and it will be introduced again this year and probably passed. In New Jersey, too, a strong eifort will be made to pass a proper Osteopathic law, and the trend of opinion in that state may be judged from the following little editorial in tne Trenton Times: "When the legislators come to consider a bill giving recognition to the Osteopath ic doctors, they will scarcely go to the enemies of the new school for facts upon which to base their action. If they had followed that curse in days gone by, the homoeopathists would still be struggling for a foothold. It the Osteopaths have methods that will alleviate human suffer- IA CRANDE DRUG CO. Lewiston't "gruesome" find which caused so great an excitement for a num ber of days: the finding of the right arms i dPaftment. Prescriptions of two women, as pronounced by several ' tij tirtleSi Phone Red 121 Reliable druggist, expert graduate of i pharmacy In charge of the prescription delivered at not yet been fully recognized as a legi- ing, they should be permitted to practice """ " 'v u ran mem. I hev admimstar nn ln- wrnaiiy, ana tnere is no dancer that thev The Anti-Capital Punishment Associa tion is waging a 8rat war "P1" tal punishment, and soliciting tn enaorse ment of the governor of the various states. The secretary wrote to our gov- ( trnor. and this it the way he answtred hen "Where one man with deliberate, pre meditated malice takts the life of another ha oui?ht to pay the penalty with his own life, in accordance with Motiac law. Its wisdom has been vindicated in every ttate where capital punishment Is in vogue. Life imprisonment is ' not sufficient to protect the public from murderers. -I would extend capital punishment U highway robbery and burglary in the physicians, turns out to be a mysterious oke the arms at last being pronounced be those of some cougars which had been broucht to town from Orofino for purpose of collecting bounty. Now who is the joke on?, The doctors, the police force and deputy sheriffs (who worked to faithfully) or the Lewiston Tribune. One exchange seems to think itdecided ly the latwr. Now we cannot help think- inr it on those wise physicians, and advise them to call in tome of the tchool boys next time when they have a stray bone to analyze. Floral Journal. F. C. Forbes. Prop. Centennial Hotel Under new management Board and Room $5 per week, cash. Meals 25 cts. Special rates furnishe Monthly patrons. No. 1417 Adams Ave. Phone No. 1161. Mrs. W. E. Murchison, proprietress the facts. Tne first Osteopathic school came into being fourteen years ago. and the first class it consisted of but a few students was graduated several years later. So that, although Osteopathy was being de veloped by Dr. A.T. Still many years be fore the first college was founded, the system as a school of practice may be .Aid ho ahnut a Hn7pn vaar nU NOTICE TO BRIDGE BUILDERS In that dozen years the subject of Sealed bids will be received by the j Osteopathy has been before the legisla- county courts of Union and waiiowa j lature of nearly every state in the Union. counties of Oregon, up to noon. February I and twenty-seven states have officially 7. 1906, for the construction of a bridge ! recognized the science by legislative ac- across the Wallowa river, according to . tion as a regular school of practice, on an plans and specifications on file in the exact par, in the eye of the law, with al Cterk's office of each of said counties. j lopathy and homoepathy. the drug tys- Bids for the abutments and approaches j terns. Has any other system ever gained must be separate from the bridge proper, recognition to rapidly? Certified checkt for 6 of the Certainly not; and it should be remem- amount or the Dia musi accompany ui. i bered Jhal every legislature which has pasted an Osteopathic bill, every govern or who has signed one. has done to only because of the incontrovertible evidence must accompany the tame, as a guaranty that a contract and bond will be entered into to build said bridge, or abutment and approachet at the case may be. according to said plans and specifications. Said courts reserve the right to reject any and all b'ds.- J. B. Oilman County Clerk of Union county, Oregon. presented to show that Osteopaths are relieving 'suffering and curing disease Moreover, every bill recognizing Osteo pathy has been passed and signed in the face of the strongcut opposition from those who had theretofore enjoyed a monopoly will work harm to the public. So that, although tne New Jersey State Medical Society has been making great preparations for an active campaign against its thriving competitor, it seems likely that the New Jersey legislature will this year give adequate recognition to Osteopatny. Tne practice of Osteopathy has already been sustained by court de cision in New Jersey, and a law recogniz ing it and regulating it should certainly do me logical sequence. It is so very evident that Osteopathy has come to stay, so very plain that it it doing great good everywhere, that it can be only a matter of a short time before all states will have Osteopathic laws. Twenty-seven already have them, and public sentiment is demanding the recog nition of the science in the others. Such recognition has no opponent, except that few who rebel against the entry of to capable a competitor into the field' of "".ing worK; and it is gratifying to find alw.ys that many of the best medical men decline to join the opposition to a scientific system of treatment that it un questionably bringing relief and cure to great numbert of .people.-The Right Way.