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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1906)
HAY ON SALE As the coast market on hay i enry weak, there bei-vg no demand, '' and we have a lot hay bought, we offer to the home consumer TIMOTHY AT 50a PER CVT. baled MIXED HAY 45c PER CVVT. baled - - j We want to give the home consumer the benefit of the decline in the market- ! , . " -" For Sale at a Special Bargain Ten lets or any part of them, between Fir and Greenwood streets, facing Jefferson Ave and adjoining the railroad tracks at a tow price on easy terms. ' .-' ' ' PHONE MAIN 2 on . Produce Company CITY BREWERY JULIUS ROESCjH, Proprietor. ' : Largest vBrewuig Plaijt in Eastern Oregon : Ask for La Grande Beer and get the Best ; LA GRANDE BEER IS MADE IN LA GRANDE " AND SHOULD HAVE THE PREFERENCE ; BULL & Company t ' Dealers in I ' rresh meats, Bacon, flams, Lard, Sausage, Bologna, Fish and Oysters, Live and dressed Poultry, Etc Prompt Delivery Service. -... none Main 8. Remember e phone is on the directory Boss Meat Market Main WALLOWA COUNTY. We want your collections and cash items on Wallowa county, and wilt guarantee prompt and satisfactory service at reasonable rates. If you have no direct con 's: nftetion for taking care of ' I these items, send them to us. .". ,. .. THe Stock Growers and Farmers Bank, V; OF WALLOWA, OREGON. We pay five per cent interest on time deposit , 2 CAPITAL . K5.000.00 : C. T, McDaniel, Cashier. A. K. Steunenbero, Pres. S YOU ILL BE SATISFIE Jrywir tlfknU TttiA the TVnTc Wd Ktoiaa sum lue "Hostile IMiM lb world I'-? UEOAOfeE t f ar so hiur scenic mXi i n i pilau of lutmat Ion Uta is IvwnOfdfi mmA Dtmtr k ul lln ll l Tar tw tiresome d rtm n (oinff wtit, write tor jmt. .ibUoo and let a uteUjr bojk Uiat Will U foa all about it ) W C McBRlDE, Agent, 124 Third St Or Brick furnished in any quantty or any style. No contract too smal or to . ' large, See samples of our pressed brick, " GEO. KREIG'ER. La Grande, Oregon "t ' January Wall Paper Sale To make room for 20,000 rolls to arrive this month, our entire stock of 1905 patterns, will be on sale a short time at less than Half Price. Staniels&Jarman Wood! Wood! Wood! j Oood dry wood delivered to any part of the city. : ANY LENGTH, ANY KIND, : Special prices on quantity ,, orders.. No order too - large or too small I James Beaver j, Red 144) I HATIOHAL IS (ROVi The grange organization is now S8 years old. It is no. longer a theory, an iperiment, or an untried Dlan. It has been weighed in the balance and not round wanting, it has reached man s state. I( has put away childish things. 11 tnere has been no good in it, it never could have lasted all these vears. Farm ers' clubs and other local societies do good, much good, but their influence is local and not widespread. The cranes cov ers the whole country. It is local, state and national in its work. A single grange has strength but strength united is stronger. Some have said that it is not the business of private men to meddle with government bold and dishonest say ing, which is fit to come from, no mouth but that of a tryant or a slave. To say that men have nothing to no with govern ment is to sav that men have nothing to do with their own happiness; that people ougnt not to concern themselves whether iney oe naked or clothed, red or starved deceived or instructed, protected or des troyed. ' ' . . - HINTS FOR THI NEW ORANGE Live uo strictly to obligations and (arm of your charter. Never break law. We have no organization if we do not respect and obey all the rules and regulations. Study the granse. Learn what it is. Know what the grange is, and then put it into practice. Work for success and success will come. Be punctual. Open and close on the hour. Have a program prepared ahead. Have plenty of.musio. Encourage theyoung people to come in Start a library. See that every family takes and reads our paper with its grange news and work. Keep posted. Make your grange hall pleasant and attractive Make degree work impressive without books, jf possible. . Visit other granges. Be sociable and aeichborlv. Build care fully, but surely. Strength does not al ways consist in numbers. Pull together. Remember the irranira orscaot: "In a- sentials unity, in nonessentials liberty. In all things hearity" Urange Judd Farmer ADJUSTING THE ; v HUMAN MACHINE ; MENSTRUAL TORTURE RELIEVED Here is another case before us-1 girl of eighteen. Ever since maturity she has suffered at intervals torments indescrib able; her life instead of being a continu ous realization of Nature,, sweetest gifts during these, the choicest moments of her life, seems etrangely fashioned. Medicine is worse than useless. What can Osteo pathy do? It finds some segments of the lumbar spine in wrong position, and ad justing the same cures the invalid. The machine adjusted goes about its work in harmony. Ask this child as to the dan ger in Osteopathy, and she will laugh and reply that she loves if for its easement of pain and lack of danger. ; . SEARCH EOR MECHANICAL DISORDER . So we might continue, but will forbear. Hosts of men, women and children walk ing the earth are living witnesses to the utility of the science of Osteopathy, and the truth and comm. m sense of this osteo pathic idea of eiamming man and woman mechanically, for reasonable, explain able, remediable cause cause for disease, and its removal mechanically. The sewing machine was wonderful, but it all hinged on the needle . with an eye near the point; the telephone is wond erful but in what does.it differ from the middle and external ear? Simply a disc upon which vibrations play. Osteopathy, we are told, is too wonderful to be true; on the contrary, it is fully as simple as the telephone. Man needs no poison poured into his stomach; ha rarely needs his abdomen opened by the knife, his nose burnt out, or his sphincter ani mutilated. Ostepathy Is proving that the cause of the disorder, in the .instances is largely mechanical, resulting in nerve pressure and retardation of blood flow, and often remote from the region of pain, . WIDELY RECOGNIZED IN STATUES ' If people bad not been helped. Osteo pathy wbukyiave "died a-borning," but, instead of this castrophe, it is now a very healthy adult, recognized by the statues of more than two-thirds of the states of this Union and the time is at hand when the family physician will be obliged ,U learn how to relieve headache and cramps of the bowles and to reduce fever- at once, insteae of leaving it for Mothe r Nature to accomplish through the uncer tain meditation of drugs. Osteopathic Health. THIS WEEK All 26 and 60 cent novels reduced to 16 cents. See- our. window stationary. Newun Druo Co. - V011 WHO f AIM III! LIVING ' It has been frequently estimated that a third of the women in the United States exclusive of farmers wives are earn ing their own Kving. (The ' farmers' wives earn it, honestly enough; but whether they get it or not-is another question) wnere a century ago the main occu pation allowed to women was house service, with a little sewing and nursing or we lower grades; now the nurses are trained nurses, the seamitrsss has be come me prosperous dressmaker, even the house-servant is on - the verge of organization and advancement. . Quite beyond these ancient lines of service our modern women are steadily Increasing In numbers in every kind of human work. Some statistics gathered from the last census showed women en gaged even in such occupations as these; Stock raisers and drovers 1,947 Lumbermen 100 Woodchoppers 113 Civil engineers and surveyors 84 Longshoremen.... ; 12 Stevedores '. 21 Watchmen and policemen",,.... ... 879 Boatmen and sailors 164 Pilots , . 6 Carriage and hack drivers 43 Blacksmiths ..... 1 96 Railway baggagemen 10 Brakesmen - SI Conductors 7 Switchmen and yardmen..! .. 25 Ship carpenters & Masons... . .'. 167 Plumers and fitters ;. 126 Fishermen and oystermen 1,805 Miners and quarrymen ..I 1,570 Authors and scientists 2,6 1 6 and 1,520 woman as "guides, trappers hunters and scouts. These last are amazing, trades . for wives and mothers surely; and probably are pursued by those yet unmarried or whose children are grown; but they serve as a starting index to the latitude of professions now open to women. Charlotte Perkins Gilman in Woman's Home Companion for February,' Illinois ranks first among the states - in inventive genius, according to the re port of the commissioner of patents. New York leads in. the. number of' pat ants granted last year, with a total of 4,592, but Illinois is ahead in proportion to inhabitants, with a total pf 2.925, or one to every 1,649 to population. . 1 At the : poultry show in Boston last week a hen sold for $750. In ' politics economy, size considered, ths han". has strong grounds for claiming first ' prize among domestic animals. , . STOCKHOLDERS' MEETINO The annual meeting of the Stockholders of the La Grande Masonic Building Asso ciation will be held at the office of Turner Oliver, at 2 o'clock p. m Feb. 1 9th. 1 906 for the purpose of electing a board of Ave directors, and the. transaction of such other business as may come be'ore. the meeting. - X E. Reynolds, Sec. ' LA GRANDE DRUO CO. Reliable druggist, expert graduate of pharmacy in charge of the prescription department. Prescripticris' delivered at all times. Phone Red 121. '. . , F. C. Forbes, Prop. fOR COMMISSIONER Ben Brown of Island City while in the city today announced his intention of filing his petition to become a candidate before the; Republican primaries for the - office' of county commissioner." 7 ' , , GRANT A MAJOR GENERAL- ' Men are judged by the company ihey keepi 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. 56 cents. Tea or Tablets. . ' ' ' ' Newlin Druo Co. Old maids would be scarce and hard ' find.' : -':-. . ; Could they be made to see, ..: . , How, grace and beauty is combined ' By using' Rocky-Mountain, Tja.. , ,., Niwlin Druo Company,- Centennial. Hotel ' "' Under new management. v Board and' Room $5 perTWeek,". cash, Meals 26 cts.- Special was furnishe Monthly patrons. No. 7 Adams Avf. Phone No. 1 X.i Vv;, ( . Mrs W, iLMurchi'soa, proprietress' . J cum i Bast rSM . Ussj 77, bunt nntnt ftLfc ILC rHiLw Coach Smnr. Tines Oml. lira. Sold br aniffiiu. Fine ;. . - l . ; -' A V . Gbnfectioricry and . AT Ri Aurelia; .Stock ' i - . ' i: .-. : ' Reports' trom the-mlnesj, during, January has" warranted a raise, cdiseqtrently stock has gone ; up to 1 cents, arid'this is riot' all, it -will keep going up as long as the property gets better, as it is you should buy- before another ; raise in ; price, or you-will miss, a good, investment. ' You . should ponsicfer thi$ as being'a home enterprise ; and help the rriatteP -alarrg,. thereby helping .; yourself. v AUREQA: MINING CO. ' .f.ii'r," ' , , ;' . j. a. thromson. ' : J ' : ; H,' STEWARD. RrppVietor and Manager. ! r- l S j.'-.' -S, '! IP j j - NOT 'llNtll"? m 1 ' -... J---.- , , ' SiaWAIJR PPPJel f,m - , MdNlDAY, FEBRUARY i2i 3 "1.V' h- mm l u fro The Same; . -- t,- The Refreshing ; The Merry Swedish;: " Boy from' the hiiis: I ; of the Old Country : A Favorite with the .girt' A treat for the rid folKiT Selovfd by the thildren i source of Pure Fun, Lumberr i LjOg'Jqm. AUJ IUUJ n's Quartette, Appointments '- ;.-: - r : iui.TNow?TrPec : 50c. and75c children 25c i I eee4lieee V . . - L-ML.UL If., I I Vf)tt X. . J. W.O BRYANT, Prop. 1 White help only. Dininu Room Ooen. Moial. ... . , Rooms 25c and 60x Special rates by wee' or month Z uni diock I rum oepot. Cor. Jefferson Ave. and Iopot St. rs. direct ors or omcers ana ureif J""iu mt nus binds, of the old Blue MunUittUniver sity are invited to attend tHeir sfqond re union to be held at the Elk's haib. 9th. 1 906 at 8 o'clock p. m. Bring Vour (ops and marbles. f ' J. E. RcYNOLDS.T'res. j ' I ' .