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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1906)
I SQUIRREL POISON uurniea wj rvii-L. ikiukc, auuiRKtLd man cne amt quantity ' . , .. of any other kind made. . tAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAA r W WW W WW w w wwwwww MADE IN LA GRANDE Our Own Male W Carry in Stock A full Line of Drugs and Druggist Sundries AT BEST PUCES Doctors Prescriptions and Family Receipts, a Specialty Two Graduated Pharmacists Always in Attendance. A. C. MAC LENNAN, Prop. Prescription Pharmacist Id (.ramie Lvcnirvj Observer Monday, july 1906 Published daily except on Sunday One year in advance $6.50 Six months in advance 3.60 Per month 65 Single copy 5c CURREY BROS.. ED'S AND PROP JtED CROSS DRUG STORE i Our First Car Of WATERMELONS FOR THE FOURTH ' POTATOES. ONIONS, CABBAGE, and HAY Our second car of new potatoes is in. These are extra fancy and a little better matured than the first car. We were able to buy these at a lower price and we have reduced the price accordingly. iWe have another car of fancy new dry onions, and have regu'ar shipments of cabbage. Wm till hnw n rhnir nt rtf hny whirh ura nW ?t ? I 5 00 ton. ' Also strawberry boxes which we will sell very cheap. Last, but not least, we offer fancy sweet ripe Water Melons - which will be here in a few days. Just the thing for ihese warm days. We will buy all (he eggs you can furnish us at 20c per do?, cash, and we will buy all your other farm produce. PHONE MAIN 2 J Oregon Produce Company This paper will not publish any article appearing over a nom-de-plume. Signed articles will be received subject to. the discretion of the editors. Please sign your articles and save disappointment AUVKK'll.-lINO KATKH lply Ad rmttjK rnrnlabd ain pritatllou lAxml routing; nuilee lUe wr Him Bisl latei lion, jc per Hat for wh rtub-munil loner tiou, MOluUuni ofoourtolenco, 50 , r Hue. arda u tlmiika, If prr Hum. ANIVfRSARY Of GUlTfAU'S (RIME Today the Local Option-law which carried in eight counties in the" state, at the recent election, goes into effect. The principal cities which went dtfT under the law are Eugene and Albany. . The re sults of this phase of the new condition in Oregon will be closely watched by the residents of other counties of the state, as these counties will prove conclusively whether or not the people as a whole will adopt or reject prohibition, as a basis of future action. Bright eyes are an infallible index to youth, windows from wnicn iupia snoots his arrows. HoMister's Rocky mountain Tea makes hriehteves. rosy cheeks. Tea or tablets, 35 cents Newlin Drug Co. Twenty-five years ago today, on July 2. 1881, President James J. Garfield, the twentieth President of the United States, wasshot and mortally wounded by Charles J. Guiteau, a disappointed office seeker, while at the railway t.tmn rt lf Otlf;, Fine Confectionery and 1 gars AT at Washington. After lingering for sev eral months in Washington and later at Elberon, N. Y., President Garfield died on September 1 9, of the same year. His body is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland, Although a quarter of a cen tury has passed since that memorable day the tragedy is by no means forgotten. President Garfield was born in Orange Township, Cuyahoga county, Ohio, Nov. 19, 1831. He entered Williams college Massachusetts, in 1 854, and was gradu ated with distinction in 1856. In 1859 he was elected to the senate of Ohio, having returned to his native state after his graduation. In the War of the Re bellion he was first colonel of the Forty- second Ohio regiment and was afterward raised to the rank of major-general for services at Chickamauga. In September 1863 he was elected to Congress and re signed his army commission. He served until 1880 when he was chosen U. S. Senator. In the same year he was nom inated for the Presidency and was elected. It was only a few months after his inaug uration that Garfield was shot. VanBuren's Cocoanut and Chop Sucy Sundaes None Better firSGHEeiRER'S Best EauioDCd Icecream i Parlor in Eastern Oregon Next door to post Office A BUSY SESSION No congress ever passe 1 as many gen eral laws for the people as a whole, as the first half of the 59th. which adjaurned Saturday. The following may be cited as the most imp rtant hills past. The railroad rate bill. The pure food law. Meat-inspection law. Naturalization law. Denatured alchol tax law (repeated.) Lock canal at Panama. Consular service reform. Appropriation bill reform. Largest battleship authorized. Employers' liability bill. LODGE DIRECTORY EAGLES - La Grande Aerie 295F.O E. meets :wy Frioay niht in Elk rial!, at 8 11. m. Visiting brhren nvited to att. I. R. Snook W. S 2r.G. L. Biggers W. P. I. O. O. F. La Grande Lodge No. 16, meets in their hall every Saturday night Visiting brothers cordially mvited to at tend. Cemetery plat may be seen at Model Restaurant. H. E. Coolidoe, N. G. D. E. Cox, Sec. STAR ENCAMPMENT, No. 51. I. O. O. F. Meets every first and third Thurs days in the month in Odd Fellows hall. Visiting patriarchs always welcome, G. E. Fowler, C. P. M. W. A.- La Grande Camp No. 7?03 meets every first and third Wednesday of the month at I. O. O. F. hall. All visiting neighbors are cordially invited to attend. C. S. Williams, V. C. John Hall, Clerk. , FORESTERS OF AMERICA Court Maid Marion No. 22 meets each Thurs day night in Redman . hall. Brothers ire Invited to attend. - . ' Fron Hon Chief Ranger L. L. Snoograss Financial Sec.. Board of Trustees Dr. G. L. Biooers John Hall and C. S. Williaml FRIENDSHIP TENT No. 51. K. O. T .Meets second and fourth Wednesdays lach month in I. 0. 0. F. haH. Visiting n.ghts welcome. H. C. Ball, Com. Mox Bloch, Record Keeper L.O. T. M. HIVE No. 27. Meets every first and third Thursdays in the after noon at the Sedmen hall. ,, All visiting ladies are welcome. Mauds Lono Lady'Commander. M. C. Vessey, Record Keeper. B. P. 0. .. La GRANDE LODGE No 433 Meets each Thursday evening at eight o'clock in Elks' hall, on Adams Avenue. Visiting Brothers are cordially invited to attend.. E. W. Davis, Exalted Ruler G. E. McCully, Rocording Secretary. LA GRANDE LODGE No. 169. WOODMEN OF THE WORLD -Moots every hriday of each month in the K. of H. hall in the Corp building. All visiting members welcome. N. L. Ackles, Consul Commander J. H. Keeney. Clerk. RED CROSS LoDGeT No. 27-Meets every Monday evening in ' Castle Hall, Corpe building. A Pythian welcome to all visiting Knights, N. L. Ackles, C. C. R. Pattison, K. R. & S. CREAM SEPARATORS "STOP!" and think before you buy sep arator. There are many things to be con sidered in the purchase of a cruatn sepaiator. You want the lightest runn.nn tiuchine on the market. You want tha m icinie that is the easiest to wash and keep c e.111. you also want the machine that will produce ai the butter fat, And above aM you wml a duutile machine so that you wont be continually piying for repairs. Now the famous E np.ri Sjp ir.ator is the ma chine you want as it has ill tnase advantages ovar every other machine on the market. Any company can make claims but let us show you the Separator that makes good GRANDE RONDE CASH COMPANY. PhooneMain6 Lewis Bros. Prop. We now have a good start for a lively progressive city, with more payrolls than any city of anything like our size in the Inland E.npire. Let the good work gr, on. Let us all pull for a greater La Grande and Union county. The election fraud indictments in Mul- thnomah show conclusively that the elec tion laws should be changed to the extent that voters must register within the speci fied time for registering, if not they should not be permitted to vote. It is evident that before it is possible for Union cou.-ty to ontain a dense pop ulation, which it is capable of supporting. that the present large land holdings must be divided and subdivided. This will not be brought about ir. its most ex emplified form until large tracts cf our valley land is brought under irr.gation. This will come in time but never loose an opportunity to help bring this condition about. Ten years ago the suggestio that this valley needed irrigation would have received little consideration but the past few yeirs has demonstrated that land values can be doubled and trebled through irrigation, as a result all now see the neccessity. That is. as much can be raised on forty acres of irrigated land RATH BONE- SISTERS RoweiaTem pie No. 9 meets every Wednesday even' ing at 8 p. m. in the K. of P. Hall in the Corpe building. Visiting members cordi ally invited. Milly Fhawley M. E. C Eunice Procter M. of R. &. C. FACTS IN NATURE. Hot Only So We Get Inspiration Fran Nature, But Health w Well. For M'iiilf who sri' run-down 11 ml new mi: who nulTi'r fi'uui iiiiliiri'siion or dvs- i'in, lii'iulavli"'. biliousness, or torpid liver. couU'd lonnie with hitter taste In the iimriiiiiK and pour Hietile. it be cmie neeesHiiry to turn to Mime tonic or lttreiuMliener which will assist Nature and help' ilM'm to net 011 their fwi and nut tin-1 uly into Us nroiier oniililiuii. LI Is heriiiiiiiiK more unit niiire appn relit that ttttre'! must vnliiiilile health - Riving auriils are ui bu luuiul in direst plant . an. I riHiK Nearly forty years ao. nr. R.V. Pierce, nmv cuiMlltiiix physician li the Invalids' llnlel ami Siirxical Institute, u!. HulTalo, N. Y.. discovered that by scieiiiilically eitvactiiiK and cnniliiiiinir certain medici nal principles from native rtxius. taken irom our American loresis. Iiecnnlil pro duce a medicine which was marvc IhiisIy e'll -ielit in cnrinil cj-es of IiIikhI disorder an. I liver and simnach trouble as well as many other chronic, or liiiircrinir all menus. This concentrated extract of culture s vitality lie named "liolileti Med ical IMscnvcry." It pnrilies the lilond by I'iiiiiiih nn suiiiiucii uiiu liver mid leallhv condition, thereliv belli mr the dm. 'Minn and assimilation of food which fis Is I he lilood. TliNrctiy It cures weak stomach, In.hife.tinn, torpid liver, or Oil- Inn no, and kimlnsl derangements. If y."l have iiia led lontfile. 11 li hitter or na.l ta-te in the inorniriK. frequent li.'inlaciies. ("el ea v. e.iily lreiLsi,(..hef ur pain in side, tack Hives out easily and aches, tu lchliig of itas, colimtiiiii, or irfe;niar tMiwels. feci Hashes ni lict ul ti rii.it m with clidlv MMiations or Inn Ui'cd sviiiptoins. they isiiiit to Merainru. incut of your stnmacli. liver nml Kidneys, wnicn me vtoioeil .nsllCHI lllc.uery' will correct more s(Msiidy and pcrtna' nently than uuv oilier known auvnt. ( on tains no alcohol or haliit-tornui. j droirs All Its inrre iieiiU prinleU !u plain Klig llsh 011 w rapiK-r. - r Ihe s,ie nndlvn for substitution to p'iiiiit the dealer to make a little more nnm. ue nains; yon lose. Accept no stih- niinu- ior "tiottieti .Metiical lliscovery.'' Constipation caits, anj (i,,.:ravate) many serious Disease, it Is thoronidily curtsl by Pr. rtenv's Pleasant IVllets, HARDWARE j; " - - New and Second Hand FURNITURE If you have anything to sell phone us and we, will . call and pay you highest cash price. ; We want second hand goods. We have new goods and we want you trade ; Gome in and see what we have to offer you. - FIR STREET SECOND HAND STORE 213 FIR STREET . Gall or phone II. B. HAISTEN Red 1751 9 THE LATEST IN EARLY I ENGLISH FURNITURE Just in from the Factory Mammocks and Lawn Swings : W. H. BOHNENKAMP CP A LITTLE TALK ON ICE CREAM SQDA . v ' NOT BETTER THAN THE BEST BUT BETTER THAN THE REST To maintain the reputation we have acquired tor supplyidg the needs of our many patrons in every department, a reputation we point to with pardon able pride, we want, now, to advise you that we have opened our toda fountain with a new line of crushed fruits and fruit juice which excel any which we have ever had, and white we may ocoasianly find a party who has never tried onn of our delicious ICE CREAM SODAS we find a hun dred who have, and do, and always wilt, because they want the best and appreciate a fine article.. We have some new flavors this year which are BOing to be of universal favor on account of their delicate flavors. Hoping you will kindly favor us with an early call, so we may show you, ' We are respectfully, A. T. HILL Prescription Druggist LA GRANDE, OR : HIS APPRECIATION THEBUSINESS MAN thoroughly appreciates the advanta&es-of a checking account with a bank.. Those who do not keep such" an account miss many of its advantages. . . We are always glad to explain the workings of a checking account to those -who- are not familiar with banking" enw;l"n . account Interestsjpaid on time deposits and in savings department " I CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $74,000.00 5t? &rrmers ana Uratfers Tfationat: SSank f Si- OrfM .tttnlM Mt IN ANCIENT DAYS watches were clumsy affairs and were not over-accurate. To ap preciate how much the art of Jtehwaking has advanced you should see our ladies-, TIME PIECES They art delicate little affair In YhZL.Z. "r-un "wtal. or enamel. i ' ,. i hevar. all o;.T ' accurate tima mnA . . . . K order aas . Th rf . Z .. .anythtno vou cAr in J. H. PEARE. Jeler and Optician f . as now is possible on eighty. . ; iuw iurw are cturuc