Li tone Evening OSserver ?VTT over!-m Grande Ronde Va.ley la a valley of MONDAY SEPTEMBER 17. 1906 borne. Farms to ivnt are exception ally scarce. Published daily except on Sunday There is room for the times the present population la the Grande Ronds Val&y. One year in advance $6.60 Six month in advance 5.60 Per month 66 Single copy 6c Entered at the Pott Office at La Grande Oregon, as Second Class Matter. CURREY BROS, EDS AND PROP 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 CEHTRAL RAILWAY Of OREdOR Cheap and abundant electric power mokes all klnd of manufacturing pos sible In any part of the county. Union county has reason to be prouo of her school system, wblcb is second to no public school system in the west. Since the packing-bouse exposures, Grande itonde V'uky farmers are re ceiving a premium for home-cured meats. ADVERT KATKH Display Ad rates rarnlahixl upon application Local reading not Ices luc per lln Oral I usee lion, jo per lint for each subsequent Inner. lion. Resolution of oonrioleucs, $c j r line. Card ol tlmbk. On per lin. Union county's prosperity Is based upon hr varied and diversified industries. This edition la all home print. The Observer office is decldkdly well equipped. No one Is idle except from choice In ine urunde Itonde Varey. There Is work at good wages all the year round for all. The La Grande brick yards made over two million brick this season and then could fill only a portion of the or ders received. The owners of our largest saw mill ay that Union county timber will last at the present rate of cutting, for at leas seventy-five years. The two Inrgv atone quarries near Grande furnWm employment to a large number of people) during the greater portion of each year. Not less than three cold storage and artificial Ice pants will be Installed In La Grande In 1907. There will be no tnore Ice famines in the Grande Ronde Valley. The raciflc coast market for cattle, hogs, sheep and poultry pay better prions than the Eastern markets. Stock shipments are In consequence seldom made to the enst, Ten acres of fruit land here will ylofd net Income over the living expenses of a family and all cost of cultivation of the land nnd that net Income will be expressed In four figures). Over a large area, termed many years ago the EundrldRy, now ac knowledged to be aecond to no part Of the valley for productiveness, the roads are a'ways perfect at all eva sions of the year. A large cannery somtwhere In this valley will be erected as soon aa the rtgtht parties become la ware of thai great opportunity t re. The fruits and Vegetables nerewmry are raised In large quantities now. Coal has In the past few yar be come In general use In the valley and bow supplies about one-third of the fuel demand. Coat In ton lota Is de livered by La Ornnde dealers at 17. Wod costs from 14 to H.SO a corn. A vinegar factory on a large scale Is awaiting the combination of capital and exerlence. La Grande with her Superior transportation facilities would be an Idenl location for such a plant. The apples to run It with are here, too. Btrawberry culture offers one of the best fields for profit either on a small Or extensive scale. Nowhere are finer or larger berries grown. They mature late and bring prices equal to the first pickings of the early season sections. Leading life Insurance companies credit Oregon with the lowest rat of mortality of any state In the Union. This Is of Importance to the seeker for a home. Union county has one cltl--en who Is In his 107th year, yet re tains his faculties In at respects carcely Impaired. La Grande Is naturally the dtstrlbut. Ing center for a large area of country. This Is emphasised by the fact that many of the raciflc coast Jabbers ship here In earlots, and tv-hlp by local rates. The day Is not fnr distant when omeone will start a wholesale grocery and provision house In La Grande. Hop-raiding Is one of the profit producing pursuits of this valley. The price has not been below 51-1 cents . a pound on foot during the past six Team and has reachu d at times a cent mor than that, during portions of each year. The largest ho In the World was rained In Union county on alfalfa and grain, and exhibited at the Lewis and Oark exposition In Tort land by Kiddle Pros. Union county offers remarkable in ducements to bomeeeekers on account of low living expenses and healthy climate. J. II. Rlnehart & Bon of Summer vllle are among the largest prune growers in Eastern On. gun. They own their own dryer and market their pro duct In carload shipments. This edition is an urgent Invitation to you, Mr. and Mrs. Easterner or Middle Wi sterner, to come to this al luring valley and make a home under the most favorable conditions. Tin re are two constantly flowing ar tu-iun wells In Union county. Neither Is below a depth of 700 feet A com pany Is now und-r contract to bore 1. D00 feet which will probably result in securing a gusher. If there Is any section of the United Slutes that possesses more diversified valuable natural and acoiilre rennr- ces and advantages than does the Grande Ronde Valley, we have neltner seen nor heard of it. The best furmlnz lands can be bought at 150 an acre. When planted to fruit the tund upeedly acquires a value of from $200 an acre up. Wild land can be had as cheap as $3 an acre, but It Is not worth much except for grazing purposes. Well-traveled people who have vu Ited lure and examined the opportune ties of the Grande Ronde Valley, unanimously admit that they have never seen a section offering more to Industrious newcomers with small capital. If you desire any further Information In regard to the Grande Ronde Valley after you have read this edition, write to any real estate Arm represented In Its columns or to the commercial clubs of La Grande, Union, Elgin or Cove. Write todny. . It Is a well known fact that a large percentage of the original pioneers of this valley are will living, In Union county. To come bene once Is to stay from choice. No one who has lived here a short time believes ho can bet ter his condition by moving. The flouring mills of Union county have sufficient capacity to grind all of the wheat produced In the valley. This means that local competition is so strong; that the grower realises from 2 to 6 o. a bushel above the shipping market. There la a big saving In aacks, too, when the wheat la sold di rect to the mill. Union county Is alluring to all con dition and classes of people. Varied Industries furnish employment to tne extent thnt the labor commissioner of Oregon In his annual report credits Union county with being third In the state's list of counties as an employer of labor. Thre Is always work for the laboring man here. For the home- .seeker our reasonably priced fertile lands, good markets, tflmatlc and so cial conditions appeal. To the busi ness man a county with auch largo and varied resources makes sure uniformly large volume of business. He knows that chance of failure will be his fault alone under such favorable conditions. To the Investor a careful study of the situation Is aH that Is necKssnry. Union county's present population Is about 20.000. Grande RondV Valley alone will easily support 60,000. The people are coming west by tralnloajs seeking Just what thla valley offers them. A little hustling wl l secure our share. POLITICAL STATUS Union county is normally Republican by several hundred majority but in local affairs there is a large independent vote and the result for years has been that when the votes are counted, the offices re distributed between the two great national parties. A Sportsman's Paradiss. The mountains of Union county abound In big game, such as bear and deer, and therw are plenty of grouse ami pheasants. Trout, of several va rieties, salmon, salmon trout, and white fish teem In the streams and rivers. Gam lnwe are well observed. A Railroad Now Eein$ Constructed M Will (My Aid in w Development o( tne Grande Ronde Valley. T Grande Ronde Valley is a land of opportunity. Favored to an extraordinary degree by natural conditions, It is destined to become a vast garden and that quick ly. Nature fans provided here a soil and climate that together make possl- b e the most profitable crops, and whh the comp etlon of the transportation facilities now In course of construc tion this va'ley will require only an Increased number of ambitious farm ers to speedily become the most pro- Important, but the fact must not be lost sight of that the Central Railway of Or-'gon is a separate and dlstlnp corporation and In no way a part of the trunk lln with whle it connects. It Is very evident that this nw road will prove profitable from the start. And that Is right and fair. It Is also evident that Its Interest are merged In the development of this Immediate section, and its broad and liberal po Icy wll be to encourage and foster Individual enterprise along Its line, Hot Lake Qs-JC K XJCove CO BURKBfTON T "Ss M QjfCo&NUCOP'A MAP SHOWING CENTRAL RAILWAY OF OREGON. This large special edition of the Ob server is all home print. Few offices in the state have a better equipment ductlve area of its size In the whole United States. The Central Railway of Oregon Is opening up to the possibilities of fruit and vegetable culture, mechanical in dustries, factories, etc, practically the entire area of this extensive valley. The railroad Is not a prospective possibility but an assumed certainty, backed by ample capital, with route selected, and, work of actual construc tion well under way. Much of the grading has already been done. The ties end steel rails for many miles of road are on the ground, and an Im mense force of men is at work. This railroad will have over 65 miles of steel track (standard gunge) In the Grande Ronde Valley, and about 200 miles altogether. In the Grande Ronde Valley the road will run from Hot Lake to Union, Union to The Cove, Cove to La Grande, La Grande to Hot Lake giving a belt line through the most fertl'e portions of the valley. From a point near La Grande the railroad will a so extend to SummervtHe on the north. Leaving Union the road will follow Catherine creek, touching (or passing; near) Medical Springs, Indiana mine and Copper- belt In the gold sections to Sanger and Cornucopia, and thence to Pine Valley. The outlook now Justi ne the expectation that the road wl l be completed from Union, La Grande and feummervtHe to Sanger In 190 and It Is certain that the entire Una will be finished during 1907. It is not an "air line" road, the idea being to solve the transportation prob lem in the Grande Ronde Valley rather than to curtail mileage. The railroad) win be operated as rapidly as constructed, considerable equipment being already on hand arid more on the way here. So fast Is the construction work progressing that the beet crops near Cove. Hot Lake and Union will be handled this season. True, the cans will have to be delivered to the O. R. ft N. at Hot Lake or Union stations for transfer to La Grande this year, but before another crop Is raised the line will be complet ed to La Grande. The line is a'ready regarded as one of the Important feeders of the O. R. & N. and will soon become the most ine management of this road sees cleariy that the Grande Ronde Valley arrords alluring opportunities for in tensive farming, canneries, saw mills, cereal factories, etc., and the road is providing transportation faciiiti.. such as would not be thought of hv any trunk line, with the belief that the present owners of the land or new purchasers will extensively engage In these profitable pursuits. The valley has ample territory to support from five to six times its present population. The natural resources are here, and the field Is open to both large and small Investors. The railroad is not aeeklng to build up any one section of the valley to the detriment of some other locality, but will encourage Investments everywhere along Its line. It Is in existence to haul freight and passenger and will endeavor to augment the volume of Its traffic by inducing Individuals to lo cate in Ms valley. No section of the Pacific coast has a more varied list of attractive oppor tunities to offer ths manufacturer and huobandman. The nearby timber should be manu factured Into lumber, boxes, etc, right here, and the railroad company Is al ready In touch with several auch pros pective enterprises. The grain grown In this valley ranks cond to none, and factories for the manufacture of cereal foods would find an advantageous location here. This Is a fle d of Industry almost un touched on the Pacific coast, and no other location surpasses the Grande Ronde Valley In natural Inducements for such factories. A straw-board factory would pay. There Is a tremenduous demand for thla sort of paper, and the raw ma terial Is now practically going to waste on hundreds of valley farms. There Is "big money" to be made In the extensive planting of truck. Such vegetables as cabbage, onions, celery, etc, will find a ready market at high price, and the highest qua'lty Is easily produced here. The possibilities In fruit-growing are as yet hard.'y realised, and profits need not be confined to mark-ting frsh fruit. A factory to manufacture Jelly, marmalade, etc, would be a paying in dustry. The same could be said of clder and vinegar factories. Sumnt fruit goes to waste now to supp y requirements of several fac'xnes of '.s an opening for canneries to nanae cherries and other fruit, and vegetables. . a,, In bringing nrpimn kinds, the Central interds 10 co-operate iu -- mter.as to k associations, able way wltn ine , ... elneri, bodies and IndKiaua c -lens and investors of his va.ley. k-nnwin full wel tnat -" elier Eastern .narke: for every pom- ble pruduct of the soi: ci . ------- It propos. to furnish the transportation facilitl. s that will -tan there products on their way. It does not take a dreamer or opti- mlst to see the great Dcnem. p'e of this val'ey will secure through .h nneratlon of eucn a rai - purely s Irish motives of material aa vamage he railroad's only request (free rWht-of-way) should be gladly granted by every one approached. No effort is b Ing made to sell stock loca -V. nor is any bonus ask -d-rlght-of-way being the only thing requested from Grande Ronde Valey property owners. This request is b. Ing met m th- runt spirt! and- the railroad is ex perlenclng little or no difficulty In that rapect. The Observ-r regards the building of the Central Railway of Oregon as the most Important work, viewed from any standpoint, that has marked local history, for It will put this valley In a class by itse f so far as transporta tion facilities are concerned. GOODNOUGH MERCANTILE STOCK CO. (Elgin, Oregon.) General Merchandise, Vehicles, Im plementsLumber Manufacturers Proprietors Elgin Milling Co. The (ioodnough Mercantile & Slock So. Is the most Important commercial ent rprUe of Elgin. A large general merchandise busi ness Is done, trade being attracted throughout the Immediate vicinity and well Into Wallowa county. Full linos of farm Implements, wagons and bug gies are carrhd as well as hardware, lumber, doors, windows, etc. The main store building Is 22x160 ftt. with basement, supplemented by an Implement warehouse 40x160 feet. These bulldlnsw afford none too much Toom for the large stock carried In a'l llns. Several portable saw mils are operated In tine vicinity of Elgin by the company, the combined cut be ing about 5.000.000 feet annually, most of which is marketed In the mlddre wes. The Elgin Milling Co. plant, a part of the business, Is a 60-barrel mill, and, e large amount of bran and chopped feed Is also turned out. The officers of the company are F. J. Holmes, prudent; Wl J. DlsV man, vice president; Frank E. Smith, secretary, and E. P. Staples, treasurer. Since the above was written, the fol lowing article has appeared in the Elgin Recorder W. I. Dishman, who has been one of the leading stockholders in the Goodnough Mercantile & Stock Co., of this city, has disposed of his interest in that firm and has purchased the Elgin flouring mil from the Elgin Milling Co., in which he was formerly a third owner. This is one OR. 8. L. CORPE. physician and Surgeon of Cove, fore. It was Dr. S. L. Corps, of Cove, who first discovered and published In medical Journal (Medical Bentlnel May. 1903) the function of the vermi form appendix. He declared that "Th appendix, la not a rudiment of a ren&thened caecum, as has been taught by aotn standard text book, but is a distinct orgs' n. having a dltlnct function." and he fJly describee this function, etc. It is a distinction to the Grande Ronde Valley that thla now feivralij accepted theory should have "JJ, given to the world by a local practi tioner. Dr. Corpe Is a very successful physl. elan and wirg on, a deep thinker and a cense ess student. He Is noticeably energetic and up-to-date in hi methods, keeping fully abreast of tne mc. He quickly recognized tho value In surgery of X-ray photographs, and was the first surgeon In the va'ley to s cure an X-ray apparatus. For two yea s It was the only one In th county. It Is a large and powerful machine. X edless to say he has a large pfc tlce in this valley. He is the son of bonored pioneer parents, .and he remains In the Grande Ronde Valley through) Jove of tlhls country and Its people. No man haa greater faith In a grand future for this favored s.ctlon. Si Jl " -l sr i , ,- ss. -v nur .- FLOUR MILL AT ELGIN. of the most important changes that has transpired in this city. Mr. Dishman has Been connected with the G. M. & S. Co ever since its organization and had been closely identified with the business inter ests of this city. The members of the Q. M. & s. Co. also composed the Elgin Milling Co. and the change is practically a a trading of Mr. Dishman's stock in th. mercantile establishment for the flouring LA GRANDE CIGAR FACTORY. J. H. Wills, Prop.Lee.ted Gai,tt. ou.in.ng -phone Black 162. This essentially home Industry "luuusnea by Mr. Wills last April, produces cuiar, that on heir merits deserve the patronage of "Otslln " kit i . "' "cel ln aroma . iraae-winner wherever Intro-'rl-r'V dealer has euv oe win probably havs it m?xt time you come. J,"..!!' 'U- ",la ""to- turns . ana Blu Stocking, Hand-Made,- a nick cigar ls value for the money. All of these clear are made under -si or hyen,c conditions well-paid white labo tobacco. Mr. Wilis or. from selected' J. A. RUSSELL. (Successor to Grandy & Russell.) Fresh and Cured Meats In point of volume of "trade and equipment, this business Is Justly en titled to more than ordinary menWjm In The Observer's review of sl uuue lOliuiliuua. I In direct line of succession It waa established ten years ago, and from August, 1905, until a few days ago, was conducted by Grandy & Russell. This nartmrshlp has now been dis solved and Mr. Grandy retire rrora the firm. J. A. Russell, who is now sole pro rietor. Is a practical butcher of Ions experience, and is both well and fav orably known In this valley. He op rates three retail markets In La Grande, and does a considerable wholesale business In this city, adjac ent towns nnd numerous camps. Al together 14 people are employed. Part of the facilities is a large slaughter housu, and only the best of sayfad n. atatire handled. Mr. Russell ymlh J. M. Bull, will feed 400 head of cat tle at the beet sugar factory yards thl winter. Prime beef steers alone furn ish the beef. The mutton, pork, veal and lamb ore the best money will buy. The sausages and bolognas sold ar made right here, the hams and bacon are cured here, and the Arm makes It own kettle-rendered lard. Gome and fish are handled in sea eon. and a specialty Is madfe of bull pickles, Ui. Viewed from any standpoint It ls a large business, and one of ttdtmost important ln this city. In thjJJJlay of pricking house exposures, It ls com forting to know that the local busi ness ls so largely ln the hands of a man who fully realizes bis responsi bl.lty to the public, and who furnishes the very best of meat. The growth of the business may be relied upon to fully keep pace with the progress of this city. mat in sV'Jar. answers. ST. LOUIS LIVERY & FEED 8TABLE J. A. McCarthy, Prop, 'Phone BlacK 1151. The roads leading out of La Grande give an excellent oppc(rtuntty for p ensure driving, and the St Loul L'very will furnish a rig that affords every comfort and which ance would be creditable There are plenty of good driving horses among the 27 head of Uvtry stock In the stalls of this stable, and some of them are speedy enough for uny one. The vehicle equipment U neat and attractive, and a number of the rigs are rubber-tired. There Is a big four-horse "carry all", at this stable for the use In summer of out ing and fishing parties, ln the winter It to mounted on runner for party s'eigh-rides. Horses are boarded by thsj day, week or month, and are not OiJfjFv& fed but are carefully looked after and kindly treated; There la room for from 16 to 20 boarding horses. Team and drivers are furnished for com mercial men or other who want to be drtwn to nearby town. The fittings Include eight box stalls, and horses needing the servltx s of a veterinary may be put up here. Ton elect the veterinary you want. The commodious two-story building has a 150 foot front and la 120 fest deep. It afford ample room for aH requirements of the business. The St. Louis Livery wilstab llshed 20 years ago. Mr. Martay secured an Interest tost November, and since April haa been sole pro prietor. He employ four or Ave peo ple. The most reasonable twice prevail. Is orU-ir.aj'v ,. I ar"1 yo"r Patronage will be apprsci- M"lnes. Ia. h. m. ' ' s , ated. i'a. Ho likes th wes'ern country. I, convinced f i Mtur, of La Gu,d and' , hr St. IV. Alf f .. .... " " r '0 The receipts of the La Grande post- Ask f...r the I.n r.r.-j. . ! n"lc" are consieVrablv over the W, cigars and you will he'p bul'd . 0 a year mark. and the city I thus local Industry, besides eU, ,.. P 1 en!lt'( ' free mall delivery. The ue for your money. v ' j "P?ctr ha sent ln a favorable report au the system will soon be lned. (