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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1909)
I" ... I RVFXIXi ORSL'HVFK. LA filtAXDI. OlUUOX. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 8,' 191111. AGE TWO. ;1 I -J : : 1J 'i I s i j It ill- II Hi! ! ! !! -iil I ' i! :! mil iti !'! i ; 1 t i n i ill: I '.it t: : f .1 La Grande Professional j Directory FHTMC1AXS, J. H. HUBBARD. M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Office In New Bank Building. Rooms 'Phones'. Residence, Main it; Office. Main 71. DR. A. 1 RICHARDSON. Physician and kiurifcow. Office over Hill's Drug Store. Office 'Phone lit. Residence Main 65 N. MOLITOR, M D.. Physician and Burgeon. Corner Adams Ave. and Depot 8t Office Main II -:- Residence Main 19 BACON HAT.L. Phvslclans and Surgeons, (rfflc I. M. Grmde National Bank Building. 'Phone Main II. C. T. Bacon. Residence, Main II. . If. K. Hall, Residence, Main 62. OK T. E. MOORB DR. H. C P. MOORI Osteopathic Physlolaua. Klrksvllle Graduates Under Founder Office 8mmer Bonding, fbonee: Office Mala IS; Ree. Main C. H. IPTOX, PH. G., M. D. Physician and Surgeon, tpeclal attention given to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Offloe in La G-ande National Bmk Building. "Phones Office, Main 2; Residence, Main 32. J - VETEIUXARY SURGEONS. DR V. Ai CHARLTON, Veterinary Burgeon. Office at Hill's Drug Store, La GranQ., Residence 'Phone Red 701. Office 'Phone Black 131. - Independent 'Phone II. Both 'phones at residence. OK. W. H. RILEY, Graduate Ohio State University. Vaccination, DeAtlstry and Surgery f ar) kind Country calls promptly answered. Office 1411 Adams Avenue. Phones: Pacific Black 1901. .' Independent, 173. DK. T. V. RIDDEI.L, M. D. C. Graduate Veterinarian. Office Red Cross' Drug Store. Phones: Pacific, Main 4. Home, 121. La Grande - - - - Oregon VIA VI. MR8. GRACE McALISTER. Teacher and Manager. . Telephonn Farmers 1971. ManZan Pile Romedy is put up i.i a tube with nozzle attached. May be applied directly to the affected pints. Guaranteed. Price f.Or. S-0.1 at Sll verthorn's Family drug store. DAILY OBSERVER 65c a Month eeeeeeeeeeeeeear3eeee i FIRST-CLASS PIANOS ! at reduced prices Wc will give special prices on all our line for 30 days. It will pay you to investigate. BRAMWELL PHONE BLACK 1071. C. B. CAUTHORN, Deatlst. Of'lce over Hill's Drug 8tore. La Grande Oregon J. C. PRICE, D. M. D. Dentist. Room 21, La Grande National dam Building. 'Phone Biack 1991. TEACHERS OF MCSIO PROF. E. PORTER DAT. Prlnclpa La Grande School of Music. . Mrs. Day, assistant School, 10! Greenwood Ave., one door south of Adams Ave. 'Phone Black 1331. MISS STELLA OLIVER, Teacher of llano and Harmony. Studio at residence of Turner Olive' corner Fourth and O avenue. MISS ROSE HOUSE, Instructor In Piano, Harmony anil 'Technic. 2105 North Hpruce Street. La Grande, Oregon. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS. L. A. PICKLE R. ClvlL Mining, Irrigation Engineer!, and Surveying. F.stlmates, plans and specifications Ofllce in Bohnenkamp Building. La Grande - - - - - Orcfo C. It. THOKNTOX. Architect and Engineer. Surveying, Civil and Structural Engl neerlng. Twenty Tears' Experience. KOI) EI IT MILLER, Archltci'l. Office 1107 Adams avenue. 'Phones Pacific, Main 1. Home Independent No. 8. ATTORNEYS. Clias. E. Cochran Geo. P. Coehrai COCHRAN & COCHRAN. Attorneys. La Grande National Bank Building. La Grande - - - - Oregot R. H. LLOtD. Attorney at Iw. "'nctlce in all the courts of the Stab and United States. , Elgin ...... Oregon C. II. CRAWFORD. Attorney at law, Practices iri all the courts of tho Ftr.t. and United States. Office In La Grande National BanV Building, La Grando, Oregon. WILLIAM M. KAMSEV, Attorney ami Counellor at Ijiw. Rooms 15 and 16 Soinimr Block. La Grande - Oregon MUSIC CO. ADAMS AVENUE THE WIEXt E PLAIXLY OITL1XED Oxteopathy Is that school of medical practice whose dlntlnctive method con Ut in (1) a physical examination to determine tho condition of tho me chun.Vm and function of all parts of the human body; (J) a specific man Iplatlon to restore the normal mechan ism and re-establish the normal func tions; and (3) the adoption of all hy gienic measures conducive to the re storation and maintenance of health. This definition lays stress upon the following point: (1)' Correct diagno sis V'ted opun a physical ev!T)Ha!ifin. The nfcft'MpHrh mit knwr th.- ti.vti.'iI and ' rvcognlxe nny departure from It as a possible factor in disease. There Is not one fact known to the anatom ist or physiologist thut may not be of vital Importance to the osteopath. Hence a correct diagnosis based upon such knowledge Is necessary. (2) Removal of the cause of disease. A deranged mechanism must be correct ed by mechanical means specifically applied, which Is the most natural and only direct method of procedure. This work Is not done by any of the meth ods of other schools. After the mech anism has been corrected little remains to be done to restore function; hut stimulation or Inhibition of certain nerve centers may give temporary re lief and aid nature. (3) Wholesome living, both in sickness and In health. All the means employed by other schools, Including proper use of pure air, waier, food, heat and cold, exer cise and rest cleanliness and surgery, and public hygiene and sanitary sci ence, are the common heritage of ell schools, and especially In line with os teopathic theory and practice. It will be seen that practically all of the above definitions lay stress upon diagnosis In the sense of determining the first cause, the causus causans, and the relations between It and the secondary causes which often deter mine the most noticeable symptoms. This is a new principle In diagnosis. absolutely unlike any ever applied, ex cept In occasional cases, by any oilier school of physllcans. The definitions also provide for treatment in accord ance with the diagnosis; hence the treatment suggested, except In occa sional cases. Is absolutely unlike any other that has ever been proposed. It Is not claimed that no one ever recognized an osteopathic principle or put it Into practice before Dr. Still. History shows that many had grasped and applied principles essentially os teopathic long before osteopathy, or anything like It, as a complete sys tem ever entered the human mind. Hut in almost every case where the principle was seen, (Is applicaion was never dreamed of. Men In all ages of the world had observed the force of steam, and many of them had seen It lift the kettle lid as often as Watt had; but only he hought of developing a machine which rt'ould enable him to use steam when ever power was wanted. So others knew much of anatomy, physiology, and pathology, but only Dr. Still thought of developing a system based upon that knowledge which would en-j cWn ,,rn ' ctMMc1 v.'ltli p.!! :1!;L'n'C which' the human body is heir. There is probably no one thing piore noticeable in medical literature to day than the almost universal failure to recognize the osteopathic Idea that diseased conditions are, or ever may! lie, due to derangement of form and consequent disturbance of function. Any change of size, texture, structure, position, relation, is a change of form, an anatomical derangement, a lesion In the osteopathic sense, a possible cause for tliseane. A failure of any part of ihe body to do its duty Is a disturbance of function, generally caused by some derangement of form. These are essential o.st, opatDic ideas. i but ihev are almost completely ignored I by the drug schools of practice; hence, the firm basis upon which osteopathy rests in contrast with those systems based on symptoms in both diagnosis and practice. llistoiy of osteopathy. A sTi;i;.l(i STATEMENT. New V "k Medical Authorities Claim D.v ' i'" I'-iii ( a 1 1 -.ox CoiiMiniliol. The post mortem statistics of the big New York hospitals show that some cases .f consumption are due to unchecked dyspepsia, especially when the victim was predisposed to tuber culosis. Dyspepsia wears out the body and brain, the weakened. Irritable stomach l unable to digest food, the body does Therefore, the person who perm dy? to progress unhindered ij i t. . i . . tl. itirev ..- ItrtJoJIfU milirislllUtMll, K w,K' V . tr--I " i constipation t nsm s and the victim be-j f v5,arif''v cames thin, weak and haggard. As' . ft'-Tl i' j!a result, the body becomes a fer tile ; rS'-d rVJCS A K ! field for the germs of dUeise to lodge' iHJtJPWJ f&.HT I and flourish. guilty of contributing toward the de velopment of one of the most Insldi ous and fatal diseases known to man kind. Dyspepsia Is curable If properly treated. A. T. Hill sells a remedy which he positively guarantees will cure Indigestion or dyspepsia or he will pay for alMhe medlclno used dur ing the trial. This remedy is an ab solutely new medical discovery and has been named Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets. Certainly no offer could be more fair, and the o'ffer of A. T. Hill If. proof posillv.' that F..-XHH Dv-p' P sla Tablets are a dependable and in fnltitiln rpmedv. Inasmuch as the medicine will cost you nothing if It does not benefit you we urge you who are suffering with indigestion or dys neiisia to try this remedy. A twenty- five cent box of Hexall Dyspepsia Tab lets contains enough medicine for fif teen days' treatment. Remember Rex- all Dyspepsia Tablets are only sold In La Grande by A. T. Hill, druggist. TRIED TO KILL MOTHER. t niatlllu Indian Ijorixed In Jail on Charge. John Mitchell, an Indian, was brought from the reservation and lodg ed In the city jail this morning, charg ed with an assault on his mother, which nearly resulted In her death, says the Pendleton East Oregonlan. Mitchell went home last night with too much firewater and when he ar rived at the house proceeded to beat his mother. She was beaten badly about the head and suffered several other bruises. Mitchell was arrested in town this morning and locked up for the time. Then the aged mother was brought to town and put In the hospital, where she lles in n half unconscious state, Agent McFatrldge arrived In the city this afternoon to take charge of the case. Died. Tmbler, March 3. (Special.) Mrs. C. Curtlse, aged 73, died this morning In this city at the home of her son. Ell Curtlse. The remains will be taken to Cash Valley, Utah, for burial. The remains will be shipped this eve ning. The deceased has been a resi dent of this valley for the past year and has been In 111 health for some time. Gmm1 Cough Medicine for Children. The season for coughs and colds is now at hand and too much care can not be used to protect the children. A child is much more likely to con tract diphtheria or scarlet fever when he has a cold. The quicker you cure his cold the less the risk. Chamber Iain's Cough Remedy Is the sole reli ance of many mothers, and few of those who have tried It are willing to use any other. Mrs. F. F. Starcher. of Ripley, W. Va., says: "I have never used anything other than Chamber lain's Cough Remedy for my children. and It has always given good satlsfae- or other narcotics and may be given as confidently to a child as to an adult For sale by all good dealers. Near Death In Big Pond. It was a thrilling experience to Mrs Ida Soper to face death. "For years a severe lung trouble gave me intense suffering," she writes, "and several times nearly caused my death. All remedies failed and doctors said I was Incurable. Then Dr. King's New Dis covery brought quick relief and a cure so permanent that I have not been troubled in 1-' years." Mrs. Roper lives In Rig Pond, Pa. It wnkrs wonders in coughs and colds, sore lungs, hem orrhages, la grippe, asthma, croup. j whooping couch and all bronchial af fections. ,",ii. and tl. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by Newlln Drug Co. Candidate's Announcement. I take this manner In inform- Ing the voters of La Grande that lama candidate for marshal of this cl.y at t'.ie coming city elec- tion and respectfully solicit their consideration. L. RAT.BURN. DIAMOND rV'" ff. tnf-'-.r fji r tsu tHHisy t i.;' - 1rvTa. Ahk trU-kfttiiie- H tootk .a mr iM-ichbortMMwI. wri b. i tt ti m e n tour rtsv-lrr. r ni v wi!l .rCKT We Want Our Want Your want is placed before a thousand cr mora want-seel ara very day Can you afford to spend one cent per word of yjur want au where results are the keynotes? ; ' FOR RENT. FOR RENT Seven-room house. In quire of Mrs. Zuber. ll-tf FOR RENT-Four-room cottage, quire of Mrs. Zuber. In- FOR RENT A burn; close In. In quire at 1609 Fifth street 2-2S-3-4 FOR RENT Suite of nicely furnished rooms, suitable for two gentlemen; bath, fire and electric lights. In quire of Mrs. D. W. Jackson. 'Phone Red 1412. Seventh street. 3-3-15 FOR RENT Nicely furnished room, suitable for lady or gent. Electric light, bath and fire. Inquire at 1612 Adams avenue or 'phone Red 131. FOR RENT A 6-room house, In good condition; large clothes closet and pantry; garden, chicken park; good cellar; convenient to shops. 'Phone Red 1921 or call at 1315 Jackson Ave., North La Grande. 3-3tf WANTED. WANTED Horses for pasture, 3 per month. Hay feed and run to staw. Inquire of J. E. Reynolds. WANTED Help wanted In small family. Call at this office or 'phone Red 1321. 2-22tf WASTED Girl to do general house work. 'Phone Red 1312, or call at the Grande Ronde Electric company. WANTED To buy or lease a gasoline engine; 1V4 to 3 horsepower. In quire of C. M. Graham, R. F. D. No. 1 2-26-3-5 POSITION WANTED Woman desires to work by the day. Call 'phone Red 1551. 3-2-6t LOST AND FOUND. FOUND A suit case on the road r.eat Moss chapel. Owner may recover same . by calling at this office and paying for this notice. LOST A small black purse with si. ver and jewelry, in this city lasi night. Finder leave at this office. FOUND On Valley Ave., between Alliance mill and McAllster farm, a pair of spectacles in leather case. Owner can have same by calling el this office and paying charges. o Pinesaivc ACTS I,KEA -"otice VttrlOiil.ed forms ov skin D1I.EA8E - ', r . . ,,- , , v tl 1 ' - - "' WHO IS YOUR DENTIST? Your Wants IN Ad Column FOR SAXJB. ' FOK SALE Two to four acres ef suburban property, well Improved. , 'Phoni-Blftck 1532, or see E. W. Kammerer, 2004 Adams avenue. Land for Salo. 40 acres of fruit, garden or alfalfa land for sale cheap If taken soon. C O. Huffman, R. P. D. 2. La Grande. FOR SALE 700 tamarack posts, 10a. lnLa Grande. See 1-21-lm LA GRANDE INVESTMENT CO. Complete Threshing Outfit. For sale at a bargain. Has bee run about 100, days. Time given, sa -approved security. ' M LA GRANDE INVESTMENT CO.' .. . FOR SALE Seal blue barred Plym out Rock eggs, $1 per 15. Mrs. A. 3 Blood, Fruitdale. 2-1-2C FOR SALE New house, containing 5 rooms and ath; one acre flrst-clasa garden land with water right; trees bushes, barn, woodshed, chicken park, etc. Close in. A bargain if taken at once. N 43, Observer. ' 2-16tf An Ideal Cough Medicine. "As an Ideal cough medicine I re gard Chamberlain's Cough Remedy ln a class by Itself," says Drr. R. A. Wilt shire, of Gwynneville, Ind. "I take great pleasure In testifying to the re sults of Chamberlain's Cough medi cine. In fact, I know of no other preparation that meets so fully tho expectations of the most exacting in cases of, croup and coughs of children. As It contains no opium, chloroform or morphine. It certainly makes a mo.t safe, pleasant and efficacious remedy for the ills It Is intended." For sale by all good dealers. Plowing. Orchard or garden plowing on hort notice. "Phono black 10U. CarefuD and painstaking. Young trees plowed! around with care. 2-25tf A. HERMAN. South La Grande. It Saved His Leg. "All thought I'd lose my leg," writes J. A. Swenson, Watertown, Wis. "Ten years of eczema, that 15 doctor could not cure, had at last laid me up. Then Rucklen's Arnica Salve cured it sattnd and well." Infallible for ski- eruptions, eczema, salt rheum, boils, scalds, cuts anil feve rsores, burns, piles, ji.e at ,twiii Drug Co.'. e V a. I il t F I , A '