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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1910)
!,A uiwvun rVEXIKf 0BSKKVT3M THUSDAY, JULY 21, 1910 I MB L PAGE FOUR THE OBSERVER lB).i;!: .1 Daily Kxrrpt Sanday Bruce Dennis, Editor ami Owner Entered at the posioiuee ul IA ijunde as aecond-claas matter i; sited Prtes TeUgTaMB Strike SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily, single copy Be Daily, per week 16c Daily, per month C5c This paper will sot publish as ar ticle appearing over a nom de plume Signed articles will be revised sub ject to be discretion of the editor. Please sign your articles and save Hsappointraeiii. established in tbls valley there will be no more cheap lands. Grass lauds will doable its present price and fruit, land will follow. Now is the accepted time to buy for the future. A few hundred dollars properly invested in , Union or Wallowa counties means a! life income. T. R. COITIKCBB PR1FH(JHT1NJ ()'(; HI TO HE STOPPED. The hand that rocks spoils the chlelf. Life. the cradle i APPLES WORTH BIG PRICES. There is every Indication at tin present time that the Grande Ronde apple crop will be one of the great est mosey producers that has been iec4iv.J H UrfS history. In the commercial centers apples are commanding high prices at pres nt with a strong demand and every Indication of advance. This means much for the fruit lands of Union and Wallowa counties for the crop in this part of the state is bet ter than ever before. All fruits v. yield well tbis year. The cherry crop! hat been wonderful and the quality of the fruit is superb. Berries have brought good returns, but the apple crop Is the backbone of the whole fruit situation. This being true, did it ever occur to you that a few acres planted to ap ples offers the greatest income to bs found. It requires some work to care for an apple orchard but figure the pay you get for that work. Everyone can afford a few acres of apple land and why not take advantage of a sit uation that will never occur again -that of buying land set to fruit for al most the price of grass land In other parts of the state? When Irrigation shall have been Mr. Roosevelt has always believed In and been fond of boxing says the Spokesman Review. The establish ment of boxing clubs in New York gt'e vigorous youngsters, who otLfj wle would have Joined gangs, leg lMinate outlet for their activities and also lessened knife-fighting and unfair When Colonel Roosevelt we; police coi mlssloner a law was enacted per milting contests in the stat? 'jetwoen professional boxers. Its terms were intended to save the sport from the perience convinced him prizefighting everywhere resulted in the suppres sion of the prize ring. But while he was governor he found himself obliged to secure the repeal of the law. Men whose every Instinct of manli ness revolts against prizefighting have been denounced aB mollycoddles. But Mr. Roosevelt's confession that his ex oenvinced him tuai imiiflshtlag ought to be stopped puts tbs burden of ttnmanlineis on the supporters of 'irizeflgts. Since prizefighting was stopped in New York, Mr. Roosevelt adds, its con ditions have only grown wprse. The money fought for is a potent source of .lemoralization, often a premium on re okedness. The gambling on the re sult Is utterly unhealthy. The mov ing picture Is a new demoralization, and it is admirable that plctoilal rep resentations of the fight are pvoMb Led. He hopes that America hi i Been its li-st prizefight. WHAT OTHERS SAY. Michigan Indians stand to get $860,000. Seeing they don't vote, this Is rather odd. Detroit News. If it tost John Dalzell, a sum eqn' to $4 n vote to get his nomluat'on he is net he Idol, but the angel of his people. - Exchange. It is barely possible that Governor Gillet is trying to win the Nobel peace prize for 1910. Omaha World-Herald. A woman is a person who would rather have her husband home of nights than in the Hall of Fame Galveston News. , They can't hear Mr. Bryan reading Governor Harmon out of the par while the campaign bands are play ing. Altanta Constitution. The collection of relca, that recent ly arrived from Egypt, probably ac counts for some of the summer vaude ville jokes. Youngstown Telegram. It would be Interesting to read a signed editorial by President Taft on the topic, "What Shall I Do With Our Ex-President?" Boston Globe. Th-e Kansas aviator who foil feet uninjured may have alighted on one of the waves of prosperity now sweeping over that state. St. Louis Times. An official dentist has been appoint ed for the Missouri penitentiary. Ap parently the old torma ui Ur Ua la. convicts are considered inadequate. St. Paul Dispatch. Professor Lovell's discovery of a canal on Mars 1000 miles long has not yet been followed by evidences of contention as to what town shall hold an exposition. Washington Star. t Jim Jeffries found it as hard to get back into winning conditions as the old political machince hacks .n Ore gon. The latter will not recognize their weakness until next November. Harney County News. A girl attending the Christian En deavor convention at San Jose be came insane and rushed to the sta tion to take a train for Heaven. Poor little mite! She was Indeed insane to even dream of San Jose in the start ing point or the Southern Pacific the line for Paradise. Watsonville Reg ulator. N WEST'S The Home of Quality Merchandise Where you get value received for every dollar you spend Where you feel satisfied in your buying that you are getting the be t in style as well as guality. SON E LATE ARRIVALS Round Lace Collars 50c to $1.00. Aeroplane Hair Nets, 10c each. New wide Embroidery and Laces, Gold and Silver Effects in Yoking. 2 2 Watch OUR WINDOWS. NEW GOODS ARRIVE DAILY ? : LE MAR CRAVATS 50 CENTS In all popular widths and the neatest newest patterns N. K. WEST, THE QUALITY STORE NOTHING NEW UNDER THF ffl THAT'S WHAT THEY ALL SAY" BUT DON'T YOU BELIEVE IT H ere Is A N ew o ne The Fred A. Jacobs, successor to the Jacobs-Stine Company, largest Realty Operators on the Pacific Coast, pays you 5 PER CENT INTEREST on all the money you pay on an "Enrol Heights1' lot in three years. They grade the streets, put in water, pay the taxes for three years; give absolute guarantee of title and make no charge for that. "ERROL HEIGHTS ' is beautifully locat ed, near the "Reed Institute," is view property, and only 20 minutes ride on the street cars from the heart of Portland. In the next two years the growth of this section of Portland will be phenominal. Here will be located one of the finest educational institutions on the Pacific Coast, and also this section will have the benefit of the best bridge on the Willamette River. Lots $450.00 Monthly payments $8.00. This is the opportunity of a lifetime. See the Fred A. Jacobs Co. Special Representatives, E. J. and D.R HAYES, at The Savoy Hotel. Phone Main 713 S I